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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #52887 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52887)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature,
-Science, and Art, March 1885, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, March 1885
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: August 23, 2016 [EBook #52887]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ECLECTIC MAGAZINE--MARCH 1885 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Les Galloway and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: An open book, listing contents as Literature, Art, Science,
-Belleslettres, History, Biography, Astronomy, Geology, etc.]
-
-
- Eclectic Magazine
-
- OF
-
- FOREIGN LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.
-
- New Series. } { Old Series complete
- Vol. XLI., No. 3. } MARCH, 1885. { in 63 vols.
-
-
-
-
-FROM SIBERIA TO SWITZERLAND.
-
-THE STORY OF AN ESCAPE.
-
-BY WILLIAM WESTALL.
-
-
-Escapes of political and other convicts from Western Siberia are more
-frequent than is generally supposed, but from Eastern Siberia, though
-often attempted, they seldom succeed. Save for convicts under sentence
-of penal servitude, and actually imprisoned, it is easy to elude
-the vigilance of the police and get away from a convict village or
-settlement, but it is almost impossible to get out of the country. The
-immense distances to be traversed, the terrible climate, lack of money,
-the absolute necessity of keeping to the high roads, prove, except in
-very few instances, insuperable obstacles to final success. In order
-to be really free, moreover, it is imperative for a fugitive not alone
-to pass the frontier of European Russia, but to reach some country
-where he runs no risk of falling into the clutches of the imperial
-police. Even in Germany he is liable to be recaptured, and is really
-safe only in England, France, or Switzerland. Hence, to make good a
-flight from Eastern Siberia requires a conjuncture of so many favorable
-and nearly impossible circumstances as to render a complete escape a
-rare and remarkable event. But the incentives to escape are as great
-as the obstacles to success. No life can be more horrible than that
-of a political exile in the far east or far north of Siberia. Even at
-Irkoutsk the mean temperature is fifty degrees below the freezing-point
-of Réaumur; for many months of the year the sun in some parts of the
-country shines but two or three hours in the twenty-four, and for days
-together darkness covers the face of the land. A man untrained to
-manual labor, or unacquainted with the arts of trapping and killing
-wild animals and collecting peltry, turned adrift in the remoter parts
-of Siberia, runs the risk of perishing of hunger and cold. A Russian
-refugee, now at Geneva, tells that, during his sojourn in Eastern
-Siberia, he spent the greater part of the long winter in bed, rising
-only to swallow some rancid oil, the sole food he could obtain. To
-escape from such a life as this a man will risk almost anything. Even
-incarceration in a central prison, or the penal servitude of the mines,
-can hardly be more terrible. The trouble is, that the way to freedom
-lies through Western Siberia and Russia in Europe. The road south is
-barred by the wild tribes that haunt the frontiers of Mongolia and
-Manchuria, who either kill or give up to the Russians all the fugitives
-that fall into their hands.
-
-On the other hand, the escape of a prisoner or of a convict under
-sentence of penal servitude is far more difficult than the flight of
-an involuntary exile; the latter may leave when he will, the former
-must either break out of prison or evade his guardians, and being soon
-missed he runs great risk of being quickly recaptured. How, in one
-instance at least, by boldness, address, presence of mind, and good
-luck, the difficulties were overcome, the following narrative, related,
-as nearly as possible, in Debagorio Mokrievitch's own words, will show.
-Other fugitives, for instance Nicolas Lopatin, a gentleman now living
-in Geneva, who escaped from Vercholensk in 1881, may have encountered
-great hardships, but, being exiles at large, they were neither so soon
-missed nor so quickly pursued. Debagorio was under sentence of penal
-servitude, and the flight from Siberia of a man condemned to penal
-servitude is almost unexampled. Even rarer than an escape is the true
-account of one, related by the fugitive himself. Imaginary accounts
-exist in plenty, but, so far as I am aware, no authentic personal
-narrative of an escape from Eastern Siberia—at any rate in English or
-French—has ever before been given to the world.
-
-I first heard of Mokrievitch in May, 1881, a few days after his
-arrival in Geneva, and through the kindness of Prince Krapotkine
-obtained (and communicated to a London newspaper) a brief sketch of
-his fellow-exile's adventures; but for certain reasons, that exist
-no longer, it was not considered expedient to publish the full and
-complete account which the reader will find in the following pages.
-
- WILLIAM WESTALL.
-
-
-THE ARREST.
-
-On the evening of February 11, 1879, several friends of the
-revolutionary cause, of whom I was one, met at Yvitchevitche's
-lodgings, in the house Kossarovsky, Yleanski Street, Kieff, the town
-where I was then living. After a short conversation, Anton, myself,
-and several others left the house with the intention of passing the
-rest of the evening with our friend, Madame Babitchev. The inevitable
-samovar was bubbling on the table, our hospitable hostess gave us a
-warm welcome, cigarettes were lighted, conversation was joined, and an
-hour or more passed very pleasantly.
-
-Anton was the first to leave, and he could hardly have reached the
-street when we were startled by a loud report like the firing of a
-pistol. We stared at each other in consternation, and Strogov, running
-into the ante-room, looked through the window and listened at the door,
-in order to find out what had happened. In a few minutes he came back
-with satisfactory tidings. Nothing unusual seemed to be stirring in
-the street; and he attributed the report we had heard to the banging
-of a door in a neighboring café. So we resumed our conversation and
-our tea-drinking with quiet minds. But five minutes later we were
-again disturbed; this time by sounds the character of which there was
-no mistaking. The trampling of heavy feet in the vestibule, hurried
-exclamations, words of command, and the rattling of arms, told us only
-too well with whom we had to do.
-
-The police were upon us.
-
-Notwithstanding our desire to resist, we knew that we should be
-compelled to yield without a blow. There was not a weapon amongst us.
-A few seconds were passed in anxious thought. Then the double-winged
-doors were thrown violently open, and we saw that the ante-room
-was occupied by a detachment of soldiers, with bayonets lowered and
-ready to charge. From the right flank came the words, loud and clear:
-“Will you surrender, gentlemen? I am the officer in command of
-the detachment.”
-
-I looked round and recognized in the officer with the gendarme uniform
-and drawn sword, Soudeikin in person, then a subaltern in the Kieff
-gendarmerie, later the famous chief of the political police of the
-capital.
-
-Despite the imposing military array, the haughty bearing of the
-officer, the glittering bayonets and stern looks of the soldiers, and
-the unpleasant sense of having fallen into their toils, the whole
-affair seemed to me just a little amusing, and I could not help
-smiling, and saying, in answer to Soudeikin's summons, “Are we then a
-fortress, Mr. Officer, that you call upon us to surrender?”
-
-“No; but your comrades....” the rest of the sentence, owing to the din,
-I did not catch.
-
-“What comrades?” I asked.
-
-“You will soon see,” replied Soudeikin.
-
-Then he ordered his men to search us, after which we were to be taken
-to the police office.
-
-The searching over, we were surrounded by thirty or forty soldiers,
-with arms at the trail, and conducted to the Libed police station. Even
-before we reached our destination we could see that something unusual
-had happened. The building was lighted up, and there was an excited
-crowd about the door. After mounting the staircase we were led into
-the waiting-room. It was filled with armed men. Pushing my way with
-some difficulty through the press, I saw on the other side of the room
-several of our friends. But, my God, what a state they were in! Posen
-and Steblin Kamensky were bound hand and foot; the cords so tightly
-drawn that their elbows, forced behind their backs, actually touched.
-Close to them were Mesdames Arnfeld, Sarandovitch, and Patalizina. It
-was evident that something extraordinary had befallen in the house
-of Kossarovsky, shortly after we left. I could not, however, ask our
-friends any questions, for that would have been taken as proof that we
-were acquainted. Yet, from a few words dropped here and there, I soon
-learnt what had come to pass. They had resisted the police, a gendarme
-had been killed, and all whom we had left at the meeting arrested.
-
-I had hardly made this discovery when a disturbance was heard in
-the next room—trampling of feet, loud exclamations, and voices in
-contention, one of which I seemed to know. The next moment a man burst
-into the reception-room, literally dragging behind him two gendarmes,
-who tried in vain to stop him. His dishevelled hair, pale face, and
-flaming eyes, showed that he had been engaged in a struggle beyond his
-strength.
-
-In a few minutes he was garotted and forced into a seat near us.
-
-“Separate the prisoners one from another!” cried Colonel Novitzki.
-
-On this each of us was immediately surrounded by four soldiers.
-
-“If they resist, use your bayonets!” said the colonel.
-
-After a short interval we were called one after another into the next
-room. I was called the last. On responding to the summons I found
-myself in the presence of several gendarmes and officers of police, by
-whom I was searched a second time.
-
-“Have the goodness to state your name,” said Colonel Novitzki, after
-the operation was completed.
-
-“I would rather not,” I answered.
-
-“In that case I shall tell you who you are.”
-
-“You will do me a great pleasure,” I replied.
-
-“You are called Debagorio Mokrievitch,” said the colonel.
-
-“Yes, that is your name,” put in Soudeikin.
-
-“I am delighted to make your acquaintance, colonel,” I answered, giving
-the military salute.
-
-It would have been useless to deny my identity. My mother, my brother,
-and my sister were living at Kieff, and I did not want to have them
-compelled to confront the police and ordered to recognize me.
-
-
-THE SENTENCE.
-
-We were lodged in the principal prison of Kieff. On April 20,
-we received copies of the indictment, drawn up by Strelnikoff,
-prosecuting advocate to the Military Tribunal (he was afterwards killed
-at Odessa). We were, in all, fourteen prisoners, accused of sedition,
-of belonging to secret political societies, and of resisting the
-police. In order to give greater publicity to the trial, we resolved to
-have ourselves defended by counsel from St. Petersburg and put forward
-a request to this effect. But after some delay we were informed that if
-we wanted advocates, we must choose them from among the candidates for
-judgeships attached to the tribunal of Kieff, and therefore dependent
-for promotion on the functionary by whom the prosecution was to be
-conducted. Deeming this a practical denial of justice, we determined to
-take no active part whatever in the proceedings.
-
-At six o'clock on the morning of April 20, we were taken before the
-tribunal. Eight of our party were men, six women. The first thing that
-struck me was the strength of the escort—more than a hundred Cossacks,
-besides gendarmes and policemen. Officers were running from group to
-group, giving orders and making arrangements, as if they were preparing
-for a general action. The women were led off first, after which we men
-were placed in a large barred carriage, so spacious indeed that we
-could all seat ourselves comfortably.
-
-Then the procession moved off. At its head rode Gubernet, the chief of
-the police. After him came the captain of the gendarmerie, Rudov, an
-old schoolfellow of mine. Our carriage was surrounded by Cossacks, the
-rear-rank men carrying loaded carbines. All the horses were put to the
-gallop, and the police, who feared a manifestation in our favor, had
-cleared the streets of spectators, and ordered a complete suspension of
-traffic. Not a figure without uniform was to be seen, and strong bodies
-of troops occupied every street corner.
-
-I need not describe the trial—if trial it can be called: it lasted four
-days, and ended in the condemnation of three of our number to death;
-the rest were sentenced to various terms of imprisonment. My sentence
-was fourteen years and ten months' penal servitude.
-
-We were led back to prison with precisely the same precautions as had
-been observed when we were taken before the tribunal. The people
-were not allowed by their presence in the street to show even silent
-sympathy, either with us, or with the cause for which we suffered and
-so many had perished.
-
-After the verdict and the sentence life became a little easier for
-us. Instead of being compelled to take exercise one by one, we were
-now allowed to meet and walk about freely in the prison yard. The
-police had an object in granting us this indulgence. Before the trial
-several attempts had been made to take our photographs; but this we had
-resolutely refused to allow. For those who cherish hopes of regaining
-their liberty, the possession of their likeness by the police is
-strongly to be deprecated. We were now informed by the authorities
-of the gaol that unless we complied with their wishes in this matter
-our meetings and our walks would be stopped. We enjoyed our social
-intercourse immensely. It was an unspeakable comfort to us. Three of
-our little company were under sentence of death, the fate of three
-others trembled in the balance, and would be made known only at the
-foot of the scaffold. It was not possible that we could long remain
-together, and we offered to comply with the wish of our gaolers
-on condition that we should not be separated until the last. This
-condition being accepted, our photographs were taken.
-
-The quarters of several of us were in an upper story of the prison, and
-from our grated windows we could watch the construction of the gallows.
-The place of execution was a plain about two-thirds of a mile from the
-prison gates. Those doomed to death, being on a lower story, did not
-witness these ghastly preparations, and none of us, of course, gave
-them a hint of what was going on.
-
-At length, and only too swiftly, came the 13th of May. We had been
-told nothing, but from the completion of the gallows, the behavior
-of the warders, and from other signs, we thought that the executions
-were fixed for the following day. The condemned thought so themselves.
-Although we did our utmost to keep outwardly calm, the farewells that
-evening were unspeakably sad. Most touching and agonizing of all was
-the parting of those who were to die on the morrow with those who
-expected to follow them a little later on to the scaffold and the
-grave. Two months afterwards Beltchomsky and Anisim Fedorow were hanged
-on the same gallows.
-
-Five thousand soldiers and gendarmes escorted our doomed friends to the
-place of execution. On previous occasions the authorities had thought
-it well to do their hanging early in the morning, while people slept.
-This time they did it with pomp, circumstance and parade. The cavalcade
-of death did not leave the prison gates until nearly noon; traffic was
-suspended, but the streets were crowded with spectators, and when the
-bodies of our comrades swung in the air, the military band struck up a
-lively tune, as if they were rejoicing over some great victory.
-
-
-SENT TO SIBERIA.
-
-From the time of the execution to the date of our departure for
-Siberia nothing noteworthy came to pass. All sorts of rumors were
-current touching our destination and our fate. Every day brought a new
-conjecture or a fresh story. It was said that we were to be confined in
-one of the dreaded central prisons—that we were to be immured in the
-casemates of St. Peter and St. Paul—that we were to be sent to Eastern
-Siberia, to Western Siberia—to the island of Sakhalin—that we were not
-to be sent anywhere, but to stay where we were.
-
-At length, on May 30, the question was settled. Ten prisoners, of
-whom I made one, were summoned to the office, and told that we were
-forthwith to take our departure—whither, our custodians refused to say.
-The next proceeding was to put two of our friends, who did not belong
-to the privileged order, in irons and shave their heads. We others,
-being nobles, were to be spared this indignity until we reached our
-destination. For the present we were required only to don the ordinary
-convict costume, consisting of a long gray capote, marked on the back
-with a yellow ace for those sentenced to simple transportation, and
-with two aces for those condemned to penal servitude.
-
-“Will you not tell us whither we are going?” asked one of our number of
-General Gubernet, as we stepped into the van.
-
-“To Eastern Siberia,” said the General, who stood near the door.
-
-Then I knew my fate—fourteen years hard labor—possibly in a region of
-almost endless night, and as cold as the Polar regions.
-
-The station of Koursk, the cities of Mzensk, Moscow, and Nijni Novgorod
-are passed in quick succession. At Nijni Novgorod we leave the railway
-and continue our journey, as far as Perm, by water. It is only here
-that we begin to realize that we are really on the road to Siberia.
-We are transferred to little three-horse carriages, with a soldier in
-front and a gendarme by the side of each prisoner. By leaning a little
-forward it is possible to see the vast horizon before us, and the
-forests and mountains that stretch for unknown distances on either side
-of the road. It is difficult to describe the feelings of a captive who
-for months, or it may be for years, has been under bolt and bar, and
-whose views have been limited to the blank walls of a prison, when he
-once more breathes the free air of heaven, and beholds nature in all
-her grandeur and her beauty. It is as if the liberty for which his soul
-has never ceased to yearn were opening to him her arms and bidding him
-be free.
-
-The country through which we were passing was thinly peopled, and
-buildings and houses were few and far between. The broad highway was
-bordered in some places by brushwood, in others by immense forests.
-All sorts of fancies flitted through my brain. I thought of home—of
-father, mother and friends—of the cause, of the incidents of my trial,
-and the dreary future that lay before me: fourteen years' hard labor in
-Eastern Siberia—a hell hopeless as any conceived in the brain of Dante.
-And then plans of escape surged through my mind, each wilder and more
-fantastic than its fellow.
-
-We travel night and day, always with the same soldier and gendarme,
-though not always with the same driver. On one occasion we change
-horses at midnight, and shortly afterwards I see that my guards are
-overcome by sleep. They nod and rouse themselves in turn; their
-efforts to keep awake are laughable. As for me, my thoughts hinder
-sleep, but an idea occurs to me, and I nod too, and, drawing myself
-into my corner, I snore. The stratagem succeeds. A few minutes later
-my gendarme is snoring loud enough to waken the dead. The soldier who
-sits before me embraces his rifle with both hands and feet, and sways
-to and fro with the motion of the tarantass, now and then incoherently
-muttering in a guttural voice. He is deep in dreamland. I rise softly
-and look out into the night. A million stars are shining in the clear
-sky, and I can see that we are passing through a thick forest. A
-spring, a bound, and I could be among those trees. Once there, my
-guards can no more find me than the wolf that steals through the
-covert, for I am fleet of foot and eager for freedom. But dressed in
-this convict costume, how long should I be able to keep my freedom? To
-regain Russia, I must follow the highroad, and the first soldier or
-gendarme I met would arrest me. True, I might throw away my capote,
-with its double ace, but I had no hat, and a bare-headed man would
-invite attention even more than one clad in the costume of a felon.
-Worse still, I had no arms. I could neither defend myself against wild
-animals nor kill game; and if I am compelled to take to the woods, game
-may be the only food I shall be able to procure.
-
-No; I must abandon the idea now, and watch for a more favorable
-opportunity hereafter. As I come reluctantly to this conclusion I
-remember—it seemed like an inspiration—that the gendarme has a hat on
-his head and a revolver by his side. Why not take them? He is still
-fast asleep, snoring, if possible, harder than ever. I shall never have
-such another chance. I will do it: two minutes more and then—freedom.
-
-I almost shout.
-
-Holding my breath, and trying to still the beatings of my heart, I
-creep close to the sleeping man, and lay my hand gently on the hat.
-He makes no sign, and the next moment the hat is under my capote. Now
-the revolver! I lay hold of the butt, and try to draw it from the
-gendarme's belt. It does not come out easily—I pull again—pull a second
-time, and am preparing to pull a third time, when the snoring suddenly
-ceases.
-
-Quick as thought, I shrink into my corner, breathe deeply and pretend
-to sleep. The gendarme rouses himself, mutters, and passes his hand
-over his head. Then he searches all about him, and, evidently alarmed
-by the loss of his hat, he sleeps no more.
-
-“Hallo, brother!” I say, “you seem to have lost your hat.”
-
-“I am afraid I have, sir,” he answers in a puzzled voice, at the same
-time scratching his head by way, probably, of keeping it warm.
-
-“You see what it is to sleep on the road, my friend! Suppose, now, I
-had slipped out of the carriage! Nothing would have been easier.”
-
-“Oh, but you never thought of such a thing, and I am sure you would not
-do it, sir.”
-
-“But why?” I ask.
-
-“Because I have done you no harm, and you do not want to get a poor
-fellow into trouble! You know yourself how severely gendarmes are dealt
-with who let their prisoners escape.”
-
-“Very well, brother, here is your hat which I found and hid—just to
-frighten you a bit.”
-
-Just then we reached another station, and the poor fellow as he put on
-his head-gear thanked me quite pathetically, as much for not running
-away as for restoring his property.
-
-
-THE CONVOY.
-
-At Krasnovarski we were put in prison again, and there remained
-several weeks, awaiting further orders as to our disposal, for,
-notwithstanding what we had been told at Kieff, there appeared to be
-some doubt touching the fate in store for us. At length came the final
-instructions. We were to march with the chain-gang of common prisoners
-to Irkoutsk. It was then that, as an expedient for avoiding penal
-servitude and eventually regaining my liberty, the idea of effecting an
-exchange first occurred to me. The device is one frequently practised
-among the outlaws of Siberia. This is the method of it:—Two prisoners
-make a bargain, whereby one of the contracting parties takes the name
-and certificate and assumes the crime of the other, and _vice versâ_.
-There is, in fact, a complete change of identities, and the one who
-gains by the exchange settles the difference by a money payment. The
-result is that the man condemned to hard labor becomes a Siberian
-settler, and the other takes his place at the mines or in gaol. The
-bargain may appear an unequal one, but a moneyless man will sometimes
-do a great deal for a small sum of ready cash—especially if he has a
-passion for gambling or drink—and there is always the possibility that,
-when the deceit is discovered, the more extreme penalty may not be
-enforced. In the meantime, moreover, the supposed political prisoner,
-who is generally of noble birth, enjoys a consideration and some
-material advantages which are denied to the common malefactor.
-
-During the long tramp of the chain gang these substitutions are
-effected without much difficulty. The escort being changed every two
-days, it is impossible for the members of it, in so short a time, to
-familiarize themselves with the names and condition of the ten or
-twelve score prisoners who compose the convoy. They can do no more than
-count heads, and when the officer in command of the party has delivered
-to his successor the same number of convicts, in each category, which
-he received from his predecessor, his task is fully acquitted. Whether
-they are the same persons he cannot undertake to say, and is never
-asked.
-
-On August 20, or thereabouts—I am not sure to a day—we were once more
-_en route_, this time on foot. From Krasnovarski the distance is 700
-English miles, and the journey, it was reckoned, would occupy about two
-months. I had thus ample time to make the acquaintance of my convict
-comrades and carry out the substitution.
-
-We were now put under an altogether different _régime_. Hitherto we had
-not been able to exchange a word with anybody. I saw about me only my
-fellow political convicts, and might speak, when occasion required, to
-none but my guards. Now we were allowed to communicate freely with each
-other, and with the rather mixed society of which we formed a part.
-The gang consisted of 170 persons of both sexes and of every class and
-age; from the babe in its mother's arms to the old man with snow-white
-hair. Most of them were peasants; yet several among us could claim the
-privileges of nobility. But the strength of the convoy diminished as we
-went on, for Krasnovarski is within the limits of Eastern Siberia, and
-several prisoners were left as colonists at the villages through which
-we passed.
-
-The escort consisted of an officer and thirty soldiers, armed with
-old-fashioned muskets. A detachment of three or four marched at the
-head of the column. The others marched at the side and were supposed to
-form a military chain. But it was so weak, relatively to its duties,
-as to be almost worthless, the convoy being increased to a portentous
-length by the baggage-wagons and the families of the prisoners who were
-following them into exile. After the baggage-wagons came two carriages
-occupied by gentlemen malefactors of the nobility, and three in which,
-when they were footsore, rode the political prisoners.
-
-About six o'clock in the evening the convoy generally reached the
-“half-stage,” a building in which we pass the night. After a march of
-two days, or of a full day, we had a day's rest at one of the buildings
-known as _étapes_, or stages. On these occasions the prisoners are
-ranged in front of the building and counted. If the count be right
-the gates are opened, and with cries of joy the weary wayfarers throw
-themselves into the court. Then, pushing and hustling, clanking their
-chains and cursing like demons, they fight their way into the house,
-struggling desperately for the best places. The first comers take
-possession of the benches; the others lie where they can. When all
-are inside the gates are closed, but the doors are not barred until
-nightfall.
-
-The “stage” is a small wooden barrack—with a large court, formed of
-palisades, in the rear—divided into several compartments, one of which
-is assigned to the nobles of the convoy; but like all the others it is
-far too little for its destined purpose. The prisoners are as closely
-packed as herrings in a barrel. A few only can find places on the
-benches. The others have to sleep on the damp and dirty floor. Next to
-the benches the most desirable spot is under them, for there it is a
-little cleaner and the sleepers are less likely to be disturbed than
-on the open floor.
-
-The struggle for places over, the barrack-yard becomes very lively.
-The prisoners are preparing the evening meal; some laying fires,
-others putting a few scanty morsels of food into a pot—for our fare is
-terribly meagre; others bringing water and making tea. After supper we
-are again counted, driven inside, and left there for the night. No one
-is allowed to go out for any purpose whatever; but as a substitute for
-latrines large wooden pails are placed in the corridor. The presence of
-these abominations among so many people in ill-ventilated rooms renders
-the air unutterably foul; its odor is something quite peculiar, as all
-who have had occasion to enter the prisoners' quarters at night, or,
-still worse, early in the morning, well know.
-
-In the same corridor, but at the other end, is the _maidan_, a sort of
-itinerant shop, which serves at the same time as a club and gambling
-saloon; for the prisoners are much given to play. This _maidan_ is an
-institution common to every Siberian convoy and gaol. The _markitant_,
-or keeper of it, is always a prisoner. The post, which is much coveted
-and very profitable, is sold to the highest bidder, and the proceeds
-of the sale, often considerable, are added to the common hoard. For
-one of the first proceedings of the prisoners is to form themselves
-into a society, which is a faithful reproduction of the rural _mir_.
-They elect a _starosta_, who also acts as general cashier, and appoint
-him an assistant. The authorities, on their part, always recognise
-this system of self-government, and acknowledge the authority of the
-_starosta_. All orders are communicated through him, and he makes all
-payments on behalf of the community. He acts, in short, as general
-intermediary between the prisoners and their custodians—bribes, when
-it is necessary, the agents of justice, and pays a regular tribute to
-the executioner, in consideration whereof that official is good enough,
-often at the risk of his own back, to wield his whip with all possible
-consideration for the feelings of his victim.
-
-The scene in the _markitant's_ den on a rest day was very queer, and,
-well painted, would make a striking picture: the players round the
-capote-covered table, as excited and as intent over their game as if
-they were playing for thousands of roubles instead of fractions of
-kopecs—the shouting and gesticulating onlookers, following with keenest
-interest the varying fortunes of the game—a ruined gambler bargaining
-with the _markitant_ for an advance on a coat, a pair of shoes, or an
-old watch—a convict asleep on the floor—another mending a rent in his
-clothes—a third hammering at his irons. He is widening the rings that
-shackle his legs, in order that he may slip them off when he is on the
-road—walking in irons not being precisely an amusement. The sentries
-and the officers cannot fail to hear the clang of the hammer, but the
-custom of removing irons while on the march is so common as to have the
-force of a recognised regulation, and is seldom, if ever, objected to
-by the commander of an escort.
-
-Day followed day with unvarying monotony, but every one brought us
-nearer to our destination, and though I had not yet ventured to
-effect an exchange, I never wavered in my resolution to escape on the
-first favorable opportunity. Almost every day we met vagabonds, as
-runaway convicts are called, making for Russia. Their dress, their
-closely cropped hair, and their general appearance left no doubt as
-to their quality. Yet neither the officer of the escort nor the local
-authorities paid the least attention to them, so common are fugitive
-convicts on Siberian roads. When they met us they would draw on one
-side, sometimes saluting the officer. I have known old friends meet in
-this way.
-
-“Hallo, Ivan Ivanovitch, how goes it?” would call out one of the tramps
-to a man whom he recognised in the chain gang.
-
-“Ah, is that you, Iliouschka?” would answer the other pleasantly.
-“What! have you become a vagabond[1] already?”
-
-“Yes, I am on the lookout for cheap lodgings; I dare say I shall soon
-get accommodated.”
-
-This in allusion to the certainty, sooner or later, of his recapture.
-
-Political prisoners on the march enjoy privileges which are denied
-to ordinary convicts. They are not fettered; they can, when so
-disposed, ride in the carriages which accompany the convoy, and they
-are allowed fifteen kopecs (threepence) a day for food. On the other
-hand, the orders in our regard given to the officers of the escort
-were exceedingly stringent; orders, however, which for the most part
-it was impossible to execute. For instance, they were enjoined to
-keep us always apart, and not let us on any account mix with the
-other prisoners. But the weakness of the escort, and, above all, the
-arrangement of the buildings at the _étapes_, or halting-places,
-rendered observance of this injunction so extremely difficult that it
-was seldom enforced.
-
-
-THE SUBSTITUTION.
-
-We were within fourteen days of Irkoutsk before I succeeded in
-effecting an exchange of identities with a convict condemned to simple
-exile. Many others followed my example. Of the 170 men who composed the
-convoy, not more than fifty were under sentence of penal servitude, and
-at least twenty of them obtained substitutes. So far as the prisoners
-were concerned, this was done quite openly; concealment, in fact, would
-have been impossible, even if it had been necessary—and it was not
-necessary; for so long as the convoy held together, and the communistic
-organisation endured, betrayal was not to be feared. The traitor would
-have died within a few hours of his treason by the hand of one of his
-comrades—and this all knew.
-
-My substitute, a peasant by origin and a burglar by profession, agreed
-to the exchange of identities in consideration of a sum of sixteen
-shillings in coin, a pair of boots and a flannel blouse. Two days
-before our arrival at the _étape_, where it was arranged to carry the
-agreement into effect, I pretended to have a bad toothache, bound up
-my face with a pocket-handkerchief, and at the half-way halting-place
-remained all the time on the bench that served for a bed, as if I were
-distracted with pain. This I did to hide my features from the soldiers
-of the escort, one of whom, sharper than his fellows, might otherwise
-possibly discover the stratagem. The risk was too great, my longing for
-liberty too intense, to permit me to neglect a single precaution.
-
-Exchanges were most easily effected at the principal halting-places
-because the escort was changed there. Among the common prisoners
-the transaction was conducted in the simplest way imaginable. At
-the roll-call the contracting parties answered respectively to each
-other's name, took each other's places, and the thing was done. In
-the case of a political prisoner under special surveillance, just
-then very stringent, the operation entailed greater risk and demanded
-more care. I arranged with my substitute that the moment we arrived at
-the _étape_ in question, he should follow me to an obscure corner of
-the barrack-yard—to speak plainly, to the latrine. The plan succeeded
-to admiration. In a few minutes we had exchanged dresses. Pavlov,
-my burglar friend, was transformed into a political prisoner of the
-nobility, and I became a common malefactor in irons. Though in face as
-unlike as possible, we were about the same height and build, and, at a
-distance, might easily be mistaken one for another.
-
-The delivery of the gang to the new escort went off without difficulty.
-Pavlov lay on a bench with his face bound up. Nobody took any notice
-either of him or of me, and when the old escort marched away, we knew
-we were safe. The moment they were gone, I went into the common room
-and got myself shaved and my hair cut close to my head, so that my
-coiffure might resemble that of my new comrades.
-
-I wondered then, and I have often wondered since, at the ease with
-which my custodians were deceived in the matter of this substitution.
-On the register I was set down as a former medical student. I had,
-therefore, been a member of a university; Pavlov, on the other hand,
-was almost wholly illiterate. He could hardly open his mouth without
-betraying his origin and showing his ignorance. His appearance,
-moreover, was little in harmony with his new character. I, as a
-noble, had worn my hair and beard long, while his head was closely
-cropped, and he wore no beard at all. How could all this fail to excite
-suspicion? For three weeks, he acted as my substitute, and it never
-seems to have occurred either to the officers of the escort or the
-authorities of Irkoutsk that the _soi-disant_ Debagorio Mokrievitch
-was _not_ the real Simon Pure. But for the denunciation—of which I
-shall speak presently—I do not believe the secret ever would have been
-discovered, always supposing that Pavlov kept the compact, and he
-really behaved very well. One day an officer of the escort, seeing
-by the register that I was a medical student, consulted my substitute
-touching some ailment he had, and Pavlov, with an impudence that
-bordered on the sublime, gave him the benefit of his advice. He was
-fortunately not called upon to put his prescription in writing.
-
-It may be asked why I did not profit by the laxity of the escort
-during the first part of the journey to escape before we reached
-our destination. Because I should have been missed at the first
-halting-place, and by means of the telegraph and an active pursuit,
-immediately recaptured; I could have had only a few hours' start, and I
-wanted, at the least, several days.
-
-After the substitution, I marched as a common felon on foot, carrying
-my irons; my allowance was reduced to twopence a-day, while Pavlov had
-threepence, and could vary the monotony of the way by riding in one of
-the carriages provided for the political prisoners.
-
-About October 20, 1879, we reached Irkoutsk, where we were to be
-received and inspected by the higher authorities. Towards eight o'clock
-in the evening, we entered the central prison and were taken into
-a large room with three doors and two exits. One of these was open
-and led into an adjoining room, where the inspection took place. Our
-starosta standing on the doorstep, called the prisoners one by one,
-and each, as he was summoned, went into the room, carrying with him
-his poor belongings, in order that it might be ascertained if he still
-possessed the articles given him by the Crown. This done, he passed on
-into a further apartment, where the prisoners were to be quartered for
-the night.
-
-At length came my turn.
-
-“Pavlov!” shouts the starosta.
-
-“Here,” I answered, and, taking up my bag, I enter the audience
-chamber, and find myself in the presence of several important-looking
-functionaries, sitting at a big table covered with registers.
-
-“Paul Pavlov?” says the presiding councillor, and then, after favoring
-me with a fugitive glance, he bends once more over his books.
-
-“Yes, your nobleness,” I reply, doing my best to speak and look like a
-peasant prisoner.
-
-“For what crime were you judged?”
-
-“For burglary, your nobleness.”
-
-“Are the effects given you by the Government all in order?”
-
-“They are, your nobleness.”
-
-“Two shirts, two pairs of drawers, woollen trousers, great coat,
-pelisse, a pair of boots, leg irons?” enumerated the councillor, in a
-rapid, monotonous voice.
-
-As each article is named, I say, “It is here,” and during the
-interrogation an obscure personage fumbles in my bag to verify my
-statement.
-
-This concluded the inspection, and after surrendering my fetters, which
-I removed without the help of a blacksmith, I passed into the apartment
-where I was to remain as a prisoner until they took me to the village
-where I had to be interned as a settler.
-
-I had not long to wait. The fifth day after our arrival, the remaining
-vagabonds of the gang were sent further east, and there remained only
-the ordinary exiles and prisoners under sentence of penal servitude. An
-important consequence of the departure of the vagabonds—old offenders
-who formed the bulk of the convoy—was the break-up of our communistic
-organisation, and the subsequent revelation of my secret.
-
-On the following day the involuntary colonists, of whom I was now one,
-started for our final destination, a village some forty miles from
-Irkoutsk, and on November 1st, we arrived at Talminsky, the end of our
-long journey. For the last time we were paraded and counted in the
-court of the _volost_. Then, after our effects had been again examined,
-we received our registers and were handed over to the clerk of the
-village, who had orders to find us quarters.
-
-The escort went one way, we went another, and we walked through the
-streets of the great village free men—within the limits assigned to us.
-
-
-THE FLIGHT.
-
-If I meant to escape I had no time to lose. At any moment I was liable
-to be betrayed. My comrades among the colonists, as also the prisoners
-we had left at Irkoutsk, all knew who I was. Any of these, by turning
-traitor, could earn a considerable reward; even a slight indiscretion
-might reveal the secret, and the disclosure of my identity to the
-authorities would lead to my immediate arrest. It was therefore
-necessary to go at once; yet I could not start on so long a journey
-without money, and I did not possess a kopeck. So I sold my great coat,
-my woollen trousers, and my gloves, for a rouble and a half. It was
-not much. After this depletion of my wardrobe, my costume left a good
-deal to be desired. A regulation pelisse, a fur cap, thin trousers,
-and ordinary underclothing, did not afford much protection against
-the intense cold of a Siberian winter. But I dared not hesitate. On
-November 2d, at ten o'clock, before noon, I set out from the village.
-The morning though cold was clear and quiet. I made no attempt to hide
-my quality; it was evident to everybody. My yellow regulation pelisse
-and closely cropped head showed clearly enough that I was a vagabond.
-But this gave me little anxiety; I had observed that in Eastern Siberia
-vagabonds were neither arrested nor questioned. It would be the same
-with me, I thought, and in this expectation I was not disappointed.
-My journey as a vagabond lasted about eight days, and I suffered much
-both from hunger and cold. In the valleys—for the country was hilly—I
-often experienced a cold so intense that I thought my limbs would
-freeze as I walked. Sometimes the valley bottoms were filled with a
-thick fog. Going through one of those fogs was like taking a bath of
-pins and needles—so keen was the cold—and, though on these occasions I
-always ran, one of my knees became frost-bitten—my pelisse not being
-long enough to cover my legs, which were clothed only in light cotton
-pantaloons.
-
-I generally passed the night in the bath-room of some peasant after the
-manner of vagabonds, for nobody in Siberia, however poor, is without a
-vapor bath, the vapor being produced by pouring water on red-hot stones.
-
-One afternoon, just as night was closing in, I reached a village
-and sought a lodging. I had heard from the experienced vagabonds of
-the gang that it was always better to ask charity or help from the
-poor than from the well-to-do. Never, they said, when you are on the
-tramp, knock at the door of a rich man's house. Go rather to the most
-wretched cabin you can find.
-
-This rule, based on a wide experience and a profound truth—for the
-poor naturally receive more sympathy from the poor than from the
-well-to-do—I deemed it expedient to follow. At the end of the village
-in question I found a cabin of unprepossessing aspect, and, concluding
-that it was exactly what I wanted, I went in, making, as I entered, the
-sign of the cross before the picture of a saint, as is the custom in
-Russia. Then I greeted my hosts.
-
-“Good day, my boy,” answered the peasant, an old man with a long white
-beard, in a kindly voice.
-
-“Could you sell me a bit of bread?” I asked; for though I travelled as
-a vagabond I did not like to beg after the manner of vagabonds, and
-always tendered a piece of money for what I received.
-
-“Yes, you can have bread,” said the old man, handing me a loaf.
-
-“Thank you, father; and may I pass the night in your house?”
-
-“I fear that is impossible, my boy. You are a vagabond, aren't you?
-They are very severe just now about vagabonds, the police are. If you
-take in a man without a passport you may get fined. Where do you come
-from, my boy?”
-
-“From the convoy.”
-
-“I thought so. I was right then. You are a vagabond.”
-
-I answered with a supplicatory gesture, and I dare say I looked cold
-enough and wretched enough to move the compassion of a harder-hearted
-man than this good old peasant.
-
-“You fellows generally sleep in the baths, don't you?” he said, after a
-pause. “Well, go into mine if you like; I can put you nowhere else. And
-I have heated it to-day; you will be warm.”
-
-So picking up my loaf, and laying on the table a few kopecks—nobody
-ever thinks of bargaining with a wanderer—I leave the house. The bath
-is hard by, and on going in I find that it is quite warm, as the old
-man had said. The heat is so great, indeed, that I can dispense with my
-pelisse.
-
-These peasants' bath-rooms are seldom supplied with a chimney. The
-stones are heated in the middle of the room, and the smoke, after
-blackening the rafters, finds its way out as best it can. There were no
-windows, and, in order to look round, I had to light one of the tallow
-candles which I carried in my bag. They were very useful for rubbing my
-feet with after a long march. I was in no hurry to sleep, and before
-lying down on the wooden bench which was to be my couch I had a little
-operation to perform. My yellow pelisse proclaimed my quality a long
-way off. That was an inconvenience, and in certain easily conceivable
-circumstances, might lead to awkward consequences. I meant to change
-its color. This I did by smearing the garment with a mixture composed
-of tallow from my candles and soot from the wall. It was not a very
-fast black perhaps, but it answered the purpose. Henceforth, nobody,
-without a pretty close inspection, would perceive that I was a vagabond
-on the tramp.
-
-This done, I lay down on the bench and was soon fast asleep. I must
-have slept an hour or two when I was wakened by the creaking of the
-door, and I heard the heavy steps of a man entering the room. As it
-was pitch dark I could not see him, and I did not think it worth while
-to strike a light. The newcomer seemed to be of the same opinion, for,
-without speaking a word, he groped his way towards my bench and laid
-down beside me. Though he touched my body he made no remark, and a
-few moments later I could tell by his regular breathing that he was
-fast asleep. Then I slept again, and did not open my eyes until I was
-wakened by the cold—for the bath-room had lost all its warmth, and the
-temperature was far below freezing-point. So I rose from my couch,
-donned my pelisse, and, though the sun had not yet risen, I left my
-snoring bed-fellow, whom I never saw, to his slumbers and resumed my
-journey.
-
-My plan was to reach the house of a friend about 150 miles from the
-village where I had been interned. To traverse a region as large as
-Europe without money was quite out of the question, and even if I had
-succeeded in doing so it would have been impossible, without papers,
-either to cross the frontier or leave the country. It is hardly
-necessary to say that I took care never to ask my way. That would have
-been a great imprudence. And there was little need, for the roads in
-Siberia are so few that it is scarcely possible to go wrong. According
-to my reckoning I was still about thirty miles from my destination.
-Shortly after leaving the village I saw, near a little cabin by the
-road-side, a man who eyed me keenly. From his short hair and stubby
-beard I guessed that he was a recently arrived colonist who had come
-into the country with a chain gang.
-
-“Won't you come in, brother,” he said, “and rest yourself and take a
-cup of tea?”
-
-I accepted the invitation with pleasure, for I had not broken my fast.
-We entered the cabin together. It was very small, and on a brick hearth
-was sitting a woman, probably the exile's wife. My host asked me to
-take a seat and began to prepare the samovar, an appliance which is
-found in every Siberian cottage. As we drank we talked.
-
-“Is it a long time since you left the gang?” asked my entertainer.
-
-“Quite lately. I belonged to convoy number four.”
-
-“You have turned vagabond then, brother?”
-
-“Yes, what is the good of staying here?”
-
-“You are quite right,” returned the exile bitterly. “The country is
-abominable. I shall do the same thing myself in a month or two. Which
-way do you go—by the Angara road?”
-
-I gave him an itinerary, though not exactly the one I meant to follow.
-
-“I know all these places well,” observed my host. “But do you know you
-will have to be prudent. The authorities hereabouts are very vicious
-just now. They arrest every wayfarer they see. You must look out, my
-brother, or they will arrest you.”
-
-“What would you advise me to do, then,” I asked, greatly alarmed at
-this news.
-
-“I will tell you, brother; listen!”
-
-And then he gave me very valuable information; described the villages
-through or near which I should have to pass, indicating at the same
-time those that were dangerous and the footpaths by which I might avoid
-them. He gave me the names and described the dwellings of the peasants
-with whom I might lodge, and, in a word, told me everything which it
-imported a wandering outlaw to know.
-
-“But why,” I asked, “are the police so active just now? I thought this
-road was one of the safest for vagabonds in the whole country.”
-
-“God knows. Perhaps they have found a body somewhere and are looking
-for the murderer.”
-
-I made no remark, but I thought it was much more likely that they had
-discovered my flight and were looking for me. And so it proved.
-
-After finishing the tea we talked a little longer, and as I took my
-leave I thanked my host warmly for his hospitality and information.
-
-When I reached the last village before that at which lived my friend,
-I was quite overcome with fatigue, and faint with hunger and cold;
-but I counted on a long and quiet rest in the cottage of a peasant
-woman whose address had been given me by the friendly exile. It was
-at the extremity of the village, and to get thither I had to pass the
-headquarters of the communal authorities. In the light of the exile's
-warning, and my own fears, this seemed a sufficiently dangerous
-enterprise. Albeit I put on an air of indifference and took care not to
-increase my pace, yet I could not avoid an occasional backward glance
-to see if I was being followed. No one, however, seemed to notice
-me, and I reached my destination without receiving any unpleasant
-attentions. The peasant woman welcomed me kindly, if not very
-effusively. But she was a dear good soul, gave me of her best, and let
-me lie on a bench and pass the night in her house.
-
-About two hours before sunrise my hostess came into the kitchen and
-began to busy herself with preparations for breakfast. But I remained
-stretched on my bench; the cottage was warm. I felt very comfortable,
-and I saw no reason for hurry. The day was before me, and I had not far
-to go. So I turned round on my wooden couch and was just sinking into
-a second slumber when I heard the sound of bells, such as post-chaises
-and mail-carts in Russia invariably carry.
-
-“Bells!” I cried, starting up. “Does a mail-coach run on this road?”
-
-“No,” answered the peasant, “we have no mail-coach here; it is probably
-a private carriage which is passing through the village.”
-
-Meanwhile the bells came nearer; then the sound suddenly ceased, as it
-seemed not far from the cottage. I did not like this at all. What could
-it mean?
-
-“Would you mind going to see what or whose carriage it is?” I said. She
-went, and as the door closed behind her, I jumped off my bench and put
-on my clothes.
-
-In a few minutes she was back with the news that the carriage belonged
-to the gendarmes, and that they were questioning the _starosta_ and the
-clerk.
-
-“The gendarmes!” I exclaimed, “who says so—where are they from?”
-
-“From Irkoutsk. It is the coachman himself who told me. He thinks they
-are after a political runaway.”
-
-“In that case, I had better be going,” I said, laughing. “They
-may perhaps think I am the man. Now look here—if they ask you any
-questions, know nothing. If you do it may be worse for you; they may
-make you pay a fine. Good-by” (putting the last of my kopecks on the
-table).
-
-“Good-by,” answered my hostess; “don't be uneasy. I shall not say a
-word.” She was a worthy woman, and a friend in need, that old peasant.
-
-I went out. It was still dark, and I might creep through the village
-without being seen. The last of the houses passed, I ran at the top
-of my speed, for I felt sure that the pursuers were at my heels, and
-the possibility of being retaken enraged me almost past endurance. I
-had been denounced shortly after leaving the settlement, of that there
-could be no doubt. But how had the police managed to trace me so soon?
-I had been very careful, neglected no conceivable precaution, given
-misleading answers to all who questioned me about my past movements
-and future plans. I had made long _detours_ to avoid the larger
-villages, and during the latter part of my journey put up only with
-the most trusted friends of vagabond wanderers. Yet the gendarmes
-had followed me step by step to my very last resting-place, and but
-for the friendly warning of the bells I should certainly have been
-recaptured, for I could not have left the village by daylight without
-being seen. Even now I was in imminent danger; my safety absolutely
-depended on my reaching my friend's house at once, and lying a long
-time in hiding. Though I had never been there, I knew the place so
-well by description—its situation and appearance were so vividly
-impressed on my mind—that I could find it, even in the dark, without
-asking a question. It was only about seven miles from the village I
-had just left. But how could I get thither unperceived? For if I was
-seen by a single person entering my friend's house, it might be the
-ruin of us both. Something must be decided on the instant. Day was
-dawning, the gendarmes were behind me, and by the barking of the dogs
-I reckoned that the village where dwelt my friend could not be more
-than two miles away. I looked round. On one side of the road were
-open fields; on the other thick brushwood grew. As yet, I had not
-met a soul,—nobody could tell the gendarmes in which direction I had
-gone—but it was now no longer dark, and if I went on, I might encounter
-a peasant or a wayfarer any moment. Only one thing could be done; I
-must hide somewhere—even at the risk of being frozen stiff—and remain
-hidden until sundown, when I might perchance gain my friend's house
-unperceived. Among the bushes! Yes, that was the place, I could lie
-_perdu_ there all day. But just as I was about to put this plan into
-execution, another thought came to trouble me. How about my footsteps?
-Fresh snow had fallen in the night, and the police could follow me to
-my hiding-place as easily as a hound tracks a deer to its lair. And
-then I bethought me of an ingenious artifice, about which I had read
-in some romance. Turning my face to the road I walked backward toward
-the bushes, taking care at every step to make a distinct impression
-on the snow. It was now quite daylight, and a little way off I could
-see two summer cabins of the Buriats—in winter always empty. Thither I
-went, always backward, and entering one of the cabins remained there
-the whole day and far into the night. When I thought all the peasants
-would be indoors, I stole quietly out, and going stealthily and with
-many precautions to my friend's house, knocked in fear and misgiving at
-his door.
-
-To my great relief he opened it himself.
-
-“I should not have recognised you, if I had not just heard all your
-history,” he said, after we had exchanged greetings.
-
-“I am very curious to see myself,” I returned, approaching a mirror
-which hung on the wall. “I have not seen a looking-glass since my
-arrest.”
-
-I was so much altered that I hardly knew myself. I saw before me the
-reflection of a wild, strange, haggard face, and I could almost have
-believed I was somebody else.
-
-“When did you hear of my flight?” I asked.
-
-“To-day. There has been quite an inquest here. The gendarmes questioned
-everybody and searched every house. They followed you step by step to
-the last village. They found out where you passed the night, and then
-they seem to have lost the scent entirely. Where have you been?”
-
-I told him.
-
-“Did anybody see you come here?”
-
-“Not a soul.”
-
-“Good. All the same, you must not stay here an hour longer than we can
-help. It would be too dangerous. The police are baffled; but they have
-by no means given up the quest, and as likely as not will be here again
-to-morrow. You must not sleep here.”
-
-“Where then?”
-
-“At my farm. But first of all you must change your skin.”
-
-As he spoke, my friend in need opened a cupboard, and took therefrom
-some garments in which, when I had arrayed myself and had a good wash,
-I looked and felt like a new man.
-
-“Is your farm far from here?” I asked, as we sat down to supper.
-
-“About twenty-five versts (fifteen miles), in the depth of the
-forest, far from any highway. Hunting parties from Irkoutsk visit us
-there sometimes. Your coming will, therefore, be no surprise for the
-servants. It is true your hair is just a little short (looking at my
-head); but that is nothing. You have had typhoid fever, and are going
-to recruit your strength in the forest. You look haggard enough to have
-had three fevers.”
-
-An hour later we were _en route_, my friend, who had lived many years
-in the country, himself taking the reins, and he contrived matters so
-well that nobody in the house knew either of my coming or my going. The
-police were thrown completely off the scent.
-
-
-LIBERTY.
-
-As I learnt subsequently, my identity and my stratagem were revealed
-to the authorities by one of my comrades of the convoy shortly after I
-left Irkoutsk. But when the gendarmes went to the village of Talminsky,
-I had already vanished. Every effort was, however, made to retake
-me, the quest being kept up night and day for six weeks. Then it was
-rumored that a body found in the forest had been identified as mine,
-and that I had perished of hunger. According to another story, I had
-been arrested at Nijni Oudinsk, and was being brought back to Irkoutsk.
-Among the vagabonds who at this time were captured right and left on
-the high roads throughout the province, were several whom it pleased to
-call themselves by my name. The deceit was naturally soon detected, but
-while it lasted the deceivers enjoyed certain advantages, which helped
-to render their detention tolerable. Instead of walking they rode in
-carriages, and were accompanied by an escort, and being regarded as
-important prisoners, they were both better fed and better treated than
-common malefactors, while their audacity rendered them highly popular
-with their vagabond and convict comrades. There were at one time no
-fewer than four false Debagorio Mokrievitches in the jail of Irkoutsk.
-The police sought me with great diligence among the political exiles
-of the province; a most stupid proceeding on their part, for to take
-refuge with the politicals would have been putting my head in the
-lion's mouth.
-
-Three other men who about the same time attempted to escape were all
-recaptured.
-
-I stayed in Siberia a year, making during that time several journeys to
-the eastward of Irkoutsk. At length the police having abandoned all
-hope of finding me, I resolved to leave the country. A passport being
-absolutely necessary, I borrowed the name and obtained the papers of a
-gentleman recently deceased—Ivan Alexandrovitch Selivanoff. It was in
-the winter of 1880 that I set out on my long journey of 3,600 miles. I
-travelled post, by way of Irkoutsk, Krasnoiarsk and Tomsk—towns through
-which, a twelvemonth before, I had passed as a prisoner. Rather a bold
-undertaking in the circumstances; but as I possessed an itinerary-card
-signed by the governor of the province, giving me the right to relays
-of horses, I ran no great danger, and left the home of my hospitable
-friend with an easy mind.
-
-During the journey I met from time to time gangs of prisoners on the
-way from Russia to Irkoutsk. The clanking of the irons, the yellow
-pelisses, the worn faces, the weary walk, and the shorn heads of these
-unfortunates—how familiar they all were, and how the sight of them
-thrilled me to the soul! And behind the chain gang came the wagons of
-the political prisoners, among whom, more than once, I recognized the
-face of a dear friend. But instead of jumping from my carriage and
-folding the poor fellows in my arms, I had to look the other way!
-
-All went well with me, but once I had a terribly narrow escape of
-falling a second time into the toils. It so chanced that I passed
-through the province of Tobolsk in company with a tchinovnik
-(government employé), whose acquaintance I had made on the road, a
-big-paunched, rosy-cheeked fellow, with merry eyes and a mellow voice;
-and, being on his way home after a long absence, in high good humor and
-full of fun. Once at the end of a long day's journey, we arrived about
-midnight at a town in the neighborhood of Tobolsk, and, being tired and
-sleepy, resolved to pass the rest of the night there. So we went into
-the travellers' room, ordered tea, and handed our itinerary cards to
-the starosta of the station, in order that he might make the necessary
-entries in the travellers' book. Before going to the sleeping room we
-requested that the horses might be ready at seven o'clock next morning.
-
-I slept the sleep of the just, rose betimes, and called for the
-starosta.
-
-“Are the horses ready?” I asked. “And be good enough to bring hither
-our itinerary-cards.”
-
-“The station-master will himself bring your itinerary-cards, and as for
-the horses they are already yoked up.”
-
-Half-an-hour later the station-master (otherwise director), came into
-our room, holding in his hand the itinerary-cards.
-
-“I am sorry to trouble you,” he said politely; “but I should like to
-know which of you young gentlemen is Ivan Alexandrovitch Selivanoff?”
-
-“At your service sir,” I answered, stepping forward.
-
-The station-master looked at me with a ludicrous expression of
-bewilderment and surprise.
-
-“A thousand pardons,” he said at length, with a low bow. “But really—I
-don't quite understand. The fact is, I knew Mr. Selivanoff, and here I
-see the same surname and Christian name; the name of the father is also
-the same, the tchin (rank) likewise! Yet I was told he had died—more
-than a year ago—but when I saw his name on the card I thought the news
-must be false, and I came to assure myself. I see that I am mistaken.
-A thousand pardons, sir, a thousand pardons,” and again he saluted me
-still more profoundly than before.
-
-I felt as if the ground were opening under my feet, and was thinking
-how on earth I should get out of the scrape, when my companion
-came—without knowing it—to the rescue.
-
-“What a capital joke!” he shouted, clapping me on the back, and
-laughing so that he could hardly speak. “One might suppose that the
-worthy director takes you for an escaped prisoner with a dead man's
-passport. Ha, ha, ha, what a capital joke to be sure!”
-
-And holding his big belly with both hands, he balanced himself first on
-one foot and then the other, laughing the while, until he could hardly
-stand.
-
-“You are quite right,” I said, also laughing, though with considerable
-effort. “It is really an excellent joke. But seriously (turning to
-the station-master), the thing is easily explained. In the part I
-come from the Selivanoffs are as plentiful as blackberries. The late
-Ivan Alexandrovitch, your friend, and I were kinsmen, and had a great
-affection for each other; the name is so common in the province that I
-could introduce you to a dozen of my namesakes any day.”
-
-The station-master seemed satisfied with this explanation. At any rate,
-he made no objection to our departure, and shortly afterwards we were
-once more _en route_. But my companion, the tchinovnik did not cease
-laughing for a long time. “To take you for a fugitive convict with a
-false passport!” he would say “it is really too good,” and whenever he
-remembered the incident he would laugh as if he never meant to stop.
-I remembered it, as may be supposed, with very different feelings.
-The escape was a very narrow one, and showed me how much I was still
-at the mercy of the slightest mishap. But this proved to be my last
-adventure and my last peril. In May, 1881, I reached Geneva, and felt
-that I was at last really free.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As most stories of Russian revolutionary life have necessarily, if they
-be true, a tragical termination, readers of the foregoing narrative
-may be pleased to know that M. Mokrievitch is still in a land where he
-feels really free. Though one of the heroes of Russian liberty he has
-not yet become one of its martyrs. But the time may come when he, as
-many other fugitives have done, will return to the volcanic soil of
-his native country, there to take part in the struggle to death which,
-though unseen, goes always on, and must continue without truce and
-without surcease until the sun of Freedom shall dawn in the Empire of
-the Night.—_Contemporary Review._
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] As vagabonds are frequently mentioned in this narrative, and
-Mokrievitch himself became one of them, it may be well to explain
-that the wanderers so designated are simply tramps unfurnished with
-passports. A double stream of these waifs is always on the move through
-Siberia—one towards the east, the other towards the west—the latter
-free, the former generally in bonds. Many of the involuntary settlers
-either do not take kindly to work, or find their lot intolerable, and
-so make off on the first opportunity, begging their way, and living on
-the charity of the peasants, who never refuse a destitute traveller a
-crust of bread and a night's lodging. Not a few of these wanderers sink
-under the hardships to which they are exposed, or freeze to death in
-the forests, and the survivors are nearly always arrested before they
-reach the frontier of European Russia; but they cause the police a
-world of trouble. Having no papers, they are able to give false names,
-and deny being fugitive transports—which they almost invariably do.
-There is then nothing for it but to write to whatever address a man may
-give—generally some remote village—and inquire if he is known there.
-Should the answer be in the negative, the fact is taken as proof of the
-paperless one's guilt, and he is sent back in chains to the interior
-of Siberia. As likely as not, however, it will be in the affirmative,
-for there prevails among these outcasts a strange yet regular trade in
-what the vagabonds call “nests.” For instance, Ivan Ivanovitch, being
-in want of money, sells to Peter Iliouschka, who has a few kopecs to
-spare, the name and address of some mujik of his acquaintance, who
-long ago left his native village for parts unknown—or, perhaps, his
-own name and address. This is Peter's nest, and when he falls into
-the hands of the police he tells them he is Paul Lubovitch, from, let
-us say, Teteriwino, in the government of Koursk. On this, a missive
-is sent to the _starosta_ of Teteriwino, who replies, in due course,
-to the effect that the village did once possess a Paul Lubovitch, but
-whether the person in question be the same man he is unable to say.
-The next proceeding is to send the _soi-disant_ Paul to Teteriwino for
-identification. This proceeding naturally results in the detection of
-the imposture, whereupon our friend Peter is condemned to a new term of
-exile, and sent back whence he came.
-
-
-
-
-COLERIDGE AS A SPIRITUAL THINKER.
-
-BY PRINCIPAL TULLOCH.
-
-
-Mr. Traill's recent volume has recalled the poet-philosopher who
-died just fifty years ago, leaving a strongly marked but indefinite
-impression upon the mind of his time. The volume has done something
-to renew and vivify the impression both in respect of Coleridge's
-poetry and criticism. His work as a critic has never, perhaps, been
-better or more completely exhibited. It is recognised generously in
-all its largeness and profundity, as well as delicacy and subtlety;
-and justice is especially done to his Shakesperian commentary, which
-in its richness, variety, felicity, combined with depth and acuteness,
-is absolutely unrivalled. But Mr. Traill cannot be said to have even
-attempted any estimate of Coleridge as a spiritual thinker. It may be
-questioned how far he has recognised that there is a spiritual side to
-all his thought, without which neither his poetry nor his criticism can
-be fully understood, cleverly as they may be judged.
-
-It is not only out of date, but outside of all intelligent judgment
-to quote at this time of day Mr. Carlyle's well-known caricature from
-his _Life of Sterling_, and put readers off with this as a “famous
-criticism.” We now know how to value utterances of this kind, and the
-unhappy spirit of detraction which lay beneath such wild and grotesque
-humors. Carlyle will always remain an artist in epithets—but few will
-turn to him for an intelligent or comprehensive estimate of any great
-name of his own or of recent time.
-
-We propose to look at Coleridge for a little as a religious thinker,
-and to ask what is the meaning and value of his work in this respect
-now that we can calmly and fully judge it. If Coleridge was anything,
-he was not only in his own view, as Mr. Traill admits, but in the
-view of his generation, a religious philosopher. It is not only the
-testimony of men like Hare, or Sterling, or Maurice, or even Cardinal
-Newman, but of John Stuart Mill, that his teaching awakened and
-freshened all contemporary thought. He was recognised with all his
-faults as a truly great thinker, who raised the mind of the time and
-gave it new and wide impulses. This judgment we feel sure will yet
-verify itself. If English literature ever regains the higher tone of
-our earlier national life—the tone of Hooker and Milton and Jeremy
-Taylor—Coleridge will be again acknowledged, in Julius Hare's words, as
-“a true sovereign of English thought.” He will take rank in the same
-line of spiritual genius. He has the same elevation of feeling, the
-same profound grasp of moral and spiritual ideas, the same wide range
-of vision. He has, in short, the same love of wisdom, the same insight,
-the same largeness—never despising nature or art, or literature, for
-the sake of religion, still less ever despising religion for the sake
-of culture. In reading over Coleridge's prose works again, returning
-to them after a long past familiarity, I am particularly struck by
-their massive and large intellectuality, akin to our older Elizabethan
-literature. There is everywhere the play of great power—of imagination
-as well as reason—of spiritual perception as well as logical subtlety.
-
-To speak of Coleridge in this manner as a great spiritual power, an
-eminently healthy writer in the higher regions of thought, may seem
-absurd to some who think mainly of his life, and of the fatal failure
-which characterised it. It is the shadow of this failure of manliness
-in his conduct, as in that of his life-long friend, Charles Lamb, which
-no doubt prompted the great genius who carried manliness, if little
-sweetness, from his Annandale home, to paint both the one and the other
-in such darkened colors. We have not a word to say on behalf of the
-failings of either. They were deplorable and unworthy; but it is the
-fact, notwithstanding, that the mind of both retained a serenity and
-a certain touch of respectfulness which are lacking in their great
-Scottish contemporary. They were both finer-edged than Carlyle. They
-inherited a more delicate and polite personal culture; and delicacy can
-never be far distant from true manliness. Neither of them could have
-written of the treasures of old religion as Carlyle did in his _Life
-of Sterling_. Whether they accepted for themselves those treasures or
-not, they would have spared the tender faith of others and respected
-an ancient ideal. And this is the higher attitude. Nothing which has
-ever deeply interested humanity or profoundly moved it, is treated
-with contempt by a good and wise man. It may call for and deserve
-rejection, but never insult. Unhappily this attitude of mind, reserved,
-as well as critical, reverent as well as bold, has been conspicuously
-absent in some of the most powerful and best known writers of our era.
-
-There is a striking contrast between the career of Coleridge and that
-of his friend Wordsworth. Fellows in the opening of their poetic
-course, they soon diverged widely. With a true instinct, Wordsworth
-devoted himself, in quietness and seclusion, to the cultivation
-of his poetic faculty. He left aside the world of politics and of
-religious thought, strongly moved as he had been by the interests of
-both. It may be said that Wordsworth continued a religious thinker
-as well as poet all his life. And to some extent this is true. The
-“Wanderer” is a preacher and not only a singer. He goes to the heart
-of religion, and lays again its foundations in the natural instincts
-of man. But while Wordsworth's poetry was instinct with a new life of
-religious feeling, and may be said to have given a new radiancy to its
-central principles,[2] it did not initiate any movement in Christian
-thought. In religious opinion Wordsworth soon fell back upon, if he
-ever consciously departed from, the old line of Anglican traditions.
-The vague Pantheism of the _Excursion_ implies rather a lack of
-distinctive dogma than any fresh insight into religious problems or
-capacity of co-ordinating them in a new manner. And so soon as definite
-religious conceptions came to the poet, the Church in her customary
-theology became a satisfactory refuge. The _Ecclesiastical Sonnets_
-mark this definite stage in his spiritual development. Wordsworth
-did for the religious thought of his time something more and better
-perhaps than giving it any definite impulse. While leaving it in
-the old channels, he gave it a richer and deeper volume. He showed
-with what vital affinity religion cleaves to humanity, in all its
-true and simple phases, when uncontaminated by conceit or frivolity.
-Nature and man alike were to him essentially religious, or only
-conceivable as the outcome of a Spirit of life, “the Soul of all the
-worlds.”[3] Wordsworth, in short, remained as he began, a poet of a
-deeply religious spirit. But he did not enter the domain of theological
-speculation or attempt to give any new direction to it.
-
-In all this Coleridge is his counterpart. He may be said to have
-abandoned poetry just when Wordsworth in his retirement at Grasmere
-(1799) was consecrating his life to it. Whether it be true, according
-to De Quincey, that Coleridge's poetical power was killed by the habit
-of opium-eating, it is certainly true that the harp of Quantock[4]
-was never again struck save for a brief moment. The poet Coleridge
-passed into the lecturer and the poetical and literary critic, and
-then, during the final period of his life, from 1816 to 1834, into
-the philosopher and theologian. It is to this latter period of his
-life in the main that his higher prose writings belong, and especially
-the well-known _Aids to Reflection_ which—disparaged as it is by Mr.
-Traill—may be said to contain, as his disciples have always held to
-contain, all the finer substance of his spiritual thought. It is true
-that it is defective as a literary composition. We are even disposed to
-allow that it has “less charm of thought, less beauty of style,” and
-in some respects even less “power of effective statement,”[5] than is
-common with Coleridge; but withal it is his highest work. These very
-defects only serve to bring out the more its strong points, when we
-consider the wonderful hold the book has taken of many minds, and how
-it has been the subject of elaborate commentary.[6] It is a book, we
-may at the same time say, which none but a thinker on divine things
-will ever like. All such thinkers have prized it greatly. To many such
-it has given a new force of religious insight; for its time, beyond all
-doubt, it created a real epoch in Christian thought. It had life in it;
-and the living seed, scattered and desultory as it was, brought forth
-fruit in many minds.
-
-What, then, were its main contributions to religious thought, and in
-what respects generally is Coleridge to be reckoned a spiritual power?
-
-(1.) First, and chiefly, in the _Aids to Reflection_, Coleridge may
-be said to have transformed and renewed the current ideas of his
-time about religion. He was, we know, a man of many ambitions never
-realised; but of all his ambitions, the most persistent was that of
-laying anew the foundations of spiritual philosophy. This was “the
-great work” to which he frequently alluded as having given “the
-preparation of more than twenty years of his life.”[7] Like other
-great tasks projected by him, it was very imperfectly accomplished;
-and there will always be those in consequence who fail to understand
-his influence as a leader of thought. We are certainly not bound to
-take Coleridge at his own value, nor to attach the same importance as
-he did to some of his speculations. No one, indeed, knew better than
-Coleridge himself that there was nothing new in his Platonic Realism.
-It was merely a restoration of the old religious metaphysic which had
-preceded “the mechanical systems,” that became dominant in the reign
-of Charles the Second. He himself constantly claims to do nothing
-more than re-assert the principles of Hooker, of Henry More, of John
-Smith, and Leighton, all of whom he speaks of as “Platonizing divines!”
-But the religious teaching of Coleridge came upon his generation as
-a new breath, not merely or mainly because he revived these ancient
-principles, but because he vitalised anew their application to
-Christianity, so as to transform it from a mere creed, or collection of
-articles, into a living mode of thought, embracing all human activity.
-Coleridge was no mere metaphysician. He was a great interpreter of
-spiritual facts—a student of spiritual life, quickened by a peculiarly
-vivid and painful experience; and he saw in Christianity, rightly
-conceived, at once the true explanation of the facts of our spiritual
-being and the true remedy for their disorder. He brought human nature,
-not merely on one side, but all sides, once more near to Christianity,
-so as to find in it not merely a means of salvation in any limited
-evangelical sense, but the highest Truth and Health—a perfect
-philosophy. His main power lies in this subjective direction, just as
-here it was that his age was most needing stimulus and guidance.
-
-The Evangelical School, with all its merits, had conceived of
-Christianity rather as something superadded the highest life of
-humanity than as the perfect development of that life; as a scheme
-for human salvation authenticated by miracles, and, so to speak,
-interpolated into human history rather than a divine philosophy,
-witnessing to itself from the beginning in all the higher phases of
-that history. And so Philosophy, and no less Literature, and Art, and
-Science, were conceived apart from religion. The world and the Church
-were not only antagonistic in the Biblical sense, as the embodiments
-of the Carnal and the Divine Spirit—which they must ever be; but they
-were, so to speak, severed portions of life divided by outward signs
-and badges: and those who joined the one or the other were supposed to
-be clearly marked off. All who know the writings of the Evangelical
-School of the eighteenth and earlier part of the nineteenth century,
-from the poetry of Cowper and the letters of his friend Newton, to the
-writings of Romaine, John Forster, and Wilberforce, and even Chalmers,
-will know how such commonplaces everywhere reappear in them. That they
-were associated with the most devout and beautiful lives, that they
-even served to foster a peculiar ardor of Christian feeling and love of
-God, cannot be disputed. But they were essentially narrow and false.
-They destroyed the largeness and unity of human experience. They not
-merely separated religion from art and philosophy, but they tended to
-separate it from morality.
-
-Coleridge's most distinctive work was to restore the broken harmony
-between reason and religion, by enlarging the conception of both, but
-of the latter especially,—by showing how man is essentially a religious
-being having a definite spiritual constitution, apart from which the
-very idea of religion becomes impossible. Religion is not, therefore,
-something brought to man, it is his highest education. Religion, he
-says, was designed “to improve the nature and the faculties of man, in
-order to the right governing of our actions, to the securing the peace
-and progress, eternal and internal, of individuals and communities.”
-Christianity is in the highest degree adapted to this end; and nothing
-can be a part of it that is not duly proportioned thereto. In thus
-vindicating the rationality of religion, Coleridge had a twofold task
-before him, as every such thinker has. He had to assert against the
-Epicurean and Empirical School the spiritual constitution of human
-nature, and against the fanatical or hyper-evangelical school the
-reasonable working of spiritual influence. He had to maintain, on the
-one hand, the essential divinity of man, that “there is more in him
-than can be rationally referred to the life of nature and the mechanism
-of organisation,” and on the other hand to show that this higher life
-of the spirit is throughout rational—that it is superstition and not
-true religion which professes to resolve “men's faith and practice”
-into the illumination of such a spirit as they can give no account
-of,—such as does not enlighten their reason or enable them to render
-their doctrine intelligible to others. He fights, in short, alike
-against materialistic negation and credulous enthusiasm.
-
-The former he meets with the assertion of “a spirituality in man,” a
-self-power or Will at the root of all his being. “If there be aught
-spiritual in man, the will must be such. If there be a will, there
-must be a spirituality in man.” He assumes both positions, seeing
-clearly—what all who radically deal with such a question must see—that
-it becomes in the end an alternative postulate on one side and the
-other. The theologian cannot prove his case, because the very terms
-in which it must be proved are already denied _ab initio_ by the
-materialist. But no more can the materialist, for the same reason,
-refute the spiritual thinker. There can be no argument where no common
-premiss is granted. Coleridge was quite alive to this, yet he validly
-appeals to common experience. “I assume,” he says, “a something the
-proof which no man can give to another, yet every man may find for
-himself. If any man assert that he has no such experience, I am
-bound to disbelieve him, I cannot do otherwise without unsettling
-the foundation of my own moral nature. For I either find it as an
-essential of the humanity common to him and to me, or I have not found
-it at all.... All the significant objections of the materialist and
-necessitarian,” he adds, “are contained in the term morality, and all
-the objections of the infidel in the term religion. These very terms
-imply something granted, which the objector in each case supposes not
-granted. A moral philosophy is only such because it assumes a principle
-of morality, a will in man, and so a Christian philosophy or theology
-has its own assumptions resting on three ultimate facts, namely, the
-reality of the law of conscience; the existence of a responsible will
-as the subject of that law; and lastly, the existence of God....
-The first is a fact of consciousness; the second, a fact of reason
-necessarily concluded from the first; and the third, a fact of history
-interpreted by both.”
-
-These were the radical data of the religious philosophy of Coleridge.
-They imply a general conception of religion which was revolutionary
-for his age, simple and ancient as the principles are. The evangelical
-tradition brought religion to man from the outside. It took no concern
-of man's spiritual constitution beyond the fact that he was a sinner
-and in danger of hell. Coleridge started from a similar but larger
-experience, including not only sin, but the whole spiritual basis on
-which sin rests. “I profess a deep conviction,” he says, “that man is a
-fallen creature,” “not by accident of bodily constitution or any other
-cause, but as diseased in his will—in that will which is the true and
-only strict synonyme of the word I, or the intelligent Self.” This
-“intelligent Self” is a fundamental conception lying at the root of his
-system of thought. Sin is an attribute of it, and cannot be conceived
-apart for it, and conscience, or the original sense of right and wrong
-governing the will. Apart from these internal realities there is no
-religion, and the function of the Christian Revelation is to build
-up the spiritual life out of these realities—to remedy the evil, to
-enlighten the conscience, to educate the will. This effective power
-of religion comes directly from God in Christ. Here Coleridge joins
-the Evangelical School, as indeed every school of living Christian
-Faith. This was the element of Truth he found in the doctrine of
-Election as handled “practically, morally, humanly,” by Leighton. Every
-true Christian, he argues, must attribute his distinction not in any
-degree to himself—“his own resolves and strivings,” “his own will and
-understanding,” still less to “his own comparative excellence,”—but to
-God, “the being in whom the promise of life originated, and on whom
-its fulfilment depends.” Election so far is a truth of experience.
-“This the conscience requires; this the highest interests of morality
-demand.” So far it is a question of facts with which the speculative
-reason has nothing to do. But when the theological reasoner abandons
-the ground of fact and “the safe circle of religion and practical
-reason for the shifting sand-wastes and mirages of speculative
-theology,” then he uses words without meaning. He can have no insight
-into the workings or plans of a Being who is neither an object of his
-senses nor a part of his self-consciousness.
-
-Nothing can show better than this brief exposition how closely
-Coleridge in his theology clung to a base of spiritual experience,
-and sought to measure even the most abstruse Christian mysteries by
-facts. The same thing may be shown by referring to his doctrine of
-the Trinity, which has been supposed the most transcendental and, so
-to speak, “Neo-Platonist” of all his doctrines. But truly speaking
-his Trinitarianism, like his doctrine of Election, is a moral rather
-than a speculative truth. The Trinitarian idea was, indeed, true to
-him notionally. The full analysis of the notion “God” seemed to him
-to involve it. “I find a certain notion in my mind, and say that is
-what I understand by the term God. From books and conversation I find
-that the learned generally connect the same notion with the same word.
-I then apply the rules laid down by the masters of logic for the
-involution and evolution of terms, and prove (to as many as agree with
-my premisses) that the notion 'God' involves the notion 'Trinity,'” So
-he argued, and many times recurred to the same Transcendental analysis.
-But the truer and more urgent spiritual basis of the doctrine of the
-Trinity, even to his own mind, was not its notional but its moral
-necessity. Christ could only be a Saviour as being Divine. Salvation is
-a Divine work. “The idea of redemption involves belief in the Divinity
-of our Lord. And our Lord's Divinity again involves the Trinitarian
-idea, because in and through this idea alone the Divinity of Christ can
-be received without breach of faith in the Unity of the Godhead.” In
-other words, the best evidence of the doctrine of the Trinity, is the
-compulsion of the spiritual conscience which demands a Divine Saviour;
-and only in and through the great idea of Trinity in Unity does this
-demand become consistent with Christian Monotheism.[8]
-
-These doctrines are merely used in illustration, as they are by
-Coleridge himself in his _Aids to Reflection_. But nothing can show in
-a stronger light the general character of the change which he wrought
-in the conception of Christianity. From being a mere traditional
-creed, with Anglican and Evangelical, and it may be added Unitarian
-alike, it became a living expression of the spiritual consciousness.
-In a sense, of course, it had always been so. The Evangelical made
-much of its living power, but only in a practical and not in a
-rational sense. It is the distinction of Coleridge to have once more
-in his age made Christian doctrine alive to the reason as well as the
-conscience—tenable as a philosophy as well as an evangel. And this
-he did by interpreting Christianity in the light of our moral and
-spiritual life. There are aspects of Christian truth beyond us—_Exeunt
-in mysteria_. But all Christian truth must have vital touch with our
-spiritual being, and be so far at least capable of being rendered in
-its terms, or, in other words, be conformable to reason.
-
-There was nothing absolutely new in this luminous conception, but
-it marked a revolution of religious thought in the earlier part of
-our century. The great principle of the Evangelical theology was
-that theological dogmas were true or false without any reference to
-a subjective standard of judgment. They were true as pure data of
-revelation, or as the propositions of an authorised creed settled
-long ago. Reason had, so far, nothing to do with them. Christian
-truth, it was supposed, lay at had in the Bible, an appeal to which
-settled everything. Coleridge did not undervalue the Bible. He gave
-it an intelligent reverence. But he no less reverenced the spiritual
-consciousness or divine light in man; and to put out this light, as
-the Evangelical had gone far to do, was to destroy all reasonable
-faith. This must rest not merely on objective data, but on internal
-experience. It must have not merely authority without, but _rationale_
-within. It must answer to the highest aspiration of human reason, as
-well as the most urgent necessities of human life. It must interpret
-reason and find expression in the voice of our higher humanity, and so
-enlarge itself as to meet all its needs.
-
-If we turn for a moment to the special exposition of the doctrines
-of sin and redemption which Coleridge has given in the _Aids to
-Reflection_, it is still mainly with the view of bringing out more
-clearly his general conception of Christianity as a living movement of
-thought rather than a mere series of articles or a traditionary creed.
-
-In dealing first with the question of sin, he shows how its very idea
-is only tenable on the ground of such a spiritual constitution in man
-as he has already asserted. It is only the recognition of a true will
-in man—a spirit or supernatural in man, although “not necessarily
-miraculous”—which renders sin possible. “These views of the spirit and
-of the will as spiritual,” he says more than once, “are the groundwork
-of my scheme.” There was nothing more significant or fundamental in
-all his theology. If there is not always a supernatural element in
-man in the shape of spirit and will, no miracles or anything else can
-ever authenticate the supernatural to him. A mere formal orthodoxy,
-therefore, hanging upon the evidence of miracles, is a suspension
-bridge without any real support. So all questions between infidelity
-and Christianity are questions here, at the root, and not what are
-called “critical” questions as to whether this or that view of the
-Bible be right, or this or that traditionary dogma be true. Such
-questions are, truly speaking, inter-Christian questions, the freest
-views of which all Churches must learn to tolerate. The really vital
-question is whether there is a divine root in man at all—a spiritual
-centre, answering to a higher spiritual centre in the universe. All
-controversies of any importance come back to this. Coleridge would have
-been a great Christian thinker if for no other reason than this, that
-he brought all theological problems back to this living centre, and
-showed how they diverged from it. Apart from this postulate, sin was
-inconceivable to him; and in the same manner all sin was to him sin of
-origin or “original sin.” It is the essential property of the will that
-it can originate. The phrase original sin is therefore “a pleonasm.”
-If sin was not original, or from within the will itself, it would not
-deserve the name. “A state or act that has not its origin in the will
-may be a calamity, deformity, disease, or mischief, but a sin it cannot
-be.”
-
-Again he says: “That there is an evil common to all is a fact, and
-this evil must, therefore, have a common ground. Now this evil ground
-cannot originate in the Divine will; it must, therefore, be referred
-to the will of man. And this evil ground we call original sin. It
-is a mystery, that is, a fact which we see, but cannot explain; and
-the doctrine a truth which we apprehend, but can neither comprehend
-nor communicate. And such by the quality of the subject (namely, a
-responsible will) it must be, if it be truth at all.”
-
-This inwardness is no less characteristic of Coleridge's treatment of
-the doctrine of atonement or redemption. It is intelligible so far as
-it comes within the range of spiritual experience. So far its nature
-and effects are amply described or figured in the New Testament,
-especially by St. Paul. And the apostle's language, as might be
-expected, “takes its predominant colors from his own experience, and
-the experience of those whom he addressed.” “His figures, images,
-analogies, and references,” are all more or less borrowed from this
-source. He describes the Atonement of Christ under four principal
-metaphors: 1. Sin-offering, sacrificial expiation. 2. Reconciliation,
-atonement, καταλλάγη. 3. Redemption, or ransom from slavery. 4.
-Satisfaction, payment of a debt. These phrases are not designed to
-convey to us all the Divine meaning of the atonement, for no phrases or
-figures can do this; but they set forth its general aspect and design.
-One and all they have an intelligible relation to our spiritual life,
-and so clothe the doctrine for us with a concrete living and practical
-meaning. But there are other relations and aspects of the doctrine of
-atonement that transcend experience, and consequently our powers of
-understanding. And all that can be said here is, “exit in mysteria.”
-The rationalism of Coleridge is at least a modest and self-limiting
-rationalism. It clears the ground within the range of spiritual
-experience, and floods this ground with the light of reason. There is
-no true doctrine can contradict this light, or shelter itself from its
-penetration. But there are aspects of Christian doctrine that outreach
-all grasp of reason, and before which reason must simply be silent. For
-example, the Divine act in redemption is “a causative act—a spiritual
-and transcendent mystery _that passeth all understanding. 'Who knoweth
-the mind of the Lord, or being his councillor who hath instructed
-him?' Factum est._” This is all that can be said of the mystery of
-redemption, or of the doctrine of atonement on its Divine side.
-
-And here emerges another important principle of the Coleridgian
-theology. While so great an advocate of the rights of reason in
-theology, of the necessity, in other words, of moulding all its facts
-in a synthesis intelligible to the higher reason he recognises strongly
-that there is a province of Divine truth beyond all such construction.
-We can never understand the fulness of Divine mystery, and it is
-hopeless to attempt to do so. While no mind was less agnostic in the
-modern sense of the term, he was yet with all his vivid and large
-intuition, a Christian agnostic. Just because Christianity was Divine,
-a revelation, and not a mere human tradition, all its higher doctrines
-ended in a region beyond our clear knowledge. As he himself said, “If
-the doctrine is more than a hyperbolical phrase it must do so.” There
-was great pregnancy in this as in his other conceptions; and probably
-no more significant change awaits the theology of the future, than the
-determination of this province of the unknown, and the cessation of
-controversy, as to matters which come within it, and therefore admit of
-no dogmatic settlement.
-
-(2.) But it is more than time to turn to the second aspect, in
-which Coleridge appears as a religious leader of the thought of the
-nineteenth century. The _Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit_ was not
-published till six years after his death, in 1840; and it is curious to
-notice their accidental connection with the _Confessions of a Beautiful
-Soul_, which had been translated by Carlyle some years before.[9]
-These _Confessions_, in the shape of seven letters to a friend, gather
-together all that is valuable in the Biblical criticism of the author
-scattered through his various writings; and although it may be
-doubtful whether the volume has ever attained the circulation of the
-_Aids to Reflection_, it is eminently deserving—small as it is, nay,
-because of its very brevity—of a place beside the larger work. It is
-eminently readable, terse and nervous, as well as eloquent in style.
-In none of his writings does Coleridge appear to greater advantage, or
-touch a more elevating strain, rising at times into solemn music.
-
-The _Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit_ were of course merely one
-indication of the rise of a true spirit of criticism in English
-theology. Arnold, Whately, Thirlwall, and others, it will be seen,
-were all astir in the same direction, even before the _Confessions_
-were published. The notion of verbal inspiration, or the infallible
-dictation of Holy Scripture, could not possibly continue after the
-modern spirit of historical inquiry had begun. As soon as men plainly
-recognised the organic growth of all great facts, literary as well as
-others, it was inevitable that they should see the Scriptures in a new
-light, as a product of many phases of thought in course of more or
-less perfect development. A larger and more intelligent sense of the
-conditions attending the origin and progress of all civilisation, and
-of the immaturities through which religious as well as moral and social
-ideas advance, necessarily carried with it a changed perception of the
-characteristics of Scriptural revelation. The old Rabbinical notion
-of an infallible text was sure to disappear. The new critical method
-besides is, in Coleridge's hands, rather an idea—a happy and germinant
-thought—than a well-evolved system. Still to him belongs the honor of
-having first plainly and boldly announced that the Scriptures were to
-be read and studied, like any other literature, in the light of their
-continuous growth, and the adaptation of their parts to one another.
-
-The divinity of Scripture appears all the more brightly, when thus
-freely handled. “I take up the work,” he says, “with the purpose to
-read it as I should read any other work—so far as I can or dare. For
-I neither can nor dare throw off a strong and awful prepossession
-in its favor, certain as I am that a large part of the light and
-life in and by which I see, love, and embrace the truths and the
-strengths organised into a living body of faith and knowledge have
-been directly or indirectly derived to me from the sacred volume.”
-All the more reason why we should not make a fetish of the Bible, as
-the Turk does of the Koran. Poor as reason may be in comparison with
-“the power and splendor of the Scriptures,” yet it is and must be for
-him a true light. “While there is a Light higher than all, even the
-_Word that was in the beginning_;—the Light of which light itself is
-but the Schechinah and cloudy tabernacle;—there is also a 'Light that
-lighteth every man that cometh into the world;' and the spirit of man
-is declared to be 'the candle of the Lord,'” “If between this Word,” he
-says, “and the written letter I shall anywhere seem to myself to find a
-discrepance, I will not conclude that such there actually is. Nor, on
-the other hand, will I fall under the condemnation of those that would
-_lie for God_, but, seek as I may, be thankful for what I have and
-wait.”
-
-Such is the keynote of the volume. The supremacy of the Bible as a
-divinely inspired literature is plainly recognised from the first.
-Obviously it is a book above all other books in which deep answers to
-deep, and our inmost thoughts and most hidden griefs find not merely
-response, but guidance and assuagement. And whatever there _finds_ us
-“bears witness for itself that it has proceeded from the Holy Spirit.”
-“In the Bible,” he says again, “there is more that _finds_ me than I
-have experienced in all other books put together; the words of the
-Bible find me at greater depths of my being, and whatever finds me
-brings with it an irresistible evidence of its having proceeded from
-the Holy Spirit.”
-
-But there is much in the Bible that not only does not find us in
-the Coleridgian sense, but that seems full of contradictions, both
-moral and historical; the psalms in which David curses his enemies;
-the obviously exaggerated ages attributed to the patriarchs; and the
-incredible number of the armies said to be collected by Abijah and
-Jeroboam (2 Chron. xiii. 3), and other incidents familiar to all
-students of Scripture. What is to be made of such features of the
-Bible? According to the old notion of its infallibility such parts
-of Scripture, no less than its most elevating utterances of “lovely
-hymn and choral song and accepted prayer of saint and prophet,” were
-to be received as dictated by the Holy Spirit. They were stamped
-with the same Divine authority. Coleridge rightly enough emphasises
-this view as that of the fathers and reformers alike; but he no less
-rightly points out that not one of them is consistent in holding to
-their general doctrine. Their treatment of the Scriptures in detail
-constantly implies the fallacy of the Rabbinical tradition to which
-they yet clung. He no less forcibly points out that the Scriptures
-themselves make no such pretension to infallibility, “explicitly or by
-implication.” “On the contrary, they refer to older documents, and on
-all points express themselves as sober-minded and veracious writers
-under ordinary circumstances are known to do.” The usual texts quoted,
-such as 2 Tim. iii. 16, have no real bearing on the subject. The little
-we know as to the origin and history of many of the books of the
-Bible, of “the time of the formation and closing of the canon,” of its
-selectors and compilers, is all opposed to such a theory. Moreover,
-the very nature of the claim stultifies itself when examined. For “how
-can infallible truth be infallibly conveyed in defective and fallible
-expression?”
-
-But if the tenet of verbal inspiration has been so long received and
-acted on “by Jew and Christian, Greek, Roman, and Protestant, why can
-it not now be received?” “For every reason,” answered Coleridge, “that
-makes me prize and revere these Scriptures;—prize them, love them,
-revere them beyond all other books.” Because such a tenet “falsifies
-at once the whole body of holy writ, with all its harmonious and
-symmetrical gradations.” It turns “the breathing organism into a
-colossal Memnon's head, a hollow passage for a voice,” which no man
-hath uttered, and no human heart hath conceived. It evacuates of all
-sense and efficacy the fact that the Bible is a Divine literature
-of many books, “composed in different and widely distant ages under
-the greatest diversity of circumstances and degrees of light and
-information.” So he argues in language I have partly quoted and
-partly summarised. And then he breaks forth into a magnificent passage
-about the song of Deborah, a passage of rare eloquence with all its
-desultoriness, but which will hardly bear separation from the context.
-The wail of the Jewish heroine's maternal and patriotic love is heard
-under all her cursing and individualism—mercy rejoicing against
-judgment. In the very intensity of her primary affections is found the
-rare strength of her womanhood; and sweetness lies near to fierceness.
-Such passages probably give us a far better idea of the occasional
-glory of the old man's talk as “he sat on the brow of Highgate Hill,”
-than any poor fragments of it that have been preserved. Direct and to
-the point it may never have been, but at times it rose into an organ
-swell with snatches of unutterable melody and power.
-
-(3.) But Coleridge contributed still another factor to the impulsion
-of religious thought in his time. He did much to revive the historic
-idea of the Church as an intellectual as well as a spiritual
-commonwealth. Like many other ideas of our older national life this
-had been depressed and lost sight of during the eighteenth century.
-The Evangelical party, deficient in learning generally, was especially
-deficient in breadth of historical knowledge. Milner's History, if
-nothing else, serves to point this conclusion. The idea of the Church
-as the mother of philosophy and arts and learning, as well as the nurse
-of faith and piety, was unknown. It was a part of the Evangelical
-creed, moreover, to leave aside as far as possible mere political and
-intellectual interests. These belonged to the world, and the main
-business of the religious man was with religion as a personal affair,
-of vast moment, but outside all other affairs. Coleridge helped once
-more to bring the Church as he did the gospel into larger room as a
-great spiritual power of manifold influence.
-
-This volume _On the Constitution of Church and State according to the
-idea of each_ was published in 1830, and was the last volume which
-the author himself published. The Catholic Emancipation question had
-greatly excited the public mind, and some friend had appealed to
-Coleridge expressing astonishment that he should be in opposition to
-the proposed measure. He replied that he is by no means unfriendly to
-Catholic emancipation, while yet “scrupling the means proposed for
-its attainment.” And in order to explain his difficulties he composed
-a long letter to his friend which is really an essay or treatise,
-beginning with the fundamental principles of his philosophy and ending
-with a description of antichrist. The essay is one of the least
-satisfactory of his compositions from a mere literary point of view,
-and is not even mentioned by Mr. Traill in his recent monograph. But
-amidst all its involutions and ramblings it is stimulating and full
-of thought on a subject which almost more than any other is liable to
-be degraded by unworthy and sectarian treatment. Here, as everywhere
-in Coleridge's writings, we are brought in contact with certain large
-conceptions which far more than cover the immediate subject in hand.
-
-It has been sometimes supposed that Coleridge's theory of the Church
-merely revived the old theory of the Elizabethan age so powerfully
-advocated by Hooker and specially espoused by Dr. Arnold in later
-times. According to this theory the Church and State are really
-identical, the Church being merely the State in its educational and
-religious aspect and organisation. But Coleridge's special theory
-is different from this, although allied to it. He distinguishes the
-Christian Church as such from any national church. The former is
-spiritual and catholic, the latter institutional and local. The former
-is opposed to the “world,” the latter is an estate of the realm. The
-former has nothing to do with states and kingdoms. It is in this
-respect identical with the “spiritual and invisible church known
-only to the Father of Spirits,” and the compensating counterpoise of
-all that is of the world. It is, in short, the Divine aggregate of
-what is really Divine in all Christian communities, and more or less
-ideally represented “in every true church.” A national church again
-is the incorporation of all the learning and knowledge—intellectual
-and spiritual—in a country. Every nation in order to its true health
-and civilisation requires not only a land-owning or permanent class
-along with a commercial, industrial, and progressive class, but
-moreover, an educative class to represent all higher knowledge, “to
-guard the treasures of past civilisation,” to bind the national life
-together in its past, present, and future, and to communicate to all
-citizens a clear understanding of their rights and duties. This third
-estate of the realm Coleridge denominated the “Clerisy,” and included
-not merely the clergy, but, in his own language, “the learned of all
-denominations.” The knowledge, which it was their function to cultivate
-and diffuse, embraced not only theology, although this pre-eminently
-as the head of all other knowledge, but law, music, mathematics, the
-physical sciences, “all the so-called liberal arts and sciences, the
-possession and cultivation of which constitute the civilisation of a
-country.”
-
-This is at any rate a large conception of a national church. It is put
-forth by its author with all earnestness, although he admitted that it
-had never been anywhere realised. But it was his object “to present the
-_Idea_ of a national church as the only safe criterion by which we can
-judge of existing things.” It was only when “we are in full and clear
-possession of the ultimate aim of an institution” that we can ascertain
-how far “this aim has ever been attained in other ways.”
-
-These, very briefly explained, are the main lines along which Coleridge
-moved the national mind in the third decade of this century. They
-may seem to some rather impalpable lines, and hardly calculated to
-touch the general mind. But they were influential, as the course of
-Christian literature has since proved. Like his own genius, they were
-diffusive rather than concentrative. The Coleridgian ideas permeated
-the general intellectual atmosphere, modifying old conceptions in
-criticism as well as theology, deepening if not always clarifying the
-channels of thought in many directions, but especially in the direction
-of Christian philosophy. They acted in this way as a new circulation
-of spiritual air all around, rather than in conveying any new body of
-truth. The very ridicule of Carlyle testifies to the influence which
-they exercised over aspiring and younger minds. The very emphasis with
-which he repudiates the Coleridgian metaphysic probably indicates that
-he had felt some echo of it in his own heart.—_Fortnightly Review._
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[2] Admiration, Hope, and Love. _Excursion_, b. iv.
-
-[3] Admiration, Hope, and Love. _Excursion_, b. ix.
-
-[4] Not only the _Ancient Mariner_ and the first part of _Christabel_,
-but also _Kubla Khan_ were composed at Nether Stovey among the Quantock
-Hills in 1797. The second part of _Christabel_ belongs to the year
-1800, and was written at Keswick, although not published till 1816.
-Nothing of the same quality was ever produced by Coleridge, although he
-continued to write verses.
-
-[5] It is strange, however, to find Mr. Traill commending Coleridge's
-very last volume (1830) _On the Constitution of Church and State_, as
-“yielding a more characteristic flavor of the author's style” than
-the _Aids to Reflection_. Characteristic, no doubt, this volume is of
-the author's mode of thought; but in point of style, it and his _Lay
-Sermon_ or _Statesman's Manual_ in 1816 appear to us the most desultory
-and imperfect of all his writings.
-
-[6] By Dr. James Marsh, an American divine, whose preliminary essay
-is prefaced to the fifth English edition, and by Mr. Green in his
-_Spiritual Philosophy_ (1865), founded on Coleridge's teaching.
-
-[7] _Spiritual Philosophy, founded on the Teaching of the late Samuel
-Taylor Coleridge._ By Jos. Henry Green, F.R.S., D.C.L. 1865.
-
-[8] This was a favorite thought with Coleridge, as for example, in his
-_Literary Remains_ (vol. i. p. 393-4): “The Trinity of Persons in the
-Unity of the Godhead would have been a necessary idea of my speculative
-reason. God must have had co-eternally an adequate idea of Himself in
-and through which He created all things. But this would only have been
-a speculative idea. Solely in consequence of our redemption does the
-Trinity become a doctrine, the belief of which as real is commanded by
-conscience.”
-
-[9] In his well-known translation of _Wilhelm Meister_.
-
-
-
-
-THE PORTRAIT.
-
-A STORY OF THE SEEN AND THE UNSEEN.
-
-
-At the period when the following incidents occurred I was living with
-my father at The Grove, a large old house in the immediate neighborhood
-of a little town. This had been his home for a number of years; and I
-believe I was born in it. It was a kind of house which, notwithstanding
-all the red and white architecture, known at present by the name of
-Queen Anne, builders nowadays have forgotten how to build. It was
-straggling and irregular, with wide passages, wide staircases, broad
-landings; the rooms large but not very lofty; the arrangements leaving
-much to be desired, with no economy of space; a house belonging to a
-period when land was cheap, and, so far as that was concerned, there
-was no occasion to economise. Though it was so near the town, the
-clump of trees in which it was environed was a veritable grove. In
-the grounds in spring the primroses grew as thickly as in the forest.
-We had a few fields for the cows, and an excellent walled garden.
-The place is being pulled down at this moment to make room for more
-streets of mean little houses,—the kind of thing, and not a dull house
-of faded gentry, which perhaps the neighborhood requires. The house
-was dull, and so were we, its last inhabitants; and the furniture was
-faded, even a little dingy,—nothing to brag of. I do not, however,
-intend to convey a suggestion that we were faded gentry, for that was
-not the case. My father, indeed, was rich, and had no need to spare any
-expense in making his life and his house bright if he pleased; but he
-did not please, and I had not been long enough at home to exercise any
-special influence of my own. It was the only home I had ever known; but
-except in my earliest childhood, and in my holidays as a schoolboy, I
-had in reality known but little of it. My mother had died at my birth,
-or shortly after, and I had grown up in the gravity and silence of a
-house without women. In my infancy, I believe, a sister of my father's
-had lived with us, and taken charge of the household and of me; but
-she, too, had died long, long ago, my mourning for her being one of
-the first things I could recollect. And she had no successor. There
-was, indeed, a housekeeper and some maids,—the latter of whom I only
-saw disappearing at the end of a passage, or whisking out of a room
-when one of “the gentlemen” appeared. Mrs. Weir, indeed, I saw nearly
-every day; but a curtsey, a smile, a pair of nice round arms which she
-caressed while folding them across her ample waist, and a large white
-apron, were all I knew of her. This was the only female influence in
-the house. The drawing-room I was aware of only as a place of deadly
-good order, into which nobody ever entered. It had three long windows
-opening on the lawn, and communicated at the upper end, which was
-rounded like a great bay, with the conservatory. Sometimes I gazed into
-it as a child from without, wondering at the needlework on the chairs,
-the screens, the looking-glasses which never reflected any living face.
-My father did not like the room, which probably was not wonderful,
-though it never occurred to me in those early days to inquire why.
-
-I may say here, though it will probably be disappointing to those
-who form a sentimental idea of the capabilities of children, that it
-did not occur to me either, in these early days, to make any inquiry
-about my mother. There was no room in life, as I knew it, for any such
-person; nothing suggested to my mind either the fact that she must
-have existed, or that there was need of her in the house. I accepted,
-as I believe most children do, the facts of existence, on the basis
-with which I had first made acquaintance with them, without question
-or remark. As a matter of fact, I was aware that it was rather dull
-at home; but neither by comparison with the books I read, nor by the
-communications received from my school-fellows, did this seem to me
-anything remarkable. And I was possibly somewhat dull too by nature,
-for I did not mind. I was fond of reading, and for that there was
-unbounded opportunity. I had a little ambition in respect to work,
-and that too could be prosecuted undisturbed. When I went to the
-university, my society lay almost entirely among men; but by that time
-and afterwards, matters had of course greatly changed with me, and
-though I recognised women as part of the economy of nature, and did not
-indeed by any means dislike or avoid them, yet the idea of connecting
-them at all with my own home never entered into my head. That continued
-to be as it had always been, when at intervals I descended upon the
-cool, grave, colorless place, in the midst of my traffic with the
-world; always very still, well-ordered, serious—the cooking very good,
-the comfort perfect—old Morphew, the butler, a little older (but very
-little older, perhaps on the whole less old, since in my childhood I
-had thought him a kind of Methuselah), and Mrs. Weir, less active,
-covering up her arms in sleeves, but folding and caressing them just
-as always. I remember looking in from the lawn through the windows
-upon that deadly-orderly drawing-room, with a humorous recollection of
-my childish admiration and wonder, and feeling that it must be kept
-so forever and ever, and that to go into it would break some sort of
-amusing mock mystery, some pleasantly ridiculous spell.
-
-But it was only at rare intervals that I went home. In the long
-vacation, as in my school holidays, my father often went abroad with
-me, so that we had gone over a great deal of the Continent together
-very pleasantly. He was old in proportion to the age of his son, being
-a man of sixty when I was twenty, but that did not disturb the pleasure
-of the relations between us. I don't know that they were ever very
-confidential. On my side there was but little to communicate, for I
-did not get into scrapes nor fall in love, the two predicaments which
-demand sympathy and confidences. And as for my father himself, I was
-never aware what there could be to communicate on his side. I knew
-his life exactly—what he did almost at every hour of the day; under
-what circumstances of the temperature he would ride and when walk;
-how often and with what guests he would indulge in the occasional
-break of a dinner-party, a serious pleasure—perhaps, indeed, less a
-pleasure than a duty. All this I knew as well as he did, and also his
-views on public matters, his political opinions, which naturally were
-different from mine. What ground, then, remained for confidence? I did
-not know any. We were both of us of a reserved nature, not apt to enter
-into our religious feelings, for instance. There are many people who
-think reticence on such subjects a sign of the most reverential way
-of contemplating them. Of this I am far from being sure; but, at all
-events, it was the practice most congenial to my own mind.
-
-And then I was for a long time absent, making my own way in the world.
-I did not make it very successfully. I accomplished the natural fate
-of an Englishman, and went out to the Colonies; then to India in a
-semi-diplomatic position; but returned home after seven or eight
-years, invalided, in bad health and not much better spirits, tired
-and disappointed with my first trial of life. I had, as people say,
-“no occasion” to insist on making my way. My father was rich, and had
-never given me the slightest reason to believe that he did not intend
-me to be his heir. His allowance to me was not illiberal, and though he
-did not oppose the carrying out of my own plans, he by no means urged
-me to exertion. When I came home he received me very affectionately,
-and expressed his satisfaction in my return. “Of course,” he said, “I
-am not glad that you are disappointed, Philip, or that your health is
-broken; but otherwise it is an ill wind, you know, that blows nobody
-good—and I am very glad to have you at home. I am growing an old man—”
-
-“I don't see any difference, sir,” said I; “everything here seems
-exactly the same as when I went away—”
-
-He smiled, and shook his head. “It is true enough,” he said, “after we
-have reached a certain age we seem to go on for a long time on a plane,
-and feel no great difference from year to year; but it is an inclined
-plane—and the longer we go on, the more sudden will be the fall at the
-end. But at all events it will be a great comfort to me to have you
-here.”
-
-“If I had known that,” I said, “and that you wanted me, I should have
-come in any circumstances. As there are only two of us in the world—”
-
-“Yes,” he said, “there are only two of us in the world; but still I
-should not have sent for you, Phil, to interrupt your career.”
-
-“It is as well, then, that it has interrupted itself,” I said, rather
-bitterly; for disappointment is hard to hear.
-
-He patted me on the shoulder and repeated, “It is an ill wind that
-blows nobody good,” with a look of real pleasure which gave me a
-certain gratification too; for, after all, he was an old man, and the
-only one in all the world to whom I owed any duty. I had not been
-without dreams of warmer affections, but they had come to nothing—not
-tragically, but in the ordinary way. I might perhaps have had love
-which I did not want, but not that which I did want,—which was not a
-thing to make any unmanly moan about, but in the ordinary course of
-events. Such disappointments happen every day; indeed, they are more
-common than anything else, and sometimes it is apparent afterward that
-it is better it was so.
-
-However, here I was at thirty stranded—yet wanting for nothing, in a
-position to call forth rather envy than pity from the greater part of
-my contemporaries,—for I had an assured and comfortable existence, as
-much money as I wanted, and the prospect of an excellent fortune for
-the future. On the other hand, my health was still low, and I had no
-occupation. The neighborhood of the town was a drawback rather than
-an advantage. I felt myself tempted, instead of taking the long walk
-into the country which my doctor recommended, to take a much shorter
-one through the High Street, across the river, and back again, which
-was not a walk but a lounge. The country was silent and full of
-thoughts—thoughts not always very agreeable—whereas there were always
-the humors of the little urban population to glance at, the news to be
-heard, all those petty matters which so often make up life in a very
-impoverished version for the idle man. I did not like it, but I felt
-myself yielding to it, not having energy enough to make a stand. The
-rector and the leading lawyer of the place asked me to dinner. I might
-have glided into the society, such as it was, had I been disposed for
-that—everything about me began to close over me as if I had been fifty,
-and fully contented with my lot.
-
-It was possibly my own want of occupation which made me observe with
-surprise, after a while, how much occupied my father was. He had
-expressed himself glad of my return; but now that I had returned, I saw
-very little of him. Most of his time was spent in his library, as had
-always been the case. But on the few visits I paid him there, I could
-not but perceive that the aspect of the library was much changed. It
-had acquired the look of a business-room, almost an office. There were
-large business-like books on the table, which I could not associate
-with anything he could naturally have to do; and his correspondence
-was very large. I thought he closed one of those books hurriedly as I
-came in, and pushed it away, as if he did not wish me to see it. This
-surprised me at the moment, without arousing any other feeling; but
-afterward I remembered it with a clearer sense of what it meant. He
-was more absorbed altogether than I had been used to see him. He was
-visited by men sometimes not of very prepossessing appearance. Surprise
-grew in my mind without any very distinct idea of the reason of it;
-and it was not till after a chance conversation with Morphew that my
-vague uneasiness began to take definite shape. It was begun without
-any special intention on my part. Morphew had informed me that master
-was very busy, on some occasion when I wanted to see him. And I was a
-little annoyed to be thus put off. “It appears to me that my father is
-always busy,” I said, hastily. Morphew then began very oracularly to
-nod his head in assent.
-
-“A deal too busy, sir, if you take my opinion,” he said.
-
-This startled me much, and I asked hurriedly, “What do you mean?”
-without reflecting that to ask for private information from a servant
-about my father's habits was as bad as investigating into a stranger's
-affairs. It did not strike me in the same light.
-
-“Mr. Philip,” said Morphew, “a thing 'as 'appened as 'appens more often
-than it ought to. Master has got awful keen about money in his old age.”
-
-“That's a new thing for him,” I said.
-
-“No, sir, begging your pardon, it ain't a new thing. He was once broke
-of it, and that wasn't easy done; but it's come back, if you'll excuse
-me saying so. And I don't know as he'll ever be broke of it again at
-his age.”
-
-I felt more disposed to be angry than disturbed by this. “You must be
-making some ridiculous mistake,” I said. “And if you were not so old a
-friend as you are, Morphew, I should not have allowed my father to be
-so spoken of to me.”
-
-The old man gave me a half-astonished, half-contemptuous look. “He's
-been my master a deal longer than he's been your father,” he said,
-turning on his heel. The assumption was so comical that my anger could
-not stand in face of it. I went out, having been on my way to the door
-when this conversation occurred, and took my usual lounge about, which
-was not a satisfactory sort of amusement. Its vanity and emptiness
-appeared to be more evident than usual to-day. I met half a dozen
-people I knew, and had as many pieces of news confided to me. I went up
-and down the length of the High Street. I made a small purchase or two.
-And then I turned homeward—despising myself, yet finding no alternative
-within my reach. Would a long country walk have been more virtuous?—it
-would at least have been more wholesome—but that was all that could
-be said. My mind did not dwell on Morphew's communication. It seemed
-without sense or meaning to me; and after the excellent joke about his
-superior interest in his master to mine in my father, was dismissed
-lightly enough from my mind. I tried to invent some way of telling
-this to my father without letting him perceive that Morphew had been
-finding faults in him, or I listening; for it seemed a pity to lose so
-good a joke. However, as I returned home, something happened which put
-the joke entirely out of my head. It is curious when a new subject of
-trouble or anxiety has been suggested to the mind in an unexpected way,
-how often a second advertisement follows immediately after the first,
-and gives to that a potency which in itself it had not possessed.
-
-I was approaching our own door, wondering whether my father had
-gone, and whether, on my return, I should find him at leisure—for I
-had several little things to say to him—when I noticed a poor woman
-lingering about the closed gates. She had a baby sleeping in her
-arms. It was a spring night, the stars shining in the twilight, and
-everything soft and dim; and the woman's figure was like a shadow,
-flitting about, now here, now there, on one side or another of the
-gate. She stopped when she saw me approaching, and hesitated for a
-moment, then seemed to take a sudden resolution. I watched her without
-knowing, with a prevision that she was going to address me, though
-with no sort of idea as to the subject of her address. She came up to
-me doubtfully, it seemed, yet certainly, as I felt, and when she was
-close to me, dropped a sort of hesitating curtsey, and said, “It's Mr.
-Philip?” in a low voice.
-
-“What do you want with me?” I said.
-
-Then she poured forth suddenly, without warning or preparation, her
-long speech—a flood of words which must have been all ready and waiting
-at the doors of her lips for utterance. “Oh, sir, I want to speak to
-you! I can't believe you'll be so hard, for you're young; and I can't
-believe he'll be so hard if so be as his own son, as I've always heard
-he had but one, 'll speak up for us. Oh, gentleman, it is easy for the
-likes of you, that, if you ain't comfortable in one room, can just
-walk into another; but if one room is all you have, and every bit of
-furniture you have taken out of it, and nothing but the four walls
-left—not so much as the cradle for the child, or a chair for your man
-to sit down upon when he comes from his work, or a saucepan to cook him
-his supper—”
-
-“My good woman,” I said, “who can have taken all that from you? surely
-nobody can be so cruel?”
-
-“You say it's cruel!” she cried with a sort of triumph. “Oh, I knowed
-you would, or any true gentleman that don't hold with screwing poor
-folks. Just go and say that to him inside there, for the love of God.
-Tell him to think what he's doing, driving poor creatures to despair.
-Summer's coming, the Lord be praised, but yet it's bitter cold at night
-with your counterpane gone; and when you've been working hard all day,
-and nothing but four bare walls to come home to, and all your poor
-little sticks of furniture that you've saved up for, and got together
-one by one, all gone—and you no better than when you started, or rather
-worse, for then you was young. Oh, sir!” the woman's voice rose into a
-sort of passionate wail. And then she added, beseechingly, recovering
-herself—“Oh, speak for us—he'll not refuse his own son—”
-
-“To whom am I to speak? who is it that has done this to you?” I said.
-
-The woman hesitated again, looking keenly in my face—then repeated with
-a slight faltering, “It's Mr. Philip?” as if that made everything right.
-
-“Yes; I am Philip Canning,” I said; “but what have I to do with this?
-and to whom am I to speak?”
-
-She began to whimper, crying and stopping herself. “Oh, please, sir!
-it's Mr. Canning as owns all the house property about—it's him that our
-court and the lane and everything belongs to. And he's taken the bed
-from under us, and the baby's cradle, although it's said in the Bible
-as you're not to take poor folks's bed.”
-
-“My father!” I cried in spite of myself—“then it must be some agent,
-some one else in his name. You may be sure he knows nothing of it. Of
-course I shall speak to him at once.”
-
-“Oh, God bless you, sir,” said the woman. But then she added, in a
-lower tone—“It's no agent. It's one as never knows trouble. It's him
-that lives in that grand house.” But this was said under her breath,
-evidently not for me to hear.
-
-Morphew's words flashed through my mind as she spoke. What was this?
-Did it afford an explanation of the much occupied hours, the big
-books, the strange visitors? I took the poor woman's name, and gave
-her something to procure a few comforts for the night, and went
-indoors disturbed and troubled. It was impossible to believe that my
-father himself would have acted thus; but he was not a man to brook
-interference, and I did not see how to introduce the subject, what to
-say. I could but hope that, at the moment of broaching it, words would
-be put into my mouth, which often happens in moments of necessity,
-one knows not how, even when one's theme is not so all-important as
-that for which such help has been promised. As usual, I did not see
-my father till dinner. I have said that our dinners were very good,
-luxurious in a simple way, everything excellent in its kind, well
-cooked, well served, the perfection of comfort without show—which is
-a combination very dear to the English heart. I said nothing till
-Morphew, with his solemn attention to everything that was going, had
-retired—and then it was with some strain of courage that I began.
-
-“I was stopped outside the gate to-day by a curious sort of
-petitioner—a poor woman, who seems to be one of your tenants, sir, but
-whom your agent must have been rather too hard upon.”
-
-“My agent? who is that?” said my father, quietly.
-
-“I don't know his name, and I doubt his competence. The poor creature
-seems to have had everything taken from her—her bed, her child's
-cradle.”
-
-“No doubt she was behind with her rent.”
-
-“Very likely, sir. She seemed very poor,” said I.
-
-“You take it coolly,” said my father, with an upward glance,
-half-amused, not in the least shocked by my statement. “But when a man,
-or a woman either, takes a house, I suppose you will allow that they
-ought to pay rent for it.”
-
-“Certainly, sir,” I replied, “when they have got anything to pay.”
-
-“I don't allow the reservation,” he said. But he was not angry, which I
-had feared he would be.
-
-“I think,” I continued, “that your agent must be too severe. And this
-emboldens me to say something which has been in my mind for some
-time”—(these were the words, no doubt, which I had hoped would be put
-into my mouth; they were the suggestion of the moment, and yet as I
-said them it was with the most complete conviction of their truth)—“and
-that is this: I am doing nothing; my time hangs heavy on my hands. Make
-me your agent. I will see for myself, and save you from such mistakes;
-and it will be an occupation—”
-
-“Mistakes? What warrant have you for saying these are mistakes?” he
-said testily; then after a moment: “This is a strange proposal from
-you, Phil. Do you know what it is you are offering?—to be a collector
-of rents, going about from door to door, from week to week; to look
-after wretched little bits of repairs, drains, etc.; to get paid,
-which, after all, is the chief thing, and not to be taken in by tales
-of poverty.”
-
-“Not to let you be taken in by men without pity,” I said.
-
-He gave me a strange glance, which I did not very well understand, and
-said, abruptly, a thing which, so far as I remember, he had never in my
-life said before, “You've become a little like your mother, Phil—”
-
-“My mother!” The reference was so unusual—nay, so unprecedented—that I
-was greatly startled. It seemed to me like the sudden introduction of
-a quite new element in the stagnant atmosphere, as well as a new party
-to our conversation. My father looked across the table, as if with some
-astonishment at my tone of surprise.
-
-“Is that so very extraordinary?” he said.
-
-“No; of course it is not extraordinary that I should resemble my
-mother. Only—I have heard very little of her—almost nothing.”
-
-“That is true.” He got up and placed himself before the fire, which
-was very low, as the night was not cold—had not been cold heretofore
-at least; but it seemed to me now that a little chill came into the
-dim and faded room. Perhaps it looked more dull from the suggestion
-of a something brighter, warmer, that might have been. “Talking of
-mistakes,” he said, “perhaps that was one: to sever you entirely from
-her side of the house. But I did not care for the connection. You
-will understand how it is that I speak of it now when I tell you—”
-He stopped here, however, said nothing more for a minute or so, and
-then rang the bell. Morphew came, as he always did, very deliberately,
-so that some time elapsed in silence, during which my surprise grew.
-When the old man appeared at the door—“Have you put the lights in the
-drawing-room, as I told you?” my father said.
-
-“Yes, sir; and opened the box, sir; and it's a—it's a speaking
-likeness—”
-
-This the old man got out in a great hurry, as if afraid that his master
-would stop him. My father did so with a wave of his hand.
-
-“That's enough. I asked no information. You can go now.”
-
-The door closed upon us, and there was again a pause. My subject had
-floated away altogether like a mist, though I had been so concerned
-about it. I tried to resume, but could not. Something seemed to
-arrest my very breathing: and yet in this dull respectable house of
-ours, where everything breathed good character and integrity, it was
-certain that there could be no shameful mystery to reveal. It was some
-time before my father spoke, not from any purpose that I could see,
-but apparently because his mind was busy with probably unaccustomed
-thoughts.
-
-“You scarcely know the drawing-room, Phil,” he said at last.
-
-“Very little. I have never seen it used. I have a little awe of it, to
-tell the truth.”
-
-“That should not be. There is no reason for that. But a man by himself,
-as I have been for the greater part of my life, has no occasion for a
-drawing-room. I always, as a matter of preference, sat among my books;
-however, I ought to have thought of the impression on you.”
-
-“Oh, it is not important,” I said; “the awe was childish. I have not
-thought of it since I came home.”
-
-“It never was anything very splendid at the best,” said he. He lifted
-the lamp from the table with a sort of abstraction, not remarking even
-my offer to take it from him, and led the way. He was on the verge
-of seventy, and looked his age; but it was a vigorous age, with no
-symptoms of giving way. The circle of light from the lamp lit up his
-white hair, and keen blue eyes, and clear complexion; his forehead was
-like old ivory, his cheek warmly colored: an old man, yet a man in
-full strength. He was taller than I was, and still almost as strong.
-As he stood for a moment with the lamp in his hand, he looked like a
-tower in his great height and bulk. I reflected as I looked at him that
-I knew him intimately, more intimately than any other creature in the
-world,—I was familiar with every detail of his outward life; could it
-be that in reality I did not know him at all?
-
- * * * * *
-
-The drawing-room was already lighted with a flickering array of
-candles upon the mantelpiece and along the walls, producing the pretty
-starry effect which candles give without very much light. As I had not
-the smallest idea what I was about to see, for Morphew's “speaking
-likeness” was very hurriedly said, and only half comprehensible in the
-bewilderment of my faculties, my first glance was at this very unusual
-illumination, for which I could assign no reason. The next showed me a
-large full-length portrait, still in the box in which apparently it had
-travelled, placed upright, supported against a table in the centre of
-the room. My father walked straight up to it, motioned to me to place a
-smaller table close to the picture on the left side, and put his lamp
-upon that. Then he waved his hand towards it, and stood aside that I
-might see.
-
-It was a full-length portrait of a very young woman—I might say, a
-girl, scarcely twenty—in a white dress, made in a very simple old
-fashion, though I was too little accustomed to female costume to be
-able to fix the date. It might have been a hundred years old, or
-twenty, for aught I knew. The face had an expression of youth, candor,
-and simplicity more than any face I had ever seen—or so, at least, in
-my surprise, I thought. The eyes were a little wistful, with something
-which was almost anxiety—which at least was not content—in them; a
-faint, almost imperceptible, curve in the lids. The complexion was
-of a dazzling fairness, the hair light, but the eyes dark, which
-gave individuality to the face. It would have been as lovely had the
-eyes been blue—probably more so—but their darkness gave a touch of
-character, a slight discord, which made the harmony finer. It was
-not, perhaps, beautiful in the highest sense of the word. The girl
-must have been too young, too slight, too little developed for actual
-beauty; but a face which so invited love and confidence I never saw.
-One smiled at it with instinctive affection. “What a sweet face!” I
-said. “What a lovely girl! Who is she? Is this one of the relations you
-were speaking of on the other side?”
-
-My father made me no reply. He stood aside, looking at it as if he knew
-it too well to require to look,—as if the picture was already in his
-eyes. “Yes,” he said, after an interval, with a long-drawn breath, “she
-was a lovely girl, as you say.”
-
-“Was?—then she is dead. What a pity!” I said; “what a pity! so young
-and so sweet!”
-
-We stood gazing at her thus, in her beautiful stillness and calm—two
-men, the younger of us full grown and conscious of many experiences,
-the other an old man—before this impersonation of tender youth. At
-length he said, with a slight tremulousness in his voice, “Does nothing
-suggest to you who she is, Phil?”
-
-I turned round to look at him with profound astonishment, but he turned
-away from my look. A sort of quiver passed over his face. “That is your
-mother,” he said, and walked suddenly away, leaving me there.
-
-My mother!
-
-I stood for a moment in a kind of consternation before the white-robed
-innocent creature, to me no more than a child; then a sudden laugh
-broke from me, without any will of mine: something ludicrous, as well
-as something awful, was in it. When the laugh was over, I found myself
-with tears in my eyes, gazing, holding my breath. The soft features
-seemed to melt, the lips to move, the anxiety in the eyes to become
-a personal inquiry. Ah, no! nothing of the kind; only because of the
-water in mine. My mother! oh, fair and gentle creature, scarcely
-woman—how could any man's voice call her by that name! I had little
-idea enough of what it meant,—had heard it laughed at, scoffed at,
-reverenced, but never had learned to place it even among the ideal
-powers of life. Yet, if it meant anything at all, what it meant was
-worth thinking of. What did she ask, looking at me with those eyes?
-what would she have said if “those lips had language”? If I had known
-her only as Cowper did—with a child's recollection—there might have
-been some thread, some faint but comprehensible link, between us; but
-now all that I felt was the curious incongruity. Poor child! I said to
-myself; so sweet a creature: poor little tender soul! as if she had
-been a little sister, a child of mine—but my mother! I cannot tell how
-long I stood looking at her, studying the candid, sweet face, which
-surely had germs in it of everything that was good and beautiful; and
-sorry, with a profound regret, that she had died and never carried
-these promises to fulfilment. Poor girl! poor people who had loved
-her! These were my thoughts: with a curious vertigo and giddiness of
-my whole being in the sense of a mysterious relationship, which it was
-beyond my power to understand.
-
-Presently my father came back: possibly because I had been a long time
-unconscious of the passage of the minutes, or perhaps because he was
-himself restless in the strange disturbance of his habitual calm. He
-came in and put his arm within mine, leaning his weight partially upon
-me, with an affectionate suggestion which went deeper than words. I
-pressed his arm to my side: it was more between us two grave Englishmen
-than any embracing.
-
-“I cannot understand it,” I said.
-
-“No. I don't wonder at that; but if it is strange to you, Phil, think
-how much more strange to me! That is the partner of my life. I have
-never had another—or thought of another. That—girl! If we are to meet
-again, as I have always hoped we should meet again, what am I to say to
-her—I, an old man? Yes; I know what you mean. I am not an old man for
-my years; but my years are threescore and ten, and the play is nearly
-played out. How am I to meet that young creature? We used to say to
-each other that it was forever, that we never could be but one, that it
-was for life and death. But what—what am I to say to her, Phil, when I
-meet her again, that—that angel? No, it is not her being an angel that
-troubles me; but she is so young! She is like my—my granddaughter,” he
-cried, with a burst of what was half sobs, half laughter; “and she is
-my wife—and I am an old man—an old man! And so much has happened that
-she could not understand.”
-
-I was too much startled by this strange complaint to know what to say.
-It was not my own trouble, and I answered it in the conventional way.
-
-“They are not as we are, sir,” I said; “they look upon us with larger,
-other eyes than ours.”
-
-“Ah! you don't know what I mean,” he said quickly; and in the interval
-he had subdued his emotion. “At first, after she died, it was my
-consolation to think that I should meet her again—that we never
-could be really parted. But, my God, how I have changed since then!
-I am another man—I am a different being. I was not very young even
-then—twenty years older than she was: but her youth renewed mine. I was
-not an unfit partner; she asked no better: and knew as much more than I
-did in some things—being so much nearer the source—as I did in others
-that were of the world. But I have gone a long way since then, Phil—a
-long way; and there she stands just where I left her.”
-
-I pressed his arm again. “Father,” I said, which was a title I seldom
-used, “we are not to suppose that in a higher life the mind stands
-still.” I did not feel myself qualified to discuss such topics, but
-something one must say.
-
-“Worse, worse!” he replied; “then she too will be like me, a different
-being, and we shall meet as what? as strangers, as people who have lost
-sight of each other, with a long past between us—we who parted, my God!
-with—with——”
-
-His voice broke and ended for a moment: then while, surprised and
-almost shocked by what he said, I cast about in my mind what to reply,
-he withdrew his arm suddenly from mine, and said in his usual tone,
-“Where shall we hang the picture, Phil? It must be here in this room.
-What do you think will be the best light?”
-
-This sudden alteration took me still more by surprise, and gave me
-almost an additional shock; but it was evident that I must follow the
-changes of his mood, or at least the sudden repression of sentiment
-which he originated. We went into that simpler question with great
-seriousness, consulting which would be the best light. “You know I can
-scarcely advise,” I said; “I have never been familiar with this room. I
-should like to put off, if you don't mind, till daylight.”
-
-“I think,” he said, “that this would be the best place.” It was on the
-other side of the fireplace, on the wall which faced the windows—not
-the best light, I knew enough to be aware, for an oil-painting. When
-I said so, however, he answered me with a little impatience,—“It does
-not matter very much about, the best light. There will be nobody to
-see it but you and me. I have my reasons——” There was a small table
-standing against the wall at this spot, on which he had his hand as he
-spoke. Upon it stood a little basket in very fine lace-like wickerwork.
-His hand must have trembled, for the table shook, and the basket fell,
-its contents turning out upon the carpet,—little bits of needlework,
-colored silks, a small piece of knitting half done. He laughed as
-they rolled out at his feet, and tried to stoop to collect them, then
-tottered to a chair, and covered for a moment his face with his hands.
-
-No need to ask what they were. No woman's work had been seen in the
-house since I could recollect it. I gathered them up reverently and put
-them back. I could see, ignorant as I was, that the bit of knitting was
-something for an infant. What could I do less than put it to my lips?
-It had. been left in the doing—for me.
-
-“Yes, I think this is the best place,” my father said a minute after,
-in his usual tone.
-
-We placed it there that evening with our own hands. The picture was
-large, and in a heavy frame, but my father would let no one help me
-but himself. And then, with a superstition for which I never could
-give any reason even to myself, having removed the packings, we closed
-and locked the door, leaving the candles about the room, in their soft
-strange illumination lighting the first night of her return to her old
-place.
-
-That night no more was said. My father went to his room early, which
-was not his habit. He had never, however, accustomed me to sit late
-with him in the library. I had a little study or smoking-room of my
-own, in which all my special treasures were, the collections of my
-travels and my favorite books—and where I always sat after prayers, a
-ceremonial which was regularly kept up in the house. I retired as usual
-this night to my room, and as usual read—but to-night somewhat vaguely,
-often pausing to think. When it was quite late, I went out by the glass
-door to the lawn, and walked round the house, with the intention of
-looking in at the drawing-room windows, as I had done when a child.
-But I had forgotten that these windows were all shuttered at night,
-and nothing but a faint penetration of the light within through the
-crevices bore witness to the instalment of the new dweller there.
-
-In the morning my father was entirely himself again. He told me without
-emotion of the manner in which he had obtained the picture. It had
-belonged to my mother's family, and had fallen eventually into the
-hands of a cousin of hers, resident abroad—“A man whom I did not like,
-and who did not like me,” my father said; “there was, or had been,
-some rivalry, he thought: a mistake, but he was never aware of that.
-He refused all my requests to have a copy made. You may suppose, Phil,
-that I wished this very much. Had I succeeded, you would have been
-acquainted, at least, with your mother's appearance, and need not have
-sustained this shock. But he would not consent. It gave him, I think, a
-certain pleasure to think that he had the only picture. But now he is
-dead—and out of remorse, or with some other intention, has left it to
-me.”
-
-“That looks like kindness,” said I.
-
-“Yes; or something else. He might have thought that by so doing he was
-establishing a claim upon me.” my father said: but he did not seem
-disposed to add any more. On whose behalf he meant to establish a claim
-I did not know, nor who the man was who had laid us under so great
-an obligation on his deathbed. He _had_ established a claim on me at
-least: though, as he was dead, I could not see on whose behalf it was.
-And my father said nothing more. He seemed to dislike the subject.
-When I attempted to return to it, he had recourse to his letters or
-his newspapers. Evidently he had made up his mind to say no more.
-
-Afterwards I went into the drawing-room to look at the picture once
-more. It seemed to me that the anxiety in her eyes was not so evident
-as I had thought it last night. The light possibly was more favorable.
-She stood just above the place where, I make no doubt, she had sat in
-life, where her little work-basket was—not very much above it. The
-picture was full-length, and we had hung it low, so that she might
-have been stepping into the room, and was little above my own level
-as I stood and looked at her again. Once more I smiled at the strange
-thought that this young creature, so young, almost childish, could be
-my mother; and once more my eyes grew wet looking at her. He was a
-benefactor, indeed, who had given her back to us. I said to myself,
-that if I could ever do anything for him or his, I would certainly do,
-for my—for this lovely young creature's sake.
-
-And with this in my mind, and all the thoughts that came with it, I am
-obliged to confess that the other matter, which I had been so full of
-on the previous night, went entirely out of my head.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is rarely, however, that such matters are allowed to slip out of
-one's mind. When I went out in the afternoon for my usual stroll—or
-rather when I returned from that stroll—I saw once more before me
-the woman with her baby whose story had filled me with dismay on the
-previous evening. She was waiting at the gate as before, and—“Oh,
-gentleman, but haven't you got some news to give me?” she said.
-
-“My good woman—I—have been greatly occupied. I have had—no time to do
-anything.”
-
-“Ah!” she said, with a little cry of disappointment, “my man said not
-to make too sure, and that the ways of the gentlefolks is hard to know.”
-
-“I cannot explain to you,” I said, as gently as I could, “what it is
-that has made me forget you. It was an event that can only do you good
-in the end. Go home now, and see the man that took your things from
-you, and tell him to come to me. I promise you it shall be put right.”
-
-The woman looked at me in astonishment, then burst forth, as it
-seemed, involuntarily,—“What! without asking no questions?” After
-this there came a storm of tears and blessings, from which I made
-haste to escape, but not without carrying that curious commentary
-on my rashness away with me—“Without asking no questions?” It might
-be foolish, perhaps: but after all how slight a matter. To make the
-poor creature comfortable at the cost of what—a box or two of cigars,
-perhaps, or some other trifle. And if it should be her own fault, or
-her husband's—what then? Had I been punished for all my faults, where
-should I have been now. And if the advantage should be only temporary,
-what then? To be relieved and comforted even for a day or two, was not
-that something to count in life? Thus I quenched the fiery dart of
-criticism which my _protégée_ herself had thrown into the transaction,
-not without a certain sense of the humor of it. Its effect, however,
-was to make me less anxious to see my father, to repeat my proposal
-to him, and to call his attention to the cruelty performed in his
-name. This one case I had taken out of the category of wrongs to be
-righted, by assuming arbitrarily the position of Providence in my own
-person—for, of course, I had bound myself to pay the poor creature's
-rent as well as redeem her goods—and, whatever might happen to her
-in the future, had taken the past into my own hands. The man came
-presently to see me who, it seems, had acted as my father's agent in
-the matter. “I don't know, sir, how Mr. Canning will take it,” he
-said. “He don't want none of those irregular, bad-paying ones in his
-property. He always says as to look over it and let the rent run on is
-making things worse in the end. His rule is, 'Never more than a month,
-Stevens:' that's what Mr. Canning says to me, sir. He says, 'More than
-that they can't pay. It's no use trying.' And it's a good rule; it's a
-very good rule. He won't hear none of their stories, sir. Bless you,
-you'd never get a penny of rent from them small houses if you listened
-to their tales. But if so be as you'll pay Mrs. Jordan's rent, it's
-none of my business how it's paid, so long as it's paid, and I'll send
-her back her things. But they'll just have to be took next time,” he
-added, composedly. “Over and over: it's always the same story with them
-sort of poor folks—they're too poor for anything, that's the truth,”
-the man said.
-
-Morphew came back to my room after my visitor was gone. “Mr. Philip,”
-he said, “you'll excuse me, sir, but if you're going to pay all the
-poor folk's rent as have distresses put in, you may just go into the
-court at once, for it's without end—”
-
-“I am going to be the agent myself, Morphew, and manage for my father:
-and we'll soon put a stop to that,” I said, more cheerfully than I felt.
-
-“Manage for—master,” he said, with a face of consternation. “You, Mr.
-Philip!”
-
-“You seem to have a great contempt for me, Morphew.”
-
-He did not deny the fact. He said with excitement, “Master, sir—master
-don't let himself be put a stop to by any man. Master's—not one to be
-managed. Don't you quarrel with master, Mr. Philip, for the love of
-God.” The old man was quite pale.
-
-“Quarrel!” I said. “I have never quarreled with my father, and I don't
-mean to begin now.”
-
-Morphew dispelled his own excitement by making up the fire, which was
-dying in the grate. It was a very mild spring evening, and he made up a
-great blaze which would have suited December. This is one of many ways
-in which an old servant will relieve his mind. He muttered all the time
-as he threw on the coals and wood. “He'll not like it—we all know as
-he'll not like it. Master won't stand no meddling, Mr. Philip,”—this
-last he discharged at me like a flying arrow as he closed the door.
-
-I soon found there was truth in what he said. My father was not angry;
-he was even half amused. “I don't think that plan of yours will
-hold water, Phil. I hear you have been paying rents and redeeming
-furniture—that's an expensive game, and a very profitless one. Of
-course, so long as you are a benevolent gentleman acting for your own
-pleasure, it makes no difference to me. I am quite content if I get my
-money, even out of your pockets—so long as it amuses you. But as my
-collector, you know, which you are good enough to propose to be——”
-
-“Of course I should act under your orders,” I said; but at least you
-might be sure that I would not commit you to any—to any——” I paused for
-a word.
-
-“Act of oppression,” he said with a smile—“piece of cruelty,
-exaction—there are half-a-dozen words——”
-
-“Sir——” I cried.
-
-“Stop, Phil, and let us understand each other. I hope I have always
-been a just man. I do my duty on my side, and I expect it from others.
-It is your benevolence that is cruel. I have calculated anxiously how
-much credit it is safe to allow; but I will allow no man, or woman
-either, to go beyond what he or she can make up. My law is fixed. Now
-you understand. My agents, as you call them, originate nothing—they
-execute only what I decide——”
-
-“But then no circumstances are taken into account—no bad luck, no evil
-chances, no loss unexpected.”
-
-“There are no evil chances,” he said “there is no bad luck—they reap
-as they sow. No, I don't go among them to be cheated by their stories
-and spend quite unnecessary emotion in sympathising with them. You will
-find it much better for you that I don't. I deal with them on a general
-rule, made, I assure you, not without a great deal of thought.”
-
-“And must it always be so?” I said. “Is there no way of ameliorating or
-bringing in a better state of things?”
-
-“It seems not,” he said; “we don't get 'no forrarder' in that direction
-so far as I can see.” And then he turned the conversation to general
-matters.
-
-I retired to my room greatly discouraged that night. In former ages—or
-so one is led to suppose—and in the lower primitive classes who still
-linger near the primeval type, action of any kind was, and is, easier
-than amid the complications of our higher civilisation. A bad man is
-a distinct entity, against whom you know more or less what steps to
-take. A tyrant, an oppressor, a bad landlord, a man who lets miserable
-tenements at a rack-rent (to come down to particulars), and exposes his
-wretched tenants to all those abominations of which we have heard so
-much—well! he is more or less a satisfactory opponent. There he is, and
-there is nothing to be said for him—down with him! and let there be an
-end of his wickedness. But when, on the contrary, you have before you
-a good man, a just man, who has considered deeply a question which you
-allow to be full of difficulty; who regrets, but cannot, being human,
-avert, the miseries which to some unhappy individuals follow from the
-very wisdom of his rule,—what can you do—what is to be done? Individual
-benevolence at haphazard may baulk him here and there, but what have
-you to put in the place of his well-considered scheme? Charity which
-makes paupers? or what else? I had not considered the question deeply,
-but it seemed to me that I now came to a blank wall, which my vague
-human sentiment of pity and scorn could find no way to breach. There
-must be wrong somewhere—but where? There must be some change for the
-better to be made—but how?
-
-I was seated with a book before me on the table, with my head supported
-on my hands. My eyes were on the printed page, but I was not reading—my
-mind was full of these thoughts, my heart of great discouragement and
-despondency, a sense that I could do nothing, yet that there surely
-must and ought, if I but knew it, be something to do. The fire which
-Morphew had built up before dinner was dying out, the shaded lamp on
-my table left all the corners in a mysterious twilight. The house was
-perfectly still, no one moving: my father in the library, where, after
-the habit of many solitary years, he liked to be left alone, and I
-here in my retreat, preparing for the formation of similar habits. I
-thought all at once of the third member of the party, the newcomer,
-alone too in the room that had been hers; and there suddenly occurred
-to me a strong desire to take up my lamp and go to the drawing-room
-and visit her, to see whether her soft angelic face would give any
-inspiration. I restrained, however, this futile impulse—for what could
-the picture say?—and instead wondered what might have been had she
-lived, had she been there, warmly enthroned beside the warm domestic
-centre, the hearth which would have been a common sanctuary, the true
-home. In that case what might have been? Alas! the question was no more
-simple to answer than the other: she might have been there alone too,
-her husband's business, her son's thoughts, as far from her as now,
-when her silent representative held her old place in the silence and
-darkness. I had known it so, often enough. Love itself does not always
-give comprehension and sympathy. It might be that she was more to us
-there, in the sweet image of her undeveloped beauty, than she might
-have been had she lived and grown to maturity and fading, like the rest.
-
-I cannot be certain whether my mind was still lingering on this not
-very cheerful reflection, or if it had been left behind, when the
-strange occurrence came of which I have now to tell: can I call it an
-occurrence? My eyes were on my book, when I thought I heard the sound
-of a door opening and shutting, but so far away and faint that if real
-at all it must have been in a far corner of the house. I did not move
-except to lift my eyes from the book, as one does instinctively the
-better to listen; when——But I cannot tell, nor have I ever been able
-to describe exactly what it was. My heart made all at once a sudden
-leap in my breast. I am aware that this language is figurative, and
-that the heart cannot leap: but it is a figure so entirely justified by
-sensation, that no one will have any difficulty in understanding what
-I mean. My heart leapt up and began beating wildly in my throat, in my
-ears, as if my whole being had received a sudden and intolerable shock.
-The sound went through my head like the dizzy sound of some strange
-mechanism, a thousand wheels and springs, circling, echoing, working
-in my brain. I felt the blood bound in my veins, my mouth became dry,
-my eyes hot, a sense of something insupportable took possession of
-me. I sprang to my feet, and then I sat down again. I cast a quick
-glance round me beyond the brief circle of the lamplight, but there
-was nothing there to account in any way for this sudden extraordinary
-rush of sensation—nor could I feel any meaning in it, any suggestion,
-any moral impression. I thought I must be going to be ill, and got
-out my watch and felt my pulse: it was beating furiously, about 125
-throbs in a minute. I knew of no illness that could come on like this
-with out warning, in a moment, and I tried to subdue myself, to say to
-myself that it was nothing, some flutter of the nerves, some physical
-disturbance. I laid myself down upon my sofa to try if rest would help
-me, and keep still—as long as the thumping and throbbing of this wild
-excited mechanism within, like a wild beast plunging and struggling,
-would let me. I am quite aware of the confusion of the metaphor—the
-reality was just so. It was like a mechanism deranged, going wildly
-with ever-increasing precipitation, like those horrible wheels that
-from time to time catch a helpless human being in them and tear him to
-pieces: but at the same time it was like a maddened living creature
-making the wildest efforts to get free.
-
-When I could bear this no longer I got up and walked about my room;
-then having still a certain command of myself, though I could not
-master the commotion within me, I deliberately took down an exciting
-book from the shelf, a book of breathless adventure which had always
-interested me, and tried with that to break the spell. After a few
-minutes, however, I flung the book aside; I was gradually losing all
-power over myself. What I should be moved to do,—to shout aloud, to
-struggle with I know not what; or if was I going mad altogether, and
-next moment must be a raving lunatic,—I could not tell. I kept looking
-round, expecting I don't know what: several times with the corner of
-my eye I seemed to see a movement, as if some one was stealing out
-of sight; but when I looked straight, there was never anything but
-the plain outlines of the wall and carpet, the chairs standing in
-good order. At last I snatched up the lamp in my hand and went out of
-the room. To look at the picture? which had been faintly showing in
-my imagination from time to time, the eyes, more anxious than ever,
-looking at me from out the silent air. But no; I passed the door of
-that room swiftly, moving, it seemed, without any volition of my own,
-and before I knew where I was going, went into my father's library with
-my lamp in my hand.
-
-He was still sitting there at his writing-table; he looked up
-astonished to see me hurrying in with my light. “Phil!” he said,
-surprised. I remember that I shut the door behind me, and came up to
-him, and set down the lamp on his table. My sudden appearance alarmed
-him. “What is the matter?” he cried. “Philip, what have you been doing
-with yourself?”
-
-I sat down on the nearest chair and gasped, gazing at him. The wild
-commotion ceased, the blood subsided into its natural channels, my
-heart resumed its place, I use such words as mortal weakness can to
-express the sensations I felt. I came to myself thus, gazing at him,
-confounded, at once by the extraordinary passion which I had gone
-through, and its sudden cessation. “The matter?” I cried; “I don't know
-what is the matter.”
-
-My father had pushed his spectacles up from his eyes. He appeared to
-me as faces appear in a fever, all glorified with light which is not
-in them—his eyes glowing, his white hair shining like silver; but his
-look was severe. “You are not a boy, that I should reprove you; but you
-ought to know better,” he said.
-
-Then I explained to him, so far as I was able, what had happened. Had
-happened? nothing had happened. He did not understand me—nor did I,
-now that it was over, understand myself; but he saw enough to make him
-aware that the disturbance in me was serious, and not caused by any
-folly of my own. He was very kind as soon as he had assured himself of
-this, and talked, taking pains to bring me back to unexciting subjects.
-He had a letter in his hand with a very deep border of black when I
-came in. I observed it, without taking any notice or associating it
-with anything I knew. He had many correspondents, and although we
-were excellent friends, we had never been on those confidential terms
-which warrant one man in asking another from whom a special letter has
-come. We were not so near to each other as this, though we were father
-and son. After a while I went back to my own room, and finished the
-evening in my usual way, without any return of the excitement which,
-now that it was over, looked to me like some extraordinary dream. What
-had it meant? had it meant anything? I said to myself that it must be
-purely physical, something gone temporarily amiss, which had righted
-itself. It was physical; the excitement did not affect my mind. I was
-independent of it all the time, a spectator of my own agitation—a clear
-proof that, whatever it was, it had affected my bodily organisation
-alone.
-
-Next day I returned to the problem which I had not been able to solve.
-I found out my petitioner in the back street, and that she was happy
-in the recovery of her possessions, which to my eyes indeed did not
-seem very worthy either of lamentation or delight. Nor was her house
-the tidy house which injured virtue should have when restored to its
-humble rights. She was not injured virtue, it was clear. She made me a
-great many curtseys, and poured forth a number of blessings. Her “man”
-came in while I was there, and hoped in a gruff voice that God would
-reward me and that the old gentleman 'd let 'em alone. I did not like
-the looks of the man. It seemed to me that in the dark lane behind the
-house of a winter's night he would not be a pleasant person to find in
-one's way. Nor was this all: when I went out into the little street,
-which it appeared was all, or almost all, my fathers property, a number
-of groups formed in my way, and at least half-a-dozen applicants sidled
-up. “I've more claims nor Mary Jordan any day,” said one; “I've lived
-on Squire Canning's property one place and another, this twenty year.”
-“And what do you say to me,” said another; “I've six children to her
-two, bless you, sir, and ne'er a father to do for them.” I believed
-in my father's rule before I got out of the street, and approved
-his wisdom in keeping himself free from personal contact with his
-tenants. Yet when I looked back upon the swarming thoroughfare, the
-mean little houses, the women at their doors all so open-mouthed, and
-eager to contend for my favor, my heart sank within me at the thought
-that out of their misery some portion of our wealth came—I don't care
-how small a portion: that I, young and strong, should be kept idle
-and in luxury, in some part through the money screwed out of their
-necessities, obtained sometimes by the sacrifice of everything they
-prized! Of course I know all the ordinary commonplaces of life as well
-as anyone—that if you build a house with your hands or your money, and
-let it, the rent of it is your just due, and must be paid. But yet——
-
-“Don't you think, sir,” I said, that evening at dinner, the subject
-being reintroduced by my father himself, “that we have some duty
-towards them when we draw so much from them?”
-
-“Certainly,” he said; “I take as much trouble about their drains as I
-do about my own.”
-
-“That is always something, I suppose.”
-
-“Something! it is a great deal—it is more than they get anywhere else.
-I keep them clean, as far as that's possible. I give them at least the
-means of keeping clean, and thus check disease, and prolong life—which
-is more, I assure you, than they've any right to expect.”
-
-I was not prepared with arguments as I ought to have been. That is all
-in the Gospel according to Adam Smith, which my father had been brought
-up in, but of which the tenets had begun to be less binding in my day.
-I wanted something more, or else something else; but my views were not
-so clear, nor my system so logical and well-built, as that upon which
-my father rested his conscience, and drew his percentage with a light
-heart.
-
-Yet I thought there were signs in him of some perturbation. I met him
-one morning coming out of the room in which the portrait hung, as if
-he had gone to look at it stealthily. He was shaking his head, and
-saying, “No, no,” to himself, not perceiving me, and I stepped aside
-when I saw him so absorbed. For myself, I entered that room but little.
-I went outside, as I had so often done when I was a child, and looked
-through the windows into the still and now sacred place, which had
-always impressed me with a certain awe. Looked at so, the slight figure
-in its white dress seemed to be stepping down into the room from some
-slight visionary altitude, looking with that which had seemed to me at
-first anxiety, which I sometimes represented to myself now as a wistful
-curiosity, as if she were looking for the life which might have been
-hers. Where was the existence that had belonged to her, the sweet
-household place, the infant she had left? She would no more recognize
-the man who thus came to look at her as through a veil with mystic
-reverence, than I could recognize her. I could never be her child to
-her, any more than she could be a mother to me.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Thus time passed on for several quiet days. There was nothing to make
-us give any special heed to the passage of time, life being very
-uneventful and its habits unvaried. My mind was very much preoccupied
-by my father's tenants. He had a great deal of property in the town
-which was so near us,—streets of small houses, the best paying property
-(I was assured) of any. I was very anxious to come to some settled
-conclusion: on the one hand, not to let myself be carried away by
-sentiment; on the other, not to allow my strongly roused feelings
-to fall into the blank of routine, as his had done. I was seated
-one evening in my own sitting-room busy with this matter,—busy with
-calculations as to cost and profit, with an anxious desire to convince
-him, either that his profits were greater than justice allowed, or that
-they carried with them a more urgent duty than he had conceived.
-
-It was night, but not late, not more than ten o'clock, the household
-still astir. Everything was quiet—not the solemnity of midnight
-silence, in which there is always something of mystery, but the
-soft-breathing quiet of the evening, full of the faint habitual sounds
-of a human dwelling, a consciousness of life about. And I was very busy
-with my figures, interested, feeling no room in my mind for any other
-thought. The singular experience which had startled me so much had
-passed over very quickly, and there had been no return. I had ceased
-to think of it: indeed I had never thought of it save for the moment,
-setting it down after it was over to a physical cause without much
-difficulty. At this time I was far too busy to have thoughts to spare
-for anything, or room for imagination: and when suddenly in a moment
-without any warning, the first symptom returned, I started with it into
-determined resistance, resolute not to be fooled by any mock influence
-which could resolve itself into the action of nerves or ganglions. The
-first symptom, as before, was that my heart sprang up with a bound, as
-if a cannon had been fired at my ear. My whole being responded with a
-start. The pen fell out of my fingers, the figures went out of my head
-as if all faculty had departed: and yet I was conscious for a time at
-least of keeping my self-control. I was like the rider of a frightened
-horse, rendered almost wild by something which in the mystery of its
-voiceless being it has seen, something on the road which it will not
-pass, but wildly plunging, resisting every persuasion, turns from,
-with ever increasing passion. The rider himself after a time becomes
-infected with this inexplainable desperation of terror, and I suppose
-I must have done so: but for a time I kept the upper hand. I would
-not allow myself to spring up as I wished, as my impulse was, but sat
-there doggedly, clinging to my books, to my table, fixing myself on
-I did not mind what, to resist the flood of sensation, of emotion,
-which was sweeping through me, carrying me away. I tried to continue
-my calculations. I tried to stir myself up with recollections of the
-miserable sights I had seen, the poverty, the helplessness. I tried
-to work myself into indignation; but all through these efforts I felt
-the contagion growing upon me, my mind falling into sympathy with
-all those straining faculties of the body, startled, excited, driven
-wild by something I knew not what. It was not fear. I was like a ship
-at sea straining and plunging against wind and tide, but I was not
-afraid. I am obliged to use these metaphors, otherwise I could give no
-explanation of my condition, seized upon against my will, and torn from
-all those moorings of reason to which I clung with desperation—as long
-as I had the strength.
-
-When I got up from my chair at last, the battle was lost, so far as
-my powers of self-control were concerned. I got up, or rather was
-dragged up, from my seat, clutching at these material things round me
-as with a last effort to hold my own. But that was no longer possible;
-I was overcome. I stood for a moment looking round me feebly, feeling
-myself begin to babble with stammering lips, which was the alternative
-of shrieking, and which I seemed to choose as a lesser evil. What I
-said was, “What am I to do?” and after a while, “What do you want me
-to do?” although throughout I saw no one, heard no voice, and had in
-reality not power enough in my dizzy and confused brain to know what I
-myself meant. I stood thus for a moment looking blankly round me for
-guidance, repeating the question, which seemed after a time to become
-almost mechanical. What do you want me to do? though I neither knew to
-whom I addressed it nor why I said it. Presently—whether in answer,
-whether in mere yielding of nature, I cannot tell—I became aware of a
-difference: not a lessening of the agitation, but a softening, as if my
-powers of resistance being exhausted, a gentler force, a more benignant
-influence, had room. I felt myself consent to whatever it was. My heart
-melted in the midst of the tumult; I seemed to give myself up, and
-move as if drawn by some one whose arm was in mine, as if softly swept
-along, not forcibly, but with an utter consent of all my faculties to
-do I knew not what, for love of I knew not whom. For love—that was
-how it seemed—not by force, as when I went before. But my steps took
-the same course: I went through the dim passages in an exaltation
-indescribable, and opened the door of my father's room.
-
-He was seated there at his table, as usual, the light of the lamp
-falling on his white hair: he looked up with some surprise at the sound
-of the opening door. “Phil,” he said, and, with a look of wondering
-apprehension on his face, watched my approach. I went straight up to
-him, and put my hand on his shoulder. “Phil, what is the matter? What
-do you want with me? What is it?” he said.
-
-“Father, I can't tell you. I come not of myself. There must be
-something in it, though I don't know what it is. This is the second
-time I have been brought to you here.”
-
-“Are you going——?” he stopped himself. The exclamation had been begun
-with an angry intention. He stopped, looked at me with a scared look,
-as if perhaps it might be true.
-
-“Do you mean mad? I don't think so. I have no delusions that I know of.
-Father, think—do you know any reason why I am brought here? for some
-cause there must be.”
-
-I stood with my hand upon the back of his chair. His table was covered
-with papers, among which were several letters with the broad black
-border which I had before observed. I noticed this now in my excitement
-without any distinct associations of thoughts, for that I was not
-capable of; but the black border caught my eye. And I was conscious
-that he, too, gave a hurried glance at them, and with one hand swept
-them away.
-
-“Philip,” he said, pushing back his chair, “you must be ill, my poor
-boy. Evidently we have not been treating you rightly: you have been
-more ill all through than I supposed. Let me persuade you to go to bed.”
-
-“I am perfectly well,” I said. “Father, don't let us deceive one
-another. I am neither a man to go mad nor to see ghosts. What it is
-that has got the command over me I can't tell: but there is some cause
-for it. You are doing something or planning something with which I have
-a right to interfere.”
-
-He turned round squarely in his chair with a spark in his blue eyes. He
-was not a man to be meddled with. “I have yet to learn what can give
-my son a right to interfere. I am in possession of all my faculties, I
-hope.”
-
-“Father,” I cried, “won't you listen to me? no one can say I have
-been undutiful or disrespectful. I am a man, with a right to speak
-my mind, and I have done so; but this is different. I am not here by
-my own will. Something that is stronger than I has brought me. There
-is something in your mind which disturbs—others. I don't know what I
-am saying. This is not what I meant to say: but you know the meaning
-better than I. Some one—who can speak to you only by me—speaks to you
-by me; and I know that you understand.”
-
-He gazed up at me, growing pale, and his under lip fell. I, for
-my part, felt that my message was delivered. My heart sank into a
-stillness so sudden that it made me faint. The light swam in my eyes:
-everything went round with me. I kept upright only by my hold upon the
-chair; and in the sense of utter weakness that followed I dropped on my
-knees I think first, then on the nearest seat that presented itself,
-and covering my face with my hands, had hard ado not to sob, in the
-sudden removal of that strange influence, the relaxation of the strain.
-
-There was silence between us for some time; then he said, but with a
-voice slightly broken, “I don't understand you Phil. You must have
-taken some fancy into your mind which my slower intelligence——Speak out
-what you want to say. What do you find fault with? Is it all—all that
-woman Jordan?”
-
-He gave a short forced laugh as he broke off, and shook me almost
-roughly by the shoulder, saying, “speak out! what—what do you want to
-say?”
-
-“It seems, sir, that I have said everything.” My voice trembled more
-than his, but not in the same way. “I have told you that I did not come
-by my own will—quite otherwise. I resisted as long as I could: now all
-is said. It is for you to judge whether it was worth the trouble or
-not.”
-
-He got up from his seat in a hurried way. “You would have me as—mad as
-yourself,” he said, then sat down again as quickly. “Come, Phil: if it
-will please you, not to make a breach, the first breach, between us,
-you shall have your way. I consent to your looking into that matter
-about the poor tenants. Your mind shall not be upset about that even
-though I don't enter into all your views.”
-
-“Thank you,” I said; “but father, that is not what it is.”
-
-“Then it is a piece of folly,” he said, angrily. “I suppose you
-mean——but this is a matter in which I choose to judge for myself.”
-
-“You know what I mean,” I said, as quietly as I could, “though I don't
-myself know; that proves there is good reason for it. Will you do one
-thing for me before I leave you? Come with me into the drawing-room——”
-
-“What end,” he said, with again the tremble in his voice, “is to be
-served by that?”
-
-“I don't very well know; but to look at her, you and I together, will
-always do something for us, sir. As for the breach, there can be no
-breach when we stand there.”
-
-He got up, trembling like an old man, which he was, but which he never
-looked like, save at moments of emotion like this, and told me to take
-the light; then stopped when he had got half-way across the room. “This
-is a piece of theatrical sentimentality,” he said. “No, Phil, I will
-not go. I will not bring her into any such——Put down the lamp, and if
-you will take my advice, go to bed.”
-
-“At least,” I said, “I will trouble you no more, father, to-night. So
-long as you understand, there need be no more to say.”
-
-He gave me a very curt “good-night,” and turned back to his papers—the
-letters with the black edge, either by my imagination or in reality,
-always keeping uppermost. I went to my own room for my lamp, and then
-alone proceeded to the silent shrine in which the portrait hung. I at
-least would look at her to-night. I don't know whether I asked myself,
-in so many words, if it were she who—or if it was any one—I knew
-nothing; but my heart was drawn with a softness—born, perhaps, of the
-great weakness in which I was left after that visitation—to her, to
-look at her, to see perhaps if there was any sympathy, any approval in
-her face. I set down my lamp on the table where her little work-basket
-still was: the light threw a gleam upward upon her,—she seemed more
-than ever to be stepping into the room, coming down towards me, coming
-back to her life. Ah no! her life was lost and vanished: all mine stood
-between her and the days she knew. She looked at me with eyes that
-did not change. The anxiety I had seen at first seemed now a wistful
-subdued question; but that difference was not in her look but in mine.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I need not linger on the intervening time. The doctor who attended
-us usually, came in next day “by accident,” and we had a long
-conversation. On the following day a very impressive yet genial
-gentleman from town lunched with us—a friend of my father's, Dr.
-something; but the introduction was hurried, and I did not catch his
-name. He, too, had a long talk with me afterwards—my father being
-called away to speak to some one on business. Dr. —— drew me out on the
-subject of the dwellings of the poor. He said he heard I took great
-interest in this question, which had come so much to the front at the
-present moment. He was interested in it too, and wanted to know the
-view I took. I explained at considerable length that my view did not
-concern the general subject, on which I had scarcely thought, so much
-as the individual mode of management of my father's estate. He was a
-most patient and intelligent listener, agreeing with me on some points,
-differing in others; and his visit was very pleasant. I had no idea
-until after of its special object: though a certain puzzled look and
-slight shake of the head when my father returned, might have thrown
-some light upon it. The report of the medical experts in my case,
-however, had been quite satisfactory, for I heard nothing more of them.
-It was, I think, a fortnight later when the next and last of these
-strange experiences came.
-
-This time it was morning, about noon,—a wet and rather dismal spring
-day. The half-spread leaves seemed to tap at the window, with an appeal
-to be taken in; the primroses, that showed golden upon the grass at
-the roots of the trees, just beyond the smooth-shorn grass of the
-lawn, were all drooped and sodden among their sheltering leaves. The
-very growth seemed dreary—the sense of spring in the air making the
-feeling of winter a grievance, instead of the natural effect which it
-had conveyed a few months before. I had been writing letters and was
-cheerful enough, going back among the associates of my old life, with,
-perhaps, a little longing for its freedom and independence, but at the
-same time a not ungrateful consciousness that for the moment my present
-tranquillity might be best.
-
-This was my condition—a not unpleasant one—when suddenly the now
-well-known symptoms of the visitation to which I had become subject
-suddenly seized upon me,—the leap of the heart; the sudden, causeless,
-overwhelming physical excitement, which I could neither ignore nor
-allay. I was terrified beyond description, beyond reason, when I became
-conscious that this was about to begin over again: what purpose did it
-answer, what good was in it? My father, indeed, understood the meaning
-of it, though I did not understand: but it was little agreeable to
-be thus made a helpless instrument without any will of mine, in an
-operation of which I knew nothing; and to enact the part of the oracle
-unwillingly, with suffering and such a strain as it took me days to
-get over. I resisted, not as before, but yet desperately, trying with
-better knowledge to keep down the growing passion. I hurried to my
-room and swallowed a dose of a sedative which had been given me to
-procure sleep on my first return from India. I saw Morphew in the hall,
-and called him to talk to him, and cheat myself, if possible, by that
-means. Morphew lingered, however, and, before he came, I was beyond
-conversation. I heard him speak, his voice coming vaguely through the
-turmoil which was already in my ears, but what he said I have never
-known. I stood staring, trying to recover my power of attention,
-with an aspect which ended by completely frightening the man. He
-cried out at last that he was sure I was ill, that he must bring me
-something; which words penetrated more or less into my maddened brain.
-It became impressed upon me that he was going to get some one—one of
-my father's doctors, perhaps—to prevent me from acting, to stop my
-interference,—and that if I waited a moment longer I might be too
-late. A vague idea seized me at the same time, of taking refuge with
-the portrait—going to its feet, throwing myself there, perhaps, till
-the paroxysm should be over. But it was not there that my footsteps
-were directed. I can remember making an effort to open the door of the
-drawing-room, and feeling myself swept past it, as if by a gale of
-wind. It was not there that I had to go. I knew very well where I had
-to go,—once more on my confused and voiceless mission to my father, who
-understood, although I could not understand.
-
-Yet as it was daylight, and all was clear, I could not help noting
-one or two circumstances on my way. I saw some one sitting in the
-hall as if waiting—a woman, a girl, a black-shrouded figure, with a
-thick veil over her face: and asked myself who she was, and what she
-wanted there? This question, which had nothing to do with my present
-condition, somehow got into my mind, and was tossed up and down upon
-the tumultuous tide like a stray log on the breast of a fiercely
-rolling stream, now submerged, now coming uppermost, at the mercy of
-the waters. It did not stop me for a moment, as I hurried towards my
-father's room, but it got upon the current of my mind. I flung open my
-father's door, and closed it again after me, without seeing who was
-there or how he was engaged. The full clearness of the daylight did not
-identify him as the lamp did at night. He looked up at the sound of the
-door, with a glance of apprehension; and rising suddenly, interrupting
-some one who was standing speaking to him with much earnestness and
-even vehemence, came forward to meet me. “I cannot be disturbed at
-present,” he said quickly; “I am busy.” Then seeing the look in my
-face, which by this time he knew, he too changed color. “Phil,” he
-said, in a low, imperative voice, “wretched boy, go away—go away; don't
-let a stranger see you——”
-
-“I can't go away,” I said. “It is impossible. You know why I have come.
-I cannot, if I would. It is more powerful than I——”
-
-“Go, sir,” he said; “go at once—no more of this folly. I will not have
-you in this room. Go——go!”
-
-I made no answer. I don't know that I could have done so. There had
-never been any struggle between us before; but I had no power to do
-one thing or another. The tumult within me was in full career. I
-heard indeed what he said, and was able to reply; but his words, too,
-were like straws tossed upon the tremendous stream. I saw now with my
-feverish eyes who the other person present was. It was a woman, dressed
-also in mourning similar to the one in the hall; but this a middle-aged
-woman, like a respectable servant. She had been crying, and in the
-pause caused by this encounter between my father and myself, dried her
-eyes with a handkerchief, which she rolled like a ball in her hand,
-evidently in strong emotion. She turned and looked at me as my father
-spoke to me, for a moment with a gleam of hope, then falling back into
-her former attitude.
-
-My father returned to his seat. He was much agitated too, though doing
-all that was possible to conceal it. My inopportune arrival was
-evidently a great and unlooked-for vexation to him. He gave me the only
-look of passionate displeasure I have ever had from him, as he sat down
-again: but he said nothing more.
-
-“You must understand,” he said, addressing the woman, “that I have said
-my last words on this subject. I don't choose to enter into it again
-in the presence of my son, who is not well enough to be made a party
-to any discussion. I am sorry that you should have had so much trouble
-in vain; but you were warned beforehand, and you have only yourself to
-blame. I acknowledge no claim, and nothing you can say will change my
-resolution. I must beg you to go away. All this is very painful and
-quite useless. I acknowledge no claim.”
-
-“Oh, sir,” she cried, her eyes beginning once more to flow, her speech
-interrupted by little sobs. “Maybe I did wrong to speak of a claim.
-I'm not educated to argue with a gentleman. Maybe we have no claim.
-But if it's not by right, oh, Mr. Canning, won't you let your heart be
-touched by pity? She don't know what I'm saying, poor dear. She's not
-one to beg and pray for herself, as I'm doing for her. Oh, sir, she's
-so young! She's so lone in this world—not a friend to stand by her, nor
-a house to take her in! You are the nearest to her of any one that's
-left in this world. She hasn't a relation—not one so near as you——oh!”
-she cried, with a sudden thought, turning quickly round upon me, “this
-gentleman's your son! Now I think of it, it's not your relation she is,
-but his, through his mother! That's nearer, nearer! Oh, sir! you're
-young; your heart should be more tender. Here is my young lady that
-has no one in the world to look to her. Your own flesh and blood: your
-mother's cousin—your mother's——”
-
-My father called to her to stop, with a voice of thunder. “Philip,
-leave us at once. It is not a matter to be discussed with you.”
-
-And then in a moment it became clear to me what it was. It had been
-with difficulty that I had kept myself still. My breast was laboring
-with the fever of an impulse poured into me, more than I could contain.
-And now for the first time I knew why. I hurried towards him, and took
-his hand, though he resisted, into mine. Mine were burning, but his
-like ice: their touch burnt me with its chill, like fire. “This is what
-it is?” I cried. “I had no knowledge before. I don't know now what is
-being asked of you. But, father—understand! You know, and I know now,
-that some one sends me—some one—who has a right to interfere.”
-
-He pushed me away with all his might. “You are mad,” he cried. “What
-right have you to think——? Oh, you are mad—mad! I have seen it coming
-on——”
-
-The woman, the petitioner, had grown silent, watching this brief
-conflict with the terror and interest with which women watch a struggle
-between men. She started and fell back when she heard what he said,
-but did not take her eyes off me, following every movement I made.
-When I turned to go away, a cry of indescribable disappointment and
-remonstrance burst from her, and even my father raised himself up and
-stared at my withdrawal, astonished to find that he had overcome me so
-soon and easily. I paused for a moment, and looked back on them, seeing
-them large and vague through the mist of fever. “I am not going away,”
-I said. “I am going for another messenger—one you can't gainsay.”
-
-My father rose. He called out to me threateningly, “I will have nothing
-touched that is hers. Nothing that is hers shall be profaned——”
-
-I waited to hear no more: I knew what I had to do. By what means it was
-conveyed to me I cannot tell; but the certainty of an influence which
-no one thought of calmed me in the midst of my fever. I went out into
-the hall, where I had seen the young stranger waiting. I went up to
-her and touched her on the shoulder. She rose at once, with a little
-movement of alarm, yet with docile and instant obedience, as if she
-had expected the summons. I made her take off her veil and her bonnet,
-scarcely looking at her, scarcely seeing her, knowing how it was: I
-took her soft, small, cool, yet trembling hand into mine; it was so
-soft and cool, not cold, it refreshed me with its tremulous touch. All
-through I moved and spoke like a man in a dream, swiftly, noiselessly,
-all the complications of waking life removed, without embarrassment,
-without reflection, without the loss of a moment. My father was still
-standing up, leaning a little forward as he had done when I withdrew,
-threatening, yet terror-stricken, not knowing what I might be about to
-do, when I returned with my companion. That was the one thing he had
-not thought of. He was entirely undefended, unprepared. He gave her one
-look, flung up his arms above his head, and uttered a distracted cry,
-so wild that it seemed the last outcry of nature—“Agnes!” then fell
-back like a sudden ruin, upon himself, into his chair.
-
-I had no leisure to think how he was, or whether he could hear what I
-said. I had my message to deliver. “Father,” I said, laboring with my
-panting breath, “it is for this that heaven has opened, and one whom
-I never saw, one whom I know not, has taken possession of me. Had we
-been less earthly we should have seen her—herself, and not merely her
-image. I have not even known what she meant. I have been as a fool
-without understanding. This is the third time I have come to you with
-her message, without knowing what to say. But now I have found it out.
-This is her message. I have found it out at last.”
-
-There was an awful pause—a pause in which no one moved or breathed.
-Then there came a broken voice out of my father's chair. He had not
-understood, though I think he heard what I said. He put out two feeble
-hands. “Phil—I think I am dying—has she—has she come for me?” he said.
-
-We had to carry him to his bed. What struggles he had gone through
-before I cannot tell. He had stood fast, and had refused to be moved,
-and now he fell—like an old tower, like an old tree. The necessity
-there was for thinking of him saved me from the physical consequences
-which had prostrated me on a former occasion. I had no leisure now for
-any consciousness of how matters went with myself.
-
-His delusion was not wonderful, but most natural. She was clothed in
-black from head to foot, instead of the white dress of the portrait.
-She had no knowledge of the conflict, of nothing but that she was
-called for, that her fate might depend on the next few minutes. In
-her eyes there was a pathetic question, a line of anxiety in the lids,
-an innocent appeal in the looks. And the face the same: the same lips,
-sensitive, ready to quiver; the same innocent, candid brow; the look
-of a common race, which is more subtle than mere resemblance. How I
-knew that it was so, I cannot tell, nor any man. It was the other—the
-elder—ah no! not elder; the ever young, the Agnes to whom age can never
-come—she who they say was the mother of a man who never saw her—it was
-she who led her kinswoman, her representative, into our hearts.
-
- * * * * *
-
-My father recovered after a few days: he had taken cold, it was said,
-the day before—and naturally, at seventy, a small matter is enough to
-upset the balance even of a strong man. He got quite well; but he was
-willing enough afterwards to leave the management of that ticklish kind
-of property which involves human well-being in my hands, who could move
-about more freely, and see with my own eyes how things were going on.
-He liked home better, and had more pleasure in his personal existence
-in the end of his life. Agnes is now my wife, as he had, of course,
-foreseen. It was not merely the disinclination to receive her father's
-daughter, or to take upon him a new responsibility, that had moved him,
-to do him justice. But both these motives had told strongly. I have
-never been told, and now will never be told, what his griefs against
-my mother's family, and especially against that cousin, had been; but
-that he had been very determined, deeply prejudiced, there can be no
-doubt. It turned out after, that the first occasion on which I had
-been mysteriously commissioned to him with a message which I did not
-understand, and which for that time he did not understand, was the
-evening of the day on which he had received the dead man's letter,
-appealing to him—to him, a man whom he had wronged—on behalf of the
-child who was about to be left friendless in the world. The second
-time, further letters, from the nurse who was the only guardian of the
-orphan, and the chaplain of the place where her father had died, taking
-it for granted that my father's house was her natural refuge—had been
-received. The third I have already described, and its results.
-
-For a long time after, my mind was never without a lurking fear that
-the influence which had once taken possession of me might return again.
-Why should I have feared to be influenced—to be the messenger of a
-blessed creature, whose wishes could be nothing but heavenly? Who can
-say? Flesh and blood is not made for such encounters: they were more
-than I could bear. But nothing of the kind has ever occurred again.
-
-Agnes had her peaceful domestic throne established under the picture.
-My father wished it to be so, and spent his evenings there in the
-warmth and light, instead of in the old library, in the narrow circle
-cleared by our lamp out of the darkness, as long as he lived. It is
-supposed by strangers that the picture on the wall is that of my wife;
-and I have always been glad that it should be so supposed. She who was
-my mother, who came back to me and became as my soul for three strange
-moments and no more, but with whom I can feel no credible relationship
-as she stands there, has retired for me into the tender regions of
-the unseen. She has passed once more into the secret company of those
-shadows, who can only become real in an atmosphere fitted to modify and
-harmonise all differences, and make all wonders possible—the light of
-the perfect day.—_Blackwood's Magazine._
-
-
-
-
-DELLA CRUSCA AND ANNA MATILDA:
-
-AN EPISODE IN ENGLISH LITERATURE.
-
-BY ARMINE T. KENT.
-
-Most people are more or less vaguely aware that there existed in
-England, towards the end of the last century, a school of poets,
-or poetasters, called Della Cruscan; and Mrs. Oliphant not long
-ago suggested, in her _Literary History_, that a sketch of their
-eccentricities might not be unamusing. I propose, accordingly, for
-the edification of the curious, to recount a few particulars of the
-Della Cruscan writers, in the days of their prosperity and the days of
-their collapse. They were, let it at once be admitted, a feeble and a
-frivolous folk; yet I think that a moral may suggest itself when their
-story has been told.
-
-In the year 1784 Mr. Robert Merry, a bachelor of thirty, had been for
-some years domiciled at Florence. That his position and prospects
-were not of a very definite order was owing to no defect of nurture
-or opportunity. He had been educated at Harrow, at the same time as
-Sheridan, and afterwards at Christ's College, Cambridge, and was
-originally intended for the Bar. To Lincoln's Inn he accordingly made a
-pretence of belonging till the death of his father, who was a Governor
-of the Hudson's Bay Company; the family connection with the North Seas
-being still perpetuated in the name of Merry's Island. Robert Merry
-at once took advantage of the independence which came to him on his
-father's death to abandon the Bar and buy himself a commission in the
-Guards. His liking for high play and high society kept him, for a short
-time, amused in his new position. He grew, however, once more restless;
-wandered on the Continent; and became, in the phraseology of the day,
-a man of letters and of leisure. His love of letters he gratified, at
-Florence, by becoming a member of the Italian Academy, the Accademia
-della Crusca, and his love of letters and leisure combined by joining
-himself to an English society who called themselves the “Oziosi,” and,
-no doubt, took good care to merit that designation.
-
-The leading spirit of this coterie was no less a personage than Mrs.
-Piozzi, happily married at last, and safely escaped from the malice
-of her cold-blooded daughters, and from the virulence with which the
-English journals had inveighed against her choice of a second husband.
-Even now the memory of her domestic troubles tended to inspire her
-with a dejection which the master-pieces of Florentine sculpture were,
-oddly enough, powerless to remove. As she herself described it, in
-lines at which one cannot help smiling, sincere as they perhaps were,—
-
- The slave and the wrestlers, what are they to me,
- From plots and contention removed?
- And Job with still less satisfaction I see,
- When I think on the pains I have proved.
-
-The homage of her countrymen, however, did much to enliven her
-despondency; and she complacently records in her journals some of the
-compliments paid her by her fellow-members of the “Oziosi.” They used
-to address her in this style:—
-
- E'en so when Parsons pours his lay,
- Correctly wild, or sweetly strong,
- Or Greathead charms the listening day,
- With English or Italian song,
- Or when, with trembling wing I try,
- Like some poor wounded bird, to fly,
- Your fostering smiles you ne'er refuse,
- But are the Pallas and the Muse!
-
-The Parsons and Greathead of this all-round panegyric of Merry's were
-two members of the “Oziosi” clique: Parsons, a bachelor with a tendency
-to flirt, to “trifle with Italian dames,” as Mrs. Piozzi poetically
-put it; Greathead, the newly-married husband of a beautiful wife. Both
-Parsons and Greathead were voluminous contributors to the society's
-Album, which soon assumed formidable dimensions. The staple of the
-contents consisted of high-flown compliments in verse. Parsons, for
-instance, would write to Greathead's wife:—
-
- O blest with taste, with Genius blest,
- Sole mistress of thy Bertie's breast,
- Who to his love-enraptured arms are given
- The rich reward his virtues claim from Heaven.
-
-And Bertie, as in duty bound, would reply in kind, bidding the sallow
-Arno pause and listen to the lays of Parsons. As an alternative to
-these panegyrics, they wrote _Dithyrambics to Bacchus_, _Odes to the
-Siroc_, or lines on that latest novelty, Montgolfier's air-balloon.
-Mrs. Greathead was, in fact, as Parsons informs us, the only member of
-the society who contributed nothing but the inspiration of her charms.
-
-Some of these poems were printed in an _Arno Miscellany_, of which
-only a few copies were privately circulated. It was a subsequent
-and larger collection, published in 1785, under the name of _The
-Florence Miscellany_, which first made its way to England, and drew the
-attention of the English public to the rising school of versifiers.
-Horace Walpole characterized their productions as “mere imitations of
-our best poets,” that is to say, of Milton, Gray, and Collins. How
-justly, may be inferred from the opening stanza of Merry's _Ode on a
-distant prospect of Rome_:—
-
- When Rome of old, terrific queen,
- High-placed on Victory's sounding car,
- With arm sublime and martial mien,
- Brandished the flaming lance of war,
- Low crouched in dust lay Afric's swarthy crowd,
- And silken Asia sank, and barbarous Britain bowed.
-
-The imitations of Milton and Collins are of a like description. Such
-as it was, the book was a success, and samples of its contents were
-reproduced, after the fashion of the day, in the newspapers and
-magazines—the _Gentleman's_, the _European_, the _Universal Magazine_,
-and so forth. Of the quality of the poems, critically considered,
-and of the Della Cruscan poetry generally, I shall have something to
-say farther on. In the meantime, it may, perhaps, be worth while to
-disinter a ludicrous passage in one of Merry's contributions to the
-_Florence Miscellany_. The “Oziosi” had one day agreed that each of
-them should produce by the evening a story or poem which should “excite
-horror by description.” Mrs. Piozzi's production will be found in her
-_Autobiography_, and is by no means devoid of merit. Merry brought a
-poem (“a very fine one,” says Mrs. Piozzi), in which he introduced the
-following remarkable ghost, which I commend to the attention of the new
-Psychical Society:—
-
- While slow he trod this desolated coast,
- From the cracked ground uprose a warning ghost;
- Whose figure, all-confused, was dire to view,
- And loose his mantle flowed, of shifting hue;
- _He shed a lustre round; and sadly pressed
- What seemed his hand upon what seemed his breast;
- Then raised his doleful voice, like wolves that roar
- In famished troops round Orcas' sleepy shore,_—
- “Approach yon antiquated tower,” he cried,
- “There bold Rinaldo, fierce Mambrino, died,” etc.
-
-But I must not linger over the _Florence Miscellany_, which was but the
-prelude to those melodious bursts which filled the spacious times of
-George III. with the music of Della Crusca and Anna Matilda. A year or
-two after its publication the Florence coterie broke up, and returned
-to England.
-
-The first note of the concert was struck by Robert Merry, who, in
-June 1787, sent to the _World_ a poem entitled _The Adieu and Recall
-to Love_, subscribing himself Della Crusca, a nickname which had
-been given to him at Florence, on account of his connection, already
-mentioned, with the Italian Academy. The _World_ was a daily morning
-paper, price threepence, which in more than one respect resembled its
-modern namesake. A contemporary satirist, writing under the modest
-pseudonym of “Horace Juvenal,” describes how the young lady of 1787—
-
- Reluctant opes her eyes, 'twixt twelve and one,
- To skim the _World_, or criticise the _Sun_,
- And when she sees her darling friend abused
- Is half enraged, yet more than half-amused.
-
-And another poet portrays two unlucky baronets, Sir Gregory Turner
-and Sir John Miller—husband of Lady Miller of Bath Easton vase
-celebrity—lamenting the ridicule with which the same newspaper had
-overwhelmed them:—
-
- Woe wait the week, Sir John, and cursed the hour,
- When harmless gentlemen felt satire's power,
- When, raised from insignificance and sloth,
- The _World_ began to ridicule us both.
-
-“In this paper,” says Gifford, “were given the earliest specimens of
-those audacious attacks on all private character, which the town first
-smiled at for their quaintness, then tolerated for their absurdity;
-and now that other papers, equally wicked and more intelligible, have
-ventured to imitate it, will have to lament to the last hour of British
-liberty.” That literary history is self-repeating, and that prophecies
-are mostly mistaken, are not new reflections; yet it is difficult to
-avoid making them when we compare those days with these.
-
-But beyond its function as a purveyor of social gossip, no newspaper
-was then considered complete without a Poet's Corner, consecrated to
-sentimental effusions and labored impromptus—“Complimentary verses to
-the brilliancy of the Hon. Mrs. N——h's Eyes,” or “Lines on Lady T—e—l's
-Ring.” In publishing his poem in the _World_, Della Crusca did but
-select the natural and recognized arena of the eighteenth-century poet.
-It may be as well to quote the greater part of _The Adieu and Recall to
-Love_, in order to give some notion of the calibre of the verses which
-were to found a school:—
-
- Go, idle Boy, I quit thy bower,
- The couch of many a thorn and flower;
- Thy twanging bow, thine arrow keen,
- Deceitful Beauty's timid mien;
- The feigned surprise, the roguish leer,
- The tender smile, the thrilling tear,
- Have now no pangs, no joys for me,
- So fare thee well, for I am free!
- Then flutter hence on wanton wing,
- Or lave thee in yon lucid spring,
- Or take thy beverage from the rose,
- Or on Louisa's breast repose;
- I wish thee well for pleasures past,
- Yet, bless the hour, I'm free at last,
- But sure, methinks, the altered day
- Scatters around a mournful ray;
- And chilling every zephyr blows,
- And every stream untuneful flows.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Alas! is all this boasted ease
- To lose each warm desire to please,
- No sweet solicitude to know
- For others' bliss, or others' woe,
- A frozen apathy to find,
- A sad vacuity of mind?
- Oh, hasten back, then, heavenly Boy,
- And with thine anguish bring thy joy!
- Return with all thy torments here,
- And let me hope, and doubt, and fear;
- Oh, rend my heart with every pain,
- But let me, let me love again.
-
-I suppose what will strike most readers with regard to these lines
-is that they are decidedly fluent, and utterly commonplace. That,
-however, is not the light in which a critic of the last quarter of
-the eighteenth century would regard them. Amid the dead level of
-sing-song couplets, the milk-and-water decency of Hayley, the chill
-and prolix classicism of Pye, the ineffable mediocrity of a thousand
-Pratts and Polwheles—the fluency of Merry passed, according to the
-critic's leanings, for fire or for fustian; and the phraseology,
-which afterwards became hackneyed, was then startling. Take, for
-instance, Horace Walpole's criticism of the new poetic departure. “It
-is refreshing to read natural easy poetry, full of sense and humor,
-instead of that unmeaning, labored, painted style now in fashion of
-the Della Cruscas and Co., of which it is impossible ever to retain a
-couplet, no more than one could remember how a string of emeralds and
-rubies were placed in a necklace. Poetry has great merit if it is the
-vehicle and preservative of sense, but it is not to be taken in change
-for it.” Poetry the vehicle and preservative of sense—that is the
-critical canon which would have made Walpole as blind to Della Crusca's
-merits, had he happened to possess any, as it made him keen-sighted for
-his defects.
-
-It may, nevertheless, be doubted whether Della Crusca would have caused
-so great a stir in literature, had it not been for several collateral
-circumstances, of which the first and most important was the appearance
-in the _World_, some ten days later, of “Anna Matilda,” with a poem
-entitled _To Della Crusca, the Pen_.
-
- Oh, seize again thy golden quill,
- And with its point my bosom thrill,
- With magic touch explore my heart,
- And bid the tear of passion start.
- Thy golden quill Apollo gave,
- Drenched first in bright Aonia's wave.
- He snatched it fluttering through the sky,
- Borne on the vapor of a sigh;
- It fell from Cupid's burnished wing
- As forcefully he drew the string,
- Which sent his keenest, surest dart,
- Through a rebellious, frozen heart,
- That had, till then, defied his power,
- And vacant beat through each dull hour.
- Be worthy, then, the sacred loan!
- Seated on Fancy's air-built throne;
- Immerse it in her rainbow hues,
- Nor, what the Godheads bid, refuse.
- Apollo Cupid shall inspire,
- And aid thee with their blended fire;
- The one poetic language give,
- The other bid thy passion live,
- With soft ideas fill thy lays,
- And crown with Love thy wintry days!
-
-The shuttlecock of correspondence, thus fairly started, was diligently
-tossed to and fro in the _World_ by the two pseudonymous writers; Della
-Crusca “seized his quill” again and again, and his ideal passion for
-the invisible Anna Matilda gained in fervor of expression with every
-fortnight. It is obvious that here was just that element of mystery, of
-romance, which creates a _furore_ and sets a fashion.
-
-The lady who signed herself “Anna Matilda” was Mrs. Hannah Cowley, the
-wife of an absent East India captain, then in her forty-fifth year,
-and known to-day as the authoress of the _Belle's Stratagem_, a play
-which still, and deservedly, keeps the stage. Her biographer records
-the beginning of her literary career as follows: “In the year 1776,
-some years after her marriage, a sense of power for dramatic writing
-suddenly struck her whilst sitting with her husband at the theatre.
-'So delighted with this?' said she to him; 'why, I could write as
-well myself.' She then wrote _The Runaway_. Many will recollect the
-extraordinary success with which it was brought out.” Her habits of
-composition were not, perhaps, likely to result in poetry of much
-excellence. “Catching up her pen immediately as the thought struck her,
-she always proceeded with the utmost facility and celerity. Her pen
-and paper were so immediately out of sight again, that those around
-her could scarcely tell when it was she wrote. She was always much
-pleased with the description of Michael Angelo making the marble fly
-around him, as he was chiselling with the utmost swiftness, that he
-might shape, however roughly, his whole design in unity with one clear
-conception.” Her preparatory note to her collected “Anna Matilda”
-poems bears out this account. “The beautiful lines of _The Adieu and
-Recall to Love_ struck her so forcibly that, without rising from the
-table at which she read, she answered them. Della Crusca's elegant
-reply surprised her into another, and thus the correspondence most
-unexpectedly became settled. Anna Matilda's share in it had little to
-boast; but she has one claim of which she is proud, that of having been
-the first to point out the excellence of Della Crusca; if there can be
-merit in discerning what is so very obvious.” She further apologizes
-for one of her poems to Della Crusca, on the ground that it was written
-while sitting for her portrait, the painter interrupting her with
-“Smile a little,” or “More to the right.” Only that class of mind which
-grows incredulous when informed that orators prepare their speeches,
-will expect much from such methods of workmanship.
-
-Nevertheless, to Mrs. Cowley appears to belong the credit, or
-discredit, of giving to the Della Cruscan poetry a certain turn
-or development which did much to make it popular. A hint of this
-development may be seen in the description of the pen, which was
-“borne on the vapor of a sigh.” It took final shape in such phrases as
-these:—
-
- Hushed be each ruder note! Soft silence spread
- With ermine hand thy cobweb robe around.
-
- Was it the shuttle of the Morn,
- That wove upon the cobweb'd thorn
- Thy airy lay?
-
- Or in the gaudy spheroids swell
- Which the swart Indian's groves illume.
-
- Gauzy zephyrs fluttering o'er the plain,
- In Twilight's bosom drop their filmy rain.
-
- Bid the streamy lightnings fly
- In liquid peril from thine eye.
-
- Summer tints begemmed the scene,
- And silky ocean slept in glossy green.
-
-A large and amusing assortment of this ambitious verbiage, which
-subsequently became in the eyes of the critics the sole “differentia”
-of Della Cruscan verse, may be seen in the notes to Gifford's _Baviad_.
-It was, however, an after-development, proceeding from a gradual
-consciousness of flagging powers; the feeling which induced Charles
-Reade's Triplet to “shove his pen under the thought, and lift it by
-polysyllables to the true level of fiction.”
-
-The other members of the Florence coterie, who, as I have said, were
-now back in England, speedily began to swell the Della Cruscan chorus
-in the columns of the _World_ and the _Oracle_. Bertie Greathead as
-“Reuben” became Della Crusca's rival, on paper, in the affections of
-Anna Matilda; and Parsons, signing himself “Benedict,” in memory of a
-sojourn in the Benedictine convent of Vallombrosa, deluged with sonnets
-an imaginary Melissa. Whether Mrs. Piozzi contributed anything beyond
-tea-party patronage, appears to be doubtful; but, as was only to be
-expected, London already possessed a score of indigenous rhymesters,
-eager to pursue the triumph and partake the gale. One of the principal
-of these was Edward Jerningham, _alias_ “The Bard,” who is commemorated
-in Macaulay's neat sentence: “Lady Miller who kept a vase wherein fools
-were wont to put verses, and Jerningham who wrote verses fit to be
-put into the vase of Lady Miller.” His brother, Sir William, of Cossy
-Hall, in Norfolk, kept an album which rivalled in celebrity the vase of
-Bath Easton, and “The Bard” had been a determined poetaster for the
-last thirty years. He is described as “a mighty gentleman, who looks
-to be painted, and is all daintification in manner, speech, and dress,
-singing to his own accompaniment on the harp, whilst he looks the
-gentlest of all dying Corydons.” Fashionable poets seldom suffer from
-lack of appreciation. Burke wrote of Jerningham's poem _The Shakespeare
-Gallery_, “I have not for a long time seen anything so well finished.
-The author has caught new fire by approaching in his perihelion so near
-to the sun of our poetical system.” I think we may be certain, after
-reading _The Shakespeare Gallery_, that the patron of Crabbe did not
-read it.
-
-Another Della Cruscan songstress was Mrs. Robinson, _alias_ “Laura
-Maria,” known to the public as a former mistress of the Prince of
-Wales, and authoress of various novels. In rapidity of composition she
-emulated Mrs. Cowley. “Conversing one evening with Mr. Richard Burke”
-(the Burke family appear to have been sometimes unfortunate in their
-poetical acquaintances) “respecting the facility with which modern
-poetry was composed, Mrs. Robinson repeated nearly the whole of those
-beautiful lines, 'To him who will understand them.' This improvisatore
-produced in her auditor not less surprise than admiration, when
-solemnly assured by its author that this was the first time of its
-being repeated. Mr. Burke entreated her to commit the poem to writing,
-a request which was readily complied with; and Mrs. Robinson had
-afterwards the gratification of finding this offspring of her genius
-inserted in the _Annual Register_, with a flattering encomium from the
-pen of the eloquent and ingenious editor.” She was one of Merry's most
-ardent admirers.
-
- Winged Ages picture to the dazzled view
- Each marked perfection of the sacred few,
- Pope, Dryden, Spenser, all that Fame shall raise,
- From Chaucer's gloom, till Merry's lucid days.
-
-Her Della Cruscan poems were published under the signature of “Laura,”
-and she was followed by Cesario, Carlos, Adelaide, Orlando, Arno, and
-fifty more whose identity can no longer be determined.
-
-A year after his first appearance in the _World_, Della Crusca printed
-his poems in a volume, and Anna Matilda speedily followed suit. But
-this was not enough for the reading public. They further greedily
-absorbed a collection of Della Cruscan verse, published as _The Poetry
-of the “World,”_ by Major Topham, the creator and editor of that
-paper, who, in a dedication to Sheridan, observes: “Of their merit,
-I am free to say I know no modern poems their superior. I am more
-happy that your opinion has confirmed mine.” It will be well to make
-allowance for changing literary fashions before we make too sure that
-Sheridan is here misrepresented. _The Poetry of the “World”_ afterwards
-ran through at least four editions as _The British Album_. As we
-read the publisher's advertisement of this work, which still abounds
-on second-hand bookstalls—_immorimur studiis lapsoque renascimur
-ævo_—we seem to be walking in the Bond Street of the Prince Regent.
-“Two beautiful volumes this day published, embellished with genuine
-portraits of the real Della Crusca and Anna Matilda, engraved in a very
-superior manner from faithful pictures, under the title of _The British
-Album_, being a new edition, revised and corrected by their respective
-authors, of the celebrated poems of Della Crusca, Anna Matilda, Arley,
-Laura, Benedict, and the elegant Cesario, “the African Boy;” and
-others, signed The Bard, by Mr. Jerningham; General Conway's elegy
-on Miss C. Campbell; Marquis of Townshend's verses on Miss Gardiner;
-Lord Derby's lines on Miss Farren's portrait.” It is unfortunate
-that the only pseudonym in the list which it is of much interest to
-decipher, should still remain a mystery. It is to “Arley” that we owe
-the admittedly excellent ballad of “Wapping old Stairs,” which first
-appeared in the _World_ for November 29th, 1787, and shines, a solitary
-pearl, in the pages of the _British Album_.
-
-The Della Cruscan mania was at its height—“bedridden old women and
-girls at their samplers began to rave,”—when Gifford, in search of a
-quarry for a seasonable satire, came before the town with the _Baviad_.
-Of this poem I shall say but little, as it is better known than the
-writings which it satirised. It contains passages of a certain coarse
-and rank vigor not difficult of attainment by a student of Dryden and
-Juvenal. There is, in fact, a sort of Billingsgate raciness about
-the _Baviad_; and the notes, which are better written than the poem,
-contain much amusing matter. The imputation made against the Della
-Cruscan love-poetry of licentious warmth is, however, wholly absurd—as
-absurd as the charge made by Mathias, the author of _The Pursuits of
-Literature_, that Merry—
-
- Proves a designer works without design,
- And fathoms Nature with a Gallic line;
-
-a notion which arose merely from the fact that he identified himself
-with the anarchists of France, and wrote odes for the Revolution
-Society, thereby acquiring the name, as Madame d'Arblay tells us, of
-“Liberty Merry,” and no doubt also the reputation for free-thinking
-then associated with everything French. As for detecting any breach of
-decorum in the mannered and falsetto gallantries of insincere Reubens
-addressing imaginary Annas, the idea was only possible to a satirist
-who started with the determination to fling all the mud he could find;
-and, it must be added, when he flung it at irreproachable characters
-such as Mrs. Piozzi, he did but excite a certain revulsion of sympathy
-for the victims. Nor was this Gifford's only misrepresentation. He
-asserted, in order to bring in an apt quotation from Martial, that
-the interview which finally took place between Merry and Mrs. Cowley,
-produced mutual disgust. This is not the testimony of Della Crusca
-himself in the poem of _The Interview_.
-
- My song subsides, yet ere I close
- The lingering lay that feeds my woes,
- Ere yet forgotten Della Crusca runs
- To torrid gales or petrifying suns,
- Ere, bowed to earth, my latest feeling flies,
- And the big passion settles on my eyes;
- Oh, may this sacred sentiment be known,
- That my adoring heart is Anna's own!
-
-Such is the immortality of poetic attachments—
-
- For ever wilt thou love and she be fair.
-
-That the poet was shortly afterward “married to another,” is sufficient
-to explain the cessation of the correspondence, from which Gifford
-argues that the interview resulted in aversion. And he might further
-have reflected that when a poet is reduced to talk of “petrifying suns”
-his correspondence has been known to cease for lack of ideas.
-
-The satirised poets did their best to retaliate on Gifford by
-abusive sonnets in the newspapers; and Mr. Jerningham wrote a feebly
-vituperative poem on Gifford and Mathias. The Della Cruscans had,
-undeniably, the worst of the battle. The efficacy of Gifford's satire
-in putting an end to the school is, however, more than doubtful. It is
-true that it afterwards came to be considered, naturally enough, that
-he had given the Della Cruscans their death-blow. Scott, for instance,
-writing in 1827, observes that the _Baviad_ “squabashed at one blow
-a set of coxcombs who might have humbugged the world long enough”;
-but that is not the evidence of contemporary witnesses. Seven years
-after the publication of the _Baviad_, Mathias, in the preface to _The
-Pursuits of Literature_, remarks that “even the _Baviad_ drops from
-Mr. Gifford's pen have fallen off like oils from the plumage of the
-Florence and Cruscan geese. I am told that Mr. Greathead and Mr. Merry
-yet write and speak, and Mr. Jerningham (poor man!) still continues
-'sillier than his sheep.”
-
-This statement is in far better accordance both with the facts and the
-probabilities of the case. Satire, even first-rate satire, does not
-kill follies. They gradually die of inanition, or are crowded out by
-newer fashions. Laura Matilda's dirge in the _Rejected Addresses_ is a
-standing monument of the vitality of Della Cruscanism more than twenty
-years after its supposed death-blow.
-
-The career as stage-writers of Merry, Greathead, and Jerningham, their
-bad tragedies and bad farces, do not belong to my present subject.
-Of the subsequent history of one or two of them a word may, however,
-be said. Jerningham lived to publish, as late as 1812, two editions
-of a flaccid poem, called _The Old Bard's Farewell_, after which he
-disappears from life and literature. Mrs. Cowley, perhaps the most
-interesting of the group, died in rural and religious retirement at
-Tiverton, in 1809. Mrs. Piozzi, as is well known, outlived all her
-contemporaries, and witnessed the popularity of a modern literature of
-which she had no very high opinion.
-
-As for Della Crusca, he married, in 1791, Miss Brunton, an actress,
-whose sister became Countess of Craven, and who had played the heroine
-in his tragedy of _Lorenzo_. His reply to the remonstrances of his
-aunt on the _mésalliance_ shall be quoted, to show that he had his
-lucid intervals. “She ought,” he said, “to be proud that he had brought
-a woman of such virtue and talents into the family. Her virtue his
-marrying her proved; and her talents would all be thrown away by taking
-her off the stage.” Nevertheless, he afterwards weakly yielded to his
-relations, and withdrew her from the stage against her own inclination,
-thereby depriving himself of a source of income with which, as
-a gambler and _bon vivant_, he could ill afford to dispense. He
-accordingly quitted England, and must have betaken himself to France,
-an adventure which befell him in Paris, in September, 1792, being thus
-amusingly given by Horace Walpole:—
-
- In the midst of the massacre of Monday last, Mr. Merry, immortalized,
- not by his verses, but by those of the _Baviad_, was mistaken for the
- Abbé Maury, and was going to be hoisted to the _lanterne_. He cried
- out that he was Merry, the poet: the ruffians, who probably had never
- read the scene in Shakespeare, yet replied, “Then we will hang you for
- your bad verses”; but he escaped better than Cinna, I don't know how,
- and his fright cost him but a few “gossamery tears,” and I suppose
- he will be happy to re-cross the “silky ocean,” and shed dolorous
- nonsense in rhyme over the woes of _this_ happy country.
-
-But England was not to see much more of Merry. English society was
-probably not so kind to the Radical husband of an actress as it had
-been to the bachelor of fashion. He withdrew, with his wife, to
-America, in 1796, and died, three years afterwards, of apoplexy, in his
-garden at Baltimore.
-
-Merry did not fail to find in his own day apologists of some
-pretensions to taste. I find in the notes to George Dyer's poem, _The
-Poet's Fate_, published in 1797—which contains early and interesting
-laudations not only of his school-fellows Lamb and Coleridge, but also
-of Wordsworth and Southey—the following reference to Merry:—“But,
-after all, though the hero of the _Baviad_ betrayed glitter and
-negligence—though he misled the taste of some, too much inclined to
-admire and imitate defects, yet Merry's writings possess poetical
-merits; and the spirit of liberty and benevolence which breathes
-through them is ardent and sincere.” The criticism may be incorrect,
-but it is worth noting, because it is the criticism of a contemporary.
-Had it not been for Coleridge's fervently expressed admiration
-for Bowles's sonnets, which so perplexes critics who do not judge
-literature from a historical point of view, the world would have
-continued to sneer at him, with Byron, as “simple Bowles,” and to know
-him only by Byron's line. The fact is, literary history will never
-be intelligently written, till it is studied in the spirit of the
-naturalist, to whom the tares are as interesting as the wheat. We may,
-perhaps, give the Della Cruscans, with their desperate strainings after
-poetic fire and poetic diction, the credit of having done something to
-shake the supremacy of versified prose; of having forwarded, however
-feebly, the poetic emancipation which Wordsworth and Coleridge were to
-consummate. The false extravagance of Della Crusca may have cleared
-the way for the truthful extravagance of Keats. It is, I am aware,
-customary to attribute the regeneration of English poetry to the French
-Revolution, which “shook up the sources of thought all over Europe,”
-but the critics who use these glib catch-words are in no hurry to point
-out a concrete chain of logical connection between Paris mobs and
-sequestered poets. Plain judges will ever consider it a far cry from
-_The Rights of Man_ to _Christabel_. At all events, Dyer was right in
-deprecating the savagery of Gifford's satire. The question
-
- Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel?
-
-will apply to other schools and fashions besides that of the “elegant
-Cesario's,” whom Leigh Hunt designated _par excellence_ as “the plague
-of the Butterflies.” And here, I think, we touch upon the moral which I
-promised at the outset.
-
-It is not very long since the country, to which Della Crusca ultimately
-betook himself, received to her shores the reputed prophet of
-Æstheticism, whose career, in other respects, presented remarkable
-parallels with that of Robert Merry. Each made his poetical appearance
-in the columns of a newspaper called the _World_; each professed
-Republican opinions; each wrote poems not remarkable for truth to
-nature or sobriety of diction; each represented a school; and the
-name of each became as a red rag to the Giffords who played the
-part of the bull in the china shop. But it is not with this clumsy
-rage that posterity will regard our follies; nor is it useful, or
-desirable, that we should now so regard them. It is with a smile of
-amused anticipation, it is with a bland and philosophic interest,
-that the antiquarian of the future will turn to the pages of _Punch_
-or the libretto of _Patience_, to read of the Anna Matildas who
-lately delighted to apparel themselves in what Bramston called
-“shape-disguising sacks”—the Della Cruscas who took Postlethwaite for a
-great poet.—_National Review._
-
-
-
-
-THE SAVAGE.
-
-BY PROF. F. MAX MÜLLER.
-
-
-There are people in the world who are very fond of asking what they
-call point-blank questions. They generally profess to hate all
-shilly-shallying, and they are at no pains to hide their suspicion that
-anyone who declines to say yes or no to any question which they choose
-to ask has either his intellect clouded by metaphysics or has not the
-courage of his opinions. The idea that it is often more difficult to
-ask a sensible question than to answer it, and that a question, however
-pointed it may sound, may for all that be so blunt and vague that no
-accurate and honest thinker would care or dare to answer it, never
-enters their mind; while the thought that there are realms of knowledge
-where indefinite language is more appropriate, and in reality more
-exact and more truthful than the most definite phraseology, is scouted
-as mere fencing and intellectual cowardice.
-
-One of those point-blank questions which has been addressed to me
-by several reviewers of my books is this, “Tell us, do you hold that
-man began as a savage or not?” To say that man began as a savage, and
-that the most savage and degraded races now existing present us with
-the primeval type of man, seems to be the shibboleth of a certain
-school of thought, a school with which on many points I sympathize, so
-long as it keeps to an accurate and independent inquiry into facts,
-and to an outspoken statement of its discoveries, regardless of all
-consequences, but from which I totally dissent as soon as it tries to
-make facts subservient to theories. I am told that my own utterances
-on this subject have been ambiguous. Now even granting this, I could
-never understand why a certain hesitation in answering so difficult a
-question should rouse such angry feelings, till it began to dawn on me
-that those who do not unreservedly admit that man began as a savage
-are supposed to hold that man was created a perfect and almost angelic
-being. This would amount to denying the gospel of the day, that man was
-the offspring of a brute, and hence, I suppose, the Anathema.
-
-Now I may say this, that though I have hesitated to affirm that man
-began as a savage, whatever that may mean, I have been even more
-careful not to commit myself to the opinion that man began as an angel,
-or as a child, or as a perfect rational being. I strongly object to
-such alternatives as that if man did not begin as a savage he must
-have begun as a child. It would be dreadful if, because there is no
-sufficient evidence to enable us to form a decided opinion on any given
-subject, we were to be driven into a corner by such alternatives,
-instead of preserving our freedom of judgment until we have the
-complete evidence before us.
-
-But in our case the evidence is as yet extremely scanty, and, from the
-nature of the case, will probably always remain so. If we want to prove
-that man began as a child, what evidence can we produce? If we appealed
-to history, history is impossible before the invention of language; and
-what language could the primitive child have spoken, what life could
-it have lived, without a father and without a mother? If we give up
-history and appeal to our inner consciousness, our reason, nay, our
-very imagination, collapses when approaching the problem how such a
-child could have been born, how such a child could have been nourished,
-reared, and protected from wild animals and other dangers. We feel we
-have come to the end of our tether, and are running our head against a
-very old, but a very solid, wall.
-
-Has Kant then written in vain; and is it still supposed that our senses
-or our reason can ever reach transcendent truths? Has the lesson to
-be taught again and again that both our senses and our reason have
-their limits; that we are indeed tethered, and that it is no proof
-of intellectual strength or suppleness to try to stand on our own
-shoulders? We are so made that neither can our senses perceive nor can
-our reason conceive the real beginning and end of anything, whether in
-space or in time. And yet we imagine we can form a definite conception
-of the true beginning of mankind.
-
-Then what remains? There remains the humbler and yet far nobler task
-of studying the earliest records of man's life on earth: to go back as
-far as literature, language, and tools will allow us, and for a time to
-consider that as primitive which, whether as a tool, or as a word, or
-as a proverb, or as a prayer, is the last we can reach, and seems at
-the same time so simple, so rational, so intelligible, as to require
-no further antecedents. That is the true work of the historian, and of
-the philosopher too; and there is plenty of work left for both of them
-before they dive into the whirlpool of their inner consciousness to
-find there the primordial savage.
-
-Instead of allowing ourselves to be driven into a corner by such a
-question as “Did man begin as a savage or as a child?” we have a
-perfect right to ask the question, What is meant by these two words,
-_savage_ and _child_?
-
-Has any one ever attempted to define the meaning of savage, and to
-draw a sharp line between a savage and a non-savage? Has any one ever
-attempted to define the meaning of child, if used in opposition to
-savage or brute? Have we been told whether by child is meant a suckling
-without a mother, or a boy who can speak, and count, and reason
-without a father? Lastly, are savage and child really terms that
-mutually exclude each other? May not a savage be a child, and may not a
-child be a savage?
-
-How, then, is any one who has given serious thought to the problem of
-the origin of mankind to answer such a question as “Tell me, do you
-hold that man began as a savage or as a child?”
-
-When we read some of the more recent works on anthropology, the
-primordial savage seems to be not unlike one of those hideous
-india-rubber dolls that can be squeezed into every possible shape, and
-made to utter every possible noise. There was a time when the savage
-was held up to the civilised man as the inhabitant of a lost paradise—a
-being of innocence, simplicity, purity, and nobility. Rousseau ascribed
-to his son of nature all the perfection which he looked for in vain
-in Paris and London. At present, when so many philosophers are on the
-lookout for the missing-link between man and beast, the savage, even
-if he has established his right to the name of man, cannot be painted
-black enough. He must be at least a man who maltreats his women,
-murders his children, kills and eats his fellow-creatures, and commits
-crimes from which even animals would shrink.
-
-This devil-savage, however, of the present anthropologist is as much
-a wild creation of scientific fancy as the angel-savage of former
-philosophers. The true Science of Man has no room for such speculations.
-
-Sometimes the history of a name can take the place of its definition,
-but this is hardly so in our case. The Greeks spoke of barbarians
-rather than of savages, and the Romans followed their example, though
-they might possibly have called the national heroes and sages of
-Germany and Britain not only _barbari_ but _feri_—that is, savages not
-very far removed from _feræ_, or wild beasts. Our own word _savage_,
-and the French _sauvage_, meant originally a man who lived in the
-woods, a _silvaticus_. It was at first applied to all who remained
-outside the cities, who were not _cives_, or civilised, and who in
-Christian times were also called _heathen_—that is, dwellers on the
-heath.
-
-But all this does not help us much. Of course the Spaniards called
-the inhabitants of America savages, though it is now quite generally
-conceded that the Spanish conquerors supplanted a higher civilisation
-than they established.[10] The first discoverers of India called the
-naked Brahmans savages, though they could hardly have followed them
-in their subtle arguments on every possible philosophical topic. Even
-by us New Zealanders and Zulus are classed as savages. And yet a Zulu
-proved a match for an English bishop; and some of the Maori poems and
-proverbs may rightly claim a place by the side of English popular
-poems and proverbs. Nothing is gained if it is said that a savage is
-the opposite of a civilised man. Civilisation is the product of the
-uninterrupted work of many generations; and if savage meant no more
-than an uncivilised man, it is no great discovery to say that the first
-man must have been a savage. No doubt he could not have been acquainted
-even with what we consider the fundamental elements of civilisation,
-such as the arts of reading, writing, and arithmetic. His dress must
-have been very scanty, his food very primitive, his dwelling very
-uncomfortable, his family life very unrestrained. And yet, for all
-that, he might have been very far removed from the brute; nay, he might
-have been a perfect man, doing his duty in that state of life into
-which it pleased God to call him.
-
-Civilisation, as it is well known, is as vague a term as savagery.
-When Alexander, the pupil of Aristotle, the representative of Greek
-civilisation, stood before the naked philosophers of India, who were
-ὑλόβιοι dwellers in the forest, can we hesitate to say which of the
-two was the true savage and which the sage? To the New Zealander
-who has been brought into contact with European civilisation, his
-former so-called savage life seems to have gained little by recent
-improvements. A grand Maori chief, reputed to have been one of the
-strongest men in his youth, thus speaks of the old days:[11]—
-
- In former times we lived differently; each tribe had its territory;
- we lived in _pas_ placed high upon the mountains. The men looked
- to war as their only occupation, and the women and the young people
- cultivated the fields. We were a strong and a healthy people then.
- When the Pakeha came, everything began to die away, even the natural
- animals of the country. Formerly, when we went into a forest, and
- stood under a tree, we could not hear ourselves speak for the noise
- of the birds—every tree was full of them. Then we had pigeons and
- everything in plenty; now many of the birds have died out.... In
- those times the fields were well tilled, there was always plenty of
- provisions, and we wore few clothes—only our own mats of feathers.
- Then the missionaries came and took our children from the fields, and
- taught them to sing hymns: they changed their minds, and the fields
- were untilled. The children came home and quoted Gospel on an empty
- stomach. Then came the war between the Pakeha and the Maori that split
- up our homes, and made one tribe fight against the other; and after
- the war came the Pakeha settlers, who took our lands, taught us to
- drink and to smoke, and made us wear clothes that brought on disease.
- What race could stand against them? The Maori is passing away like
- the _Kiwi_, the _Tui_, and many other things, and by-and-by they will
- disappear just like the leaves of the trees, and nothing will remain
- to tell of them but the names of their mountains and their rivers!
-
-This is the view which a so-called savage takes of the benefits of
-European civilisation as contrasted with the contentment and happiness
-in which his forefathers had passed through this life. Let us now hear
-what a highly educated American, a scholar and a philosopher, Mr.
-Morgan, says of the character of the Iroquois, who are often quoted as
-specimens of extreme savagery:—
-
- No test of friendship was too severe; no sacrifice to repay a favor
- too great; no fidelity to an engagement too inflexible for the red
- man. With an innate knowledge of the freedom and dignity of man, he
- has exhibited the noblest virtues of the heart, and the kindest deeds
- of humanity, in those sylvan retreats we are wont to look upon as
- vacant and frightful solitudes.
-
-No one would suspect Morgan of exaggeration or sentimentality. And
-if it should be objected that these were private virtues only, and
-no proof of true civilisation or a well-organised society among the
-Iroquois, the same writer tells us:[12]—
-
- They achieved for themselves a more remarkable civil organisation, and
- acquired a higher degree of influence, than any other race of Indian
- lineage, except those of Mexico and Peru. In the drama of European
- colonisation they stood for nearly two centuries with an unshaken
- front against the devastations of war, the blighting influence of
- foreign intercourse, and the still more fatal encroachments of
- a restless and advancing border population. Under their federal
- system, the Iroquois flourished in independence, and were capable of
- self-protection long after the New England and Virginia races had
- surrendered their jurisdictions and fallen into the condition of
- dependent nations; and they now stand forth upon the canvas of Indian
- history, prominent alike for the wisdom of their civil institutions,
- their sagacity in the administration of the league, and their courage
- in its defence.
-
-The words of another author also may be quoted, who tells us:[13]—
-
- Their legislation was simple, and the penalties which gave law its
- sanctions well defined. Their league stood in the consent of the
- governed. It was a representative popular government, conceived in
- the wisdom of genuine statesmanship, and with the sagacity to provide
- against some of the dangers which beset popular institutions. It is
- said that the framers of our own (the American) government borrowed
- some of its features from the Iroquois league. Whether or not this be
- true, it is a matter of history that as early as 1755 a suggestion
- came from the Iroquois nation to the colonies that they should unite
- in a confederacy like their own for mutual protection.
-
-It is the fashion to quote against these favorable statements cases
-of cruelty committed by the Red Indians or the New Zealanders in
-their wars among themselves and in their resistance to their white
-enemies. But let us not forget the bloody pages of our own history.
-We should probably say that the eighteenth century was one of the
-most brilliant in the history of Europe. We should probably assign to
-England at that time a foremost place among European countries, and
-we know how high a position Scotchmen took during the last century
-in general culture, in philosophy, in science, and statesmanship.
-Yet, in his “History of England in the Eighteenth Century,” Mr. Lecky
-describes the common people of Scotland as broken into fierce clans,
-ruled by wild chieftains; as thieves and cattle-lifters, kidnappers
-of men and children to be sold as slaves; as ferocious barbarians,
-besotted with the most brutal ignorance, and the grossest and gloomiest
-superstitions, possessed of the rudest modes of agriculture, scratching
-the earth with a crooked piece of wood for a plough, and for a harrow
-a brush attached to the tail of a horse, otherwise devoid of harness;
-their food, oatmeal and milk, mixed with blood drawn from the living
-cow; their cooking, revolting and filthy, boiling their beef in the
-hide, and roasting fowls in their feathers, with many like customs and
-demoralising habits unknown to aboriginal life among the Red Indians.
-
-It will be clear after these few specimens, which might have been
-considerably increased, that we shall make no step in advance if we
-continue to use the word savage so vaguely as it has been hitherto
-used. To think is difficult, but it becomes utterly impossible if we
-use debased or false coin. I have been considered too inquisitive for
-venturing to ask anthropologists what they meant by a fetish, but I
-must expose myself once more to the same reproach by venturing to ask
-them to state plainly what they mean by a savage.
-
-Whatever other benefits a study of the science of language may confer,
-there is one which cannot be valued too highly—namely, that it makes us
-not only look _at_ words, but _through_ words. If we are told that a
-savage means an uncivilised man, then, to say that the first man was a
-savage is saying either nothing or what is self-evident. Civilisation
-consists in the accumulated wisdom of countless generations of men,
-and to say that the first generation of men was uncivilised is
-therefore pure tautology. We are far too tolerant with respect to such
-tautologies. How many people, for instance, have been led to imagine
-that such a phrase as the survival of the fittest contains the solution
-of the problem of the survival of certain species and the extinction
-of others? To the student of language the survival of the fittest is a
-mere tautology, meaning the survival of the fittest to survive, which
-is the statement of a fact, but no solution of it.
-
-It is easy to say that the meaning of savage has been explained
-and defined by almost every writer on anthropology. I know these
-explanations and definitions, but not one of them can be considered as
-answering the requirements of a scientific definition.
-
-Some anthropologists say that savage means wild and cruel. But in
-that case no nation would be without its savages. Others say that
-savages are people who wear little or no clothing. But in that case
-the greatest philosophers, the gymnosophists of India, would have
-to be classed as savages. If it means people without a settled form
-of government, without laws and without a religion, then, go where
-you like, you will not find such a race. Again, if people who have
-no cities and no central government are to be called savages, then
-the Jews would have been savages, the Hindus, the Arabs, the ancient
-Germans, and other of the most important races in the history of
-the world. In fact, whatever characteristics are brought forward as
-distinctive of a savage, they can always be met by counter-instances,
-showing that each definition would either include races whom no one
-dares to call savage, or exclude races whom no one dares to call
-civilised. It used to be imagined that the use of letters was the
-principal circumstance that distinguishes a civilised people from a
-herd of savages incapable of knowledge or reflection. Without that
-artificial help, to quote the words of Gibbon, “the human memory soon
-dissipates or corrupts the ideas committed to her charge, and the
-nobler faculties of the mind, no longer supplied with models or with
-materials, gradually forget their powers, the judgment becomes feeble
-and lethargic, the imagination languid or irregular.” Such arguments
-might pass in the days of Gibbon, but after the new light that has been
-thrown on the ancient history of some of the principal nations of the
-world they are no longer tenable.
-
-No one would call the ancient Brahmans savages, and yet writing was
-unknown to them before the third century B.C. Homer, quite apart from
-his blindness, was certainly unacquainted with writing for literary
-purposes. The ancient inhabitants of Germany, as described by Tacitus,
-were equally ignorant of the art of writing as a vehicle of literature;
-yet for all that we could not say, with Gibbon, that with them the
-nobler faculties of the mind had lost their powers, the judgment had
-become feeble, and the imagination languid.
-
-And as we find that the use of letters is by no means an indispensable
-element of true civilisation, we should arrive at the same conclusion
-in examining almost every discovery which has been pointed out as a
-_sine quâ non_ of civilised life. Every generation is apt to consider
-the measure of comfort which it has reached as indispensable to
-civilised life, but very often, in small as well as great things, what
-is called civilised to-day may be called barbarous to-morrow. Races who
-abstain from eating the flesh of animals are apt to look on carnivorous
-people as savages; people who abstain from intoxicating drinks
-naturally despise a nation in which drunkenness is prevalent. What
-should we say if we entered a town in which the streets were neither
-paved nor lighted, and in which the windows were without glass; where
-we saw no carriages in any of the thoroughfares, and where, inside the
-houses, ladies and gentlemen might be seen eating without forks and
-wearing garments that had never been washed? And yet even in Paris no
-street was paved before 1185. In London Holborn was first paved in
-1417, and Smithfield in 1614, while Berlin was without paved streets
-far into the seventeenth century. No houses had windows of glass before
-the twelfth century, and as late as the fourteenth century anything
-might be thrown out of window at Paris, after three times calling out
-“_Gare l'eau!_” Shirts were an invention of the Crusades, and the fine
-dresses which ladies and gentlemen wore during the Middle Ages were
-hardly ever washed, but only refreshed from time to time with precious
-scents. In 1550 we are told that there existed in Paris no more than
-three carriages—one belonging to the Queen, the other to Diane de
-Poitiers, and the third to René de Laval. In England coaches (so called
-from the Hungarian _kossi_) date from 1580, though whirlicotes go
-back to the fourteenth century. So far as we know, neither Dante nor
-Beatrice used forks in eating, and yet we should hardly class them as
-savages.
-
-It is easy to say that all these are matters of small importance. No
-doubt they are, but we often see them treated as matters of great
-importance, when we speak of races with red skins or black skins.
-With us civilisation, whether consisting of these small or great
-matters, has often become a burden, a check rather than a help to
-the free development of all that is noble in human nature; while
-many conditions of life which we are inclined to call barbarous were
-almost essential for the growth of the human mind during its earlier
-stages. Can we imagine a religion growing up in modern Paris? Would
-a travelling bard, such as Homer, find an audience in the streets of
-London? Would a Socrates be listened to by the professors of Berlin? A
-Panini sitting almost naked under a pippal tree and composing the rules
-of his marvellous grammar of Sanskrit, a Bâdârâya_n_a with dishevelled
-hair, spinning out of his mind the subtle web of Vedânta philosophy,
-would be shunned as wild creatures by a young English officer, and
-yet, on the ladder that leads to the highest excellence of intellect,
-how many steps would the former stand above the latter! For carrying
-out the chief objects of our life on earth, very little of what is now
-called civilisation is really wanted. Many things are pleasant, without
-being really essential to our fulfilling our mission on earth. For
-laying the foundations of society, for settling the broad principles of
-law and morality, for discovering the deep traces of order and unity in
-nature, and for becoming conscious of the presence of the Divine within
-and without, a life in the forests, on the mountains, ay, even in the
-desert, is far more favorable than a lodging in Bond Street.
-
-The latest attempt which has been made at defining the true character
-of a savage restricts the distinctive characteristics of a savage to
-three—(1) that he murders his children, (2) that he kills and eats his
-fellow-men, (3) that he disregards certain laws of nature.
-
-Now in that sense it seems quite clear that the first man could not
-have been a savage, for if he had murdered his children we should not
-be alive; if he had eaten his fellow-men, supposing there were any to
-eat, again we should not be alive; and if he had disregarded certain
-laws of nature, in that case also, probably, we should not be alive.
-
-What, then, is to be done? Are we to say that there never were any
-savages, or that it is impossible to distinguish between a savage and
-a non-savage? Certainly not. All we have to do is to be on our guard
-against a very common trick of language, or rather against a very
-common mistake of philosophers, who imagine that the same name must
-always mean the same thing. All the difficulties hitherto detailed
-which have prevented anthropologists from agreeing on any real
-definition of savage have arisen from their having mixed up under the
-same name at least two totally different classes of men, both called
-savages in ordinary parlance, but each occupying its own place in the
-history of the world. How this should have happened is difficult to
-explain, but I think we can trace the first beginnings in the works
-of some of the earlier anthropologists, who were carried away by the
-idea that we can study in the illiterate races of the present day, such
-as we find in Africa, America, and Polynesia, the true character of
-the primitive man, as he emerged new-born from the bowels of nature.
-Scientific ethnologists have long since awaked from this fond dream,
-but the primitive savage has remained as a troublesome legacy in other
-quarters. Nothing can be more interesting than the study of races who
-have no literature, but whose former history may be read in their
-languages and their tools, and whose present state of civilisation or
-savagery may certainly be used to throw collateral light on many phases
-in the history of more highly civilised nations. Only let us remember
-that these races and their languages are as old as the most civilised
-races and their languages, while their history, if so we may call it,
-seldom carries us back beyond the mere surface of the day. If we in
-England are old, the Fuegians are not a day younger. If the question
-as to the age of the European and American races could be settled by
-geological evidence, it would seem as if America is now able to produce
-human skulls older than the Neanderthal skull.[14] No one, so far as
-I know, has ever succeeded in proving that after man had once been
-evolved or created, a new evolution or creation of man took place,
-attested by contemporaneous witnesses. The Duke of Argyll goes so far
-as to maintain[15] that those who hold the opinion that different races
-of men represent different species, or a species which spread from more
-than one place, stand outside the general current of scientific thought.
-
-But while scientific anthropologists have long given up the idea that,
-if we want to know the condition of primitive man, we must study it
-among the Fuegians or Eskimos, the subject has lost none of its charms.
-It is, no doubt, a very amusing occupation to run through the books of
-modern and ancient travellers, traders, or missionaries, to mark with
-pencil a strange legend here, and an odd custom there, to point out
-a similarity between a Shâman and an Archbishop, between a Hottentot
-and Homer. This kind of work can be done in the intervals of more
-serious studies, and if it is done with the facile pen of a journalist
-or the epigrammatic eloquence of a young lawyer, nothing can be more
-delightful. But it is dangerous work—so dangerous that the prejudice
-that has lately arisen among scientific anthropologists against
-Agriology seems justified, at least to a certain extent. There are
-truly scholarlike works on savages. I say scholarlike intentionally,
-because they are based on a scholarlike study of the languages spoken
-by the races whose mental organisation has to be analysed. The works
-of Bishops Callaway and Caldwell, of Brinton and Horatio Hale, of
-Gill, Bleek, and Hahn, the more general compilations of Waitz, Tiele,
-Lubbock, Tylor, and Reville, the clever contributions of A. Lang,
-John Fiske, and others, are but the first that occur to my mind as
-specimens of really useful work that may be done in this line. But the
-loose and superficial appeals to savages as the representatives of a
-brand-new humanity, fresh from the hands of the potter, the ignorant
-attempts at explaining classical myths from Melanesian tattle, the wild
-comparisons of Hebrew customs with the outrages of modern cannibals,
-have at last met with their well-merited reward, and the very name of
-savage is gradually disappearing from the best works on anthropology
-and philosophy.
-
-And yet there are savages, only we must distinguish. There are, as
-I pointed out long ago, two classes of savages, to say nothing of
-minor subdivisions—namely, _progressive_ and _retrogressive_ savages.
-There is a hopeful and a hopeless barbarism, there is a growing and
-a decaying civilisation. We owe a great deal to the Duke of Argyll,
-particularly in his last great work, _The Unity of Nature_, for having
-laid so much stress on the fact that of all works of nature man is the
-one most liable to two kinds of evolution, one ascending and the other
-descending. Like the individual, a whole family, tribe, or race of men
-may, within a very short time, rise to the highest pitch of virtue and
-culture, and in the next generation sink to the lowest level of vice
-and brutality.
-
-The first question, therefore, which we have to ask when we have to
-speak of savages, is whether there is any indication of their having
-once reached a higher stage from which they have descended, or whether
-they are only just ascending from that low but healthy level which must
-precede every attempt at what we call civilisation. We may call both
-by the same name of savages, but, if we do so, we must always remember
-that, from an historical point of view, no two stages in civilised life
-can be more apart from each other than that of the retrogressive and
-that of the progressive savage.
-
-But even after we have laid down this broad line of demarcation, we
-shall by no means find it easy to catch either a progressive or a
-retrogressive savage _pur et simple_. If looking out for retrogressive
-or decaying savages, most people would naturally think of Fuegians,
-Tasmanians, Hottentots, Ashantis, Veddas, and Red Indians, and one of
-the strongest proofs of their decay would be derived from the fact that
-they are dying out wherever they are brought in contact with European
-civilisation. Now it is true that the Tasmanians have become extinct,
-and that several of the Red Indian tribes, too, have actually been
-destroyed by our civilisation. But we must not generalise too quickly.
-Some of these very tribes, the Red Indians,[16] seem to be recovering,
-seem to increase again, and to be able to hold their own against the
-baneful influences which threatened to destroy them. The negroes also
-are by no means dwindling away. On the contrary, they are increasing
-both in Africa and in America. We must therefore be careful before we
-deny the recuperative powers even of retrogressive savages, and we must
-look for other evidence beyond mere statistics in support of their
-hopeless degeneracy.
-
-Historical evidence of such gradual degeneracy is, from the nature of
-the case, almost impossible. We must trust, therefore, to less direct
-proof. I believe there is some distinct historical evidence in the
-case of the Central and South American races, that at the time of the
-arrival of Columbus and his successors civilisation had really been
-decaying for some time in America.[17] But in nearly all other cases
-we have to look out for other proofs in support of a higher antecedent
-civilisation possessed by tribes who, as we know them at present, have
-to be classed as savages. Such proofs, if they exist, must be sought
-for in language, religion, customs, tools, and works of art.
-
-As I look upon language neither as a ready-made gift of God nor as a
-natural growth of the human mind, but as, in the true sense of the
-word, a work of human art, I must confess that nothing has surprised
-me so much as the high art displayed in the languages of so-called
-savages. I do not wish to exaggerate; and I know quite well that a
-great abundance of grammatical forms, such as we find in these savage
-dialects, is by no means a proof of high intellectual development.
-But if we consider how small is the number of words and ideas in the
-ordinary vocabulary of an English peasant,[18] and if then we find
-that one dialect of the Fuegians, the Tagan, consists of about 30,000
-words,[19] we certainly hesitate before venturing to classify the
-possessors of so vast an inherited wealth as the descendants of poor
-savages, more savage than themselves. Such facts cannot be argued away.
-We cannot prevent people from despising religious concepts different
-from their own, or from laughing at customs which they themselves could
-never adopt. But such a treasure of conceptual thought as is implied
-in the possession of a vocabulary of 30,000 entries cannot be ignored
-in our estimate of the antecedents of this Fuegian race. I select the
-Fuegians as a crucial test simply because Darwin[20] selected them as
-the strongest proof of his own theory, and placed them almost below
-the level reached by the most intelligent animals. I have always had a
-true regard for Darwin, and what I admired in him more than anything
-else was his fearlessness, his simple devotion to truth. I believe
-that if he had seen that his own theories were wrong, he would have
-been the first to declare it, whatever his followers might have said.
-But in spite of all that, no man can resist the influence of his own
-convictions. When Darwin looked at the Fuegians, he no doubt saw what
-he tells us, but then he saw it with Darwinian eyes. According to his
-account, the party of Fuegians whom he saw resembled the devils which
-come on the stage in such plays as _Der Freischütz_.[21] “Viewing such
-men, one can hardly believe,” he says, “that they are fellow-creatures,
-and inhabitants of the same world” (p. 235). “Their language, according
-to our notions, scarcely deserves to be called articulate. Captain Cook
-has compared it to a man clearing his throat, but certainly no European
-ever cleared his throat with so many hoarse, guttural, and clicking
-sounds.”
-
-Now, even with regard to their physical aspect, Darwin must have either
-been very unlucky in the Fuegians whom he met, or he cannot have kept
-himself quite free from prejudice. Captain Parker Snow, in his _Two
-Years Cruise of Tierra del Fuego_ (London 1857), speaks of them as
-without the least exaggeration really beautiful representatives of the
-human race. Professor Virchow, when exhibiting a number of Fuegians
-at Berlin, strongly protested against the supposition of the Fuegians
-being by nature an inferior race, so that they might be considered as a
-connecting link between ape and man. But what shall we say of Darwin's
-estimate of the Fuegian language? Here we can judge for ourselves,
-and I doubt whether, so far as this sound is concerned, anyone would
-consider Fuegian as inferior to English. Giacomo Bove, when speaking of
-the Tagan dialect, says, “le parole di quella sono dolci, piacevoli,
-piene di vocali.” And though he admits that some of the other dialects
-are harsher, yet that is very far as yet from the sound of clearing the
-throat.
-
-And, even if the sound of their language was as guttural as some of
-the Swiss dialects, how shall we account for the wealth of their
-vocabulary? Every concept embodied in their language is the result of
-hard intellectual labor; and although here again excessive wealth may
-be an embarrassment, yet there remains enough to prove a past that must
-have been very different from the present.
-
-The workman must at least have been as great as his work; and if
-the ruins of Central America tell us of architects greater than any
-that country could produce at present, the magnificent ruins in the
-dialects, whether of Fuegians, Mohawks, or Hottentots, tell us of
-mental builders whom no one could match at present. Even in their
-religious beliefs there are here and there rays of truth which could
-never have proceeded from the dark night of their actual superstitions.
-The Fuegians, according to Captain FitzRoy, believe in a just god and a
-great spirit moving about in forests and mountains. They may believe in
-a great deal more, but people who believe in a great spirit in forests
-and mountains, and in a just god, are not on the lowest step of the
-ladder leading from earth to heaven.
-
-The Duke of Argyll, in examining the principal races that are commonly
-called savage, has pointed out that degraded races generally inhabit
-the extreme ends of continents or tracts of country almost unfit for
-human habitation, or again whole islands difficult of access except
-under exceptionally favorable conditions. He naturally concludes that
-they did not go there of their own free will, but that they represent
-conquered races, exiles, weaklings, cowards, criminals, who saved
-nothing but their life in their flight before more vigorous conquerors,
-or in their exile from countries that had thrown them off like poison.
-Instead of looking on the inhabitants of Tierra del Fuego as children
-of the soil, Autochthones, or the immediate descendants of the mythical
-Proanthropoi, the Duke points out that it is far more likely they may
-have come from the north; that their ancestors may have participated
-in the blessings of the soil and climate of Chili, Peru, Brazil,
-or Mexico, possibly in the early civilisation of that part of the
-world; and that the wretchedness of the country into which they were
-driven fully accounts for their present degradation. Take away the
-wretchedness of their present home, educate a baby, as Captain FitzRoy
-did, under the beneficent influences of an English sky and of European
-civilisation, and in one generation, as Mr. Darwin tells us, “his
-intellect was good, and his disposition nice.”
-
-It is quite fair that those who oppose this theory should call upon the
-Duke to establish his view by the evidence of language. If the Fuegians
-were the descendants of the same race which reached a high pitch of
-civilisation in Peru, Mexico, or Central America, their language ought
-to show the irrefragable proof of such descent. If it did, his position
-would be impregnable. Unfortunately the materials now at hand have not
-yet been sufficiently examined to enable us to say either yes or no.
-Nor must we forget that language, when it is not fixed by a popular
-literature, is liable among nomadic tribes to unlimited variation.
-The number of languages spoken[22] throughout the whole of North
-and South America has been estimated to considerably exceed twelve
-hundred; and on the northern continent alone more than five hundred
-distinct languages are said to be spoken, which admit of classification
-among seventy-five ethnical groups, each with essential linguistic
-distinctions, pointing to its own parent stock. Some of these languages
-are merely well-marked dialects, with fully developed vocabularies.
-Others have more recently acquired a dialectic character in the
-breaking up and scattering of dismembered tribes, and present a very
-limited range of vocabulary, suited to the intellectual requirements
-of a small tribe or band of nomads. The prevailing condition of life
-throughout the whole North American continent was peculiarly favorable
-to the multiplication of such dialects and their growth into new
-languages, owing to the constant breaking up and scattering of tribes,
-and the frequent adoption into their numbers of the refugees from other
-fugitive broken tribes, leading to an intermingling of vocabularies
-and fresh modifications of speech. It is to be hoped that the study
-of native American languages may before long receive that attention
-which it so fully deserves. It must be taken up in good earnest, and
-with all the accuracy which we are accustomed to in a comparative study
-of Indo-European languages. All ethnological questions must for the
-present be kept in abeyance till the linguistic witness can be brought
-into court, and it would be extraordinary if the laurels that can here
-be gained should fail to stimulate the ambition of some young scholar
-in America.
-
-As to the Fuegians at Cape Horn, so at the North Pole the Eskimos,
-however low their present state of civilisation, have been looked upon
-as immigrants from a centre of civilisation located in a more temperate
-zone. The Eskimo leads the only life that is possible in his latitudes.
-Why he should have migrated there, unless driven by _force majeure_,
-is impossible to say. Unless we are willing to admit a special Eskimo
-Adam, we have no choice except to look upon him either as a withering
-offshoot of the American moundbuilders, or as a weak descendant of
-Siberian nomads.
-
-In Africa, the most degraded races, the Bushmen, are clearly a
-corruption of the Hottentots, while it is well known that some
-eminent ethnologists look upon the Hottentots as degraded emigrants
-from Egypt. How much higher the civilisation of Africa stood in
-former ages, we know from the monuments of Egypt and Nubia, from the
-histories of Phœnicia, Carthage, and Numidia. If among the ruins of
-these ancient centres of civilisation we now find tribes whom European
-travellers would call savage, we see again that in the evolution of man
-retrogression is as important an element as progression.
-
-Even in Australasia, where we meet with the most repulsive customs and
-the most hopeless barbarism, the Duke of Argyll shows that, according
-to the principles of evolution, the separation of the islands from the
-Asiatic continent would date from a period anterior to the age of man,
-and that here too man must be an immigrant, a degraded offshoot from
-that branch of the human race which in China or India has risen to some
-kind of civilised life. For further details the pages in the last book
-of the Duke of Argyll, particularly chapter x., on the “Degradation of
-Man,” should be consulted. It must suffice here to quote his summing
-up:—
-
- Instead of assuming these (savage) tribes to be the nearest living
- representatives of primeval man, we should be more safe in assuming
- them to represent the widest departure from that earliest condition of
- our race which, on the theory of development, must of necessity have
- been associated at first with the most highly favorable conditions of
- external nature.
-
-We have thus seen that, wherever we seem to lay hold of primeval
-savages who are supposed to represent to us the unchanged image of the
-primeval man, the evidence of their having been autochthonous in the
-places where we now find them is very weak, the proofs that they have
-never changed are altogether wanting; while geographical, physical,
-and linguistic considerations make it probable, though no more, that
-they originally came from more favored countries, that they were driven
-in the struggle for life into inhospitable climates, and that in
-accommodating themselves to the requirements of their new homes they
-gradually descended from a higher level of civilisation, indicated by
-their language and religion, to that low level in which we find them
-now. Some of them have sunk so low that, like individual members of the
-noblest families in Europe, they can no longer be reclaimed. Others,
-however, though shaken by sudden contact with the benefits and the
-dangers of a higher civilisation, may regain their former health and
-vigor, and, from having been retrogressive savages, become once more
-progressive in the great struggle for existence.
-
-But if in the cases just mentioned we feel inclined to recognise the
-influence of degradation, and if we class such races as the Fuegians,
-the Eskimos, the Bushmen and Hottentots, the Papuans and brown
-Polynesians, as retrogressive savages, the question arises where we
-can hope to find specimens of the progressive savage, or rather of the
-natural man, who might teach us something of what man may have been
-before civilisation completely changed him into an artificial being,
-forgetful of the essential purposes of life, and who feels at home no
-longer in fields and forests, on rivers or mountains, but only in that
-enchanted castle of custom and fashion which he has erected for himself
-out of the unmeaning fragments of former ages?
-
-My answer is that after we have collected the primitive tools and
-weapons which lie buried beneath the abodes of civilised man, our best
-chance of learning some of the secrets of primitive civilisation is to
-study the sacred hymns and the ancient legends of India, the traditions
-embodied in the Homeric poems, and whatever has been preserved to us
-of the most ancient literature of the progressive races of the world,
-the Italic, Celtic, Slavonic, and Teutonic races. This of course
-applies to the Aryan race only. The Semitic races are represented to
-us in their progress from a nomadic to a more or less civilised life
-in the Old Testament, in the earliest ballads of the Arabs, and in
-passages scattered in the inscriptions of Assyrians, Babylonians, and
-Phœnicians. China too in its ancient literature allows us an insight
-into the age of a nascent society, while Egypt discloses to us the most
-ancient of all civilisations, which can boast of a literature at a time
-when the very idea of writing was as yet unknown to all other nations.
-
-It is easy to say that all this is modern. In one sense no doubt it
-is. The Vedic literature, the most ancient of the whole Aryan race,
-presupposes a succession of intellectual strata which no chronology
-can measure. The language of the Veda is a work of art which it must
-have taken generations to build up. But is it reasonable to expect
-anything less modern in the history of the human race? And is there not
-a continuity in language and thought which allows us to see even in
-these literary remains, call them as modern as you like, something of
-the first dawn of human life. French is a very modern language, but in
-_chien_ we still hear the Sanskrit _ṥvan_; in _journal_ we recognise
-the old Vedic deity _Dyaus_. In the same way we can go back from
-what is common to Sanskrit, Greek, and Latin, to what was the common
-language of the Aryans before they broke up in different nationalities.
-In that common Aryan vocabulary, again, we can distinguish between
-what is radical and primitive and what is formal and secondary. Thus
-we may go back beyond all so-called historical limits to a stage of
-primitive thought, represented by a small number of radical concepts,
-and a still smaller number of formal elements. And is not that enough?
-Is it not more historical and more trustworthy, at all events, than
-all _à priori_ speculations? and have we not at least a right to
-demand this from our _à priori_ friends, that, in running their tunnel
-from the other end, they should take care that when it emerges into
-the daylight of history it should meet the tunnel which comparative
-philology, mythology, and theology have carefully dug out on the
-opposite side through the solid rock of facts? It will never do for
-_à priori_ theories to run counter to _à posteriori_ facts. It is a
-fact, for instance, proved by historical evidence, that fetichism
-represents a secondary stage in the growth of religion, and that it
-presupposes an earlier stage, in which the name and the concept of
-something divine, the predicate of every fetich, was formed. It would
-be fatal, therefore, to any system of _à priori_ reasoning if it placed
-fetichism before that phase in the development of human thought which
-is represented by the first formation of divine concepts. It would be a
-real hysteron-proteron.
-
-Again, it is a fact, proved by historical evidence, that all the words
-of the Aryan languages are derived from definite roots, expressive of
-definite concepts. It would therefore be fatal, again, to any system
-of _à priori_ reasoning if it attempted to derive words direct from
-more or less inarticulate cries or imitations of cries, and not from
-that small number of roots which has been proved to supply all that is
-really wanted in explanation of all the facts of Aryan speech.
-
-Again, it is a fact, proved by historical evidence, that most of the
-ancient deities of the Aryan nations have names expressive of the
-great powers of nature, and it would be an insult to all historical
-scholarship if our _à priori_ friends were to attempt to prove once
-more that the worship of Zeus was derived from a general reverence
-felt for a gentleman of the name of Sky, or the belief in Eos from
-a sentimental devotion excited by a young lady of the name of Dawn.
-I believe it will be admitted by all honest anthropologists that the
-philological identification of one single word, Dyaus in the Veda and
-Zeus in Homer, has done more for rectifying our ideas of the true
-course of ancient Aryan civilisation than all the myths and customs of
-savages put together.
-
-There was a time when the students of Oriental literature were inclined
-to claim an extravagant antiquity for the books which they had rescued
-from oblivion. But that tendency has now been changed into the very
-opposite. There may be traces of it among Chinese, sometimes among
-Egyptian and Accadian scholars, but wherever we have to deal with a
-real literature, whether in India, Persia, or Palestine, scholars are
-far more anxious to point out what is modern than what is ancient,
-whether in the Veda the Avesta, or the Old Testament. I certainly do
-not feel guilty of ever having claimed an excessive antiquity for the
-Rig-Veda. From the very first, though I placed the whole of Vedic
-literature before Buddhism, say the sixth century B.C. and though,
-owing to the changes in language, style, and thought which are clearly
-perceptible in different parts of Vedic literature, owing also to
-certain astronomical dates, I ventured to place it between 1000 and
-1500 B.C., yet I have never concealed my impression that some portions
-of the Veda may turn out to be of far more recent origin.[23]
-
-But is not that sufficient? Is it not perfectly marvellous that so
-much that is really old, so much that carries us back more than 3,000
-years, should have been preserved to us at all? Why will people ask
-for what is impossible? Savages they say, do not read and write, and
-yet they want to have trustworthy information from literary documents
-composed by those very savages who cannot read and write. Among the
-Aryan nations, I do not believe in any written books before the sixth
-century B.C. In China, books may have been older, papyri are older in
-Egypt, and clay tablets in Babylon. But even when literature began,
-the very last that ancient people do is to write about themselves,
-about their manners and customs. What we know of the manners and
-customs of ancient people, when they were still passing through that
-phase which we call progressive savagery, comes to us from strangers
-only. As modern travellers give us full accounts of the life of savages
-who cannot speak and write for themselves, our only chance of learning
-something about our own ancestors, before they began to write, would
-be from ancient travellers who were interested in these promising
-savages. Now it is a piece of excessive good luck that, with regard to
-one of the Aryan races, with regard to our own Teutonic ancestors, we
-possess such a book, written by a stranger who felt deeply interested
-in German savages, and who has told us what they were, before they
-could write and tell us themselves what they were. If we want to study
-the progressive savage, not as he ought to have been, according to _à
-priori_ philosophy, nor as he might have been, according to what we see
-among Fuegians of the present day, but as he really was according to
-the best information that could be collected by the best of historians,
-we must, read and read again the _Germania_ of Tacitus.
-
-If history means the evidence of contemporary eye-witnesses, I doubt
-whether history will ever enable us to see further into the natural
-transition of barbarism into civilisation than in the _Germania_ of
-Tacitus. To divide civilisation from barbarism by a sharp line is of
-course impossible. There are remnants of barbarism in the most advanced
-state of civilisation, and there are sparks of civilisation in the most
-distant ages of barbarism—at least of that healthy barbarism which is
-represented to us in the _Germania_, and of which we find but scanty
-fragments in the ancient literature of the civilising nations of the
-world.
-
-Here we may see ourselves as we were not quite two thousand years ago.
-Here we may see from how small beginnings the highest civilisation may
-be reached. Here we may study the natural man as he really was, in some
-respects certainly a savage, but a progressive savage, as we know from
-his later history, and certainly without one sign of that corruption
-and decay which is so plainly visible in Hottentots and Papuans.
-
-This book, the account of the site, the manners, and the inhabitants of
-Germany, by Tacitus, has had various fates. To every German, to every
-member of the Teutonic race, it has always been a kind of national
-charter, a picture of a golden age, adorned with all that is considered
-most perfect, pure, and noble in human nature; whereas French _savants_
-have often either ridiculed the work of Tacitus as a mere romance,
-or so interpreted his words as to turn the ancient Germans into real
-Hottentots.
-
-This controversy has been carried on during several centuries. M.
-Guizot, for instance, in his _History of Civilisation_ completely
-ignoring the distinction between retrogressive and progressive savages,
-tried to show that there was little to choose between the Germans of
-Tacitus and the Red Indians of the present day.
-
-This controversy became embittered by a curious circumstance. Whereas
-Tacitus and other Roman writers spoke in glowing terms of the Teutonic
-races, their remarks on the Gauls, the ancient inhabitants of France,
-were not only far from complimentary, but happened to touch on points
-on which Frenchmen are particularly sensitive. Tertullian, who was
-a great admirer of the Jews, was very wroth with Tacitus because he
-used very anti-Semitic language. He actually calls Tacitus a “brawler,
-and the greatest teller of lies,”[24] The French do not differ much
-from that opinion, not so much because Tacitus spoke ill of the Jews,
-and likewise of the Celts of Gaul, as because he spoke so well of
-the _paysans du Danube_. The ancient classical writers dwell rather
-strongly on the unfavorable side of the Celtic character. It is well
-known how low an opinion Aristotle formed of Celtic morality. Strabo
-says that the Celts are simple, but proud and sensitive, fond of
-dress and ornaments. It is even hinted that they dyed their hair,
-and allowed their mustache to grow, so that it interfered with the
-comfort of eating and drinking.[25] Strabo goes on to say that they
-are not malicious, but reckless, changeable, fond of innovation, and
-never to be depended on. They are quick in their resolutions, but
-often inconsiderate, fond of war, brave, but intolerably conceited if
-victorious, and quite demoralised if defeated. Polybius confirms that
-their first onslaught is terrible, but both Cæsar and Livy agree as to
-their want of steadiness and perseverance. Other Latin authors add that
-they are unmanageable and inclined to revolutions, and that, owing to
-continual factions, many are obliged to leave the country, and to try
-their fortunes as adventurers elsewhere. Still darker colors were added
-by others to this picture of national depravity. The state of morality
-in Gaul was such that it was considered infamous for a father to be
-seen in company with his son before the latter had come of age. At the
-death of a nobleman his widow was, as a matter of course, subjected to
-a trial as to whether she had been the cause of her husband's death.
-Strabo affirms that it was their custom to cut off the heads of their
-enemies after a battle, and to hang them on the heads of their horses,
-or nail them over their doors. While German scholars composed this
-mosaic out of all the stones that classical writers had ever thrown at
-the inhabitants of Gaul, French writers retaliated by either throwing
-discredit on Tacitus, the supposed encomiast of the Germans, or by
-showing that the account which Tacitus gives of the ancestors of the
-Teutonic race proves better than anything else that, at his time, the
-Germans had not yet emerged from a state of the grossest barbarism, and
-were incapable, therefore, as yet of vices of which they maintain are
-the outcome of a more advanced state of civilisation.
-
-To my mind, apart from any national idiosyncrasies, the description
-which Tacitus gives us of the Germans, as he had seen them, is
-perfectly unique and invaluable as a picture of what I should willingly
-call the life of progressive savages. What should we give if, besides
-the hymns of the Rig-Veda, we had the accounts of travellers who
-had actually seen the ancient Rishis of India with their flocks and
-families, their priests and sacrifices, their kings and battles? What
-should we give if, besides the Homeric poems, we had the work of an
-eyewitness who could describe to us the real Troy, and the real fight
-between Greece and Asia Minor? This is what Tacitus has done for
-Germany, and at a time when the ancient religion was still living,
-when the simple laws of a primitive society were still observed, and
-when the epic poems of a later time were still being sung as ballads
-at the feasts of half-naked warriors! In Tacitus, therefore, and not
-in the missionary accounts of Melanesian savages, should we study the
-truly primitive man, primitive in the only sense in which we shall ever
-know of primitive man, and primitive certainly in a far truer sense
-than Papuans or Fuegians are likely to be in the nineteenth century.
-I cannot understand how an historian like Guizot could have allowed
-himself to be so much misguided by national prejudice as to speak of
-Tacitus as a kind of Montaigne or Rousseau, who, in a fit of disgust
-with his own country, drew a picture of Germany as a mere satire on
-Roman manners, or to call the _Germania_ “the eloquent sulking of
-a patriotic philosopher who wishes to see virtue where he does not
-find the disgraceful effeminacy and the elegant depravity of an old
-society.” Surely the work of Tacitus cannot have been very fresh in the
-memory of the great French historian when he delivered this judgment.
-If Tacitus, like Rousseau or Voltaire, had intended to draw the picture
-of an ideal barbarism, would he have mentioned the many vices of the
-German Utopia, the indolence of the Germans, their drunkenness, their
-cruelty to slaves, their passion for gambling, and their riotous
-revels? Besides, three-fourths of his book treat of subjects which
-have no bearing whatever on Roman society, nay, which are of so little
-interest to the general reader that I doubt whether many Romans would
-have taken the trouble to read them. The facts which came to the
-knowledge of Tacitus are so loosely strung together that his book looks
-more like a collection of memoranda than the compact and pointed
-pamphlet of a political satirist. We need only read the letters of
-Voltaire on England, or Montalembert's pamphlet, _De l'Angleterre_,
-in order to perceive the difference between a political satire and
-an historical memoir. No doubt a man of the temper of Tacitus would
-naturally dwell with satisfaction on the bright side of the German
-character, and, while holding before the eyes of his own nation the
-picture of a brave and simple, religious and independent race, might
-naturally think of what Rome once had been, and was no longer. But
-there is no more sarcasm or satire in his work than is inseparable from
-a straightforward statement of facts when addressed to ears no longer
-accustomed to the sound of unvarnished truth.
-
-So little did M. Guizot perceive the unique character of the _Germania_
-of Tacitus as an historical document of the earliest stage of society,
-that he amused himself with collecting from various books of travel a
-number of facts observed among the very lowest races in America and
-Africa, which, as he thinks, form an exact parallel to the statements
-of Tacitus with regard to the good and bad qualities of the Germans.
-His parallel columns, which occupy nearly ten pages, are certainly
-amusing, but they prove nothing, least of all that there was no
-difference between the healthy sons of Germany and the tattooed
-cannibals of New Zealand. If they prove anything, it is that there
-is one kind of barbarism through which every nation has to pass, the
-childhood and wild youth of a race, to be followed by the mature vigor
-of a nation's manhood, and that there is another kind of barbarism
-which leads to nothing, but ends in mere brutality, shrinking from
-contact with higher civilisation and succumbing when it attempts to
-imitate with monkeyish delight the virtues and vices of a more advanced
-society. Why is it that the fresh breezes of European civilisation
-proved fatal to the consumptive barbarism of the wretched inhabitants
-of Australia, while the strong constitution of the Germans of Tacitus
-resisted even the poisonous vapors of Roman life? When the results are
-so different, surely there must be a difference in the antecedents,
-and though M. Guizot is successful in showing that in some respects
-the ancient Germans did the same things and said the same things as
-Ojibways and Papuans, he forgets in drawing his conclusion the old
-proverb, _Si duo dicunt idem, non est idem_.
-
-After these remarks it will perhaps seem less surprising that students
-of antiquity should decline to answer the point-blank question whether
-man began his life on earth as a savage. Every definition that has
-been attempted of a savage in general, has broken down as soon as
-it was confronted with facts. The only characteristic of the savage
-which remained, and was strong enough to withstand the sharpest
-cross-examination, was cannibalism. But I am not aware that even the
-most extreme believers in the primitive savage would insist on his
-having been necessarily a cannibal, a kind of human Kronos, swallowing
-his own kith and kin.
-
-Every attempt to place the savage who can _no longer_ be called
-civilised in the place of the savage who can _not yet_ be so-called,
-could only end, as it has, in utter confusion of thought.
-
-Something, however, will be gained, or at all events some kind of
-mutual understanding will become possible, if in future discussions on
-the character of primitive man a careful distinction is made between
-the two kinds of savages, the progressive and the retrogressive. When
-that distinction has once been grasped, the question whether man began
-as a savage has no longer anything perplexing about it. Man certainly
-began as a savage, but as a progressive savage. He certainly did not
-begin with an innate knowledge of reading, writing and arithmetic; but,
-on the other hand, there is nothing to lead us to suppose that he was
-a being altogether foul and filthy, that when he grew up he invariably
-ill-treated his wife or wives, and that still later in life he passed
-his time in eating his children.
-
-If we must need form theories or reason by analogy on the primitive
-state of man, let us go to the nearest _ci-près_, such as the Vedic
-Hindus, or the Germans as described by Cæsar and Tacitus, but not to
-Fuegians, who in time and probably in space also are the most widely
-removed from the primitive inhabitants of our globe. If we knew
-nothing of the manners and customs of the Saxons, when they first
-settled in these isles, should we imagine that they must have resembled
-the most depraved classes of modern English society? Let us but once
-see clearly that the Fuegian, whether as described by Darwin or by
-Parker Snow, is the most modern of human beings, and we shall pause
-before we see in him the image of the first ancestor of the human race.
-Wherever we look we can see the rise and fall of the human race. We
-can see it with our own eyes, if we look at the living representatives
-of some of our oldest and noblest families; we can read it in history
-if we compare ancient India with modern India, ancient Greece with
-modern Greece. The idea that the Fuegian was salted and preserved for
-us during many thousands of years, so that we might study in him the
-original type of man, is nothing but a poetical sentiment unsupported
-alike by fact, analogy, and reason.
-
-I know full well that when I speak of the Germans of Tacitus or of
-the Aryans of the Veda as the _ci-près_ of primitive man, all the
-indications of modern, or at all events of secondary and tertiary
-thought which I have pointed out myself in the hymns of the Rig-Veda,
-and which might easily be collected from the book of Tacitus, will
-be mustered against me. Must I quote the old saying again: _Est
-quoddam prodire tenus si non datur ultra_? All I maintain is that
-these historical documents bring us as near to the primitive man as
-historical documents can bring us; but that the nearest point within
-our reach is still very far from the cradle of the human race, no one
-has pointed out more often than myself.
-
-There is, however, plenty of work still to be done in slowly following
-up the course of human progress and tracing it back to its earliest
-stages, as far as literary, monumental, and traditional documents will
-allow us to do so. There are many intricate windings of that historical
-river to be explored, many riddles to be solved, many lessons to be
-learnt. One thing only is quite certain—namely, that the private diary
-of the first man will never be discovered, least of all at Cape Horn.
-
-I have thus tried to show how untenable is the theory which would
-boldly identify the modern savage with primitive man, and how cautious
-we ought to be whenever we take even a few hints here and there from
-degraded tribes of the present day in order to fill out our imaginary
-picture of the earliest civilisation of our race. Some lessons, and
-even important lessons, may be learnt from savages, if only they
-are studied in a truly scholarlike spirit, as they have been, for
-instance, by Callaway and Codrington, by Waitz and Tylor. But if the
-interpretation of an Homeric custom or myth requires care, that of
-African or Polynesian customs or myths requires ten times greater care,
-and if a man shrinks from writing on the Veda because he does not know
-Sanskrit, he should tremble whenever he writes the names of Zulus,
-unless he has some idea of what Bântu grammar means.
-
-In arguing so far, I have carefully kept to the historical point of
-view, though I am well aware that the principal traits in the imaginary
-picture of primitive man are generally taken from a very different
-source. We are so made that for everything that comes before us we have
-to postulate a cause and a beginning. We therefore postulate a cause
-and a beginning for man. The ethnologist is not concerned with the
-first cause of man, but he cannot resist the craving of his mind to
-know at least the beginning of man.
-
-Most ethnologists used to hold that, as each individual begins as
-a child, mankind also began as a child; and they imagined that a
-careful observation of the modern child would give them some idea of
-the character of the primeval child. Much ingenuity has been spent on
-this subject since the days of Voltaire, and many amusing books have
-been the result, till it was seen at last that the modern baby and the
-primeval baby have nothing in common but the name, not even a mother or
-a nurse.
-
-It is chiefly due to Darwin and to the new impulse which he gave to
-the theory of evolution that this line of argument was abandoned as
-hopeless. Darwin boldly asked the question whose child the primeval
-human baby could have been, and he answered it by representing the
-human baby as the child of non-human parents. Admitting even the
-possibility of this _transitio in aliud genus_, which the most honest
-of Darwin's followers strenuously deny, what should we gain by this
-for our purpose—namely, for knowing the primitive state of man, the
-earliest glimmerings of the human intellect? Our difficulties would
-remain exactly the same, only pushed back a little further.
-
-Disappointing as it may sound, the fact must be faced, nevertheless,
-that our reasoning faculties, wonderful as they are, break down
-completely before all problems concerning the origin of things. We
-may imagine, we may believe, anything we like about the first man; we
-can know absolutely nothing. If we trace him back to a primeval cell,
-the primeval cell that could become a man is more mysterious by far
-than the man that was evolved from a cell. If we trace him back to a
-primeval pro-anthropos, the pro-anthropos is more unintelligible to us
-than even the protanthropos would be. If we trace back the whole solar
-system to a rotating nebula, that wonderful nebula which by evolution
-and revolution could become an inhabitable universe is, again, far more
-mysterious than the universe itself.
-
-The lesson that there are limits to our knowledge is an old lesson,
-but it has to be taught again and again. It was taught by Buddha, it
-was taught by Socrates, and it was taught for the last time in the
-most powerful manner by Kant. Philosophy has been called the knowledge
-of our knowledge; it might be called more truly the knowledge of
-our ignorance, or, to adopt the more moderate language of Kant, the
-knowledge of the limits of our knowledge.—_Nineteenth Century._
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[10] Charles Hawley, _Addresses before the Cayuga County Historical
-Society_, 1883-84, p. 31.
-
-[11] _The King Country; or, Explorations in New Zealand_, by T. H.
-Kerry; see Nicholls in the _Academy_, Aug. 23, 1884, p. 113.
-
-[12] _The League of the Iroquois_, p. 12.
-
-[13] Hawley, _l.c._, p. 17.
-
-[14] See, however, Daniel Wilson, _Pre-Aryan American Man_, p. 47.
-
-[15] _Unity of Nature_, p. 393.
-
-[16] _The Indians in the United States._—In an interesting paper read
-at a recent meeting of the Académie des Sciences, M. Paul Passy,
-who has recently returned from a visit to the North-Western States
-of America, endeavored to show that the generally accepted theory
-of the eventual disappearance of the “red man” is erroneous, and
-that though certain tribes have been exterminated in war and others
-decimated by disease and “firewater,” the contact of civilisation is
-not necessarily fatal to the Indians. M. Passy states that there are
-at present 376,000 Indians in the country, of whom 67,000 have become
-United States citizens. The Indians in the reserve territories are in
-part maintained by the Government, many of them, however, earning their
-living by shooting and fishing, and also by agriculture. The progress
-which they have made in farming is shown by the fact that they had
-under cultivation in 1882 more than 205,000 acres of land, as against
-157,000 in India. Moreover, the total Indian population, exclusive
-of the Indians who are citizens of the United States and of those in
-Alaska, had increased during the same interval by more than 5,000. M.
-Passy says that the Federal Government, though not doing nearly so
-much as it should for the education of Indian children, devoted a sum
-of $365,515 to this purpose in 1882, and in the State of New York the
-six Iroquois “nations” settled there have excellent schools, which
-three-fourths of their children regularly attend. The five “nations”
-in Indian territory are also well cared for in this respect, having 11
-schools for boarders, and 198 day schools attended by 6,183 children.
-In 1827, a Cherokee invented a syllabic alphabet of 85 letters, and
-this alphabet is now used for the publication of a newspaper in the
-Cherokee language. In addition to the tribes in cantonments, a great
-many children (about 8,000) are disseminated among the schools in the
-different States. There are also three normal and industrial schools in
-which, apart from elementary subjects, the boys are taught agriculture
-and different trades, and the girls sewing, cooking, and housekeeping.
-A journal in the Dakota tongue, called the _Yapi Oaye_, is published
-at Chicago for the benefit of the pupils in that region, and it is
-said that the Indians of the territories show themselves very anxious
-to learn, so much so that the Ometras of Nebraska have sold part of
-their territory so as to be able to keep up their schools. M. Passy
-adds that the Americans differ very much in their estimate of the sum
-required for providing all the young Indians with a sound education,
-some of them putting it as high as $10,000,000, while the lowest
-estimate is $3,000,000, or ten times as much as is now being spent.
-His conclusion is that if the Indians are destined to disappear, it
-will be because they become fused with the other citizens of the United
-States.—_Times_, Sept. 8, 1884.
-
-[17] See Hawley, _l.c._, p. 31.
-
-[18] _Lectures on Science of Language_, vol. i. p. 308.
-
-[19] See Giacomo Bove, _Viaggio alla Patagonia ed alla Terra del
-Fuoco_, in _Nuova Antologia_, Dec. 15, 1881.
-
-[20] _Travels_, Deutsch von Dieffenbach. Braunschweig, 1844, p. 229.
-
-[21] Darwin, _Narrative of the Surveying Voyage of H.M.'s Ships
-“Adventure” and “Beagle,”_ 1839, vol. iii. p. 226.
-
-[22] D. Wilson, _Pre-Aryan American Man_, p. 4.
-
-[23] _Rig-Veda-Sanhita, the Sacred Hymns of the Brahmans, translated by
-M. M._, Vol. i. p. xxxix.
-
-[24] Tertullian, _Apolog._ 16: “rabula et mendaciorum loquacissimus.”
-
-[25] See Strabo, iv. 196; Plin. xvii. 12; Liv. xxxviii. 17.
-
-
-
-
-LE BONHOMME CORNEILLE.
-
-BY HENRY M. TROLLOPE.
-
-
-The Marquis de Dangeau wrote, in his journal for the 1st of October,
-1684: “Aujourd'hui est mort le bonhomme Corneille.” The illustrious
-dramatist was an old man, for he had been born in 1606. He was a good
-old fellow in his way, being always an honest and upright man, though
-the appellation “le bonhomme” was less frequently given to him than to
-La Fontaine.
-
-Had it been as much the fashion fifty years ago as now to honor great
-men by anniversaries, in the year 1836 a more gracious homage might
-have been paid to the author of _Le Cid_. At Christmastime in that year
-this play burst upon Paris. As a bombshell carries with it destruction,
-the _Cid_ gave sudden and unexpected delight to all who saw it. It
-is the first of French tragedies that has left a mark; no earlier
-tragedy is now generally remembered. Corneille woke up to find himself
-famous. It appears that, though he was by no means a novice, he was as
-much astonished as anyone at the great success of his play. The Court
-liked it, and the town liked it. It was at once translated into many
-languages. In France people learnt passages of it by heart, and for
-a while there was a popular saying, “Cela est beau comme le _Cid_.”
-If the good folk in Paris had only bethought themselves in 1836 of
-celebrating the bi-centenary of the appearance of the _Cid_ the event
-would have sounded happier than of now celebrating the author's death.
-But fashion rules much in this world. It has not yet become fashionable
-to recollect the date of a great man's great work—fifty years ago it
-had not become fashionable to have centenaries at all; so that now,
-all other excuses failing, we must seize upon the bi-centenary of
-Corneille's death as a date upon which to honor him. Let us hope that
-on the 6th of June, 1906, the ter-centenary of his birth, a more joyful
-note may be sung.
-
-We have said that Pierre Corneille was a good old fellow in his way,
-but it was his misfortune that his way was not more like that of other
-men. He was very poor during the last ten or twelve years of his
-life. He walked out one day with a friend, and went into a shop to
-have his shoe mended. During the operation he sat down upon a plank,
-his friend sitting beside him. After the cobbler had finished his job
-Corneille took from his purse three bits of money to pay for his shoe,
-and when the two gentlemen got home Corneille's friend offered him
-his purse, but he declined all assistance. Corneille was of a proud
-and independent nature. He is reported to have said of himself, “Je
-suis saoûl de gloire, mais affamé d'argent.” He has been accused of
-avarice—unjustly, we think—because he tried to get as much money as he
-could for his plays. If a man wants money he will try to obtain that
-which he thinks should belong to him. And if he wants it badly, his
-high notions of dignity—if it be only mock dignity—will go to the wall.
-No fine gentleman nowadays would think it beneath him to take £100
-from a publisher or from a theatrical manager after it had been fairly
-earned. Some ask for their £100 before it has been earned. Two hundred
-years ago a poet was supposed to be paid with honor and glory, but,
-unfortunately for himself, Corneille wanted more solid acknowledgment.
-And two hundred years ago the rights of authorship were not so well
-understood as now. In France, as in England, very few men could have
-lived by their pen alone. It is true that the dramatists were among the
-most fortunate, but many years had elapsed since Corneille's plays had
-been popular at the theatre. In 1670 Molière, as theatrical manager,
-had given him 2,000 francs for a piece. This was considered a large
-sum, and it may be doubted if Molière's company ever got back their
-money. The play was _Tite et Bérénice_, and it was played alternately
-with _Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme_. We may judge which of the two plays
-we should like to see best. Corneille had to make the most of his
-2,000 francs, for his pension, supposed to be paid to him every year
-from the Civil List, was always delayed. The year was made to have
-fifteen months! Sometimes the pension was not paid at all. So that poor
-Corneille was hard pressed for money in the latter years of his life,
-from 1672 to 1684, while his years of greatest triumph had been from
-1636 to 1642. And he had small resources except what had come to him
-from writing. His two sons went into the army, and he had to provide
-for them at a time when his payments from the theatre were diminishing.
-There is no evidence which should make us think he was avaricious or
-greedy for money.
-
-In his manner Corneille was apt to be awkward and ungainly. A
-contemporary says that when he first saw him he took him for a
-tradesman at Rouen. Rouen was his birthplace, and there he lived until
-his avocations compelled him, against his will, to live in Paris.
-Like La Fontaine, he made a poor figure in society. He did not talk
-well. He was not good company, and his friends were bound to confess
-that he was rather a bore. Those who knew him well enough would hint
-to him his defects, at which he would smile, and say, “I am none the
-less Pierre Corneille.” But his physiognomy, when observed, was far
-from commonplace. His nephew, Fontenelle, says of him: “His face was
-pleasant enough; a large nose, a good mouth, his expression lively, and
-his features strongly marked and fit to be transmitted to posterity in
-a medal or in a bust.” Corneille begins a letter to Pellisson with the
-following verses, describing himself:
-
- En matière d'amour je suis fort inégal,
- Je l'écris assez bien, je le fais assez mal;
- J'ai la plume féconde et la bouche stérile,
- Bon galant au théâtre et fort mauvais en ville;
- Et l'on peut rarement m'écouter sans ennui
- Que quand je me produis par la bouche d'autrui.
-
-This is a charming little bit of autobiography. And in the same letter,
-after the verses, the old poet says, “My poetry left me at the same
-time as my teeth.”
-
-All this he writes, laughing in his sleeve. But often enough he was
-melancholy and depressed. Again we quote from Fontenelle: “Corneille
-was of a melancholy temperament. He required stronger emotions to make
-him hopeful and happy than to make him mournful or despondent. His
-manner was brusque, and sometimes rude in appearance, but at bottom
-he was very easy to live with, and he was affectionate and full of
-friendliness.” When he heard of large sums of money being given to
-other men for their plays, for pieces that the world liked perhaps
-better than his own, he got unhappy, for he felt that his glory was
-departing from him. Need we go back two hundred years to find instances
-of men who have become unhappy from similar causes? There are many such
-in London and in Paris at this moment. Early in his career, before the
-days of the _Cid_, he was proud of his calling. He gloried in being
-one of the dramatic authors of his time. He says:—
-
- Le théâtre est un fief dont les rentes sont bonnes.
-
-And also:—
-
- Mon travail sans appui monte sur le théâtre,
- Chacun en liberté l'y blâme ou l'idolâtre.
-
-Then he had the ball at his feet, and all the world was before him. He
-had just made his name, and was honored by Richelieu—being appointed
-one of his five paid authors. But minister and poet did not like each
-other. The autocrat was in something of the same position towards his
-inferior as is the big boy towards the little boy who gets above him at
-school. The big boy wanted to thrash the little boy, and the little boy
-wouldn't have it; but at last he had to suffer for his precociousness.
-The big boy summoned other little boys to his assistance, and made them
-administer chastisement to the offender. This was the examination of
-the _Cid_ by the Academy.
-
- “En vain, contre le _Cid_ un ministre se ligue,
- Tout Paris pour Chimène a les yeux de Rodrigue;
- L'Académie en corps a beau le censurer,
- Le public révolté s'obstine à l'admirer.”
-
-Corneille was a voluminous writer. He wrote nearly as many plays as
-Shakespeare, but his later ones are not equal to those of his best
-days. And he wrote a translation in verse of the _Imitatione Christi_.
-This was a pecuniary success. The book was bought and eagerly read,
-though now it is rarely taken down from the shelf. But his prose,
-unlike Racine's, which charms by its grace, is insignificant. And,
-unlike Racine, his speech when he was received into the French Academy
-was dull, and disappointed everybody. An Academical reception is one
-of the occasions in which Frenchmen have always expected that the
-recipient of honor should distinguish himself. But it was not in
-Corneille's power to please his audience by making a speech. We need
-not be too heavy upon him because his glory was not universal. As he
-said of himself, he was none the less Pierre Corneille. Readers have
-generally extolled Corneille too highly, or have not given him his due
-praise. This is partly from the fact that after his great success he
-wrote much that was unworthy of his former self; and partly, we believe
-at least, that even in his best plays he is too spasmodic. His fine
-lines come out too much by starts, amidst much that is uninteresting.
-The famous “Qu'il mourût” (_Horace_, Act III., sc. 6) is very grand,
-and the next line, though not English in sentiment, is fine. But the
-four succeeding lines are washy, and take away from the dignity of what
-has just gone before. Instinctively Corneille was a dramatist, and
-had it not been for the laws of the unities which bound him down to
-conventional and unwise rules, he would in all probability have risen
-higher in the world's esteem. He was also a poet, having the gift of
-poetical expression more at his command than the larger measure of
-composition in prose. His lines are often sweet and very stirring,
-for he was moved towards his subject with a true feeling of poetic
-chivalry. None of his lines is more quoted than one in which he proudly
-spoke of himself:—
-
- Je ne dois qu'à moi seul toute ma renommée.
-
- —_Gentleman's Magazine._
-
-
-
-
-CHARLES DICKENS AT HOME.
-
-WITH ESPECIAL REFERENCE TO HIS RELATIONS WITH CHILDREN.
-
-BY HIS ELDEST DAUGHTER.
-
-Charles Dickens was a very little and very sickly boy, but he had
-always the belief that this circumstance had brought to him the
-inestimable advantage of having greatly inclined him to reading.
-
-When money troubles came upon his parents, the poor little fellow was
-taken away from school and kept for some time at an occupation most
-distasteful to him, with every surrounding that could jar on sensitive
-and refined feelings. But the great hardship, and the one which he felt
-most acutely, was the want of the companionship of boys of his own age.
-A few years later on we read in “Mr. Forster's Life” a schoolfellow's
-description of Charles Dickens: “A healthy-looking boy, small, but
-well-built, with a more than usual flow of spirits, inclining to
-harmless fun, seldom, if never, I think, to mischief. He usually held
-his head more erect than lads ordinarily do, and there was a general
-smartness about him.” This is also a very good personal description of
-the man.
-
-I have never heard him refer in any way to his own childish days,
-excepting in one instance, when he would tell the story of how, when
-he lived at Chatham he and his father often passed Gad's Hill in their
-walks, and what an admiration he had for the red-brick house with its
-beautiful old cedar trees, and how it seemed to him to be larger and
-finer than any other house; and how his father would tell him that if
-he were to be very persevering and were to work hard he might perhaps
-some day come to live in it. I have heard him tell this story over and
-over again, when he had become the possessor of the very place which
-had taken such a hold upon his childish affections. Beyond this, I
-cannot recall a single instance of any allusion being made by him to
-his own early childhood.
-
-He believed the power of observation in very young children to be close
-and accurate, and he thought that the recollection of most of us could
-go further back than we supposed. I do not know how far my own memory
-may carry me back, but I have no remembrance of my childhood which is
-not immediately associated with him.
-
-He had a wonderful attraction for children and a quick perception of
-their character and disposition; a most winning and easy way with
-them, full of fun, but also of a graver sympathy with their many small
-troubles and perplexities, which made them recognise a friend in him at
-once.
-
-I have often seen mere babies, who would look at no other stranger
-present, put out their tiny arms to him with unbounded confidence,
-or place a small hand in his and trot away with him, quite proud and
-contented at having found such a companion; and although with his own
-children he had sometimes a sterner manner than he had with others,
-there was not one of them who feared to go to him for help and advice,
-knowing well that there was no trouble too trivial to claim his
-attention, and that in him they would always find unvarying justice and
-love. When any treat had to be asked for, the second little daughter,
-always a pet of her father's, was pushed into his study by the other
-children, and always returned triumphant. He wrote special prayers
-for us as soon as we could speak, interested himself in our lessons,
-would give prizes for industry, for punctuality, for neat and unblotted
-copy-books. A word of commendation from him was indeed most highly
-cherished, and would set our hearts glowing with pride and pleasure.
-
-His study, to us children, was rather a mysterious and awe-inspiring
-chamber, and while he was at work no one was allowed to enter it. We
-little ones had to pass the door as quietly as possible, and our little
-tongues left off chattering. But at no time through his busy life was
-he too busy to think of us, to amuse us, or to interest himself in all
-that concerned us. Ever since I can remember anything I remember him
-as the good genius of the house, and as its happy, bright, and funny
-genius. He had a peculiar tone of voice and way of speaking for each of
-his children, who could tell, without being called by name which was
-the one addressed. He had funny songs which he used to sing to them
-before they went to bed. One in particular, about an old man who caught
-cold and rheumatism while sitting in an omnibus, was a great favorite,
-and as it was accompanied by sneezes, coughs, and gesticulations,
-it had to be sung over and over again before the small audience was
-satisfied.
-
-I can see him now, through the mist of years, with a child nearly
-always on his knee at this time of the evening, his bright and
-beautiful eyes full of life and fun. I can hear his clear sweet voice
-as he sang to those children as if he had no other occupation in the
-world but to amuse them; and when they grew older, and were able
-to act little plays, it was their father himself, who was teacher,
-manager, and prompter to the infant amateurs. These theatricals were
-undertaken as earnestly and seriously as were those of the grown up
-people. He would teach the children their parts separately; what to do
-and how to do it, acting himself for their edification. At one moment
-he would be the dragon in “Fortunio,” at the next one of the seven
-servants, then a jockey—played by the youngest child, whose little legs
-had much difficulty to get into the tiny top-boots—until he had taken
-every part in the play.
-
-As with his grown-up company of actors, so with his juvenile company,
-did his own earnestness and activity work upon them and affect each
-personally. The shyest and most awkward child would come out quite
-brilliantly under his patient and always encouraging training.
-
-At the juvenile parties he was always the ruling spirit. He had
-acquired by degrees an excellent collection of conjuring tricks, and on
-Twelfth Night—his eldest son's birthday—he would very often, dressed as
-a magician, give a conjuring entertainment, when a little figure which
-appeared from a wonderful and mysterious bag, and which was supposed
-to be a personal friend of the conjuror, would greatly delight the
-audience by his funny stories, his eccentric voice and way of speaking,
-and by his miraculous appearances and disappearances. Of course a plum
-pudding was made in a hat, and was always one of the great successes
-of the evening. I have seen many such puddings, but no other conjurer
-has been able to put into a pudding all the love, sympathy, fun, and
-thorough enjoyment which seemed to come from the hands of this great
-magician. Then, when supper time came, he would be everywhere at once,
-serving, cutting up the great twelfth cake, dispensing the bonbons,
-proposing toasts, and calling upon first one child and then another
-for a song or recitation. How eager the little faces looked for each
-turn to come round, and how they would blush and brighten up when the
-magician's eyes looked their way!
-
-One year, before a Twelfth Night dance, when his two daughters were
-quite tiny girls, he took it into his head that they must teach him
-and his friend John Leech the polka. The lessons were begun as soon as
-thought of, and continued for some time. It must have been rather a
-funny sight to see the two small children teaching those two men—Mr.
-Leech was over six feet—to dance, all four as solemn and staid as
-possible.
-
-As in everything he undertook, so in this instance, did Charles
-Dickens throw his whole heart into the dance. No one could have taken
-more pains than he did, or have been more eager and anxious, or more
-conscientious about steps and time than he was. And often, after the
-lesson was over, he would jump up and have a practice by himself.
-When the night of the party came both the small dancing mistresses
-felt anxious and nervous. I know that the heart of one beat very fast
-when the moment for starting off arrived. But both pupils acquitted
-themselves perfectly, and were the admiration of all beholders.
-
-Sir Roger de Coverley was always the finale to those dances, and was
-a special favorite of Charles Dickens, who kept it up as long as
-possible, and was as unflagging in his dancing enthusiasm as was his
-own “Fizziwig” in his.
-
-There can be but little doubt that the children who came to those
-parties, and who have lived to grow up to be men and women, remember
-them as something bright and sunny in their young lives, and must
-always retain a loving feeling for their kind and genial host.
-
-In those early days when he was living in Devonshire Terrace, his
-children were quite babies. And when he paid his first visit to
-America—accompanied by Mrs. Dickens—they were left under the care of
-some relations and friends. Anyone reading “The Letters of Charles
-Dickens” must be touched by his frequent allusions to these children,
-and by the love and tenderness expressed in his longings to see them
-again.
-
-I can recall but very little of those days. I can remember our being
-obliged to spend much of the time at the house of a dear and good
-friend, but where the children of the house were very severely and
-sternly brought up. And I can remember how my little sister used to
-cry whenever she had to go there. I have also a vague remembrance of
-the return of the travellers, and of being lifted up to a gate and
-kissing my father through the bars. I do not know how the gate came to
-be shut, but imagine that he, in his impatience and eagerness to see us
-again, must have jumped out of the carriage before there was time for
-the gate to be opened.
-
-I cannot at all recall his appearance at this time, but know from old
-portraits that his face was beautiful. I think he was fond of dress,
-and must have been rather a dandy in his way. Carrying my memory
-further on, I _can_ remember him as very handsome. He had a most
-beautiful mouth, sensitive, strong, and full of character. This was,
-unfortunately, hidden when he took to wearing—some years afterwards—a
-beard and mustache. But this is the only alteration I can remember in
-him, as to me his face never seemed to change at all. He had always an
-active, young, and boyish-looking figure, and a way of holding his head
-a little thrown back, which was very characteristic. This carriage of
-the head, and his manner altogether, are exactly inherited by one of
-his sons.
-
-Charles Dickens was always a great walker, but in these days he rode
-and drove more than he did in later years. He was fond of the game of
-battledore and shuttlecock, and used constantly to play with friends on
-summer evenings. There is a little drawing by the late Daniel Maclise,
-where a shuttlecock is to be seen in the air. This is suggestive of
-many and many a pleasant evening in the garden, which was shut in all
-round by a high wall, and where, in summer time, a tent was always put
-up, and where, after dinner the family would adjourn for “dessert,”
-This was always considered by us a special treat.
-
-As the children grew older, there were evenings when they would be
-allowed to drive out into the country, and then get out of the carriage
-and walk with “Papa.” It seems now as if the wild flowers which used
-to be gathered on those evenings in the country lanes were sweeter
-and more beautiful than any which grow nowadays! The very lanes have
-all disappeared and grown into houses. But the memory of the one who
-originated those treats, and who was the good spirit of the time, can
-_never_ be blotted out.
-
-Charles Dickens brought a little white Havannah spaniel with him from
-America, and from that time there were always various pets about the
-house. In particular there was an eagle and a raven. The eagle had a
-sort of grotto made for him in the garden, to which he was chained,
-and being chained he was not quite such an object of terror to the
-children as the raven was. This raven, with its mischievous nature,
-delighted in frightening them. One of the little daughters had very
-chubby, rosy legs, and the raven used to run after and peck at them,
-until poor “Tatie's leds” became a constant subject for commiseration.
-Yet the raven was a great source of amusement to the family, and there
-were countless funny stories about him. He was especially wicked to
-the eagle; as soon as his food was brought to him, the raven would
-swoop down upon it, take it just beyond the eagle's reach, mount guard
-over it, dancing round it, and chuckling. When he considered he had
-tantalised the poor bird enough, he would eat the food as deliberately
-and slowly as possible, and then hop away perfectly contented with
-himself. He was not the celebrated Grip of “Barnaby Rudge,” but was
-given after the death of that bird.
-
-In bringing up his children, Charles Dickens was always most anxious
-to impress upon them that as long as they were honest and truthful, so
-would they always be sure of having justice done to them. To show how
-strongly he felt about this, and what a horror he had of their being
-frightened, or in any way unnecessarily intimidated, his own words
-shall be quoted:—
-
-“In the little world in which children have their existence, whosoever
-brings them up, there is nothing so finely perceived and so finely
-felt as injustice. It may only be small injustice that the child can
-be exposed to; but the child is small, and its rocking-horse stands as
-many hands high, according to scale, as a big-boned Irish hunter.” And
-again:—“It would be difficult to overstate the intensity and accuracy
-of an intelligent child's observation. At that impressible time of
-life, it must sometimes produce a fixed impression. If the fixed
-impression be of an object terrible to the child, it will be (for want
-of reasoning upon) inseparable from great fear. Force the child at such
-a time, be Spartan with it, send it into the dark against its will, and
-you had better murder it.”
-
-He was always tender with us, as I have said, in our small troubles
-and trials. When the time came for the eldest son to be sent to a
-boarding-school, there was great grief in the nursery at Devonshire
-Terrace, and he came unexpectedly upon one of his daughters who was
-putting away some school-books, and crying bitterly at the time. To
-him the separation could not have seemed such a terrible one, as the
-boy was certainly to come home once a month, if not once a week. But
-he soothed the weeping child, and reasoned with her, using much the
-same arguments as he did years afterwards, when the well-beloved Plorn
-went to Australia—namely, that these partings were “Hard, hard things,
-but must be borne,” until at last the sobs ceased, and the poor aching
-little heart had found consolation in his loving sympathy.
-
-There are so many people, good, kind, and affectionate, but who can
-_not_ remember that they once were children themselves, and looked out
-upon the world with a child's eyes _only_!
-
-A third daughter was born in Devonshire Terrace, but only lived to be
-nine months old. Her death was very sudden, and happened while Charles
-Dickens was presiding at a public dinner. He had been playing with the
-baby before starting for the dinner, and the little thing was then as
-well and as bright as possible.
-
-An evening or two after her death, some beautiful flowers were sent
-and were brought into the study, and the father was about to take them
-upstairs and place them on the little dead baby, when he suddenly gave
-away completely. It is always very terrible to see a man weep; but
-to see your own father weep, and to see this for the first time as a
-child, fills you with a curious awe.
-
-When the grave where the little Dora was buried was opened, a few
-years ago, and the tiny coffin was seen lying at the bottom of it,
-the remembrance of that evening in the study at Devonshire Terrace was
-fresh in the minds of some of those who were standing at the grave.
-
-It was always a great honor and delight to any of the children to have
-any special present from “Papa,” and on the occasion of a daughter's
-birthday a watch had been promised, and the day was eagerly looked
-forward to by the whole of the family. When the morning arrived,
-Charles Dickens was not well, and was unable to get up to breakfast,
-but the little girl was sent for, and went up to his bedside in a state
-of trembling and anxious expectation. He put his arms round her and
-kissed her, wishing her “Many happy returns of the day,” and took a
-case from under his pillow and opened it. But when she saw first a gold
-watch, and then when he turned it and showed an enamelled back, with
-her initials also in enamel, it was many seconds before the joyful Oh!
-could be gasped out; but when it _did_ come, and she met her father's
-eyes, I don't think they were freer from a certain sort of moisture
-than were those of the happy and delighted child.
-
-When the move was made from Devonshire Terrace to Tavistock House—a far
-larger and handsomer house than the old home—Charles Dickens promised
-his daughters a better bedroom than they ever had before, and told
-them that he should choose “the brightest of papers” for it, but that
-they were not to see “the gorgeous apartment” until it was ready for
-their use. But when the time came for the move, and the two girls were
-shown their room, it surpassed even their expectations. They found
-it full of love and thoughtful care, and as pretty and as fresh as
-their hearts could desire, and with not a single thing in it which had
-not been expressly chosen for them, or planned by their father. The
-wall-paper was covered with wild-flowers, the two little iron bedsteads
-were hung with a flowery chintz. There were two toilet-tables, two
-writing-tables, two easy chairs, etc., etc., all so pretty and elegant,
-and this in the days when bedrooms were not, as a rule, so luxurious as
-they are now.
-
-Notwithstanding his constant and arduous work, he was never too busy to
-be unmindful of the comfort and welfare of those about him, and there
-was not a corner in any of his homes, from kitchen to garret, which was
-not constantly inspected by him, and which did not boast of some of his
-neat and orderly contrivances. We used to laugh at him sometimes and
-say we believed that he was personally acquainted with every nail in
-the house.
-
-It was in this home, some few years later, that the first grown-up
-theatricals were given. And these theatricals were very remarkable,
-in that nearly every part was filled by some celebrated man in either
-literature or art.
-
-Besides being a really great actor, Charles Dickens as a manager
-was quite incomparable. His “company” was as well trained as any
-first-class professional company, and although always kind and
-pleasant, he was feared and looked up to by every member of his
-company. The rehearsals meant business and hard work, and sometimes
-even tears to a few, when all did not go quite satisfactorily. Each one
-knew that there could be no trifling, no playing at work. As in the
-children's performances so in these later ones did he know every part,
-and enter heart and soul into each character. If any new idea came into
-his head, he would at once propound it to the actor or actress, who,
-looking upon that earnest face and active figure, would do his or her
-very best to gain a managerial smile of approval.
-
-He had a temporary theatre built out into the garden, and the scenes
-were painted by some of the greatest scene-painters of the day. A
-drop-scene, representing Eddystone lighthouse, by the late Clarkson
-Stanfield, R.A., was afterwards framed and covered with glass, and hung
-in the entrance hall of Gad's Hill.
-
-In the play called “The Lighthouse,” written by Mr. Wilkie Collins, the
-great effect at the end of an act was to come from a storm, and the
-rehearsing of this storm was a very serious matter indeed. There was
-a long wooden box with peas in it, to be moved slowly up and down to
-represent rain—a wheel to be turned for wind—a piece of oilcloth to be
-dashed upon oilcloth and slowly dragged away, for the waves coming up
-and then receding, carrying the pebbles along with them—a heavy weight
-rolled about upon the floor above the stage, for thunder, etc., etc.
-
-At the time of the storm the manager's part kept him on the stage,
-but during rehearsal he somehow or other managed to be in the hall
-where the storm was worked, as well as on the stage, for he sometimes
-appeared with the rain, sometimes with the wind, sometimes with the
-thunder, until he had seen each separate part made perfect. This storm
-was pronounced by the audience a most wonderful success. I know there
-was such a noise “behind the scenes” that we could not hear ourselves
-speak, and it was most amusing to watch all the actors in their sailor
-dresses and their various “make-ups,” gravely and solemnly pounding
-away at these raw materials.
-
-Then the suppers after these evenings were so delightful! Many and many
-of the company, besides the dear manager, have passed away, but many
-still remain to remember them.
-
-Until he came into possession of Gad's Hill, Charles Dickens was in
-the habit of removing his whole household to some seaside place every
-summer. For many years Broadstairs was the favorite spot, and for some
-seasons he rented a house there, called Fort House. It stood on a
-hill surrounded by a nice garden, a little out of the town, and close
-to the cliff, and was a home of which he was very fond. Since those
-days the name of it has been changed to Bleak House. During these
-seaside visits he would take long walks, in all weathers—and always
-accompanied by one faithful friend and companion—and would get as brown
-and as weather-beaten as any of the sailors about, of whom he was the
-special favorite. I think he had some of the sailor element in himself.
-One always hears of sailors being so neat, handy, and tidy, and he
-possessed all these qualities to a wonderful extent. When a sea captain
-retires, his garden is always the trimmest about, the gates are painted
-a bright green, and of course he puts up a flag-staff. The garden at
-Gad's Hill was the trimmest and the neatest, green paint was on every
-place where it could possibly be put, and the flag staff had an endless
-supply of flags.
-
-There was one year spent in Italy, when the children were still
-very young, and another year in Switzerland, at Lausanne; but after
-Broadstairs, Boulogne became the favorite watering-place. It was here,
-in a charming villa, quite out of the town, that he and his youngest
-son, “The Plorn,” would wander about the garden together admiring the
-flowers, the little fellow being taught to show his admiration by
-holding up his tiny arms. It was a pretty sight to watch them down the
-long avenue, the baby looking so sweet in its white frock and blue
-ribbons, either carried in his father's arms, or toddling by his side
-with his little hand in his, and a most perfect understanding between
-them! There were always anecdotes to be told of the Plorn after these
-walks, when his father invariably wound up with the assertion that he
-was “a noble boy.” Being the youngest of the family, he was made a
-great pet of, especially by his father, and was kept longer at home
-than any of his brothers had been.
-
-Charles Dickens writes to his sister-in-law in the year 1856:—“Kiss
-the Plorn for me, and expound to him that I am always looking forward
-to meeting him again, among the birds and flowers in the garden on
-the side of the hill at Boulogne.” And when he had to part with this
-son in 1868, he says in a letter to a friend, “Poor Plorn is gone to
-Australia. It was a hard parting at the last. He seemed to me to become
-once more my youngest and favorite little child as the day drew near,
-and I did not think I could have been so shaken.” The housekeeper at
-his office, who saw him after he had taken leave of the boy, told “how
-she had never seen the master so upset, and that when she asked him
-how Mr. Edward went off he burst into tears, and couldn't answer her a
-word.”
-
-During the years spent at Tavistock House one of his daughters was,
-for a time, a great invalid, and after a worse attack of illness than
-usual her father suggested that she should be carried as far as the
-study, and lie on the sofa there, while he was at work. This was of
-course considered an immense privilege, and even if she had not felt as
-weak and ill as she did, she would have been bound to remain as still
-and quiet as possible. For some time there was no sound to be heard
-in the room but the rapid working of the pen, when suddenly he jumped
-up, went to the looking-glass, rushed back to his writing-table and
-jotted down a few words; back to the glass again, this time talking to
-his own reflection, or rather to the simulated expression he saw there,
-and was trying to catch before drawing it in words, then back again to
-his writing. After a little he got up again, and stood with his back to
-the glass, talking softly and rapidly for a long time, then _looking_
-at his daughter, but certainly never _seeing_ her, then once more back
-to his table, and to steady writing until luncheon time. It was a
-curious experience, and a wonderful thing to see him throwing himself
-so entirely _out_ of himself and _into_ the character he was writing
-about. His daughter has very seldom mentioned this incident, feeling
-as if it would be almost a breach of confidence to do so. But in these
-reminiscences of her father, she considers it only right that this
-experience should be mentioned, showing as it does his characteristic
-earnestness and method of work.
-
-Often, after a hard morning's writing, when he has been alone with his
-family, and no visitors in the house, he has come in to luncheon and
-gone through the meal without uttering a word, and then has gone back
-again to the work in which he was so completely absorbed. Then again,
-there have been times when his nerves have been strung up to such a
-pitch that any sudden noise, such as the dropping of a spoon, or the
-clatter of a plate, seemed to cause him real agony. He never could bear
-the least noise when he was writing, and waged a fierce war against all
-organ-grinders, bands, etc.
-
-In 1856 the purchase of Gad's Hill was made. Charles Dickens had never
-been inside the house until it was his own. For once we may hope and
-believe that a childish dream was realised, for certainly some of the
-happiest years of his home-life were spent in the house he had so
-coveted and admired when he was quite a small boy. “It has never been
-to me like any other house,” were his own words.
-
-For the first three years, Gad's Hill was only used by him as a summer
-residence, but after the sale of Tavistock House, in 1860, it became
-his home; and from this time, until the year of his death, his great
-delight was to make “the little freehold” as comfortable, complete,
-and pretty as possible. Every year he had some “bright idea,” or
-some contemplated “wonderful improvement” to propound to us. And it
-became quite a joke between him and his youngest daughter—who was
-constantly at Gad's Hill—as to what the next improvement was to be.
-These additions and alterations gave him endless amusement and delight,
-and he would watch the growing of each one with the utmost eagerness
-and impatience. The most important _out_-door “improvement” he made,
-was a tunnel to connect the garden with the shrubbery, which lay on
-the opposite side of the high road, and could only be approached by
-leaving the garden, crossing the road, and unlocking a gate. The work
-of excavation began, of course from each side, and on the day when it
-was supposed that the picks would meet and the light appear, Charles
-Dickens was so excited that he had to “knock off work,” and stood for
-hours waiting for this consummation, and when at last it did come to
-pass, the workmen were all “treated,” and there was a general jubilee.
-This “improvement” was a great success, for the shrubbery was a nice
-addition to the garden, and moreover in it, facing the road, grew two
-very large and beautiful cedar-trees. Some little time after Monsieur
-Fechter sent his friend a two-roomed châlet, which was placed in the
-shrubbery. The upper room was prettily furnished, and fitted all round
-with looking-glasses to reflect the view, and was used by Charles
-Dickens as a study throughout the summer. He had a passion for light,
-bright colors, and looking-glass. When he built a new drawing-room he
-had two mirrors sunk into the wall opposite each other, which, being so
-placed, gave the effect of an endless corridor. I do not remember how
-many rooms could thus be counted, but he would often call some of us,
-and ask if we could make out another room, as _he_ certainly could.
-
-For one “improvement” he had looking-glass put into each panel of the
-dining-room door, and showing it to his youngest daughter said, with
-great pride, “Now, what do you say to _this_, Katie?” She laughed and
-said, “Well, really, papa, I think when you're an angel your wings will
-be made of looking-glass, and your crown of scarlet geraniums!”
-
-He loved all flowers, but especially bright flowers, and scarlet
-geraniums were his favorite of all. There were two large beds of these
-on the front lawn, and when they were fully out, making one scarlet
-mass, there was blaze enough to satisfy even _him_. Even in dress he
-was fond of a great deal of color, and the dress of a friend who came
-to his daughter's wedding quite delighted him because it was trimmed
-with a profusion of cherry-colored ribbon. He used constantly to speak
-about it afterwards in terms of the highest admiration.
-
-The large dogs at Gad's Hill were quite a feature of the place,
-and were also rather a subject of dread to outsiders. But this was
-desirable, as the house really required protection, standing as it
-did on the high road, which was frequented by tramps of a wild and
-low order, who, in the hopping season, were sometimes even dangerous;
-and the dogs, though as gentle as possible to their own people, knew
-that they were the guardians of the place, and were terribly fierce
-to all intruders. Linda—a St. Bernard, and a beautiful specimen of
-that breed—had been as a puppy living in the garden at Tavistock House
-before she was taken to Gad's Hill. She and Turk, a mastiff, were
-constant companions in all their master's walks. When he was away
-from home, and the ladies of the family were out alone with the dogs,
-Turk would at once feel the responsibility of his position, and guard
-them with unusual devotion, giving up all play in an instant when he
-happened to see any suspicious-looking figure approaching; and he never
-made a mistake in discovering the tramp. He would then keep on the
-outside of the road, close to his mistresses, with an ominous turning
-up of the lip, and with anything but the usually mild expression in his
-beautiful large brown eyes, and he would give many a look back before
-he thought it safe to be off again on his own account. Of all the large
-dogs— and there were many at different times—these two were the best
-loved by their dear master.
-
-Mrs. Bouncer, a little white Pomeranian with black eyes and nose, the
-very sweetest and most bewitching of her sex, was a present to the
-eldest daughter, and was brought by her, a puppy of only six weeks old,
-to Tavistock House. “The boys,” knowing that the little dog was to
-arrive, were ready to receive their sister at the door, and escorted
-her, in a tremendous state of excitement, up to the study. But when
-the little creature was put down on the floor to be exhibited to
-Charles Dickens, and showed her pretty figure and little bushy tail
-curling tightly over her back, they could keep quiet no longer, but
-fairly screamed and danced with delight. From that moment he took to
-the little dog and made a pet of her, and it was he who gave her the
-name of Mrs. Bouncer. He delighted to see her out with the large dogs,
-because she looked “so preposterously small” by the side of them.
-He had a peculiar voice and way of speaking for her, which she knew
-perfectly well and would respond to at once, running to him from any
-part of the house or garden directly she heard the call. To be stroked
-with a foot had great fascinations for Mrs. Bouncer, and my father
-would often and often take off his boot of an evening and sit stroking
-the little creature while he read or smoked for an hour together.
-And although there were times, I fear, when her sharp bark must have
-irritated him, there never was an angry word for Bouncer.
-
-Then there was Dick, the eldest daughter's canary, another important
-member of the household, who came out of his cage every morning at
-breakfast time and hopped about the table, pecking away at anything
-he had a fancy for, and perching upon the heads or shoulders of those
-present. Occasionally he would have naughty fits, when he would
-actually dare to peck his master's cheek. He took strong likes and
-dislikes, loving some people and really hating others. But a word from
-his mistress called him to order at once, and he would come to her when
-so called from any part of the room. After she had been away from home
-she always on her return went to the room where Dick lived and put
-her head just inside the door. At the very sight of her the bird would
-fly to the corner of his cage and sing as if his little throat would
-burst. Charles Dickens constantly followed his daughter and peeped into
-the room behind her, just to see Dick's rapturous reception of his
-mistress. When this pet bird died he had him buried in the garden, and
-a rose-tree planted over his grave, and wrote his epitaph:—
-
- _This is the grave of
- DICK,
- The best of birds.
- Born at Broadstairs, Midsr. 1851.
- Died at Gad's Hill Place, 14th Oct., 1866._
-
-While Dick lived cats were of course tabooed, and were never allowed
-about the house; but after his death a white kitten called Williamina
-was given to one of the family, and she and her numerous offspring had
-a happy home at Gad's Hill.
-
-This cat ingratiated herself into favor with every one in the house,
-but she was particularly devoted to the master. Once, after a family
-of kittens had been born, she had a fancy that they should live in the
-study. So she brought them up, one by one, from the kitchen floor,
-where a comfortable bed had been provided for them, and deposited them
-in a corner of the study. They were taken down stairs by order of the
-master, who said he really could _not_ allow the kittens to be in his
-room. Williamina tried again, but again with the same result. But
-when the third time she carried a kitten up the stairs into the hall,
-and from there to the study window, jumping in with it in her mouth,
-and laying it at her master's feet, until the whole family were at
-last before him, and she herself sat down beside them and gave him an
-imploring look, he could resist no longer, and Williamina carried the
-day. As the kittens grew up they became very rampagious, and swarmed
-up the curtains and played on the writing-table, and scampered among
-the book-shelves, and made such a noise as was never heard in the study
-before. But the same spirit which influenced the whole house must have
-been brought to bear upon those noisy little creatures to keep them
-still and quiet when necessary, for they were never complained of, and
-they were never turned out of the study until the time came for giving
-them away and finding good homes for them. One kitten was kept, and,
-being a very exceptional cat, deserves to be specially mentioned. Being
-deaf, he had no name given him, but was called by the servants “the
-master's cat,” in consequence of his devotion to him. He was always
-with his master, and used to follow him about the garden and sit with
-him while he was writing. One evening they were left together, the
-ladies of the house having gone to a ball in the neighborhood. Charles
-Dickens was reading at a small table on which a lighted candle was
-placed, when suddenly the candle went out. He was much interested in
-his book, relighted the candle, gave a pat to the cat, who he noticed
-was looking up at him with a most pathetic expression, and went on with
-his reading. A few minutes afterwards, the light getting dim, he looked
-up and was in time to see Puss deliberately put out the candle with his
-paw, and then gaze again appealingly at his master. This second appeal
-was understood, and had the desired effect. The book was shut, and Puss
-was made a fuss with and amused till bed-time. His master was full of
-this anecdote when we all met in the morning.
-
-During the summer months there was a constant succession of visitors at
-Gad's Hill, with picnics, long drives, and much happy holiday-making.
-At these picnics there was a frequent request to this lover of light
-and color of “_Please_ let us have the luncheon in the shade at any
-rate.” He came to his daughter one day and said he had “a capital idea”
-about picnic luncheons. He wished each person to have his or her own
-ration neatly done up in one parcel, to consist of a mutton pie, a
-hard-boiled egg, a roll, a piece of butter, and a packet of salt. Of
-course this idea was faithfully carried out, but was not always the
-rule, as when the choice of food was put to the vote, it was found that
-many people cared neither for mutton-pie nor hard-boiled egg. But “the
-capital idea” of separate rations was always followed as closely as
-possible.
-
-Charles Dickens was a most delightful and genial host, had the power of
-putting the shyest people at ease with him at once, and had a charm in
-his manner peculiarly his own and quite indescribable. The charm was
-always there whether he was grave or gay, whether in his very funniest
-or in his most serious and earnest mood.
-
-He was a strict master in the way of insisting upon everything being
-done perfectly and exactly as he desired, but, on the other hand, was
-most kind, just, and considerate.
-
-His punctuality was a remarkable characteristic, and visitors used to
-wonder how it was that everything was done to the very minute, “almost
-by clockwork,” as some of them would remark.
-
-It is a common saying now in the family of some dear friends, where
-punctuality is not _quite_ so well observed, “What would Mr. Dickens
-have said to this?” or, “Ah! my dear child, I wish you could have been
-at Gad's Hill to learn what punctuality means!”
-
-Charles Dickens was very fond of music, and not only of classical
-music. He loved national airs, old tunes, songs, and ballads, and was
-easily moved by anything pathetic in a song or tune, and was never
-tired of hearing his special favorites sung or played. He used to like
-to have music of an evening, and duets used to be played for hours
-together, while he would read or walk up and down the room. A member
-of his family was singing a ballad one evening while he was apparently
-deep in his book, when he suddenly got up, saying, “You don't make
-enough of that word,” and he sat down by the piano, showed her the
-way in which he wished it to be emphasized, and did not leave the
-instrument until it had been sung to his satisfaction. Whenever this
-song was sung, which it often was, as it became a favorite with him, he
-would always listen for that word, with his head a little on one side,
-as much as to say, “I wonder if she will remember.”
-
-There was a large meadow at the back of the garden in which, during the
-summer-time, many cricket matches were held. Although never playing
-himself, he delighted in the game, and would sit in his tent, keeping
-score for one side, the whole day long. He never took to croquet; but
-had lawn-tennis been played in the Gad's Hill days, he would certainly
-have enjoyed it. He liked American bowls, at which he used constantly
-to play with his male guests. For one of his “improvements” he had
-turned a waste piece of land into a croquet-ground and bowling-green.
-
-In the meadow he used to practice many of his “readings;” and any
-stranger passing down the lane and seeing him gesticulating and hearing
-him talking, laughing, and sometimes it may be weeping, must surely
-have thought him out of his mind! The getting up of these “readings”
-gave him an immense amount of labor and fatigue, and the sorrowful
-parts tried him greatly. For instance, in the reading of “Little
-Dombey,” it was hard work for him so to steel his heart as to be able
-to read the death without breaking down or displaying too much emotion.
-He often told how much he suffered over this story, and how it would
-have been impossible for him to have gone through with it had he not
-kept constantly before his eyes the picture of his own Plorn alive and
-strong and well.
-
-His great neatness and tidiness have already been alluded to, as also
-his wonderful sense of order. The first thing he did every morning,
-before going to work, was to make a complete circuit of the garden,
-and then to go over the whole house, to see that everything was in
-its place. And this was also the first thing he did upon his return
-home, after long absence. A more thoroughly orderly nature never
-existed. And it must have been through this gift of order that he was
-enabled to make time—notwithstanding any amount of work—to give to the
-minutest household details. Before a dinner-party the _menu_ was always
-submitted to him for approval, and he always made a neat little plan
-of the table, with the names of the guests marked in their respective
-places, and a list of “who was to take in who” to dinner, and had
-constantly some “bright idea” or other as to the arrangement of the
-table or the rooms.
-
-Among his many attributes, that of a doctor must not be forgotten.
-He was invaluable in a sick room, or in any sudden emergency; always
-quiet, always cheerful, always useful and skilful, always doing the
-right thing, so that his very presence seemed to bring comfort and
-help. From his children's earliest days his visits, during any
-time of sickness, were eagerly longed for and believed in, as doing
-more good than those even of the doctor himself. He had a curiously
-magnetic and sympathetic hand, and his touch was wonderfully soothing
-and quieting. As a mesmerist he possessed great power, which he used,
-most successfully, in many cases of great pain and distress. He had a
-strong aversion to saying good-bye, and would do anything he possibly
-could to avoid going through the ordeal. This feeling must have been
-natural to him, for as early as the “Old Curiosity Shop” he writes:
-“Why is it we can better bear to part in spirit than in body, and while
-we have the fortitude to bid farewell have not the nerve to say it? On
-the eve of long voyages, or an absence of many years, friends who are
-tenderly attached will separate with the usual look, the usual pressure
-of the hand, planning one final interview for the morrow, while each
-well knows that it is but a feint to save the pain of uttering that
-one word, and that the meeting will never be! Should possibilities be
-worse to bear than certainties?” So all who love him, and who know the
-painful dislike _he_ had to that word, are thankful that he was spared
-the agony of that last, long Farewell.
-
-Almost the pleasantest times at Gad's Hill were the winter gatherings
-for Christmas and the New Year, when the house was more than full, and
-the bachelors of the party had to be “put up” in the village. At these
-times Charles Dickens was at his gayest and brightest, and the days
-passed cheerily and merrily away. He was great at games, and many of
-the evenings were spent in playing at Yes and No, Proverbs, Russian
-Scandal, Crambo, Dumb Crambo—in this he was most exquisitely funny—and
-a game of Memory, which he particularly liked.
-
-The New Year was always welcomed with all honors. Just before twelve
-o'clock everybody would assemble in the hall, and he would open the
-door and stand in the entrance, watch in hand—how many of his friends
-must remember him thus, and think lovingly of the picture!—as he
-waited, with a half-smile on his attentive face, for the bells to
-chime out the New Year. Then his voice would break the silence with,
-“A Happy New Year to us all.” For many minutes there would be much
-embracing, hand-shaking, and good-wishing; and the servants would all
-come up and get a hearty shake of the hand from the beloved “master.”
-Then hot spiced wine would be distributed, and good-health drunk all
-round. Sometimes there would be a country dance, in which the host
-delighted, and in which he insisted upon every one joining, and he
-never allowed the dancing—and real dancing it was too—to flag for an
-instant, but kept it up until even _he_ was tired and out of breath,
-and had at last to clap his hands, and bring it to an end. His thorough
-enjoyment was most charming to witness, and seemed to infect every one
-present.
-
-One New Year's Day at breakfast, he proposed that we should act some
-charades, in dumb show, that evening. This proposal being met with
-enthusiasm, the idea was put into train at once. The different parts
-were assigned, dresses were discussed, “properties” were collected, and
-rehearsing went on the whole day long. As the home visitors were all
-to take part in the charades, invitations had to be sent to the more
-intimate neighbors to make an audience, an impromptu supper had to be
-arranged for, and the day was one of continual bustle and excitement,
-and the rehearsals were the greatest fun imaginable. A dear old friend
-volunteered to undertake the music, and he played delightfully all
-through the acting. These charades made one of the pleasantest and most
-successful of New Year's evenings spent at Gad's Hill.
-
-But there were not only grown-up guests invited to the pretty cheerful
-home. In a letter to a friend Charles Dickens writes: “Another
-generation begins to peep above the table. I once used to think what a
-horrible thing it was to be a grandfather. Finding that the calamity
-falls upon me without my perceiving any other change in myself, I
-bear it like a man.” But as he so disliked the name of grandfather as
-applied to himself, those grandchildren were taught by him to call him
-“Venerables.” And to this day some of them still speak of him by this
-self-invented name.
-
-Now there is another and younger family who never knew “Venerables,”
-but have been all taught to know his likeness, and taught to know his
-books by the pictures in them, as soon as they can be taught anything,
-and whose baby hands lay bright flowers upon the stone in Westminster
-Abbey, every June 9 and every Christmas Eve. For in remembrance of his
-love for all that is gay in color, none but the brightest flowers, and
-also some of the gorgeous American leaves, sent by a friend for the
-purpose, are laid upon the grave, making that one spot in the midst of
-the vast and solemn building bright and beautiful.
-
-In a letter to Plorn before his departure for Australia, Charles
-Dickens writes: “I hope you will always be able to say in after life,
-that you had a kind father.” And to this hope, each one of his children
-can answer with a loving, grateful heart, that so it was.—_Cornhill
-Magazine._
-
-
-
-
-THE SUMMER PALACE, PEKING.
-
-BY C. F. GORDON CUMMING.
-
-
-I think the only enjoyable time of the day, during the burning summer
-in dusty, dirty, dilapidated Peking, is the very early morning, before
-the sun rises high, and while the air still feels fresh, and one can
-enjoy sitting in the cool courts which take the place of gardens, and
-listen to the quaint music of the pigeons as they fly overhead. This
-is no dove-like cooing, but a low melodious whistle like the sighing
-of an Eolian harp or the murmur of telegraph wires thrilled by the
-night wind. It is produced by the action of cylindrical pipes like two
-finger-ends, side by side, about an inch and a half in length. These
-are made of very light wood and filled with whistles. Some are globular
-in form and are constructed from a tiny gourd. These little musical
-boxes are attached to the tail feathers of the pigeon in such a manner
-that as he flies the air shall blow through the whistle, producing the
-most plaintive tones, especially as there are often many pigeons flying
-at once—some near, some distant, some just overhead, some high in the
-heavens; so the combined effect is really melodious. I believe the
-Pekingese are the only people who thus provide themselves with a dove
-orchestra, though the use of pigeons as message-bearers is common to
-all parts of the Empire.
-
-There is one form of insect life here which is a terrible
-nuisance—namely, the sand-flies, which swarm in multitudes. They are
-too cruel, every one is bitten, and the irritation is so excessive that
-few people have sufficient determination to resist scratching. So of
-course there is a most unbecoming prevalence of red spots, suggestive
-of a murrain of measles!
-
-I have been told that I am singularly unfortunate in the season of my
-visit, and that if only I had come in September I should have found
-life most enjoyable (I recollect some of the residents at Aden likewise
-assuring me that they really learnt to think their blazing rock quite
-pleasant!) I suppose that I am spoilt by memories of green Pacific
-isles and sweet sea breezes, so I can only compassionate people who,
-till two months ago, were ice-bound—shut off from the world by a frozen
-river—and now are boiled and stifled!
-
-Such of them, however, as can get away from their work in the city
-have the delightful resource of going to the hills, and establishing
-themselves as lodgers at one of the many almost forsaken temples, where
-a few poor priests are very glad to supplement their small revenues by
-a sure income of barbaric coin. The Pekingese themselves are in the
-habit of thus making summer trips to the hills—so many of the temples
-have furnished rooms to let—with a view to encouraging the combination
-of well-paid temple service with this pleasant change of air.
-
-I am told that many of these temples are charmingly situated, and have
-beautifully laid-out grounds. A group called “The Eight Great Temples”
-is described as especially attractive. They are dotted on terraces
-along the face of the western mountains, about twelve miles from the
-city, and among their attractions are cool pools in shady grottoes all
-overgrown with trailing vines and bright blossoms; stone fountains,
-where numberless gold-fish swim in crystalline water, which falls from
-the mouth of a great marble dragon; curious inscriptions in Thibetan
-and Chinese characters, deeply engraven on the rocks and colored red;
-fine groups of Scotch firs, and old walnut-trees; and in springtime I
-am told that our dear familiar lilac blossoms in perfection. Then there
-are all manner of quaintly ornamental pagodas and temples, great and
-small, with innumerable images and pictures, and silken hangings, and
-all the paraphernalia so attractive to the artistic eye.
-
-Among the points of chief interest in the immediate neighborhood of
-Peking, the Summer Palace of course holds a foremost place, and there I
-found my way yesterday by paying the penalty of eight hours of anguish
-in a hateful springless cart, which is the cab of Peking, and the only
-mode of locomotion for such as are not the happy possessors of horses.
-
-The manifold interests of the day, however, far more than compensated
-for the drawbacks of even dust and bumping, which is saying a great
-deal. A member of one of the Legations had kindly undertaken to show me
-the various points of interest to the north-west of the city, and we
-agreed to try and escape some heat by starting at 3.30 A.M., at which
-hour I was accordingly ready, waiting in the courtyard to open the
-gate. It was a most lovely morning, the clear moonlight mingling with
-the dawn, and the air fresh and pleasant. I had full leisure to enjoy
-it, for the carter, who had promised to be at the Japanese Legation by
-three, was wrapped in slumber. So my companion had to begin his day's
-work by a two miles' walk to fetch me. Luckily, my carter had been
-more faithful, so we started in very fair time; indeed, I profited by
-the delay, for as we passed through the great northern gate, there on
-the dusty plain—just outside the walls—we came in for a grand review
-of the Eight Banners, by Prince Poah of the Iron Crown. Such a pretty,
-animated scene, with all these Tartar regiments galloping about, and
-their gay standards flashing through the smoke of artillery and the
-dust-clouds, which seem to blend the vast plain with the blue distant
-hills and the great gray walls and huge three-storied keep which forms
-the gateway.
-
-The latter is that Anting Gate of which we heard so much at the time
-when it was given up to the British army after the sacking of the
-Summer Palace; not, however, till their big guns were planted on the
-raised terraces within the sacred park of the Temple of Earth, all
-ready to breach the walls.
-
-The Prince's large blue tent was pitched on a slightly rising ground
-apart from the others, and was constantly surrounded by gorgeous
-officers in bright yellow raiment, with round, flat black hats and long
-feathers, who were galloping to and fro, directing grand charges of
-cavalry. It did seem so funny to see a whole army of ponies; for there
-are no horses here, unless the foreign residents chance to import any.
-
-These Eight Banners are all Manchus or Mongol Tartars, or at any rate
-are descended from such, Chinese troops being ranged under the green
-standard. These Eight Banners which, as I have said, are multiplied,
-are plain white, red, blue, and yellow, and the same colors repeated,
-and distinguished by a white edge and white spot. These companies are
-supposed to defend different sides of the city, the colors having some
-mystic relation to the points of the compass; except that yellow is in
-the middle, where it guards the Imperial Palace. Red guards the south,
-blue the north, and white the west, whilst the east is nominally given
-up to the green standard, which, however, being composed of Chinamen,
-is not admitted to the honor of guarding the forbidden city. I am told
-that the Banner Army numbers upwards of a hundred thousand men, who
-supply Tartar garrisons for the principal cities of the Empire.
-
-We got out of the cart and secured a good position on a small hillock,
-whence we had a capital view. A number of Tartar soldiers who were
-off duty gathered round, and were quite captivated by the loan of my
-opera-glasses. Then they showed us their wretched firearms (which
-certainly did not look as if any European could have superintended the
-arsenal where they were manufactured), and also their peculiar belts,
-containing charges of powder only, and yet we are told that in addition
-to first-class firearms, which are being ceaselessly manufactured at
-the Government arsenals at Tientsin, Shanghai, Canton, Foochow, Nankin,
-and other less important places, the Chinese Government spares no
-expense in buying both ammunition and firearms of European manufacture.
-I suppose they are kept in reserve for real war!
-
-A picturesque company of archers rode by on stout ponies, holding their
-bridles in the right hand, and in the left their bows, the arrows being
-cased in a leathern quiver, slung across the shoulders. As to their
-swords, instead of hanging from the waist, they are stuck under the
-saddle-flap; each man's cap is adorned with the tails of two squirrels,
-which is the correct military decoration. Now though we Scots are quite
-ready to believe that blackcocks were created for the express purpose
-of bequeathing their tails to adorn the caps of the London Scottish
-(the said tails having very much the jovial, independent character of
-the bird itself), it really is impossible to see the fitness of things
-in selecting poor little squgs as military emblems, unless to suggest
-the wisdom of he who fights and runs away! Anyhow, it now seems as if
-we might find a profitable market for all the thousands of squirrel's
-tails which are annually wasted in our north-country woods. I quite
-forgot to take note of the fan and the pipe, which I am told are
-invariable items in the accoutrements of the Chinese soldiers.[26]
-
-Returning to our cart we next drove to the Ta-tsoon-tsu, or Temple
-of the Great Bell. It is a large Buddhist monastery. The priests,
-who occupy separate houses, are a civil, kindly lot, very different
-from the Lamas of the Yung-ho-Kung! There are curious paintings of
-Buddhist saints in the halls; but the great object of interest is the
-huge bell, which is said to be the largest hanging bell in the world.
-Anyhow, it is a wonderful piece of casting, being nearly eighteen feet
-high and forty-five feet in circumference, and is of solid bronze four
-inches thick. It is one of eight great bells which were cast by command
-of the Emperor Yung-lo about A.D. 1400, and this giant is said to
-have cost the lives of eight men, who were killed during the process
-of casting. The whole bell, both inside and out, is covered with an
-inscription in embossed Chinese characters about half an inch long,
-covering even the handle, the total number being 84,000! I am told that
-this is a whole classic.
-
-This gigantic bell hangs in a two-storied pagoda, and underneath the
-beam from which it is suspended hangs a little bell, and a favorite
-amusement of Chinese visitors to the temple is to ascend to a gallery,
-whence they throw small coins at the little bell, in hopes of
-hitting it, on the same principle, I suppose, that they spit chewed
-prayer-papers at certain gods in the hope of hitting them! The throwing
-of cash is certainly more profitable to the priests, as the coins fall
-into a rim round the great bell and become temple property. This great
-bell, which is struck on the outside by a suspended ram of wood, is
-only sounded when—in times of drought—the Emperor in person or the
-Imperial Princes as his deputies come to this temple to pray for rain.
-Theoretically, they are supposed not to rise from their knees till the
-rain falls in answer to their prayer, and responsive to the vibrations
-of the mighty bell.
-
-There is sore need of rain now, so I suppose the bell will be struck
-ere long. Apparently it is reserved as a last resource, for already the
-little Emperor and the Empresses Regent have been pleading for rain in
-the gorgeous yellow tiled temple at the entrance to the Forbidden City,
-and Prince Yeh, as the Emperor's deputy, has been repeatedly sent to
-pray for rain in a most strange open-air temporary sanctuary close to
-the Bell Temple. We discovered this quite by chance, having observed a
-large circular inclosure in the middle of a field of standing corn.
-
-We halted and went to see what it was, and we found that it consisted
-of eight screens of coarse yellow mats, with great yellow dragons
-designed on them. Four of the screens form a circle having four gaps.
-The other four are straight, and are placed outside, so as to guard and
-conceal the entrances. In the centre a square raised platform of earth
-forms a rude altar, at the four corners of which are four vases of the
-coarsest pottery, containing plants; straggling and much trampled corn
-grows between and around them, as in the field outside. In a small tent
-close by we found a sleepy watchman, who told us about the Prince's
-devotional visits to this very primitive oratory.
-
-After four hours of intolerably weary jolting in our dreadful cart,
-we arrived at Wan-Shu-Shan, which is the only portion of the grounds
-of the Summer Palace (the Yuen-Ming-Yuen) to which foreigners are
-still admitted, as they have there wrought such hopeless ruin that I
-suppose it is not thought worth while to shut them out; and truly it is
-sickening even now to look on such a scene of devastation. The park,
-which is now once more closed to the barbarians, contains fine palatial
-buildings, faced with colonnades and altogether of a very Italian type,
-having been built under the direction of the Jesuits, but the beautiful
-pleasure grounds, where we wandered over wooded hills all strewn with
-beautiful ruins, is purely Chinese, and as such is to me far more
-interesting.
-
-Our first halt was beside a well whose waters are so deliciously
-crystalline and cold that they seemed to our parched and dusty throats
-as a true elixir. So famous is this pure spring that the daily supply
-for the Imperial Palace is brought thence in barrels, in a cart flying
-a yellow flag, with an inscription in black characters stating that it
-travels on the Emperor's business—a warning to all men to make way for
-it. The water near the city is all bad and brackish, so such a spring
-as this is a priceless boon.
-
-This wonderland has been so often described since its destruction,
-that in its present aspect the whole seems familiar ground; but it is
-new to me to learn anything concerning it in its palmy days, from the
-pen of an eyewitness, and so I have been much interested in reading a
-curious account of these Imperial pleasure-grounds written in 1743 by
-Mons. Attiret, a French missionary, whose talent for painting led to
-his receiving an order to make drawings for the Emperor at the Summer
-Palace.
-
-He tells how he and his companions were conducted to Peking by a
-Chinese official, who would on no account allow them to look out of
-the windows of their covered boats to observe the country, still less
-to land at any point. The latter part of the journey they were carried
-in litters, in which they were shut up all the day long, only halting
-at wretched inns. Naturally, when they were released from this tedious
-captivity and beheld these beautiful grounds—the Yuen-Ming-Yuen—the
-Garden of gardens, they supposed themselves in Paradise, and here they
-seem to have remained for a considerable time.
-
-M. Attiret describes the ornamental buildings, containing the most
-beautiful and valuable things that could be obtained in China, the
-Indies, and even Europe—ancient vases of fine porcelain, silk cloths
-of gold and silver, carved furniture of valuable wood, and all manner
-of rare objects. He counted no less than two hundred of these palaces,
-each of which he declared to be large enough to accommodate the
-greatest nobleman in Europe with all his retinue. Some of these towns
-were built of cedar-wood, brought at great expense from a distance of
-fifteen hundred miles; some were gilded, painted, and varnished. Many
-had their roofs covered with glazed tiles of different colors, red,
-yellow, blue, green, and purple, arranged in patterns.
-
-What chiefly astonished the artist was the variety which had been
-obtained in designing these pleasure houses, not only as regarded their
-general architecture but such minor details as the forms of the doors
-and windows, which were round, oval, square, and of all manner of
-angled figures, while some were shaped like fans, others like flowers,
-vases, birds, beasts, and figures.
-
-In the courts and passages he saw vases of porcelain, brass, and marble
-filled with flowers, while in the outer courts stood mythological
-figures of animals, and urns with perfumes burning in them, resting on
-marble pedestals.
-
-Most of these buildings were but one story high, and, being built
-on artificially raised ground, were approached by rough steps of
-artificial rock work. Some of these were connected one with another by
-fanciful winding porticoes or colonnades, which in places were raised
-on columns, and in others were so led as to wind by the side of a grove
-or by a river bank.
-
-Wonderful ingenuity was displayed in so placing these houses as to
-secure the greatest possible variety of situation, and to command
-the most varied views. Every natural feature of the ground had been
-elaborated, so as to produce charming landscapes, which could scarcely
-be recognised as artificial; hills, of from ten to sixty feet in
-height, were constructed, divided by little valleys and watered by
-clear streams forming cascades and lakes, one of which was five miles
-in circumference. On its calm waters floated beautiful pleasure-boats,
-including one magnificent house-boat for the amusement of the ladies of
-the palace.
-
-In every direction, winding paths led to quaint little pavilions and
-charming grottoes, while artificial rock-work was made the nursery for
-all manner of beautiful flowers, much care being bestowed on securing
-a great variety for every season of the year. Flowering trees were
-scattered over the grassy hills, and their blossoms perfumed the air.
-Each stream was crossed at frequent intervals by most picturesque and
-highly ornamental bridges of wood, brick or freestone adorned with
-fanciful kiosks, in which to repose while admiring the view. He says
-the triumph of art was to make these bridges twist about in such an
-extraordinary manner that they were often three times as long as if
-they had been led in a direct line. Near some of them were placed some
-very remarkable triumphal arches, either of elaborately carved wood or
-of marble.
-
-M. Attiret awards the palm of beauty to a palace of a hundred
-apartments, standing in an island in the middle of the large lake, and
-commanding a general view of all the other palaces, which lay scattered
-round its shores, or half concealed among the groves, which were so
-planted as to screen them from one another. Moreover, from this point
-all the bridges were visible, as each rivulet flowed to the lake, round
-which the artificial hills rose in a series of terraces, forming a
-sort of amphitheatre.
-
-On the brink of the lake were network houses for all manner of strange
-waterfowl, and in a large reservoir, inclosed by a lattice work of fine
-brass wire, were a multitude of beautiful gold and silver fish. Other
-fish there were of all manner of colors—red, blue, green, purple, and
-black—these were likewise inclosed. But the lake must have been well
-stocked, as fishing was one of the favorite recreations of the nobles.
-
-Sometimes there were mimic sea-fights and other diversions for the
-entertainment of the Court, and occasionally illuminations, when every
-palace, every boat, almost every tree was lighted up, and brilliant
-fireworks, which M. Attiret declared far exceeded anything of the sort
-he had witnessed in France or Italy.
-
-As to the variety of lanterns displayed at the great Feast of Lanterns,
-it was altogether amazing. From the ceiling of every chamber in every
-palace, they were suspended from the trees on the hills, the kiosks on
-the bridges. They were shaped like fishes, birds, and beasts, vases,
-fruits, flowers, and boats of different form and size. Some were made
-of silk, some of horn, glass, mother-of-pearl, and a thousand other
-materials. Some were painted, some embroidered, some so valuable that
-it seemed as if they could not have been produced under a thousand
-crowns. On every rivulet, river, and lake floated lanterns made in the
-form of little boats, each adding something to the fairy-like scene.
-
-At the time when the Barbarian army so ruthlessly forced their way into
-this Chinese paradise it was in the most perfect order—a feature by no
-means common even in the houses of the greatest mandarins.
-
-Forty small palaces, each a marvel of art, occupied beautiful sites
-within the grounds, and the footpaths leading from one to another were
-faultlessly neat. The sheets of ornamental water, lakes, and rivers
-were all clean, and each marble bridge was a separate object of beauty,
-while from out the dense foliage on the hill, yellow tiled roofs,
-curled up at the ends, gleamed like gold in the sunlight.
-
-Within the palace were stored such treasures of exquisitely carved
-jade, splendid old enamels, bronzes, gold and silver, precious jewels
-of jade and rubies, carved lapis lazuli, priceless furs and richest
-silks, as could only have been accumulated by a long dynasty of
-Celestial rulers.
-
-Cruel indeed was the change when a few hours later the allied forces
-arrived. The English cavalry was the first to reach the ground, but did
-not enter. The French quickly followed by another approach, and at once
-proceeded to sack the palace; so that when the British were allowed to
-join in the work of devastation and indiscriminate plunder, all the
-most obviously valuable treasure had already been removed, while the
-floors were strewn knee-deep with broken fragments of priceless china,
-and every sort of beautiful object too cumbersome or too fragile for
-rough and ready removal, and therefore ruthlessly smashed with the butt
-ends of muskets, to say nothing of the piles of most gorgeous silks and
-satins and gold embroideries, which lay unheeded among the ruins.
-
-Then when the best of the steeds had been stolen, the doors were locked
-and Indian troops were posted to guard the treasures that remained (no
-easy task), till it should be possible to divide them equally between
-the forces. When this had been done the share apportioned to the
-British was at once sold by public auction, in order that an immediate
-distribution of prize money might allay the very natural jealousy which
-would otherwise have been aroused by the sight of French soldiers laden
-with the Sycee silver and other treasures which they had appropriated.
-
-But though wagon-loads of what seemed the most precious objects
-were removed, these were as nothing compared with what was left and
-destroyed, when the order was given to commence the actual demolition
-of the principal buildings: a work on which two regiments were employed
-for two whole days, ere the hand of the destroyer was stayed by a
-treaty of peace, and so happily a few wonderful and unique buildings
-still remain as a suggestion of vanished glories.
-
-Of course all this was done with the best possible intentions, by way
-of punishing the Emperor himself and his great nobles for the official
-deeds of treachery, rather than injure the innocent citizens of Peking.
-Yet it seems that these would have accepted any amount of personal loss
-and suffering rather than this barbarous destruction of an Imperial
-glory—an act which has so impressed the whole nation with a conviction
-that all foreigners are barbarous Vandals, that it is generally coupled
-with their determined pushing of the opium trade. These two crimes
-form the double-barrelled weapon of reproach wherewith Christian
-missionaries in all parts of the Empire are assailed, and their work
-grievously hindered.
-
-We devoted about three hours to exploring these beautiful grounds, of
-which might well be said, “Was never scene so sad so fair!” Even the
-ornamental timber was cut for firewood by the allied barbarians, though
-enough remains to beautify the landscape.
-
-The grounds are enclosed by a handsome wall of dark-red sandstone with
-a coping of glazed tiles, and its warm color contrasts pleasantly
-with the rich greens of the park and the lovely blue lake with its
-reedy shores, and floating lotus blossoms. One of the most conspicuous
-objects is a very handsome stone bridge of seventeen arches, graduated
-from quite small arches on either side to very high ones in the centre.
-It is commonly called the marble bridge, because of its beautiful white
-marble balustrades with about fifty pillars on either side, on each of
-which sits a marble lion, and of all these I am told that no two are
-quite alike. Each end of this bridge is guarded by two large lions,
-also of marble. This bridge connects the mainland with an island about
-a quarter of a mile in circumference; it is entirely surrounded with a
-marble balustrade like that of the bridge. In the centre of the isle
-is an artificial mound, on which, approached by flights of steps, and
-enclosed by yet another marble balustrade, are the ruins of what must
-have been a beautiful temple.
-
-Another very striking bridge, which spans a stream flowing into the
-lake, is called the Camel's Hump, and has only one very steep arch,
-about forty feet high. What makes this look so very peculiar is the
-fact that the banks on either side are almost level with the stream,
-so the elevation is purely fanciful. The bridge also has a beautiful
-marble balustrade.
-
-A third, very similar to this last, crosses another winding of the
-stream, where it flows through flooded rice-fields, and so appears like
-an extension of the lake. Along this stream there is a fine avenue of
-willow-trees fully a mile in length.
-
-Ascending a wooded hill, which is dotted all over with only partially
-destroyed buildings, we thence had a most lovely view of all the
-park, looking down on the blue lake, the winding streams, the various
-bridges, the blue mountain range, and the distant city of Peking with a
-foreground of most picturesque temple buildings and fine Scotch firs,
-dark rocks and green creepers.
-
-Though the general feeling is one of desolation (as one climbs
-stairways, passing between numberless mounds of rubble, entirely
-composed of beautifully glazed tiles of every color of the rainbow, and
-all in fragments), there are, nevertheless, some isolated buildings
-which happily have quite escaped. Among these are several most
-beautiful seven-story pagodas. Of one, which is octagonal, the lower
-story is adorned with finely sculptured Indian gods. Two others are
-entirely faced and roofed with the loveliest porcelain tiles—yellow
-gold, bright green, and deep blue. They are exquisitely delicate and
-are quite intact; even the tremulous bells suspended from the leaves
-still tinkling with every breath of air.
-
-Another building, which is still almost perfect, is a beautiful little
-bronze temple, near to which is a fine triple pai-low, or commemorative
-arch, and there are others of indescribable form, such as a little
-globe resting on a great one, and the whole surmounted by a spire
-representing fourteen canopies. But nothing save colored sketches (of
-which I secured a few) could really give any idea of this strange place
-or of these singular buildings.
-
-On the summit of the hill there still stands a very large two-storied
-brick building, entirely faced with glittering glazed tiles of dazzling
-yellow, emerald green, and blue, with a double roof of yellow porcelain
-tiles; among its decorations are a multitude of images of Buddha in
-brown china. It is approached by a grand triple gateway of white marble
-and colored tiles, like one we saw at the Confucian temple in the city
-of Peking.
-
-There are also a great variety of huge stone pillars and tablets, all
-highly sculptured; the dragon and other mythical animals appearing
-in all directions. There are bronze beasts and marble beasts, but
-only those of such size and weight as to have baulked all efforts of
-thieving visitors, whether native or foreign, whose combined efforts
-have long since removed every portable image and ornament.
-
-To me the most interesting group of ruins is a cluster of very
-ornamental small temple buildings, some with conical, others, with
-tent-shaped roofs, but all glazed with the most brilliantly green
-tiles, and all the pillars and other woodwork painted deep red.
-On either side of the principal building are two very ornamental
-pagoda-shaped temples, exactly alike, except that the green roof of one
-is surmounted by a dark-blue china ornament, the other by a similar
-ornament in bright yellow.
-
-Each is built to contain a large rotatory cylinder on the prayer-wheel
-principle, with niches for a multitude of images. In fact they are
-small editions of two revolving cylinders with five hundred disciples
-of Buddha, which attracted me at the great Lama temple as being the
-first link to Japanese Scripture-wheels, or Thibetan prayer-wheels
-which I have seen in China, and the existence of which has apparently
-passed unnoticed. It is needless to add that of course every image has
-been stolen, and only the revolving stands now remain in a most rickety
-condition.
-
-When we could no longer endure the blazing heat, we descended past what
-appears to have been the principal temple, of which absolutely nothing
-remains standing—only a vast mound of brilliant fragments of broken
-tiles, lying on a great platform; steep zigzag stairs brought us to the
-foot of the hill, where great bronze lions still guard the forsaken
-courts.
-
-Parched with thirst, we returned to the blessed spring of truly living
-water, and drank and drank again, cup after cup, till the very coolies
-standing by laughed. Then once again climbing into the horrible
-vehicle of torture, we retraced our morning route, till we reached a
-very nice clean restaurant, where we ordered luncheon. We were shown
-into a pretty little airy room upstairs, commanding a very fine view of
-the grounds we had just left. After the preliminary tiny cup of pale
-yellow tea, basins of boiling water were brought in, with a bit of
-flannel floating in each, that we might wash off the dust in orthodox
-Chinese fashion. The correct thing is to wring out the flannel, and
-therewith rub the face and neck with a view to future coolness.
-
-Luncheon (eaten with chop sticks, which I can now manage perfectly)
-consisted of the usual series of small dishes, little bits of cold
-chicken with sauce, little bits of hot chicken boiled to rags, morsels
-of pork with mushrooms, fragments of cold duck with some other sort of
-fungus, watery soup, scraps of pigs' kidneys with boiled chestnuts,
-very coarse rice, pickled cucumber, garlic and cabbage, patty of
-preserved shrimps, all in infinitesimal portions, so that, but for the
-plentiful supply of rice, hungry folk would find it hard to appease the
-inner wolf. Tiny cups of rice wine followed by more tea completed the
-repast for which a sum equivalent to sixteen shillings was demanded,
-and of course refused; nevertheless, necessitating a troublesome
-argument.
-
-We hurried away as soon as possible, being anxious to visit a very
-famous Lama temple, the “Wang-Tzu,” or Yellow Temple. As we drove along
-I was amazed to notice how singularly numerous magpies are hereabouts.
-They go about in companies of six or eight, and are so tame and saucy
-that they scarcely take the trouble to hop aside as we pass.
-
-Though the drive seemed very long still, we never suspected anything
-amiss till suddenly we found ourselves near the gates of the city; when
-we discovered that our worthy carter, assuming that he knew the time
-better than we did, and that we should be locked out of the city at
-sunset, had deliberately taken a wrong road, and altogether avoided
-the Yellow Temple. Reluctantly yielding to British determination, he
-sorrowfully turned, and we had to endure a long extra course of bumping
-ere we reached the temple, which is glazed with yellow tiles (an
-Imperial privilege which is conceded to Lamas).
-
-This is a very large Lama monastery, full of objects of interest, of
-which the most notable is a very fine white marble monument to a grand
-Lama who died here. It is of a purely Indian design, and all round
-it are sculptured scenes in the life and death of Buddha, Of course,
-having lost so much time, we had very little to spare here, so once
-more betook us to the cart and jolted back to Peking.
-
-As we crossed the dreary expanse of dusty plain, a sharp wind sprang
-up, and we had a moderate taste of the horrors of a dust-storm, and
-devoutly hope never to be subjected to a real one.
-
-The dread of being locked out is by no means unfounded. Punctually
-at a quarter to six, one of the soldiers on guard strikes the gong
-which hangs at the door, and continues doing so for five minutes
-with slow regular strokes. Then a quickened beat gives notice that
-only ten minutes' grace remains, then more and more rapidly fall the
-strokes, and the accustomed ear distinguishes five varieties of beat,
-by which it is easy to calculate how many minutes remain. From the
-first stroke every one outside the gate hurries towards them, and
-carts, foot passengers, and riders stream into the city with much noise
-and turmoil. At six o'clock precisely the guard unite in a prolonged
-unearthly shout, announcing that time is up. Then the ponderous gates
-are closed, and in another moment the rusty lock creaks, and the city
-is secure for the night.
-
-Then follows the frightful and unfragrant process of street watering,
-of which we had full benefit, as our tired mule slowly dragged us back
-to our haven of rest under the hospitable roof of the London Missionary
-Society.—_Belgravia._
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[26] The annual returns of the very necessary squirrel slaughter in
-the woods of Altyre, of Cawdor Castle, Beaufort Castle, and Darnaway
-Castle, each average one thousand squirrels. Thus these four estates
-might furnish four thousand tails per annum.
-
-
-
-
-THE CAMORRA.
-
-Most foreign visitors to Naples are inclined to think that the Camorra
-is as entirely a thing of the past as the Swiss guards that used to
-protect the King of the Two Sicilies, or the military pageant that was
-formerly held in honor of Santa Maria Piedigrotta, the Madonna who was
-once nominated commander-in-chief of the Neapolitan armies, and led
-them to victory. Young men with gorgeous, if somewhat tawdry, caps
-and jewelry are no longer to be seen sauntering through the streets
-and markets with an insolent air of mastery which no one dares to
-question; and the old man who used to collect money for the lamps of
-the Madonna—a request which, somehow, no coachman ever refused—have
-vanished from the cabstands. The outward glory of the Camorra has
-passed away; it is anxious now to conceal instead of displaying its
-power; but among the older residents in Naples there are many who
-believe that this strange secret society has never exercised a greater
-influence than it does at present, though it is possible that the
-interest it is said to have lately taken in politics may lead to its
-fall. In fact, such an interference in public affairs is a distinct
-departure from the principles on which the earlier traditions of the
-association were founded.
-
-The whole subject is of course shrouded in mystery. There are
-important points connected with it on which it is impossible to obtain
-trustworthy information, as all who have any real knowledge of the
-facts have the strongest personal reasons for concealing them. Still,
-the organization of the lower ranks of the society is well known to the
-police, and it is by no means impossible to form a clear conception
-of its real character and aims, though it is necessary to sift every
-statement made about them with unusual care, as the inquirer must be
-on his guard not only against the romance and exaggeration of popular
-fancy, but also against a desire to mislead. It is only by inadvertence
-that any correct information is likely to be given, and as soon as
-the stranger exhibits an interest in the subject, he is supplied with
-a splendid stock of pure inventions. He must look and listen, and
-refrain from questioning as much as possible, unless he has the good
-fortune to meet an intelligent official connected with the police, or
-still better one who served the deposed dynasty. Before entering on the
-subject itself, however, a digression will be necessary in order to
-explain to English readers how such an association could be formed, and
-what were the circumstances that favored its growth and have hitherto
-secured its existence.
-
-With respect to Sicily, Dr. Franchetti tells us that, whenever several
-men combine to support their own interests in opposition to those
-of their neighbors, that is Mafia. Where the condition of society
-is favorable, such combinations become exceedingly powerful. The
-strongest, the most enterprising, and the most violent inhabitants
-unite together. The will of each member is law in as far as the outside
-world is concerned; in executing it his companions will shrink neither
-from force nor fraud, and all they expect is that he should be ready
-to render similar services in his turn. When such a body has been
-formed in a district where the law is not powerful enough to hold it
-in check, the other members of the community must either tamely submit
-to its oppressions, put themselves under its protection, or form a
-new Mafia of their own. Now the Camorra is only a fully-developed and
-highly-organized Mafia.
-
-It owes its long existence and its great influence chiefly to two
-circumstances. Family feeling in Naples is much stronger than in the
-North. Not only do parents and children, brothers and sisters cling
-together through life, but even distant cousins are recognized as
-relations whose interests must be guarded and advanced. If your cook's
-uncle happens to have a friend who is a butcher, nothing will induce
-him to buy your meat at any other shop; if your boy is sent to fetch a
-cab, he will waste half an hour looking for some distant acquaintance
-of his aunt's. As soon as you take a servant your custom becomes the
-property of his family connections. If you attempt to prevent this,
-you only embitter your life with a vain endeavor to thwart petty
-intrigues. If you dismiss your man, you only change your set of
-tradesmen; if you submit good humoredly, you soon begin to be regarded
-as a patron of the whole family, and will therefore be treated with all
-fitting consideration and esteem. The single members will serve you
-honestly, and even go out of their way to please you. It is clear that
-a society so clannish is excellently suited for a Mafia.
-
-On the other hand, the uncertainty of the law under the old dynasty
-might well serve as an excuse for a good deal of self-assertion and
-self-defence. The tyranny of the Bourbons, it is true, was chiefly
-exercised upon the educated members of the middle class, whom they
-suspected, not unjustly, of designs against their rule. For the poor
-and the uneducated they did a good deal, often in a rather unwise
-way, and they never seem intentionally to have oppressed them. But
-the police are generally said to have been corrupt, the influence of
-the man of birth and wealth was great, and it was doubtless at times
-capriciously exercised. Against this the individual was powerless; when
-a large number were bound together by secret pledges, they could ensure
-respect and consideration.
-
-It must not, however, be thought that there was anything heroic even
-in the old Camorra. It was not a league of justice and freedom, but
-simply an association which was pledged to advance the interests of
-its members, to right their wrongs, and to protect them to the utmost
-against every external power, including that of the law. And it has
-always maintained this character. Though it has occasionally done acts
-of justice and mercy, these are by no means its chief, or even an
-important, object; though many of its members belong to the criminal
-classes, it is not a society for the furtherance of crime. It pays no
-respect to the law except from prudential motives, and, as it has often
-dirty work to do, it makes use of dirty hands; but many men in all
-classes who are otherwise perfectly honest and respectable belong to
-it, and find their advantage in doing so.
-
-To a certain extent, however, the aims of the Camorra have grown with
-the growth of its power. In the face of so powerful an association,
-it became necessary for those who did not belong to it to take steps
-to guard their own interests, and most of them did so by seeking its
-protection. This could be obtained by the payment of a tribute which
-consisted either of a fixed tax or of a percentage on profits. Thus the
-association claims, and has long claimed, a right to levy an impost on
-all meat, fish, fruit, and vegetables exposed for sale in the markets,
-on all goods sold in the streets, on the winnings in all games of
-chance played in public, and on all cab hire. Very stringent laws have
-been enacted against this practice, and the Government has from time to
-time made energetic efforts to suppress it, but without success. The
-peasants and fishermen are eager to pay the illegal tax. The threat not
-to accept it will awe the most refractory among them into obedience to
-the other regulations of the Association, for they know that if the
-countenance of the Society is withdrawn, it will soon become impossible
-for them to visit the market. For a week or two they may thrive under
-the exceptional care of the police, but as soon as the attention of the
-authorities relaxes, customers will be crowded away from their stalls,
-their goods will be pilfered, and their boats or carts, as the case may
-be, either seriously injured or put vexatiously out of gear. The mere
-fact that the Camorra has ceased to favor So-and-so is enough to expose
-him to the violence and the wiles of half the roughs and thieves of
-the district, as well as to the tricks and torments of the most impish
-crowd of street boys that any European town can show.
-
-The Camorra dues are, therefore, an insurance against theft and
-annoyance. Those who pay them are not members of the fraternity, they
-for the most part know nothing of its constitution, and they can make
-no claim upon it, except for protection, on their way from the gates
-of the town to the market-place, and during their stay there. This,
-however, is highly valuable, and it is honestly exercised. Some years
-ago a party of fishermen brought a rather unusual supply to market, and
-left their wares standing at the accustomed place while they went into
-a neighboring coffee-house to breakfast. They were stolen, and the men
-applied to the official representative of the Camorra as naturally
-an Englishman would to the police. He asked some questions, took a
-few notes, and then bid them leave the market for a time, and come
-back at a certain hour. They did so, and on their return found their
-fish standing where they had originally left it, “not a sardine was
-missing.” Such events are constantly occurring.
-
-The almost unlimited influence which the association exercises over
-the criminal classes is due less to the fact that many of them are
-enrolled among its members than to the extraordinary information it can
-command as to any detail of city life. In every district it has a body
-of highly-trained agents, as to whose education and organization we may
-perhaps have an opportunity of saying something in a future number.
-These men are all eye and ear, and if a question is proposed to them by
-their superiors as to the private life of any one who resides in their
-district, it will go hard if they are not able to supply a trustworthy
-answer in a few days. Hence it would be almost impossible for a
-criminal to escape the officers of justice if the Camorra sincerely
-desired his arrest. It never interferes in such matters, however,
-except when one of its members or tributaries has been wronged, and
-compensation is refused. This rarely happens; but when it does it is
-said that its vengeance is swift and implacable, while it takes the
-perfectly legal form of a judicial sentence. Nor does the victim escape
-from its power when the prison gates close upon him. Some members of
-the association are almost sure to be confined within the same gloomy
-precincts, and they spare no pains to render the life of the foe of
-their society intolerable by a thousand petty vexations which the
-gaolers could not prevent, even if they cared to incur the personal
-danger of endeavoring to do so. As a rule, they prefer to stand on a
-good footing with the Camorrists, and to employ their influence in
-keeping the other prisoners in order.
-
-When a dispute arises, either in the streets or market-places, between
-persons who have purchased the protection of the association, it is
-usually referred to one of its agents whose decision is regarded
-as final, and so great is the reputation of many of these men for
-justice and fair play, that they are frequently requested to arbitrate
-on matters with which they have officially no concern whatever. On
-such occasions it is usual to make a present to the amateur judge,
-proportionate in worth to the matter he has settled, or at least to
-invite him to a sumptuous dinner. In a similar way these Camorrists
-form the court of honor of the lazzaroni. All questions of vendetta
-which have their origin in a sense of honor rather than personal
-hatred are submitted to them, and it is only just to recognize that
-they almost invariably do their best to bring about a reconciliation,
-though they themselves are notoriously ready to use their knives. In
-a word, whatever the ultimate purposes of the Camorra may be—they are
-doubtless always lawless, and not unfrequently criminal—its influence
-over the poorer classes is not an unmixed evil. It is unscrupulous
-both in forming and executing its designs, but when its own interests
-are not involved, it can be both just and merciful. There are honest
-and well-to-do tradesmen in Naples who would never have risen from the
-gutter, if, in their boyhood, the Camorra had not given them a fair
-start and something more.—_Saturday Review._
-
-
-
-
-THE DECAY OF IRISH HUMOR.
-
-
-The above heading was suggested to us by a friend as the subject of a
-paper some months back, but it was not until much time had elapsed,
-and not a little reflection had been devoted to the matter, that
-we felt ourselves constrained to admit its unwelcome truth. For to
-acknowledge that Irish humor is on the wane is a serious admission at
-the present day, when we are suffering from an undoubted dearth of
-that commodity on this side of the Channel; when laughter has been
-effectually quenched at St. Stephen's; when our interest in the best
-comic paper is almost entirely centred in the illustrations, and not
-the text; and when we have grown to be strangely dependent upon
-America for light reading of all sorts. This year—an exceptionally
-uninteresting year for the reader—has, it is true, been marked by a new
-departure or a reaction in the direction of startling sensation and
-melodramatic plots—engendered perhaps by a desire to escape from the
-unromantic common placeness of our daily surroundings, culminating in
-Mr. Stevenson's tale, “The Bodysnatcher,” in the Christmas number of
-the _Pall Mall Gazette_, which literally reeks of the charnel-house.
-But this movement, apart from its general literary or constructive
-merit, is from its very nature opposed to sunshine and mirth. The
-advent of a new humorist was hailed by some critics on the appearance
-of “Vice Versâ,” but his second considerable contribution to fiction,
-“The Giant's Robe,” is anything but a cheerful book. Lastly, at
-least two conscious and elaborate attempts have been made during the
-last six months to transplant the squalid anatomical photography of
-Zola into the realm of English fiction. Where, then, in these latter
-days are we to look for native humorists? Not in the ranks of Irish
-politicians surely, for the Irish political fanatic is anything but a
-comic personage, and the whole course of the Nationalist agitation has
-been unredeemed by any humorous passage. There are no Boyle Roches,
-or O'Connells, or Dowses, or even O'Gormans, to be found amongst
-the followers of Mr. Parnell. The cold, impassive address of their
-leader, utterly un-Irish in its character, and, perhaps, only the more
-effective on that account, has infected them all. Mr. O'Donnell has now
-and then let fly a sardonic shaft; but Mr. Justin McCarthy reserves his
-graceful pleasantry for the pages of his novels, save no one occasion
-when Mr. Gladstone pounced down on a “bull” of preternatural magnitude.
-Acrimony, virulence, and powers of invective, these are abundantly
-displayed by Messrs. Sexton, Healy, and O'Brien; but as for humor,
-there is none of it. For otherwise would they not have seen the logical
-outcome of their decision (we speak of the Nationalists as a whole)
-to rename the Dublin streets,—we mean the corollary that they should
-in many cases divest themselves also of their indubitably Sassenach
-patronymics in favor of Celtic and national names? From their own point
-of view, Charles Stewart Parnell is an odious combination, and should
-give place, let us say, to Brian Boroihme O'Toole. If we turn from
-politics to literature, we shall find much the same state of things
-prevailing. Irishmen are remarkably successful as journalists, but
-the prizes of that profession draw them away from their own country;
-their lives are spent amid other surroundings, less favorable to the
-development of their characteristic humor, which encourage their facile
-wits to waste themselves in mere over-production. Some of the very
-best specimens of recent Irish verse are to be found in the pages of
-_Kottabos_, a magazine supported by the members of Trinity College,
-Dublin. But although it is hardly a good sign that the best work of
-this kind should flourish under Academic patronage, we have been
-sincerely grieved to learn that _Kottabos_ is no more, and the goodly
-company of _Kottabistæ_ finally disbanded.
-
-If we descend to the other end of the social scale, we shall find that
-a variety of causes have conspired to diminish or even destroy the
-sense of humor with the possession of which tradition has credited
-the Irish peasant. It is only fair, however, to premise that much of
-what strikes an appreciative visitor as humorous in the speech of an
-Irish peasant is wholly unconscious in the speaker, and arises from
-his casting his sentences in the diffuse form of his mother-tongue, or
-from his use of imposing phrases picked up from the books read during
-his school-time. The first of these causes probably accounts for many
-picturesque expressions, such as “to let a screech out of oneself;”
-where an Englishman would merely say, “to shout,” or “screech;” the
-second explains the use of words like “extricate,” “congratulate,” by
-bare-legged gossoons in remote mountain glens. Among the destructive
-agents alluded to above, the tourist occupies a prominent position. For
-when the native inhabitants at any favorite place of resort found that
-it paid them to amuse the visitors, they cultivated the faculty and
-spoilt it in the cultivation. If we are asked for an example, we have
-only to mention the Killarney guide, a creature who is to every true
-Irishman _anathema_,—a tedious retailer of stories concocted during
-the slack season. A more serious cause of decay of late years has been
-the emigration which is slowly draining certain districts of the South
-and West of the cream of their population. In some parts of Kerry it
-is well-nigh impossible to get young and vigorous laborers; and the
-national game of “hurly” has completely died out, in consequence of
-the dearth of able-bodied players. We regard this as a serious loss,
-for though matches between the teams of rival villages often led to
-subsequent “ructions,” the game was a fine one and a good outlet for
-the excitable side of the Celtic character, which now finds a far less
-healthy field for expansion. All attempts to teach the peasants cricket
-have failed. Though fine athletes and unsurpassed jumpers, they lacked
-the coolness, the patience, and faculty of co-operating so essential
-to success in cricket. From this absence of vigorous youth, there
-results a dearth of “play-boys”—_i.e._, jokers, merry fellows—which is
-not likely to be remedied in this generation. Even in former years,
-before the _entente cordiale_ between landlord and tenant had been
-so rudely severed, it struck us as a symptom of decadence—unless,
-may-be, it was a mere compliment to the “quality,”—that on all festive
-gatherings where gentle and simple met on a friendly footing, the
-singers as often as not chose for the delectation of their superiors
-some old popular music-hall song of six or seven seasons back, which
-had filtered down from London through the provinces to Dublin, and
-so slowly made its way into our remote district. Thus we have heard
-“The Grecian Bend” rendered with the richest brogue imaginable, which
-partly alleviated the Philistinism of the song. The Irish peasantry,
-it should be remarked, do not sing Moore's Irish melodies, with few
-exceptions, in spite of the charm of the airs to which the words are
-wedded, which is an adequate proof, if any were wanted, that he has
-no claim to be considered a national poet. Few readers realise that
-by far his finest work is in the domain of satire, on which his title
-to immortality is far more securely based than on his erotic dactyls.
-Nor do the peasants, as a rule, know much of Lover, whose amusing
-ballads have a great and well-merited popularity in the middle and
-upper classes of Irish society. The reason of this is, perhaps, to be
-found in the character of the music, generally Lover's own, which is
-a sort of compromise between an Irish melody of the flowing type and
-the modern drawing-room ballad. Genuine Irish music is a barbarous
-thing enough—a wild, nasal chant, freely embellished with trills and
-turns—and to this setting the peasantry in the outlying districts
-still sing a good many songs in Irish or in English, in the latter
-case generally translations. To this must be added a certain number of
-ballads which trace their source to the events of the last few years.
-Nothing can be gained from an attempt to write down the Land League
-from a literary point of view, and we are very far from harboring such
-an intention. But these songs are, in the main, dreary and abusive, as
-one might naturally expect, for the events of recent years have not
-been conducive to mirth in Ireland. Here is a fragment from one on the
-landlords of Ireland:—
-
- “The bare, barren mountains and bog, I must state,
- The poor Irish farmer he must cultivate;
- Whilst the land-shark is watching
- His chance underhand,
- To gobble his labor, his house, and his land.
- But the Devil is fishing, and he'll soon get a pull,
- Of those bad landlords and agents
- His net is near full....
- Then hurrah! for the Land League,
- And Parnell so brave;
- Each bad landlord, my boys,
- We'll muzzle him tight.
- May the banner of freedom
- And green laurels wave
- O'er the men of the Land League,
- And Parnell so brave.”
-
-Irish humor is not dead yet, but it is decaying or dormant; and if
-ever, in spite of the malign influence of the Gulf Stream, and the
-Nationalist Party, and a sense of their past wrongs, and race-hatred,
-and half-a-dozen other drawbacks, Ireland should recover her sanity and
-grow prosperous and contented, then, and not till then, may we expect
-to see her sons grow merry as well as wise,—unless, indeed, their sense
-of humor is entirely improved out of them in the process. Judging
-from the character of the men of Antrim, this is not impossible. But
-valuable as is the gift of humor, the harmony of Great Britain would
-not be too dearly bought by its sacrifice.—_The Spectator._
-
-
-
-
-PRINCE BISMARCK'S CHARACTER.
-
-The late general election in Germany showed results which have signally
-verified Prince Bismarck's calculations on the tendencies of modern
-democracy.
-
-The Liberalists, who represent the opinions of the Manchester school,
-lost a great number of seats—no less than forty-four; while signal
-victories were won by the Conservatives, the Catholics, and the
-Socialists. The doctrines of the Liberals were treated with unequivocal
-contempt in the large cities, and several members of the party
-retained their seats only through the support grudgingly given to
-them by Socialist electors at the second ballot. At the first ballot
-the Socialists testified to their absolute hatred of the Liberals
-by voting for Conservative or Catholic candidates in constituencies
-where they were not strong enough to carry candidates of their own;
-but at the second ballot they dictated terms to the sorely mortified
-party whose overthrow they had caused, and agreed to assist Liberals
-who promised to vote for a repeal of the law against Socialists. The
-Liberals swallowed the leek and made the promise, though throughout
-the electoral campaign they had denounced the Socialists as the worst
-enemies of human progress. The Socialists, on their side, went to the
-polls as if obeying the injunction which Ferdinand Lassalle laid upon
-working-men eighteen months before his death[27]: “I have always been
-a Republican, but, promise me, my friends, that if ever a struggle
-should take place between the Divine Right Monarchy and the miserable
-Liberal middle-class, you will fight on the King's side against the
-_bourgeois_.”
-
-German Conservatives have regretted that Lassalle died at least six
-years too soon, for it is supposed that if he had witnessed the
-triumphs of Bismarck's policy and the unification of Germany after
-the war of 1870, he would have used his influence over the working
-classes to make them trust the great and successful champion of their
-nation. This, however, is doubtful, for the post-mortem examination of
-Lassalle's body revealed that he had in him the germs of disease by
-which his intellect would have gradually deteriorated. He had become a
-voluptuary before he died, and had he lived a little longer he might
-simply have been dazzled by the conqueror s glory, and have lost his
-influence by accepting honors and favors too readily as the reward of
-his homage. On the other hand, if Lassalle had remained head-whole
-and heart-whole, Bismarck and he could not have lived together. Both
-giants, one must have succumbed to the other after some formidable
-encounter. The two spent an afternoon in company at the height of
-the _Conflikt-Zeit_, when Bismarck was wrestling with the Liberal
-opposition in the Prussian Parliament. They smoked and drank beer,
-laughed like old friends over the events of the day, talked long and
-with deepening earnestness over the world's future, and separated
-well pleased with each other. But Lassalle is believed to have shown
-his hand a little too openly to his host. There were points where the
-policy of the two blended, and one point of ultimate convergence might
-have been found if Lassalle's only object had been to seek it; but his
-personal ambition was at least equal to his zeal as a reformer. “He is
-a composer,” said Edward Lasker, “who will never think his music well
-executed unless he conducts the orchestra.”
-
-It is well to remember what were the views of Lassalle about Germany,
-and how much they differed from those of his inferior successor in
-the leadership of the Socialists, Karl Marx. In a historical tragedy,
-“Franz von Sickingen,” which Lassalle published in 1859, he declared
-that “the sword is the god of this world, the word made flesh, the
-instrument of all great deliverances, the necessary tool of all useful
-undertakings.” In the 3d scene of Act III. Franz von Sickingen, the
-hero in whom Lassalle portrays himself, exclaims against the sordid
-ambition of petty princes, adding: “How are you to make the soul of a
-giant enter into the bodies of pigmies?... what we want is a strong
-and united Germany free from the yoke of Rome—an empire under an
-evangelical emperor.”[28]
-
-This has been also the wish of Bismarck's life—and this wish he has
-realised; the obstacles he had to surmount before achieving success
-offer a most curious subject for study. The political difficulties have
-furnished matter for many books, but something remains to be said of
-the social difficulties.
-
-“A conqueror's enemies are not all in front of him,” said Wallenstein,
-and we know Voltaire's apologue about that “grain of sand in the eye
-which checked Alexander's march.” Bismarck, like other great fighters,
-has had to shake off friends—real friends—tugging at his arm. He has
-had to foil boudoir cabals more powerful than Parliamentary majorities.
-He has got into those little scrapes which Lord Beaconsfield compared
-to sudden fogs in a park: “You may have the luck to walk straight
-home through them, or they may cause you to go miles out of your way
-and to miss anything, from a dinner to an appointment on which all
-your prospects depend.” Bismarck again has known the worry and agony
-of being unable to convince persons of thick head or of timorous
-conscience, whose co-operation was absolutely indispensable to him.
-Lord Chesterfield well said that the manner of a man's discourse is of
-more weight than the matter, for there are more people with ears to be
-charmed than with minds to understand. Bismarck is no charmer; he has
-had to contend with the disadvantage of cumbersome speech moved by
-slow thoughts, and of a temper inflammable as touchwood. For many years
-he was considered by those who knew him best to be more of a trooper
-than a politician.
-
-Lord Ampthill once found him reading Andersen's story on the Ugly
-Duckling, which relates how a duck hatched a swan's egg, and how the
-cygnet was jeered at by his putative brethren, the ducklings, until one
-day a troop of lordly swans, floating down the river, saluted him as
-one of their race. “Ah,” observed Bismarck, “it was a long time before
-my poor mother could be persuaded that in hatching me she had not
-produced a goose.”
-
-Bismarck was born in 1814, and at the age of seventeen went to the
-University of Göttingen. Here he joined a _Verbindung_—one of those
-student associations whose members wear flat caps of many colors,
-hold interminable _Kneipen_ or beer-carousals, and fight rapier duels
-with the members of other clubs. Bismarck's _Verbindung_ was select,
-containing none but the sons of noblemen, and it called itself by
-Kotzebue's name, out of antagonism to a Liberal club which was named
-after Karl Sand, Kotzebue's murderer.[29] There hangs in one of the
-rooms at Varzin, a pencil sketch of young Otto Bismarck fighting
-with a “Sandist” who was the great swashbuckler of his party. Both
-combatants are dressed, as is still the custom for such meetings, in
-padded leather jackets, tall hats, iron spectacles with wire netting
-over the glasses, and they wear thick stocks covering all the neck and
-throat. Only parts of the face are exposed, the object of the fighters
-being not to inflict deadly injuries, but to slit each other's cheeks,
-or to snip off the tip of a nose. Bismarck's adversary, named Konrad
-Koch, was a towering fellow with such a long arm that he had all the
-advantage; and after a few passes he snicked Bismarck along the left
-cheek down to the chin, making a wound of which the scar can be seen
-to this day. But before the duel he had bragged that he would make the
-“Kotzebuan” wear the “Sandist” color, red—and, laughing triumphantly at
-the fulfilment of his threat, as he saw Bismarck drenched in blood, he
-so infuriated the latter that the Kotzebuan insisted on having another
-bout. This was contrary to the regulations of student duels, which
-always end with first blood, so Bismarck had to take patience until
-his cut was healed, and until he could prove his fitness to meet Koch
-again, by worsting a number of Sandists. The rapier duels were, and are
-now, regular Saturday afternoon pastimes, taking place in a gymnastic
-room, and the combatants on either side being drawn by lot; but it is
-a rule that, when a student has beaten an opponent, he may decline
-duelling with him again until this antagonist works his way up to him,
-so to say, by prevailing over all other swordsmen who may care to
-challenge him. Bismarck had to fight nearly half-a-dozen duels before
-he could cross swords with Koch again, but on this second occasion he
-dealt the Sandist a master-slash on the face and remained victorious.
-
-This series of duels had some important consequences. A satirical
-paper called _Der Floh_ (_The Flea_), which was published at Hanover,
-inserted an article against student fights, and pretty clearly
-designated young Bismarck as a truculent fellow. Bismarck went to
-Hanover, called on the editor of the paper, and holding up to his nose
-the cutting of the offensive article, requested him to swallow it.
-One version of the story says that the editor's mouth was forced open
-and that the article was thrust into it in a pellet; another version
-states that a scrimmage ensued and that the student, after giving and
-receiving blows and kicks, was hustled out of the office. But it is
-certain that the affair reached the ears of the Rector of Göttingen
-University, who sent for Bismarck and rebuked him in a paternal way for
-his pugnacity. Bismarck did not accept the reproof. To the Rector's
-astonishment he made an indignant speech, expressing his detestation
-of Frenchmen, French principles and revolutionary Germans, whom he
-called Frenchmen in disguise. He prayed that the sword of Joshua might
-be given him to exterminate all these. “Well, my young friend, you
-are preparing great trouble for yourself,” remarked the Rector, with
-a shake of the head; “your opinions are those of another age.” “Good
-opinions re-flower like the trees after winter,” was Bismarck's answer.
-
-At this time, however, Bismarck's principles were not yet well set.
-The son of a Pomeranian squire, he had the _Junker's_ abhorrence of
-Radicals, and from the study of J. J. Rousseau's “Emile,” he had
-derived the idea that all cities are nests of corruption. Though he
-execrated Rousseau's name, he was so far his disciple as to look
-upon country life as the perfect life; in fact, he was an idealist,
-and he was often sadly at a loss for arguments with which to refute
-the reasoning of political opponents. This tormented him, for he did
-not wish to be a man like that Colonel in Hacklander's “Tale of the
-Regiment,” who said of a philosopher: “I felt the fellow was going
-to convince me, so I kicked him down stairs.” From Göttingen he
-went to the University of Berlin, and there vexed his soul in many
-disputations, without acquiring the consciousness that he was growing
-really strong in logic. At last he heard in a Lutheran church a sermon
-which left a lasting impression on his mind. He has often spoken of it
-since as “my Pentecost.”
-
-The preacher was treating of infidelity in connection with Socialist
-aspirations, and he observed that men could not live without faith
-in some ideal. Those men who reject the doctrine of immortality and
-of a world after this, delude themselves with visions of an earthly
-paradise. The Socialist's dream is nothing else; and his shibboleths
-of equality, fraternity and co-operation, are but a paraphrase of the
-Christian's “love one another.” Love is not necessary to the fulfilment
-of the Socialist's schemes than it is to the realisation of one's image
-of Heaven. A world in which there shall be no poor—in which each man
-shall receive according to his needs and work to the full measure of
-his capacities, having no individual advancement to expect from his
-industry, but content to see other men, less capable, fed out of the
-surplus of his earnings—what would this be but a paradise purged of all
-human passions—envy, jealousy, covetousness and sloth? Unless there
-were universal love, how could all the members of a Socialist community
-be expected to work to their utmost? And if every man did not work his
-best, so that the weak and the clumsy might live at the expense of the
-strong and the clever, how could the community exist?
-
-This was the substance of the sermon which Bismarck heard, and those
-words “the Socialist's Earthly Paradise” have remained fixed in his
-memory ever since as a terse demonstration as to the inanity of
-Socialism. State Socialism is of course another matter, and very early
-in life Bismarck came to the conclusion that the wise ruler must try to
-make himself popular by humoring the fancies of the people, whatever
-they may be, and however they may vary. If he can divert the people's
-fancies towards the objects of his own preference, so much the better,
-and it must be part of his business to endeavor to do this. But if
-he cannot lead, he must seem to lead while letting himself be pushed
-onward. “The people must be led without knowing it,” said Napoleon in a
-letter which he wrote to Fouché to decline Barrère's offer of pamphlets
-extolling the Emperor's policy. Bismarck has described universal
-suffrage as “the government of a house by its nursery;” but he added:
-“You can do anything with children if you play with them.”
-
-It has been one of the secrets of Bismarck's strength that he has never
-let himself be imposed upon by inflated talk about the “majesty of
-the People.” The Democracy has been in his eyes a mere multitude of
-mediocrities. “_Cent imbéciles ne font pas un sage_,” said Voltaire,
-and though La Rochefoucauld inclines to the contrary opinion in some
-of his well-known aphorisms,[30] it is a provable fact that the only
-successful rulers are those who have had eyes enabling them to analyse
-the component elements of a crowd. As sportsmen delight in tales of
-the chase, and soldiers in anecdotes of war, so Bismarck has always
-taken a peculiar pleasure in stories showing how one man by presence of
-mind has mastered an angry mob, or outwitted it, or coaxed it into good
-humor. A sure way to make him laugh is to tell him such stories, and it
-must be added that he likes them all the better when they exhibit the
-_bon enfant_ side of the popular character.
-
-During the siege of Paris, whilst he was at Versailles, a pass was
-applied for by a relation of M. Cuvillier Fleury, the eminent critic
-and member of the French Academy. The Chancellor at once gave the
-pass, saying: “M. Fleury is an admirable man. I know a capital story
-about him.” The story was this: M. Fleury, who had been tutor to the
-Duc d'Aumale, was in 1848 Private Secretary to the Duchess of Orleans.
-When the revolution of February broke out, a rabble invaded the Palais
-Royal, where the Princess resided, and began smashing works of art,
-pictures, statuettes, and nicknacks. All the household was seized with
-panic except M. Fleury, who, throwing off his coat, smeared his face
-and hands with coal, caught up a poker, and rushed among the mob,
-shouting: “Here, I'll show you where the best pictures are.” So saying,
-he plied his poker upon furniture of no value, and, thus winning the
-confidence of the roughs, was able to lead them out of the royal
-apartments into the kitchen regions, where they spent their patriotic
-fury upon the contents of the larder and cellar. The sequel of this
-story is very droll, and Bismarck relates it with great relish. A few
-days after he had saved the Palais Royal, M. Fleury was recognised in
-the streets as the Duchess of Orleans's Secretary, and mobbed. He was
-being somewhat roughly hustled when a hulking water-carrier elbowed his
-way through the throng and roared: “Let that man be! He is one of the
-right sort. He led us to the pillage of the Palais Royal the other day!”
-
-Bismarck once told Lord Bloomfield that he had the highest opinion of
-Charles Mathews, the actor. It turned out that this opinion was not
-based on any particular admiration for Mathews's professional talent,
-but on his coolness during a theatrical riot which Bismarck witnessed
-during a visit to London. Mathews was manager of a theatre, and for
-want of pay, part of his company had struck work. It was impossible to
-perform the piece advertised, so pit and gallery grew clamorous. In
-the midst of the hubbub, Mathews came before the curtain and jovially
-announced that, although he must disappoint the audience of the comedy
-which they had expected, he was ready to perform anything they pleased,
-provided only that he could satisfy the majority. A voice from the
-gallery sang out: “'Box and Cox.'” “Well, that is an excellent play,”
-said Mathews gravely, “but before my honorable friend puts a motion
-for its performance, I think he should explain to the audience why
-he prefers it to all others.” This turned a general laugh against
-the “mover,” who of course became bashful and could explain nothing.
-Mathews then made a chaffing little speech on the comparative merits of
-various plays, and at length withdrew, saying that as he could discern
-nothing like unanimity among the audience, he thought it best that they
-should all agree to meet him another day, but that meanwhile those who
-liked to apply for their money at the doors should have it. It seems
-that a number of men had come to the theatre on purpose to create a
-disturbance, but Mathews's banter put the whole audience into good
-humor, and the house was emptied without any riot.[31]
-
-Bismarck has another favorite story about mobs. When the Grand
-Duke Constantine of Russia went as Viceroy to Poland in 1862, he
-was received in the streets of Warsaw with cries of “Long live the
-Constitution!” A Prussian, Count Perponcher, who was present, asked a
-vociferating Pole who “Constitutiona” was? “I suppose it's his wife,”
-answered the Pole. “Well, but he has children,” said Perponcher,
-“so you should cry: “Hurrah for Constitutiona and the little
-Constitutions,”” which the Pole at once did. Hearing Bismarck tell this
-anecdote—not for the first time probably—his son-in-law Count Rantzau,
-once said: “You can make a mob cry anything by paying a few men among
-them a mark apiece to start the shouting.” “_Nein_, but you need not
-waste your marks,“ demurred the Chancellor, ”_es gibt immer Esel genug,
-die schreien unbezahlt_.” (There are always asses to bray gratis).
-
-The knowledge of how men can be swayed involves an accurate estimate of
-the influence which oratory exercises over them. Bismarck, as we have
-said, is not eloquent, and it is one of his maxims that a man of many
-words cannot be a man of action. “The best Parliamentary speeches”—he
-said, in conversation with M. Pouyer Quertier about M. Thiers—“are
-those which men have delivered to criticise other men's work, or to set
-forth what they themselves were _going_ to do, or to apologize for what
-they have left undone.”
-
-Action speaks for itself. “When I hear of ministers in parliamentary
-countries making long speeches to defend their policy, it always
-strikes me that there has been very little policy; and I am reminded
-of those big dishes of stew which our frugal German housewives serve
-up on Mondays with the remnants of Sunday's dinner—lots of cabbage and
-carrots, making a great show, with small scraps of meat.”
-
-Action fascinates the masses as much as speech,[32] for it demands
-courage, which is of all virtues the rarest.[33] Pastor Stocker, of
-anti-Semitic renown, relates that Bismarck once asked him whether
-there were any text in the Bible saying, “All men are cowards?” “No,
-you are thinking of the text: 'The Cretans are all liars,'” said
-Stocker. “Liars—cowards, it comes to much the same thing,” answered
-Bismarck; “but it's not true only of the Cretans;” and he then asked
-Stocker whether the latter had met many thoroughly brave men. The Court
-pastor replied that there might be several definitions of courage; but
-Bismarck interrupted him with a boisterous laugh: “Oh, yes, the moral
-courage of letting one's face be smacked rather than fight a duel; I
-have met plenty of men who had that.”
-
-Bismarck's own courage is that of a mastiff, and in early life it
-often got him into scrapes. We have remarked how some of these might
-have been detrimental to his whole career. Whilst he was doing his
-One Year Voluntariate in the Prussian Light Infantry, he paid a visit
-to Schleswig, which was then under Danish rule. One day, wearing
-his uniform, he was seated in a _Brauerei_ when he overheard two
-gentlemen holding a political conversation and expressing extreme
-Liberal sentiments. With amazing impudence he walked up to their
-table and requested that: “If they must talk nonsense, they would use
-an undertone.” The two Schleswigers told the _Junker_ to mind his
-own business, whereupon Bismarck caught up a beer-jug and dashed its
-contents in their faces. This affair caused very serious trouble.
-Bismarck was taken into custody and ordered out of the country. On
-joining his regiment he was placed under arrest again, and there was
-an interchange of diplomatic notes about him. He only escaped severe
-punishment through powerful intercession being employed at Court on his
-behalf.
-
-Some years later when Bismarck had been appointed to the Legation at
-Frankfort (a post which he owed to the delight with which Frederick
-William IV. had read his bluff speeches in the Prussian Lower House),
-he was present at a public ball, where a member of the French Corps
-Législatif, M. Jouvois de Clancy, was pointed out to him as a noted
-fire-eater. This gentleman had been a Republican, but had turned his
-coat after the _coup d'état_. He was a big man with dandified airs,
-but evidently not much accustomed to society, for he had brought his
-hat—not a compressible one—into the ball-room; and in waltzing he held
-it in his left hand. The sight of the big Frenchman careering round the
-room with his hat extended at arm's length was too much for Bismarck's
-sense of fun; so, as M. Jouvois revolved past him, he dropped a copper
-coin into the hat. One may imagine the scene. The Frenchman, turning
-purple, stopped short in his dancing, led back his partner to her
-place, and then came with flashing eyes to demand satisfaction. There
-would have been assault and battery on the spot if friends had not
-interposed; but on the following day the Frenchman and the Prussian met
-with pistols and the former was wounded. Unfortunately for Bismarck,
-M. Jouvois knew Louis Schneider, the ex-comedian, who had become Court
-Councillor to Frederick William IV., and was that eccentric monarch's
-favorite companion. Schneider had but a moderate fondness for Bismarck,
-and he represented his act of _gaminerie_ in so unfavorable a light to
-the King that his Majesty instructed the Foreign Office to read the
-newly appointed diplomatist a severe lecture.
-
-Bismarck has never liked Frenchmen. His feelings towards them savor
-of contempt in their expression, but there is more of hatred than of
-genuine disdain in them, and much of this hatred has its source in
-religious fervor. Bismarck is a believer. The sceptical levity of
-most Frenchmen, the profanity and licentiousness of their literature,
-their want of reverence for all things, whether of Divine or of human
-ordinance—all this shocks the statesman, who still reads his Bible
-with a simple faith, and who has attentively noted the doom which is
-threatened to nations who are disobedient, During the Franco-German
-War, Countess Bismarck, hearing that her husband had lost the
-travelling-bag in which he carried his Bible, sent him another with
-this naïve letter: “As I am afraid you may not be able to buy a Bible
-in France, I send you two copies of the Scriptures, and have marked the
-passages in Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel _which relate to France_—also
-the verse in the Psalms which says that 'The unbeliever shall be rooted
-out.'”
-
-Carlyle saw affinities between the character of Cromwell and that of
-Bismarck, but the only resemblance between the two men is physical.
-One may question how far Cromwell was a believer: he certainly had as
-little respect for sacred words as he had for cathedrals and kings,
-and he juggled with texts of Scripture as it suited his purpose.
-Bismarck has never canted. His acknowledgments of Divine mercies have
-only been expressed where national triumphs were concerned—never where
-his own personal enterprises had to be lauded. On the other hand, he
-has evinced strong religious scruples under circumstances when few
-men would have credited him with such. He has spent more sleepless
-hours from thinking over the deposition of George V. of Hanover than
-Cromwell did from fretting over Charles I.'s execution. He reconciled
-that deposition with the dictates of his reason, but not with those
-of his faith in the inviolability of kings. When it had been decided
-to annex Hanover, the Crown lawyers were instructed to draw up a
-report of legal justifications for this measure; but when Bismarck had
-read half through this document, he threw it aside with irritation:
-“Better nothing than that—it reminds me of Teste's Memorandum on the
-confiscation of the estates of the Orleans family.”[34]
-
-Again Bismarck, while making it the chief occupation of his life to
-study how the Plebs might be managed, has never stooped to such immoral
-means for this purpose as the French officials of the Second Empire
-employed. He was deeply interested in Napoleon III.'s experiments
-with universal suffrage. The whole system of plébiscites, official
-candidatures, prefectoral newspapers, and electoral districts, so
-arranged that peasant votes should neutralise those of Radical
-working-men, seemed to him “very pretty,” as he once told a disgusted
-Republican refugee. But the encouragement given by De Morny, De
-Persigny, and others to every kind of immorality that could amuse the
-people—frivolous newspapers, improper novels and plays, gambling clubs,
-and outrageous fashions in dress—this was a very different affair. De
-Morny was fond of quoting the anecdote about Alcibiades having cut off
-the tail of his dog to give the Athenians something to talk about,
-and during Bismarck's short stay in Paris as Ambassador in 1862, he
-and the Prussian statesman had more than one conversation about the
-art of ruling. Bismarck had the frankness to say that he looked upon
-the comedies of Dumas the younger, and indeed on most French plays of
-the lighter sort, as grossly corrupting to the public morals. “_Panem
-et circenses_,” smiled De Morny. “_Panem et saturnalia_,” muttered
-Bismarck.
-
-Another point upon which De Morny and Bismarck could not agree,
-was about the qualities that are requisite in a public servant. De
-Morny cared nothing for character. The men whom he recommended for
-prefectships or posts in the diplomatic service were, for the most
-part, adventurers—brilliant, witty, _diseurs de rien_ and cajolers
-of the other sex. “A French Ambassador,” he maintained, “should
-always consider himself accredited _auprès des reines_.” Bismarck
-loathes ladies' men: and he had the poorest opinion of Napoleon III.'s
-diplomatists. His own ideal of a State functionary is the blameless
-man without debts or entanglements—laborious, but not pushing,
-well-educated but not abounding in ideas, a man in all things obedient.
-His sneering judgment on plenipotentiaries like M. Benedetti and the
-Duc de Gramont is well known. He called them “dancing dogs without
-collars.” They never seemed to have a master, he complained, “but stood
-up on their hind legs and performed their antics without authority
-from man alive. If they barked, you were sure to hear a voice from
-Paris crying to them to be quiet. If they fawned you might expect to
-see them receive some sly kick, warning them that they ought to be up
-and biting.” Bismarck conceived some liking and respect for Napoleon
-III., whom he saw to be better than his _entourage_. Had the Emperor's
-health remained good, the war of 1870 would doubtless never have taken
-place; but so early as 1862 Bismarck perceived that Napoleon III.'s
-bodily ailments were causing an indolence of mind that left the Emperor
-at the mercy of intriguing counsellors; and what he observed in his
-subsequent visits to Paris in 1867 and to Plombières in 1868, confirmed
-these impressions. His ceaseless study of France as the great enemy
-that would have to be coped with soon, moreover added to his deep and
-moody detestation of that country. When the formal declaration of war
-by France reached Berlin in July 1870, Count Bismarck was staying for
-a few days at Varzin. The news was communicated to him by a telegram
-which was put into his hands just as he was returning from a drive. He
-at once sprang into his carriage, to go to the railway station, and
-on his way through the village of Wussow, he saw the parish minister
-standing at the door of his manse. “I said nothing to him,” ejaculated
-Bismarck, in relating the story long afterwards to some friends,
-“but I just made a sign as of two sabre-cuts crosswise, and he quite
-understood.”
-
-The pastor of Wussow understood the sign of the cross in sword-cuts to
-mean crusade, and as such the war against France was viewed by all good
-Prussians. Bismarck and the village clergyman were at one in regarding
-the French people as the Beast of the Apocalypse, and Paris as Babylon.
-Such sentiments are not incompatible with Christian piety, for there
-must be militants in the Church. But where Bismarck ceases to be a
-Christian in the common acceptance of that term, is in his exaggerated
-contempt for almost all men as individuals.[35]
-
-His want of charity—we do not of course mean in almsgiving, for
-in this respect he is as generous as the Princess, his wife,
-allows him to be—is the most unamiable and disconcerting trait
-in his nature. Disconcerting because misanthrophy is an evidence
-of moral short-sightedness, begetting timidity and rendering a
-man incapable of forming disciples to carry on his work. Without
-trustfulness, a statesman can make no real friends. It may be said
-that uncharitableness like Bismarck's must be the result of many
-disenchantments; but a man who only keeps rooks and ravens must not
-complain that all birds are black. The men who were at different times
-Bismarck's most zealous helpmates—Count Harry Arnim, Herr Delbrück,
-Count Stolberg and Count Eulenborg—were all discarded as soon as they
-gave the smallest sign, not of mutiny, but of independence. Bismarck
-would not accept advice or remonstrance from them; he required on
-all occasions that blind obedience which is not loyal service, but
-servility. For the same cause he would never employ Herr Edward Lasker,
-whose great talents as a financier and parliamentary debater would have
-been of immense value to the monarchy. He has rejected the advances
-of Herr Bennigsen, the Hanoverian founder of the _Nationalverein_,
-who is now leader of the National Liberals; and those of Dr. Rudolph
-Gneist, who is one of the ablest politicians in Germany, but who had
-the misfortune to take the wrong side during the _Conflikt-Zeit_.
-Opposition, as Bismarck has often taken care to impress upon his
-hearers, shall never be _regierungsfähig_ so long as he holds office.
-He abominates the Parliamentary system which brings to power men who
-have begun life as demagogues agitating for the abolition of this and
-that, and who, afterwards, are obliged to make shameless recantations,
-or to quibble away their words. The contrary system of selecting
-for his assistants only men who have never sown political wild oats
-is, however, compelling Bismarck to rely now on such henchmen as
-Herr Von Puttkamer and Herr Hofmann. The former is the Chancellor's
-brother-in-law, an excellent subordinate, supple as a glove, but with
-no originality of mind or firmness that could enable him to remain
-Home Minister if he were not propped up in this post. Herr Hofmann is
-also a mere painstaking bureaucrat, who, if he did not hear the voice
-of command, would be quite inapt to think for himself. Of late Prince
-Bismarck is said to have been training his son, Count Herbert to act
-as his Secretary and to take his place by-and-by. Count Herbert is a
-clever man, but dynasties of _maires du palais_ have never succeeded
-in any country, and it is strange Bismarck should have forgotten that
-the Hohenzollern dynasty has owed its rapid rise to a respect for that
-principle which he is now ignoring, namely the selection of the best
-men without favoritism. If independence of mind and character have been
-eyed with suspicion by the Prussian kings, as they now are by the
-Chancellor, Germany would have had no Bismarck.
-
-The popular idea of a genial, soldierly, blunt-spoken Bismarck is a
-wrong one. Bismarck can be jovial among friends and good-humoredly
-affable with strangers; but genial he is not. There is a sarcastic
-tone in his voice which grates on the ears of all who are brought in
-contact with him for the first time, and his unconcealed mistrust for
-the rectitude of all public men, of no matter what country, who do not
-happen to be in his good graces at the time, is too often offensive. It
-must be remembered that when Bismarck has quarrelled with public men,
-it has generally been because, having changed an opinion himself, he
-has been unable to persuade men to do the same at a moment's notice.
-Turn by turn, Free-trader and Protectionist, inclining one day to the
-Russian, another to the Austrian alliance, coquetting at one time
-with England, then with Italy, and even with France, he has ever been
-actuated by the sole desire to use every passing wind which might push
-the interest of his Government. He has declined to formulate any policy
-in details, because against such a policy parties might coalesce,
-whereas by veering and tacking often, he throws disunion among his
-opponents. He appropriates what is best in the new designs of this or
-that party, takes for his Sovereign and himself the credit of carrying
-them into execution, and then leaves the original promoters with a
-sense that power has gone out of them—that they have been played with,
-but that they have nothing to complain of.
-
-This policy of variations, however, has exposed Bismarck to some
-cutting rebukes from loyal Prussians whose consciences were not
-acrobatic. The trouble with Count Harry Arnim began when this
-diplomatist—“_Der Affe_,” as he was nicknamed by his familiars—said to
-Countess Von Redern, at one of the Empress Augusta's private parties,
-that he had hitherto been trying to walk on his feet in Paris, but
-that from “his latest instructions he gathered that he was expected
-until further notice to walk on his hands.” The saying was reported to
-Bismarck and made “his three hairs bristle.” “The 'Ape' has only been
-employed, because we thought him quadrumanous,“ he exclaimed, and from
-that moment there was war between the two men.
-
-Another time Bismarck had to bear a snub from a young nobleman of the
-House of Hatzfelt. This gentleman, being left in charge of a Legation
-during the absence of the Minister, sent home a despatch embodying
-views favorable to the policy which the Chancellor had, until then,
-been pursuing towards the country where the attaché was residing.
-But it so chanced that the Chief of the Legation had been summoned
-to Berlin on purpose to receive instructions for a change of policy;
-so that when the attaché's despatch arrived, it gave no pleasure in
-Wilhelmstrasse, and the Chancellor spoke testily of its writer as a
-”_Schafsköpf_.” Hearing this, the attaché resigned. He was a young man
-of high spirit, who had many friends at Court, and it was pointed out
-to the Chancellor by an august peacemaker, that the young fellow had
-not been very well-treated. Somewhat grudgingly—for he does not like
-to make amends—the Chancellor was induced to send his Secretary to the
-ex-attaché offering to reinstate him. But the recipient of this dubious
-favor drew himself up stiffly and said: “Germany has not fallen to so
-low a point that she needs to be served by _Schafsköpf_; and for the
-rest, you may tell the Chancellor that I have not been trained to turn
-somersaults.”[36]
-
-It has been mentioned that Bismarck has had to contend with many a
-boudoir cabal. The Empress Augusta's long antipathy to him is no
-secret, and the Chancellor has never had to congratulate himself much
-on the friendliness of the Crown Prince's and Princess's circle. The
-ill-will of royal ladies enlists that of many other persons influential
-in society; but it stands to Bismarck's honor that he has never used
-newspapers to combat these drawing-room foes. The revelations made to
-the public some years since by an ex-member of the “Reptile's Bureau”
-were no doubt in the main true, and they showed that the Chancellor had
-raised the art of “nobbling” the Press to a high pitch of perfection.
-Not only had he, all over Germany, newspapers supported in part out of
-the Secret Service Fund and inspired wholly by the Press Bureau, but
-he has been accused of employing hirelings on the staffs of newspapers
-reputed as independent, and through these he was in a position to
-procure the insertion of articles in foreign journals, these effusions
-being afterwards reprinted in German papers as genuine expressions of
-foreign opinion.
-
-All this constituted a very powerful organization, which the Chancellor
-might have used with telling effect in fighting society caballers.
-But while he has not scrupled to direct the heaviest artillery of his
-newspapers and not unfrequently torpedo attacks against open political
-opponents, he would never let his difficulties with “_die Wespen_” as
-he called society aggressors, be made the subjects of Press comments.
-Newspapers, guilty of assailing members of the Imperial family or of
-the Court household, have been unsparingly prosecuted by his orders.
-“_Er is kein Journaliste!_” exclaimed a too zealous partisan-writer,
-who had gone to the Chancellerie with a proposal for creating in
-Berlin a newspaper like the Paris _Figaro_, “_er könne sich nicht
-auf die feine Malice zu verstehen_.” This may be rendered as, “He
-won't throw mud;” and it is no small compliment to the integrity of a
-statesman, whom his enemies are wont to describe as more astute than
-Machiavelli, and more unscrupulous than Richelieu.[37]
-
-In the autumn of the present year the Pope gave a commission to the
-painter Lenbach to paint a portrait of Prince Bismarck. The Chancellor
-agreed to sit; the artist went several times to Varzin, and people have
-been asking ever since what is the meaning of this strange fancy of Leo
-XIII.'s to have a portrait of the arch-enemy of Rome, the formidable
-champion of the Kulturkampf. A French journalist has suggested that
-there is at the Vatican an artistic Index Expurgatorius—a _Galerie des
-Réprouvés_—and that Bismarck's portrait is to hang there in the place
-of honor, between that of Dositheus the Samaritan, and Isaac Laquedem
-the Wandering Jew.
-
-It is more likely that the Pope aspires to some political
-_rapprochement_ with Germany, and if he have such a hope it must have
-come to him from the knowledge that the Chancellor would not object
-to a reconciliation. But if Bismarck consents to make peace with the
-Vatican, and to find some official post for Herr Windhorst, it would
-not be that any of his own private Lutheran prejudices against Rome
-have vanished. He is a doughty Protestant in whose religion there is
-no variableness, but he may veer on the Kulturkampf as he did on that
-of free trade, simply because, having failed, after doing his best, to
-crush the Catholics, he will see no use in recommencing the struggle.
-And whatever is useless seems to Bismarck a thing which should not be
-attempted, indeed, many of his great triumphs hitherto have been won
-by shaking hands with yesterday's enemy, and saying “Let us two stand
-together.” Before long the world may see Prince Bismarck recognise
-the Roman Catholic Church as one of the greatest living forces of
-Continental Conservatism, and enlist its services in the work of
-“dishing” both Liberals and Socialists. It is significant that in
-one of his few autumn speeches, Bismarck was heard quoting Joseph De
-Maistre's dictum about the Soldier and the Priest being the sentries of
-civilisation.—_Temple Bar._
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[27] Lassalle was killed in a duel in 1864, at the age of thirty-nine.
-
-[28] In the play, Charles V. has a long conference with Franz, but
-ends by saying of him what Bismarck must have said to himself about
-Lassalle: “The man is great, but his is not the greatness which I seek,
-and which I can employ.”
-
- “Der mann ist gross, doch ist es nicht die Grösse,
- Welche ich suche und gebrauchen kann.”
-
-
-[29] Karl Sand, a student of Erlangen, assassinated Kotzebue at Manheim
-in 1819, and having ineffectually tried to commit suicide, was executed
-in the following year. In striking Kotzebue, he meant, as he said, “to
-exterminate the apologist of despotism.”
-
-[30] “Personne n'a de l'esprit, comme tout le monde.” “On peut avoir
-plus d'esprit qu'un autre, mais non plus d'esprit que tous les autres.”
-
-[31] Prince Bismarck does not care much about the theatre, and it
-may be mentioned that when he visited Paris in 1867, Offenbach's
-“Grande Duchesse,” which, as a skit upon militaryism, made so many
-laugh, excited in him only anger. He was especially indignant at the
-song of “Here is the Sabre of my Sire.” “You can't expect a pair
-of Jews (Offenbach and Ludovic Halévy) to feel any reverence for
-military traditions,” he said; “but now 'Le Sabre de mon Père' will
-be associated with ludicrous ideas in the minds of Frenchmen, and old
-generals will be ashamed to give their swords to their sons on account
-of this odious jingle.” At this same visit to Paris, however, Bismarck
-saw a performance of Sardou's “Nos bons Villageois” at the Gymnase,
-and he laughed loudly at the scene in which a Colonel, who is Mayor
-of his village, makes all the municipal Councillors sign a document
-acknowledging that they are “a troop of donkeys.”
-
-[32] Two of Bismarck's heroes in history are Wallenstein and William
-the Silent. He once said of Marshal von Moltke: “Lucky man, he need
-only make his one speech a year in the Reichstag and then the echoes
-of cannon seem to be speaking for him!” Marshal von Moltke, however,
-speaks as well as he writes. His _Letters_ to his late wife, while he
-was travelling in Turkey and the Danubian Provinces, are faultless
-in their composition, instructive, amusing, and models of style. All
-the qualities which distinguish them are to be found in the Marshal's
-speeches, which are clear, short, and captivate the attention, not
-less by what they contain than by the tuneful voice in which they are
-uttered.
-
-[33] Some years ago, when a young Prussian officer of noble family
-was turned out of the army for declining a challenge on conscientious
-grounds, an English clergyman sent Prince Bismarck a copy of the Diary
-of Mr. Adams, who was American Minister of the Court of St. James's
-at the beginning of this century. Mr. Adams speaks with admiration of
-the efforts which were being made to put down duelling in England by
-force of public opinion. Prince Bismarck, in courteously acknowledging
-the book, wrote: “There is much good sense in England, but you have
-not done away with duelling, as you suppose. There is more of it among
-your schoolboys, who fight with fists, than among those of any other
-country; and this may prevent the necessity for much fighting in
-after-life. English boys take rank at school according to their pluck,
-and hold that rank afterwards.”
-
-[34] M. Teste had been one of Louis Philippe's Ministers. Getting into
-disgrace through financial jobberies, which subjected him to criminal
-proceedings, he had to resign his portfolio and retire altogether from
-public life. To revenge himself on Louis Philippe's family (though no
-member of it had had any share in his ruin) he privately drew up for
-Napoleon III. the report that was required to justify the seizure of
-the Orleans property. No respectable lawyer could be found to do this
-work.
-
-[35] After a dinner at Count Lehndorff's the conversation once fell
-upon religious topics, and Bismarck exclaimed: “I cannot understand
-how without faith in a revealed religion we can believe in God; nor do
-I see how, without faith in a God, Dispenser of all good and Supreme
-Judge, a man can do his duty. If I were not a Christian, I should not
-remain at my post. It can yield me nothing more in the way of honors;
-the exercise of power is no longer a pleasure but a worry, since I
-can never carry out the simplest scheme without struggles, trying to
-a man of my age and weak health. If I were ambitious of popularity, I
-could get it by retiring. All men would speak well of me if I lived
-in retirement. I should then perhaps have more real power than I have
-now. I should certainly have more power to help my friends. But it is
-because I believe in a Divine dispensation which has marked out Germany
-for great destinies that I remain at my post. I have a duty to perform
-and must continue to do it so long as I am permitted. If I am stricken
-down and rendered incapable for work, then I shall know that my time of
-rest has come; but not till then.”
-
-[36] Bismarck has never had much veneration either for diplomatists or
-diplomacy. Here is an extract of a letter which he wrote to his wife
-in 1851 when he was at Frankfort: “In the art of saying nothing and
-in a great many words, I am making rapid progress. I write many pages
-of letters which read like leading articles, and if Manteuffel, after
-perusing them, can tell what they are about, he certainly knows more
-than I. Every one of us pretends to believe that his colleagues are
-full of ideas and plans; and yet all the time the whole body of us
-knows nothing, and each is aware that the others know nothing. No man,
-not even the most malicious sceptic of a democrat, can believe what
-charlatanism and big pretence is all this diplomacy.”
-
-It may be remarked, in view of Prince Bismarck's opinions on duelling,
-that for an affront like that which he offered to the young attaché,
-a French Admiral, the Bailli de Suffren, was killed by a lieutenant.
-The affront was offered on the high seas; the subaltern bore it at the
-time without a murmur, but on returning to France he resigned and sent
-the admiral a challenge, saying: “You are no longer my superior now. We
-are both gentlemen and you owe me a reparation.” In Germany this would
-have been impossible, for the attaché must have belonged either to the
-_Landwehr_ or the _Landsturm_, so that the Chancellor as a general of
-the _Landwehr_ remained always his superior. Thus in military countries
-one of the chief excuses for duelling—namely, that it enables a man to
-punish the insolence of office—cannot be urged.
-
-[37] A fact that speaks well for Prince Bismarck is that ladies are
-not afraid of him. Napoleon I. made women cower; they knew that
-his Corsican spitefulness would disdain no means of retaliation
-for a slight or an injury. But ladies have often been maliciously
-epigrammatical, or downright saucy to the Chancellor, without having
-anything worse to fear from him than scowls and grumbles.
-
-
-
-
-A FEW NOTES ON PERSIAN ART.
-
-
-The limner's art in Persia has few patrons, and the professional
-draughtsman of the present day in that country must needs be an
-enthusiast, and an art-lover for art's sake, as his remuneration is so
-small as to be a mere pittance; and the man who can live by his brush
-must be clever indeed. The Persians are an eminently practical people,
-and buy nothing unless it be of actual utility; hence the artist has
-generally to sink to the mere decorator; and as all, even the very
-rich, expect a great deal for a little money, the work must be scamped
-in order to produce a great effect for a paltry reward. The artists,
-moreover, are all self-taught, or nearly so, pupilage merely consisting
-of the drudgery of preparing the canvas, panel, or other material for
-the master, mixing the colors, filling in backgrounds, varnishing,
-&c. There are no schools of art, no lectures, no museums of old or
-contemporary masters, no canons of taste, no drawing from nature or the
-model, no graduated studies, or system of any kind. There is, however,
-a certain custom of adhering to tradition and the conventional;
-and most of the art workmen of Iran, save the select few, are mere
-reproducers of the ideas of their predecessors.
-
-The system of perspective is erroneous; but neither example nor
-argument can alter the views of a Persian artist on this subject.
-Leaving aside the wonderful blending of colors in native carpets,
-tapestries, and embroideries, all of which improve by the toning
-influence of age, the modern Persian colorist is remarkable for his
-skill in the constant use of numerous gaudy and incongruous colors, yet
-making one harmonious and effective whole, which surprises us by its
-daring, but compels our reluctant admiration.
-
-Persian pictorial art is original, and it is cheap; the wages of a
-clever artist are about one shilling and sixpence a day. In fact, he is
-a mere day-laborer, and his terms are, so many days' pay for a certain
-picture. In this pernicious system of time-work lies the cause of the
-scamping of many really ingenious pieces of work.
-
-As a copyist the Persian is unrivalled; he has a more than Chinese
-accuracy of reproduction; every copy is a fac-simile of its original,
-the detail being scamped, or the reverse, according to the scale of
-payment. In unoriginal work, such as the multiplication of some popular
-design, a man will pass a lifetime, because he finds it pay better to
-do this than to originate. This kind of unoriginal decoration is most
-frequent in the painted mirror cases and book-covers, the designs of
-which are ancient; and the painter merely reproduces the successful and
-popular work of some old and forgotten master.
-
-But where the Persian artist shines is in his readiness to undertake
-any style or subject; geometrical patterns—and they are very clever
-in originating these; scroll-work scenes from the poets; likenesses,
-miniatures, paintings of flowers or birds; in any media, on any
-substance, oils, water, or enamel, and painting on porcelain; all are
-produced with rapidity, wonderful spirit, and striking originality. In
-landscape, the Persian is very weak; and his attempts at presenting the
-nude, of which he is particularly fond, are mostly beneath contempt. A
-street scene will be painted in oils and varnished to order “in a week”
-on a canvas a yard square, the details of the painting desired being
-furnished in conversation. While the patron is speaking, the artist
-rapidly makes an outline sketch in white paint; and any suggested
-alterations are made in a few seconds by the facile hand of the _ustad
-nakosh_ (master-painter), a term used to distinguish the artist from
-the mere portrait-painter or _akkas_, a branch of the profession
-much despised by the artists, a body of men who consider their art a
-mechanical one, and their guild no more distinguished than those of
-other handicraftsmen.
-
-A Persian artist will always prefer to reproduce rather than originate,
-because, as a copy will sell for the same price as an original, by
-multiplication more money can be earned in a certain time, than by the
-exercise of originality. Rarely, among the better class of artists,
-is anything actually out of drawing; the perspective is of course
-faulty, and resembles that of early specimens of Byzantine art. Such
-monstrosities as the making the principal personages giants, and the
-subsidiaries dwarfs, are common; while the beauties are represented as
-much bejewelled; but this is done to please the buyer's taste, and the
-artist knows its absurdity. There is often considerable weakness as
-to the rendering of the extremities; but as the Persian artist never
-draws, save in portraiture, from the life, this is not to be wondered
-at.
-
-The writer has before him a fair instance of the native artist's
-rendering of the scene at the administration of the bastinado. This
-picture is an original painting in oils, twenty-four inches by sixteen
-on _papier-mâché_. The details were given to the artist by the writer
-in conversation, sketched by him in white paint on the _papier mâché_
-during the giving of the order, in the course of half an hour; and the
-finished picture was completed, varnished, and delivered in a week. The
-price paid for this original work in oils in 1880 was seven shillings
-and sixpence. The costumes are quite accurate in the minutest detail;
-the many and staring colors employed are such as are in actual use;
-while the general _mise en scène_ is very correct.
-
-Many similar oil-paintings were executed for the writer by Persian
-artists, giving graphic renderings of the manners and customs of this
-little-known country. They were always equally spirited, and minutely
-correct as to costume and detail, at the same low price; a small
-present for an extraordinarily successful performance gladdening the
-heart of the artist beyond his expectations.
-
-As to original work by Persian artists in water-color, remuneration
-is the same—so much per diem. A series of water-colors giving minute
-details of Persian life were wished; and a clever artist was found
-as anxious to proceed as the writer was to obtain the sketches. The
-commission was given, and the subjects desired carefully indicated
-to the artist, who, by a rapid outline sketch in pencil, showed his
-intelligence and grasp of the subject. The writer, delighted at the
-thought of securing a correct and permanent record of the manners and
-customs of a little-known people, congratulated himself. But, alas!
-he counted his chickens before hatching; for the artist, on coming
-with his next water-color, demanded, and received, a double wage. A
-similar result followed the finishing of each drawing; and though
-the first only cost three shillings, and the second six, the writer
-was reluctantly compelled to stop his commissions, after paying four
-times the price of the first for his third water-color, on the artist
-demanding twenty-four shillings for a fourth—not that the work was
-more, but as he found himself appreciated, the wily painter kept
-to arithmetical progression as his scale of charge; a very simple
-principle, which all artists must devoutly wish they could insist on.
-
-For a reduced copy of a rather celebrated painting, of which the
-figures were life-size, of what might be called, comparatively
-speaking, a Persian old master—for this reduction, in oils, fourteen
-inches by eight, and fairly well done, the charge was a sovereign.
-The piece was painted on a panel. The subject is a royal banqueting
-scene in Ispahan—the date a century and a half ago. The dresses are
-those of the time—the ancient court costume of Persia. The king in a
-brocaded robe is represented seated on a carpet at the head of a room,
-his drinking-cup in his hand; while his courtiers are squatted in two
-rows at the sides of the room, and are also carousing. Minstrels and
-singers occupy the foreground of the picture; and a row of handsome
-dancing-girls form the central group. All the figures are portraits of
-historical personages; and, in the copy, the likenesses are faithfully
-retained.
-
-The palaces of Ispahan are decorated with large oil paintings by the
-most eminent Persian artists of their day. All are life-size, and none
-are devoid of merit. Some are very clever, particularly the likenesses
-of Futteh Ali Shah and his sons, several of whom were strikingly
-like their father. As Futteh Ali Shah had an acknowledged family of
-seventy-two, this latter fact is curious. These paintings are without
-frames, spaces having been made in the walls to receive them. The
-Virgin Mary is frequently represented in these mural paintings; also
-a Mr. Strachey, a young diplomate who accompanied the English mission
-to Persia in the reign of our Queen Elizabeth, is still admired as
-a type of adolescent beauty. He is represented with auburn hair in
-the correct costume of the period; and copies of his portrait are
-still often painted on the pen-cases of amateurs. These pen-cases, or
-_kalamdans_, are the principal occupation of the miniature-painter.
-As one-fourth of the male population of Persia can write, and as each
-man has one or more pen-cases, the artist finds a constant market for
-his wares in their adornment. The pen-case is a box of _papier-mâché_
-eight inches long, an inch and a half broad, and the same deep. Some of
-them, painted by artists of renown, are of great value, forty pounds
-being a common price to pay for such a work of art by a rich amateur.
-Several fine specimens may be seen in the Persian Collection at the
-South Kensington Museum. It is possible to spend a year's hard work
-on the miniatures painted on a pen-case. These are very minute and
-beautiful. The writer possesses a pen-case, painted during the lifetime
-of Futteh Ali Shah, a king of Persia who reigned long and well. All the
-faces—none more than a quarter of an inch in diameter—are likenesses;
-and the long black beard of the king reaching to his waist, is not
-exaggerated, for such beards are common in Persia.
-
-Bookbinding in Persia is an art, and not a trade; and here the flower
-and bird painter finds his employment. Bright bindings of boards
-with a leather back are decorated by the artist, principally with
-presentments of birds and flowers, both being a strange mixture of
-nature and imagination; for if a Persian artist in this branch thinks
-that he can improve on nature in the matter of color, he attempts
-it. The most startling productions are the result; his nightingales
-being birds of gorgeous plumage, and the colors of some of his flowers
-saying much for his imagination. This method of “painting the lily” is
-common in Persia; for the narcissus—bouquets of which form the constant
-ornament in spring of even the poorest homes—is usually “improved” by
-rings of colored paper, silk, or velvet being introduced over the inner
-ring of the petals. Startling floral novelties are the result; and
-the European seeing them for the first time, is invariably deceived,
-and cheated into admiration of what turns out afterwards to be a
-transparent trick. Of course, this system of binding each book in an
-original cover of its own, among a nation so literary as the Persians,
-gives a continuous and healthy impetus to the art of the flower-painter.
-
-Enamelling in Persia is a dying art. The best enamels are done on
-gold, and often surrounded by a ring or frame of transparent enamel,
-grass-green in color. This green enamel, or rather transparent paste,
-is supposed to be peculiar to the Persian artist. At times, the gold is
-hammered into depressions, which are filled with designs in enamel on a
-white paste, the spaces between the depressions being burnished gold.
-Large _plaques_ are frequently enamelled on gold for the rich; and
-often the golden water-pipes are decorated with enamels, either alone,
-or in combination with incrusted gems.
-
-Yet another field remains to the Persian artist—that of engraving
-on gold, silver, brass, copper, and iron. Here the work is usually
-artistically good, and always original, no two pieces being alike.
-
-Something must be said about the artist and his studio. Abject poverty
-is the almost universal lot of the Persian artist. He is, however, an
-educated man, and generally well-read. His marvellous memory helps him
-to retain the traditional attributes of certain well-known figures:
-the black-bearded Rustum (the Persian Hercules), and his opponent
-the Deev Suffid or White Demon; Leila and Mujnūn, the latter of whom
-retired to the wilderness for love of the beautiful Leila; and in a
-painfully attenuated state, all his ribs being very apparent, is always
-represented as conversing with the wild beasts, who sit around him
-in various attitudes of respectful attention. Dr. Tanner could never
-hope to reach the stage of interesting emaciation to which the Persian
-artists represent Mujnūn to have attained. Another popular subject is
-that of Solomon in all his glory.
-
-These legends are portrayed with varying art but unquestionable
-spirit, and often much humor; while the poetical legends of the
-mythical history of ancient Persia, full of strange imagery, find apt
-illustrators in the Persian artist. The palmy days of book-illustration
-have departed; the cheap reprints of Bombay have taken away the
-_raison d'être_ of the caligraphist and book-illustrators, and the few
-really great artists who remain are employed by the present Shah in
-illustrating his great copy of the _Arabian Nights_ by miniatures which
-emulate the beauty and detail of the best specimens of ancient monkish
-art, or in making bad copies of European lithographs to “adorn” the
-walls of the royal palaces.
-
-As for the painter's studio, it is usually a bare but light apartment,
-open to the winds, in a corner of which, on a scrap of matting, the
-artist kneels, sitting on his heels. (It tires an oriental to sit
-in a chair.) A tiny table a foot high holds all his materials; his
-paints are mixed on a tile; and his palette is usually a bit of
-broken crockery. His brushes he makes himself. Water-pipe in mouth—a
-luxury that even an artist can afford, in a country where tobacco
-is fourpence a pound—his work held on his knee in his left hand,
-without a mahl-stick or the assistance of a color-man, the artist
-squats contentedly at his work. He is ambitious, proud of his powers,
-and loves his art for art's sake. Generally, he does two classes of
-work—the one the traditional copies of the popular scenes before
-described, or the painting on pen cases—by this he lives; the other
-purely ideal, in which he deals with art from a higher point of view,
-and practises the particular branch which he affects.
-
-As a painter of likenesses, the Persian seldom succeeds in flattering.
-The likeness is assuredly obtained; but the sitter is usually “guyed,”
-and a caricature is generally the result. This is not the case in the
-portraits of females, and in the ideal heads of women and children.
-The large dreamy eye and long lashes, the full red lips, and naturally
-high color, the jetty or dark auburn locks (a color caused by the use
-of henna, a dye) of the Persian women in their natural luxuriance, lend
-themselves to the successful production of the peculiarly felicitous
-representation of female beauty in which the Persian artist delights.
-Accuracy in costume is highly prized, and the minutiæ of dress are
-indicated with much aptness, the varied pattern of a shawl or scarf
-being rendered with almost Chinese detail. Beauty of the brunette
-type is the special choice of the artist and amateur, and “salt”—as a
-high-colored complexion is termed—is much admired.
-
-Like the ancient Byzantine artist, the Persian makes a free use of
-gold and silver in his work. When wishing to represent the precious
-metals, he first gilds or silvers the desired portion of the canvas or
-panel, and then with a fine brush puts in shadows, etc. In this way a
-strangely magnificent effect is produced. The presentments of mailed
-warriors are done in this way; and the jewelled chairs, thrones, and
-goblets in which the oriental mind delights. Gilt backgrounds, too, are
-not uncommon, and their effect is far from displeasing.
-
-The painting of portraits of Mohammed, Ali, Houssein, and Hassan—the
-last three, relatives of the Prophet, and the principal martyred
-saints in the Persian calendar, is almost a trade in itself, though
-the representation of the human form is contrary to the Mohammedan
-religion, and the saints are generally represented as veiled and
-faceless figures. Yet in these particular cases, custom has overridden
-religious law, and the _Schamayūl_ (or portrait of Ali) is common.
-He is represented as a portly personage of swarthy hue; his dark and
-scanty beard, which is typical of the family of Mohammed, crisply
-curled; his hand is grasping his sword; and he is usually depicted as
-wearing a green robe and turban (the holy color of the _Seyyuds_ or
-descendants of the Prophet). A nimbus surrounds his head; and he is
-seated on an antelope's skin, for the Persians say that skins were used
-in Arabia before the luxury of carpets was known there.
-
-Humble as is the lot of the Persian artist, he expects to be treated by
-the educated with consideration, and would be terribly hurt at any want
-of civility. One well-known man, Agha Abdullah of Shiraz, generally
-insisted on regaling the writer with coffee, which he prepared himself
-when his studio was visited. To have declined this would have been
-to give mortal offence. On one of these visits, his little brasier
-of charcoal was nearly extinguished, and the host had recourse to a
-curious kind of fire-igniter, reviver, or rather steam-blast, that
-as yet is probably undescribed in books. It was of hammered copper,
-and had a date on it that made it three hundred years old. It was
-fairly well modelled; and this curious domestic implement was in the
-similitude of a small duck preening its breast; consequently, the open
-beak, having a spout similar to that of a tea-kettle, was directed
-downwards. The Persian poured an ounce or so of water into the copper
-bird, and placed it on the expiring embers. Certainly the result
-was surprising. In a few minutes the small quantity of water boiled
-fiercely; a jet of steam was emitted from the open bill, and very
-shortly the charcoal was burning brightly. The water having all boiled
-away, the Persian triumphantly removed this scientific bellows with his
-tongs, and prepared coffee.
-
-No mention has been made of the curious bazaar pictures, sold for a few
-pence. These cost little, but are very clever, and give free scope for
-originality, which is the great characteristic of the Persian artist.
-They consist of studies of town-life, ideal pictures of dancing-girls,
-and such-like. All are bold, ingenious, and original. But bazaar
-pictures would take a chapter to themselves, and occupy more space than
-can be spared.—_Chambers's Journal._
-
-
-
-
-HOW INSECTS BREATHE.
-
-BY THEODORE WOOD.
-
-Perhaps in the entire range of insect anatomy there is no point more
-truly marvellous than the manner in which the respiratory system is
-modified, in order to suit it to the peculiar requirements of its
-owners.
-
-In many ways the structure of the insects is wonderful enough. They are
-gifted with muscles of extraordinary strength, and are yet destitute
-of bones to which those muscles can be attached; they possess a
-circulatory system, and are yet without a heart; they perform acts
-involving the exercise of certain mental qualities, and are yet without
-a brain. But, more remarkable still, they breathe atmospheric air
-without the aid of lungs.
-
-And this for a very good reason. It can be neither too often nor too
-strongly insisted upon that, throughout animated nature, Structure
-is in all cases subservient to Habit. If in any animal we find some
-singular development in bodily form, we may be quite sure that there
-is a peculiarity in the life-history which renders such development of
-particular service, and so may often gain very complete information
-with regard to the habits by a mere glance at external characteristics.
-If, for example, the general shape is cylindrical, the toes webbed, and
-the hair set closely against the body, we may safely conclude that the
-animal is one intended for a life in the water. If the form is conical,
-the limbs short, and the claws large and strong, that it is one which
-burrows in the earth. If the jaws are large and massive, the teeth long
-and sharply pointed, and the muscular power is concentrated principally
-into the fore-parts of the body, that it is a beast of prey. And so on
-with minor details.
-
-And this rule holds equally good in the case of the insects, which are
-devoid of lungs for the very sufficient reason that those organs are
-necessarily weighty, and consequently unsuitable to the requirements
-of beings which are in great measure creatures of air. In all animals
-intended for a more or less aerial existence every particle of
-superfluous weight must be dispensed with, in order that the strain
-upon the muscles of flight may be reduced to the least possible
-degree. Take the bats, and see how the skeleton has been attenuated
-until it scarcely seems capable of affording the necessary rigidity
-to the frame. Take the birds, and see how a large portion of the body
-is occupied by supplementary air-cells, which permeate the very bones
-themselves, and thus minimize the weight without detracting from the
-strength. And so also with the insects, but in a different manner.
-
-For in them the very lungs themselves are taken away, and replaced by a
-respiratory system of great simplicity, and yet of wonderful intricacy,
-which penetrates to every part of the structure, and simultaneously
-aerates the whole of the blood contained in the body. In other words,
-an insect is one large Lung.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If we take any moderately large insect, say a wasp or a hornet, we
-can see, even with the naked eye, that a series of small spot-like
-marks runs along either side of the body. These apparent spots, which
-are generally eighteen or twenty in number, are in fact the apertures
-through which air is admitted into the system, and are generally formed
-in such a manner that no extraneous matter can by any possibility find
-entrance. Sometimes they are furnished with a pair of horny lips, which
-can be opened and closed at the will of the insect; in other cases
-they are densely fringed with stiff, interlacing bristles, forming a
-filter, which allows air, and air alone, to pass. But the apparatus, of
-whatever character it may be, is always so wonderfully perfect in its
-action that it has been found impossible to inject the body of a dead
-insect with even so subtle a medium as spirits of wine, although the
-subject was first immersed in the fluid, and then placed beneath the
-receiver of an air-pump.
-
-The apertures in question, which are technically known as “spiracles,”
-communicate with two large breathing-tubes, or “tracheæ,” which extend
-through the entire length of the body. From these main tubes are given
-off innumerable branches, which run in all directions, and continually
-divide and subdivide until a wonderfully intricate network is formed,
-pervading every part of the structure, and penetrating even to the
-antennæ and claws.
-
-Physiologists tell us that if in the human frame the nerves, the
-muscles, and the veins and arteries could be separated from one
-another, while retaining their own relative positions, each would be
-found to possess the perfect human form. In other words, there would be
-the nerve-man, the muscle-man, and the blood-vessel-man, as well as the
-bone-man which supplies the framework of the whole. In the same way we
-may speak of the tracheal, or breathing-tube insect; for the two main
-tubes and the endless ramifications of their branches, if they could
-be detached from the surrounding tissues while themselves suffering no
-displacement, would exhibit to us the form of the insect from which
-they were taken, and that so exactly that in many cases we should
-almost be able to recognize the species.
-
-In the smaller branches of these air-vessels considerable variety
-is to be found. Some retain their tubular character to their very
-termination. Others assume a curious beaded form, dilating at short
-intervals into small chambers; while yet others abruptly resolve
-themselves into sac-like reservoirs, in which a comparatively large
-quantity of air is stored up. From the larger vessels are thrown off
-vast numbers of exceedingly delicate filaments, so small that a very
-powerful microscope is necessary in order to detect them, which float
-loosely in the blood, and furnish it with the constant supply of oxygen
-necessary for its purification.
-
-Now, we may well ask ourselves how it is that these tubes, which
-are of almost inconceivable delicacy, should remain open during the
-various movements of which the flexible body is capable. Why is it, for
-instance, that the air-supply of the lower leg is not cut off when the
-limb is bent at the knee-joint? or from the head, when that important
-part of the frame is tucked away beneath the body? How does the
-Earwig contrive to breathe while folding its wings by the aid of its
-tail-forceps? or many of the Cocktail-beetles when curled up in their
-peculiar attitude of repose?
-
-The answer to these questions is simple enough, and may be discovered
-by a glance at one of the most familiar of our own inventions—the
-flexible gas-tube. This preserves its tubular form no matter to what
-degree it may be bent or twisted, for coiled closely within it is a
-spiral wire, which obliges the interior of the pipe to retain its
-diameter almost unaltered alike when straight or curved. And as with
-this, so with the tracheæ of the insect, whose walls are formed of a
-double layer, the one lying inside the other, while between the two,
-and surrounding the inner, is coiled a fine but very strong elastic
-thread, whose convolutions allow the vessel to be bent in any required
-direction without losing its cylindrical form. By the exercise of a
-little care the anatomist can often unwind an inch or two of this
-spiral thread from a single branch of the tracheæ of a tolerably large
-insect, so closely is it coiled, and so elastic its character.
-
-It will thus be seen that each expansion of the respiratory muscles
-causes the air to rush to every part of the body, the entire bulk of
-the blood being consequently aerated at each respiration. This fact is
-a most important one, for, as it is not necessary that the blood should
-be brought to a definite centre, as in the higher animals, before it
-can be re-vivified, and then despatched through another series of
-vessels upon its errand of invigorating the frame, the necessity for
-a circulatory system is almost wholly at an end, and a large amount
-of weight consequently dispensed with. Insects have neither veins nor
-arteries, one principal vessel running along the back, and the blood
-passing slowly through this, and flowing between the various organs of
-the body until it again enters it at the opposite extremity to that
-from which it emerged.
-
-Nor is this all. With ourselves, as with the higher animals in general,
-nearly one-half of the blood, the venous, is always effete and useless,
-requiring to pass through the lungs before it can again be rendered
-fit for service. When this is vivified and pumped back by the heart
-into the system, that which was before arterial becomes venous in its
-turn; and so on. But not in the case of the insects. The whole bulk of
-their blood is arterial, if we may use the expression in speaking of
-animals which do not possess a vascular system. In other words, being
-incessantly vivified throughout the body, owing to the comprehensive
-character of the respiratory apparatus, no portion of it becomes at
-any time effete from the exhaustion of the contained oxygen. Blood
-so thoroughly and continually aerated, therefore, can practically
-perform double work, and need be far less in volume than in beings
-whose circulation is conducted upon different principles. The tracheal
-structure, consequently, while itself detracting from rather than
-adding to the substance of the body, permits of the abolition, not
-only of lungs, but also of veins and arteries and of a considerable
-proportion of the blood, so that the weight of the insect is reduced to
-the least possible degree.
-
-There is yet another point to be considered, and that a very curious
-and at present unexplained one. Upon careful investigation we find that
-the tracheæ extend beyond the limits of the circulation, showing that
-they must serve some secondary purpose in addition to that generally
-attributed to them. For nature provides nothing in vain, and would not
-without good and sufficient reason have carried the breathing-tubes
-farther than necessary for their primary object of regenerating the
-blood. As to what this purpose may be, however, we have no certain
-knowledge, and can only conjecture that it is in some way connected
-with the olfactory system. It is well known that the sense of scent
-is in many insects very highly developed, enabling them to ascertain
-the position of their food while yet at a considerable distance.
-Burying-beetles and blowflies, for instance, will detect the faintest
-odor of putrid carrion, and will wing their way without hesitation to
-the spot whence it proceeds. Ivy-blossom, again, will attract almost
-every butterfly and moth in the neighborhood, and this clearly by
-reason of its peculiar fragrance.
-
-It may be, therefore, that the perfection of the organs of scent in
-insects is due to the fact that they are distributed throughout the
-body, instead of being localized as is the case with animals higher in
-the scale. That they must be connected with the respiratory apparatus
-would seem, judging by analogy, to be indisputable, for, so far as we
-know, an odor cannot be appreciated unless the air containing it be
-allowed to pass more or less rapidly over the olfactory nerves. And in
-no other part of an insect's structure could this requisite so well be
-observed as in the tracheæ themselves, through which a stream of air is
-continually passing, and which penetrate to the remotest parts of the
-body.
-
-With so wonderful a respiratory system, it naturally follows that an
-insect must be particularly susceptible to the effects of any poisonous
-vapor, which, being immediately carried to all parts of the body, must
-speedily be attended by fatal results. And this is the case in a very
-marked degree. A moth or beetle, which will live for hours, and even
-days, after receiving an injury which would cause instant death to
-a more highly organized being, will yet succumb in a few seconds to
-the fumes of ether or chloroform, owing to the fact that the deadly
-influence is simultaneously exerted upon all the nerve-centres of the
-body, instead of being confined to one or two alone.
-
-So much for the respiratory system of insects as a group. We have seen
-how air is admitted into the body, how the entire bulk of the blood
-is continuously aerated, and how every particle of needless weight
-has carefully been dispensed with. There are many species, however,
-whose mode of life renders necessary certain further developments, in
-order that respiration may be carried on under circumstances which
-would otherwise render it impossible. Such, for example, are the
-various aquatic insects, which, while spending the greater part of
-their existence beneath the surface of the water, must yet be enabled
-to command a continual supply of atmospheric air. They are not, as a
-rule, furnished with gills like the fish, for it is necessary that they
-should be able to leave their ponds and streams at will, and become for
-the time terrestrial or aerial beings, subject to the same conditions
-as others of their class. But they are, nevertheless, provided with
-certain modifications of structure, which enable them to breathe with
-equal ease, whether submerged in the water, crawling upon the ground,
-or flying through the air.
-
-Even in these modifications there is considerable variety, dependent
-in all cases upon the requirements of the individual species. The
-Water-beetles, for instance, which must be able to lurk concealed among
-the weeds, &c., until a victim comes within their reach, and then to
-pursue and overtake it, carry down with them a supply of air in a
-kind of reservoir, situated between the body and the wing-cases. The
-former of these is concave and the latter convex, so that a chamber
-of considerable size is formed, containing sufficient for their
-requirements during a tolerably long period of time. And in these
-insects the spiracles, instead of being situated along the sides of
-the body, are placed upon the upper surface of the abdomen, so that
-they open into the air-chamber itself, and allow the respiration to be
-carried on without the slightest difficulty or inconvenience.
-
-There is only one drawback to this arrangement, and that is, that the
-increased buoyance prevents the insect from remaining beneath the water
-excepting at the expense of active exertion, unless it can find some
-submerged object to which to cling. Even this disadvantage, however,
-is more apparent than real, for, while on the watch for prey, it is
-necessary for the insect to remain as motionless as possible, and,
-when engaged in swimming, the peculiar action of the oar-like limbs
-neutralizes the tendency to rise towards the surface.
-
-Upon an average, a water-beetle remains from fifteen to twenty
-minutes without requiring to breathe; this period being capable of
-considerable extension should occasion arise. I have forced one of
-these insects, for instance, to stay beneath the surface for nearly
-an hour and a half, by alarming it as often as it attempted to rise.
-Generally speaking, however, before the first half hour is over, the
-beetle allows itself to float to the surface, protrudes the tips of
-the wing-cases, and expels the exhausted air from the cavity beneath
-them; a fresh supply is then taken in, and the insect again dives, the
-entire operation occupying barely a second of time.
-
-The Water Scorpion affords us an instance of a perfectly different
-structure.
-
-Here we have a being, feeding upon living prey, which it must capture
-for itself, and yet sluggish and slow of foot. By stratagem alone,
-therefore, can it hope to succeed, and it accordingly lies hidden among
-the dead leaves, sticks, &c., at the bottom of the water until some
-luckless insect passes within reach of its jaw-like fore-limbs. But
-this may not occur for hours, and it is imperatively necessary that no
-alarm should be given by frequent journeys to the surface in search of
-air. So, the extremity of the body is furnished with a curious organ
-consisting of two long filaments, which are, in reality, tubular, and
-which serve to convey air to the spiracles. The extreme tips of these
-project slightly above the surface when the insect is at rest at the
-bottom of the pond, so that respiration can be carried on without
-difficulty, and without necessitating the slightest change of position.
-
-A still more curious structure, although of very much the same
-character, is afforded us by the grubs of the common Drone-fly. These
-are inhabitants of the thickest and most fetid mud, dwelling entirely
-beneath its surface, and consequently cut off from all personal
-communication with the atmosphere. But from the end of the body
-proceeds a long tube, which can be lengthened or shortened at will,
-somewhat after the manner of a telescope, and which conveys air to the
-spiracles just as do the tail filaments of the water scorpion. Unable
-to change their position, these “rat-tailed maggots,” as they are
-popularly called, are yet independent of any alteration in the depth of
-the water above them, for the air-tube can be instantly regulated to
-the required length, and so insure an uninterrupted supply of air.
-
-Yet another system we find employed in the case of the grub of the
-Dragon-fly, which stands almost alone among insects in its power of
-extracting the necessary oxygen from the water itself. This is one of
-the most rapacious of living beings, ever upon the watch for prey, and
-securing its victims, not by stealth and fraud, but by open attack.
-Its swimming powers, consequently, are of a very high order, and are
-due to an organ which serves the double purpose of locomotion and
-respiration, and which is one of the most wonderful pieces of structure
-to be found in the whole of the insect world.
-
-If a dragon-fly grub be even casually examined, a curious five-pointed
-appendage will be noticed at the extremity of the body. If these
-five points be carefully separated they will be seen to surround the
-entrance to a tubular passage, of about the diameter of an ordinary
-pin. This passage runs throughout almost the entire length of the body,
-and, by the expansion and contraction of the abdominal muscles, can be
-opened and closed at will.
-
-When open, of course, it is instantly filled with water; when closed,
-the contents are driven out with some little force. Consequently, the
-action of the ejected fluid upon the surrounding water drives the
-insect sharply forward, just as a sky-rocket rises into the air owing
-to the action of the expelled gases upon the atmosphere. As soon as the
-effect of the first stroke is at an end a second contraction of the
-body takes place, and the operation is repeated as often as necessary.
-The water, while in the swimming tube, however, is exhausted of its
-oxygen, for the entrances to the respiratory system are inside instead
-of outside the body, and act in much the same manner as do the gills
-of a fish. The insect, therefore, is not obliged to visit the surface
-of the water at all, and can continue to search for prey without
-interruption.
-
-Such are some of the many modifications brought about in insect
-structure by the requirements of the respiratory organs alone. Each,
-as will be noticed, is specially adapted to individual wants, and each
-is absolutely perfect in its own way, insuring a continual supply of
-oxygen for the purification of the blood, whatever the conditions under
-which life may be carried on.—_Good Words._
-
-
-
-
-PIERRE'S MOTTO:
-
-A CHACUN SELON SON TRAVAIL.
-
-A TALK IN A PARISIAN WORKSHOP ABOUT THE UNEQUAL DISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH.
-
-“_A chacun selon son travail_, To each man according to his work,
-that's my way of looking at it. Go by that motto and things will soon
-come right.”
-
-I heard this said, with great emphasis, by Pierre Nigaud to some of his
-mates as I entered the workshop. I went there every month to collect
-the contributions to a Provident Insurance Club, to which several of
-the men belonged. Pierre was on the whole an industrious as well as
-clever workman, and had joined the club readily, as he thought it right
-to save something for his wife and children, and to provide for a rainy
-day, as the saying is.
-
-I had observed, however, that Pierre on the last occasion when I saw
-him was less frank than he used to be, and did not hand over his money
-with the same cheerful goodwill as formerly. What was the cause I did
-not know, but he soon made it plain. He had been listening to some
-plausible people, or reading some shallow treatises that made him
-discontented with his lot.
-
-“I was just saying when you came in,” he began, “_A chacun selon son
-travail_, To each man according to his work. Don't you think that a
-good motto?”
-
-“Well, it sounds good, but it depends how you apply it, and what you
-are talking about.”
-
-“I was talking, I and my mates, about the great inequality among
-people. Riches are distributed in a very strange and, I say, unjust
-fashion. Is it not unjust that, while so many poor fellows have to work
-hard to gain a few pence a day, there are wealthy Nabobs who haul in
-gold by shovelfuls? I read in a paper the other day that the English
-Duke of Westminster has an income of twenty millions of francs, which
-brings him at least 50,000 francs a day!”
-
-“Quite true, and he is far from being the most wealthy man you might
-name, I believe the Californian Mackay has about seventy millions of
-income. Rothschild, of Frankfort, left more than a milliard. Astor
-and Vanderbilt, of New York, and other millionaires on both sides the
-ocean, have untold wealth.”
-
-“There, you see,” said Pierre; “and what appears to me the worst
-wrong of all is that these huge incomes belong to people who do next
-to nothing, while poverty is oftenest the lot of those who work and
-toil the hardest. I call this downright injustice. _A chacun selon son
-travail._ The riches ought to be with those that work. That's my way of
-looking at it.”
-
-“All right, Pierre,” said I; “there is a good deal of truth in what you
-say. It is quite true that in regard to the distribution of wealth, as
-in regard to many other things, this world is far from being perfect.
-But do you think that if you had the re-arrangement of society, and the
-redistribution of riches, you could proceed on some other and better
-plan?”
-
-“Certainly. I believe, without any presumption, that I could,” said
-Pierre. “What seems to me difficult is not to make things better, but
-to make them any worse than they are now!”
-
-One of the workmen here said that nothing was simpler than to take the
-surplus wealth of these rich men, and divide it amongst the deserving
-poor.
-
-“That plan is just a little too simple,” I remarked. “All the millions
-of a Rothschild would go a very little way, if divided among the
-population of Paris alone, and we should soon have to resort to other
-schemes to redress the ever-renewed inequalities. No; no; what I want
-Pierre to show us is some better system of society, and he thinks he
-has the key to the problem in his favorite motto, _A chacun selon son
-travail_. But just let me remind you that in ancient times there was
-a king of Spain who was a bit of an astronomer; and looking at the
-heavens, and wondering at the complicated movements of the stars, he
-said that if he had been consulted in the matter he could have made a
-much better and simpler arrangement. Your purpose is not so ambitious
-and presumptuous as his, for the heavens are the work of the Almighty,
-who has imposed upon Nature certain fixed laws; whereas the laws of
-society are the work of men, and men are liable to err. Let us then
-hear what improvement you can suggest in the laws and usages which
-regulate the distribution of wealth.”
-
-Pierre was somewhat taken aback, for he felt that the existing
-arrangements of society were very complex, and it was not easy to
-determine where the reform should begin.
-
-“Well,” said I, “let us suppose that a number of persons were set on
-shore upon an island, where none had any rights or property beyond the
-others. Let us suppose that there are as yet no laws, that there is no
-government, no past history: all are free and equal, and you have full
-power to organise the distribution of wealth in this new society, and
-to decide what is to be the share of each. Come now, you have a _carte
-blanche_, let us hear what you would do.”
-
-“Well,” said Pierre, “I should begin by deciding that every one was to
-do what he would and what he could, and that every one should keep what
-he was able by his work and industry to obtain. _A chacun selon son
-travail_: behold my fundamental rule!”
-
-“It is an excellent rule,” I said, “and I do not think any one could
-find a better. It appears to me to be just, and also eminently
-practical, for it would stimulate every one to produce by his industry
-as much as he could. I see by this that you are no advocate of
-Communism.”
-
-“Certainly not,” said Pierre. “Communism is a very good thing in a
-family, where every one exerts himself to work for those he loves, and
-accepts without murmur his share of work, certain that the mother, or
-whoever is housekeeper, manages the common purse with thrift, and in
-the interest of all. But in a large society, I do not think that men
-are equally willing to exert themselves for those whom they have no
-knowledge of and no special attachment to. Besides, in Communism under
-the State, the manager holding the purse strings would be no other than
-the Government, and I would not have confidence in its management being
-wise and economical.”
-
-“I quite agree with you. But let us return to your plan. After
-establishing your principle, “to each one the produce of his labor,”
-what would you do then?”
-
-“Nothing at all; every one would then stand on his own bottom. He that
-works well would have sufficient, and he who did no work would have
-nothing.”
-
-“You do not imagine,” I observed, “that you would obtain equality by
-these conditions? Since every one has to take his part in the work, it
-is evident that these parts will be small or great, according as each
-is industrious or not. You would soon come to have in your new society
-the rich and the poor.”
-
-“Well, perhaps; but at all events there would be none too rich or too
-poor.”
-
-“How do you know that? Here are two families: in one the habits of
-work, of order, of economy, are hereditary; the other is given, from
-father to son, to idleness, improvidence, and dissipation. The distance
-that separates these families, small at first, must go on increasing,
-till in the natural course of things, sooner or later, there would come
-to be the same inequality as between Rothschild and a beggar. It would
-only be a question of time.”
-
-Pierre's companions, who were listening attentively to the discussion,
-here murmured assent, or what would correspond to the “Hear, hear!” of
-more formal debates. Pierre, however, merely remarked that this result
-might seem opposed to his views, but that he nevertheless accepted it;
-“because,” said he, “in this case the inequality of riches would at
-least be the result of work and of the efforts of each worker. There
-would be no injustice.”
-
-“Pardon me, Pierre, but I think that your motto is still causing you
-to cherish some illusions. Let me show you my way of looking at it. _A
-chacun selon son travail_, you say, To every one the product of his
-own industry. But what is the proprietor to do with the product of his
-labor? He will no doubt sell all that is over and above what he needs
-for his own use, and the price of what is sold will form his income.
-But the price of things depends on a variety of conditions independent
-of our personal labor and our own will; such for instance, as the
-vicissitudes of seasons and the variations of the markets. Out of a
-difference of ten francs in the price of wine may result the fortune
-or the ruin of a proprietor, and that proves nothing as to his having
-himself labored well or ill. The revenue or net profit is rarely in
-exact proportion to the labor bestowed, in farming or vine-growing or
-any other industry. What we call chance will always play its part in
-the affairs of this world, and in the new world which you are planning
-you cannot hinder Fortune from dispensing her favors in an unequal
-fashion; it is not without reason that she is represented with a
-bandage over her eyes!”
-
-“Ah, bah!” exclaimed Pierre; “you disconcert me with your suppositions.
-What do you want? I firmly believe that in my colony, as everywhere,
-there will be good and bad luck, but while the chances are equal for
-all, and there is no place for wrong-doing or trickery, I console
-myself. At least you will admit that my principle, _A chacun le produit
-de son travail_, will have this good result, that it will render
-impossible the existence of rich idle people who pass their life in
-doing nothing.”
-
-“Are you quite sure of that, Pierre? If any one after working ten or
-twenty years has produced enough property to suffice for his wants
-during the remainder of his days, do you pretend to hinder him from
-spending in his own way, in idleness if he pleases, what he had amassed
-by his labors?”
-
-“Certainly not, because such a one would be living on the product of
-his own toil. Let a man rest in the evening after having worked hard
-in the morning, and let him live in ease in his old age after having
-produced enough by the toil of his youth; I see no harm in that. I
-have no wish to condemn the members of my colony to forced labor in
-perpetuity. The only idlers that I wish to exclude are those who live
-without ever having worked at all or produced anything—the _rentiers_,
-as they call them, or idle people, who live on their income, or the
-interest of their money.”
-
-“Stop now, Pierre; do you admit that a man who has obtained anything by
-his labor has the right to do what he pleases with it?”
-
-“Assuredly.”
-
-“Here is a man who has made a loaf of bread. You admit his right to
-eat it all if he is hungry, or to set part of it aside if he has not
-appetite at the time for all of it, or even to throw some of it away,
-as he pleases.”
-
-“Yes, it is a consequence of my principle, _A chacun le produit de son
-travail_. He who creates wealth has the right to dispose of it as he
-pleases. But what has that to do with your argument?”
-
-“Just this. If he who produces a thing can do what he pleases with
-it, he can surely give it where he pleases. If, then, it suits me to
-make every day a loaf for you, and to give it to you; still more, if
-it pleases me to give to you out of my property or to bequeath to you
-after my death enough bread, or, what comes to the same thing, enough
-money to support you during your life, you will have acquired the
-means of walking about with your hands in your pockets like an idle
-gentleman. You will, in fact, have become a _rentier_.”
-
-Never,” said Pierre, “never. If I allowed such parasites to exist in my
-new society it would be no better than the old.”
-
-“Then don't talk any more about your motto, _A chacun le produit de
-son travail_. If you adopt this principle you must adopt also its
-consequences, whether you like them or not. If, according to your
-system, you admit to every one the right of disposing of the fruit of
-his labor, you must admit the right to receive as well as to give.
-Where the worker is master of his own property it depends on him
-whether he will create a _rentier_, and you cannot prevent him except
-by decreeing that he is incapable of disposing of what belongs to
-him. Beware of what must happen otherwise. If in your new society you
-prevented parents from giving or leaving to their children the property
-they have amassed, there would be risk of their amassing far less or
-of dissipating what they had already been able to accumulate by their
-industry and thrift, which would be a great loss for all. We must
-allow, in fact, and it is to the honor of human nature, that there are
-very many in this world who work more and save more for their children
-and for others rather than for themselves.”
-
-“Well, sir, if in my new society there must eventually be rich
-and poor, workers and non-workers: if the portion of each is not
-necessarily proportioned to their labor then how, I wish to know, would
-this new society which I have taken such trouble to plan and organise,
-how would it differ from the society in which we now live?”
-
-“In nothing at all, my good friend, and this it just what I wished to
-demonstrate to you. You see that the world in which we live is, after
-all, not so badly organised, seeing that the new one which you have
-tried to create on better principles, as you imagined, turns out, at
-the end of the account, to be an exact reproduction of the existing
-system.”—_Leisure Hour._
-
-
-
-
-BEHIND THE SCENES.
-
-BY F. C. BURNAND.
-
-
-During the past year there has been a considerable amount of
-discussion, within the circumference of a comparatively inconsiderable
-circle, as to the social position of the professional actor. It is
-a subject that crops up from time to time, attracting more or less
-attention to itself, from those outside the boundary, according to
-whatever may happen to be the prevalent artistic development, or the
-latest fashionable craze. The tone of the disputants and the weight
-of their individual character must, of course, be taken into account.
-The actor is of all professors of any kind of art the one who is most
-before the public. The result of his study is ephemeral: “he struts
-and frets his hour upon the stage and then is heard no more,” though
-nowadays the strutting and fretting are not by any means limited to
-the hour upon the stage; and at the present time there seems to be
-some anxiety on the part of the children of Thespis to obtain such
-an authoritative definition of their status, as shall put their
-position in society above all question, by placing them on a level
-with the members of the recognised professions. It is asserted that
-the professional actor is far differently situated now from what he
-was fifty, or even thirty years ago. Actor and actress are, it is
-pointed out, received everywhere, petted, fêted, lionized, and made
-much of; our young men of birth and education but of limited purse,
-take to the stage, professionally, as a honorable means of earning
-their livelihood, just as the youngest son of a good, but impoverished
-family, used to be sent into the Church in order to hold a family
-living. Further, it has been said that for our young ladies to go on
-the stage is not now considered, as heretofore, a disgrace, but, on
-the contrary, rather a plume in their bonnet. Altogether it may be
-fairly inferred that there has recently been a movement theatrewards,
-favorable to the social prospects of the professional actor. But has it
-been anything more than this? Is the actor's calling one whit nearer
-being recognised as on a social equality with the regular professions
-than it was fifty years ago?
-
-Throughout this article I shall use the word “society” in its widest
-and most comprehensive acceptation, except of course where its
-limitation is expressly stated.
-
-A “status in society” means a certain standing among one's fellow
-subjects, fixed by law, recognised by traditional usage, and
-acknowledged by every one, from the highest to the lowest. Formerly, it
-must be admitted, that as one of the “rogues and vagabonds” by Act of
-Parliament the actor, _quâ_ actor, had no more status in society than
-the professional beggar with whom he was unjustly classed.
-
- “The strolling tribe, a despicable race,
- Like wandering Arabs, shift from place to place.”
-
-And even now, when this blot on our statute-book has been erased,
-a respectable theatrical company, travelling in the provinces, is
-described in the law courts as “a company of strolling players.”
-Undoubtedly, in a liberal age, the actor's disabilities have been
-removed; but is he not asking for what is an impossibility from the
-very nature of the case, when he advances a claim for the recognition
-of his “calling” as on an equality with the acknowledged professions,
-which, of themselves, confer a certain honorable _status_ on their
-members, stamping them, so far, gentlemen? A man who is a gentleman
-by birth and education is, as Mrs. Micawber phrases it, “eligible”
-for the best society; and he can only forfeit his social position by
-misconduct. Now, one question is, does “going on the stage” imply
-forfeiture of social position? To consider this impartially we must
-get entirely away from Leo Hunter associations and cliques established
-on the mutual-admiration principle. The test cases are soon and easily
-put. Let us suppose the case of the son of an impoverished peer. He
-cannot afford to be idle. He has a liking for the bar: he passes his
-examination and becomes a barrister; or he has an inclination for
-the Church, and there being a family living vacant, and plenty of
-interest to get him on, he takes orders. In either case does he forfeit
-his social position? Certainly not: if anything, he improves it by
-becoming a member of an honorable and dignified profession. Supposing
-he has money, and prefers soldiering or sailoring to doing absolutely
-nothing, does he forfeit his social position by becoming an officer?
-Certainly not: on the contrary he improves his already good social
-status. I maintain that, _prima facie_, for a man to be an officer,
-a barrister, or a clergyman, is in itself a passport to any English
-society. Wherever he is personally unknown, it is assumed that he is
-a gentleman, until the contrary is proved; and this assumption is on
-the strength of his profession only. Let the rank of our hypothetical
-peer's son be subsequently discovered, and for that representative
-portion of society which has “entertained an angel unawares,” he has
-the recommendation of his nobility _plus_ the social position implied
-by his profession.
-
-But how if the son of our “poor nobleman” have a taste for theatricals,
-and, after being at Eton and Oxford, determine on “adopting the stage
-as a profession,” or, as it might be more correctly put, “in lieu of
-a profession.” What will his noble father and his relatives say to
-this step? Will they be as pleased as if he were going into the army,
-or to the bar, or into the Church? Not exactly. If he became an
-officer, a barrister, or a clergyman, the event would be officially
-notified in due form; but if he went on the stage there would be
-startling paragraphs in the papers announcing “The Son of an Earl on
-the Stage,” “The Honorable Mr. So-and-So has adopted the profession
-of the stage, &c., &c.” “Well, and why not?” some will exclaim; and
-others will commend his pluck, and say, “Quite right too.” I entirely
-agree with them. But the point is, has the young gentleman taken a
-step up the social ladder, or has he gone more than two or three down?
-Has he improved his position, or injured it? Certainly, as matters
-stand, there can be but one answer,—the step he has taken has seriously
-affected the position to which his birth and education entitle him.
-
-As a barrister on circuit I have supposed him received _quâ_ barrister
-with his legal brethren; as an officer, quartered in a garrison town,
-we know he will be received _quâ_ officer, with his brother officers,
-and no questions asked; and I have alluded to the satisfaction that
-will be felt (snobbery of course is taken for granted everywhere)
-when his rank is discovered. But as a player with other players in a
-country town, will he be received by society, it being understood that
-_because_ he is a player, _therefore_ he is a gentleman by birth and
-education? On becoming a soldier, or a barrister, does any one change
-his name? No: but on going “on the stage” it is the rule for any one
-to conceal his identity under some name widely different from his
-own, just as he conceals his individuality behind the footlights with
-cosmetics, burnt cork, and an eccentric wig. When it is ascertained
-who he is, will this same society, which would have received him as a
-barrister, be satisfied and delighted? No, probably scandalised. It
-will be with these simple, old-fashioned persons a foregone conclusion
-that this scion of a noble house must be a loose sort of fellow, and
-they will decide that the less they see of him the better.
-
-There is one reason why the aspirant for Thespian honors (if such he
-really be) should change his name, and that is the chance of failure.
-If he goes on the stage as somebody else, and fails as somebody else,
-very few will hear of it, and he may quit “the boards” none the worse,
-perhaps for the experience; but for some considerable time, until in
-fact he has “lived it down,” he will be very careful to conceal this
-episode in his career from the world at large.
-
-Before getting at the very essence of the difficulty, I will ask in
-what light do our upper-middle class, and upper-lower middle class, and
-the remainder of that form (the public school divisions are useful)
-regard the stage as a means of earning a livelihood?
-
-We must put out of the case entirely all instances of genius. An
-histrionic genius _will_ be an actor, and his success will justify
-his choice. The force of his genius will take him everywhere. Genius
-excuses a multitude of faults and solecisms. We must, too, leave out of
-the question cases of exceptional talent, where there is more than an
-occasional spark of the _feu sacré_. Whether histrionic genius could be
-better utilised than on the stage, may occur to some serious minds with
-a decided anti-theatrical bias. But the histrion for the stage, and the
-stage for the histrion, and we must take the stage as it is for what it
-is, and not for what it is not. Such a reform of the stage, as shall
-give its members something like the status they very properly covet,
-is a matter for future consideration. Let it be understood then—and I
-cannot impress this too often on those who do me the honor of reading
-my contribution towards the discussion,—that I am only speaking of very
-ordinary men and women taking to the stage as a means of earning their
-livelihood. The men first; it is not yet awhile _place aux dames_, when
-professions are concerned.
-
-Whatever theatrical biography I have taken up, I can call to mind
-but very few instances of a man going on the stage with the full
-approbation of his relatives. Let his parents be small or large
-tradesmen, civil servants, clerks in the City, no matter what, they
-rarely took kindly to their son “going on the stage.” It was so: is it
-not so now? The bourgeois is as dead against his son becoming an actor
-as ever he was. Scratch the British bourgeois and you'll come upon the
-puritan.
-
-Supposing a tradesman, free from narrow prejudices, and theatrically
-inclined, a regular theatre-goer in fact,—will he be one whit more
-favorable to his son's becoming an actor? No: rather the contrary. He
-will not indeed regard him as going straight to a place unmentionable,
-as probably he will not consider the religious bearings of the
-“vocation” at all, but he will not give the youth his blessing, and he
-may contemplate omitting his name from his will. Supposing this same
-son had told his father that he wanted to be a barrister, and in order
-to do so he should like, as a first step, to serve as a clerk in a
-solicitor's office, wouldn't the old tradesman be pleased? Certainly.
-He might, indeed, prove to the lad that if he would stick to the
-business he would be better off for a certainty, but, all the same, the
-youth's aspirations would give his parent considerable pleasure. And,
-to be brief, here is a case which will bring the question directly home
-to every one; given equality in every other respect, and which would
-be preferred as a son-in-law, the ordinary actor, or the briefless
-barrister?
-
-The question of the social status of the stage is still more important
-as affecting ladies who have to earn their livelihood. At the present
-day there are more chances of suitable employment for educated,
-respectably-connected girls than there were fifty years ago. As yet,
-however, the demand exceeds the supply. Few occupations insure to
-successful ladies such good pay as stage-playing; but, as in the
-previous instances, “on the spear side,” so now we must consider the
-case of girls of ordinary intelligence, well brought up, not by any
-means geniuses, with no particular talent, and who have to earn their
-living. If they cannot paint plates and doileys, or copy pictures in
-oils, if they object to any clerkly drudgery that has something menial
-in it, and if, as has been affirmed, they “turn with a sigh of relief
-towards the vista of the stage,” let us see what this “vista” has to
-offer, and on what terms. And to do this we had better take a glance at
-“professional,” _i.e._, “theatrical” life.
-
-What Tom Robertson, whose personal experience of every variety of
-theatrical life was considerable, in his thoroughly English (let
-us be grateful for this, at all events) play of _Caste_ left to the
-imagination, in giving us Eccles as a widower, and bestowing an honest,
-hard-working lover on Polly (this was a mistake, except as a concession
-to respectability, for Polly was never meant to be a Mrs. Sam Gerridge,
-a small tradesman's wife, or, if she were, so much the worse for Sam),
-M. Halévy in his _Monsieur et Madame Cardinal_ has put before his
-readers very plainly. The scenes in Georges Ohnet's _Lise Flueron_ are
-not merely peculiar to the French stage; and only to those who want
-to know the seamy side of a strolling player's life would I recommend
-_A Mummer's Wife_, but not otherwise, as the realism of Mr. Moore's
-story is repulsive. Be it remembered, however, that the best chance for
-girls who seek an engagement at a London theatre, is to travel with a
-company “on tour,” and so learn experience by constant and frequently
-varying practice. “The Stage” is an art, and not a profession, and
-an art which, as a means of obtaining a bare livelihood, is open to
-everybody possessing ordinary natural faculties, offering employment
-without requiring from the applicants any special qualification or
-any certificate from schoolmaster, pastor, or master, and therefore
-it must be the resort of all who, unable or unwilling to do anything
-else, are content to earn their few shillings a week, and to be in
-the same category with Garrick, Macready, Phelps, and Kean; for the
-“super” who earns his money by strict attention to business, and who
-has night after night, for a lifetime, no more than a few lines to say,
-is briefly described in the census as “Actor,” as would be the leading
-tragedian or comedian of the day. He is a supernumerary, _i.e._, a
-supernumerary actor; and a supernumerary, abbreviated to “super,”
-attached to the theatre, he lives and dies. In civil and Government
-offices there are supernumeraries. They are supernumerary clerks, and
-none the less clerks on that account. If taken on to the regular staff
-they cease to be called supernumeraries, and if a super on the stage
-should exhibit decided histrionic talent, he, too, would cease to be a
-super and become an actor, that is, he would drop the qualification
-of “supernumerary.” So for the “extra ladies,” as they are politely
-termed, who are the female supers. As a rule, the extras are a good,
-hard-working people as you will find anywhere. They have “come down”
-to this, and in most cases consider their position as a descent in the
-social scale, no matter what they may have been before. A few may take
-the place for the sake of obtaining “an appearance,” with a view to
-something better; some as a means of honest livelihood, and to help
-the family in its “little house in Stangate;” and others, to whom a
-small salary is not so much an object as to obtain relief from the
-monotony of evenings at home, take to the stage in this, or any other
-capacity, as “extras” in burlesque, in pantomime, or as strengthening a
-chorus; and to these the theatre is a source of profitable amusement.
-These being some of the essential component parts of most theatrical
-companies, would any of us wish our daughters to “go on the stage?”
-
-There can be but one answer to this: No; certainly we would rather
-they did not choose the stage as the means of earning a livelihood.
-But some objector will say, “Surely my daughter need not associate
-with such persons as you describe.” I answer No; she need not off
-the stage, but how is she to avoid it in the theatre? Your daughter,
-my dear sir, is not all at once a Mrs. Siddons; she is a beginner.
-Perhaps she never will be a Mrs. Siddons; perhaps she will never get
-beyond playing a soubrette, or, if she cannot deliver her lines well,
-and has not the fatal gift of beauty, she may, being there only to
-earn her livelihood, be compelled to remain among the extras. At all
-events, she cannot expect to consort in the theatre with the stars and
-with the leading ladies. The manageress may “know her at home,” and do
-everything she can for her; but she cannot be unjust to others, and
-your daughter must dress in the same room with the “extras,” just as
-Lord Tomnoddy, should he choose to take the Queen's shilling, must put
-up with the other privates in barracks. The officers may have “known
-him at home,” but that can't be helped now. Your daughter, my dear
-lady, goes on to the stage in preference to being a governess, to earn
-money to relieve her parents of a burden, and to replenish the family
-purse. Excellent motive! But can you, her mother, always be with her?
-Can you accompany her to rehearsals, and be with her every evening in
-the dressing-room of the theatre, where there are generally about a
-dozen others, more or less according to the accommodation provided by
-the theatre? If you make your companionship a _sine quâ non_, will it
-not prevent any manager from engaging your daughter? They cannot have
-the dressing-rooms full of mothers; they cannot spare the space, and
-mothers cannot be permitted to encumber green-rooms and the “wings.”
-You may have implicit confidence in your child and in her manager
-and manageress, but the latter have something else to do besides
-looking after your daughter. “Some theatres,” you will say, “are more
-respectable than others.” True; but your daughter having to earn her
-daily bread by her profession, cannot select her theatre. It is a hard
-saying, that beggars must not be choosers. Lucky for your daughter
-if she obtains employment in a small theatre where only comedy is
-played.[38] But the chances are against her, and she will be compelled
-to take the first engagement that offers itself, which will probably be
-at some large theatre where there is employment for any number of extra
-ladies, and where the salaries are really very good, if your daughter
-is only showy enough to make herself an attraction. You ask “what sort
-of attraction?” Well, have you any objection to her appearing as a
-page in an extravaganza? Consider that anyone who plays Shakespeare's
-heroines, Viola or Rosalind, must wear much the same costume; but the
-other ladies who play pages, and some of whom will be her companions in
-the dressing-room, are they just the sort of girls you would like your
-daughter to be with every evening of her life? If your well-brought-up
-daughter does go there one of two things will happen,—she will be
-either so thoroughly disgusted at all she hears and sees that she will
-never go near the place after the first week, or she will unconsciously
-deteriorate in tone, until the fixed lines of the moral boundary have
-become blurred and faint. If among these surroundings a girl remain
-pure in heart, it is simply nothing short of a miracle of grace. Would
-you like to expose your daughter to this atmosphere? Of course not.
-How can I put the question? but I _do_ put the question, after giving
-you the information of the facts of the case. Even in a first-class
-theatre, for a Shakespearian revival, there must be a large number of
-all sorts engaged, and with them, your daughter, as beginner, will have
-to consort, and she cannot have her mother always at her elbow. Besides
-her mother cannot neglect her other daughters, or her household duties,
-to attend to the youthful actress.
-
-Now supposing a young lady at once obtains an engagement at a reputable
-theatre, and is cast for a good part. What then? Then the atmosphere of
-the theatre at its best is not a pleasant one. Your daughter will be
-astonished at the extraordinary variations of manner, from the abjectly
-servile to the free-and-easy, described in Mr. Namby's case as “Botany
-Bay gentility.” She will hear everybody “my dearing” one another. At
-first she will not understand half that is said, and very little that
-is meant. When they all warm to their work, the veneer of politeness is
-soon rubbed off, and actor and actress are seen as the real artistes
-they are. The stage manager comes out strongly too; strange words are
-used, and whether it be high art or not that is being illustrated,
-there is pretty sure to be a considerable amount of forcible language
-employed in the excitement of the moment. Your daughter's ideas of
-propriety will be rudely shocked at every turn. When she ceases to be
-even astonished, she will be unconsciously deteriorating.
-
-There is one sort of girl to whom all this does no harm, and that is
-the girl who comes of a hard-working professional theatrical family,
-who has been decently brought up in the middle of it all from a child,
-whose father and mother are in the theatre, thoroughly respectable
-people, and as careful of their daughter s morals as though she were
-the niece of a bishop. Such a girl as this, if she remain on the
-stage, will be a tolerable actress, always sure of an engagement.
-She will marry a decent, respectable actor, of some one connected
-with theatricals, will bring up a family excellently, will be really
-religious without ostentation, will never lose her self-respect, and
-in her own way be perfectly domesticated, happy and contented. Or she
-may marry some one in a good social position: if so, she will quit
-the stage without regret, because she is not of the stuff of which
-great actresses are made; but she will look back on her theatrical
-experience with affection for her parents to whom she owed so much.
-She is neither Esther, nor Polly Eccles, nor is she in the position of
-the well-brought-up young lady we have been considering. But she is an
-admirable woman, in whatever station of life her lot may be cast, and
-not a bit of a snob.
-
-For a young lady, travelling with a company would be simply impossible,
-unless accompanied by her mother, or by some trustworthy relative.
-A manageress might undertake the guardianship and execute the trust
-conscientiously. But this is an exceptional case.
-
-There is another point, and a very important one, to be considered,
-and that is the artistic temperament. If a young lady of attractive
-personal appearance possesses histrionic talent, then in proportion to
-her talent will be her temperament. She will be impulsive, passionate,
-impressionable, self-willed, impatient of control, simple, confiding,
-and vain, but artistically vain, and desirous of applause. She will be
-illogical, inconsistent, full of contradictions, fond of variety, and
-unable to exist without excitement. It only requires her to be a genius
-to be duped by the first schemer that throws himself in her way.
-
-So, when the theatrical profession is brought before you, my dear
-madam, as a calling for your daughter to follow, you see that on the
-one hand there is mediocrity and deterioration of character, and on the
-other success, at, probably, a ruinous price. This does not apply, and
-again I impress it on my readers, to those who are to the manner born.
-They will lead jog-trot lives, study their parts, make puddings, act
-mechanically every night, knit socks in the green-room, and be virtuous
-and happy to the end of their days. Their artistic temperament will
-not lead them very far astray, unless they have the _feu sacré_, and
-then, it is likely, they will make a hasty marriage, repent at leisure,
-and try to forget they ever bore a husband's name by making one for
-themselves. In some recent French romance an ex-actress is warning her
-daughter who has married a prince, against the fascinations of a young
-painter. The princess turns on her mother with, “Est ce ma faute à
-moi si j'ai dans les veines du sang d'artiste?” And the ex-comédienne
-feels the full force of her daughter's retort, which has in it a
-certain amount of truth. Public life has great dangers for young women
-of the artistic temperament: mothers cannot be always with them, and
-sheep-dogs are expensive and untrustworthy. Chance or ill-luck may
-bring your daughter, madam, to the stage, but you would not choose it
-for her, that is, the stage, being as it is, and as it is likely to be
-under the present conditions. When those conditions are altered for the
-better, it will be time enough for society to change its opinion on the
-subject.
-
-But, it is urged, the present state of the stage is a vast improvement
-on the past; that the actor is a person of more consideration than
-formerly, and not necessarily tabooed from all society, but on the
-contrary, he is to be met in the very best drawing-rooms. It may be
-that a few, whom you may count on the fingers of both hands, have the
-_entrée_ to the best society. It may be so; I am not in a position
-to deny it. But their genius, or talent, and their unblemished
-reputation have combined to place them on that pedestal exalted above
-their fellows. But was it not always so? Have there not always been a
-privileged few among the actors, as among other citizens of the Great
-Republic of Art and Letters, who have been admitted to the assemblies
-of the great, and whose hospitality the great have condescended to
-accept in return? Go back thirty years and at least a dozen names
-of prominent actors and actresses will occur to us as having been
-received in the best society. Now, in their time, the number of
-West-end theatres was about one-third of what it is at the present day.
-Therefore, if five actors were received by society then, there should
-be fifteen received now. If there are not, the stage of to-day is
-socially on the same level with the stage of thirty years ago, and has
-not advanced a step; if the number of presentable actors is, nowadays,
-less, then the stage has retrograded. I cannot make out that there are
-more received than formerly. There are a few University men on the
-stage, men of birth and education, entitled to be received in good
-society. But now we are speaking of only a section of society, and are
-begging the original question.
-
-And why, from the nature of the case, cannot the stage ever rank
-with the recognised professions? Because, as a means of earning a
-livelihood, that is as a mere employment, the stage is open to all
-the world. Unlike painting, literature, and music, it requires no
-special knowledge of any sort; it can be practised as well by the
-unlearned as, though not with the same facility, by the learned. It is
-a self-educating profession. Physical gifts, up to a certain point,
-will make up for deficiency in talent: but given talent, and with
-perseverance and application even for the most illiterate, success
-is certain. Given genius, then “reading and writing” seem to “come
-by nature,” and though there may always be a little difficulty with
-the spelling, yet triumph is sure and swift. The stage requires no
-matriculation; but for an actor of talent, who loves his art, there is
-no limit to his studies,—one helps another, one leads to another. As
-far as society is concerned, there should be no one more thoroughly
-qualified to play a leading part in the very highest, the most
-intellectual, and most cultivated society, than the actor or actress,
-who is rising in or who has reached the summit of “the profession.”
-Scarcely a subject can be named that is not, in its degree, almost
-essential—a strong word, but on consideration used correctly—to
-the perfection of the actor's art. A first-rate actor should be an
-admirable Crichton. The best preparation for the stage is, as I have
-elsewhere insisted, a thorough education. True, that it is so for
-every calling, but especially for the stage. To belong to the bar of
-England is an honor in itself, even though the barrister never gets a
-brief and could do nothing with it if he did. To belong to the stage of
-England is _not_ an honor in itself. To the genius, the talents, and
-the private worth of our eminent actors in the past and in the present,
-our stage owes its lustre. They owed nothing to the stage, the stage
-everything to them.
-
-The desire to raise the social status of the actor so that the term
-actor shall be “synonymous with gentleman,” is worthy of all praise. To
-make it possible for young ladies of education to take to acting as a
-means of earning a livelihood, would be a great social benefit.
-
-When a youth, well brought up, takes to the stage, he should not be
-immediately treated as a pariah. On the contrary, if ever there be a
-time in a young man's career when more than ever he stands in need
-of good home traditions, the companionship of his equals, and the
-encouragement of his superiors, it is when he has honestly chosen, as
-a means of earning his living, the stage as a profession. That, for
-evident reasons, it has been usually selected by the dissolute, the
-idle, and those to whom any restraint is distasteful, accounts to a
-great extent for the disrepute in which the stage has been held. Of
-course the statute-book and the puritanism of the seventeenth century
-have much to answer for in the popular estimate of the players. There
-is a strong leaven of Puritanism amongst us, and, in some respects,
-so much the better; but also among very excellent people of various
-religious opinions, there has been, and it exists now, a sort of vague
-idea that the stage has always been under the positive ban of the
-Church. In the temporary laws and regulations of different countries,
-enforced by narrow-minded men, civil or ecclesiastical, may be found
-the origin of this mistaken notion. The Church has never pronounced
-the stage the anathema. On the contrary, she has patronised the stage,
-and the first mimes who entered France from Italy rather resembled
-members of a religious order in their pious fervor, than actors of a
-later date in their laxity. If players were refused Christian burial,
-it was when they had neither lived nor died as even nominal Christians,
-and in such cases even “maimed rites” would savor of hypocrisy. In
-France the actors themselves were under this hallucination. M. Regnier
-tells us how in 1848 a deputation of comedians went to Monseigneur
-Affre to ask him to get the sentence of excommunication removed from
-the theatrical profession. “L'illustre prélat leur répondit qu'il n'y
-avait pas à la lever, parcequ'elle n'avait jamais été formulée, et que
-les comédiens français, comme les comédiens de tous les autres pays
-catholiques, pouvaient participer aux sacraments.”
-
-It would be a comparatively easy task to trace the origin of this
-floating but perfectly false tradition, but I have already overrun
-the limit of this article. In the time of Louis XIII. the actors were
-excellent church-goers, had their children baptised, frequented the
-sacraments, and were on the best terms with curés of Paris; and it
-will be a consolation to those actors among us who, like the doll in
-the song, “pine for higher society” to be reminded, that the grand
-monarch himself did not disdain to stand god-father at the font to the
-first-born of Molière, and to do the like office to the third child of
-Domenico Biancolelli, the Italian harlequin.
-
-Our leading actors and actresses of the present day will naturally
-strive, no less than those of the past, to do their best for the stage,
-and, in return, the patrons of the drama will do their best for them.
-But to claim for it, as its right, the social status of the recognised
-professions, and to be fussily indignant with society at large for
-refusing to acknowledge this groundless claim, is degrading to an art
-which should be as independent and as exalted as virtue, and content
-with virtue's reward.—_Fortnightly Review._
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[38] The process of obtaining an engagement is the same for a lady as
-a gentleman, _i.e._ a visit to an agent's office, &c., &c. Here is an
-advertisement which evidently offers a rare chance:—
-
-“Wanted, ladies of attractive appearance, with good singing voices.
-Can be received for long pantomime season. Dresses found. Salaried
-engagement (an exceptionable opportunity for clever amateurs desirous
-of adopting the profession).”
-
-
-
-
-GO TO THE ANT.
-
-In the market-place at Santa Fé, in Mexico, peasant women from the
-neighboring villages bring in for sale trayfuls of living ants, each
-about as big and round as a large white currant, and each entirely
-filled with honey or grape-sugar, much appreciated by the ingenuous
-Mexican youth as an excellent substitute for Everton toffee. The method
-of eating them would hardly command the approbation of the Society for
-the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. It is simple and primitive, but
-decidedly not humane. Ingenuous youth holds the ant by its head and
-shoulders, sucks out the honey with which the back part is absurdly
-distended, and throws away the empty body as a thing with which it
-has now no further sympathy. Maturer age buys the ants by the quart,
-presses out the honey through a muslin strainer, and manufactures it
-into a very sweet intoxicating drink, something like shandygaff, as I
-am credibly informed by bold persons who have ventured to experiment
-upon it, taken internally.
-
-The curious insect which thus serves as an animated sweetmeat for
-the Mexican children is the honey-ant of the Garden of the Gods; and
-it affords a beautiful example of Mandeville's charming paradox that
-personal vices are public benefits—_vitia privata humana commoda_. The
-honey-ant is a greedy individual who has nevertheless nobly devoted
-himself for the good of the community by converting himself into a
-living honey-jar, from which all the other ants in his own nest may
-help themselves freely from time to time, as occasion demands. The
-tribe to which he belongs lives underground, in a dome-roofed vault,
-and only one particular caste among the workers, known as rotunds from
-their expansive girth, is told off for this special duty of storing
-honey within their own bodies. Clinging to the top of their nest,
-with their round, transparent abdomens hanging down loosely, mere
-globules of skin enclosing the pale amber-colored honey, these Daniel
-Lamberts of the insect race look for all the world like clusters of
-the little American Delaware grapes, with an ant's legs and head stuck
-awkwardly on to the end instead of a stalk. They have, in fact,
-realised in everyday life the awful fate of Mr. Gilbert's discontented
-sugar-broker, who laid on flesh and “adipose deposit” until he became
-converted at last into a perfect rolling ball of globular humanity.
-
-The manners of the honey-ant race are very simple. Most of the members
-of each community are active and roving in their dispositions, and
-show no tendency to undue distension of the nether extremities. They
-go out at night and collect nectar or honey-dew from the gall-insects
-on oak-trees; for the gall-insect, like love in the old Latin saw, is
-fruitful both in sweets and bitters, _melle et felle_. This nectar
-they then carry home, and give it to the rotunds or honey-bearers, who
-swallow it and store it in their round abdomen until they can hold
-no more, having stretched their skins literally to the very point of
-bursting. They pass their time, like the Fat Boy in “Pickwick,” chiefly
-in sleeping, but they cling upside down meanwhile to the roof of their
-residence. When the workers in turn require a meal, they go up to the
-nearest honey-bearer and stroke her gently with their antennæ. The
-honey-bearer thereupon throws up her head and regurgitates a large drop
-of the amber liquid. (“Regurgitates” is a good word, which I borrow
-from Dr. McCook, of Philadelphia, the great authority upon honey-ants;
-and it saves an immense deal of trouble in looking about for a
-respectable periphrasis). The workers feed upon the drops thus exuded,
-two or three at once often standing around the living honey-jar, and
-lapping nectar together from the lips of their devoted comrade. This
-may seem at first sight rather an unpleasant practice on the part
-of the ants; but, after all, how does it really differ from our own
-habit of eating honey which has been treated in very much the same
-unsophisticated manner by the domestic bee?
-
-Worse things than these, however, Dr. McCook records to the discredit
-of the Colorado honey-ant. When he was opening some nests in the
-Garden of the Gods, he happened accidentally to knock down some of the
-rotunds, which straightway burst asunder in the middle, and scattered
-their store of honey on the floor of the nest. At once the other ants,
-tempted away from their instinctive task of carrying off the cocoons
-and young grubs, clustered around their unfortunate companion, like
-street boys around a broken molasses barrel, and instead of forming
-themselves forthwith into a volunteer ambulance company, proceeded
-immediately to lap up the honey from their dying brother. On the other
-hand, it must be said, to the credit of the race, that (unlike the
-members of Arctic expeditions) they never desecrate the remains of the
-dead. When a honey-bearer dies at his post, a victim to his zeal for
-the common good, the workers carefully remove his cold corpse from the
-roof where it still clings, clip off the head and shoulders from the
-distended abdomen, and convey their deceased brother piecemeal, in two
-detachments, to the formican cemetery, undisturbed. If they chose,
-they might only bury the front half of their late relation, while they
-retained his remaining moiety as an available honey-bag: but from this
-cannibal proceeding ant-etiquette recoils in decent horror; and the
-amber globes are “pulled up galleries, rolled along rooms, and bowled
-into the graveyard, along with the juiceless heads, legs, and other
-members.” Such fraternal conduct would be very creditable to the worker
-honey-ants, were it not for a horrid doubt insinuated by Dr. McCook
-that perhaps the insects don't know they could get at the honey by
-breaking up the body of their lamented relative. If so, their apparent
-disregard of utilitarian considerations may really be due not to their
-sentimentality but to their hopeless stupidity.
-
-The reason why the ants have taken thus to storing honey in the living
-bodies of their own fellows is easy enough to understand. They want to
-lay up for the future, like prudent insects that they are; but they
-can't make wax, as the bees do, and they have not yet evolved the
-purely human art of pottery. Consequently—happy thought—why not tell
-off some of our number to act as jars on behalf of the others? Some of
-the community work by going out and gathering honey; they also serve
-who only stand and wait—who receive it from the workers, and keep it
-stored up in their own capacious india-rubber maws till further notice.
-So obvious is this plan for converting ants into animated honey-jars,
-that several different kinds of ants in different parts of the world,
-belonging to the most widely distinct families, have independently hit
-upon the very self-same device. Besides the Mexican species, there is
-a totally different Australian honey-ant, and another equally separate
-in Borneo and Singapore. This last kind does not store the honey in
-the hind part of the body, technically known as the abdomen, but in
-the middle division which naturalists call the thorax, where it forms
-a transparent bladder-like swelling, and makes the creature look as
-though it were suffering with an acute attack of dropsy. In any case,
-the life of a honey-bearer must be singularly uneventful, not to say
-dull and monotonous; but no doubt any small inconvenience in this
-respect must be more than compensated for by the glorious consciousness
-that one is sacrificing one's own personal comfort for the common good
-of universal anthood. Perhaps, however, the ants have not yet reached
-the Positivist stage, and may be totally ignorant of the enthusiasm of
-formicity.
-
-Equally curious are the habits and manners of the harvesting ants,
-the species which Solomon seems to have had specially in view when he
-advised his hearers to go to the ant—a piece of advice which I have
-also adopted as the title of the present article, though I by no means
-intend thereby to insinuate that the readers of this magazine ought
-properly to be classed as sluggards. These industrious little creatures
-abound in India: they are so small that it takes eight or ten of them
-to carry a single grain of wheat or barley; and yet they will patiently
-drag along their big burden for five hundred or a thousand yards to
-the door of their formicary. To prevent the grain from germinating,
-they bite off the embryo root—a piece of animal intelligence outdone
-by another species of ant, which actually allows the process of
-budding to begin, so as to produce sugar, as in malting. After the
-last thunderstorms of the monsoon the little proprietors bring up
-all the grain from their granaries to dry in the tropical sunshine.
-The quantity of grain stored up by the harvesting ants is often so
-large that the hair-splitting Jewish casuists of the Mishna have
-seriously discussed the question whether it belongs to the landowner
-or may lawfully be appropriated by the gleaners. “They do not appear,”
-says Sir John Lubbock, “to have considered the rights of the ants.”
-Indeed our duty towards insects is a question which seems hitherto to
-have escaped the notice of all moral philosophers. Even Mr. Herbert
-Spencer, the prophet of individualism, has never taken exception to
-our gross disregard of the proprietary rights of bees in their honey,
-or of silkworms in their cocoons. There are signs, however, that the
-obtuse human conscience is awakening in this respect; for when Dr. Loew
-suggested to bee-keepers the desirability of testing the commercial
-value of honey-ants, as rivals to the bee, Dr. McCook replied that “the
-sentiment against the use of honey thus taken from living insects,
-which is worthy of all respect, would not be easily overcome.”
-
-There are no harvesting ants in Northern Europe, though they extend
-as far as Syria, Italy, and the Riviera, in which latter station I
-have often observed them busily working. What most careless observers
-take for grain in the nests of English ants are of course really
-the cocoons of the pupæ. For many years, therefore, entomologists
-were under the impression that Solomon had fallen into this popular
-error, and that when he described the ant as “gathering her food in
-the harvest” and “preparing her meat in the summer,” he was speaking
-rather as a poet than as a strict naturalist. Later observations,
-however, have vindicated the general accuracy of the much-married king
-by showing that true harvesting ants do actually occur in Syria, and
-that they lay by stores for the winter in the very way stated by that
-early entomologist, whose knowledge of “creeping things” is specially
-enumerated in the long list of his universal accomplishments.
-
-Dr. Lincecum of Texan fame has even improved upon Solomon by his
-discovery of those still more interesting and curious creatures, the
-agricultural ants of Texas. America is essentially a farming country,
-and the agricultural ants are born farmers. They make regular
-clearings around their nests, and on these clearings they allow nothing
-to grow except a particular kind of grain, known as ant-rice. Dr.
-Lincecum maintains that the tiny farmers actually sow and cultivate the
-ant-rice. Dr. McCook, on the other hand, is of opinion that the rice
-sows itself, and that the insects' part is limited to preventing any
-other plants or weeds from encroaching on the appropriated area. In any
-case, be they squatters or planters, it is certain that the rice, when
-ripe, is duly harvested, and that it is, to say the least, encouraged
-by the ants, to the exclusion of all other competitors. “After the
-maturing and harvesting of the seed,” says Dr. Lincecum, “the dry
-stubble is cut away and removed from the pavement, which is thus left
-fallow until the ensuing autumn, when the same species of grass, and in
-the same circle, appears again, and receives the same agricultural care
-as did the previous crop.” Sir John Lubbock, indeed, goes so far as to
-say that the three stages of human progress—the hunter, the herdsman,
-and the agriculturist—are all to be found among various species of
-existing ants.
-
-The Saüba ants of tropical America carry their agricultural operations
-a step further. Dwelling in underground nests, they sally forth upon
-the trees, and cut out of the leaves large round pieces, about as big
-as a shilling. These pieces they drop upon the ground, where another
-detachment is in waiting to convey them to the galleries of the nest.
-There they store enormous quantities of these round pieces, which
-they allow to decay in the dark, so as to form a sort of miniature
-mushroom bed. On the mouldering vegetable heap they have thus piled
-up, they induce a fungus to grow, and with this fungus they feed their
-young grubs during their helpless infancy. Mr. Belt, the “Naturalist
-in Nicaragua,” found that native trees suffered far less from their
-depredations than imported ones. The ants hardly touched the local
-forests, but they stripped young plantations of orange, coffee, and
-mango trees stark naked. He ingeniously accounts for this curious fact
-by supposing that an internecine struggle has long been going on in
-the countries inhabited by the Saübas between the ants and the forest
-trees. Those trees that best resisted the ants, owing either to
-some unpleasant taste or to hardness of foliage have in the long run
-survived destruction; but those which were suited for the purpose of
-the ants have been reduced to nonentity, while the ants in turn were
-getting slowly adapted to attack other trees. In this way almost all
-the native trees have at last acquired some special means of protection
-against the ravages of the leaf-cutters; so that they immediately fall
-upon all imported and unprotected kinds as their natural prey. This
-ingenious and wholly satisfactory explanation must of course go far to
-console the Brazilian planters for the frequent loss of their orange
-and coffee crops.
-
-Mr. Alfred Russel Wallace, the co-discoverer of the Darwinian theory
-(whose honors he waived with rare generosity in favor of the older
-and more distinguished naturalist), tells a curious story about the
-predatory habits of these same Saübas. On one occasion, when he was
-wandering about in search of specimens on the Rio Negro, he bought a
-peck of rice, which was tied up, Indian fashion, in the local bandanna
-of the happy plantation slave. At night he left his rice incautiously
-on the bench of the hut where he was sleeping; and next morning the
-Saübas had riddled the handkerchief like a sieve, and carried away a
-gallon of the grain for their own felonious purposes. The underground
-galleries which they dig can often be traced for hundreds of yards;
-and Mr. Hamlet Clark even asserts that in one case they have tunnelled
-under the bed of a river where it is a quarter of a mile wide. This
-beats Brunel on his own ground into the proverbial cocked hat, both for
-depth and distance.
-
-Within doors, in the tropics, ants are apt to put themselves
-obtrusively forward in a manner little gratifying to any except the
-enthusiastically entomological mind. The winged females, after their
-marriage flight, have a disagreeable habit of flying in at the open
-doors and windows at lunch time, settling upon the table like the
-Harpies in the Æneid, and then quietly shuffling off their wings one at
-a time, by holding them down against the table-cloth with one leg, and
-running away vigorously with the five others. As soon as they have thus
-disembarassed themselves of their superfluous members, they proceed
-to run about over the lunch as if the house belonged to them, and to
-make a series of experiments upon the edible qualities of the different
-dishes. One doesn't so much mind their philosophical inquiries into the
-nature of the bread or even the meat; but when they come to drowning
-themselves by dozens, in the pursuit of knowledge, in the soup and the
-sherry, one feels bound to protest energetically against the spirit
-of martyrdom by which they are too profoundly animated. That is one
-of the slight drawbacks of the realms of perpetual summer: in the
-poets you see only one side of the picture—the palms, the orchids, the
-humming-birds, the great trailing lianas; in practical life you see
-the reverse side—the thermometer at 98°, the tepid drinking-water,
-the prickly heat, the perpetual languor, the endless shoals of
-aggressive insects. A lady of my acquaintance, indeed, made a valuable
-entomological collection in her own dining-room, by the simple process
-of consigning to pillboxes all the moths and flies and beetles that
-settled upon the mangoes and star-apples in the course of dessert.
-
-Another objectionable habit of the tropical ants, viewed practically,
-is their total disregard of vested interests in the case of
-house-property. Like Mr. George and his communistic friends, they
-disbelieve entirely in the principle of private rights in real estate.
-They will eat their way through the beams of your house till there is
-only a slender core of solid wood left to support the entire burden.
-I have taken down a rafter in my own house in Jamaica, originally 18
-inches thick each way, with a sound circular centre of no more than
-6 inches in diameter, upon which all the weight necessarily fell.
-With the material extracted from the wooden beams they proceed to
-add insult to injury by building long covered galleries right across
-the ceiling of your drawing-room. As may be easily imagined, these
-galleries do not tend to improve the appearance of the ceiling; and it
-becomes necessary to form a Liberty and Property Defence League for
-the protection of one's personal interests against the insect enemy. I
-have no objection to ants building galleries on their own freehold, or
-even to their nationalising the land in their native forests; but I
-do object strongly to their unwarrantable intrusion upon the domain of
-private life. Expostulation and active warfare, however, are equally
-useless. The carpenter-ant has no moral sense, and is not amenable
-either to kindness or blows. On one occasion, when a body of these
-intrusive creatures had constructed an absurdly conspicuous brown
-gallery straight across the ceiling of my drawing-room, I determined to
-declare open war against them, and getting my black servant to bring
-in the steps and a mop, I proceeded to demolish the entire gallery
-just after breakfast. It was about twenty feet long, as well as I can
-remember, and perhaps an inch in diameter. At one o'clock I returned to
-lunch. My black servant pointed, with a broad grin on his intelligent
-features, to the wooden ceiling. I looked up: in those three hours the
-carpenter-ants had reconstructed the entire gallery, and were doubtless
-mocking me at their ease, with their uplifted antennæ, under that safe
-shelter. I retired at once from the unequal contest. It was clearly
-impossible to go on knocking down a fresh gallery every three hours of
-the day or night throughout a whole lifetime.
-
-Ants, says Mr. Wallace, without one touch of satire, “force themselves
-upon the attention of everyone who visits the tropics.” They do,
-indeed, and that most pungently; if by no other method, at least by
-the simple and effectual one of stinging. The majority of ants in
-every nest are of course neuters, or workers, that is to say, strictly
-speaking, undeveloped females, incapable of laying eggs. But they
-still retain the ovipositor, which is converted into a sting, and
-supplied with a poisonous liquid to eject afterwards into the wound.
-So admirably adapted to its purpose is this beautiful provision of
-nature, that some tropical ants can sting with such violence as to
-make your leg swell and confine you for some days to your room; while
-cases have even been known in which the person attacked has fainted
-with pain, or had a serious attack of fever in consequence. It is not
-every kind of ant, however, that can sting; a great many can only bite
-with their little hard horny jaws, and then eject a drop of formic
-poison afterwards into the hole caused by the bite. The distinction is
-a delicate physiological one, not much appreciated by the victims of
-either mode of attack. The perfect females can also sting, but not,
-of course, the males, who are poor, wretched, useless creatures, only
-good as husbands for the community, and dying off as soon as they have
-performed their part in the world—another beautiful provision, which
-saves the workers the trouble of killing them off, as bees do with
-drones after the marriage flight of the queen bee.
-
-The blind driver-ants of West Africa are among the very few species
-that render any service to man, and that, of course, only incidentally.
-Unlike most other members of their class, the driver-ants have no
-settled place of residence; they are vagabonds and wanderers upon the
-face of the earth, formican tramps, blind beggars, who lead a gipsy
-existence, and keep perpetually upon the move, smelling their way
-cautiously from one camping-place to another. They march by night,
-or on cloudy days, like wise tropical strategists, and never expose
-themselves to the heat of the day in broad sunshine, as though they
-were no better than the mere numbered British Tommy Atkins at Coomassie
-or in the Soudan. They move in vast armies across country, driving
-everything before them as they go; for they belong to the stinging
-division, and are very voracious in their personal habits. Not only
-do they eat up the insects in their line of march, but they fall even
-upon larger creatures and upon big snakes, which they attack first in
-the eyes, the most vulnerable portion. When they reach a negro village
-the inhabitants turn out _en masse_, and run away, exactly as if the
-visitors were English explorers or brave Marines, bent upon retaliating
-for the theft of a knife by nobly burning down King Tom's town or King
-Jumbo's capital. Then the negroes wait in the jungle till the little
-black army has passed on, after clearing out the huts by the way of
-everything eatable. When they return they find their calabashes and
-saucepans licked clean, but they also find every rat, mouse, lizard,
-cockroach, gecko, and beetle completely cleared out from the whole
-village. Most of them have cut and run at the first approach of the
-drivers; of the remainder, a few blanched and neatly-picked skeletons
-alone remain to tell the tale.
-
-As I wish to be considered a veracious historian, I will not retail
-the further strange stories that still find their way into books of
-natural history about the manners and habits of these blind marauders.
-They cross rivers, the West African gossips declare, by a number of
-devoted individuals flinging themselves first into the water as a
-living bridge, like so many six-legged Marcus Curtiuses, while over
-their drowning bodies the heedless remainder march in safety to the
-other side. If the story is not true, it is at least well invented;
-for the ant-commonwealth everywhere carries to the extremest pitch the
-old Roman doctrine of the absolute subjection of the individual to the
-State. So exactly is this the case that in some species there are a few
-large, overgrown, lazy ants in each nest, which do no work themselves,
-but accompany the workers on their expeditions; and the sole use of
-these idle mouths seems to be to attract the attention of birds and
-other enemies, and so distract it from the useful workers, the mainstay
-of the entire community. It is almost as though an army, marching
-against a tribe of cannibals, were to place itself in the centre of a
-hollow square formed of all the fattest people in the country, whose
-fine condition and fitness for killing might immediately engross the
-attention of the hungry enemy. Ants, in fact, have, for the most part,
-already reached the goal set before us as a delightful one by most
-current schools of socialist philosophers, in which the individual is
-absolutely sacrificed in every way to the needs of the community.
-
-The most absurdly human, however, among all the tricks and habits of
-ants are their well-known cattle-farming and slaveholding instincts.
-Everybody has heard, of course, how they keep the common rose-blight
-as milch cows, and suck from them the sweet honey-dew. But everybody,
-probably, does not yet know the large number of insects which they herd
-in one form or another as domesticated animals. Man has, at most, some
-twenty or thirty such, including cows, sheep, horses, donkeys, camels,
-llamas, alpacas, reindeer, dogs, cats, canaries, pigs, fowl, ducks,
-geese, turkeys, and silkworms. But ants have hundreds and hundreds,
-some of them kept obviously for purposes of food; others apparently
-as pets; and yet others again, as has been plausibly suggested, by
-reason of superstition or as objects of worship. There is a curious
-blind beetle which inhabits ants' nests, and is so absolutely dependent
-upon its hosts for support that it has even lost the power of feeding
-itself. It never quits the nest, but the ants bring it in food and
-supply it by putting the nourishment actually into its mouth. But the
-beetle, in return, seems to secrete a sweet liquid (or it may even be
-a stimulant like beer, or a narcotic like tobacco) in a tuft of hairs
-near the bottom of the hard wing-cases, and the ants often lick this
-tuft with every appearance of satisfaction and enjoyment. In this case,
-and in many others, there can be no doubt that the insects are kept for
-the sake of food or some other advantage yielded by them.
-
-But there are other instances of insects which haunt ants' nests,
-which it is far harder to account for on any hypothesis save that of
-superstitious veneration. There is a little weevil that runs about by
-hundreds in the galleries of English ants, in and out among the free
-citizens, making itself quite at home in their streets and public
-places, but as little noticed by the ants themselves as dogs are in
-our own cities. Then, again, there is a white woodlouse, something
-like the common little armadillo, but blind from having lived so
-long underground, which walks up and down the lanes and alleys of
-antdom, without ever holding any communication of any sort with its
-hosts and neighbors. In neither case has Sir John Lubbock ever seen
-an ant take the slightest notice of the presence of these strange
-fellow-lodgers. “One might almost imagine,” he says, “that they had the
-cap of invisibility.” Yet it is quite clear that the ants deliberately
-sanction the residence of the weevils and woodlice in their nests, for
-any unauthorised intruder would immediately be set upon and massacred
-outright. Sir John Lubbock suggests that they may perhaps be tolerated
-as scavengers; or, again, it is possible that they may prey upon the
-eggs or larvæ of some of the parasites to whose attacks the ants are
-subject. In the first case, their use would be similar to that of the
-wild dogs in Constantinople or the common black John-crow vultures in
-tropical America: in the second case, they would be about equivalent to
-our own cats or to the hedgehog often put in farmhouse kitchens to keep
-down cockroaches.
-
-The crowning glory of owning slaves, which many philosophic Americans
-(before the war) showed to be the highest and noblest function of the
-most advanced humanity, has been attained by more than one variety of
-anthood. Our great English horse-ant is a moderate slave-holder; but
-the big red ant of Southern Europe carries the domestic institution
-many steps further. It makes regular slave-raids upon the nests of the
-small brown ants, and carries off the young in their pupa condition.
-By-and-by the brown ants hatch out in the strange nest, and, never
-having known any other life except that of slavery, accommodate
-themselves to it readily enough. The red ant, however, is still only
-an occasional slaveowner; if necessary, he can get along by himself,
-without the aid of his little brown servants. Indeed, there are free
-states and slave states of red ants side by side with one another, as
-of old in Maryland and Pennsylvania: in the first, the red ants do
-their work themselves, like mere vulgar Ohio farmers; in the second,
-they get their work done for them by their industrious little brown
-servants, like the aristocratic first families of Virginia before the
-earthquake of emancipation.
-
-But there are other degraded ants, whose life-history may be humbly
-presented to the consideration of the Anti-Slavery Society, as speaking
-more eloquently than any other known fact for the demoralising effect
-of slaveowning upon the slaveholders themselves. The Swiss rufescent
-ant is a species so long habituated to rely entirely upon the services
-of slaves that it is no longer able to manage its own affairs when
-deprived by man of its hereditary bondsmen. It has lost entirely the
-art of constructing a nest; it can no longer tend its own young,
-whom it leaves entirely to the care of negro nurses; and its bodily
-structure even has changed, for the jaws have lost their teeth, and
-have been converted into mere nippers, useful only as weapons of war.
-The rufescent ant, in fact, is a purely military caste, which has
-devoted itself entirely to the pursuit of arms, leaving every other
-form of activity to its slaves and dependents. Officers of the old
-school will be glad to learn that this military insect is dressed, if
-not in scarlet, at any rate in very decent red, and that it refuses to
-be bothered in any way with questions of transport or commissariat. If
-the community changes its nest, the masters are carried on the backs of
-their slaves to the new position, and the black ants have to undertake
-the entire duty of foraging and bringing in stores of supply for their
-gentlemanly proprietors. Only when war is to be made upon neighboring
-nests does the thin red line form itself into long file for active
-service. Nothing could be more perfectly aristocratic than the views of
-life entertained and acted upon by these distinguished slaveholders.
-
-On the other hand, the picture has its reverse side, exhibiting clearly
-the weak points of the slaveholding system. The rufescent ant has lost
-even the very power of feeding itself. So completely dependent is each
-upon his little black valet for daily bread, that he cannot so much
-as help himself to the food that is set before him. Hüber put a few
-slaveholders into a box with some of their own larvæ and pupæ, and a
-supply of honey, in order to see what they would do with them. Appalled
-at the novelty of the situation, the slaveholders seemed to come to
-the conclusion that something must be done; so they began carrying
-the larvæ about aimlessly in their mouths, and rushing up and down in
-search of the servants. After a while, however, they gave it up and
-came to the conclusion that life under such circumstances was clearly
-intolerable. They never touched the honey, but resigned themselves to
-their fate like officers and gentlemen. In less than two days, half
-of them had died of hunger, rather than taste a dinner which was not
-supplied to them by a properly constituted footman. Admiring their
-heroism or pitying their incapacity, Hüber, at last, gave them just one
-slave between them all. The plucky little negro, nothing daunted by
-the gravity of the situation, set to work at once, dug a small nest,
-gathered together the larvæ, helped several pupæ out of the cocoon,
-and saved the lives of the surviving slaveowners. Other naturalists
-have tried similar experiments, and always with the same result.
-The slaveowners will starve in the midst of plenty rather than feed
-themselves without attendance. Either they cannot or will not put the
-food into their own mouths with their own mandibles.
-
-There are yet other ants, such as the workerless _Anergates_, in which
-the degradation of slaveholding has gone yet further. These wretched
-creatures are the formican representatives of those Oriental despots
-who are no longer even warlike, but are sunk in sloth and luxury, and
-pass their lives in eating bang or smoking opium. Once upon a time,
-Sir John Lubbock thinks, the ancestors of _Anergates_ were marauding
-slaveowners, who attacked and made serfs of other ants. But gradually
-they lost not only their arts but even their military prowess, and
-were reduced to making war by stealth instead of openly carrying
-off their slaves in fair battle. It seems probable that they now
-creep into a nest of the far more powerful slave ants, poison or
-assassinate the queen, and establish themselves by sheer usurpation in
-the queenless nest. “Gradually,” says Sir John Lubbock, “even their
-bodily force dwindled away under the enervating influence to which they
-had subjected themselves, until they sank to their present degraded
-condition—weak in body and mind, few in numbers, and apparently nearly
-extinct, the miserable representatives of far superior ancestors,
-maintaining a precarious existence as contemptible parasites of their
-former slaves.” One may observe in passing, that these wretched
-do-nothings cannot have been the ants which Solomon commended to the
-favorable consideration of the sluggard; though it is curious that the
-text was never pressed into the service of defence for the peculiar
-institution by the advocates of slavery in the South, who were always
-most anxious to prove the righteousness of their cause by most sure and
-certain warranty of Holy Scripture.—_Cornhill Magazine._
-
-
-
-
-LITERARY NOTICES.
-
-
- EPISODES OF MY SECOND LIFE. By Antonio Gallenga (Luigi Mariotti).
- English and American Experiences. Philadelphia: _J. B. Lippincott &
- Co._
-
-The autobiographer in this case (for the last year has been singularly
-rich in interesting autobiography) is not in any degree, at least for
-Americans, an eminent and well-known personage. But, in spite of this,
-his record of experience and vicissitude is full of interest, and we
-may almost say fascinating. His threescore years and ten have been
-crowded with events which, if not in themselves strikingly dramatic,
-are at least striking in the telling, for he has all the art of an
-accomplished _raconteur_, simple, direct and vigorous in style, and
-knowing perfectly when to glide over with little stress, when to put
-on his color with a vigorous and lavish brush. Mr. Gallenga (this
-being his true name) was in the latter part of his life a leading
-correspondent of the London _Times_, having achieved a high reputation
-in this direction prior to the days of Dr. Russell and Archibald
-Forbes. His work and position brought him into confidential relations
-with many of the most important men and events of Europe from 1840
-to 1875, and he describes these in a racy fashion which will command
-attention, we think.
-
-Mr. Gallenga as a youth of twenty took part in the Italian struggle
-for liberty in 1831, under the name of Luigi Mariotti. It was one of
-those brief episodes of revolution with which Italy was convulsed so
-often before the great final dead-lock came, which drove the hated
-_Sedischi_ from her soil. The young patriot was for a short time in
-prison, but finally escaped, and lived for a while as a tutor in
-Tangiers. Thence he came to America, to carve a career for himself, and
-located himself in Boston in 1836. Here he speedily found employment
-as teacher, lecturer and writer, and was fortunate in securing the
-friendship and goodwill of the leading people of the city. Boston was
-then without dispute the only literary centre of the country, in spite
-of a few brilliant names in New York, and Sig. Gallenga seems to have
-found congenial employment and companionship from the outset. His
-reminiscences of such men as Edward Everett, Fields, Ticknor, Prescott
-and others are entertaining, and his sketch of the whole entourage of
-Boston society is given with a refreshing _naïveté_, as well as with
-graceful vivacity. Among the minor incidents which lend humor to the
-book is the author's experience with a young American beauty, with
-whom he was in love, and whom in his impulsive and passionate Italian
-way, he clasped in his arms and kissed. He professes himself highly
-astonished because the damsel was greatly enraged and ordered him from
-the house, ending the acquaintance then and there. After spending four
-years in America under unusually agreeable conditions, Mr. Gallenga,
-who was still known under his pseudonym of Mariotti, took ship for
-England, and bade a final farewell to the country of which he speaks in
-such cordial and even affectionate terms. Settling in London good luck
-still followed him. He secured introductions to prominent persons, was
-accorded recognition at once, and became acquainted with many of the
-people, both literary and otherwise, best worth knowing in England. A
-great interest in Italian affairs and literature was then the rage,
-and Mr. Gallenga, who was a scholar and an able writer, found ample
-opportunity and occupation in contributing to the magazines and reviews
-on subjects which he discussed _con amore_. A book which he published
-gave him repute beyond that of a mere fugitive writer, and he was
-fortunate in making literature lucrative as well as honorable. His
-gossip about prominent people and occurrences in London forty years
-ago, is very entertaining, and he shows as much skill in throwing light
-on the English life of that day as he had done in describing America.
-Twenty years of literary and professorial work, were frequently broken
-up by long residences in Italy, during which he sat for a time in the
-Italian Parliament, and helped to pave the way for that consolidation
-of Italian interests which at last led to Solferino and Magenta, and
-the grand result of Italian unity. He seems to have been accorded an
-important place in the councils and deliberations of his nation, and
-to have been an important agent in bringing about those relations
-which freed Italy from foreign domination. In 1859 our author became
-connected with the _Times_ as correspondent, and since that time has
-been employed on many of the most delicate and important commissions.
-He represented them in the Franco-Italian-Austrian War, and succeeded
-Dr. Russell at the time of our late civil conflict; was sent repeatedly
-to every part of Europe, and, for a good while had a roving commission
-to write whatever he saw worth reporting and discussing, particularly
-on the peoples and events of the Mediterranean seaboard countries, from
-the straits of Gibraltar to the Dardanelles. Mr. Gallenga tells his
-story (and he has much to tell) with the vivacity of an Italian and
-with the ability of a trained man-of-letters. A number of books, mostly
-on historical and political subjects, have given him a recognized
-literary place aside from mere journalism, and he reviews a long,
-diversified and interesting career with an interest and satisfaction
-which he fully communicates to his readers. We have rarely read a
-volume more packed with interesting matter, narrated with the skill
-which comes of long training.
-
-
- A HISTORICAL REFERENCE BOOK, COMPRISING A CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE OF
- UNIVERSAL HISTORY, A CHRONOLOGICAL DICTIONARY OF UNIVERSAL HISTORY,
- A BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY WITH GEOGRAPHICAL NOTES FOR THE USE OF
- STUDENTS, TEACHERS AND READERS. By Louis Heilprin. New York: _D.
- Appleton & Co._
-
-The plan adopted in this handy reference book of historical dates
-and events has been to deal separately with the events of different
-countries, and an excellent system has been followed with great
-thoroughness. The author is very well known as an industrious and
-painstaking scholar, the results of whose work can be depended
-on. About many historical dates there is much confusion, and the
-difficulties in coming to a conclusion are great. Mr. Heilprin very
-modestly states the obstacles in the way of perfect accuracy, and
-convinces the reader that, if blunders have been made, they are such
-as are absolutely unavoidable in the dire chaos which envelops many of
-even the most important facts of history so far as certainty of year
-is concerned. We may be sure that every caution and pains have been
-taken by the author. In many cases where it is impossible to reach an
-absolute statement, two dates are given, the preferable one stated
-first. Such a book as this is of the greatest convenience, and one
-that a well-informed or studious man can hardly afford to be without.
-A remarkable seeming omission, however, is the non-assignment of date
-to the Christian era, or any reference to the life and career that
-gave it significance. The studious avoidal seems significant, but we
-may explain it on the theory that the absolute date of Christ's birth
-cannot be absolutely fixed within several years. On the whole, indeed,
-with this one exception (perhaps an unavoidable one) the compilation
-appears to be all such a work should.
-
-
- BERMUDA: AN IDYLL OF THE SUMMER ISLANDS. By Julia C. R. Dorr. New
- York: _Charles Scribner's Sons_.
-
-The germ of this book was in an article called “Bermudan Days”
-published in the _Atlantic Monthly_ for December, 1883, and we find
-the paper incorporated with the work. The volume is a brightly written
-account of a vacation of three months in the Bermudas, one of the most
-charming sanitariums of our western seas. So much has been written
-about the pleasant lotos-lands of the North and South Antilles, that
-no new facts can be now told about them. But the old background of
-cloudless skies, summer seas, and balmy ocean breezes, which make
-such places as the Bahamas and the Bermudas earthly paradises, never
-get tedious or dull when seen and felt through the medium of a fresh
-and lively nature. In winter time especially, when the bleak cold of
-the north starts the imagination travelling toward summer climates,
-and those condemned to stay in cold weather, sigh for the delights
-of the more fortunate voyager, such books as the one before us make
-very pleasant reading. The author describes the attractions of
-Bermudan life: its roses and sunshine, its novel sights and sounds,
-the picturesque aspects of a primitive, contented, lazy population,
-delightful sails over beautiful seas, and all the episodes of the
-sojourn with the keenest enjoyment, and a skilful literary touch. The
-very essence of an agreeable book of this kind is an utter lack of
-anything like fine writing. Mrs. Dorr certainly shows good taste in
-this matter, though one might fancy the temptation would be great to
-try what is so often called word-painting. She tells us what she has to
-say, and she has many good things to tell us, too, in a lively, racy,
-picturesque, but utterly unpretentious way. Of course we do not expect
-anyone to write a book about the Bermudas, without giving us something
-of the oft-repeated tale of its history and traditions; but Mrs.
-Dorr has spared us from overmuch, and does not weary the attention.
-The enjoyable portion of the work is the personal impressions and
-experiences of herself and her party. As every traveller or tourist
-with a literary taste, finds it essential, nowadays, to serve the
-sight-seeing up in book form, we can only wish that more of them had
-the good taste and lively nature of the present author.
-
-
- ELEMENTS OF ZOOLOGY. (_Appleton's Science Text-Books._) By C. F.
- Holder, Fellow of the New York Academy of Sciences, etc., and T. B.
- Holder, A.M., Curator Zoology, American Museum of Natural History. New
- York: _D. Appleton & Co._
-
-This new manual of one of the most interesting branches of science, is
-equally adapted for the school or for family reading. The object of the
-authors, which is to present in plain and concise language and in the
-light of the latest research and investigation, the life history of the
-various groups making up the animal kingdom has been well done. The
-best authorities have been followed. The authors, too, have introduced
-a great deal of matter of a descriptive and narrative matter, such as
-will thoroughly interest their young readers, such as the growth of the
-coral, nest-building fishes, luminous animals, animal electricians,
-hibernation, mimicry, etc., things which make certain phases of science
-almost like a fairy tale. The dry classification of science has but
-little attraction except to the professional scientist, and the authors
-have avoided this rock of dreariness as far as possible. The aim of the
-book seems to be largely to encourage the reader to become an original
-investigator, and to use his eyes and ears intelligently in observing
-the order of animated nature. The cuts are nicely and cleanly made,
-and the volume is very neat, though gotten up for service and not for
-ornament.
-
-
- THE REALITY OF RELIGION. By Henry J. Van Dyke, Jr., D.D. New York:
- _Charles Scribner's Sons_.
-
-In this day of scepticism without, and dry-rot within, it well becomes
-the champions of the Christian faith to enter the lists with the
-keenest weapons furnished for the fight. Dr. Van Dyke argues, not
-from the standpoint of the dialectician, or from that of the defender
-of historical Christianity. It is the personal argument drawn from
-needs of human nature which he has here elaborated. He says: “We do
-not sneer at the dogmas of theology. They are certainly as important
-as the dogmas of science. We do not despise the questions of ritual.
-They are at least of equal consequence with the questions of social
-order. But religion is infinitely beyond all these. It is more vital
-and more profound. It does not appeal to the intellect alone. It is not
-satisfied with the conclusions of logic. Nor does it rest at ease upon
-the æsthetic sense. It reaches down into the very depths of the living,
-throbbing, human heart, and stirs a longing which nothing outward and
-formal can ever fill—_the longing for personal fellowship with God_.”
-It is this need of religion in the soul as essential to satisfy its
-truest and deepest longing which furnishes the keynote of the argument.
-He insists that religion is as absolute a reality, which we can feel
-and know in our spiritual life, as is the bread we eat to sustain our
-physical life. Dr. Van Dyke considers the subject under the heads of
-“A Real Religion Necessary;” “The Living God;” “The Living Soul” “The
-Living Word;” “The Living Sacrifice;” and “The Living Christ.” In the
-last, of course, we find the key-stone and cap, as well, of the logic
-of his thesis. The work will give comfort and satisfaction to many
-Christian souls, and is not unworthy of Dr. Van Dyke as an accomplished
-stylist. Chastened, yet glowing, subdued, yet strong, the book is one
-which should have a large number of readers among those devoted to the
-interests of the Church of Christ.
-
-
- THE ENCHIRIDION OF WIT: THE BEST SPECIMENS OF ENGLISH CONVERSATIONAL
- WIT. Philadelphia: _J. B. Lippincott & Co._
-
-This collection has aimed to avoid both the characteristics of the
-jest-book or of table-talk. Its place is between the two, being
-compiled from the annals of conversation, and comprising at the same
-time only those jests and stories which possess the stamp of wit as
-distinguished from humor or drollery. That the collection is good,
-one needs only to read the pleasant prefatory essay, which is very
-gracefully and brightly written, to feel sure that the taste and
-knowledge of the writer or editor have been well displayed in his work
-of selection. It goes without saying that many of the anecdotes are old
-and familiar. Many of the very best things ever said in the world, of
-course, are what we term “Joe Millers.” That they should be otherwise,
-would argue but bad taste on the part of our predecessors. But our
-present author has gleaned in many an outlying field as well as in the
-well travelled road, and gives us very satisfactory showing for his
-literary excursus in new directions. Some of the stories in the book we
-do not remember to have seen before in any similar work.
-
-
-
-
-FOREIGN LITERARY NOTES.
-
-
-THE monument to Virgil at Pietole (which is supposed to be the Andes of
-the Romans), near Mantua, was unveiled lately.
-
- * * * * *
-
-THE death of a popular Russian novelist, B. M. Markievich, on the 30th
-of last month, is reported from St. Petersburg.
-
- * * * * *
-
-THE original autographs of the love-letters addressed by John Keats
-to Miss Fanny Brawne in the years 1819-20 will be sold by Messrs.
-Sotheby, Wilkinson & Hodge the first week in March, together with six
-unpublished autograph letters of Charles Lamb.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A PAMPHLET by Madame E. Coulombe is announced for immediate publication
-by Mr. Elliot Stock. This lady was associated with Madame Blavatsky
-for some years, and in this _brochure_ tells what she heard and saw of
-Madame Blavatsky and the Theosophists with whom she came in contact in
-India and elsewhere.
-
- * * * * *
-
-TRINITY COLLEGE, Dublin, is about to start a new paper with the
-title _The Dublin University Review_. The first number will appear
-on February 1st, and the issue will be bi-monthly, except during the
-long vacation. The paper will contain literary articles as well as
-university news of every description, and will be owned by a limited
-liability company.
-
- * * * * *
-
-THE Incorporated Society of Authors propose to send a deputation to the
-Prime Minister to urge the codification of the Copyright Acts, which
-are fourteen in number. Several of the chief publishers, not of books
-only, but also of prints and music, will be asked to join.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A CONFERENCE of elementary teachers, international in its character,
-has been summoned to meet at Havre. This is the first conference of the
-kind which has been organized in France, and it is expected that the
-Government will make a grant in aid of the expenses.
-
- * * * * *
-
-THE article on Polish history and literature in the next volume of the
-“Encyclopædia Britannica” will be from the pen of Mr. Morfill, who will
-also contribute the articles on the Emperor Paul, and on Peter the
-Great.
-
- * * * * *
-
-MR. LOWE, correspondent of the _Times_ at Berlin, is engaged in writing
-a biography of Prince Bismarck, which will appear next spring.
-
- * * * * *
-
-M. SCHLUMBERGER, the well known numismatist, and M. Benoist have
-lately been elected members of the Académie des Inscriptions et
-Belles-Lettres.
-
- * * * * *
-
-AN exhibition is to be held in the Imperial Library at Constantinople
-of Turkish writing, bookbinding, and illumination, for which prizes are
-to be given.
-
- * * * * *
-
-ONE of the most important scholastic reforms now in progress in Turkey
-is that relating to the study of the Arabic language. As now conducted,
-this study absorbs years in a desultory way which might be applied
-to the acquisition of other branches of knowledge. With the view to
-abridge the course of study without impairing its quality, the Sultan
-has determined on founding a special medresseh for teaching Arabic
-on a scientific basis, and for this purpose has purchased from the
-funds of the civil list the property of the Guedik Pasha Theatre at
-Constantinople.
-
- * * * * *
-
-THE long lost and often found commentary on the “Atharva-veda” seems at
-last on its way to publication. The whole of the commentary has not yet
-been found, but two-thirds of it are now in the hands of the pandits
-of Poona, who will prepare a critical publication of both text and
-commentary. The text of the “Atharva-veda” was published in the early
-days of Vedic scholarship by Roth and Whitney, and the latter scholar
-has lately published a very useful index.
-
- * * * * *
-
-WE are enabled to state, says the _Athenæum_, that a popular edition of
-Her Majesty's recent work, “More Leaves from the Journal of a Life in
-the Highlands,” is in the press, and will be ready for publication in
-the course of a few weeks. The new edition will contain all the woodcut
-illustrations which appeared in the original edition, together with
-wood-engravings of the portraits, and will be uniform with the popular
-edition of the Queen's previous work, “Leaves from the Journal of our
-Life in the Highlands.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-MR. ALEXANDER DEL MAR, according to the _Academy_, formerly Director
-of the Bureau of Statistics of the United States, whose _History of
-the Precious Metals_ was published in 1880, has in the press a work
-on _The History of Money from the Earliest Times to the Middle Ages_,
-upon which he has been occupied for many years past. It will shortly be
-published by Messrs. Bell & Sons.
-
- * * * * *
-
-FROM the _Academy_ we quote the following amusing paragraph:
-
-“The _Magazin für die Literatur des In- und Auslandes_ continues to
-be unfortunate when it meddles with the English language. Many of
-our readers will be acquainted with Victor Scheffel's charming German
-song—referring, we believe, to Heinrich von Ofterdingen—which has the
-refrain, 'Der Heini von Steier ist wieder im Land.' The _Magazin_ of
-January 10 publishes an 'English' translation of this poem, by Johanna
-Baltz, from which we quote the following specimen:—
-
- “'To finches and swallows tells sweet nightingale:
- “The song of a violin fills woodland and vale!
- Ye twitt'ners, ye singers, now silence your cant—
- Hark, Heini von Steier returned to his land!”
-
- “'Shoemaker is waving his furcap in glee:
- “The merciful heaven forgets neven me!
- Now shoes will be costly, soleleather gets scant—
- Hark, Heini von Steier returned to his land.“'”
-
- * * * * *
-
-THE eighty-ninth birthday of Dr. Ranke (December 21st) has excited
-interest throughout Germany, and elicited many expressions of the
-respect universally felt for him. The strength of the venerable
-historian defies the increase of years, and he works daily at his home
-in Berlin on the history which he hopes to complete.
-
- * * * * *
-
-MR. C. E. PASCOE has issued a prospectus on the publication of
-English books in America. He says in effect that, though the lack of
-international copyright is one reason why English authors derive but
-little profit from the sale of their works in America, another and
-graver reason is, that as a class, they are in ignorance of the means
-for getting the best out of existing conditions. The usual method of
-procedure is for the English publisher to make proposals to an American
-publisher, or for the representative of an American firm in London to
-submit proposals to his principals in the United States. Mr. Pascoe
-points to the danger of losing a lucrative sale that this method
-entails. His prospectus, which is accompanied by letters from American
-publishers and some well-known English authors, is worth attention. Mr.
-Pascoe's address is 6 Southfields Road, West Hill, Wandsworth, S. W.
-
- * * * * *
-
-AN early and hitherto unknown Arabic work has lately been added to
-the Museum Library. It is entitled “Kitāb al-Mohabbir”, and contains
-various historical notices and traditions relating to the ancient
-Arabs and to the time of Mohammed and his immediate successors. The
-author, Abu Sa'id al-Hasan al-Sukkari, lived in the third century
-of the Hijrah, and is well known as one of the earliest editors and
-commentators of the old poets, but the present work appears somehow to
-have escaped notice; it is neither mentioned in the Fihrist, nor by Ibn
-Khallikan or Soyuti. The two last-named authors state that Al-Sukkari
-died A.H. 275; but according to Ibn Kāni' (Leyden Catalogue, vol. ii.
-p. 8) he lived on to A.H. 290. The present work would show that the
-former date is decidedly wrong; for it contains a brief sketch of
-the Abbasides brought down by Al-Sukkari himself to the accession of
-Al-Mo'tadid, _i.e._, A.H. 279.
-
- * * * * *
-
-AMONG other recent additions to the Arabic collection, the following
-are especially deserving of the attention of scholars: the earliest
-extant history of the Moslem conquest of Egypt, Africa, and Spain,
-by Ibn 'Abd al-Hakam, who died A.H. 257, a twelfth century copy;
-“Zubdat al-Tawarikh,” a history of the Seljuk-dynasty, written shortly
-after its extinction, about A.H. 620, by Sadr al-Din Abul Hasan Ali
-Ibn Abul Fawaris Nasir Husaini, a fine and apparently unique copy of
-the thirteenth century; “Kitab al-Osul,” an extensive and hitherto
-unknown work on Arabic grammar by one of the earliest writers on the
-subject, Ibn al-Sarraj, who died A.H. 316, handsomely written, with all
-vowels, A.H. 651; a fine and valuable copy of the “Makamat al-Hariri,”
-written by a grandson of the author, A.H. 557 (_i.e._, forty years
-after Hariri's death), and consequently earlier than any copy of that
-standard work known to exist in European libraries.
-
- * * * * *
-
-THE numbers of ladies attending the King's College classes at
-Observatory Avenue have been very high during the term that has just
-ended. The entries were nearly 600, which is a larger number than has
-been reached since the first year, 1878, when the classes started, and
-the present house hardly affords room for such numbers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-IT is not generally known that the _Times_ attains its hundredth year
-on the 1st of January, 1885. The prevailing notion is that the year in
-which it was founded was 1788, the truth being that the 940th number
-of the journal appeared on the first day in that year. The mistake is
-due to confounding a change in the title with the foundation of the
-journal. The actual facts are set forth in an article which Mr. Fraser
-Rae contributes to the January number of the _Nineteenth Century_.
-Amongst other things which will attract notice in that article is a
-verbatim copy of the inscription on the tablets affixed in honor of the
-conduct of the _Times_ in the case of Bogle _v._ Lawson in 1841, by a
-committee of bankers and merchants of the City, in the Royal Exchange,
-and over the entrance to the _Times_ printing office. As these tablets
-are placed where the inscriptions on them cannot easily be read, and as
-copies of these inscriptions are not given in the works dealing with
-the City, the copy in the _Nineteenth Century_ is a piece of historical
-information which will be novel to most readers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-THE last number of _Shakspeariana_ contains the somewhat surprising
-statement that Prof. Kuno Fischer is a convert to the Bacon-Shakspere
-theory, and will lecture upon it at Heidelberg this winter. From the
-same periodical we copy the following curious paragraph:—
-
-“A very remarkable discovery has been placed on record by the Hon.
-Ignatius Donnelly, who claims to have proof positive that Bacon was
-the author of Shakspere's plays. This is accomplished by means of
-a cipher which Bacon twice describes, whereby one writing could be
-infolded and hidden in another. The words of the hidden story have
-a definite relation to the acts and scenes of the plays, which is
-determined by counting. Attracted by 'I. Henry IV.'; II., i., ii.,
-iv., and IV., ii., in which he found the words 'Francis,' 'Bacon'
-(twice), 'Nicholas' (twice), 'Bacon's,' 'son,' 'master,' 'Kings,'
-'exchequer,' 'St. Albans'—the name of Bacon's place of residence—and,
-in IV., ii., 'Francis' repeated twenty times on one page, Mr. Donnelly
-applied his key to it, with the following result:—Elizabeth during
-the Essex troubles became, as is known, incensed at the use made of
-the play of 'Richard II.,' in which is represented the deposition and
-killing of the King; and she made it one of the points of prosecution
-which cost Essex his head, that he had hired the company of players
-to which Shakspere belonged to represent it more than forty times in
-open streets and in tavern yards, in order to prepare the public mind
-for her own deposition and murder. History tells us that she caused
-the arrest of Haywarde, who wrote a prose narrative of the deposition
-of Richard II. and dedicated it to Essex, and he narrowly escaped a
-State prosecution. Mr. Donnelly shows that at the same time Shakspere
-was arrested as the author of the plays; he was threatened with the
-torture, and disclosed to the officers of the Crown the fact that Bacon
-was the real author of the plays. Bacon threw himself on the protection
-of his uncle, Lord Burleigh, the great Lord Treasurer, who saved him
-from exposure and prosecution, but revealed the truth to Elizabeth; and
-this is the explanation of the fact, that, as long as Elizabeth lived,
-she kept Bacon out of office and in poverty.”
-
-
-
-
-MISCELLANY.
-
-
-SOME PERSONAL RECOLLECTIONS OF GEORGE SAND.—The recent unveiling of
-George Sand's statue at La Châtre has set people thinking about her
-afresh. At no time since “Indiana” and “Lelia” first revealed the
-existence of a new writer of transcendent power, has her place in
-French literature, and her influence on the social problems of the
-time, and the question whether her artistic creations will or will not
-live, been canvassed with more energy than during the past few weeks.
-Some personal recollections of George Sand given by Mrs. Ellis, the
-authoress of “Sylvestra,” may therefore be of interest: “Above twenty
-years ago,” writes Mrs. Ellis, “I spent three days in a French hotel
-(at Tours) with George Sand, without knowing who she was. She puzzled
-me all the time, and had in person something of the same effect on
-me that her character—attractive and repulsive—has still. She sat
-opposite me at a narrow _table d'hôte_—a tall, large, strongly-built
-woman, with features in proportion to her size. Her eyes were fine,
-but her force of appearance was rather physical than intellectual. It
-must have been the brain beneath the strong features which teased me
-as it did, to make out to myself who she could be. She was mature,
-but in no decline of force, massive, grave, and restful, with nothing
-Gallic about her. The dark hair, eyes, and tint might have belonged to
-Italy or Spain, quite as well as to France, and the bearing, better.
-Her dress might have been called 'dowdy.' It was of the type of the
-travelling Englishwoman, as French eyes see it, rather than French. I
-think her 'robe' was brown, which did not become her at all. Crimson
-would have suited her. She wore an ugly, large-brimmed, straw hat,
-with broad lace falling over the brim, at a time when Frenchwomen had
-hardly begun to wear hats, and—if my memory does not err—she wore it
-at dinner. Her companion was an elderly and feeble man, seemingly
-more than seventy. There was nothing in the appearance of the couple
-(viewing them as married folk) unlike that of many other French pairs,
-when, as is so often the case, the man 'ranges' himself at forty by
-the side of a young lady of half his years. My perplexing neighbor
-understood what I said to my husband in English, and offered me some
-little courteous attentions. There was no real speech between us. If I
-had known it was George Sand, I believe that I should not have spoken
-more, as I had not long before read some unpleasing remarks in her
-autobiography on the way in which she was annoyed by '_les Anglaises_,'
-and on the '_étranges sifflements_' which they introduced into the
-fine French tongue! She and I were the only two women in the hotel
-who ever went into a sort of reading-room adjoining the house to look
-at the newspapers. I had nearly settled with myself that she was a
-lady country squire, such as I used to see drive into Tours on market
-days, when one morning, on going, as I used to do, to the Imperial
-library, to draw from old illuminated MSS., my friend, the librarian,
-M. d'Orange, said to me, 'Madame, do you know that you have George Sand
-in your hotel?' When I went back, she had just gone with the gentleman
-who had lent her his name to travel with, for she was entered as his
-'Comtesse' in the book of the hotel. He was a Radical Deputy. I told my
-lively landlady, who declared that M. d'Orange '_n'en savait rien_,'
-and opened her book to show me the names of M. le Comte and Madame la
-Comtesse So-and-So. Then she said, 'If it was George Sand,' her books,
-'_ma foi_,' of which she had read one or two—instancing a couple of the
-best—were not '_grande chose_.' When I got back to England, I looked
-at a fine lithographed portrait of George Sand, and saw it was the
-woman. Perhaps it was for the best that I had not known who she was,
-as my impression, which is still vivid, remains of her as she seemed,
-and not such as my fancy would at once have set to work to make her
-out. Thinking of her afterward, I was reminded of that passage in her
-autobiography in which she tells how, in a moment of misery, she tested
-her own strength by lifting a large heavy stone, and said to herself in
-despair, 'And I may have to live forty years!' Also I thought of Alfred
-de Musset's taunting her—she never forgot it—with having no _esprit_.
-Of '_esprit Gallois_' she seems to have had little. The Northern races
-had the uppermost in her making, I should say. I have a notion that
-the Königsmarks were Pomeranian—of the Bismarck build—and had she not
-the blood of the Counts Horn? I forget. However, Marshal Saxe spoke
-for himself in her. Mr. Hamerton says that an intense desire to study
-character had its strong share in her illicit liaisons with poets,
-musicians, lawyers, novelists, etc., all being men above the common
-run. But here, again, I cannot help thinking that race descent from
-Augustus II. of Saxony and Aurore de Königsmark counted for much. Her
-genuine feeling for the poor, and a sort of homely motherliness, seem
-to have made her greatly loved by the Berry people.“—_Spectator._
-
- * * * * *
-
-THE AMERICAN SENATE.—It is amusing to see discussions on the possible
-abolition of the American Senate, in which the disputants on one side
-do not seem to see that what they are proposing is the abolition of
-the federal system altogether. It has been explained over and over
-again—yet, as long as some seem not to understand so plain a matter,
-it must be explained once more—that a proposal to abolish the American
-Senate is quite a different matter from a proposal to abolish the
-French Senate. With regard to the French Senate the question is simply
-whether the business of the nation is likely to be best done by one
-House or by two. With regard to the American Senate we have to go much
-deeper. The House of Representatives represents the nation formed
-by the union of all the separate States; the Senate represents the
-separate States themselves. The federal nation is formed by the union
-of States differing widely in size and power, but equal in rights and
-dignity, each of which still keeps all such attributes of independent
-commonwealths as it has not formally given up to the federal power. To
-hinder alike the federal nation from being swamped by the States and
-the States from being swamped by the federal nation, it is needful to
-have one assembly in which each State has only that amount of voice to
-which it is entitled by its population, and another assembly in which
-each State, great and small, has an equal voice. If any party in the
-United States wishes altogether to get rid of the federal system, if
-they wish to get rid of the independence of the several States, if they
-wish the great names of Massachusetts and Virginia to mean no more than
-an English county or a French department, then let them propose the
-abolition of the Senate of the United States, and not otherwise. Yet
-even under a system where the Second Chamber is absolutely necessary,
-we see the comparative weakness of Second Chambers; its abolition can
-be discussed. And herein comes the wonderful wisdom of the founders
-of the American Constitution in strengthening the Senate with those
-powers of other kinds which make it something more than a Second
-Chamber or Upper House. And mark further that the Swiss _Ständerath_
-or _Conseil des États_, formed after the model of the American Senate,
-like it absolutely necessary if Switzerland is to remain a federal
-commonwealth, is far from holding the same position in the country
-which the American Senate holds. For it is a mere partner with the
-_Nationalrath_, and has not those special powers in and by itself which
-the American Senate has. But mark again that the great position of the
-American Senate is something which cannot exist along with our form
-of executive government. A President may be asked formally to submit
-his acts to be confirmed by one branch of the Legislature; a King can
-hardly be asked to do so.—_Contemporary Review._
-
- * * * * *
-
-SHAKESPEARE AND BALZAC.—Yacht life gives ample leisure. I had employed
-part of mine in making sketches. One laughs at one's extraordinary
-performances a day or two after one has completed them. Yet the attempt
-is worth making. It teaches one to admire less grudgingly the work of
-real artists who have conquered the difficulties. Books are less trying
-to vanity, for one is producing nothing of one's own, and submitting
-only to be interested or amused, if the author can succeed in either.
-One's appetite is generally good on these occasions, and one can devour
-anything; but in the pure primitive element of sea, and mountains,
-and unprogressive peasantry, I had become somehow fastidious. I tried
-a dozen novels one after the other without success; at last, perhaps
-the morning we left Elversdale, I found on the library shelves ”_Le
-Père Goriot_.” I had read a certain quantity of “Balzac” at other
-times, in deference to the high opinion entertained of him. N——, a
-fellow of Oriel, and once Member for Oxford, I remembered insisting
-to me that there was more knowledge of human nature in “Balzac” than
-in Shakespeare. I had myself observed in him a knowledge of a certain
-kind of human nature which Shakespeare let alone—a nature in which
-healthy vigor had been corrupted into a caricature by highly seasoned
-artificial civilization. Hothouse plants, in which the flowers had
-lost their grace of form and natural beauty, and had gained instead a
-poison-loaded and perfumed luxuriance, did not exist in Shakespeare's
-time, and if they had they would probably not have interested him.
-However, I had not read “_Le Père Goriot_,” and as I had been assured
-that it was the finest of Balzac's works, I sat down to it and
-deliberately read it through. My first impulse after it was over was
-to plunge into the sea to wash myself. As we were going ten knots,
-there were objections to this method of ablution, but I felt that
-I had been in abominable company. The book seemed to be the very
-worst ever written by a clever man. But it, and N——'s reference to
-Shakespeare, led me into a train of reflections. Le Père Goriot, like
-King Lear, has two daughters. Like Lear, he strips himself of his own
-fortune to provide for them in a distinguished manner. He is left to
-poverty and misery while his daughters live in splendor. Why is Lear
-so grand? Why is Le Père Goriot detestable? In the first place, all
-the company in Balzac are bad. Le Père Goriot is so wrapped up in
-his delightful children, that their very vices charm him, and their
-scented boudoirs seem a kind of Paradise. Lear, in the first scene
-of the play, acts and talks like an idiot, but still an idiot with a
-moral soul in him. Take Lear's own noble nature from him, take Kent
-away, and Edgar, and the fool, and Cordelia—and the actors in the play,
-it must be admitted, are abominable specimens of humanity—yet even
-so, leaving the story as it might have been if Marlowe had written
-it instead of Shakespeare, Goneril and Regan would still have been
-terrible, while the Paris dames of fashion are merely loathsome. What
-is the explanation of the difference? Partly, I suppose, it arises from
-the comparative intellectual stature of the two sets of women. Strong
-natures and weak may be equally wicked. The strong are interesting,
-because they have daring and force. You fear them as you fear panthers
-and tigers. You hate, but you admire. M. Balzac's heroines have no
-intellectual nature at all. They are female swine out of Circe's sty;
-as selfish, as unscrupulous as any daughter of Adam could conveniently
-be, but soft, and corrupt, and cowardly, and sensual; so base and low
-that it would be a compliment to call them devils. I object to being
-brought into the society of people in a book whom I would shut my eyes
-rather than see in real life. Goneril and Regan would be worth looking
-at in a cage in the Zoological Gardens. One would have no curiosity
-to stare at a couple of dames caught out of Coventry Street or the
-Quadrant. From Shakespeare to Balzac, from the sixteenth century to the
-nineteenth, we have been progressing to considerable purpose. If the
-state of literature remains as it has hitherto been, the measure of
-our moral condition, Europe has been going ahead with a vengeance. I
-put out the taste of “_Le Père Goriot_” with “Persuasion.” Afterwards
-I found a book really worth reading, with the uninviting title of
-“Adventures in Sport and War,” the author of it a young Marquis de
-Compiègne, a ruined representative of the old French _noblesse_, who
-appears first as a penniless adventurer seeking his fortune in America
-as a birdstuffer, and tempted by an advertisement into the swamps of
-Florida in search of specimens, a beggarly experience, yet told with
-_naïveté_ and simplicity, truth and honor surviving by the side of
-absolute helplessness. Afterwards we find him in France again, fighting
-as a private in the war with Germany, and taken prisoner at Sedan; and
-again in the campaign against the Commune, at the taking of Paris, and
-the burning of the Tuileries—a tragic picture, drawn, too, with entire
-unconsciousness of the condition to which Balzac, Madame Sand, and the
-rest of the fraternity had dragged down the French nation.—_Longman's
-Magazine._
-
- * * * * *
-
-THE DREAD OF OLD AGE.—We all of us, or at least all of us who are
-slipping past fifty, secretly dread old age, and regard with aversion
-its usual, or traditionally usual, conditions; and the sight of a
-man about whose years there can be no question, who has passed by
-thirty years the average limit of human life, and by ten years an
-extreme limit, and yet talks well, hears fairly well, sees perfectly
-well and could walk like another but for weakness, is pleasantly
-reassuring. If the man of a century can be like Sir Moses Montefiore,
-the man of ninety may be only a little indolent, the man of eighty
-hale and hearty, and the man of seventy retain “the fullest vigor of
-his faculties.” That is one secret, we are convinced, of the decided
-popularity of very old statesmen, and especially old statesmen of great
-vigor, a sense among the middle-aged that if they who are so visible
-can be so strong and active and full brilliancy, old age cannot be so
-dreadful after all. An apprehension has been removed or lessened, and a
-very keen one. Some of the dread no doubt is traditional, founded upon
-boyish recollections, and even upon books, Shakespeare in particular
-having expressed, in lines which have stuck in the national memory,
-an unusually strong sense of the infirmities of age. His celebrated
-lines were probably accurate at the time, for they are accurate now
-when applied to certain classes of the very poor; but they no longer
-describe the majority of the aged well-to-do. Whatever the cause,
-whether improved sanitary appliances, or greater temperance, or, as
-we should ourselves believe, an increase of the habit of persistently
-using the mind, and consistently taking interest in events, it is
-certain that the disease called senility is among the fully-fed
-much rarer than it used to be. The old lose their hearing, and their
-activity, and part of the keenness of their sight, and are supposed to
-be grown duller alike to pleasure and to pain; but they much seldomer
-become totally blind, or fatuous, or unable to control their features,
-or incapable of guiding themselves about. Men of eighty-four or
-five, who, in the early part of the century, would have fallen into
-second childhood—then a disease recognized not only by doctors, but
-by all men, and regarded as a sort of idiotcy—now talk easily, and
-glide over little deficiencies of memory, and are, apart from a not
-ungraceful physical weakness, truly men. The younger generation has,
-however, scarcely realised the change in its full extent, and fears
-age, therefore, unconsciously a little more acutely than it should,
-though it has reason for some of its fear. The lot of the old is not
-the happiest, even if they are fortunately placed. They suffer from
-the certainty that such physical ills as they have cannot be cured,
-and a fear that they will become worse, from a deficiency, not so much
-of occupation as of imperative occupation, the business occupation of
-middle-age and from that unconscious insolence of the babbling youth
-around them, which is, perhaps, most felt by the aged when youth is
-most loving and considerate. One does not want to be “considered” by a
-baby. They suffer from a jar between their own impression of their own
-wisdom, as a necessary product of their long experience, and a secret
-doubt whether the young, who evidently think so differently, can be
-all wrong, not to mention that actual disrespect which the peculiar
-conceit of the young always appears to indicate even when it is not
-intended. They suffer from their keen memory for disappointments, which
-sometimes in the reflections of the old exaggerate their bulk till life
-seems made up of little else—a phenomenon constantly observable in the
-monologues of the uneducated and ill-restrained. And they suffer most
-of all from the loss, ever-increasing as time slips along, not only
-of those dearest to them, but of accustomed intimates, and especially
-of friends who grow fewer not only from deaths, but from departures,
-alienations, and changes of condition and feeling. The very old, as
-far as our experience serves, are fortunate if, outside the circle of
-blood relations, they retain even one or two close friends: and this to
-some men and women, especially to those much dependent on conversation
-to stimulate their natures and “put them in spirits,” is the most
-irremediable of losses. They feel as if life had altered, and the very
-sunlight were less inspiring. Add that all the indulgences of hope,
-including day dreaming, become vapid—reason showing the unreality—and
-gradually cease, and we may admit that even under favorable
-circumstances old age is not an enviable condition, more especially
-among Englishmen and Americans, who feel little of that instinctive
-reverence for age, and belief in its nearness to the divine, which
-characterises all Asia and a large portion of Southern Europe. The
-Teutons think allusions to gray hairs, which Southerners regard as
-solemn, and will accept even in a theatre with applause, a little
-rhetorical or artificial. The respect for the old is not gone, but a
-certain reverence is, if it ever existed among us, which, remembering
-Shakespeare's lines and our own workhouse arrangements, we half incline
-to doubt.—_Spectator._
-
-A TRUE CRITIC.—He who has the genuine pictorial sense, of which not
-even the idea can be given to those who have not got it, is quickly
-discovered by those who have the same gift. They will detect him in
-the gallery by many signs. He is guided by instinct to stand at the
-right distance from the picture, which is not a mere matter of taste
-as most folk think, but the distance at which the picture has the same
-expanse to the eye as the real object replaced by it would have. A
-little nearer or a little farther he feels the picture bearing falsely.
-Falsely when things are represented which in the real view would alter
-(as the picture objects cannot) in their mutual effects by advancing
-towards or retreating from them. His eye goes right to the heart of
-the picture; the spot made to be such by the artifice of the painter.
-He is in no hurry to look elsewhere. He looks towards one point, but
-he sees the rest sufficiently without peeping about. His consciousness
-takes in the whole simultaneously, and for a while he examines nothing;
-forgets that he sees a picture, and feels the quickening within of the
-thoughts which such a scene might stir up. He can presently put aside
-all this and criticise if he cares to do so, just as the musician can
-cease from his tune and look to the strings or stops. For he is curious
-about the mechanism of the delightful delusion as the musician or the
-most enraptured of his audience may care to look into the arrangement
-of a musical instrument. But the picture like the violin, is not in
-operation at all while it is being examined.—_Art Journal._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber's Notes
-
-Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected. Variations
-in hyphenation have been standardised but all other spelling and
-punctuation remains unchanged.
-
-Italics are represented thus _italic_.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Eclectic Magazine of Foreign
-Literature, Science, and Art, by Various
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature,
-Science, and Art, March 1885, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, March 1885
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: August 23, 2016 [EBook #52887]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ECLECTIC MAGAZINE--MARCH 1885 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Les Galloway and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p>Transcribers note: table of contents added by the transcriber.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="toc">
-<a href="#FROM_SIBERIA_TO_SWITZERLAND">FROM SIBERIA TO SWITZERLAND.</a><br />
-<a href="#COLERIDGE_AS_A_SPIRITUAL_THINKER">COLERIDGE AS A SPIRITUAL THINKER.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_PORTRAIT">THE PORTRAIT.</a><br />
-<a href="#DELLA_CRUSCA_AND_ANNA_MATILDA">DELLA CRUSCA AND ANNA MATILDA:</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_SAVAGE">THE SAVAGE.</a><br />
-<a href="#LE_BONHOMME_CORNEILLE">LE BONHOMME CORNEILLE.</a><br />
-<a href="#CHARLES_DICKENS_AT_HOME">CHARLES DICKENS AT HOME.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_SUMMER_PALACE_PEKING">THE SUMMER PALACE, PEKING.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_CAMORRA">THE CAMORRA.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_DECAY_OF_IRISH_HUMOR">THE DECAY OF IRISH HUMOR.</a><br />
-<a href="#PRINCE_BISMARCKS_CHARACTER">PRINCE BISMARCK'S CHARACTER.</a><br />
-<a href="#A_FEW_NOTES_ON_PERSIAN_ART">A FEW NOTES ON PERSIAN ART.</a><br />
-<a href="#HOW_INSECTS_BREATHE">HOW INSECTS BREATHE.</a><br />
-<a href="#PIERRES_MOTTO">PIERRE'S MOTTO:</a><br />
-<a href="#BEHIND_THE_SCENES">BEHIND THE SCENES.</a><br />
-<a href="#GO_TO_THE_ANT">GO TO THE ANT.</a><br />
-<a href="#LITERARY_NOTICES">LITERARY NOTICES.</a><br />
-<a href="#FOREIGN_LITERARY_NOTES">FOREIGN LITERARY NOTES.</a><br />
-<a href="#MISCELLANY">MISCELLANY.</a><br />
-</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/masthead.jpg" alt="Mastehead" />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h1>
-Eclectic Magazine<br />
-
-<span class="xs">OF</span><br />
-
-<small>FOREIGN LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART</small>.</h1>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/001.jpg" alt="――――――" />
-</div>
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<col width="25%" /><col width="50%" /><col width="25%" />
-<tr>
- <td align="center"><small>New Series.<br />Vol. XLI., No. 3.</small></td>
- <td align="center">MARCH, 1885.</td>
- <td align="center"><small>Old Series complete<br />in 63 vols.</small></td>
-</tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/001.jpg" alt="――――――" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<h2><a name="FROM_SIBERIA_TO_SWITZERLAND" id="FROM_SIBERIA_TO_SWITZERLAND">FROM SIBERIA TO SWITZERLAND.</a><br />
-
-<small><span class="smcap">The Story of an Escape.</span></small></h2>
-
-<p class="aut">BY WILLIAM WESTALL.</p>
-
-
-<p>Escapes of political and other convicts
-from Western Siberia are more frequent
-than is generally supposed, but
-from Eastern Siberia, though often attempted,
-they seldom succeed. Save
-for convicts under sentence of penal
-servitude, and actually imprisoned, it is
-easy to elude the vigilance of the police
-and get away from a convict village or
-settlement, but it is almost impossible to
-get out of the country. The immense
-distances to be traversed, the terrible
-climate, lack of money, the absolute
-necessity of keeping to the high roads,
-prove, except in very few instances, insuperable
-obstacles to final success. In
-order to be really free, moreover, it is
-imperative for a fugitive not alone to
-pass the frontier of European Russia,
-but to reach some country where he runs
-no risk of falling into the clutches of the
-imperial police. Even in Germany he
-is liable to be recaptured, and is really
-safe only in England, France, or Switzerland.
-Hence, to make good a flight
-from Eastern Siberia requires a conjuncture
-of so many favorable and nearly
-impossible circumstances as to render a
-complete escape a rare and remarkable
-event. But the incentives to escape are
-as great as the obstacles to success. No
-life can be more horrible than that of a
-political exile in the far east or far north
-of Siberia. Even at Irkoutsk the mean
-temperature is fifty degrees below the
-freezing-point of Réaumur; for many
-months of the year the sun in some parts
-of the country shines but two or three
-hours in the twenty-four, and for days
-together darkness covers the face of the
-land. A man untrained to manual
-labor, or unacquainted with the arts of
-trapping and killing wild animals and
-collecting peltry, turned adrift in the remoter
-parts of Siberia, runs the risk of
-perishing of hunger and cold. A Russian
-refugee, now at Geneva, tells that,
-during his sojourn in Eastern Siberia, he
-spent the greater part of the long winter
-in bed, rising only to swallow some
-rancid oil, the sole food he could obtain.
-To escape from such a life as this
-a man will risk almost anything. Even
-incarceration in a central prison, or the
-penal servitude of the mines, can hardly
-be more terrible. The trouble is, that
-the way to freedom lies through Western
-Siberia and Russia in Europe. The
-road south is barred by the wild tribes
-that haunt the frontiers of Mongolia and
-Manchuria, who either kill or give up to
-the Russians all the fugitives that fall
-into their hands.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, the escape of a
-prisoner or of a convict under sentence
-of penal servitude is far more difficult
-than the flight of an involuntary exile;
-the latter may leave when he will, the
-former must either break out of prison
-or evade his guardians, and being soon
-missed he runs great risk of being
-quickly recaptured. How, in one instance
-at least, by boldness, address,
-presence of mind, and good luck, the
-difficulties were overcome, the following
-narrative, related, as nearly as possible,
-in Debagorio Mokrievitch's own words,
-will show. Other fugitives, for instance
-Nicolas Lopatin, a gentleman now living
-in Geneva, who escaped from Vercholensk
-in 1881, may have encountered
-great hardships, but, being exiles at
-large, they were neither so soon missed
-nor so quickly pursued. Debagorio was
-under sentence of penal servitude, and
-the flight from Siberia of a man condemned
-to penal servitude is almost unexampled.
-Even rarer than an escape
-is the true account of one, related by the
-fugitive himself. Imaginary accounts
-exist in plenty, but, so far as I am aware,
-no authentic personal narrative of an
-escape from Eastern Siberia—at any rate
-in English or French—has ever before
-been given to the world.</p>
-
-<p>I first heard of Mokrievitch in May,
-1881, a few days after his arrival in
-Geneva, and through the kindness of
-Prince Krapotkine obtained (and communicated
-to a London newspaper) a
-brief sketch of his fellow-exile's adventures;
-but for certain reasons, that exist
-no longer, it was not considered expedient
-to publish the full and complete
-account which the reader will find in the
-following pages.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">William Westall.</span>
-</p>
-
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Arrest.</span></h3>
-
-<p>On the evening of February 11, 1879,
-several friends of the revolutionary
-cause, of whom I was one, met at
-Yvitchevitche's lodgings, in the house
-Kossarovsky, Yleanski Street, Kieff, the
-town where I was then living. After a
-short conversation, Anton, myself, and
-several others left the house with the intention
-of passing the rest of the evening
-with our friend, Madame Babitchev.
-The inevitable samovar was bubbling on
-the table, our hospitable hostess gave
-us a warm welcome, cigarettes were
-lighted, conversation was joined, and an
-hour or more passed very pleasantly.</p>
-
-<p>Anton was the first to leave, and he
-could hardly have reached the street
-when we were startled by a loud report
-like the firing of a pistol. We stared at
-each other in consternation, and
-Strogov, running into the ante-room,
-looked through the window and listened
-at the door, in order to find out what
-had happened. In a few minutes he
-came back with satisfactory tidings.
-Nothing unusual seemed to be stirring
-in the street; and he attributed the
-report we had heard to the banging of a
-door in a neighboring café. So we resumed
-our conversation and our tea-drinking
-with quiet minds. But five
-minutes later we were again disturbed;
-this time by sounds the character of
-which there was no mistaking. The
-trampling of heavy feet in the vestibule,
-hurried exclamations, words of command,
-and the rattling of arms, told us
-only too well with whom we had to do.</p>
-
-<p>The police were upon us.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding our desire to resist,
-we knew that we should be compelled to
-yield without a blow. There was not a
-weapon amongst us. A few seconds
-were passed in anxious thought. Then
-the double-winged doors were thrown
-violently open, and we saw that the
-ante-room was occupied by a detachment
-of soldiers, with bayonets lowered
-and ready to charge. From the right
-flank came the words, loud and clear:
-&ldquo;Will you surrender, gentlemen? I
-am the officer in command of the detachment.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>I looked round and recognized in the
-officer with the gendarme uniform and
-drawn sword, Soudeikin in person, then
-a subaltern in the Kieff gendarmerie,
-later the famous chief of the political
-police of the capital.</p>
-
-<p>Despite the imposing military array,
-the haughty bearing of the officer, the
-glittering bayonets and stern looks of the
-soldiers, and the unpleasant sense of
-having fallen into their toils, the whole
-affair seemed to me just a little amusing,
-and I could not help smiling, and saying,
-in answer to Soudeikin's summons,
-“Are we then a fortress, Mr. Officer,
-that you call upon us to surrender?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; but your comrades....”
-the rest of the sentence, owing to the
-din, I did not catch.</p>
-
-<p>“What comrades?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“You will soon see,” replied
-Soudeikin.</p>
-
-<p>Then he ordered his men to search us,
-after which we were to be taken to the
-police office.</p>
-
-<p>The searching over, we were surrounded
-by thirty or forty soldiers, with
-arms at the trail, and conducted to the
-Libed police station. Even before we
-reached our destination we could see
-that something unusual had happened.
-The building was lighted up, and there
-was an excited crowd about the door.
-After mounting the staircase we were led
-into the waiting-room. It was filled
-with armed men. Pushing my way with
-some difficulty through the press, I saw
-on the other side of the room several of
-our friends. But, my God, what a state
-they were in! Posen and Steblin
-Kamensky were bound hand and foot;
-the cords so tightly drawn that their elbows,
-forced behind their backs, actually
-touched. Close to them were
-Mesdames Arnfeld, Sarandovitch, and
-Patalizina. It was evident that something
-extraordinary had befallen in the
-house of Kossarovsky, shortly after we
-left. I could not, however, ask our
-friends any questions, for that would
-have been taken as proof that we were
-acquainted. Yet, from a few words
-dropped here and there, I soon learnt
-what had come to pass. They had resisted
-the police, a gendarme had been
-killed, and all whom we had left at the
-meeting arrested.</p>
-
-<p>I had hardly made this discovery
-when a disturbance was heard in the
-next room—trampling of feet, loud exclamations,
-and voices in contention,
-one of which I seemed to know. The
-next moment a man burst into the reception-room,
-literally dragging behind
-him two gendarmes, who tried in vain
-to stop him. His dishevelled hair, pale
-face, and flaming eyes, showed that he
-had been engaged in a struggle beyond
-his strength.</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes he was garotted and
-forced into a seat near us.</p>
-
-<p>“Separate the prisoners one from
-another!” cried Colonel Novitzki.</p>
-
-<p>On this each of us was immediately
-surrounded by four soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>“If they resist, use your bayonets!”
-said the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>After a short interval we were called
-one after another into the next room. I
-was called the last. On responding to
-the summons I found myself in the
-presence of several gendarmes and
-officers of police, by whom I was
-searched a second time.</p>
-
-<p>“Have the goodness to state your
-name,” said Colonel Novitzki, after the
-operation was completed.</p>
-
-<p>“I would rather not,” I answered.</p>
-
-<p>“In that case I shall tell you who you
-are.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will do me a great pleasure,” I
-replied.</p>
-
-<p>“You are called Debagorio Mokrievitch,”
-said the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that is your name,” put in
-Soudeikin.</p>
-
-<p>“I am delighted to make your acquaintance,
-colonel,” I answered, giving
-the military salute.</p>
-
-<p>It would have been useless to deny my
-identity. My mother, my brother, and
-my sister were living at Kieff, and I did
-not want to have them compelled to
-confront the police and ordered to
-recognize me.</p>
-
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Sentence.</span></h3>
-
-<p>We were lodged in the principal prison
-of Kieff. On April 20, we received
-copies of the indictment, drawn up by
-Strelnikoff, prosecuting advocate to the
-Military Tribunal (he was afterwards
-killed at Odessa). We were, in all, fourteen
-prisoners, accused of sedition, of
-belonging to secret political societies,
-and of resisting the police. In order to
-give greater publicity to the trial, we resolved
-to have ourselves defended by
-counsel from St. Petersburg and put forward
-a request to this effect. But after
-some delay we were informed that if we
-wanted advocates, we must choose them
-from among the candidates for judgeships
-attached to the tribunal of Kieff,
-and therefore dependent for promotion
-on the functionary by whom the prosecution
-was to be conducted. Deeming
-this a practical denial of justice, we determined
-to take no active part whatever
-in the proceedings.</p>
-
-<p>At six o'clock on the morning of
-April 20, we were taken before the
-tribunal. Eight of our party were men,
-six women. The first thing that struck
-me was the strength of the escort—more
-than a hundred Cossacks, besides gendarmes
-and policemen. Officers were
-running from group to group, giving
-orders and making arrangements, as if
-they were preparing for a general action.
-The women were led off first, after which
-we men were placed in a large barred
-carriage, so spacious indeed that we
-could all seat ourselves comfortably.</p>
-
-<p>Then the procession moved off. At
-its head rode Gubernet, the chief of the
-police. After him came the captain of
-the gendarmerie, Rudov, an old schoolfellow
-of mine. Our carriage was surrounded
-by Cossacks, the rear-rank men
-carrying loaded carbines. All the horses
-were put to the gallop, and the police,
-who feared a manifestation in our favor,
-had cleared the streets of spectators, and
-ordered a complete suspension of traffic.
-Not a figure without uniform was to be
-seen, and strong bodies of troops occupied
-every street corner.</p>
-
-<p>I need not describe the trial—if trial
-it can be called: it lasted four days, and
-ended in the condemnation of three of
-our number to death; the rest were
-sentenced to various terms of imprisonment.
-My sentence was fourteen years
-and ten months' penal servitude.</p>
-
-<p>We were led back to prison with precisely
-the same precautions as had been
-observed when we were taken before the
-tribunal. The people were not allowed
-by their presence in the street to show
-even silent sympathy, either with us, or
-with the cause for which we suffered and
-so many had perished.</p>
-
-<p>After the verdict and the sentence life
-became a little easier for us. Instead of
-being compelled to take exercise one by
-one, we were now allowed to meet and
-walk about freely in the prison yard.
-The police had an object in granting us
-this indulgence. Before the trial several
-attempts had been made to take our
-photographs; but this we had resolutely
-refused to allow. For those who cherish
-hopes of regaining their liberty, the
-possession of their likeness by the police
-is strongly to be deprecated. We were
-now informed by the authorities of the
-gaol that unless we complied with their
-wishes in this matter our meetings and
-our walks would be stopped. We enjoyed
-our social intercourse immensely.
-It was an unspeakable comfort to us.
-Three of our little company were under
-sentence of death, the fate of three
-others trembled in the balance, and
-would be made known only at the foot
-of the scaffold. It was not possible that
-we could long remain together, and we
-offered to comply with the wish of our
-gaolers on condition that we should not
-be separated until the last. This condition
-being accepted, our photographs
-were taken.</p>
-
-<p>The quarters of several of us were in
-an upper story of the prison, and from
-our grated windows we could watch the
-construction of the gallows. The place
-of execution was a plain about two-thirds
-of a mile from the prison gates.
-Those doomed to death, being on a lower
-story, did not witness these ghastly
-preparations, and none of us, of course,
-gave them a hint of what was going on.</p>
-
-<p>At length, and only too swiftly, came
-the 13th of May. We had been told
-nothing, but from the completion of the
-gallows, the behavior of the warders,
-and from other signs, we thought that
-the executions were fixed for the following
-day. The condemned thought
-so themselves. Although we did our
-utmost to keep outwardly calm, the
-farewells that evening were unspeakably
-sad. Most touching and agonizing of
-all was the parting of those who were to
-die on the morrow with those who expected
-to follow them a little later on
-to the scaffold and the grave. Two
-months afterwards Beltchomsky and
-Anisim Fedorow were hanged on the
-same gallows.</p>
-
-<p>Five thousand soldiers and gendarmes
-escorted our doomed friends to the place
-of execution. On previous occasions
-the authorities had thought it well to do
-their hanging early in the morning, while
-people slept. This time they did it with
-pomp, circumstance and parade. The
-cavalcade of death did not leave the
-prison gates until nearly noon; traffic
-was suspended, but the streets were
-crowded with spectators, and when the
-bodies of our comrades swung in the
-air, the military band struck up a lively
-tune, as if they were rejoicing over
-some great victory.</p>
-
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Sent to Siberia.</span></h3>
-
-<p>From the time of the execution to the
-date of our departure for Siberia nothing
-noteworthy came to pass. All sorts of
-rumors were current touching our destination
-and our fate. Every day
-brought a new conjecture or a fresh
-story. It was said that we were to be
-confined in one of the dreaded central
-prisons—that we were to be immured in
-the casemates of St. Peter and St. Paul—that
-we were to be sent to Eastern
-Siberia, to Western Siberia—to the
-island of Sakhalin—that we were not to
-be sent anywhere, but to stay where we
-were.</p>
-
-<p>At length, on May 30, the question
-was settled. Ten prisoners, of whom I
-made one, were summoned to the office,
-and told that we were forthwith to take
-our departure—whither, our custodians
-refused to say. The next proceeding
-was to put two of our friends, who did
-not belong to the privileged order, in
-irons and shave their heads. We
-others, being nobles, were to be spared
-this indignity until we reached our
-destination. For the present we were
-required only to don the ordinary convict
-costume, consisting of a long gray
-capote, marked on the back with a
-yellow ace for those sentenced to simple
-transportation, and with two aces for
-those condemned to penal servitude.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you not tell us whither we are
-going?” asked one of our number of
-General Gubernet, as we stepped into
-the van.</p>
-
-<p>“To Eastern Siberia,” said the
-General, who stood near the door.</p>
-
-<p>Then I knew my fate—fourteen years
-hard labor—possibly in a region of almost
-endless night, and as cold as the
-Polar regions.</p>
-
-<p>The station of Koursk, the cities of
-Mzensk, Moscow, and Nijni Novgorod
-are passed in quick succession. At
-Nijni Novgorod we leave the railway
-and continue our journey, as far as
-Perm, by water. It is only here that we
-begin to realize that we are really on the
-road to Siberia. We are transferred to
-little three-horse carriages, with a soldier
-in front and a gendarme by the side of
-each prisoner. By leaning a little forward
-it is possible to see the vast horizon
-before us, and the forests and
-mountains that stretch for unknown distances
-on either side of the road. It is
-difficult to describe the feelings of a captive
-who for months, or it may be for
-years, has been under bolt and bar, and
-whose views have been limited to the
-blank walls of a prison, when he once
-more breathes the free air of heaven, and
-beholds nature in all her grandeur and
-her beauty. It is as if the liberty for
-which his soul has never ceased to yearn
-were opening to him her arms and bidding
-him be free.</p>
-
-<p>The country through which we were
-passing was thinly peopled, and buildings
-and houses were few and far between.
-The broad highway was bordered
-in some places by brushwood, in
-others by immense forests. All sorts of
-fancies flitted through my brain. I
-thought of home—of father, mother and
-friends—of the cause, of the incidents of
-my trial, and the dreary future that lay
-before me: fourteen years' hard labor in
-Eastern Siberia—a hell hopeless as any
-conceived in the brain of Dante. And
-then plans of escape surged through my
-mind, each wilder and more fantastic
-than its fellow.</p>
-
-<p>We travel night and day, always with
-the same soldier and gendarme, though
-not always with the same driver. On
-one occasion we change horses at midnight,
-and shortly afterwards I see that
-my guards are overcome by sleep.
-They nod and rouse themselves in turn;
-their efforts to keep awake are laughable.
-As for me, my thoughts hinder sleep,
-but an idea occurs to me, and I nod too,
-and, drawing myself into my corner,
-I snore. The stratagem succeeds. A
-few minutes later my gendarme is snoring
-loud enough to waken the dead.
-The soldier who sits before me embraces
-his rifle with both hands and feet, and
-sways to and fro with the motion of the
-tarantass, now and then incoherently
-muttering in a guttural voice. He is
-deep in dreamland. I rise softly and
-look out into the night. A million stars
-are shining in the clear sky, and I can
-see that we are passing through a thick
-forest. A spring, a bound, and I could
-be among those trees. Once there, my
-guards can no more find me than the
-wolf that steals through the covert, for I
-am fleet of foot and eager for freedom.
-But dressed in this convict costume,
-how long should I be able to keep my
-freedom? To regain Russia, I must
-follow the highroad, and the first soldier
-or gendarme I met would arrest me.
-True, I might throw away my capote,
-with its double ace, but I had no hat,
-and a bare-headed man would invite
-attention even more than one clad in the
-costume of a felon. Worse still, I had
-no arms. I could neither defend myself
-against wild animals nor kill game; and
-if I am compelled to take to the woods,
-game may be the only food I shall be
-able to procure.</p>
-
-<p>No; I must abandon the idea now,
-and watch for a more favorable opportunity
-hereafter. As I come reluctantly
-to this conclusion I remember—it
-seemed like an inspiration—that the
-gendarme has a hat on his head and a
-revolver by his side. Why not take
-them? He is still fast asleep, snoring,
-if possible, harder than ever. I shall
-never have such another chance. I will
-do it: two minutes more and then—freedom.</p>
-
-<p>I almost shout.</p>
-
-<p>Holding my breath, and trying to still
-the beatings of my heart, I creep close
-to the sleeping man, and lay my hand
-gently on the hat. He makes no sign,
-and the next moment the hat is under my
-capote. Now the revolver! I lay hold
-of the butt, and try to draw it from the
-gendarme's belt. It does not come out
-easily—I pull again—pull a second time,
-and am preparing to pull a third time,
-when the snoring suddenly ceases.</p>
-
-<p>Quick as thought, I shrink into my
-corner, breathe deeply and pretend to
-sleep. The gendarme rouses himself,
-mutters, and passes his hand over his
-head. Then he searches all about him,
-and, evidently alarmed by the loss of his
-hat, he sleeps no more.</p>
-
-<p>“Hallo, brother!” I say, “you seem
-to have lost your hat.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am afraid I have, sir,” he answers
-in a puzzled voice, at the same time
-scratching his head by way, probably, of
-keeping it warm.</p>
-
-<p>“You see what it is to sleep on the
-road, my friend! Suppose, now, I had
-slipped out of the carriage! Nothing
-would have been easier.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but you never thought of such
-a thing, and I am sure you would not do
-it, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why?” I ask.</p>
-
-<p>“Because I have done you no harm,
-and you do not want to get a poor fellow
-into trouble! You know yourself how
-severely gendarmes are dealt with who
-let their prisoners escape.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, brother, here is your hat
-which I found and hid—just to frighten
-you a bit.”</p>
-
-<p>Just then we reached another station,
-and the poor fellow as he put on his
-head-gear thanked me quite pathetically,
-as much for not running away as for
-restoring his property.</p>
-
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Convoy.</span></h3>
-
-<p>At Krasnovarski we were put in prison
-again, and there remained several weeks,
-awaiting further orders as to our disposal,
-for, notwithstanding what we had
-been told at Kieff, there appeared to be
-some doubt touching the fate in store
-for us. At length came the final instructions.
-We were to march with
-the chain-gang of common prisoners to
-Irkoutsk. It was then that, as an expedient
-for avoiding penal servitude and
-eventually regaining my liberty, the idea
-of effecting an exchange first occurred to
-me. The device is one frequently practised
-among the outlaws of Siberia.
-This is the method of it:—Two prisoners
-make a bargain, whereby one of
-the contracting parties takes the name
-and certificate and assumes the crime of
-the other, and <i lang="la">vice versâ</i>. There is, in
-fact, a complete change of identities, and
-the one who gains by the exchange
-settles the difference by a money payment.
-The result is that the man condemned
-to hard labor becomes a Siberian
-settler, and the other takes his place at
-the mines or in gaol. The bargain may
-appear an unequal one, but a moneyless
-man will sometimes do a great deal for
-a small sum of ready cash—especially if
-he has a passion for gambling or drink—and
-there is always the possibility that,
-when the deceit is discovered, the more
-extreme penalty may not be enforced.
-In the meantime, moreover, the supposed
-political prisoner, who is generally of
-noble birth, enjoys a consideration and
-some material advantages which are denied
-to the common malefactor.</p>
-
-<p>During the long tramp of the chain
-gang these substitutions are effected
-without much difficulty. The escort
-being changed every two days, it is impossible
-for the members of it, in so
-short a time, to familiarize themselves
-with the names and condition of the ten
-or twelve score prisoners who compose
-the convoy. They can do no more than
-count heads, and when the officer in
-command of the party has delivered to
-his successor the same number of convicts,
-in each category, which he received
-from his predecessor, his task is
-fully acquitted. Whether they are the
-same persons he cannot undertake to
-say, and is never asked.</p>
-
-<p>On August 20, or thereabouts—I am
-not sure to a day—we were once more
-<i lang="fr">en route</i>, this time on foot. From
-Krasnovarski the distance is 700 English
-miles, and the journey, it was reckoned,
-would occupy about two months.
-I had thus ample time to make the acquaintance
-of my convict comrades and
-carry out the substitution.</p>
-
-<p>We were now put under an altogether
-different <i lang="fr">régime</i>. Hitherto we had not
-been able to exchange a word with anybody.
-I saw about me only my fellow
-political convicts, and might speak,
-when occasion required, to none but my
-guards. Now we were allowed to communicate
-freely with each other, and
-with the rather mixed society of which
-we formed a part. The gang consisted
-of 170 persons of both sexes and of
-every class and age; from the babe in
-its mother's arms to the old man with
-snow-white hair. Most of them were
-peasants; yet several among us could
-claim the privileges of nobility. But the
-strength of the convoy diminished as
-we went on, for Krasnovarski is within
-the limits of Eastern Siberia, and
-several prisoners were left as colonists at
-the villages through which we passed.</p>
-
-<p>The escort consisted of an officer and
-thirty soldiers, armed with old-fashioned
-muskets. A detachment of three or
-four marched at the head of the column.
-The others marched at the side and were
-supposed to form a military chain. But
-it was so weak, relatively to its duties, as
-to be almost worthless, the convoy being
-increased to a portentous length by the
-baggage-wagons and the families of the
-prisoners who were following them into
-exile. After the baggage-wagons came
-two carriages occupied by gentlemen
-malefactors of the nobility, and three in
-which, when they were footsore, rode
-the political prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>About six o'clock in the evening the
-convoy generally reached the “half-stage,”
-a building in which we pass the
-night. After a march of two days, or
-of a full day, we had a day's rest at
-one of the buildings known as <i lang="fr">étapes</i>, or
-stages. On these occasions the prisoners
-are ranged in front of the building
-and counted. If the count be right
-the gates are opened, and with cries of
-joy the weary wayfarers throw themselves
-into the court. Then, pushing
-and hustling, clanking their chains and
-cursing like demons, they fight their way
-into the house, struggling desperately
-for the best places. The first comers
-take possession of the benches; the
-others lie where they can. When all are
-inside the gates are closed, but the
-doors are not barred until nightfall.</p>
-
-<p>The “stage” is a small wooden barrack—with
-a large court, formed of palisades,
-in the rear—divided into several
-compartments, one of which is assigned
-to the nobles of the convoy;
-but like all the others it is far too little
-for its destined purpose. The prisoners
-are as closely packed as herrings in a
-barrel. A few only can find places on
-the benches. The others have to sleep
-on the damp and dirty floor. Next to
-the benches the most desirable spot is
-under them, for there it is a little
-cleaner and the sleepers are less likely
-to be disturbed than on the open floor.</p>
-
-<p>The struggle for places over, the barrack-yard
-becomes very lively. The
-prisoners are preparing the evening
-meal; some laying fires, others putting
-a few scanty morsels of food into a pot—for
-our fare is terribly meagre; others
-bringing water and making tea. After
-supper we are again counted, driven inside,
-and left there for the night. No
-one is allowed to go out for any purpose
-whatever; but as a substitute for latrines
-large wooden pails are placed in
-the corridor. The presence of these
-abominations among so many people in
-ill-ventilated rooms renders the air unutterably
-foul; its odor is something quite
-peculiar, as all who have had occasion to
-enter the prisoners' quarters at night,
-or, still worse, early in the morning,
-well know.</p>
-
-<p>In the same corridor, but at the other
-end, is the <i lang="ru">maidan</i>, a sort of itinerant
-shop, which serves at the same time as
-a club and gambling saloon; for the
-prisoners are much given to play. This
-<i lang="ru">maidan</i> is an institution common to
-every Siberian convoy and gaol. The
-<i lang="ru">markitant</i>, or keeper of it, is always a
-prisoner. The post, which is much
-coveted and very profitable, is sold to
-the highest bidder, and the proceeds of
-the sale, often considerable, are added
-to the common hoard. For one of the
-first proceedings of the prisoners is to
-form themselves into a society, which is
-a faithful reproduction of the rural <i lang="ru">mir</i>.
-They elect a <i lang="ru">starosta</i>, who also acts as
-general cashier, and appoint him an assistant.
-The authorities, on their part,
-always recognise this system of self-government,
-and acknowledge the
-authority of the <i lang="ru">starosta</i>. All orders are
-communicated through him, and he
-makes all payments on behalf of the
-community. He acts, in short, as
-general intermediary between the prisoners
-and their custodians—bribes, when
-it is necessary, the agents of justice, and
-pays a regular tribute to the executioner,
-in consideration whereof that official is
-good enough, often at the risk of his
-own back, to wield his whip with all
-possible consideration for the feelings
-of his victim.</p>
-
-<p>The scene in the <i lang="ru">markitant's</i> den on a
-rest day was very queer, and, well
-painted, would make a striking picture:
-the players round the capote-covered
-table, as excited and as intent over their
-game as if they were playing for thousands
-of roubles instead of fractions of
-kopecs—the shouting and gesticulating
-onlookers, following with keenest interest
-the varying fortunes of the game—a
-ruined gambler bargaining with the
-<i lang="ru">markitant</i> for an advance on a coat, a
-pair of shoes, or an old watch—a convict
-asleep on the floor—another mending
-a rent in his clothes—a third hammering
-at his irons. He is widening
-the rings that shackle his legs, in order
-that he may slip them off when he is on
-the road—walking in irons not being
-precisely an amusement. The sentries
-and the officers cannot fail to hear the
-clang of the hammer, but the custom of
-removing irons while on the march is so
-common as to have the force of a recognised
-regulation, and is seldom, if ever,
-objected to by the commander of an
-escort.</p>
-
-<p>Day followed day with unvarying
-monotony, but every one brought us
-nearer to our destination, and though I
-had not yet ventured to effect an exchange,
-I never wavered in my resolution
-to escape on the first favorable opportunity.
-Almost every day we met
-vagabonds, as runaway convicts are
-called, making for Russia. Their dress,
-their closely cropped hair, and their general
-appearance left no doubt as to their
-quality. Yet neither the officer of the
-escort nor the local authorities paid the
-least attention to them, so common are
-fugitive convicts on Siberian roads.
-When they met us they would draw on
-one side, sometimes saluting the officer.
-I have known old friends meet in this
-way.</p>
-
-<p>“Hallo, Ivan Ivanovitch, how goes
-it?” would call out one of the tramps to
-a man whom he recognised in the chain
-gang.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, is that you, Iliouschka?”
-would answer the other pleasantly.
-“What! have you become a vagabond<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>
-already?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I am on the lookout for cheap
-lodgings; I dare say I shall soon get
-accommodated.”</p>
-
-<p>This in allusion to the certainty,
-sooner or later, of his recapture.</p>
-
-<p>Political prisoners on the march enjoy
-privileges which are denied to ordinary
-convicts. They are not fettered; they
-can, when so disposed, ride in the carriages
-which accompany the convoy, and
-they are allowed fifteen kopecs (threepence)
-a day for food. On the other
-hand, the orders in our regard given to
-the officers of the escort were exceedingly
-stringent; orders, however, which
-for the most part it was impossible to
-execute. For instance, they were enjoined
-to keep us always apart, and not
-let us on any account mix with the other
-prisoners. But the weakness of the
-escort, and, above all, the arrangement
-of the buildings at the <i lang="fr">étapes</i>, or halting-places,
-rendered observance of this injunction
-so extremely difficult that it
-was seldom enforced.</p>
-
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Substitution.</span></h3>
-
-<p>We were within fourteen days of
-Irkoutsk before I succeeded in effecting
-an exchange of identities with a convict
-condemned to simple exile. Many others
-followed my example. Of the 170 men
-who composed the convoy, not more
-than fifty were under sentence of penal
-servitude, and at least twenty of them
-obtained substitutes. So far as the
-prisoners were concerned, this was done
-quite openly; concealment, in fact,
-would have been impossible, even if it
-had been necessary—and it was not
-necessary; for so long as the convoy
-held together, and the communistic
-organisation endured, betrayal was not
-to be feared. The traitor would have
-died within a few hours of his treason
-by the hand of one of his comrades—and
-this all knew.</p>
-
-<p>My substitute, a peasant by origin and
-a burglar by profession, agreed to the
-exchange of identities in consideration
-of a sum of sixteen shillings in coin, a
-pair of boots and a flannel blouse. Two
-days before our arrival at the <i lang="fr">étape</i>, where
-it was arranged to carry the agreement
-into effect, I pretended to have a bad
-toothache, bound up my face with a
-pocket-handkerchief, and at the half-way
-halting-place remained all the time on
-the bench that served for a bed, as if I
-were distracted with pain. This I did to
-hide my features from the soldiers of the
-escort, one of whom, sharper than his fellows,
-might otherwise possibly discover
-the stratagem. The risk was too great,
-my longing for liberty too intense, to
-permit me to neglect a single precaution.</p>
-
-<p>Exchanges were most easily effected at
-the principal halting-places because the
-escort was changed there. Among the
-common prisoners the transaction was
-conducted in the simplest way imaginable.
-At the roll-call the contracting
-parties answered respectively to each
-other's name, took each other's places,
-and the thing was done. In the case of
-a political prisoner under special surveillance,
-just then very stringent, the
-operation entailed greater risk and
-demanded more care. I arranged with
-my substitute that the moment we
-arrived at the <i lang="fr">étape</i> in question, he
-should follow me to an obscure corner
-of the barrack-yard—to speak plainly, to
-the latrine. The plan succeeded to
-admiration. In a few minutes we had
-exchanged dresses. Pavlov, my burglar
-friend, was transformed into a
-political prisoner of the nobility, and I
-became a common malefactor in irons.
-Though in face as unlike as possible, we
-were about the same height and build,
-and, at a distance, might easily be mistaken
-one for another.</p>
-
-<p>The delivery of the gang to the new
-escort went off without difficulty.
-Pavlov lay on a bench with his face
-bound up. Nobody took any notice
-either of him or of me, and when the
-old escort marched away, we knew we
-were safe. The moment they were
-gone, I went into the common room
-and got myself shaved and my hair cut
-close to my head, so that my coiffure
-might resemble that of my new comrades.</p>
-
-<p>I wondered then, and I have often
-wondered since, at the ease with which
-my custodians were deceived in the matter
-of this substitution. On the register
-I was set down as a former medical
-student. I had, therefore, been a member
-of a university; Pavlov, on the other
-hand, was almost wholly illiterate. He
-could hardly open his mouth without
-betraying his origin and showing his
-ignorance. His appearance, moreover,
-was little in harmony with his new character.
-I, as a noble, had worn my hair
-and beard long, while his head was
-closely cropped, and he wore no beard
-at all. How could all this fail to excite
-suspicion? For three weeks, he acted
-as my substitute, and it never seems to
-have occurred either to the officers of
-the escort or the authorities of Irkoutsk
-that the <i lang="fr">soi-disant</i> Debagorio Mokrievitch
-was <em>not</em> the real Simon Pure. But
-for the denunciation—of which I shall
-speak presently—I do not believe the
-secret ever would have been discovered,
-always supposing that Pavlov kept the
-compact, and he really behaved very
-well. One day an officer of the escort,
-seeing by the register that I was a
-medical student, consulted my substitute
-touching some ailment he had, and
-Pavlov, with an impudence that bordered
-on the sublime, gave him the benefit
-of his advice. He was fortunately
-not called upon to put his prescription
-in writing.</p>
-
-<p>It may be asked why I did not profit
-by the laxity of the escort during the
-first part of the journey to escape before
-we reached our destination. Because I
-should have been missed at the first
-halting-place, and by means of the telegraph
-and an active pursuit, immediately
-recaptured; I could have had only a few
-hours' start, and I wanted, at the least,
-several days.</p>
-
-<p>After the substitution, I marched as a
-common felon on foot, carrying my
-irons; my allowance was reduced to twopence
-a-day, while Pavlov had threepence,
-and could vary the monotony of
-the way by riding in one of the carriages
-provided for the political prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>About October 20, 1879, we reached
-Irkoutsk, where we were to be received
-and inspected by the higher authorities.
-Towards eight o'clock in the evening,
-we entered the central prison and were
-taken into a large room with three doors
-and two exits. One of these was open
-and led into an adjoining room, where
-the inspection took place. Our starosta
-standing on the doorstep, called the
-prisoners one by one, and each, as he
-was summoned, went into the room,
-carrying with him his poor belongings,
-in order that it might be ascertained if
-he still possessed the articles given him
-by the Crown. This done, he passed
-on into a further apartment, where the
-prisoners were to be quartered for the
-night.</p>
-
-<p>At length came my turn.</p>
-
-<p>“Pavlov!” shouts the starosta.</p>
-
-<p>“Here,” I answered, and, taking up
-my bag, I enter the audience chamber,
-and find myself in the presence of several
-important-looking functionaries, sitting
-at a big table covered with registers.</p>
-
-<p>“Paul Pavlov?” says the presiding
-councillor, and then, after favoring me
-with a fugitive glance, he bends once
-more over his books.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, your nobleness,” I reply,
-doing my best to speak and look like a
-peasant prisoner.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>“For what crime were you judged?”</p>
-
-<p>“For burglary, your nobleness.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are the effects given you by the
-Government all in order?”</p>
-
-<p>“They are, your nobleness.”</p>
-
-<p>“Two shirts, two pairs of drawers,
-woollen trousers, great coat, pelisse, a
-pair of boots, leg irons?” enumerated
-the councillor, in a rapid, monotonous
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>As each article is named, I say, “It
-is here,” and during the interrogation
-an obscure personage fumbles in my bag
-to verify my statement.</p>
-
-<p>This concluded the inspection, and
-after surrendering my fetters, which I
-removed without the help of a blacksmith,
-I passed into the apartment where
-I was to remain as a prisoner until they
-took me to the village where I had to be
-interned as a settler.</p>
-
-<p>I had not long to wait. The fifth day
-after our arrival, the remaining vagabonds
-of the gang were sent further east,
-and there remained only the ordinary
-exiles and prisoners under sentence of
-penal servitude. An important consequence
-of the departure of the vagabonds—old
-offenders who formed the
-bulk of the convoy—was the break-up of
-our communistic organisation, and the
-subsequent revelation of my secret.</p>
-
-<p>On the following day the involuntary
-colonists, of whom I was now one,
-started for our final destination, a village
-some forty miles from Irkoutsk, and on
-November 1st, we arrived at Talminsky,
-the end of our long journey. For the
-last time we were paraded and counted
-in the court of the <i lang="ru">volost</i>. Then, after
-our effects had been again examined, we
-received our registers and were handed
-over to the clerk of the village, who had
-orders to find us quarters.</p>
-
-<p>The escort went one way, we went
-another, and we walked through the
-streets of the great village free men—within
-the limits assigned to us.</p>
-
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Flight.</span></h3>
-
-<p>If I meant to escape I had no time to
-lose. At any moment I was liable to be
-betrayed. My comrades among the colonists,
-as also the prisoners we had left at
-Irkoutsk, all knew who I was. Any of
-these, by turning traitor, could earn a
-considerable reward; even a slight indiscretion
-might reveal the secret, and
-the disclosure of my identity to the
-authorities would lead to my immediate
-arrest. It was therefore necessary to go
-at once; yet I could not start on so long
-a journey without money, and I did not
-possess a kopeck. So I sold my great
-coat, my woollen trousers, and my
-gloves, for a rouble and a half. It was
-not much. After this depletion of my
-wardrobe, my costume left a good deal
-to be desired. A regulation pelisse, a
-fur cap, thin trousers, and ordinary underclothing,
-did not afford much protection
-against the intense cold of a
-Siberian winter. But I dared not hesitate.
-On November 2d, at ten o'clock,
-before noon, I set out from the village.
-The morning though cold was clear and
-quiet. I made no attempt to hide my
-quality; it was evident to everybody.
-My yellow regulation pelisse and closely
-cropped head showed clearly enough that
-I was a vagabond. But this gave me
-little anxiety; I had observed that
-in Eastern Siberia vagabonds were
-neither arrested nor questioned. It
-would be the same with me, I thought,
-and in this expectation I was not disappointed.
-My journey as a vagabond
-lasted about eight days, and I suffered
-much both from hunger and cold. In
-the valleys—for the country was hilly—I
-often experienced a cold so intense that
-I thought my limbs would freeze as I
-walked. Sometimes the valley bottoms
-were filled with a thick fog. Going
-through one of those fogs was like taking
-a bath of pins and needles—so keen was
-the cold—and, though on these occasions
-I always ran, one of my knees became
-frost-bitten—my pelisse not being long
-enough to cover my legs, which were
-clothed only in light cotton pantaloons.</p>
-
-<p>I generally passed the night in the
-bath-room of some peasant after the
-manner of vagabonds, for nobody in
-Siberia, however poor, is without a
-vapor bath, the vapor being produced
-by pouring water on red-hot stones.</p>
-
-<p>One afternoon, just as night was closing
-in, I reached a village and sought a
-lodging. I had heard from the experienced
-vagabonds of the gang that it was
-always better to ask charity or help from
-the poor than from the well-to-do.
-Never, they said, when you are on the
-tramp, knock at the door of a rich man's
-house. Go rather to the most wretched
-cabin you can find.</p>
-
-<p>This rule, based on a wide experience
-and a profound truth—for the poor
-naturally receive more sympathy from
-the poor than from the well-to-do—I
-deemed it expedient to follow. At the
-end of the village in question I found
-a cabin of unprepossessing aspect, and,
-concluding that it was exactly what I
-wanted, I went in, making, as I entered,
-the sign of the cross before the picture
-of a saint, as is the custom in Russia.
-Then I greeted my hosts.</p>
-
-<p>“Good day, my boy,” answered the
-peasant, an old man with a long white
-beard, in a kindly voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Could you sell me a bit of bread?”
-I asked; for though I travelled as a
-vagabond I did not like to beg after the
-manner of vagabonds, and always tendered
-a piece of money for what I received.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you can have bread,” said the
-old man, handing me a loaf.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, father; and may I pass
-the night in your house?”</p>
-
-<p>“I fear that is impossible, my boy.
-You are a vagabond, aren't you? They
-are very severe just now about vagabonds,
-the police are. If you take in a
-man without a passport you may get
-fined. Where do you come from, my
-boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“From the convoy.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought so. I was right then.
-You are a vagabond.”</p>
-
-<p>I answered with a supplicatory gesture,
-and I dare say I looked cold enough
-and wretched enough to move the compassion
-of a harder-hearted man than
-this good old peasant.</p>
-
-<p>“You fellows generally sleep in the
-baths, don't you?” he said, after a
-pause. “Well, go into mine if you
-like; I can put you nowhere else. And
-I have heated it to-day; you will be
-warm.”</p>
-
-<p>So picking up my loaf, and laying on
-the table a few kopecks—nobody ever
-thinks of bargaining with a wanderer—I
-leave the house. The bath is hard by,
-and on going in I find that it is quite
-warm, as the old man had said. The
-heat is so great, indeed, that I can dispense
-with my pelisse.</p>
-
-<p>These peasants' bath-rooms are seldom
-supplied with a chimney. The
-stones are heated in the middle of the
-room, and the smoke, after blackening
-the rafters, finds its way out as best it
-can. There were no windows, and, in
-order to look round, I had to light one
-of the tallow candles which I carried in
-my bag. They were very useful for rubbing
-my feet with after a long march. I
-was in no hurry to sleep, and before
-lying down on the wooden bench which
-was to be my couch I had a little operation
-to perform. My yellow pelisse proclaimed
-my quality a long way off. That
-was an inconvenience, and in certain
-easily conceivable circumstances, might
-lead to awkward consequences. I meant
-to change its color. This I did by smearing
-the garment with a mixture composed
-of tallow from my candles and
-soot from the wall. It was not a very
-fast black perhaps, but it answered the
-purpose. Henceforth, nobody, without
-a pretty close inspection, would perceive
-that I was a vagabond on the tramp.</p>
-
-<p>This done, I lay down on the bench
-and was soon fast asleep. I must have
-slept an hour or two when I was wakened
-by the creaking of the door, and I
-heard the heavy steps of a man entering
-the room. As it was pitch dark I could
-not see him, and I did not think it
-worth while to strike a light. The newcomer
-seemed to be of the same opinion,
-for, without speaking a word, he
-groped his way towards my bench and
-laid down beside me. Though he
-touched my body he made no remark,
-and a few moments later I could tell by
-his regular breathing that he was fast
-asleep. Then I slept again, and did not
-open my eyes until I was wakened by the
-cold—for the bath-room had lost all its
-warmth, and the temperature was far
-below freezing-point. So I rose from
-my couch, donned my pelisse, and,
-though the sun had not yet risen, I left
-my snoring bed-fellow, whom I never
-saw, to his slumbers and resumed my
-journey.</p>
-
-<p>My plan was to reach the house of a
-friend about 150 miles from the village
-where I had been interned. To traverse
-a region as large as Europe without
-money was quite out of the question,
-and even if I had succeeded in doing so
-it would have been impossible, without
-papers, either to cross the frontier or
-leave the country. It is hardly necessary
-to say that I took care never to ask
-my way. That would have been a great
-imprudence. And there was little need,
-for the roads in Siberia are so few that
-it is scarcely possible to go wrong. According
-to my reckoning I was still
-about thirty miles from my destination.
-Shortly after leaving the village I saw,
-near a little cabin by the road-side, a
-man who eyed me keenly. From his
-short hair and stubby beard I guessed
-that he was a recently arrived colonist
-who had come into the country with a
-chain gang.</p>
-
-<p>“Won't you come in, brother,” he
-said, “and rest yourself and take a cup
-of tea?”</p>
-
-<p>I accepted the invitation with pleasure,
-for I had not broken my fast. We
-entered the cabin together. It was very
-small, and on a brick hearth was sitting
-a woman, probably the exile's wife. My
-host asked me to take a seat and began
-to prepare the samovar, an appliance
-which is found in every Siberian cottage.
-As we drank we talked.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it a long time since you left the
-gang?” asked my entertainer.</p>
-
-<p>“Quite lately. I belonged to convoy
-number four.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have turned vagabond then,
-brother?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, what is the good of staying
-here?”</p>
-
-<p>“You are quite right,” returned the
-exile bitterly. “The country is abominable.
-I shall do the same thing myself
-in a month or two. Which way do
-you go—by the Angara road?”</p>
-
-<p>I gave him an itinerary, though not
-exactly the one I meant to follow.</p>
-
-<p>“I know all these places well,” observed
-my host. “But do you know
-you will have to be prudent. The authorities
-hereabouts are very vicious just
-now. They arrest every wayfarer they
-see. You must look out, my brother,
-or they will arrest you.”</p>
-
-<p>“What would you advise me to do,
-then,” I asked, greatly alarmed at this
-news.</p>
-
-<p>“I will tell you, brother; listen!”</p>
-
-<p>And then he gave me very valuable
-information; described the villages
-through or near which I should have to
-pass, indicating at the same time those
-that were dangerous and the footpaths
-by which I might avoid them. He gave
-me the names and described the dwellings
-of the peasants with whom I might
-lodge, and, in a word, told me everything
-which it imported a wandering outlaw
-to know.</p>
-
-<p>“But why,” I asked, “are the police
-so active just now? I thought this road
-was one of the safest for vagabonds in
-the whole country.”</p>
-
-<p>“God knows. Perhaps they have
-found a body somewhere and are looking
-for the murderer.”</p>
-
-<p>I made no remark, but I thought it
-was much more likely that they had discovered
-my flight and were looking for
-me. And so it proved.</p>
-
-<p>After finishing the tea we talked a little
-longer, and as I took my leave I
-thanked my host warmly for his hospitality
-and information.</p>
-
-<p>When I reached the last village before
-that at which lived my friend, I was
-quite overcome with fatigue, and faint
-with hunger and cold; but I counted
-on a long and quiet rest in the cottage
-of a peasant woman whose address had
-been given me by the friendly exile. It
-was at the extremity of the village, and
-to get thither I had to pass the headquarters
-of the communal authorities.
-In the light of the exile's warning, and
-my own fears, this seemed a sufficiently
-dangerous enterprise. Albeit I put on
-an air of indifference and took care not
-to increase my pace, yet I could not
-avoid an occasional backward glance to
-see if I was being followed. No one,
-however, seemed to notice me, and I
-reached my destination without receiving
-any unpleasant attentions. The
-peasant woman welcomed me kindly, if
-not very effusively. But she was a dear
-good soul, gave me of her best, and let
-me lie on a bench and pass the night in
-her house.</p>
-
-<p>About two hours before sunrise my
-hostess came into the kitchen and began
-to busy herself with preparations for
-breakfast. But I remained stretched on
-my bench; the cottage was warm. I felt
-very comfortable, and I saw no reason for
-hurry. The day was before me, and I
-had not far to go. So I turned round
-on my wooden couch and was just sinking
-into a second slumber when I heard
-the sound of bells, such as post-chaises
-and mail-carts in Russia invariably
-carry.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>“Bells!” I cried, starting up. “Does
-a mail-coach run on this road?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” answered the peasant, “we
-have no mail-coach here; it is probably
-a private carriage which is passing
-through the village.”</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the bells came nearer;
-then the sound suddenly ceased, as it
-seemed not far from the cottage. I did
-not like this at all. What could it
-mean?</p>
-
-<p>“Would you mind going to see what
-or whose carriage it is?” I said. She
-went, and as the door closed behind
-her, I jumped off my bench and put on
-my clothes.</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes she was back with
-the news that the carriage belonged to
-the gendarmes, and that they were questioning
-the <i lang="ru">starosta</i> and the clerk.</p>
-
-<p>“The gendarmes!” I exclaimed,
-“who says so—where are they from?”</p>
-
-<p>“From Irkoutsk. It is the coachman
-himself who told me. He thinks they
-are after a political runaway.”</p>
-
-<p>“In that case, I had better be going,”
-I said, laughing. “They may perhaps
-think I am the man. Now look here—if
-they ask you any questions, know
-nothing. If you do it may be worse for
-you; they may make you pay a fine.
-Good-by” (putting the last of my kopecks
-on the table).</p>
-
-<p>“Good-by,” answered my hostess;
-“don't be uneasy. I shall not say a
-word.” She was a worthy woman, and a
-friend in need, that old peasant.</p>
-
-<p>I went out. It was still dark, and I
-might creep through the village without
-being seen. The last of the houses
-passed, I ran at the top of my speed,
-for I felt sure that the pursuers were at
-my heels, and the possibility of being
-retaken enraged me almost past endurance.
-I had been denounced shortly
-after leaving the settlement, of that there
-could be no doubt. But how had the
-police managed to trace me so soon? I
-had been very careful, neglected no conceivable
-precaution, given misleading
-answers to all who questioned me about
-my past movements and future plans.
-I had made long <i lang="fr">detours</i> to avoid the
-larger villages, and during the latter part
-of my journey put up only with the most
-trusted friends of vagabond wanderers.
-Yet the gendarmes had followed me step
-by step to my very last resting-place,
-and but for the friendly warning of the
-bells I should certainly have been recaptured,
-for I could not have left the village
-by daylight without being seen.
-Even now I was in imminent danger;
-my safety absolutely depended on my
-reaching my friend's house at once, and
-lying a long time in hiding. Though I
-had never been there, I knew the place
-so well by description—its situation and
-appearance were so vividly impressed on
-my mind—that I could find it, even in
-the dark, without asking a question.
-It was only about seven miles from the
-village I had just left. But how could
-I get thither unperceived? For if I was
-seen by a single person entering my
-friend's house, it might be the ruin of
-us both. Something must be decided
-on the instant. Day was dawning, the
-gendarmes were behind me, and by the
-barking of the dogs I reckoned that the
-village where dwelt my friend could not
-be more than two miles away. I looked
-round. On one side of the road were
-open fields; on the other thick brushwood
-grew. As yet, I had not met a
-soul,—nobody could tell the gendarmes
-in which direction I had gone—but it
-was now no longer dark, and if I went
-on, I might encounter a peasant or a
-wayfarer any moment. Only one thing
-could be done; I must hide somewhere—even
-at the risk of being frozen stiff—and
-remain hidden until sundown, when
-I might perchance gain my friend's
-house unperceived. Among the bushes!
-Yes, that was the place, I could lie <i lang="fr">perdu</i>
-there all day. But just as I was about
-to put this plan into execution, another
-thought came to trouble me. How
-about my footsteps? Fresh snow had
-fallen in the night, and the police could
-follow me to my hiding-place as easily
-as a hound tracks a deer to its lair.
-And then I bethought me of an ingenious
-artifice, about which I had read in
-some romance. Turning my face to the
-road I walked backward toward the
-bushes, taking care at every step to
-make a distinct impression on the snow.
-It was now quite daylight, and a little
-way off I could see two summer cabins
-of the Buriats—in winter always empty.
-Thither I went, always backward, and
-entering one of the cabins remained
-there the whole day and far into the
-night. When I thought all the peasants
-would be indoors, I stole quietly out,
-and going stealthily and with many precautions
-to my friend's house, knocked
-in fear and misgiving at his door.</p>
-
-<p>To my great relief he opened it himself.</p>
-
-<p>“I should not have recognised you,
-if I had not just heard all your history,”
-he said, after we had exchanged greetings.</p>
-
-<p>“I am very curious to see myself,” I
-returned, approaching a mirror which
-hung on the wall. “I have not seen a
-looking-glass since my arrest.”</p>
-
-<p>I was so much altered that I hardly
-knew myself. I saw before me the reflection
-of a wild, strange, haggard face,
-and I could almost have believed I was
-somebody else.</p>
-
-<p>“When did you hear of my flight?” I
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“To-day. There has been quite an
-inquest here. The gendarmes questioned
-everybody and searched every
-house. They followed you step by step
-to the last village. They found out
-where you passed the night, and then
-they seem to have lost the scent entirely.
-Where have you been?”</p>
-
-<p>I told him.</p>
-
-<p>“Did anybody see you come here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a soul.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good. All the same, you must not
-stay here an hour longer than we can
-help. It would be too dangerous. The
-police are baffled; but they have by no
-means given up the quest, and as likely
-as not will be here again to-morrow.
-You must not sleep here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where then?”</p>
-
-<p>“At my farm. But first of all you
-must change your skin.”</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke, my friend in need opened
-a cupboard, and took therefrom some
-garments in which, when I had arrayed
-myself and had a good wash, I looked
-and felt like a new man.</p>
-
-<p>“Is your farm far from here?” I
-asked, as we sat down to supper.</p>
-
-<p>“About twenty-five versts (fifteen
-miles), in the depth of the forest, far
-from any highway. Hunting parties
-from Irkoutsk visit us there sometimes.
-Your coming will, therefore, be no surprise
-for the servants. It is true your
-hair is just a little short (looking at my
-head); but that is nothing. You have
-had typhoid fever, and are going to recruit
-your strength in the forest. You
-look haggard enough to have had three
-fevers.”</p>
-
-<p>An hour later we were <i lang="fr">en route</i>, my
-friend, who had lived many years in the
-country, himself taking the reins, and he
-contrived matters so well that nobody in
-the house knew either of my coming or
-my going. The police were thrown
-completely off the scent.</p>
-
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Liberty.</span></h3>
-
-<p>As I learnt subsequently, my identity
-and my stratagem were revealed to the
-authorities by one of my comrades of
-the convoy shortly after I left Irkoutsk.
-But when the gendarmes went to the
-village of Talminsky, I had already
-vanished. Every effort was, however,
-made to retake me, the quest being kept
-up night and day for six weeks. Then
-it was rumored that a body found in the
-forest had been identified as mine, and
-that I had perished of hunger. According
-to another story, I had been arrested
-at Nijni Oudinsk, and was being brought
-back to Irkoutsk. Among the vagabonds
-who at this time were captured
-right and left on the high roads throughout
-the province, were several whom it
-pleased to call themselves by my name.
-The deceit was naturally soon detected,
-but while it lasted the deceivers enjoyed
-certain advantages, which helped to render
-their detention tolerable. Instead
-of walking they rode in carriages, and
-were accompanied by an escort, and being
-regarded as important prisoners, they
-were both better fed and better treated
-than common malefactors, while their
-audacity rendered them highly popular
-with their vagabond and convict comrades.
-There were at one time no fewer
-than four false Debagorio Mokrievitches
-in the jail of Irkoutsk. The police
-sought me with great diligence among
-the political exiles of the province; a
-most stupid proceeding on their part,
-for to take refuge with the politicals
-would have been putting my head in the
-lion's mouth.</p>
-
-<p>Three other men who about the same
-time attempted to escape were all recaptured.</p>
-
-<p>I stayed in Siberia a year, making
-during that time several journeys to the
-eastward of Irkoutsk. At length the
-police having abandoned all hope of finding
-me, I resolved to leave the country.
-A passport being absolutely necessary, I
-borrowed the name and obtained the
-papers of a gentleman recently deceased—Ivan
-Alexandrovitch Selivanoff. It
-was in the winter of 1880 that I set out
-on my long journey of 3,600 miles. I
-travelled post, by way of Irkoutsk, Krasnoiarsk
-and Tomsk—towns through
-which, a twelvemonth before, I had
-passed as a prisoner. Rather a bold
-undertaking in the circumstances; but
-as I possessed an itinerary-card signed
-by the governor of the province, giving
-me the right to relays of horses, I
-ran no great danger, and left the home
-of my hospitable friend with an easy
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>During the journey I met from time
-to time gangs of prisoners on the way
-from Russia to Irkoutsk. The clanking
-of the irons, the yellow pelisses, the
-worn faces, the weary walk, and the
-shorn heads of these unfortunates—how
-familiar they all were, and how the sight
-of them thrilled me to the soul! And
-behind the chain gang came the wagons
-of the political prisoners, among whom,
-more than once, I recognized the face
-of a dear friend. But instead of jumping
-from my carriage and folding the
-poor fellows in my arms, I had to look
-the other way!</p>
-
-<p>All went well with me, but once I had
-a terribly narrow escape of falling a
-second time into the toils. It so
-chanced that I passed through the province
-of Tobolsk in company with a
-tchinovnik (government employé), whose
-acquaintance I had made on the road, a
-big-paunched, rosy-cheeked fellow, with
-merry eyes and a mellow voice; and,
-being on his way home after a long
-absence, in high good humor and full
-of fun. Once at the end of a long day's
-journey, we arrived about midnight at a
-town in the neighborhood of Tobolsk,
-and, being tired and sleepy, resolved to
-pass the rest of the night there. So we
-went into the travellers' room, ordered
-tea, and handed our itinerary cards to
-the starosta of the station, in order that
-he might make the necessary entries in
-the travellers' book. Before going to
-the sleeping room we requested that the
-horses might be ready at seven o'clock
-next morning.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>I slept the sleep of the just, rose betimes,
-and called for the starosta.</p>
-
-<p>“Are the horses ready?” I asked.
-“And be good enough to bring hither
-our itinerary-cards.”</p>
-
-<p>“The station-master will himself
-bring your itinerary-cards, and as for the
-horses they are already yoked up.”</p>
-
-<p>Half-an-hour later the station-master
-(otherwise director), came into our
-room, holding in his hand the itinerary-cards.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry to trouble you,” he said
-politely; “but I should like to know
-which of you young gentlemen is Ivan
-Alexandrovitch Selivanoff?”</p>
-
-<p>“At your service sir,” I answered,
-stepping forward.</p>
-
-<p>The station-master looked at me with
-a ludicrous expression of bewilderment
-and surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“A thousand pardons,” he said at
-length, with a low bow. “But really—I
-don't quite understand. The fact is, I
-knew Mr. Selivanoff, and here I see the
-same surname and Christian name; the
-name of the father is also the same, the
-tchin (rank) likewise! Yet I was told
-he had died—more than a year ago—but
-when I saw his name on the card I
-thought the news must be false, and I
-came to assure myself. I see that I
-am mistaken. A thousand pardons, sir,
-a thousand pardons,” and again he
-saluted me still more profoundly than
-before.</p>
-
-<p>I felt as if the ground were opening
-under my feet, and was thinking how on
-earth I should get out of the scrape, when
-my companion came—without knowing
-it—to the rescue.</p>
-
-<p>“What a capital joke!” he shouted,
-clapping me on the back, and laughing
-so that he could hardly speak. “One
-might suppose that the worthy director
-takes you for an escaped prisoner with
-a dead man's passport. Ha, ha, ha,
-what a capital joke to be sure!”</p>
-
-<p>And holding his big belly with both
-hands, he balanced himself first on one
-foot and then the other, laughing the
-while, until he could hardly stand.</p>
-
-<p>“You are quite right,” I said, also
-laughing, though with considerable
-effort. “It is really an excellent joke.
-But seriously (turning to the station-master),
-the thing is easily explained.
-In the part I come from the Selivanoffs
-are as plentiful as blackberries. The
-late Ivan Alexandrovitch, your friend,
-and I were kinsmen, and had a great
-affection for each other; the name is so
-common in the province that I could
-introduce you to a dozen of my namesakes
-any day.”</p>
-
-<p>The station-master seemed satisfied
-with this explanation. At any rate, he
-made no objection to our departure, and
-shortly afterwards we were once more
-<i lang="fr">en route</i>. But my companion, the
-tchinovnik did not cease laughing for a
-long time. “To take you for a fugitive
-convict with a false passport!” he
-would say “it is really too good,” and
-whenever he remembered the incident
-he would laugh as if he never meant to
-stop. I remembered it, as may be supposed,
-with very different feelings. The
-escape was a very narrow one, and
-showed me how much I was still at the
-mercy of the slightest mishap. But this
-proved to be my last adventure and my
-last peril. In May, 1881, I reached Geneva,
-and felt that I was at last really free.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>As most stories of Russian revolutionary
-life have necessarily, if they be true,
-a tragical termination, readers of the
-foregoing narrative may be pleased to
-know that M. Mokrievitch is still in a
-land where he feels really free. Though
-one of the heroes of Russian liberty he
-has not yet become one of its martyrs.
-But the time may come when he, as
-many other fugitives have done, will return
-to the volcanic soil of his native
-country, there to take part in the
-struggle to death which, though unseen,
-goes always on, and must continue without
-truce and without surcease until the
-sun of Freedom shall dawn in the Empire
-of the Night.—<cite>Contemporary Review.</cite></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<h2><a name="COLERIDGE_AS_A_SPIRITUAL_THINKER" id="COLERIDGE_AS_A_SPIRITUAL_THINKER">COLERIDGE AS A SPIRITUAL THINKER.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="aut">BY PRINCIPAL TULLOCH.</p>
-
-
-<p>Mr. Traill's recent volume has recalled
-the poet-philosopher who died
-just fifty years ago, leaving a strongly
-marked but indefinite impression upon
-the mind of his time. The volume has
-done something to renew and vivify the
-impression both in respect of Coleridge's
-poetry and criticism. His work as a
-critic has never, perhaps, been better or
-more completely exhibited. It is recognised
-generously in all its largeness and
-profundity, as well as delicacy and
-subtlety; and justice is especially done
-to his Shakesperian commentary, which
-in its richness, variety, felicity, combined
-with depth and acuteness, is absolutely
-unrivalled. But Mr. Traill cannot be
-said to have even attempted any estimate
-of Coleridge as a spiritual thinker. It
-may be questioned how far he has
-recognised that there is a spiritual side
-to all his thought, without which neither
-his poetry nor his criticism can be fully
-understood, cleverly as they may be
-judged.</p>
-
-<p>It is not only out of date, but outside
-of all intelligent judgment to quote at
-this time of day Mr. Carlyle's well-known
-caricature from his <cite>Life of Sterling</cite>,
-and put readers off with this as
-a “famous criticism.” We now know
-how to value utterances of this kind,
-and the unhappy spirit of detraction
-which lay beneath such wild and
-grotesque humors. Carlyle will always
-remain an artist in epithets—but few will
-turn to him for an intelligent or comprehensive
-estimate of any great name of
-his own or of recent time.</p>
-
-<p>We propose to look at Coleridge for a
-little as a religious thinker, and to ask
-what is the meaning and value of his
-work in this respect now that we can
-calmly and fully judge it. If Coleridge
-was anything, he was not only in his
-own view, as Mr. Traill admits, but in
-the view of his generation, a religious
-philosopher. It is not only the testimony
-of men like Hare, or Sterling, or
-Maurice, or even Cardinal Newman, but
-of John Stuart Mill, that his teaching
-awakened and freshened all contemporary
-thought. He was recognised with
-all his faults as a truly great thinker,
-who raised the mind of the time and gave
-it new and wide impulses. This judgment
-we feel sure will yet verify itself. If
-English literature ever regains the higher
-tone of our earlier national life—the
-tone of Hooker and Milton and Jeremy
-Taylor—Coleridge will be again acknowledged,
-in Julius Hare's words, as
-“a true sovereign of English thought.”
-He will take rank in the same line of
-spiritual genius. He has the same elevation
-of feeling, the same profound
-grasp of moral and spiritual ideas, the
-same wide range of vision. He has, in
-short, the same love of wisdom, the
-same insight, the same largeness—never
-despising nature or art, or literature, for
-the sake of religion, still less ever despising
-religion for the sake of culture. In
-reading over Coleridge's prose works
-again, returning to them after a long
-past familiarity, I am particularly struck
-by their massive and large intellectuality,
-akin to our older Elizabethan
-literature. There is everywhere the play
-of great power—of imagination as well
-as reason—of spiritual perception as well
-as logical subtlety.</p>
-
-<p>To speak of Coleridge in this manner
-as a great spiritual power, an eminently
-healthy writer in the higher regions of
-thought, may seem absurd to some who
-think mainly of his life, and of the fatal
-failure which characterised it. It is the
-shadow of this failure of manliness in his
-conduct, as in that of his life-long
-friend, Charles Lamb, which no doubt
-prompted the great genius who carried
-manliness, if little sweetness, from his
-Annandale home, to paint both the one
-and the other in such darkened colors.
-We have not a word to say on behalf of
-the failings of either. They were deplorable
-and unworthy; but it is the fact,
-notwithstanding, that the mind of both
-retained a serenity and a certain touch
-of respectfulness which are lacking in
-their great Scottish contemporary.
-They were both finer-edged than Carlyle.
-They inherited a more delicate and
-polite personal culture; and delicacy can
-never be far distant from true manliness.
-Neither of them could have written of the
-treasures of old religion as Carlyle did
-in his <cite>Life of Sterling</cite>. Whether they
-accepted for themselves those treasures
-or not, they would have spared the tender
-faith of others and respected an
-ancient ideal. And this is the higher
-attitude. Nothing which has ever
-deeply interested humanity or profoundly
-moved it, is treated with contempt
-by a good and wise man. It may
-call for and deserve rejection, but never
-insult. Unhappily this attitude of mind,
-reserved, as well as critical, reverent as
-well as bold, has been conspicuously
-absent in some of the most powerful and
-best known writers of our era.</p>
-
-<p>There is a striking contrast between
-the career of Coleridge and that of his
-friend Wordsworth. Fellows in the
-opening of their poetic course, they soon
-diverged widely. With a true instinct,
-Wordsworth devoted himself, in quietness
-and seclusion, to the cultivation
-of his poetic faculty. He left aside the
-world of politics and of religious
-thought, strongly moved as he had been
-by the interests of both. It may be said
-that Wordsworth continued a religious
-thinker as well as poet all his life. And
-to some extent this is true. The
-“Wanderer” is a preacher and not
-only a singer. He goes to the heart
-of religion, and lays again its foundations
-in the natural instincts of man.
-But while Wordsworth's poetry was
-instinct with a new life of religious
-feeling, and may be said to have given
-a new radiancy to its central principles,<a id="FNanchor_2_2" href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">2</a>
-it did not initiate any movement
-in Christian thought. In religious
-opinion Wordsworth soon fell back
-upon, if he ever consciously departed
-from, the old line of Anglican traditions.
-The vague Pantheism of the <em>Excursion</em>
-implies rather a lack of distinctive
-dogma than any fresh insight into religious
-problems or capacity of co-ordinating
-them in a new manner. And so
-soon as definite religious conceptions
-came to the poet, the Church in her customary
-theology became a satisfactory
-refuge. The <cite>Ecclesiastical Sonnets</cite> mark
-this definite stage in his spiritual
-development. Wordsworth did for the
-religious thought of his time something
-more and better perhaps than giving it
-any definite impulse. While leaving it
-in the old channels, he gave it a richer
-and deeper volume. He showed with
-what vital affinity religion cleaves to
-humanity, in all its true and simple
-phases, when uncontaminated by conceit
-or frivolity. Nature and man alike
-were to him essentially religious, or only
-conceivable as the outcome of a Spirit
-of life, “the Soul of all the worlds.”<a id="FNanchor_3_3" href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">3</a>
-Wordsworth, in short, remained as he
-began, a poet of a deeply religious
-spirit. But he did not enter the domain
-of theological speculation or attempt to
-give any new direction to it.</p>
-
-<p>In all this Coleridge is his counterpart.
-He may be said to have abandoned
-poetry just when Wordsworth in
-his retirement at Grasmere (1799) was
-consecrating his life to it. Whether it
-be true, according to De Quincey, that
-Coleridge's poetical power was killed by
-the habit of opium-eating, it is certainly
-true that the harp of Quantock<a id="FNanchor_4_4" href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">4</a> was
-never again struck save for a brief moment.
-The poet Coleridge passed into
-the lecturer and the poetical and literary
-critic, and then, during the final period
-of his life, from 1816 to 1834, into the
-philosopher and theologian. It is to
-this latter period of his life in the main
-that his higher prose writings belong, and
-especially the well-known <cite>Aids to Reflection</cite>
-which—disparaged as it is by
-Mr. Traill—may be said to contain, as
-his disciples have always held to contain,
-all the finer substance of his spiritual
-thought. It is true that it is defective as
-a literary composition. We are even
-disposed to allow that it has “less
-charm of thought, less beauty of style,”
-and in some respects even less “power
-of effective statement,”<a id="FNanchor_5_5" href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">5</a> than is common
-with Coleridge; but withal it is his
-highest work. These very defects only
-serve to bring out the more its strong
-points, when we consider the wonderful
-hold the book has taken of many minds,
-and how it has been the subject of
-elaborate commentary.<a id="FNanchor_6_6" href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">6</a> It is a book,
-we may at the same time say, which
-none but a thinker on divine things will
-ever like. All such thinkers have prized
-it greatly. To many such it has given a
-new force of religious insight; for its
-time, beyond all doubt, it created a real
-epoch in Christian thought. It had life
-in it; and the living seed, scattered and
-desultory as it was, brought forth fruit
-in many minds.</p>
-
-<p>What, then, were its main contributions
-to religious thought, and in what
-respects generally is Coleridge to be reckoned
-a spiritual power?</p>
-
-<p>(1.) First, and chiefly, in the <cite>Aids
-to Reflection</cite>, Coleridge may be said to
-have transformed and renewed the current
-ideas of his time about religion.
-He was, we know, a man of many ambitions
-never realised; but of all his
-ambitions, the most persistent was that
-of laying anew the foundations of
-spiritual philosophy. This was “the
-great work” to which he frequently
-alluded as having given “the preparation
-of more than twenty years of his
-life.”<a id="FNanchor_7_7" href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">7</a> Like other great tasks projected
-by him, it was very imperfectly accomplished;
-and there will always be those
-in consequence who fail to understand
-his influence as a leader of thought.
-We are certainly not bound to take
-Coleridge at his own value, nor to attach
-the same importance as he did to some
-of his speculations. No one, indeed,
-knew better than Coleridge himself that
-there was nothing new in his Platonic
-Realism. It was merely a restoration of
-the old religious metaphysic which had
-preceded “the mechanical systems,”
-that became dominant in the reign of
-Charles the Second. He himself constantly
-claims to do nothing more than
-re-assert the principles of Hooker, of
-Henry More, of John Smith, and Leighton,
-all of whom he speaks of as
-“Platonizing divines!” But the religious
-teaching of Coleridge came upon
-his generation as a new breath, not
-merely or mainly because he revived these
-ancient principles, but because he
-vitalised anew their application to Christianity,
-so as to transform it from a mere
-creed, or collection of articles, into a
-living mode of thought, embracing all
-human activity. Coleridge was no mere
-metaphysician. He was a great interpreter
-of spiritual facts—a student of
-spiritual life, quickened by a peculiarly
-vivid and painful experience; and he
-saw in Christianity, rightly conceived, at
-once the true explanation of the facts of
-our spiritual being and the true remedy
-for their disorder. He brought human
-nature, not merely on one side, but all
-sides, once more near to Christianity, so
-as to find in it not merely a means of salvation
-in any limited evangelical sense,
-but the highest Truth and Health—a
-perfect philosophy. His main power
-lies in this subjective direction, just as
-here it was that his age was most needing
-stimulus and guidance.</p>
-
-<p>The Evangelical School, with all its
-merits, had conceived of Christianity
-rather as something superadded the
-highest life of humanity than as the
-perfect development of that life; as a
-scheme for human salvation authenticated
-by miracles, and, so to speak, interpolated
-into human history rather than
-a divine philosophy, witnessing to itself
-from the beginning in all the higher
-phases of that history. And so Philosophy,
-and no less Literature, and
-Art, and Science, were conceived apart
-from religion. The world and the
-Church were not only antagonistic in the
-Biblical sense, as the embodiments of
-the Carnal and the Divine Spirit—which
-they must ever be; but they were, so to
-speak, severed portions of life divided by
-outward signs and badges: and those
-who joined the one or the other were
-supposed to be clearly marked off. All
-who know the writings of the Evangelical
-School of the eighteenth and earlier
-part of the nineteenth century, from the
-poetry of Cowper and the letters of his
-friend Newton, to the writings of
-Romaine, John Forster, and Wilberforce,
-and even Chalmers, will know
-how such commonplaces everywhere reappear
-in them. That they were associated
-with the most devout and beautiful
-lives, that they even served to foster a
-peculiar ardor of Christian feeling and
-love of God, cannot be disputed. But
-they were essentially narrow and false.
-They destroyed the largeness and unity
-of human experience. They not merely
-separated religion from art and philosophy,
-but they tended to separate it from
-morality.</p>
-
-<p>Coleridge's most distinctive work was
-to restore the broken harmony between
-reason and religion, by enlarging the
-conception of both, but of the latter
-especially,—by showing how man is essentially
-a religious being having a definite
-spiritual constitution, apart from
-which the very idea of religion becomes
-impossible. Religion is not, therefore,
-something brought to man, it is his
-highest education. Religion, he says,
-was designed “to improve the nature
-and the faculties of man, in order to
-the right governing of our actions, to
-the securing the peace and progress,
-eternal and internal, of individuals and
-communities.” Christianity is in the
-highest degree adapted to this end; and
-nothing can be a part of it that is not
-duly proportioned thereto. In thus
-vindicating the rationality of religion,
-Coleridge had a twofold task before
-him, as every such thinker has. He had
-to assert against the Epicurean and
-Empirical School the spiritual constitution
-of human nature, and against the
-fanatical or hyper-evangelical school
-the reasonable working of spiritual influence.
-He had to maintain, on the
-one hand, the essential divinity of man,
-that “there is more in him than can be
-rationally referred to the life of nature
-and the mechanism of organisation,” and
-on the other hand to show that this
-higher life of the spirit is throughout
-rational—that it is superstition and not
-true religion which professes to resolve
-“men's faith and practice” into the
-illumination of such a spirit as they can
-give no account of,—such as does not
-enlighten their reason or enable them
-to render their doctrine intelligible to
-others. He fights, in short, alike
-against materialistic negation and credulous
-enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>The former he meets with the assertion
-of “a spirituality in man,” a self-power
-or Will at the root of all his
-being. “If there be aught spiritual in
-man, the will must be such. If there
-be a will, there must be a spirituality in
-man.” He assumes both positions,
-seeing clearly—what all who radically
-deal with such a question must see—that
-it becomes in the end an alternative
-postulate on one side and the other.
-The theologian cannot prove his case,
-because the very terms in which it must
-be proved are already denied <i lang="la">ab initio</i> by
-the materialist. But no more can the
-materialist, for the same reason, refute
-the spiritual thinker. There can be no
-argument where no common premiss is
-granted. Coleridge was quite alive to
-this, yet he validly appeals to common
-experience. “I assume,” he says, “a
-something the proof which no man can
-give to another, yet every man may find
-for himself. If any man assert that he
-has no such experience, I am bound to
-disbelieve him, I cannot do otherwise
-without unsettling the foundation of my
-own moral nature. For I either find it
-as an essential of the humanity common
-to him and to me, or I have not found
-it at all.... All the significant objections
-of the materialist and necessitarian,”
-he adds, “are contained in the
-term morality, and all the objections of
-the infidel in the term religion. These
-very terms imply something granted,
-which the objector in each case supposes
-not granted. A moral philosophy is
-only such because it assumes a principle
-of morality, a will in man, and so a
-Christian philosophy or theology has its
-own assumptions resting on three ultimate
-facts, namely, the reality of the
-law of conscience; the existence of a
-responsible will as the subject of that
-law; and lastly, the existence of God....
-The first is a fact of consciousness;
-the second, a fact of reason necessarily
-concluded from the first; and the
-third, a fact of history interpreted by
-both.”</p>
-
-<p>These were the radical data of the religious
-philosophy of Coleridge. They
-imply a general conception of religion
-which was revolutionary for his age,
-simple and ancient as the principles are.
-The evangelical tradition brought religion
-to man from the outside. It took
-no concern of man's spiritual constitution
-beyond the fact that he was a sinner
-and in danger of hell. Coleridge
-started from a similar but larger experience,
-including not only sin, but the
-whole spiritual basis on which sin rests.
-“I profess a deep conviction,” he
-says, “that man is a fallen creature,”
-“not by accident of bodily constitution
-or any other cause, but as diseased in
-his will—in that will which is the true
-and only strict synonyme of the word I,
-or the intelligent Self.” This “intelligent
-Self” is a fundamental conception
-lying at the root of his system of
-thought. Sin is an attribute of it, and
-cannot be conceived apart for it, and
-conscience, or the original sense of right
-and wrong governing the will. Apart
-from these internal realities there is no
-religion, and the function of the Christian
-Revelation is to build up the
-spiritual life out of these realities—to
-remedy the evil, to enlighten the conscience,
-to educate the will. This effective
-power of religion comes directly from
-God in Christ. Here Coleridge joins
-the Evangelical School, as indeed every
-school of living Christian Faith. This
-was the element of Truth he found in
-the doctrine of Election as handled
-“practically, morally, humanly,” by
-Leighton. Every true Christian, he
-argues, must attribute his distinction
-not in any degree to himself—“his own
-resolves and strivings,” “his own will
-and understanding,” still less to “his
-own comparative excellence,”—but to
-God, “the being in whom the promise
-of life originated, and on whom its fulfilment
-depends.” Election so far is a
-truth of experience. “This the conscience
-requires; this the highest interests
-of morality demand.” So far it
-is a question of facts with which the
-speculative reason has nothing to do.
-But when the theological reasoner abandons
-the ground of fact and “the safe
-circle of religion and practical reason
-for the shifting sand-wastes and mirages
-of speculative theology,” then he uses
-words without meaning. He can have
-no insight into the workings or plans
-of a Being who is neither an object of
-his senses nor a part of his self-consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing can show better than this
-brief exposition how closely Coleridge in
-his theology clung to a base of spiritual
-experience, and sought to measure even
-the most abstruse Christian mysteries by
-facts. The same thing may be shown
-by referring to his doctrine of the
-Trinity, which has been supposed the
-most transcendental and, so to speak,
-“Neo-Platonist” of all his doctrines.
-But truly speaking his Trinitarianism,
-like his doctrine of Election, is a moral
-rather than a speculative truth. The
-Trinitarian idea was, indeed, true to him
-notionally. The full analysis of the
-notion “God” seemed to him to involve
-it. “I find a certain notion in my
-mind, and say that is what I understand
-by the term God. From books and conversation
-I find that the learned generally
-connect the same notion with the
-same word. I then apply the rules laid
-down by the masters of logic for the
-involution and evolution of terms, and
-prove (to as many as agree with my
-premisses) that the notion 'God' involves
-the notion 'Trinity,'” So he
-argued, and many times recurred to the
-same Transcendental analysis. But the
-truer and more urgent spiritual basis of
-the doctrine of the Trinity, even to his
-own mind, was not its notional but its
-moral necessity. Christ could only be
-a Saviour as being Divine. Salvation is
-a Divine work. “The idea of redemption
-involves belief in the Divinity of
-our Lord. And our Lord's Divinity
-again involves the Trinitarian idea, because
-in and through this idea alone the
-Divinity of Christ can be received without
-breach of faith in the Unity of the
-Godhead.” In other words, the best
-evidence of the doctrine of the Trinity,
-is the compulsion of the spiritual
-conscience which demands a Divine
-Saviour; and only in and through the
-great idea of Trinity in Unity does this
-demand become consistent with Christian
-Monotheism.<a id="FNanchor_8_8" href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">8</a></p>
-
-<p>These doctrines are merely used in
-illustration, as they are by Coleridge
-himself in his <cite>Aids to Reflection</cite>. But
-nothing can show in a stronger light the
-general character of the change which
-he wrought in the conception of Christianity.
-From being a mere traditional
-creed, with Anglican and Evangelical,
-and it may be added Unitarian alike, it
-became a living expression of the
-spiritual consciousness. In a sense, of
-course, it had always been so. The
-Evangelical made much of its living
-power, but only in a practical and not in
-a rational sense. It is the distinction of
-Coleridge to have once more in his age
-made Christian doctrine alive to the
-reason as well as the conscience—tenable
-as a philosophy as well as an
-evangel. And this he did by interpreting
-Christianity in the light of our moral
-and spiritual life. There are aspects of
-Christian truth beyond us—<i lang="la">Exeunt in
-mysteria</i>. But all Christian truth must
-have vital touch with our spiritual being,
-and be so far at least capable of being
-rendered in its terms, or, in other words,
-be conformable to reason.</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing absolutely new in
-this luminous conception, but it marked
-a revolution of religious thought in
-the earlier part of our century. The
-great principle of the Evangelical
-theology was that theological dogmas
-were true or false without any reference
-to a subjective standard of judgment.
-They were true as pure data of revelation,
-or as the propositions of an authorised
-creed settled long ago. Reason
-had, so far, nothing to do with them.
-Christian truth, it was supposed, lay at
-had in the Bible, an appeal to which
-settled everything. Coleridge did not
-undervalue the Bible. He gave it an
-intelligent reverence. But he no less
-reverenced the spiritual consciousness
-or divine light in man; and to put out
-this light, as the Evangelical had gone
-far to do, was to destroy all reasonable
-faith. This must rest not merely
-on objective data, but on internal experience.
-It must have not merely
-authority without, but <em>rationale</em> within.
-It must answer to the highest aspiration
-of human reason, as well as the
-most urgent necessities of human life.
-It must interpret reason and find expression
-in the voice of our higher
-humanity, and so enlarge itself as to
-meet all its needs.</p>
-
-<p>If we turn for a moment to the special
-exposition of the doctrines of sin and
-redemption which Coleridge has given
-in the <cite>Aids to Reflection</cite>, it is still mainly
-with the view of bringing out more
-clearly his general conception of Christianity
-as a living movement of thought
-rather than a mere series of articles or a
-traditionary creed.</p>
-
-<p>In dealing first with the question of
-sin, he shows how its very idea is only
-tenable on the ground of such a spiritual
-constitution in man as he has already
-asserted. It is only the recognition of
-a true will in man—a spirit or supernatural
-in man, although “not necessarily
-miraculous”—which renders sin
-possible. “These views of the spirit
-and of the will as spiritual,” he says
-more than once, “are the groundwork
-of my scheme.” There was nothing
-more significant or fundamental in all
-his theology. If there is not always a
-supernatural element in man in the
-shape of spirit and will, no miracles or
-anything else can ever authenticate the
-supernatural to him. A mere formal
-orthodoxy, therefore, hanging upon the
-evidence of miracles, is a suspension
-bridge without any real support. So all
-questions between infidelity and Christianity
-are questions here, at the root,
-and not what are called “critical” questions
-as to whether this or that view of
-the Bible be right, or this or that traditionary
-dogma be true. Such questions
-are, truly speaking, inter-Christian questions,
-the freest views of which all
-Churches must learn to tolerate. The
-really vital question is whether there is
-a divine root in man at all—a spiritual
-centre, answering to a higher spiritual
-centre in the universe. All controversies
-of any importance come back to
-this. Coleridge would have been a great
-Christian thinker if for no other reason
-than this, that he brought all theological
-problems back to this living centre, and
-showed how they diverged from it.
-Apart from this postulate, sin was inconceivable
-to him; and in the same
-manner all sin was to him sin of origin
-or “original sin.” It is the essential
-property of the will that it can originate.
-The phrase original sin is therefore
-“a pleonasm.” If sin was not
-original, or from within the will itself,
-it would not deserve the name. “A
-state or act that has not its origin in
-the will may be a calamity, deformity,
-disease, or mischief, but a sin it cannot
-be.”</p>
-
-<p>Again he says: “That there is an evil
-common to all is a fact, and this evil
-must, therefore, have a common ground.
-Now this evil ground cannot originate
-in the Divine will; it must, therefore,
-be referred to the will of man. And this
-evil ground we call original sin. It is a
-mystery, that is, a fact which we see,
-but cannot explain; and the doctrine a
-truth which we apprehend, but can
-neither comprehend nor communicate.
-And such by the quality of the subject
-(namely, a responsible will) it must be,
-if it be truth at all.”</p>
-
-<p>This inwardness is no less characteristic
-of Coleridge's treatment of the doctrine
-of atonement or redemption. It is
-intelligible so far as it comes within the
-range of spiritual experience. So far its
-nature and effects are amply described
-or figured in the New Testament,
-especially by St. Paul. And the apostle's
-language, as might be expected,
-“takes its predominant colors from
-his own experience, and the experience
-of those whom he addressed.” “His
-figures, images, analogies, and references,”
-are all more or less borrowed
-from this source. He describes the
-Atonement of Christ under four principal
-metaphors: 1. Sin-offering, sacrificial
-expiation. 2. Reconciliation,
-atonement, καταλλάγη. 3. Redemption,
-or ransom from slavery. 4. Satisfaction,
-payment of a debt. These
-phrases are not designed to convey to us
-all the Divine meaning of the atonement,
-for no phrases or figures can do this;
-but they set forth its general aspect
-and design. One and all they have an
-intelligible relation to our spiritual life,
-and so clothe the doctrine for us with a
-concrete living and practical meaning.
-But there are other relations and aspects
-of the doctrine of atonement that transcend
-experience, and consequently our
-powers of understanding. And all that
-can be said here is, “exit in mysteria.”
-The rationalism of Coleridge is at least
-a modest and self-limiting rationalism.
-It clears the ground within the range of
-spiritual experience, and floods this
-ground with the light of reason. There
-is no true doctrine can contradict this
-light, or shelter itself from its penetration.
-But there are aspects of Christian
-doctrine that outreach all grasp of reason,
-and before which reason must simply
-be silent. For example, the Divine
-act in redemption is “a causative act—a
-spiritual and transcendent mystery <em>that
-passeth all understanding. 'Who knoweth
-the mind of the Lord, or being his councillor
-who hath instructed him?' Factum
-est.</em>” This is all that can be said of the
-mystery of redemption, or of the doctrine
-of atonement on its Divine side.</p>
-
-<p>And here emerges another important
-principle of the Coleridgian theology.
-While so great an advocate of the
-rights of reason in theology, of the
-necessity, in other words, of moulding
-all its facts in a synthesis intelligible to
-the higher reason he recognises strongly
-that there is a province of Divine truth
-beyond all such construction. We can
-never understand the fulness of Divine
-mystery, and it is hopeless to attempt to
-do so. While no mind was less agnostic
-in the modern sense of the term, he
-was yet with all his vivid and large intuition,
-a Christian agnostic. Just because
-Christianity was Divine, a revelation,
-and not a mere human tradition,
-all its higher doctrines ended in a region
-beyond our clear knowledge. As he
-himself said, “If the doctrine is more
-than a hyperbolical phrase it must do
-so.” There was great pregnancy in this
-as in his other conceptions; and probably
-no more significant change awaits
-the theology of the future, than the
-determination of this province of the
-unknown, and the cessation of controversy,
-as to matters which come within
-it, and therefore admit of no dogmatic
-settlement.</p>
-
-<p>(2.) But it is more than time to
-turn to the second aspect, in which
-Coleridge appears as a religious leader
-of the thought of the nineteenth century.
-The <cite>Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit</cite>
-was not published till six years after
-his death, in 1840; and it is curious to
-notice their accidental connection with
-the <cite>Confessions of a Beautiful Soul</cite>,
-which had been translated by Carlyle
-some years before.<a id="FNanchor_9_9" href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">9</a> These <cite>Confessions</cite>,
-in the shape of seven letters to a friend,
-gather together all that is valuable in
-the Biblical criticism of the author scattered
-through his various writings; and
-although it may be doubtful whether the
-volume has ever attained the circulation
-of the <cite>Aids to Reflection</cite>, it is eminently
-deserving—small as it is, nay, because
-of its very brevity—of a place beside the
-larger work. It is eminently readable,
-terse and nervous, as well as eloquent in
-style. In none of his writings does Coleridge
-appear to greater advantage, or
-touch a more elevating strain, rising at
-times into solemn music.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit</cite>
-were of course merely one indication of
-the rise of a true spirit of criticism
-in English theology. Arnold, Whately,
-Thirlwall, and others, it will be seen,
-were all astir in the same direction, even
-before the <cite>Confessions</cite> were published.
-The notion of verbal inspiration, or
-the infallible dictation of Holy Scripture,
-could not possibly continue after
-the modern spirit of historical inquiry
-had begun. As soon as men plainly
-recognised the organic growth of all
-great facts, literary as well as others, it
-was inevitable that they should see the
-Scriptures in a new light, as a product
-of many phases of thought in course of
-more or less perfect development. A
-larger and more intelligent sense of the
-conditions attending the origin and progress
-of all civilisation, and of the immaturities
-through which religious as
-well as moral and social ideas advance,
-necessarily carried with it a changed perception
-of the characteristics of Scriptural
-revelation. The old Rabbinical
-notion of an infallible text was sure to
-disappear. The new critical method
-besides is, in Coleridge's hands, rather
-an idea—a happy and germinant thought—than
-a well-evolved system. Still to
-him belongs the honor of having first
-plainly and boldly announced that the
-Scriptures were to be read and studied,
-like any other literature, in the light of
-their continuous growth, and the adaptation
-of their parts to one another.</p>
-
-<p>The divinity of Scripture appears all
-the more brightly, when thus freely
-handled. “I take up the work,” he
-says, “with the purpose to read it as I
-should read any other work—so far as I
-can or dare. For I neither can nor dare
-throw off a strong and awful prepossession
-in its favor, certain as I am that a
-large part of the light and life in and by
-which I see, love, and embrace the
-truths and the strengths organised into
-a living body of faith and knowledge
-have been directly or indirectly derived
-to me from the sacred volume.” All
-the more reason why we should not
-make a fetish of the Bible, as the Turk
-does of the Koran. Poor as reason may
-be in comparison with “the power and
-splendor of the Scriptures,” yet it is and
-must be for him a true light. “While
-there is a Light higher than all, even the
-<em>Word that was in the beginning</em>;—the
-Light of which light itself is but the
-Schechinah and cloudy tabernacle;—there
-is also a 'Light that lighteth every
-man that cometh into the world;' and
-the spirit of man is declared to be 'the
-candle of the Lord,'” “If between
-this Word,” he says, “and the written
-letter I shall anywhere seem to myself
-to find a discrepance, I will not conclude
-that such there actually is. Nor,
-on the other hand, will I fall under the
-condemnation of those that would <em>lie for
-God</em>, but, seek as I may, be thankful for
-what I have and wait.”</p>
-
-<p>Such is the keynote of the volume.
-The supremacy of the Bible as a divinely
-inspired literature is plainly recognised
-from the first. Obviously it is a
-book above all other books in which
-deep answers to deep, and our inmost
-thoughts and most hidden griefs find not
-merely response, but guidance and
-assuagement. And whatever there <em>finds</em>
-us “bears witness for itself that it has
-proceeded from the Holy Spirit.” “In
-the Bible,” he says again, “there is
-more that <em>finds</em> me than I have experienced
-in all other books put together;
-the words of the Bible find me at greater
-depths of my being, and whatever finds
-me brings with it an irresistible evidence
-of its having proceeded from the Holy
-Spirit.”</p>
-
-<p>But there is much in the Bible that
-not only does not find us in the Coleridgian
-sense, but that seems full of
-contradictions, both moral and historical;
-the psalms in which David curses
-his enemies; the obviously exaggerated
-ages attributed to the patriarchs; and
-the incredible number of the armies said
-to be collected by Abijah and Jeroboam
-(2 Chron. xiii. 3), and other incidents
-familiar to all students of Scripture.
-What is to be made of such features of
-the Bible? According to the old notion
-of its infallibility such parts of Scripture,
-no less than its most elevating utterances
-of “lovely hymn and choral song and
-accepted prayer of saint and prophet,”
-were to be received as dictated by the
-Holy Spirit. They were stamped with
-the same Divine authority. Coleridge
-rightly enough emphasises this view as
-that of the fathers and reformers alike;
-but he no less rightly points out that not
-one of them is consistent in holding to
-their general doctrine. Their treatment
-of the Scriptures in detail constantly
-implies the fallacy of the Rabbinical
-tradition to which they yet clung. He
-no less forcibly points out that the
-Scriptures themselves make no such pretension
-to infallibility, “explicitly or
-by implication.” “On the contrary,
-they refer to older documents, and on
-all points express themselves as sober-minded
-and veracious writers under
-ordinary circumstances are known to
-do.” The usual texts quoted, such as
-2 Tim. iii. 16, have no real bearing on
-the subject. The little we know as to
-the origin and history of many of the
-books of the Bible, of “the time of the
-formation and closing of the canon,”
-of its selectors and compilers, is all opposed
-to such a theory. Moreover,
-the very nature of the claim stultifies
-itself when examined. For “how can
-infallible truth be infallibly conveyed in
-defective and fallible expression?”</p>
-
-<p>But if the tenet of verbal inspiration
-has been so long received and acted on
-“by Jew and Christian, Greek, Roman,
-and Protestant, why can it not now
-be received?” “For every reason,”
-answered Coleridge, “that makes me
-prize and revere these Scriptures;—prize
-them, love them, revere them beyond
-all other books.” Because such a
-tenet “falsifies at once the whole body
-of holy writ, with all its harmonious and
-symmetrical gradations.” It turns
-“the breathing organism into a colossal
-Memnon's head, a hollow passage for a
-voice,” which no man hath uttered, and
-no human heart hath conceived. It
-evacuates of all sense and efficacy the
-fact that the Bible is a Divine literature
-of many books, “composed in different
-and widely distant ages under the
-greatest diversity of circumstances and
-degrees of light and information.” So
-he argues in language I have partly
-quoted and partly summarised. And
-then he breaks forth into a magnificent
-passage about the song of Deborah, a
-passage of rare eloquence with all its
-desultoriness, but which will hardly bear
-separation from the context. The wail
-of the Jewish heroine's maternal and
-patriotic love is heard under all her
-cursing and individualism—mercy rejoicing
-against judgment. In the very
-intensity of her primary affections is
-found the rare strength of her womanhood;
-and sweetness lies near to fierceness.
-Such passages probably give us a
-far better idea of the occasional glory of
-the old man's talk as “he sat on the
-brow of Highgate Hill,” than any poor
-fragments of it that have been preserved.
-Direct and to the point it may never
-have been, but at times it rose into an
-organ swell with snatches of unutterable
-melody and power.</p>
-
-<p>(3.) But Coleridge contributed still
-another factor to the impulsion of religious
-thought in his time. He did much
-to revive the historic idea of the Church
-as an intellectual as well as a spiritual
-commonwealth. Like many other ideas
-of our older national life this had been
-depressed and lost sight of during the
-eighteenth century. The Evangelical
-party, deficient in learning generally,
-was especially deficient in breadth of
-historical knowledge. Milner's History,
-if nothing else, serves to point this
-conclusion. The idea of the Church as
-the mother of philosophy and arts and
-learning, as well as the nurse of faith and
-piety, was unknown. It was a part of
-the Evangelical creed, moreover, to
-leave aside as far as possible mere
-political and intellectual interests.
-These belonged to the world, and the
-main business of the religious man was
-with religion as a personal affair, of vast
-moment, but outside all other affairs.
-Coleridge helped once more to bring the
-Church as he did the gospel into larger
-room as a great spiritual power of manifold
-influence.</p>
-
-<p>This volume <cite>On the Constitution of
-Church and State according to the idea of
-each</cite> was published in 1830, and was the
-last volume which the author himself
-published. The Catholic Emancipation
-question had greatly excited the public
-mind, and some friend had appealed to
-Coleridge expressing astonishment that
-he should be in opposition to the proposed
-measure. He replied that he is
-by no means unfriendly to Catholic
-emancipation, while yet “scrupling the
-means proposed for its attainment.”
-And in order to explain his difficulties
-he composed a long letter to his friend
-which is really an essay or treatise, beginning
-with the fundamental principles
-of his philosophy and ending with a
-description of antichrist. The essay is
-one of the least satisfactory of his compositions
-from a mere literary point of
-view, and is not even mentioned by Mr.
-Traill in his recent monograph. But
-amidst all its involutions and ramblings
-it is stimulating and full of thought on
-a subject which almost more than any
-other is liable to be degraded by unworthy
-and sectarian treatment. Here,
-as everywhere in Coleridge's writings,
-we are brought in contact with certain
-large conceptions which far more than
-cover the immediate subject in hand.</p>
-
-<p>It has been sometimes supposed that
-Coleridge's theory of the Church merely
-revived the old theory of the Elizabethan
-age so powerfully advocated by
-Hooker and specially espoused by Dr.
-Arnold in later times. According to
-this theory the Church and State are
-really identical, the Church being merely
-the State in its educational and religious
-aspect and organisation. But Coleridge's
-special theory is different from
-this, although allied to it. He distinguishes
-the Christian Church as such
-from any national church. The former
-is spiritual and catholic, the latter institutional
-and local. The former is opposed
-to the “world,” the latter is an
-estate of the realm. The former has
-nothing to do with states and kingdoms.
-It is in this respect identical with the
-“spiritual and invisible church known
-only to the Father of Spirits,” and the
-compensating counterpoise of all that is
-of the world. It is, in short, the Divine
-aggregate of what is really Divine in all
-Christian communities, and more or less
-ideally represented “in every true
-church.” A national church again is
-the incorporation of all the learning and
-knowledge—intellectual and spiritual—in
-a country. Every nation in order to
-its true health and civilisation requires
-not only a land-owning or permanent
-class along with a commercial, industrial,
-and progressive class, but moreover,
-an educative class to represent all
-higher knowledge, “to guard the treasures
-of past civilisation,” to bind the
-national life together in its past, present,
-and future, and to communicate to all
-citizens a clear understanding of their
-rights and duties. This third estate of
-the realm Coleridge denominated the
-“Clerisy,” and included not merely the
-clergy, but, in his own language, “the
-learned of all denominations.” The
-knowledge, which it was their function
-to cultivate and diffuse, embraced not
-only theology, although this pre-eminently
-as the head of all other knowledge,
-but law, music, mathematics, the physical
-sciences, “all the so-called liberal
-arts and sciences, the possession and
-cultivation of which constitute the civilisation
-of a country.”</p>
-
-<p>This is at any rate a large conception
-of a national church. It is put forth by
-its author with all earnestness, although
-he admitted that it had never been anywhere
-realised. But it was his object
-“to present the <em>Idea</em> of a national
-church as the only safe criterion by which
-we can judge of existing things.” It
-was only when “we are in full and clear
-possession of the ultimate aim of an institution”
-that we can ascertain how far
-“this aim has ever been attained in
-other ways.”</p>
-
-<p>These, very briefly explained, are the
-main lines along which Coleridge moved
-the national mind in the third decade of
-this century. They may seem to some
-rather impalpable lines, and hardly calculated
-to touch the general mind. But
-they were influential, as the course of
-Christian literature has since proved.
-Like his own genius, they were diffusive
-rather than concentrative. The Coleridgian
-ideas permeated the general intellectual
-atmosphere, modifying old conceptions
-in criticism as well as theology,
-deepening if not always clarifying the
-channels of thought in many directions,
-but especially in the direction of Christian
-philosophy. They acted in this way
-as a new circulation of spiritual air all
-around, rather than in conveying any
-new body of truth. The very ridicule
-of Carlyle testifies to the influence which
-they exercised over aspiring and younger
-minds. The very emphasis with which
-he repudiates the Coleridgian metaphysic
-probably indicates that he had felt some
-echo of it in his own heart.—<cite>Fortnightly
-Review.</cite></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2><a name="THE_PORTRAIT" id="THE_PORTRAIT">THE PORTRAIT.</a><br />
-
-<span class="smcap"><small>A Story of the Seen and the Unseen</small>.</span></h2>
-
-
-<p>At the period when the following incidents
-occurred I was living with my
-father at The Grove, a large old house
-in the immediate neighborhood of a little
-town. This had been his home for
-a number of years; and I believe I was
-born in it. It was a kind of house
-which, notwithstanding all the red and
-white architecture, known at present by
-the name of Queen Anne, builders nowadays
-have forgotten how to build. It
-was straggling and irregular, with wide
-passages, wide staircases, broad landings;
-the rooms large but not very lofty;
-the arrangements leaving much to be
-desired, with no economy of space; a
-house belonging to a period when land
-was cheap, and, so far as that was concerned,
-there was no occasion to economise.
-Though it was so near the town,
-the clump of trees in which it was environed
-was a veritable grove. In the
-grounds in spring the primroses grew as
-thickly as in the forest. We had a few
-fields for the cows, and an excellent
-walled garden. The place is being
-pulled down at this moment to make
-room for more streets of mean little
-houses,—the kind of thing, and not a
-dull house of faded gentry, which perhaps
-the neighborhood requires. The
-house was dull, and so were we, its last
-inhabitants; and the furniture was
-faded, even a little dingy,—nothing to
-brag of. I do not, however, intend to
-convey a suggestion that we were faded
-gentry, for that was not the case. My
-father, indeed, was rich, and had no
-need to spare any expense in making his
-life and his house bright if he pleased;
-but he did not please, and I had not
-been long enough at home to exercise
-any special influence of my own. It was
-the only home I had ever known; but
-except in my earliest childhood, and in
-my holidays as a schoolboy, I had in
-reality known but little of it. My
-mother had died at my birth, or shortly
-after, and I had grown up in the gravity
-and silence of a house without women.
-In my infancy, I believe, a sister of my
-father's had lived with us, and taken
-charge of the household and of me; but
-she, too, had died long, long ago, my
-mourning for her being one of the first
-things I could recollect. And she had
-no successor. There was, indeed, a
-housekeeper and some maids,—the latter
-of whom I only saw disappearing at the
-end of a passage, or whisking out of a
-room when one of “the gentlemen” appeared.
-Mrs. Weir, indeed, I saw
-nearly every day; but a curtsey, a smile,
-a pair of nice round arms which she
-caressed while folding them across her
-ample waist, and a large white apron,
-were all I knew of her. This was the
-only female influence in the house. The
-drawing-room I was aware of only as a
-place of deadly good order, into which
-nobody ever entered. It had three long
-windows opening on the lawn, and communicated
-at the upper end, which was
-rounded like a great bay, with the conservatory.
-Sometimes I gazed into it as
-a child from without, wondering at the
-needlework on the chairs, the screens,
-the looking-glasses which never reflected
-any living face. My father did not like
-the room, which probably was not wonderful,
-though it never occurred to me in
-those early days to inquire why.</p>
-
-<p>I may say here, though it will probably
-be disappointing to those who form
-a sentimental idea of the capabilities of
-children, that it did not occur to me
-either, in these early days, to make any
-inquiry about my mother. There was
-no room in life, as I knew it, for any
-such person; nothing suggested to my
-mind either the fact that she must have
-existed, or that there was need of her in
-the house. I accepted, as I believe
-most children do, the facts of existence,
-on the basis with which I had first made
-acquaintance with them, without question
-or remark. As a matter of fact, I
-was aware that it was rather dull at
-home; but neither by comparison with
-the books I read, nor by the communications
-received from my school-fellows,
-did this seem to me anything remarkable.
-And I was possibly somewhat
-dull too by nature, for I did not mind.
-I was fond of reading, and for that there
-was unbounded opportunity. I had a
-little ambition in respect to work, and
-that too could be prosecuted undisturbed.
-When I went to the university,
-my society lay almost entirely among
-men; but by that time and afterwards,
-matters had of course greatly changed
-with me, and though I recognised women
-as part of the economy of nature, and
-did not indeed by any means dislike or
-avoid them, yet the idea of connecting
-them at all with my own home never
-entered into my head. That continued
-to be as it had always been, when at intervals
-I descended upon the cool, grave,
-colorless place, in the midst of my traffic
-with the world; always very still, well-ordered,
-serious—the cooking very good,
-the comfort perfect—old Morphew, the
-butler, a little older (but very little
-older, perhaps on the whole less old,
-since in my childhood I had thought
-him a kind of Methuselah), and Mrs.
-Weir, less active, covering up her arms
-in sleeves, but folding and caressing
-them just as always. I remember looking
-in from the lawn through the windows
-upon that deadly-orderly drawing-room,
-with a humorous recollection of
-my childish admiration and wonder,
-and feeling that it must be kept so forever
-and ever, and that to go into it
-would break some sort of amusing mock
-mystery, some pleasantly ridiculous
-spell.</p>
-
-<p>But it was only at rare intervals that
-I went home. In the long vacation, as
-in my school holidays, my father often
-went abroad with me, so that we had
-gone over a great deal of the Continent
-together very pleasantly. He was old in
-proportion to the age of his son, being
-a man of sixty when I was twenty, but
-that did not disturb the pleasure of the
-relations between us. I don't know
-that they were ever very confidential.
-On my side there was but little to communicate,
-for I did not get into scrapes
-nor fall in love, the two predicaments
-which demand sympathy and confidences.
-And as for my father himself,
-I was never aware what there could be
-to communicate on his side. I knew
-his life exactly—what he did almost at
-every hour of the day; under what circumstances
-of the temperature he would
-ride and when walk; how often and
-with what guests he would indulge in
-the occasional break of a dinner-party, a
-serious pleasure—perhaps, indeed, less a
-pleasure than a duty. All this I knew
-as well as he did, and also his views on
-public matters, his political opinions,
-which naturally were different from
-mine. What ground, then, remained
-for confidence? I did not know any.
-We were both of us of a reserved nature,
-not apt to enter into our religious feelings,
-for instance. There are many
-people who think reticence on such subjects
-a sign of the most reverential way
-of contemplating them. Of this I am
-far from being sure; but, at all events,
-it was the practice most congenial to my
-own mind.</p>
-
-<p>And then I was for a long time absent,
-making my own way in the world. I
-did not make it very successfully. I
-accomplished the natural fate of an Englishman,
-and went out to the Colonies;
-then to India in a semi-diplomatic position;
-but returned home after seven or
-eight years, invalided, in bad health and
-not much better spirits, tired and disappointed
-with my first trial of life. I
-had, as people say, “no occasion” to
-insist on making my way. My father
-was rich, and had never given me the
-slightest reason to believe that he did
-not intend me to be his heir. His allowance
-to me was not illiberal, and though
-he did not oppose the carrying out of
-my own plans, he by no means urged
-me to exertion. When I came home he
-received me very affectionately, and expressed
-his satisfaction in my return.
-“Of course,” he said, “I am not glad
-that you are disappointed, Philip, or
-that your health is broken; but otherwise
-it is an ill wind, you know, that
-blows nobody good—and I am very glad
-to have you at home. I am growing an
-old man—”</p>
-
-<p>“I don't see any difference, sir,” said
-I; “everything here seems exactly the
-same as when I went away—”</p>
-
-<p>He smiled, and shook his head. “It
-is true enough,” he said, “after we
-have reached a certain age we seem to
-go on for a long time on a plane, and
-feel no great difference from year to
-year; but it is an inclined plane—and
-the longer we go on, the more sudden
-will be the fall at the end. But at all
-events it will be a great comfort to me
-to have you here.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I had known that,” I said, “and
-that you wanted me, I should have come
-in any circumstances. As there are
-only two of us in the world—”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he said, “there are only two
-of us in the world; but still I should
-not have sent for you, Phil, to interrupt
-your career.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is as well, then, that it has interrupted
-itself,” I said, rather bitterly;
-for disappointment is hard to hear.</p>
-
-<p>He patted me on the shoulder and repeated,
-“It is an ill wind that blows nobody
-good,” with a look of real pleasure
-which gave me a certain gratification
-too; for, after all, he was an old man,
-and the only one in all the world to
-whom I owed any duty. I had not
-been without dreams of warmer affections,
-but they had come to nothing—not
-tragically, but in the ordinary way.
-I might perhaps have had love which I
-did not want, but not that which I did
-want,—which was not a thing to make
-any unmanly moan about, but in the ordinary
-course of events. Such disappointments
-happen every day; indeed,
-they are more common than anything
-else, and sometimes it is apparent afterward
-that it is better it was so.</p>
-
-<p>However, here I was at thirty stranded—yet
-wanting for nothing, in a position
-to call forth rather envy than pity
-from the greater part of my contemporaries,—for
-I had an assured and comfortable
-existence, as much money as
-I wanted, and the prospect of an excellent
-fortune for the future. On the
-other hand, my health was still low, and
-I had no occupation. The neighborhood
-of the town was a drawback rather
-than an advantage. I felt myself tempted,
-instead of taking the long walk into
-the country which my doctor recommended,
-to take a much shorter one
-through the High Street, across the
-river, and back again, which was not a
-walk but a lounge. The country was
-silent and full of thoughts—thoughts
-not always very agreeable—whereas
-there were always the humors of the little
-urban population to glance at, the
-news to be heard, all those petty matters
-which so often make up life in a
-very impoverished version for the idle
-man. I did not like it, but I felt myself
-yielding to it, not having energy
-enough to make a stand. The rector
-and the leading lawyer of the place
-asked me to dinner. I might have
-glided into the society, such as it was,
-had I been disposed for that—everything
-about me began to close over me
-as if I had been fifty, and fully contented
-with my lot.</p>
-
-<p>It was possibly my own want of occupation
-which made me observe with surprise,
-after a while, how much occupied
-my father was. He had expressed himself
-glad of my return; but now that I
-had returned, I saw very little of him.
-Most of his time was spent in his library,
-as had always been the case. But on
-the few visits I paid him there, I could
-not but perceive that the aspect of the
-library was much changed. It had acquired
-the look of a business-room, almost
-an office. There were large business-like
-books on the table, which I
-could not associate with anything he
-could naturally have to do; and his correspondence
-was very large. I thought
-he closed one of those books hurriedly
-as I came in, and pushed it away, as if
-he did not wish me to see it. This surprised
-me at the moment, without arousing
-any other feeling; but afterward I
-remembered it with a clearer sense of
-what it meant. He was more absorbed
-altogether than I had been used to see
-him. He was visited by men sometimes
-not of very prepossessing appearance.
-Surprise grew in my mind without any
-very distinct idea of the reason of it;
-and it was not till after a chance conversation
-with Morphew that my vague
-uneasiness began to take definite shape.
-It was begun without any special intention
-on my part. Morphew had informed
-me that master was very busy,
-on some occasion when I wanted to see
-him. And I was a little annoyed to be
-thus put off. “It appears to me that
-my father is always busy,” I said, hastily.
-Morphew then began very oracularly
-to nod his head in assent.</p>
-
-<p>“A deal too busy, sir, if you take my
-opinion,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>This startled me much, and I asked
-hurriedly, “What do you mean?” without
-reflecting that to ask for private information
-from a servant about my father's
-habits was as bad as investigating
-into a stranger's affairs. It did not strike
-me in the same light.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Philip,” said Morphew, “a
-thing 'as 'appened as 'appens more often
-than it ought to. Master has got awful
-keen about money in his old age.”</p>
-
-<p>“That's a new thing for him,” I said.</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, begging your pardon, it
-ain't a new thing. He was once broke
-of it, and that wasn't easy done; but
-it's come back, if you'll excuse me saying
-so. And I don't know as he'll ever
-be broke of it again at his age.”</p>
-
-<p>I felt more disposed to be angry than
-disturbed by this. “You must be making
-some ridiculous mistake,” I said.
-“And if you were not so old a friend as
-you are, Morphew, I should not have
-allowed my father to be so spoken of to
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man gave me a half-astonished,
-half-contemptuous look. “He's
-been my master a deal longer than he's
-been your father,” he said, turning on
-his heel. The assumption was so comical
-that my anger could not stand in
-face of it. I went out, having been on
-my way to the door when this conversation
-occurred, and took my usual lounge
-about, which was not a satisfactory sort
-of amusement. Its vanity and emptiness
-appeared to be more evident than
-usual to-day. I met half a dozen people
-I knew, and had as many pieces of
-news confided to me. I went up and
-down the length of the High Street. I
-made a small purchase or two. And
-then I turned homeward—despising myself,
-yet finding no alternative within my
-reach. Would a long country walk
-have been more virtuous?—it would at
-least have been more wholesome—but
-that was all that could be said. My
-mind did not dwell on Morphew's communication.
-It seemed without sense
-or meaning to me; and after the excellent
-joke about his superior interest in
-his master to mine in my father, was
-dismissed lightly enough from my mind.
-I tried to invent some way of telling this
-to my father without letting him perceive
-that Morphew had been finding
-faults in him, or I listening; for it
-seemed a pity to lose so good a joke.
-However, as I returned home, something
-happened which put the joke entirely
-out of my head. It is curious
-when a new subject of trouble or anxiety
-has been suggested to the mind in an
-unexpected way, how often a second
-advertisement follows immediately after
-the first, and gives to that a potency
-which in itself it had not possessed.</p>
-
-<p>I was approaching our own door,
-wondering whether my father had gone,
-and whether, on my return, I should
-find him at leisure—for I had several
-little things to say to him—when I noticed
-a poor woman lingering about the
-closed gates. She had a baby sleeping
-in her arms. It was a spring night, the
-stars shining in the twilight, and everything
-soft and dim; and the woman's
-figure was like a shadow, flitting about,
-now here, now there, on one side or another
-of the gate. She stopped when
-she saw me approaching, and hesitated
-for a moment, then seemed to take a
-sudden resolution. I watched her without
-knowing, with a prevision that she
-was going to address me, though with
-no sort of idea as to the subject of her
-address. She came up to me doubtfully,
-it seemed, yet certainly, as I felt, and
-when she was close to me, dropped a
-sort of hesitating curtsey, and said, “It's
-Mr. Philip?” in a low voice.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you want with me?” I said.</p>
-
-<p>Then she poured forth suddenly, without
-warning or preparation, her long
-speech—a flood of words which must
-have been all ready and waiting at the
-doors of her lips for utterance. “Oh,
-sir, I want to speak to you! I can't
-believe you'll be so hard, for you're
-young; and I can't believe he'll be so
-hard if so be as his own son, as I've always
-heard he had but one, 'll speak up
-for us. Oh, gentleman, it is easy for
-the likes of you, that, if you ain't comfortable
-in one room, can just walk into
-another; but if one room is all you
-have, and every bit of furniture you
-have taken out of it, and nothing but
-the four walls left—not so much as the
-cradle for the child, or a chair for your
-man to sit down upon when he comes
-from his work, or a saucepan to cook
-him his supper—”</p>
-
-<p>“My good woman,” I said, “who
-can have taken all that from you? surely
-nobody can be so cruel?”</p>
-
-<p>“You say it's cruel!” she cried with
-a sort of triumph. “Oh, I knowed you
-would, or any true gentleman that don't
-hold with screwing poor folks. Just go
-and say that to him inside there, for the
-love of God. Tell him to think what
-he's doing, driving poor creatures to despair.
-Summer's coming, the Lord be
-praised, but yet it's bitter cold at night
-with your counterpane gone; and when
-you've been working hard all day, and
-nothing but four bare walls to come
-home to, and all your poor little sticks
-of furniture that you've saved up for,
-and got together one by one, all gone—and
-you no better than when you started,
-or rather worse, for then you was
-young. Oh, sir!” the woman's voice
-rose into a sort of passionate wail. And
-then she added, beseechingly, recovering
-herself—“Oh, speak for us—he'll
-not refuse his own son—”</p>
-
-<p>“To whom am I to speak? who is it
-that has done this to you?” I said.</p>
-
-<p>The woman hesitated again, looking
-keenly in my face—then repeated with a
-slight faltering, “It's Mr. Philip?” as
-if that made everything right.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; I am Philip Canning,” I said;
-“but what have I to do with this? and
-to whom am I to speak?”</p>
-
-<p>She began to whimper, crying and
-stopping herself. “Oh, please, sir! it's
-Mr. Canning as owns all the house
-property about—it's him that our court
-and the lane and everything belongs to.
-And he's taken the bed from under us,
-and the baby's cradle, although it's said
-in the Bible as you're not to take poor
-folks's bed.”</p>
-
-<p>“My father!” I cried in spite of myself—“then
-it must be some agent,
-some one else in his name. You may
-be sure he knows nothing of it. Of
-course I shall speak to him at once.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, God bless you, sir,” said the
-woman. But then she added, in a lower
-tone—“It's no agent. It's one as
-never knows trouble. It's him that
-lives in that grand house.” But this
-was said under her breath, evidently not
-for me to hear.</p>
-
-<p>Morphew's words flashed through my
-mind as she spoke. What was this?
-Did it afford an explanation of the much
-occupied hours, the big books, the
-strange visitors? I took the poor woman's
-name, and gave her something to
-procure a few comforts for the night,
-and went indoors disturbed and troubled.
-It was impossible to believe that my
-father himself would have acted thus;
-but he was not a man to brook interference,
-and I did not see how to introduce
-the subject, what to say. I could but
-hope that, at the moment of broaching
-it, words would be put into my mouth,
-which often happens in moments of necessity,
-one knows not how, even when
-one's theme is not so all-important as
-that for which such help has been promised.
-As usual, I did not see my father
-till dinner. I have said that our dinners
-were very good, luxurious in a simple
-way, everything excellent in its kind,
-well cooked, well served, the perfection
-of comfort without show—which is a
-combination very dear to the English
-heart. I said nothing till Morphew,
-with his solemn attention to everything
-that was going, had retired—and then it
-was with some strain of courage that I
-began.</p>
-
-<p>“I was stopped outside the gate to-day
-by a curious sort of petitioner—a
-poor woman, who seems to be one of
-your tenants, sir, but whom your agent
-must have been rather too hard upon.”</p>
-
-<p>“My agent? who is that?” said my
-father, quietly.</p>
-
-<p>“I don't know his name, and I doubt
-his competence. The poor creature
-seems to have had everything taken from
-her—her bed, her child's cradle.”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt she was behind with her
-rent.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very likely, sir. She seemed very
-poor,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“You take it coolly,” said my father,
-with an upward glance, half-amused, not
-in the least shocked by my statement.
-“But when a man, or a woman either,
-takes a house, I suppose you will allow
-that they ought to pay rent for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, sir,” I replied, “when
-they have got anything to pay.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don't allow the reservation,” he
-said. But he was not angry, which I
-had feared he would be.</p>
-
-<p>“I think,” I continued, “that your
-agent must be too severe. And this
-emboldens me to say something which
-has been in my mind for some time”—(these
-were the words, no doubt, which
-I had hoped would be put into my
-mouth; they were the suggestion of the
-moment, and yet as I said them it was
-with the most complete conviction of
-their truth)—“and that is this: I am
-doing nothing; my time hangs heavy
-on my hands. Make me your agent. I
-will see for myself, and save you from
-such mistakes; and it will be an occupation—”</p>
-
-<p>“Mistakes? What warrant have you
-for saying these are mistakes?” he said
-testily; then after a moment: “This is
-a strange proposal from you, Phil. Do
-you know what it is you are offering?—to
-be a collector of rents, going about
-from door to door, from week to week;
-to look after wretched little bits of repairs,
-drains, etc.; to get paid, which,
-after all, is the chief thing, and not to
-be taken in by tales of poverty.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not to let you be taken in by men
-without pity,” I said.</p>
-
-<p>He gave me a strange glance, which I
-did not very well understand, and said,
-abruptly, a thing which, so far as I remember,
-he had never in my life said
-before, “You've become a little like
-your mother, Phil—”</p>
-
-<p>“My mother!” The reference was
-so unusual—nay, so unprecedented—that
-I was greatly startled. It seemed
-to me like the sudden introduction of a
-quite new element in the stagnant atmosphere,
-as well as a new party to our
-conversation. My father looked across
-the table, as if with some astonishment
-at my tone of surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that so very extraordinary?” he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>“No; of course it is not extraordinary
-that I should resemble my mother.
-Only—I have heard very little of her—almost
-nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is true.” He got up and
-placed himself before the fire, which was
-very low, as the night was not cold—had
-not been cold heretofore at least; but it
-seemed to me now that a little chill came
-into the dim and faded room. Perhaps
-it looked more dull from the suggestion
-of a something brighter, warmer, that
-might have been. “Talking of mistakes,”
-he said, “perhaps that was
-one: to sever you entirely from her side
-of the house. But I did not care for
-the connection. You will understand
-how it is that I speak of it now when I
-tell you—” He stopped here, however,
-said nothing more for a minute or so,
-and then rang the bell. Morphew came,
-as he always did, very deliberately, so
-that some time elapsed in silence, during
-which my surprise grew. When the
-old man appeared at the door—“Have
-you put the lights in the drawing-room,
-as I told you?” my father said.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir; and opened the box, sir;
-and it's a—it's a speaking likeness—”</p>
-
-<p>This the old man got out in a great
-hurry, as if afraid that his master would
-stop him. My father did so with a
-wave of his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“That's enough. I asked no information.
-You can go now.”</p>
-
-<p>The door closed upon us, and there
-was again a pause. My subject had
-floated away altogether like a mist,
-though I had been so concerned about
-it. I tried to resume, but could not.
-Something seemed to arrest my very
-breathing: and yet in this dull respectable
-house of ours, where everything
-breathed good character and integrity,
-it was certain that there could be no
-shameful mystery to reveal. It was
-some time before my father spoke, not
-from any purpose that I could see, but
-apparently because his mind was busy
-with probably unaccustomed thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>“You scarcely know the drawing-room,
-Phil,” he said at last.</p>
-
-<p>“Very little. I have never seen it
-used. I have a little awe of it, to tell
-the truth.”</p>
-
-<p>“That should not be. There is no
-reason for that. But a man by himself,
-as I have been for the greater part of
-my life, has no occasion for a drawing-room.
-I always, as a matter of preference,
-sat among my books; however, I
-ought to have thought of the impression
-on you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it is not important,” I said;
-“the awe was childish. I have not
-thought of it since I came home.”</p>
-
-<p>“It never was anything very splendid
-at the best,” said he. He lifted the
-lamp from the table with a sort of abstraction,
-not remarking even my offer
-to take it from him, and led the way.
-He was on the verge of seventy, and
-looked his age; but it was a vigorous
-age, with no symptoms of giving way.
-The circle of light from the lamp lit up
-his white hair, and keen blue eyes, and
-clear complexion; his forehead was like
-old ivory, his cheek warmly colored:
-an old man, yet a man in full strength.
-He was taller than I was, and still almost
-as strong. As he stood for a moment
-with the lamp in his hand, he looked
-like a tower in his great height and bulk.
-I reflected as I looked at him that I
-knew him intimately, more intimately
-than any other creature in the world,—I
-was familiar with every detail of his outward
-life; could it be that in reality I
-did not know him at all?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The drawing-room was already lighted
-with a flickering array of candles upon
-the mantelpiece and along the walls,
-producing the pretty starry effect which
-candles give without very much light.
-As I had not the smallest idea what I
-was about to see, for Morphew's “speaking
-likeness” was very hurriedly said,
-and only half comprehensible in the bewilderment
-of my faculties, my first
-glance was at this very unusual illumination,
-for which I could assign no reason.
-The next showed me a large full-length
-portrait, still in the box in which
-apparently it had travelled, placed upright,
-supported against a table in the
-centre of the room. My father walked
-straight up to it, motioned to me to
-place a smaller table close to the picture
-on the left side, and put his lamp upon
-that. Then he waved his hand towards
-it, and stood aside that I might see.</p>
-
-<p>It was a full-length portrait of a very
-young woman—I might say, a girl,
-scarcely twenty—in a white dress, made
-in a very simple old fashion, though I
-was too little accustomed to female costume
-to be able to fix the date. It
-might have been a hundred years old,
-or twenty, for aught I knew. The face
-had an expression of youth, candor,
-and simplicity more than any face I had
-ever seen—or so, at least, in my surprise,
-I thought. The eyes were a little
-wistful, with something which was almost
-anxiety—which at least was not
-content—in them; a faint, almost imperceptible,
-curve in the lids. The
-complexion was of a dazzling fairness,
-the hair light, but the eyes dark, which
-gave individuality to the face. It would
-have been as lovely had the eyes been
-blue—probably more so—but their darkness
-gave a touch of character, a slight
-discord, which made the harmony finer.
-It was not, perhaps, beautiful in the
-highest sense of the word. The girl
-must have been too young, too slight,
-too little developed for actual beauty;
-but a face which so invited love and
-confidence I never saw. One smiled at
-it with instinctive affection. “What a
-sweet face!” I said. “What a lovely
-girl! Who is she? Is this one of the
-relations you were speaking of on the
-other side?”</p>
-
-<p>My father made me no reply. He
-stood aside, looking at it as if he knew
-it too well to require to look,—as if the
-picture was already in his eyes. “Yes,”
-he said, after an interval, with a long-drawn
-breath, “she was a lovely girl, as
-you say.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was?—then she is dead. What a
-pity!” I said; “what a pity! so young
-and so sweet!”</p>
-
-<p>We stood gazing at her thus, in her
-beautiful stillness and calm—two men,
-the younger of us full grown and conscious
-of many experiences, the other
-an old man—before this impersonation
-of tender youth. At length he said,
-with a slight tremulousness in his voice,
-“Does nothing suggest to you who she
-is, Phil?”</p>
-
-<p>I turned round to look at him with
-profound astonishment, but he turned
-away from my look. A sort of quiver
-passed over his face. “That is your
-mother,” he said, and walked suddenly
-away, leaving me there.</p>
-
-<p>My mother!</p>
-
-<p>I stood for a moment in a kind of
-consternation before the white-robed innocent
-creature, to me no more than a
-child; then a sudden laugh broke from
-me, without any will of mine: something
-ludicrous, as well as something
-awful, was in it. When the laugh was
-over, I found myself with tears in my
-eyes, gazing, holding my breath. The
-soft features seemed to melt, the lips to
-move, the anxiety in the eyes to become
-a personal inquiry. Ah, no! nothing
-of the kind; only because of the water
-in mine. My mother! oh, fair and
-gentle creature, scarcely woman—how
-could any man's voice call her by that
-name! I had little idea enough of what
-it meant,—had heard it laughed at,
-scoffed at, reverenced, but never had
-learned to place it even among the ideal
-powers of life. Yet, if it meant anything
-at all, what it meant was worth
-thinking of. What did she ask, looking
-at me with those eyes? what would
-she have said if “those lips had language”?
-If I had known her only as
-Cowper did—with a child's recollection—there
-might have been some thread,
-some faint but comprehensible link, between
-us; but now all that I felt was
-the curious incongruity. Poor child! I
-said to myself; so sweet a creature:
-poor little tender soul! as if she had
-been a little sister, a child of mine—but
-my mother! I cannot tell how long I
-stood looking at her, studying the candid,
-sweet face, which surely had germs
-in it of everything that was good and
-beautiful; and sorry, with a profound
-regret, that she had died and never carried
-these promises to fulfilment. Poor
-girl! poor people who had loved her!
-These were my thoughts: with a curious
-vertigo and giddiness of my whole
-being in the sense of a mysterious relationship,
-which it was beyond my power
-to understand.</p>
-
-<p>Presently my father came back: possibly
-because I had been a long time unconscious
-of the passage of the minutes,
-or perhaps because he was himself restless
-in the strange disturbance of his
-habitual calm. He came in and put his
-arm within mine, leaning his weight
-partially upon me, with an affectionate
-suggestion which went deeper than
-words. I pressed his arm to my side:
-it was more between us two grave Englishmen
-than any embracing.</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot understand it,” I said.</p>
-
-<p>“No. I don't wonder at that; but
-if it is strange to you, Phil, think how
-much more strange to me! That is the
-partner of my life. I have never had
-another—or thought of another. That—girl!
-If we are to meet again, as I
-have always hoped we should meet
-again, what am I to say to her—I, an
-old man? Yes; I know what you
-mean. I am not an old man for my
-years; but my years are threescore and
-ten, and the play is nearly played out.
-How am I to meet that young creature?
-We used to say to each other that it was
-forever, that we never could be but one,
-that it was for life and death. But
-what—what am I to say to her, Phil,
-when I meet her again, that—that angel?
-No, it is not her being an angel that
-troubles me; but she is so young! She
-is like my—my granddaughter,” he
-cried, with a burst of what was half
-sobs, half laughter; “and she is my
-wife—and I am an old man—an old
-man! And so much has happened that
-she could not understand.”</p>
-
-<p>I was too much startled by this strange
-complaint to know what to say. It was
-not my own trouble, and I answered it
-in the conventional way.</p>
-
-<p>“They are not as we are, sir,” I
-said; “they look upon us with larger,
-other eyes than ours.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! you don't know what I mean,”
-he said quickly; and in the interval he
-had subdued his emotion. “At first,
-after she died, it was my consolation to
-think that I should meet her again—that
-we never could be really parted. But,
-my God, how I have changed since
-then! I am another man—I am a different
-being. I was not very young
-even then—twenty years older than she
-was: but her youth renewed mine. I
-was not an unfit partner; she asked no
-better: and knew as much more than I
-did in some things—being so much nearer
-the source—as I did in others that were
-of the world. But I have gone a long
-way since then, Phil—a long way; and
-there she stands just where I left her.”</p>
-
-<p>I pressed his arm again. “Father,”
-I said, which was a title I seldom used,
-“we are not to suppose that in a higher
-life the mind stands still.” I did not
-feel myself qualified to discuss such
-topics, but something one must say.</p>
-
-<p>“Worse, worse!” he replied; “then
-she too will be like me, a different being,
-and we shall meet as what? as
-strangers, as people who have lost sight
-of each other, with a long past between
-us—we who parted, my God! with—with——”</p>
-
-<p>His voice broke and ended for a moment:
-then while, surprised and almost
-shocked by what he said, I cast about
-in my mind what to reply, he withdrew
-his arm suddenly from mine, and said
-in his usual tone, “Where shall we hang
-the picture, Phil? It must be here in
-this room. What do you think will be
-the best light?”</p>
-
-<p>This sudden alteration took me still
-more by surprise, and gave me almost
-an additional shock; but it was evident
-that I must follow the changes of his
-mood, or at least the sudden repression
-of sentiment which he originated. We
-went into that simpler question with
-great seriousness, consulting which
-would be the best light. “You know I
-can scarcely advise,” I said; “I have
-never been familiar with this room. I
-should like to put off, if you don't mind,
-till daylight.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think,” he said, “that this would
-be the best place.” It was on the other
-side of the fireplace, on the wall which
-faced the windows—not the best light, I
-knew enough to be aware, for an oil-painting.
-When I said so, however, he
-answered me with a little impatience,—“It
-does not matter very much about,
-the best light. There will be nobody
-to see it but you and me. I have my
-reasons——” There was a small table
-standing against the wall at this spot,
-on which he had his hand as he spoke.
-Upon it stood a little basket in very fine
-lace-like wickerwork. His hand must
-have trembled, for the table shook, and
-the basket fell, its contents turning out
-upon the carpet,—little bits of needlework,
-colored silks, a small piece of knitting
-half done. He laughed as they
-rolled out at his feet, and tried to stoop
-to collect them, then tottered to a chair,
-and covered for a moment his face with
-his hands.</p>
-
-<p>No need to ask what they were. No
-woman's work had been seen in the
-house since I could recollect it. I
-gathered them up reverently and put
-them back. I could see, ignorant as I
-was, that the bit of knitting was something
-for an infant. What could I do
-less than put it to my lips? It had.
-been left in the doing—for me.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I think this is the best place,”
-my father said a minute after, in his
-usual tone.</p>
-
-<p>We placed it there that evening with
-our own hands. The picture was large,
-and in a heavy frame, but my father
-would let no one help me but himself.
-And then, with a superstition for which
-I never could give any reason even to
-myself, having removed the packings,
-we closed and locked the door, leaving
-the candles about the room, in their soft
-strange illumination lighting the first
-night of her return to her old place.</p>
-
-<p>That night no more was said. My
-father went to his room early, which was
-not his habit. He had never, however,
-accustomed me to sit late with him in
-the library. I had a little study or
-smoking-room of my own, in which all
-my special treasures were, the collections
-of my travels and my favorite books—and
-where I always sat after prayers, a
-ceremonial which was regularly kept up
-in the house. I retired as usual this
-night to my room, and as usual read—but
-to-night somewhat vaguely, often
-pausing to think. When it was quite
-late, I went out by the glass door to the
-lawn, and walked round the house, with
-the intention of looking in at the drawing-room
-windows, as I had done when
-a child. But I had forgotten that these
-windows were all shuttered at night, and
-nothing but a faint penetration of the
-light within through the crevices bore
-witness to the instalment of the new
-dweller there.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning my father was entirely
-himself again. He told me without
-emotion of the manner in which he had
-obtained the picture. It had belonged
-to my mother's family, and had fallen
-eventually into the hands of a cousin of
-hers, resident abroad—“A man whom
-I did not like, and who did not like
-me,” my father said; “there was, or
-had been, some rivalry, he thought: a
-mistake, but he was never aware of
-that. He refused all my requests to
-have a copy made. You may suppose,
-Phil, that I wished this very much.
-Had I succeeded, you would have been
-acquainted, at least, with your mother's
-appearance, and need not have sustained
-this shock. But he would not consent.
-It gave him, I think, a certain pleasure
-to think that he had the only picture.
-But now he is dead—and out of remorse,
-or with some other intention, has left it
-to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“That looks like kindness,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; or something else. He might
-have thought that by so doing he was
-establishing a claim upon me.” my father
-said: but he did not seem disposed
-to add any more. On whose behalf he
-meant to establish a claim I did not
-know, nor who the man was who had
-laid us under so great an obligation on
-his deathbed. He <em>had</em> established a
-claim on me at least: though, as he was
-dead, I could not see on whose behalf it
-was. And my father said nothing more.
-He seemed to dislike the subject. When
-I attempted to return to it, he had recourse
-to his letters or his newspapers.
-Evidently he had made up his mind to
-say no more.</p>
-
-<p>Afterwards I went into the drawing-room
-to look at the picture once more.
-It seemed to me that the anxiety in her
-eyes was not so evident as I had thought
-it last night. The light possibly was
-more favorable. She stood just above
-the place where, I make no doubt, she
-had sat in life, where her little work-basket
-was—not very much above it.
-The picture was full-length, and we had
-hung it low, so that she might have
-been stepping into the room, and was
-little above my own level as I stood and
-looked at her again. Once more I
-smiled at the strange thought that this
-young creature, so young, almost childish,
-could be my mother; and once
-more my eyes grew wet looking at her.
-He was a benefactor, indeed, who had
-given her back to us. I said to myself,
-that if I could ever do anything for
-him or his, I would certainly do, for
-my—for this lovely young creature's
-sake.</p>
-
-<p>And with this in my mind, and all the
-thoughts that came with it, I am obliged
-to confess that the other matter, which
-I had been so full of on the previous
-night, went entirely out of my head.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is rarely, however, that such matters
-are allowed to slip out of one's
-mind. When I went out in the afternoon
-for my usual stroll—or rather when
-I returned from that stroll—I saw once
-more before me the woman with her
-baby whose story had filled me with dismay
-on the previous evening. She was
-waiting at the gate as before, and—“Oh,
-gentleman, but haven't you got
-some news to give me?” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“My good woman—I—have been
-greatly occupied. I have had—no time
-to do anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” she said, with a little cry of
-disappointment, “my man said not to
-make too sure, and that the ways of the
-gentlefolks is hard to know.”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot explain to you,” I said, as
-gently as I could, “what it is that has
-made me forget you. It was an event
-that can only do you good in the end.
-Go home now, and see the man that
-took your things from you, and tell him
-to come to me. I promise you it shall
-be put right.”</p>
-
-<p>The woman looked at me in astonishment,
-then burst forth, as it seemed, involuntarily,—“What!
-without asking
-no questions?” After this there came
-a storm of tears and blessings, from
-which I made haste to escape, but not
-without carrying that curious commentary
-on my rashness away with me—“Without
-asking no questions?” It
-might be foolish, perhaps: but after all
-how slight a matter. To make the poor
-creature comfortable at the cost of what—a
-box or two of cigars, perhaps, or
-some other trifle. And if it should be
-her own fault, or her husband's—what
-then? Had I been punished for all my
-faults, where should I have been now.
-And if the advantage should be only
-temporary, what then? To be relieved
-and comforted even for a day or two,
-was not that something to count in life?
-Thus I quenched the fiery dart of criticism
-which my <em>protégée</em> herself had
-thrown into the transaction, not without
-a certain sense of the humor of it. Its
-effect, however, was to make me less
-anxious to see my father, to repeat my
-proposal to him, and to call his attention
-to the cruelty performed in his
-name. This one case I had taken out
-of the category of wrongs to be righted,
-by assuming arbitrarily the position of
-Providence in my own person—for, of
-course, I had bound myself to pay the
-poor creature's rent as well as redeem
-her goods—and, whatever might happen
-to her in the future, had taken the past
-into my own hands. The man came
-presently to see me who, it seems, had
-acted as my father's agent in the matter.
-“I don't know, sir, how Mr. Canning
-will take it,” he said. “He don't want
-none of those irregular, bad-paying ones
-in his property. He always says as to
-look over it and let the rent run on is
-making things worse in the end. His
-rule is, 'Never more than a month, Stevens:'
-that's what Mr. Canning says to
-me, sir. He says, 'More than that they
-can't pay. It's no use trying.' And
-it's a good rule; it's a very good rule.
-He won't hear none of their stories, sir.
-Bless you, you'd never get a penny of
-rent from them small houses if you listened
-to their tales. But if so be as
-you'll pay Mrs. Jordan's rent, it's none
-of my business how it's paid, so long as
-it's paid, and I'll send her back her
-things. But they'll just have to be took
-next time,” he added, composedly.
-“Over and over: it's always the same
-story with them sort of poor folks—they're
-too poor for anything, that's the
-truth,” the man said.</p>
-
-<p>Morphew came back to my room after
-my visitor was gone. “Mr. Philip,”
-he said, “you'll excuse me, sir, but if
-you're going to pay all the poor folk's
-rent as have distresses put in, you may
-just go into the court at once, for it's
-without end—”</p>
-
-<p>“I am going to be the agent myself,
-Morphew, and manage for my father:
-and we'll soon put a stop to that,” I
-said, more cheerfully than I felt.</p>
-
-<p>“Manage for—master,” he said, with
-a face of consternation. “You, Mr.
-Philip!”</p>
-
-<p>“You seem to have a great contempt
-for me, Morphew.”</p>
-
-<p>He did not deny the fact. He said
-with excitement, “Master, sir—master
-don't let himself be put a stop to by any
-man. Master's—not one to be managed.
-Don't you quarrel with master,
-Mr. Philip, for the love of God.” The
-old man was quite pale.</p>
-
-<p>“Quarrel!” I said. “I have never
-quarreled with my father, and I don't
-mean to begin now.”</p>
-
-<p>Morphew dispelled his own excitement
-by making up the fire, which was dying
-in the grate. It was a very mild spring
-evening, and he made up a great blaze
-which would have suited December.
-This is one of many ways in which an
-old servant will relieve his mind. He
-muttered all the time as he threw on the
-coals and wood. “He'll not like it—we
-all know as he'll not like it. Master
-won't stand no meddling, Mr. Philip,”—this
-last he discharged at me like a
-flying arrow as he closed the door.</p>
-
-<p>I soon found there was truth in what
-he said. My father was not angry; he
-was even half amused. “I don't think
-that plan of yours will hold water, Phil.
-I hear you have been paying rents and
-redeeming furniture—that's an expensive
-game, and a very profitless one. Of
-course, so long as you are a benevolent
-gentleman acting for your own pleasure,
-it makes no difference to me. I am
-quite content if I get my money, even
-out of your pockets—so long as it
-amuses you. But as my collector, you
-know, which you are good enough to
-propose to be——”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I should act under your
-orders,” I said; but at least you
-might be sure that I would not commit
-you to any—to any——” I paused for
-a word.</p>
-
-<p>“Act of oppression,” he said with a
-smile—“piece of cruelty, exaction—there
-are half-a-dozen words——”</p>
-
-<p>“Sir——” I cried.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop, Phil, and let us understand
-each other. I hope I have always been
-a just man. I do my duty on my side,
-and I expect it from others. It is your
-benevolence that is cruel. I have calculated
-anxiously how much credit it is
-safe to allow; but I will allow no man,
-or woman either, to go beyond what he
-or she can make up. My law is fixed.
-Now you understand. My agents, as
-you call them, originate nothing—they
-execute only what I decide——”</p>
-
-<p>“But then no circumstances are taken
-into account—no bad luck, no evil
-chances, no loss unexpected.”</p>
-
-<p>“There are no evil chances,” he said
-“there is no bad luck—they reap as
-they sow. No, I don't go among them
-to be cheated by their stories and spend
-quite unnecessary emotion in sympathising
-with them. You will find it much
-better for you that I don't. I deal with
-them on a general rule, made, I assure
-you, not without a great deal of
-thought.”</p>
-
-<p>“And must it always be so?” I said.
-“Is there no way of ameliorating or
-bringing in a better state of things?”</p>
-
-<p>“It seems not,” he said; “we don't
-get 'no forrarder' in that direction so
-far as I can see.” And then he turned
-the conversation to general matters.</p>
-
-<p>I retired to my room greatly discouraged
-that night. In former ages—or
-so one is led to suppose—and in the
-lower primitive classes who still linger
-near the primeval type, action of any
-kind was, and is, easier than amid the
-complications of our higher civilisation.
-A bad man is a distinct entity, against
-whom you know more or less what steps
-to take. A tyrant, an oppressor, a bad
-landlord, a man who lets miserable
-tenements at a rack-rent (to come down
-to particulars), and exposes his wretched
-tenants to all those abominations of
-which we have heard so much—well! he
-is more or less a satisfactory opponent.
-There he is, and there is nothing to be
-said for him—down with him! and let
-there be an end of his wickedness.
-But when, on the contrary, you have before
-you a good man, a just man, who
-has considered deeply a question which
-you allow to be full of difficulty; who
-regrets, but cannot, being human, avert,
-the miseries which to some unhappy individuals
-follow from the very wisdom
-of his rule,—what can you do—what is
-to be done? Individual benevolence at
-haphazard may baulk him here and
-there, but what have you to put in the
-place of his well-considered scheme?
-Charity which makes paupers? or what
-else? I had not considered the question
-deeply, but it seemed to me that I now
-came to a blank wall, which my vague
-human sentiment of pity and scorn could
-find no way to breach. There must be
-wrong somewhere—but where? There
-must be some change for the better to be
-made—but how?</p>
-
-<p>I was seated with a book before me
-on the table, with my head supported on
-my hands. My eyes were on the printed
-page, but I was not reading—my mind
-was full of these thoughts, my heart of
-great discouragement and despondency,
-a sense that I could do nothing, yet that
-there surely must and ought, if I but
-knew it, be something to do. The fire
-which Morphew had built up before
-dinner was dying out, the shaded lamp
-on my table left all the corners in a
-mysterious twilight. The house was perfectly
-still, no one moving: my father
-in the library, where, after the habit of
-many solitary years, he liked to be left
-alone, and I here in my retreat, preparing
-for the formation of similar habits. I
-thought all at once of the third member
-of the party, the newcomer, alone too
-in the room that had been hers; and
-there suddenly occurred to me a strong
-desire to take up my lamp and go to
-the drawing-room and visit her, to see
-whether her soft angelic face would give
-any inspiration. I restrained, however,
-this futile impulse—for what could the
-picture say?—and instead wondered
-what might have been had she lived, had
-she been there, warmly enthroned beside
-the warm domestic centre, the hearth
-which would have been a common sanctuary,
-the true home. In that case what
-might have been? Alas! the question
-was no more simple to answer than the
-other: she might have been there alone
-too, her husband's business, her son's
-thoughts, as far from her as now, when
-her silent representative held her old
-place in the silence and darkness. I
-had known it so, often enough. Love
-itself does not always give comprehension
-and sympathy. It might be that
-she was more to us there, in the sweet
-image of her undeveloped beauty, than
-she might have been had she lived and
-grown to maturity and fading, like the
-rest.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot be certain whether my mind
-was still lingering on this not very
-cheerful reflection, or if it had been left
-behind, when the strange occurrence
-came of which I have now to tell: can I
-call it an occurrence? My eyes were on
-my book, when I thought I heard the
-sound of a door opening and shutting,
-but so far away and faint that if real at
-all it must have been in a far corner of
-the house. I did not move except to lift
-my eyes from the book, as one does instinctively
-the better to listen; when——But
-I cannot tell, nor have I ever been
-able to describe exactly what it was.
-My heart made all at once a sudden leap
-in my breast. I am aware that this language
-is figurative, and that the heart
-cannot leap: but it is a figure so entirely
-justified by sensation, that no one will
-have any difficulty in understanding what
-I mean. My heart leapt up and began
-beating wildly in my throat, in my ears,
-as if my whole being had received a sudden
-and intolerable shock. The sound
-went through my head like the dizzy
-sound of some strange mechanism, a
-thousand wheels and springs, circling,
-echoing, working in my brain. I felt
-the blood bound in my veins, my mouth
-became dry, my eyes hot, a sense of
-something insupportable took possession
-of me. I sprang to my feet, and then I
-sat down again. I cast a quick glance
-round me beyond the brief circle of the
-lamplight, but there was nothing there
-to account in any way for this sudden
-extraordinary rush of sensation—nor
-could I feel any meaning in it, any suggestion,
-any moral impression. I thought
-I must be going to be ill, and got out
-my watch and felt my pulse: it was
-beating furiously, about 125 throbs in a
-minute. I knew of no illness that could
-come on like this with out warning, in a
-moment, and I tried to subdue myself,
-to say to myself that it was nothing,
-some flutter of the nerves, some physical
-disturbance. I laid myself down upon
-my sofa to try if rest would help me, and
-keep still—as long as the thumping and
-throbbing of this wild excited mechanism
-within, like a wild beast plunging and
-struggling, would let me. I am quite
-aware of the confusion of the metaphor—the
-reality was just so. It was like a
-mechanism deranged, going wildly with
-ever-increasing precipitation, like those
-horrible wheels that from time to time
-catch a helpless human being in them
-and tear him to pieces: but at the same
-time it was like a maddened living creature
-making the wildest efforts to get free.</p>
-
-<p>When I could bear this no longer I
-got up and walked about my room;
-then having still a certain command of
-myself, though I could not master the
-commotion within me, I deliberately
-took down an exciting book from the
-shelf, a book of breathless adventure
-which had always interested me, and
-tried with that to break the spell. After
-a few minutes, however, I flung the book
-aside; I was gradually losing all power
-over myself. What I should be moved
-to do,—to shout aloud, to struggle with
-I know not what; or if was I going
-mad altogether, and next moment must
-be a raving lunatic,—I could not tell. I
-kept looking round, expecting I don't
-know what: several times with the
-corner of my eye I seemed to see a
-movement, as if some one was stealing
-out of sight; but when I looked straight,
-there was never anything but the plain
-outlines of the wall and carpet, the
-chairs standing in good order. At last I
-snatched up the lamp in my hand and
-went out of the room. To look at the
-picture? which had been faintly showing
-in my imagination from time to time, the
-eyes, more anxious than ever, looking at
-me from out the silent air. But no; I
-passed the door of that room swiftly,
-moving, it seemed, without any volition
-of my own, and before I knew where I
-was going, went into my father's library
-with my lamp in my hand.</p>
-
-<p>He was still sitting there at his writing-table;
-he looked up astonished to see
-me hurrying in with my light. “Phil!”
-he said, surprised. I remember that I
-shut the door behind me, and came up
-to him, and set down the lamp on his
-table. My sudden appearance alarmed
-him. “What is the matter?” he cried.
-“Philip, what have you been doing with
-yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>I sat down on the nearest chair and
-gasped, gazing at him. The wild commotion
-ceased, the blood subsided into
-its natural channels, my heart resumed
-its place, I use such words as mortal
-weakness can to express the sensations I
-felt. I came to myself thus, gazing at
-him, confounded, at once by the extraordinary
-passion which I had gone
-through, and its sudden cessation.
-“The matter?” I cried; “I don't
-know what is the matter.”</p>
-
-<p>My father had pushed his spectacles
-up from his eyes. He appeared to me
-as faces appear in a fever, all glorified
-with light which is not in them—his eyes
-glowing, his white hair shining like
-silver; but his look was severe. “You
-are not a boy, that I should reprove
-you; but you ought to know better,” he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>Then I explained to him, so far as I
-was able, what had happened. Had
-happened? nothing had happened. He
-did not understand me—nor did I, now
-that it was over, understand myself; but
-he saw enough to make him aware that
-the disturbance in me was serious, and
-not caused by any folly of my own. He
-was very kind as soon as he had assured
-himself of this, and talked, taking pains
-to bring me back to unexciting subjects.
-He had a letter in his hand with a very
-deep border of black when I came in.
-I observed it, without taking any notice
-or associating it with anything I knew.
-He had many correspondents, and
-although we were excellent friends, we
-had never been on those confidential
-terms which warrant one man in asking
-another from whom a special letter has
-come. We were not so near to each
-other as this, though we were father
-and son. After a while I went back to
-my own room, and finished the evening
-in my usual way, without any return of
-the excitement which, now that it was
-over, looked to me like some extraordinary
-dream. What had it meant? had
-it meant anything? I said to myself
-that it must be purely physical, something
-gone temporarily amiss, which had
-righted itself. It was physical; the
-excitement did not affect my mind. I
-was independent of it all the time, a
-spectator of my own agitation—a clear
-proof that, whatever it was, it had
-affected my bodily organisation alone.</p>
-
-<p>Next day I returned to the problem
-which I had not been able to solve. I
-found out my petitioner in the back
-street, and that she was happy in the recovery
-of her possessions, which to my
-eyes indeed did not seem very worthy
-either of lamentation or delight. Nor
-was her house the tidy house which injured
-virtue should have when restored
-to its humble rights. She was not injured
-virtue, it was clear. She made me a
-great many curtseys, and poured forth
-a number of blessings. Her “man”
-came in while I was there, and hoped in
-a gruff voice that God would reward me
-and that the old gentleman 'd let 'em
-alone. I did not like the looks of the
-man. It seemed to me that in the dark
-lane behind the house of a winter's
-night he would not be a pleasant person
-to find in one's way. Nor was this all:
-when I went out into the little street,
-which it appeared was all, or almost
-all, my fathers property, a number of
-groups formed in my way, and at least
-half-a-dozen applicants sidled up. “I've
-more claims nor Mary Jordan any day,”
-said one; “I've lived on Squire Canning's
-property one place and another,
-this twenty year.” “And what do you
-say to me,” said another; “I've six
-children to her two, bless you, sir, and
-ne'er a father to do for them.” I
-believed in my father's rule before I
-got out of the street, and approved his
-wisdom in keeping himself free from
-personal contact with his tenants. Yet
-when I looked back upon the swarming
-thoroughfare, the mean little houses, the
-women at their doors all so open-mouthed,
-and eager to contend for my
-favor, my heart sank within me at the
-thought that out of their misery some
-portion of our wealth came—I don't care
-how small a portion: that I, young and
-strong, should be kept idle and in
-luxury, in some part through the money
-screwed out of their necessities, obtained
-sometimes by the sacrifice of everything
-they prized! Of course I know all the
-ordinary commonplaces of life as well as
-anyone—that if you build a house with
-your hands or your money, and let it,
-the rent of it is your just due, and must
-be paid. But yet——</p>
-
-<p>“Don't you think, sir,” I said, that
-evening at dinner, the subject being reintroduced
-by my father himself, “that
-we have some duty towards them when
-we draw so much from them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly,” he said; “I take as
-much trouble about their drains as I do
-about my own.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is always something, I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>“Something! it is a great deal—it is
-more than they get anywhere else. I
-keep them clean, as far as that's possible.
-I give them at least the means of
-keeping clean, and thus check disease,
-and prolong life—which is more, I assure
-you, than they've any right to expect.”</p>
-
-<p>I was not prepared with arguments as
-I ought to have been. That is all in
-the Gospel according to Adam Smith,
-which my father had been brought up in,
-but of which the tenets had begun to be
-less binding in my day. I wanted
-something more, or else something else;
-but my views were not so clear, nor my
-system so logical and well-built, as that
-upon which my father rested his conscience,
-and drew his percentage with a
-light heart.</p>
-
-<p>Yet I thought there were signs in him
-of some perturbation. I met him one
-morning coming out of the room in
-which the portrait hung, as if he had
-gone to look at it stealthily. He was
-shaking his head, and saying, “No,
-no,” to himself, not perceiving me, and
-I stepped aside when I saw him so absorbed.
-For myself, I entered that
-room but little. I went outside, as I
-had so often done when I was a child,
-and looked through the windows into
-the still and now sacred place, which had
-always impressed me with a certain awe.
-Looked at so, the slight figure in its white
-dress seemed to be stepping down into
-the room from some slight visionary
-altitude, looking with that which had
-seemed to me at first anxiety, which I
-sometimes represented to myself now as
-a wistful curiosity, as if she were looking
-for the life which might have been
-hers. Where was the existence that had
-belonged to her, the sweet household
-place, the infant she had left? She would
-no more recognize the man who thus
-came to look at her as through a veil
-with mystic reverence, than I could recognize
-her. I could never be her child
-to her, any more than she could be a
-mother to me.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Thus time passed on for several quiet
-days. There was nothing to make us
-give any special heed to the passage of
-time, life being very uneventful and its
-habits unvaried. My mind was very
-much preoccupied by my father's
-tenants. He had a great deal of property
-in the town which was so near us,—streets
-of small houses, the best paying
-property (I was assured) of any. I was
-very anxious to come to some settled
-conclusion: on the one hand, not to let
-myself be carried away by sentiment;
-on the other, not to allow my strongly
-roused feelings to fall into the blank of
-routine, as his had done. I was seated
-one evening in my own sitting-room busy
-with this matter,—busy with calculations
-as to cost and profit, with an anxious
-desire to convince him, either that his
-profits were greater than justice allowed,
-or that they carried with them a more
-urgent duty than he had conceived.</p>
-
-<p>It was night, but not late, not more
-than ten o'clock, the household still
-astir. Everything was quiet—not the
-solemnity of midnight silence, in which
-there is always something of mystery,
-but the soft-breathing quiet of the evening,
-full of the faint habitual sounds of a
-human dwelling, a consciousness of life
-about. And I was very busy with my
-figures, interested, feeling no room in
-my mind for any other thought. The
-singular experience which had startled
-me so much had passed over very
-quickly, and there had been no return.
-I had ceased to think of it: indeed I
-had never thought of it save for the moment,
-setting it down after it was over to
-a physical cause without much difficulty.
-At this time I was far too busy to have
-thoughts to spare for anything, or room
-for imagination: and when suddenly in
-a moment without any warning, the first
-symptom returned, I started with it into
-determined resistance, resolute not to be
-fooled by any mock influence which
-could resolve itself into the action of
-nerves or ganglions. The first symptom,
-as before, was that my heart sprang up
-with a bound, as if a cannon had been
-fired at my ear. My whole being responded
-with a start. The pen fell out
-of my fingers, the figures went out of my
-head as if all faculty had departed: and
-yet I was conscious for a time at least of
-keeping my self-control. I was like the
-rider of a frightened horse, rendered
-almost wild by something which in the
-mystery of its voiceless being it has
-seen, something on the road which it will
-not pass, but wildly plunging, resisting
-every persuasion, turns from, with ever
-increasing passion. The rider himself
-after a time becomes infected with this
-inexplainable desperation of terror, and
-I suppose I must have done so: but for
-a time I kept the upper hand. I would
-not allow myself to spring up as I
-wished, as my impulse was, but sat there
-doggedly, clinging to my books, to my
-table, fixing myself on I did not mind
-what, to resist the flood of sensation, of
-emotion, which was sweeping through
-me, carrying me away. I tried to continue
-my calculations. I tried to stir
-myself up with recollections of the miserable
-sights I had seen, the poverty, the
-helplessness. I tried to work myself
-into indignation; but all through these
-efforts I felt the contagion growing upon
-me, my mind falling into sympathy with
-all those straining faculties of the body,
-startled, excited, driven wild by something
-I knew not what. It was not fear.
-I was like a ship at sea straining and
-plunging against wind and tide, but I
-was not afraid. I am obliged to use
-these metaphors, otherwise I could give
-no explanation of my condition, seized
-upon against my will, and torn from all
-those moorings of reason to which I
-clung with desperation—as long as I had
-the strength.</p>
-
-<p>When I got up from my chair at last,
-the battle was lost, so far as my powers
-of self-control were concerned. I got
-up, or rather was dragged up, from my
-seat, clutching at these material things
-round me as with a last effort to hold my
-own. But that was no longer possible;
-I was overcome. I stood for a moment
-looking round me feebly, feeling
-myself begin to babble with stammering
-lips, which was the alternative of shrieking,
-and which I seemed to choose as a
-lesser evil. What I said was, “What am
-I to do?” and after a while, “What do
-you want me to do?” although throughout
-I saw no one, heard no voice, and
-had in reality not power enough in my
-dizzy and confused brain to know what
-I myself meant. I stood thus for a
-moment looking blankly round me for
-guidance, repeating the question, which
-seemed after a time to become almost
-mechanical. What do you want me to
-do? though I neither knew to whom I
-addressed it nor why I said it. Presently—whether
-in answer, whether in mere
-yielding of nature, I cannot tell—I became
-aware of a difference: not a lessening
-of the agitation, but a softening, as
-if my powers of resistance being exhausted,
-a gentler force, a more benignant influence,
-had room. I felt myself consent
-to whatever it was. My heart melted in
-the midst of the tumult; I seemed to
-give myself up, and move as if drawn by
-some one whose arm was in mine, as if
-softly swept along, not forcibly, but with
-an utter consent of all my faculties to do
-I knew not what, for love of I knew not
-whom. For love—that was how it seemed—not
-by force, as when I went before.
-But my steps took the same course: I
-went through the dim passages in an
-exaltation indescribable, and opened the
-door of my father's room.</p>
-
-<p>He was seated there at his table, as
-usual, the light of the lamp falling on
-his white hair: he looked up with some
-surprise at the sound of the opening
-door. “Phil,” he said, and, with a look
-of wondering apprehension on his face,
-watched my approach. I went straight
-up to him, and put my hand on his
-shoulder. “Phil, what is the matter?
-What do you want with me? What is
-it?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Father, I can't tell you. I come
-not of myself. There must be something
-in it, though I don't know what it
-is. This is the second time I have been
-brought to you here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you going——?” he stopped
-himself. The exclamation had been
-begun with an angry intention. He
-stopped, looked at me with a scared look,
-as if perhaps it might be true.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean mad? I don't think
-so. I have no delusions that I know
-of. Father, think—do you know any
-reason why I am brought here? for some
-cause there must be.”</p>
-
-<p>I stood with my hand upon the back
-of his chair. His table was covered with
-papers, among which were several letters
-with the broad black border which I had
-before observed. I noticed this now in
-my excitement without any distinct associations
-of thoughts, for that I was not
-capable of; but the black border caught
-my eye. And I was conscious that he,
-too, gave a hurried glance at them, and
-with one hand swept them away.</p>
-
-<p>“Philip,” he said, pushing back his
-chair, “you must be ill, my poor boy.
-Evidently we have not been treating you
-rightly: you have been more ill all
-through than I supposed. Let me
-persuade you to go to bed.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am perfectly well,” I said. “Father,
-don't let us deceive one another.
-I am neither a man to go mad nor to see
-ghosts. What it is that has got the command
-over me I can't tell: but there is
-some cause for it. You are doing something
-or planning something with which
-I have a right to interfere.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned round squarely in his chair
-with a spark in his blue eyes. He was
-not a man to be meddled with. “I have
-yet to learn what can give my son a right
-to interfere. I am in possession of all
-my faculties, I hope.”</p>
-
-<p>“Father,” I cried, “won't you listen
-to me? no one can say I have been
-undutiful or disrespectful. I am a
-man, with a right to speak my mind, and
-I have done so; but this is different. I
-am not here by my own will. Something
-that is stronger than I has brought
-me. There is something in your mind
-which disturbs—others. I don't know
-what I am saying. This is not what I
-meant to say: but you know the meaning
-better than I. Some one—who can
-speak to you only by me—speaks to you
-by me; and I know that you understand.”</p>
-
-<p>He gazed up at me, growing pale, and
-his under lip fell. I, for my part, felt
-that my message was delivered. My
-heart sank into a stillness so sudden that
-it made me faint. The light swam in
-my eyes: everything went round with
-me. I kept upright only by my hold
-upon the chair; and in the sense of
-utter weakness that followed I dropped
-on my knees I think first, then on the
-nearest seat that presented itself, and
-covering my face with my hands, had
-hard ado not to sob, in the sudden removal
-of that strange influence, the relaxation
-of the strain.</p>
-
-<p>There was silence between us for
-some time; then he said, but with a
-voice slightly broken, “I don't understand
-you Phil. You must have taken
-some fancy into your mind which my
-slower intelligence——Speak out what
-you want to say. What do you find
-fault with? Is it all—all that woman
-Jordan?”</p>
-
-<p>He gave a short forced laugh as he
-broke off, and shook me almost roughly
-by the shoulder, saying, “speak out!
-what—what do you want to say?”</p>
-
-<p>“It seems, sir, that I have said everything.”
-My voice trembled more than
-his, but not in the same way. “I have
-told you that I did not come by my own
-will—quite otherwise. I resisted as long
-as I could: now all is said. It is for
-you to judge whether it was worth the
-trouble or not.”</p>
-
-<p>He got up from his seat in a hurried
-way. “You would have me as—mad as
-yourself,” he said, then sat down again
-as quickly. “Come, Phil: if it will
-please you, not to make a breach, the
-first breach, between us, you shall have
-your way. I consent to your looking
-into that matter about the poor tenants.
-Your mind shall not be upset about that
-even though I don't enter into all your
-views.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” I said; “but father,
-that is not what it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then it is a piece of folly,” he
-said, angrily. “I suppose you mean——but
-this is a matter in which I
-choose to judge for myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“You know what I mean,” I said,
-as quietly as I could, “though I don't
-myself know; that proves there is good
-reason for it. Will you do one thing for
-me before I leave you? Come with me
-into the drawing-room——”</p>
-
-<p>“What end,” he said, with again the
-tremble in his voice, “is to be served by
-that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don't very well know; but to look
-at her, you and I together, will always
-do something for us, sir. As for the
-breach, there can be no breach when we
-stand there.”</p>
-
-<p>He got up, trembling like an old man,
-which he was, but which he never looked
-like, save at moments of emotion like
-this, and told me to take the light; then
-stopped when he had got half-way across
-the room. “This is a piece of theatrical
-sentimentality,” he said. “No, Phil,
-I will not go. I will not bring her into
-any such——Put down the lamp, and
-if you will take my advice, go to bed.”</p>
-
-<p>“At least,” I said, “I will trouble
-you no more, father, to-night. So long
-as you understand, there need be no
-more to say.”</p>
-
-<p>He gave me a very curt “good-night,”
-and turned back to his papers—the
-letters with the black edge, either by
-my imagination or in reality, always
-keeping uppermost. I went to my own
-room for my lamp, and then alone proceeded
-to the silent shrine in which the
-portrait hung. I at least would look at
-her to-night. I don't know whether I
-asked myself, in so many words, if it
-were she who—or if it was any one—I
-knew nothing; but my heart was drawn
-with a softness—born, perhaps, of the
-great weakness in which I was left after
-that visitation—to her, to look at her, to
-see perhaps if there was any sympathy,
-any approval in her face. I set down
-my lamp on the table where her little
-work-basket still was: the light threw a
-gleam upward upon her,—she seemed
-more than ever to be stepping into the
-room, coming down towards me, coming
-back to her life. Ah no! her life was
-lost and vanished: all mine stood between
-her and the days she knew. She
-looked at me with eyes that did not
-change. The anxiety I had seen at first
-seemed now a wistful subdued question;
-but that difference was not in her look
-but in mine.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I need not linger on the intervening
-time. The doctor who attended us
-usually, came in next day “by accident,”
-and we had a long conversation.
-On the following day a very impressive
-yet genial gentleman from town lunched
-with us—a friend of my father's, Dr.
-something; but the introduction was
-hurried, and I did not catch his name.
-He, too, had a long talk with me afterwards—my
-father being called away to
-speak to some one on business. Dr.
-—— drew me out on the subject of the
-dwellings of the poor. He said he heard
-I took great interest in this question,
-which had come so much to the front at
-the present moment. He was interested
-in it too, and wanted to know the view I
-took. I explained at considerable length
-that my view did not concern the general
-subject, on which I had scarcely
-thought, so much as the individual mode
-of management of my father's estate.
-He was a most patient and intelligent
-listener, agreeing with me on some
-points, differing in others; and his visit
-was very pleasant. I had no idea until
-after of its special object: though a certain
-puzzled look and slight shake of
-the head when my father returned, might
-have thrown some light upon it. The
-report of the medical experts in my
-case, however, had been quite satisfactory,
-for I heard nothing more of
-them. It was, I think, a fortnight later
-when the next and last of these strange
-experiences came.</p>
-
-<p>This time it was morning, about noon,—a
-wet and rather dismal spring day.
-The half-spread leaves seemed to tap at
-the window, with an appeal to be taken
-in; the primroses, that showed golden
-upon the grass at the roots of the trees,
-just beyond the smooth-shorn grass of
-the lawn, were all drooped and sodden
-among their sheltering leaves. The very
-growth seemed dreary—the sense of
-spring in the air making the feeling of
-winter a grievance, instead of the natural
-effect which it had conveyed a few
-months before. I had been writing
-letters and was cheerful enough, going
-back among the associates of my old
-life, with, perhaps, a little longing for its
-freedom and independence, but at the
-same time a not ungrateful consciousness
-that for the moment my present tranquillity
-might be best.</p>
-
-<p>This was my condition—a not unpleasant
-one—when suddenly the now
-well-known symptoms of the visitation to
-which I had become subject suddenly
-seized upon me,—the leap of the heart;
-the sudden, causeless, overwhelming
-physical excitement, which I could
-neither ignore nor allay. I was terrified
-beyond description, beyond reason,
-when I became conscious that this was
-about to begin over again: what purpose
-did it answer, what good was in it? My
-father, indeed, understood the meaning
-of it, though I did not understand: but
-it was little agreeable to be thus made a
-helpless instrument without any will of
-mine, in an operation of which I knew
-nothing; and to enact the part of the
-oracle unwillingly, with suffering and
-such a strain as it took me days to get
-over. I resisted, not as before, but yet
-desperately, trying with better knowledge
-to keep down the growing passion. I
-hurried to my room and swallowed a
-dose of a sedative which had been given
-me to procure sleep on my first return
-from India. I saw Morphew in the
-hall, and called him to talk to him, and
-cheat myself, if possible, by that means.
-Morphew lingered, however, and, before
-he came, I was beyond conversation.
-I heard him speak, his voice coming
-vaguely through the turmoil which was
-already in my ears, but what he said I
-have never known. I stood staring, trying
-to recover my power of attention,
-with an aspect which ended by completely
-frightening the man. He cried
-out at last that he was sure I was ill,
-that he must bring me something; which
-words penetrated more or less into my
-maddened brain. It became impressed
-upon me that he was going to get some
-one—one of my father's doctors, perhaps—to
-prevent me from acting, to
-stop my interference,—and that if I
-waited a moment longer I might be too
-late. A vague idea seized me at the
-same time, of taking refuge with the
-portrait—going to its feet, throwing myself
-there, perhaps, till the paroxysm
-should be over. But it was not there
-that my footsteps were directed. I can
-remember making an effort to open the
-door of the drawing-room, and feeling
-myself swept past it, as if by a gale of
-wind. It was not there that I had to go.
-I knew very well where I had to go,—once
-more on my confused and voiceless
-mission to my father, who understood,
-although I could not understand.</p>
-
-<p>Yet as it was daylight, and all was
-clear, I could not help noting one or two
-circumstances on my way. I saw some
-one sitting in the hall as if waiting—a
-woman, a girl, a black-shrouded figure,
-with a thick veil over her face: and
-asked myself who she was, and what she
-wanted there? This question, which had
-nothing to do with my present condition,
-somehow got into my mind, and was
-tossed up and down upon the tumultuous
-tide like a stray log on the breast of
-a fiercely rolling stream, now submerged,
-now coming uppermost, at the mercy of
-the waters. It did not stop me for a moment,
-as I hurried towards my father's
-room, but it got upon the current of
-my mind. I flung open my father's
-door, and closed it again after me, without
-seeing who was there or how he
-was engaged. The full clearness of
-the daylight did not identify him as the
-lamp did at night. He looked up at
-the sound of the door, with a glance of
-apprehension; and rising suddenly, interrupting
-some one who was standing
-speaking to him with much earnestness
-and even vehemence, came forward to
-meet me. “I cannot be disturbed at
-present,” he said quickly; “I am
-busy.” Then seeing the look in my
-face, which by this time he knew, he too
-changed color. “Phil,” he said, in a
-low, imperative voice, “wretched boy,
-go away—go away; don't let a stranger
-see you——”</p>
-
-<p>“I can't go away,” I said. “It is
-impossible. You know why I have
-come. I cannot, if I would. It is more
-powerful than I——”</p>
-
-<p>“Go, sir,” he said; “go at once—no
-more of this folly. I will not have
-you in this room. Go——go!”</p>
-
-<p>I made no answer. I don't know
-that I could have done so. There had
-never been any struggle between us before;
-but I had no power to do one
-thing or another. The tumult within
-me was in full career. I heard indeed
-what he said, and was able to reply; but
-his words, too, were like straws tossed
-upon the tremendous stream. I saw
-now with my feverish eyes who the
-other person present was. It was a
-woman, dressed also in mourning similar
-to the one in the hall; but this a
-middle-aged woman, like a respectable
-servant. She had been crying, and in
-the pause caused by this encounter between
-my father and myself, dried her
-eyes with a handkerchief, which she rolled
-like a ball in her hand, evidently in
-strong emotion. She turned and looked
-at me as my father spoke to me, for a
-moment with a gleam of hope, then falling
-back into her former attitude.</p>
-
-<p>My father returned to his seat. He
-was much agitated too, though doing
-all that was possible to conceal it. My
-inopportune arrival was evidently a great
-and unlooked-for vexation to him. He
-gave me the only look of passionate displeasure
-I have ever had from him, as
-he sat down again: but he said nothing
-more.</p>
-
-<p>“You must understand,” he said,
-addressing the woman, “that I have
-said my last words on this subject. I
-don't choose to enter into it again in
-the presence of my son, who is not well
-enough to be made a party to any discussion.
-I am sorry that you should have
-had so much trouble in vain; but you
-were warned beforehand, and you have
-only yourself to blame. I acknowledge
-no claim, and nothing you can say will
-change my resolution. I must beg you
-to go away. All this is very painful and
-quite useless. I acknowledge no claim.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, sir,” she cried, her eyes beginning
-once more to flow, her speech interrupted
-by little sobs. “Maybe I did
-wrong to speak of a claim. I'm not educated
-to argue with a gentleman. Maybe
-we have no claim. But if it's not by
-right, oh, Mr. Canning, won't you let
-your heart be touched by pity? She
-don't know what I'm saying, poor dear.
-She's not one to beg and pray for herself,
-as I'm doing for her. Oh, sir,
-she's so young! She's so lone in this
-world—not a friend to stand by her, nor
-a house to take her in! You are the
-nearest to her of any one that's left in
-this world. She hasn't a relation—not
-one so near as you——oh!” she cried,
-with a sudden thought, turning quickly
-round upon me, “this gentleman's your
-son! Now I think of it, it's not your
-relation she is, but his, through his
-mother! That's nearer, nearer! Oh,
-sir! you're young; your heart should
-be more tender. Here is my young
-lady that has no one in the world to
-look to her. Your own flesh and blood:
-your mother's cousin—your mother's——”</p>
-
-<p>My father called to her to stop, with
-a voice of thunder. “Philip, leave us
-at once. It is not a matter to be discussed
-with you.”</p>
-
-<p>And then in a moment it became clear
-to me what it was. It had been with
-difficulty that I had kept myself still.
-My breast was laboring with the fever of
-an impulse poured into me, more than
-I could contain. And now for the first
-time I knew why. I hurried towards
-him, and took his hand, though he resisted,
-into mine. Mine were burning,
-but his like ice: their touch burnt me
-with its chill, like fire. “This is what
-it is?” I cried. “I had no knowledge
-before. I don't know now what is being
-asked of you. But, father—understand!
-You know, and I know now,
-that some one sends me—some one—who
-has a right to interfere.”</p>
-
-<p>He pushed me away with all his might.
-“You are mad,” he cried. “What
-right have you to think——? Oh, you
-are mad—mad! I have seen it coming
-on——”</p>
-
-<p>The woman, the petitioner, had grown
-silent, watching this brief conflict with
-the terror and interest with which women
-watch a struggle between men. She
-started and fell back when she heard
-what he said, but did not take her eyes
-off me, following every movement I
-made. When I turned to go away, a
-cry of indescribable disappointment and
-remonstrance burst from her, and even
-my father raised himself up and stared
-at my withdrawal, astonished to find
-that he had overcome me so soon and
-easily. I paused for a moment, and
-looked back on them, seeing them large
-and vague through the mist of fever.
-“I am not going away,” I said. “I
-am going for another messenger—one
-you can't gainsay.”</p>
-
-<p>My father rose. He called out to me
-threateningly, “I will have nothing
-touched that is hers. Nothing that is
-hers shall be profaned——”</p>
-
-<p>I waited to hear no more: I knew
-what I had to do. By what means it
-was conveyed to me I cannot tell; but
-the certainty of an influence which no
-one thought of calmed me in the midst
-of my fever. I went out into the hall,
-where I had seen the young stranger
-waiting. I went up to her and touched
-her on the shoulder. She rose at once,
-with a little movement of alarm, yet with
-docile and instant obedience, as if she
-had expected the summons. I made her
-take off her veil and her bonnet, scarcely
-looking at her, scarcely seeing her,
-knowing how it was: I took her soft,
-small, cool, yet trembling hand into
-mine; it was so soft and cool, not cold, it
-refreshed me with its tremulous touch.
-All through I moved and spoke like a
-man in a dream, swiftly, noiselessly, all
-the complications of waking life removed,
-without embarrassment, without
-reflection, without the loss of a moment.
-My father was still standing up, leaning
-a little forward as he had done when I
-withdrew, threatening, yet terror-stricken,
-not knowing what I might be about
-to do, when I returned with my companion.
-That was the one thing he had
-not thought of. He was entirely undefended,
-unprepared. He gave her one
-look, flung up his arms above his head,
-and uttered a distracted cry, so wild
-that it seemed the last outcry of nature—“Agnes!”
-then fell back like a sudden
-ruin, upon himself, into his chair.</p>
-
-<p>I had no leisure to think how he was,
-or whether he could hear what I said. I
-had my message to deliver. “Father,”
-I said, laboring with my panting breath,
-“it is for this that heaven has opened,
-and one whom I never saw, one whom I
-know not, has taken possession of me.
-Had we been less earthly we should have
-seen her—herself, and not merely her
-image. I have not even known what
-she meant. I have been as a fool without
-understanding. This is the third
-time I have come to you with her message,
-without knowing what to say. But
-now I have found it out. This is her
-message. I have found it out at last.”</p>
-
-<p>There was an awful pause—a pause
-in which no one moved or breathed.
-Then there came a broken voice out of
-my father's chair. He had not understood,
-though I think he heard what I
-said. He put out two feeble hands.
-“Phil—I think I am dying—has she—has
-she come for me?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>We had to carry him to his bed. What
-struggles he had gone through before I
-cannot tell. He had stood fast, and had
-refused to be moved, and now he fell—like
-an old tower, like an old tree. The
-necessity there was for thinking of him
-saved me from the physical consequences
-which had prostrated me on a former
-occasion. I had no leisure now for any
-consciousness of how matters went with
-myself.</p>
-
-<p>His delusion was not wonderful, but
-most natural. She was clothed in black
-from head to foot, instead of the white
-dress of the portrait. She had no knowledge
-of the conflict, of nothing but that
-she was called for, that her fate might
-depend on the next few minutes. In her
-eyes there was a pathetic question, a line
-of anxiety in the lids, an innocent appeal
-in the looks. And the face the
-same: the same lips, sensitive, ready to
-quiver; the same innocent, candid brow;
-the look of a common race, which is
-more subtle than mere resemblance.
-How I knew that it was so, I cannot
-tell, nor any man. It was the other—the
-elder—ah no! not elder; the ever
-young, the Agnes to whom age can never
-come—she who they say was the mother
-of a man who never saw her—it was
-she who led her kinswoman, her representative,
-into our hearts.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>My father recovered after a few days:
-he had taken cold, it was said, the day
-before—and naturally, at seventy, a
-small matter is enough to upset the balance
-even of a strong man. He got
-quite well; but he was willing enough
-afterwards to leave the management of
-that ticklish kind of property which involves
-human well-being in my hands,
-who could move about more freely, and
-see with my own eyes how things were
-going on. He liked home better, and
-had more pleasure in his personal existence
-in the end of his life. Agnes is
-now my wife, as he had, of course, foreseen.
-It was not merely the disinclination
-to receive her father's daughter, or
-to take upon him a new responsibility,
-that had moved him, to do him justice.
-But both these motives had told strongly.
-I have never been told, and now will
-never be told, what his griefs against my
-mother's family, and especially against
-that cousin, had been; but that he had
-been very determined, deeply prejudiced,
-there can be no doubt. It turned
-out after, that the first occasion on
-which I had been mysteriously commissioned
-to him with a message which I
-did not understand, and which for that
-time he did not understand, was the
-evening of the day on which he had received
-the dead man's letter, appealing
-to him—to him, a man whom he had
-wronged—on behalf of the child who
-was about to be left friendless in the
-world. The second time, further letters,
-from the nurse who was the only guardian
-of the orphan, and the chaplain of
-the place where her father had died,
-taking it for granted that my father's
-house was her natural refuge—had been
-received. The third I have already described,
-and its results.</p>
-
-<p>For a long time after, my mind was
-never without a lurking fear that the influence
-which had once taken possession
-of me might return again. Why should I
-have feared to be influenced—to be the
-messenger of a blessed creature, whose
-wishes could be nothing but heavenly?
-Who can say? Flesh and blood is not
-made for such encounters: they were
-more than I could bear. But nothing of
-the kind has ever occurred again.</p>
-
-<p>Agnes had her peaceful domestic
-throne established under the picture.
-My father wished it to be so, and spent
-his evenings there in the warmth and
-light, instead of in the old library, in
-the narrow circle cleared by our lamp
-out of the darkness, as long as he lived.
-It is supposed by strangers that the
-picture on the wall is that of my wife;
-and I have always been glad that it
-should be so supposed. She who was
-my mother, who came back to me and
-became as my soul for three strange
-moments and no more, but with whom
-I can feel no credible relationship as
-she stands there, has retired for me into
-the tender regions of the unseen. She
-has passed once more into the secret
-company of those shadows, who can
-only become real in an atmosphere fitted
-to modify and harmonise all differences,
-and make all wonders possible—the
-light of the perfect day.—<cite>Blackwood's
-Magazine.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2><a name="DELLA_CRUSCA_AND_ANNA_MATILDA" id="DELLA_CRUSCA_AND_ANNA_MATILDA">DELLA CRUSCA AND ANNA MATILDA:</a><br />
-
-<span class="smcap"><small>An Episode in English Literature</small></span>.</h2>
-
-<p class="aut">BY ARMINE T. KENT.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>Most people are more or less vaguely
-aware that there existed in England,
-towards the end of the last century, a
-school of poets, or poetasters, called
-Della Cruscan; and Mrs. Oliphant not
-long ago suggested, in her <cite>Literary History</cite>,
-that a sketch of their eccentricities
-might not be unamusing. I propose,
-accordingly, for the edification of the
-curious, to recount a few particulars of
-the Della Cruscan writers, in the days of
-their prosperity and the days of their
-collapse. They were, let it at once be
-admitted, a feeble and a frivolous folk;
-yet I think that a moral may suggest itself
-when their story has been told.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1784 Mr. Robert Merry, a
-bachelor of thirty, had been for some
-years domiciled at Florence. That his
-position and prospects were not of a
-very definite order was owing to no defect
-of nurture or opportunity. He had
-been educated at Harrow, at the same
-time as Sheridan, and afterwards at
-Christ's College, Cambridge, and was
-originally intended for the Bar. To
-Lincoln's Inn he accordingly made a
-pretence of belonging till the death of
-his father, who was a Governor of the
-Hudson's Bay Company; the family connection
-with the North Seas being still
-perpetuated in the name of Merry's
-Island. Robert Merry at once took advantage
-of the independence which came
-to him on his father's death to abandon
-the Bar and buy himself a commission
-in the Guards. His liking for high play
-and high society kept him, for a short
-time, amused in his new position. He
-grew, however, once more restless; wandered
-on the Continent; and became, in
-the phraseology of the day, a man of
-letters and of leisure. His love of letters
-he gratified, at Florence, by becoming
-a member of the Italian Academy,
-the Accademia della Crusca, and his
-love of letters and leisure combined by
-joining himself to an English society
-who called themselves the “Oziosi,”
-and, no doubt, took good care to merit
-that designation.</p>
-
-<p>The leading spirit of this coterie was
-no less a personage than Mrs. Piozzi,
-happily married at last, and safely escaped
-from the malice of her cold-blooded
-daughters, and from the virulence
-with which the English journals had inveighed
-against her choice of a second
-husband. Even now the memory of her
-domestic troubles tended to inspire her
-with a dejection which the master-pieces
-of Florentine sculpture were, oddly
-enough, powerless to remove. As she
-herself described it, in lines at which
-one cannot help smiling, sincere as they
-perhaps were,—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">The slave and the wrestlers, what are they to me,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">From plots and contention removed?</div>
- <div class="verse">And Job with still less satisfaction I see,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">When I think on the pains I have proved.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The homage of her countrymen, however,
-did much to enliven her despondency;
-and she complacently records
-in her journals some of the compliments
-paid her by her fellow-members of the
-“Oziosi.” They used to address her in
-this style:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">E'en so when Parsons pours his lay,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Correctly wild, or sweetly strong,</div>
- <div class="verse">Or Greathead charms the listening day,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">With English or Italian song,</div>
- <div class="verse">Or when, with trembling wing I try,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Like some poor wounded bird, to fly,</div>
- <div class="verse">Your fostering smiles you ne'er refuse,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">But are the Pallas and the Muse!</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The Parsons and Greathead of this
-all-round panegyric of Merry's were two
-members of the “Oziosi” clique: Parsons,
-a bachelor with a tendency to flirt,
-to “trifle with Italian dames,” as Mrs.
-Piozzi poetically put it; Greathead, the
-newly-married husband of a beautiful
-wife. Both Parsons and Greathead were
-voluminous contributors to the society's
-Album, which soon assumed formidable
-dimensions. The staple of the contents
-consisted of high-flown compliments in
-verse. Parsons, for instance, would write
-to Greathead's wife:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">O blest with taste, with Genius blest,</div>
- <div class="verse">Sole mistress of thy Bertie's breast,</div>
- <div class="verse">Who to his love-enraptured arms are given</div>
- <div class="verse">The rich reward his virtues claim from Heaven.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>And Bertie, as in duty bound, would reply
-in kind, bidding the sallow Arno
-pause and listen to the lays of Parsons.
-As an alternative to these panegyrics,
-they wrote <cite>Dithyrambics to Bacchus</cite>,
-<cite>Odes to the Siroc</cite>, or lines on that latest
-novelty, Montgolfier's air-balloon. Mrs.
-Greathead was, in fact, as Parsons informs
-us, the only member of the society
-who contributed nothing but the inspiration
-of her charms.</p>
-
-<p>Some of these poems were printed in
-an <cite>Arno Miscellany</cite>, of which only a few
-copies were privately circulated. It was
-a subsequent and larger collection, published
-in 1785, under the name of <cite>The
-Florence Miscellany</cite>, which first made
-its way to England, and drew the attention
-of the English public to the rising
-school of versifiers. Horace Walpole
-characterized their productions as
-“mere imitations of our best poets,”
-that is to say, of Milton, Gray, and
-Collins. How justly, may be inferred
-from the opening stanza of Merry's
-<cite>Ode on a distant prospect of Rome</cite>:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">When Rome of old, terrific queen,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">High-placed on Victory's sounding car,</div>
- <div class="verse">With arm sublime and martial mien,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Brandished the flaming lance of war,</div>
- <div class="verse">Low crouched in dust lay Afric's swarthy crowd,</div>
- <div class="verse">And silken Asia sank, and barbarous Britain bowed.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The imitations of Milton and Collins
-are of a like description. Such as it was,
-the book was a success, and samples of
-its contents were reproduced, after the
-fashion of the day, in the newspapers
-and magazines—the <cite>Gentleman's</cite>, the
-<cite>European</cite>, the <cite>Universal Magazine</cite>, and
-so forth. Of the quality of the poems,
-critically considered, and of the Della
-Cruscan poetry generally, I shall have
-something to say farther on. In the
-meantime, it may, perhaps, be worth
-while to disinter a ludicrous passage in
-one of Merry's contributions to the
-<cite>Florence Miscellany</cite>. The “Oziosi”
-had one day agreed that each of them
-should produce by the evening a story
-or poem which should “excite horror
-by description.” Mrs. Piozzi's production
-will be found in her <cite>Autobiography</cite>,
-and is by no means devoid of merit.
-Merry brought a poem (“a very fine
-one,” says Mrs. Piozzi), in which he introduced
-the following remarkable ghost,
-which I commend to the attention of the
-new Psychical Society:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">While slow he trod this desolated coast,</div>
- <div class="verse">From the cracked ground uprose a warning ghost;</div>
- <div class="verse">Whose figure, all-confused, was dire to view,</div>
- <div class="verse">And loose his mantle flowed, of shifting hue;</div>
- <div class="verse"><em>He shed a lustre round; and sadly pressed</em></div>
- <div class="verse"><em>What seemed his hand upon what seemed his breast</em>;</div>
- <div class="verse"><em>Then raised his doleful voice, like wolves that roar</em></div>
- <div class="verse"><em>In famished troops round Orcas' sleepy shore,</em>—</div>
- <div class="verse">“Approach yon antiquated tower,” he cried,</div>
- <div class="verse">“There bold Rinaldo, fierce Mambrino, died,” etc.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>But I must not linger over the <cite>Florence
-Miscellany</cite>, which was but the prelude
-to those melodious bursts which
-filled the spacious times of George III.
-with the music of Della Crusca and Anna
-Matilda. A year or two after its publication
-the Florence coterie broke up,
-and returned to England.</p>
-
-<p>The first note of the concert was
-struck by Robert Merry, who, in June
-1787, sent to the <cite>World</cite> a poem entitled
-<cite>The Adieu and Recall to Love</cite>, subscribing
-himself Della Crusca, a nickname
-which had been given to him at Florence,
-on account of his connection, already
-mentioned, with the Italian Academy.
-The <cite>World</cite> was a daily morning paper,
-price threepence, which in more than one
-respect resembled its modern namesake.
-A contemporary satirist, writing under
-the modest pseudonym of “Horace Juvenal,”
-describes how the young lady
-of 1787—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Reluctant opes her eyes, 'twixt twelve and one,</div>
- <div class="verse">To skim the <em>World</em>, or criticise the <em>Sun</em>,</div>
- <div class="verse">And when she sees her darling friend abused</div>
- <div class="verse">Is half enraged, yet more than half-amused.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>And another poet portrays two unlucky
-baronets, Sir Gregory Turner and Sir
-John Miller—husband of Lady Miller of
-Bath Easton vase celebrity—lamenting
-the ridicule with which the same newspaper
-had overwhelmed them:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Woe wait the week, Sir John, and cursed the hour,</div>
- <div class="verse">When harmless gentlemen felt satire's power,</div>
- <div class="verse">When, raised from insignificance and sloth,</div>
- <div class="verse">The <em>World</em> began to ridicule us both.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>“In this paper,” says Gifford, “were
-given the earliest specimens of those
-audacious attacks on all private character,
-which the town first smiled at for
-their quaintness, then tolerated for their
-absurdity; and now that other papers,
-equally wicked and more intelligible,
-have ventured to imitate it, will have to
-lament to the last hour of British liberty.”
-That literary history is self-repeating,
-and that prophecies are mostly
-mistaken, are not new reflections; yet
-it is difficult to avoid making them when
-we compare those days with these.</p>
-
-<p>But beyond its function as a purveyor
-of social gossip, no newspaper was then
-considered complete without a Poet's
-Corner, consecrated to sentimental effusions
-and labored impromptus—“Complimentary
-verses to the brilliancy of the
-Hon. Mrs. N——h's Eyes,” or “Lines
-on Lady T—e—l's Ring.” In publishing
-his poem in the <cite>World</cite>, Della Crusca
-did but select the natural and recognized
-arena of the eighteenth-century poet. It
-may be as well to quote the greater part
-of <cite>The Adieu and Recall to Love</cite>, in order
-to give some notion of the calibre
-of the verses which were to found a
-school:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Go, idle Boy, I quit thy bower,</div>
- <div class="verse">The couch of many a thorn and flower;</div>
- <div class="verse">Thy twanging bow, thine arrow keen,</div>
- <div class="verse">Deceitful Beauty's timid mien;</div>
- <div class="verse">The feigned surprise, the roguish leer,</div>
- <div class="verse">The tender smile, the thrilling tear,</div>
- <div class="verse">Have now no pangs, no joys for me,</div>
- <div class="verse">So fare thee well, for I am free!</div>
- <div class="verse">Then flutter hence on wanton wing,</div>
- <div class="verse">Or lave thee in yon lucid spring,</div>
- <div class="verse">Or take thy beverage from the rose,</div>
- <div class="verse">Or on Louisa's breast repose;</div>
- <div class="verse">I wish thee well for pleasures past,</div>
- <div class="verse">Yet, bless the hour, I'm free at last,</div>
- <div class="verse">But sure, methinks, the altered day</div>
- <div class="verse">Scatters around a mournful ray;</div>
- <div class="verse">And chilling every zephyr blows,</div>
- <div class="verse">And every stream untuneful flows.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">
-
-<hr class="tb" /></div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Alas! is all this boasted ease</div>
- <div class="verse">To lose each warm desire to please,</div>
- <div class="verse">No sweet solicitude to know</div>
- <div class="verse">For others' bliss, or others' woe,</div>
- <div class="verse">A frozen apathy to find,</div>
- <div class="verse">A sad vacuity of mind?</div>
- <div class="verse">Oh, hasten back, then, heavenly Boy,</div>
- <div class="verse">And with thine anguish bring thy joy!</div>
- <div class="verse">Return with all thy torments here,</div>
- <div class="verse">And let me hope, and doubt, and fear;</div>
- <div class="verse">Oh, rend my heart with every pain,</div>
- <div class="verse">But let me, let me love again.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>I suppose what will strike most readers
-with regard to these lines is that they are
-decidedly fluent, and utterly commonplace.
-That, however, is not the light
-in which a critic of the last quarter of
-the eighteenth century would regard
-them. Amid the dead level of sing-song
-couplets, the milk-and-water decency
-of Hayley, the chill and prolix
-classicism of Pye, the ineffable mediocrity
-of a thousand Pratts and Polwheles—the
-fluency of Merry passed, according
-to the critic's leanings, for fire or
-for fustian; and the phraseology, which
-afterwards became hackneyed, was then
-startling. Take, for instance, Horace
-Walpole's criticism of the new poetic
-departure. “It is refreshing to read
-natural easy poetry, full of sense and
-humor, instead of that unmeaning, labored,
-painted style now in fashion of
-the Della Cruscas and Co., of which it
-is impossible ever to retain a couplet, no
-more than one could remember how a
-string of emeralds and rubies were
-placed in a necklace. Poetry has great
-merit if it is the vehicle and preservative
-of sense, but it is not to be taken in
-change for it.” Poetry the vehicle and
-preservative of sense—that is the critical
-canon which would have made Walpole
-as blind to Della Crusca's merits, had
-he happened to possess any, as it made
-him keen-sighted for his defects.</p>
-
-<p>It may, nevertheless, be doubted
-whether Della Crusca would have caused
-so great a stir in literature, had it not
-been for several collateral circumstances,
-of which the first and most important
-was the appearance in the <cite>World</cite>, some
-ten days later, of “Anna Matilda,”
-with a poem entitled <cite>To Della Crusca,
-the Pen</cite>.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Oh, seize again thy golden quill,</div>
- <div class="verse">And with its point my bosom thrill,</div>
- <div class="verse">With magic touch explore my heart,</div>
- <div class="verse">And bid the tear of passion start.</div>
- <div class="verse">Thy golden quill Apollo gave,</div>
- <div class="verse">Drenched first in bright Aonia's wave.</div>
- <div class="verse">He snatched it fluttering through the sky,</div>
- <div class="verse">Borne on the vapor of a sigh;</div>
- <div class="verse">It fell from Cupid's burnished wing</div>
- <div class="verse">As forcefully he drew the string,</div>
- <div class="verse">Which sent his keenest, surest dart,</div>
- <div class="verse">Through a rebellious, frozen heart,</div>
- <div class="verse">That had, till then, defied his power,</div>
- <div class="verse">And vacant beat through each dull hour.</div>
- <div class="verse">Be worthy, then, the sacred loan!</div>
- <div class="verse">Seated on Fancy's air-built throne;</div>
- <div class="verse">Immerse it in her rainbow hues,</div>
- <div class="verse">Nor, what the Godheads bid, refuse.</div>
- <div class="verse">Apollo Cupid shall inspire,</div>
- <div class="verse">And aid thee with their blended fire;</div>
- <div class="verse">The one poetic language give,</div>
- <div class="verse">The other bid thy passion live,</div>
- <div class="verse">With soft ideas fill thy lays,</div>
- <div class="verse">And crown with Love thy wintry days!</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The shuttlecock of correspondence,
-thus fairly started, was diligently tossed
-to and fro in the <cite>World</cite> by the two
-pseudonymous writers; Della Crusca
-“seized his quill” again and again, and
-his ideal passion for the invisible Anna
-Matilda gained in fervor of expression
-with every fortnight. It is obvious that
-here was just that element of mystery,
-of romance, which creates a <em>furore</em> and
-sets a fashion.</p>
-
-<p>The lady who signed herself “Anna
-Matilda” was Mrs. Hannah Cowley,
-the wife of an absent East India captain,
-then in her forty-fifth year, and
-known to-day as the authoress of the
-<cite>Belle's Stratagem</cite>, a play which still, and
-deservedly, keeps the stage. Her biographer
-records the beginning of her literary
-career as follows: “In the year
-1776, some years after her marriage, a
-sense of power for dramatic writing suddenly
-struck her whilst sitting with her
-husband at the theatre. 'So delighted
-with this?' said she to him; 'why, I
-could write as well myself.' She then
-wrote <cite>The Runaway</cite>. Many will recollect
-the extraordinary success with which
-it was brought out.” Her habits of composition
-were not, perhaps, likely to result
-in poetry of much excellence.
-“Catching up her pen immediately as
-the thought struck her, she always proceeded
-with the utmost facility and celerity.
-Her pen and paper were so immediately
-out of sight again, that those
-around her could scarcely tell when it
-was she wrote. She was always much
-pleased with the description of Michael
-Angelo making the marble fly around
-him, as he was chiselling with the utmost
-swiftness, that he might shape, however
-roughly, his whole design in unity with
-one clear conception.” Her preparatory
-note to her collected “Anna Matilda”
-poems bears out this account. “The
-beautiful lines of <cite>The Adieu and Recall
-to Love</cite> struck her so forcibly that,
-without rising from the table at which
-she read, she answered them. Della
-Crusca's elegant reply surprised her into
-another, and thus the correspondence
-most unexpectedly became settled.
-Anna Matilda's share in it had little to
-boast; but she has one claim of which
-she is proud, that of having been the
-first to point out the excellence of Della
-Crusca; if there can be merit in discerning
-what is so very obvious.” She further
-apologizes for one of her poems to
-Della Crusca, on the ground that it was
-written while sitting for her portrait, the
-painter interrupting her with “Smile a
-little,” or “More to the right.” Only
-that class of mind which grows incredulous
-when informed that orators prepare
-their speeches, will expect much from
-such methods of workmanship.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, to Mrs. Cowley appears
-to belong the credit, or discredit,
-of giving to the Della Cruscan poetry a
-certain turn or development which did
-much to make it popular. A hint of
-this development may be seen in the description
-of the pen, which was “borne
-on the vapor of a sigh.” It took final
-shape in such phrases as these:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Hushed be each ruder note! Soft silence spread</div>
- <div class="verse">With ermine hand thy cobweb robe around.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent6">Was it the shuttle of the Morn,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">That wove upon the cobweb'd thorn</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Thy airy lay?</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent4">Or in the gaudy spheroids swell</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Which the swart Indian's groves illume.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent2">Gauzy zephyrs fluttering o'er the plain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">In Twilight's bosom drop their filmy rain.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent6">Bid the streamy lightnings fly</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">In liquid peril from thine eye.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent10">Summer tints begemmed the scene,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">And silky ocean slept in glossy green.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>A large and amusing assortment of
-this ambitious verbiage, which subsequently
-became in the eyes of the critics
-the sole “differentia” of Della Cruscan
-verse, may be seen in the notes to
-Gifford's <cite>Baviad</cite>. It was, however, an
-after-development, proceeding from a
-gradual consciousness of flagging powers;
-the feeling which induced Charles
-Reade's Triplet to “shove his pen under
-the thought, and lift it by polysyllables
-to the true level of fiction.”</p>
-
-<p>The other members of the Florence
-coterie, who, as I have said, were now
-back in England, speedily began to swell
-the Della Cruscan chorus in the columns
-of the <cite>World</cite> and the <cite>Oracle</cite>. Bertie
-Greathead as “Reuben” became Della
-Crusca's rival, on paper, in the affections
-of Anna Matilda; and Parsons,
-signing himself “Benedict,” in memory
-of a sojourn in the Benedictine convent
-of Vallombrosa, deluged with sonnets
-an imaginary Melissa. Whether Mrs.
-Piozzi contributed anything beyond tea-party
-patronage, appears to be doubtful;
-but, as was only to be expected,
-London already possessed a score of indigenous
-rhymesters, eager to pursue
-the triumph and partake the gale. One
-of the principal of these was Edward
-Jerningham, <em>alias</em> “The Bard,” who is
-commemorated in Macaulay's neat sentence:
-“Lady Miller who kept a vase
-wherein fools were wont to put verses,
-and Jerningham who wrote verses fit to
-be put into the vase of Lady Miller.”
-His brother, Sir William, of Cossy Hall,
-in Norfolk, kept an album which rivalled
-in celebrity the vase of Bath Easton,
-and “The Bard” had been a determined
-poetaster for the last thirty years.
-He is described as “a mighty gentleman,
-who looks to be painted, and is all
-daintification in manner, speech, and
-dress, singing to his own accompaniment
-on the harp, whilst he looks the
-gentlest of all dying Corydons.” Fashionable
-poets seldom suffer from lack of
-appreciation. Burke wrote of Jerningham's
-poem <cite>The Shakespeare Gallery</cite>,
-“I have not for a long time seen anything
-so well finished. The author has
-caught new fire by approaching in his
-perihelion so near to the sun of our poetical
-system.” I think we may be certain,
-after reading <cite>The Shakespeare Gallery</cite>,
-that the patron of Crabbe did not
-read it.</p>
-
-<p>Another Della Cruscan songstress was
-Mrs. Robinson, <em>alias</em> “Laura Maria,”
-known to the public as a former mistress
-of the Prince of Wales, and authoress
-of various novels. In rapidity of
-composition she emulated Mrs. Cowley.
-“Conversing one evening with Mr.
-Richard Burke” (the Burke family appear
-to have been sometimes unfortunate
-in their poetical acquaintances) “respecting
-the facility with which modern
-poetry was composed, Mrs. Robinson
-repeated nearly the whole of those beautiful
-lines, 'To him who will understand
-them.' This improvisatore produced in
-her auditor not less surprise than admiration,
-when solemnly assured by its
-author that this was the first time of its
-being repeated. Mr. Burke entreated
-her to commit the poem to writing, a request
-which was readily complied with;
-and Mrs. Robinson had afterwards the
-gratification of finding this offspring of
-her genius inserted in the <cite>Annual Register</cite>,
-with a flattering encomium from
-the pen of the eloquent and ingenious
-editor.” She was one of Merry's most
-ardent admirers.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Winged Ages picture to the dazzled view</div>
- <div class="verse">Each marked perfection of the sacred few,</div>
- <div class="verse">Pope, Dryden, Spenser, all that Fame shall raise,</div>
- <div class="verse">From Chaucer's gloom, till Merry's lucid days.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Her Della Cruscan poems were published
-under the signature of “Laura,”
-and she was followed by Cesario, Carlos,
-Adelaide, Orlando, Arno, and fifty more
-whose identity can no longer be determined.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>A year after his first appearance in
-the <cite>World</cite>, Della Crusca printed his
-poems in a volume, and Anna Matilda
-speedily followed suit. But this was
-not enough for the reading public.
-They further greedily absorbed a collection
-of Della Cruscan verse, published
-as <cite>The Poetry of the “World,”</cite> by Major
-Topham, the creator and editor of that
-paper, who, in a dedication to Sheridan,
-observes: “Of their merit, I am free
-to say I know no modern poems their
-superior. I am more happy that your
-opinion has confirmed mine.” It will
-be well to make allowance for changing
-literary fashions before we make too
-sure that Sheridan is here misrepresented.
-<cite>The Poetry of the “World”</cite> afterwards
-ran through at least four editions
-as <cite>The British Album</cite>. As we read the
-publisher's advertisement of this work,
-which still abounds on second-hand
-bookstalls—<i lang="la">immorimur studiis lapsoque
-renascimur ævo</i>—we seem to be walking
-in the Bond Street of the Prince Regent.
-“Two beautiful volumes this day published,
-embellished with genuine portraits
-of the real Della Crusca and Anna
-Matilda, engraved in a very superior
-manner from faithful pictures, under the
-title of <cite>The British Album</cite>, being a new
-edition, revised and corrected by their
-respective authors, of the celebrated
-poems of Della Crusca, Anna Matilda,
-Arley, Laura, Benedict, and the elegant
-Cesario, “the African Boy;” and others,
-signed The Bard, by Mr. Jerningham;
-General Conway's elegy on Miss C.
-Campbell; Marquis of Townshend's
-verses on Miss Gardiner; Lord Derby's
-lines on Miss Farren's portrait.” It is
-unfortunate that the only pseudonym in
-the list which it is of much interest to
-decipher, should still remain a mystery.
-It is to “Arley” that we owe the admittedly
-excellent ballad of “Wapping old
-Stairs,” which first appeared in the
-<cite>World</cite> for November 29th, 1787, and
-shines, a solitary pearl, in the pages of
-the <cite>British Album</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>The Della Cruscan mania was at its
-height—“bedridden old women and
-girls at their samplers began to rave,”—when
-Gifford, in search of a quarry for
-a seasonable satire, came before the
-town with the <cite>Baviad</cite>. Of this poem I
-shall say but little, as it is better known
-than the writings which it satirised. It
-contains passages of a certain coarse and
-rank vigor not difficult of attainment by
-a student of Dryden and Juvenal.
-There is, in fact, a sort of Billingsgate
-raciness about the <cite>Baviad</cite>; and the
-notes, which are better written than the
-poem, contain much amusing matter.
-The imputation made against the Della
-Cruscan love-poetry of licentious warmth
-is, however, wholly absurd—as absurd
-as the charge made by Mathias, the author
-of <cite>The Pursuits of Literature</cite>, that
-Merry—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Proves a designer works without design,</div>
- <div class="verse">And fathoms Nature with a Gallic line;</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>a notion which arose merely from the
-fact that he identified himself with the
-anarchists of France, and wrote odes
-for the Revolution Society, thereby acquiring
-the name, as Madame d'Arblay
-tells us, of “Liberty Merry,” and no
-doubt also the reputation for free-thinking
-then associated with everything
-French. As for detecting any breach
-of decorum in the mannered and falsetto
-gallantries of insincere Reubens addressing
-imaginary Annas, the idea was only
-possible to a satirist who started with
-the determination to fling all the mud
-he could find; and, it must be added,
-when he flung it at irreproachable characters
-such as Mrs. Piozzi, he did but
-excite a certain revulsion of sympathy
-for the victims. Nor was this Gifford's
-only misrepresentation. He asserted,
-in order to bring in an apt quotation
-from Martial, that the interview which
-finally took place between Merry and
-Mrs. Cowley, produced mutual disgust.
-This is not the testimony of Della Crusca
-himself in the poem of <cite>The Interview</cite>.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">My song subsides, yet ere I close</div>
- <div class="verse">The lingering lay that feeds my woes,</div>
- <div class="verse">Ere yet forgotten Della Crusca runs</div>
- <div class="verse">To torrid gales or petrifying suns,</div>
- <div class="verse">Ere, bowed to earth, my latest feeling flies,</div>
- <div class="verse">And the big passion settles on my eyes;</div>
- <div class="verse">Oh, may this sacred sentiment be known,</div>
- <div class="verse">That my adoring heart is Anna's own!</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Such is the immortality of poetic attachments—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">For ever wilt thou love and she be fair.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>That the poet was shortly afterward
-“married to another,” is sufficient to
-explain the cessation of the correspondence,
-from which Gifford argues that
-the interview resulted in aversion. And
-he might further have reflected that
-when a poet is reduced to talk of “petrifying
-suns” his correspondence has
-been known to cease for lack of ideas.</p>
-
-<p>The satirised poets did their best to
-retaliate on Gifford by abusive sonnets
-in the newspapers; and Mr. Jerningham
-wrote a feebly vituperative poem on
-Gifford and Mathias. The Della Cruscans
-had, undeniably, the worst of the
-battle. The efficacy of Gifford's satire
-in putting an end to the school is, however,
-more than doubtful. It is true
-that it afterwards came to be considered,
-naturally enough, that he had given the
-Della Cruscans their death-blow. Scott,
-for instance, writing in 1827, observes
-that the <cite>Baviad</cite> “squabashed at one
-blow a set of coxcombs who might have
-humbugged the world long enough”;
-but that is not the evidence of contemporary
-witnesses. Seven years after the
-publication of the <cite>Baviad</cite>, Mathias, in
-the preface to <cite>The Pursuits of Literature</cite>,
-remarks that “even the <cite>Baviad</cite>
-drops from Mr. Gifford's pen have
-fallen off like oils from the plumage of
-the Florence and Cruscan geese. I am
-told that Mr. Greathead and Mr. Merry
-yet write and speak, and Mr. Jerningham
-(poor man!) still continues 'sillier
-than his sheep.”</p>
-
-<p>This statement is in far better accordance
-both with the facts and the probabilities
-of the case. Satire, even first-rate
-satire, does not kill follies. They
-gradually die of inanition, or are crowded
-out by newer fashions. Laura Matilda's
-dirge in the <cite>Rejected Addresses</cite> is
-a standing monument of the vitality of
-Della Cruscanism more than twenty
-years after its supposed death-blow.</p>
-
-<p>The career as stage-writers of Merry,
-Greathead, and Jerningham, their bad
-tragedies and bad farces, do not belong
-to my present subject. Of the subsequent
-history of one or two of them a
-word may, however, be said. Jerningham
-lived to publish, as late as 1812,
-two editions of a flaccid poem, called
-<cite>The Old Bard's Farewell</cite>, after which
-he disappears from life and literature.
-Mrs. Cowley, perhaps the most interesting
-of the group, died in rural and religious
-retirement at Tiverton, in 1809.
-Mrs. Piozzi, as is well known, outlived
-all her contemporaries, and witnessed
-the popularity of a modern literature of
-which she had no very high opinion.</p>
-
-<p>As for Della Crusca, he married, in
-1791, Miss Brunton, an actress, whose
-sister became Countess of Craven, and
-who had played the heroine in his tragedy
-of <cite>Lorenzo</cite>. His reply to the remonstrances
-of his aunt on the <i lang="fr">mésalliance</i>
-shall be quoted, to show that he
-had his lucid intervals. “She ought,”
-he said, “to be proud that he had
-brought a woman of such virtue and talents
-into the family. Her virtue his
-marrying her proved; and her talents
-would all be thrown away by taking her
-off the stage.” Nevertheless, he afterwards
-weakly yielded to his relations,
-and withdrew her from the stage against
-her own inclination, thereby depriving
-himself of a source of income with
-which, as a gambler and <i lang="fr">bon vivant</i>, he
-could ill afford to dispense. He accordingly
-quitted England, and must have
-betaken himself to France, an adventure
-which befell him in Paris, in September,
-1792, being thus amusingly given by
-Horace Walpole:—</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>In the midst of the massacre of Monday last,
-Mr. Merry, immortalized, not by his verses,
-but by those of the <cite>Baviad</cite>, was mistaken for
-the Abbé Maury, and was going to be hoisted
-to the <i lang="fr">lanterne</i>. He cried out that he was
-Merry, the poet: the ruffians, who probably
-had never read the scene in Shakespeare, yet
-replied, “Then we will hang you for your bad
-verses”; but he escaped better than Cinna, I
-don't know how, and his fright cost him but a
-few “gossamery tears,” and I suppose he will
-be happy to re-cross the “silky ocean,” and
-shed dolorous nonsense in rhyme over the
-woes of <em>this</em> happy country.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>But England was not to see much
-more of Merry. English society was
-probably not so kind to the Radical husband
-of an actress as it had been to the
-bachelor of fashion. He withdrew, with
-his wife, to America, in 1796, and died,
-three years afterwards, of apoplexy, in
-his garden at Baltimore.</p>
-
-<p>Merry did not fail to find in his own
-day apologists of some pretensions to
-taste. I find in the notes to George
-Dyer's poem, <cite>The Poet's Fate</cite>, published
-in 1797—which contains early and interesting
-laudations not only of his school-fellows
-Lamb and Coleridge, but also of
-Wordsworth and Southey—the following
-reference to Merry:—“But, after
-all, though the hero of the <cite>Baviad</cite> betrayed
-glitter and negligence—though
-he misled the taste of some, too much
-inclined to admire and imitate defects,
-yet Merry's writings possess poetical
-merits; and the spirit of liberty and
-benevolence which breathes through
-them is ardent and sincere.” The criticism
-may be incorrect, but it is worth
-noting, because it is the criticism of a
-contemporary. Had it not been for
-Coleridge's fervently expressed admiration
-for Bowles's sonnets, which so perplexes
-critics who do not judge literature
-from a historical point of view, the
-world would have continued to sneer at
-him, with Byron, as “simple Bowles,”
-and to know him only by Byron's line.
-The fact is, literary history will never
-be intelligently written, till it is studied
-in the spirit of the naturalist, to whom
-the tares are as interesting as the wheat.
-We may, perhaps, give the Della Cruscans,
-with their desperate strainings after
-poetic fire and poetic diction, the
-credit of having done something to shake
-the supremacy of versified prose; of
-having forwarded, however feebly, the
-poetic emancipation which Wordsworth
-and Coleridge were to consummate.
-The false extravagance of Della Crusca
-may have cleared the way for the truthful
-extravagance of Keats. It is, I am
-aware, customary to attribute the regeneration
-of English poetry to the French
-Revolution, which “shook up the
-sources of thought all over Europe,”
-but the critics who use these glib catch-words
-are in no hurry to point out a
-concrete chain of logical connection between
-Paris mobs and sequestered poets.
-Plain judges will ever consider it a far
-cry from <cite>The Rights of Man</cite> to <cite>Christabel</cite>.
-At all events, Dyer was right in
-deprecating the savagery of Gifford's
-satire. The question</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel?</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>will apply to other schools and fashions
-besides that of the “elegant Cesario's,”
-whom Leigh Hunt designated <i lang="fr">par excellence</i>
-as “the plague of the Butterflies.”
-And here, I think, we touch upon the
-moral which I promised at the outset.</p>
-
-<p>It is not very long since the country,
-to which Della Crusca ultimately betook
-himself, received to her shores the reputed
-prophet of Æstheticism, whose
-career, in other respects, presented remarkable
-parallels with that of Robert
-Merry. Each made his poetical appearance
-in the columns of a newspaper
-called the <cite>World</cite>; each professed Republican
-opinions; each wrote poems
-not remarkable for truth to nature or
-sobriety of diction; each represented a
-school; and the name of each became
-as a red rag to the Giffords who played
-the part of the bull in the china shop.
-But it is not with this clumsy rage that
-posterity will regard our follies; nor is
-it useful, or desirable, that we should
-now so regard them. It is with a smile
-of amused anticipation, it is with a
-bland and philosophic interest, that the
-antiquarian of the future will turn to
-the pages of <cite>Punch</cite> or the libretto of
-<cite>Patience</cite>, to read of the Anna Matildas
-who lately delighted to apparel themselves
-in what Bramston called “shape-disguising
-sacks”—the Della Cruscas
-who took Postlethwaite for a great poet.—<cite>National
-Review.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2><a name="THE_SAVAGE" id="THE_SAVAGE">THE SAVAGE.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="aut">BY PROF. F. MAX MÜLLER.</p>
-
-
-<p>There are people in the world who are
-very fond of asking what they call point-blank
-questions. They generally profess
-to hate all shilly-shallying, and they are
-at no pains to hide their suspicion that
-anyone who declines to say yes or no
-to any question which they choose to ask
-has either his intellect clouded by metaphysics
-or has not the courage of his
-opinions. The idea that it is often more
-difficult to ask a sensible question than
-to answer it, and that a question, however
-pointed it may sound, may for all
-that be so blunt and vague that no
-accurate and honest thinker would care
-or dare to answer it, never enters their
-mind; while the thought that there are
-realms of knowledge where indefinite
-language is more appropriate, and in
-reality more exact and more truthful
-than the most definite phraseology, is
-scouted as mere fencing and intellectual
-cowardice.</p>
-
-<p>One of those point-blank questions
-which has been addressed to me by
-several reviewers of my books is this,
-“Tell us, do you hold that man began as
-a savage or not?” To say that man
-began as a savage, and that the most
-savage and degraded races now existing
-present us with the primeval type of man,
-seems to be the shibboleth of a certain
-school of thought, a school with which
-on many points I sympathize, so long as
-it keeps to an accurate and independent
-inquiry into facts, and to an outspoken
-statement of its discoveries, regardless
-of all consequences, but from which I
-totally dissent as soon as it tries to make
-facts subservient to theories. I am told
-that my own utterances on this subject
-have been ambiguous. Now even granting
-this, I could never understand why
-a certain hesitation in answering so difficult
-a question should rouse such angry
-feelings, till it began to dawn on me
-that those who do not unreservedly
-admit that man began as a savage are
-supposed to hold that man was created
-a perfect and almost angelic being.
-This would amount to denying the gospel
-of the day, that man was the offspring
-of a brute, and hence, I suppose,
-the Anathema.</p>
-
-<p>Now I may say this, that though I
-have hesitated to affirm that man began
-as a savage, whatever that may mean, I
-have been even more careful not to commit
-myself to the opinion that man began
-as an angel, or as a child, or as a
-perfect rational being. I strongly object
-to such alternatives as that if man
-did not begin as a savage he must have
-begun as a child. It would be dreadful
-if, because there is no sufficient evidence
-to enable us to form a decided opinion
-on any given subject, we were to be
-driven into a corner by such alternatives,
-instead of preserving our freedom
-of judgment until we have the complete
-evidence before us.</p>
-
-<p>But in our case the evidence is as yet
-extremely scanty, and, from the nature
-of the case, will probably always remain
-so. If we want to prove that man began
-as a child, what evidence can we produce?
-If we appealed to history, history
-is impossible before the invention
-of language; and what language could
-the primitive child have spoken, what
-life could it have lived, without a father
-and without a mother? If we give up
-history and appeal to our inner consciousness,
-our reason, nay, our very
-imagination, collapses when approaching
-the problem how such a child could have
-been born, how such a child could have
-been nourished, reared, and protected
-from wild animals and other dangers.
-We feel we have come to the end of our
-tether, and are running our head against
-a very old, but a very solid, wall.</p>
-
-<p>Has Kant then written in vain; and
-is it still supposed that our senses or our
-reason can ever reach transcendent
-truths? Has the lesson to be taught
-again and again that both our senses and
-our reason have their limits; that we are
-indeed tethered, and that it is no proof
-of intellectual strength or suppleness to
-try to stand on our own shoulders? We
-are so made that neither can our senses
-perceive nor can our reason conceive
-the real beginning and end of anything,
-whether in space or in time. And yet
-we imagine we can form a definite conception
-of the true beginning of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>Then what remains? There remains
-the humbler and yet far nobler task of
-studying the earliest records of man's
-life on earth: to go back as far as literature,
-language, and tools will allow us,
-and for a time to consider that as primitive
-which, whether as a tool, or as a
-word, or as a proverb, or as a prayer, is
-the last we can reach, and seems at the
-same time so simple, so rational, so intelligible,
-as to require no further antecedents.
-That is the true work of the
-historian, and of the philosopher too;
-and there is plenty of work left for both
-of them before they dive into the whirlpool
-of their inner consciousness to find
-there the primordial savage.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of allowing ourselves to be
-driven into a corner by such a question
-as “Did man begin as a savage or as a
-child?” we have a perfect right to ask
-the question, What is meant by these two
-words, <em>savage</em> and <em>child</em>?</p>
-
-<p>Has any one ever attempted to define
-the meaning of savage, and to draw a
-sharp line between a savage and a non-savage?
-Has any one ever attempted to
-define the meaning of child, if used in
-opposition to savage or brute? Have
-we been told whether by child is meant a
-suckling without a mother, or a boy who
-can speak, and count, and reason without
-a father? Lastly, are savage and child
-really terms that mutually exclude each
-other? May not a savage be a child,
-and may not a child be a savage?</p>
-
-<p>How, then, is any one who has given
-serious thought to the problem of the
-origin of mankind to answer such a question
-as “Tell me, do you hold that man
-began as a savage or as a child?”</p>
-
-<p>When we read some of the more recent
-works on anthropology, the primordial
-savage seems to be not unlike one of those
-hideous india-rubber dolls that can be
-squeezed into every possible shape, and
-made to utter every possible noise.
-There was a time when the savage was
-held up to the civilised man as the inhabitant
-of a lost paradise—a being
-of innocence, simplicity, purity, and
-nobility. Rousseau ascribed to his son
-of nature all the perfection which he
-looked for in vain in Paris and London.
-At present, when so many philosophers
-are on the lookout for the missing-link
-between man and beast, the savage, even
-if he has established his right to the
-name of man, cannot be painted black
-enough. He must be at least a man who
-maltreats his women, murders his children,
-kills and eats his fellow-creatures,
-and commits crimes from which even animals
-would shrink.</p>
-
-<p>This devil-savage, however, of the
-present anthropologist is as much a wild
-creation of scientific fancy as the angel-savage
-of former philosophers. The
-true Science of Man has no room for
-such speculations.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes the history of a name can
-take the place of its definition, but this
-is hardly so in our case. The Greeks
-spoke of barbarians rather than of
-savages, and the Romans followed their
-example, though they might possibly
-have called the national heroes and sages
-of Germany and Britain not only <i lang="la">barbari</i>
-but <i lang="la">feri</i>—that is, savages not very
-far removed from <i lang="la">feræ</i>, or wild beasts.
-Our own word <em>savage</em>, and the French
-<i lang="fr">sauvage</i>, meant originally a man who
-lived in the woods, a <i lang="la">silvaticus</i>. It was
-at first applied to all who remained outside
-the cities, who were not <i lang="la">cives</i>, or
-civilised, and who in Christian times
-were also called <em>heathen</em>—that is, dwellers
-on the heath.</p>
-
-<p>But all this does not help us much.
-Of course the Spaniards called the inhabitants
-of America savages, though it
-is now quite generally conceded that the
-Spanish conquerors supplanted a higher
-civilisation than they established.<a id="FNanchor_10_10" href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">10</a> The
-first discoverers of India called the
-naked Brahmans savages, though they
-could hardly have followed them in their
-subtle arguments on every possible
-philosophical topic. Even by us New
-Zealanders and Zulus are classed as
-savages. And yet a Zulu proved a
-match for an English bishop; and some
-of the Maori poems and proverbs may
-rightly claim a place by the side of
-English popular poems and proverbs.
-Nothing is gained if it is said that a
-savage is the opposite of a civilised man.
-Civilisation is the product of the uninterrupted
-work of many generations; and
-if savage meant no more than an uncivilised
-man, it is no great discovery to
-say that the first man must have been a
-savage. No doubt he could not have
-been acquainted even with what we consider
-the fundamental elements of civilisation,
-such as the arts of reading, writing,
-and arithmetic. His dress must
-have been very scanty, his food very
-primitive, his dwelling very uncomfortable,
-his family life very unrestrained.
-And yet, for all that, he might have been
-very far removed from the brute; nay,
-he might have been a perfect man, doing
-his duty in that state of life into which it
-pleased God to call him.</p>
-
-<p>Civilisation, as it is well known, is as
-vague a term as savagery. When Alexander,
-the pupil of Aristotle, the representative
-of Greek civilisation, stood before
-the naked philosophers of India,
-who were ὑλόβιοι dwellers in the forest,
-can we hesitate to say which of the two
-was the true savage and which the sage?
-To the New Zealander who has been
-brought into contact with European
-civilisation, his former so-called savage
-life seems to have gained little by recent
-improvements. A grand Maori chief,
-reputed to have been one of the strongest
-men in his youth, thus speaks of the old
-days:<a id="FNanchor_11_11" href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">11</a>—</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>In former times we lived differently; each
-tribe had its territory; we lived in <i>pas</i> placed
-high upon the mountains. The men looked to
-war as their only occupation, and the women
-and the young people cultivated the fields.
-We were a strong and a healthy people then.
-When the Pakeha came, everything began to
-die away, even the natural animals of the country.
-Formerly, when we went into a forest,
-and stood under a tree, we could not hear ourselves
-speak for the noise of the birds—every
-tree was full of them. Then we had pigeons
-and everything in plenty; now many of the
-birds have died out.... In those times the
-fields were well tilled, there was always plenty
-of provisions, and we wore few clothes—only
-our own mats of feathers. Then the missionaries
-came and took our children from the
-fields, and taught them to sing hymns: they
-changed their minds, and the fields were untilled.
-The children came home and quoted
-Gospel on an empty stomach. Then came the
-war between the Pakeha and the Maori that
-split up our homes, and made one tribe fight
-against the other; and after the war came the
-Pakeha settlers, who took our lands, taught us
-to drink and to smoke, and made us wear
-clothes that brought on disease. What race
-could stand against them? The Maori is passing
-away like the <i lang="mi">Kiwi</i>, the <i lang="mi">Tui</i>, and many
-other things, and by-and-by they will disappear
-just like the leaves of the trees, and nothing
-will remain to tell of them but the names of
-their mountains and their rivers!</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This is the view which a so-called
-savage takes of the benefits of European
-civilisation as contrasted with the contentment
-and happiness in which his
-forefathers had passed through this life.
-Let us now hear what a highly educated
-American, a scholar and a philosopher,
-Mr. Morgan, says of the character of the
-Iroquois, who are often quoted as specimens
-of extreme savagery:—</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>No test of friendship was too severe; no
-sacrifice to repay a favor too great; no fidelity
-to an engagement too inflexible for the red
-man. With an innate knowledge of the freedom
-and dignity of man, he has exhibited the
-noblest virtues of the heart, and the kindest
-deeds of humanity, in those sylvan retreats we
-are wont to look upon as vacant and frightful
-solitudes.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No one would suspect Morgan of exaggeration
-or sentimentality. And if it
-should be objected that these were private
-virtues only, and no proof of true
-civilisation or a well-organised society
-among the Iroquois, the same writer tells
-us:<a id="FNanchor_12_12" href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">12</a>—</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>They achieved for themselves a more remarkable
-civil organisation, and acquired a higher
-degree of influence, than any other race of Indian
-lineage, except those of Mexico and Peru.
-In the drama of European colonisation they
-stood for nearly two centuries with an unshaken
-front against the devastations of war,
-the blighting influence of foreign intercourse,
-and the still more fatal encroachments of a
-restless and advancing border population.
-Under their federal system, the Iroquois flourished
-in independence, and were capable of
-self-protection long after the New England and
-Virginia races had surrendered their jurisdictions
-and fallen into the condition of dependent
-nations; and they now stand forth upon
-the canvas of Indian history, prominent alike
-for the wisdom of their civil institutions, their
-sagacity in the administration of the league,
-and their courage in its defence.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The words of another author also may
-be quoted, who tells us:<a id="FNanchor_13_13" href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">13</a>—</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Their legislation was simple, and the penalties
-which gave law its sanctions well defined.
-Their league stood in the consent of the governed.
-It was a representative popular government,
-conceived in the wisdom of genuine
-statesmanship, and with the sagacity to provide
-against some of the dangers which beset popular
-institutions. It is said that the framers of
-our own (the American) government borrowed
-some of its features from the Iroquois league.
-Whether or not this be true, it is a matter of
-history that as early as 1755 a suggestion came
-from the Iroquois nation to the colonies that
-they should unite in a confederacy like their
-own for mutual protection.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>It is the fashion to quote against these
-favorable statements cases of cruelty
-committed by the Red Indians or the
-New Zealanders in their wars among
-themselves and in their resistance to
-their white enemies. But let us not forget
-the bloody pages of our own history.
-We should probably say that the eighteenth
-century was one of the most brilliant
-in the history of Europe. We
-should probably assign to England at
-that time a foremost place among
-European countries, and we know how
-high a position Scotchmen took during
-the last century in general culture, in
-philosophy, in science, and statesmanship.
-Yet, in his “History of England
-in the Eighteenth Century,” Mr.
-Lecky describes the common people of
-Scotland as broken into fierce clans,
-ruled by wild chieftains; as thieves and
-cattle-lifters, kidnappers of men and
-children to be sold as slaves; as
-ferocious barbarians, besotted with the
-most brutal ignorance, and the grossest
-and gloomiest superstitions, possessed of
-the rudest modes of agriculture, scratching
-the earth with a crooked piece of
-wood for a plough, and for a harrow a
-brush attached to the tail of a horse,
-otherwise devoid of harness; their food,
-oatmeal and milk, mixed with blood
-drawn from the living cow; their cooking,
-revolting and filthy, boiling their
-beef in the hide, and roasting fowls in
-their feathers, with many like customs
-and demoralising habits unknown to
-aboriginal life among the Red Indians.</p>
-
-<p>It will be clear after these few specimens,
-which might have been considerably
-increased, that we shall make no
-step in advance if we continue to use the
-word savage so vaguely as it has been
-hitherto used. To think is difficult, but
-it becomes utterly impossible if we use
-debased or false coin. I have been considered
-too inquisitive for venturing to
-ask anthropologists what they meant by
-a fetish, but I must expose myself once
-more to the same reproach by venturing
-to ask them to state plainly what they
-mean by a savage.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever other benefits a study of the
-science of language may confer, there is
-one which cannot be valued too highly—namely,
-that it makes us not only look
-<em>at</em> words, but <em>through</em> words. If we are
-told that a savage means an uncivilised
-man, then, to say that the first man was
-a savage is saying either nothing or what
-is self-evident. Civilisation consists in
-the accumulated wisdom of countless
-generations of men, and to say that the
-first generation of men was uncivilised
-is therefore pure tautology. We are far
-too tolerant with respect to such tautologies.
-How many people, for instance,
-have been led to imagine that such a
-phrase as the survival of the fittest
-contains the solution of the problem of
-the survival of certain species and the
-extinction of others? To the student
-of language the survival of the fittest is
-a mere tautology, meaning the survival
-of the fittest to survive, which is the
-statement of a fact, but no solution of it.</p>
-
-<p>It is easy to say that the meaning of
-savage has been explained and defined
-by almost every writer on anthropology.
-I know these explanations and definitions,
-but not one of them can be considered
-as answering the requirements
-of a scientific definition.</p>
-
-<p>Some anthropologists say that savage
-means wild and cruel. But in that case
-no nation would be without its savages.
-Others say that savages are people
-who wear little or no clothing. But in
-that case the greatest philosophers, the
-gymnosophists of India, would have to
-be classed as savages. If it means people
-without a settled form of government,
-without laws and without a religion,
-then, go where you like, you will not
-find such a race. Again, if people who
-have no cities and no central government
-are to be called savages, then the
-Jews would have been savages, the
-Hindus, the Arabs, the ancient Germans,
-and other of the most important
-races in the history of the world. In
-fact, whatever characteristics are brought
-forward as distinctive of a savage, they
-can always be met by counter-instances,
-showing that each definition would
-either include races whom no one dares
-to call savage, or exclude races whom no
-one dares to call civilised. It used to
-be imagined that the use of letters was
-the principal circumstance that distinguishes
-a civilised people from a herd of
-savages incapable of knowledge or reflection.
-Without that artificial help, to
-quote the words of Gibbon, “the human
-memory soon dissipates or corrupts the
-ideas committed to her charge, and the
-nobler faculties of the mind, no longer
-supplied with models or with materials,
-gradually forget their powers, the judgment
-becomes feeble and lethargic,
-the imagination languid or irregular.”
-Such arguments might pass in the days
-of Gibbon, but after the new light that
-has been thrown on the ancient history
-of some of the principal nations of the
-world they are no longer tenable.</p>
-
-<p>No one would call the ancient Brahmans
-savages, and yet writing was unknown
-to them before the third century
-<span class="smcap">B.C.</span> Homer, quite apart from his blindness,
-was certainly unacquainted with
-writing for literary purposes. The ancient
-inhabitants of Germany, as described
-by Tacitus, were equally ignorant
-of the art of writing as a vehicle of
-literature; yet for all that we could not
-say, with Gibbon, that with them the
-nobler faculties of the mind had lost
-their powers, the judgment had become
-feeble, and the imagination languid.</p>
-
-<p>And as we find that the use of letters
-is by no means an indispensable element
-of true civilisation, we should arrive
-at the same conclusion in examining
-almost every discovery which has been
-pointed out as a <i lang="la">sine quâ non</i> of civilised
-life. Every generation is apt to consider
-the measure of comfort which it
-has reached as indispensable to civilised
-life, but very often, in small as well as
-great things, what is called civilised to-day
-may be called barbarous to-morrow.
-Races who abstain from eating the flesh
-of animals are apt to look on carnivorous
-people as savages; people who
-abstain from intoxicating drinks naturally
-despise a nation in which drunkenness
-is prevalent. What should we say
-if we entered a town in which the streets
-were neither paved nor lighted, and in
-which the windows were without glass;
-where we saw no carriages in any of the
-thoroughfares, and where, inside the
-houses, ladies and gentlemen might be
-seen eating without forks and wearing
-garments that had never been washed?
-And yet even in Paris no street was paved
-before 1185. In London Holborn was
-first paved in 1417, and Smithfield in
-1614, while Berlin was without paved
-streets far into the seventeenth century.
-No houses had windows of glass before
-the twelfth century, and as late as the
-fourteenth century anything might be
-thrown out of window at Paris, after three
-times calling out “<i lang="fr">Gare l'eau!</i>” Shirts
-were an invention of the Crusades, and
-the fine dresses which ladies and gentlemen
-wore during the Middle Ages were
-hardly ever washed, but only refreshed
-from time to time with precious scents.
-In 1550 we are told that there existed in
-Paris no more than three carriages—one
-belonging to the Queen, the other to
-Diane de Poitiers, and the third to René
-de Laval. In England coaches (so called
-from the Hungarian <i lang="hu">kossi</i>) date from
-1580, though whirlicotes go back to the
-fourteenth century. So far as we know,
-neither Dante nor Beatrice used forks
-in eating, and yet we should hardly class
-them as savages.</p>
-
-<p>It is easy to say that all these are
-matters of small importance. No doubt
-they are, but we often see them treated
-as matters of great importance, when we
-speak of races with red skins or black
-skins. With us civilisation, whether
-consisting of these small or great
-matters, has often become a burden, a
-check rather than a help to the free
-development of all that is noble in
-human nature; while many conditions
-of life which we are inclined to call barbarous
-were almost essential for the
-growth of the human mind during its
-earlier stages. Can we imagine a religion
-growing up in modern Paris?
-Would a travelling bard, such as Homer,
-find an audience in the streets of London?
-Would a Socrates be listened to
-by the professors of Berlin? A Panini
-sitting almost naked under a pippal
-tree and composing the rules of his
-marvellous grammar of Sanskrit, a
-Bâdârâya<i>n</i>a with dishevelled hair, spinning
-out of his mind the subtle web of
-Vedânta philosophy, would be shunned
-as wild creatures by a young English
-officer, and yet, on the ladder
-that leads to the highest excellence of
-intellect, how many steps would the
-former stand above the latter! For
-carrying out the chief objects of our life
-on earth, very little of what is now called
-civilisation is really wanted. Many
-things are pleasant, without being really
-essential to our fulfilling our mission on
-earth. For laying the foundations of
-society, for settling the broad principles
-of law and morality, for discovering the
-deep traces of order and unity in nature,
-and for becoming conscious of the presence
-of the Divine within and without,
-a life in the forests, on the mountains,
-ay, even in the desert, is far more favorable
-than a lodging in Bond Street.</p>
-
-<p>The latest attempt which has been
-made at defining the true character of a
-savage restricts the distinctive characteristics
-of a savage to three—(1) that he
-murders his children, (2) that he kills
-and eats his fellow-men, (3) that he disregards
-certain laws of nature.</p>
-
-<p>Now in that sense it seems quite clear
-that the first man could not have been a
-savage, for if he had murdered his children
-we should not be alive; if he had
-eaten his fellow-men, supposing there
-were any to eat, again we should not be
-alive; and if he had disregarded certain
-laws of nature, in that case also, probably,
-we should not be alive.</p>
-
-<p>What, then, is to be done? Are we
-to say that there never were any
-savages, or that it is impossible to distinguish
-between a savage and a non-savage?
-Certainly not. All we have to
-do is to be on our guard against a very
-common trick of language, or rather
-against a very common mistake of
-philosophers, who imagine that the same
-name must always mean the same thing.
-All the difficulties hitherto detailed
-which have prevented anthropologists
-from agreeing on any real definition of
-savage have arisen from their having
-mixed up under the same name at
-least two totally different classes of men,
-both called savages in ordinary parlance,
-but each occupying its own place in the
-history of the world. How this should
-have happened is difficult to explain,
-but I think we can trace the first beginnings
-in the works of some of the earlier
-anthropologists, who were carried away
-by the idea that we can study in the illiterate
-races of the present day, such as
-we find in Africa, America, and Polynesia,
-the true character of the primitive
-man, as he emerged new-born from the
-bowels of nature. Scientific ethnologists
-have long since awaked from this fond
-dream, but the primitive savage has remained
-as a troublesome legacy in other
-quarters. Nothing can be more interesting
-than the study of races who
-have no literature, but whose former
-history may be read in their languages
-and their tools, and whose present state
-of civilisation or savagery may certainly
-be used to throw collateral light on many
-phases in the history of more highly
-civilised nations. Only let us remember
-that these races and their languages are
-as old as the most civilised races and
-their languages, while their history, if
-so we may call it, seldom carries us back
-beyond the mere surface of the day. If
-we in England are old, the Fuegians are
-not a day younger. If the question as
-to the age of the European and American
-races could be settled by geological
-evidence, it would seem as if America is
-now able to produce human skulls older
-than the Neanderthal skull.<a id="FNanchor_14_14" href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">14</a> No one,
-so far as I know, has ever succeeded in
-proving that after man had once been
-evolved or created, a new evolution or
-creation of man took place, attested by
-contemporaneous witnesses. The Duke
-of Argyll goes so far as to maintain<a id="FNanchor_15_15" href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">15</a> that
-those who hold the opinion that different
-races of men represent different species,
-or a species which spread from more
-than one place, stand outside the general
-current of scientific thought.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>But while scientific anthropologists
-have long given up the idea that, if we
-want to know the condition of primitive
-man, we must study it among the
-Fuegians or Eskimos, the subject has
-lost none of its charms. It is, no doubt,
-a very amusing occupation to run
-through the books of modern and
-ancient travellers, traders, or missionaries,
-to mark with pencil a strange
-legend here, and an odd custom there,
-to point out a similarity between a
-Shâman and an Archbishop, between a
-Hottentot and Homer. This kind of
-work can be done in the intervals of more
-serious studies, and if it is done with
-the facile pen of a journalist or the
-epigrammatic eloquence of a young
-lawyer, nothing can be more delightful.
-But it is dangerous work—so dangerous
-that the prejudice that has lately
-arisen among scientific anthropologists
-against Agriology seems justified, at
-least to a certain extent. There are
-truly scholarlike works on savages. I
-say scholarlike intentionally, because
-they are based on a scholarlike study of
-the languages spoken by the races whose
-mental organisation has to be analysed.
-The works of Bishops Callaway and
-Caldwell, of Brinton and Horatio Hale,
-of Gill, Bleek, and Hahn, the more
-general compilations of Waitz, Tiele,
-Lubbock, Tylor, and Reville, the clever
-contributions of A. Lang, John Fiske,
-and others, are but the first that occur
-to my mind as specimens of really useful
-work that may be done in this line.
-But the loose and superficial appeals to
-savages as the representatives of a brand-new
-humanity, fresh from the hands of
-the potter, the ignorant attempts at explaining
-classical myths from Melanesian
-tattle, the wild comparisons of Hebrew
-customs with the outrages of modern
-cannibals, have at last met with their
-well-merited reward, and the very name
-of savage is gradually disappearing from
-the best works on anthropology and
-philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>And yet there are savages, only we
-must distinguish. There are, as I
-pointed out long ago, two classes of
-savages, to say nothing of minor subdivisions—namely,
-<em>progressive</em> and <em>retrogressive</em>
-savages. There is a hopeful and
-a hopeless barbarism, there is a growing
-and a decaying civilisation. We owe a
-great deal to the Duke of Argyll, particularly
-in his last great work, <cite>The Unity
-of Nature</cite>, for having laid so much
-stress on the fact that of all works of
-nature man is the one most liable to two
-kinds of evolution, one ascending and
-the other descending. Like the individual,
-a whole family, tribe, or race of
-men may, within a very short time, rise
-to the highest pitch of virtue and culture,
-and in the next generation sink to
-the lowest level of vice and brutality.</p>
-
-<p>The first question, therefore, which
-we have to ask when we have to speak
-of savages, is whether there is any indication
-of their having once reached a
-higher stage from which they have
-descended, or whether they are only
-just ascending from that low but healthy
-level which must precede every attempt
-at what we call civilisation. We may
-call both by the same name of savages,
-but, if we do so, we must always remember
-that, from an historical point of
-view, no two stages in civilised life
-can be more apart from each other than
-that of the retrogressive and that of the
-progressive savage.</p>
-
-<p>But even after we have laid down this
-broad line of demarcation, we shall by
-no means find it easy to catch either a
-progressive or a retrogressive savage <i lang="fr">pur
-et simple</i>. If looking out for retrogressive
-or decaying savages, most people
-would naturally think of Fuegians,
-Tasmanians, Hottentots, Ashantis, Veddas,
-and Red Indians, and one of the
-strongest proofs of their decay would be
-derived from the fact that they are dying
-out wherever they are brought in contact
-with European civilisation. Now
-it is true that the Tasmanians have become
-extinct, and that several of the Red
-Indian tribes, too, have actually been
-destroyed by our civilisation. But we
-must not generalise too quickly. Some
-of these very tribes, the Red Indians,<a id="FNanchor_16_16" href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">16</a>
-seem to be recovering, seem to increase
-again, and to be able to hold their own
-against the baneful influences which
-threatened to destroy them. The negroes
-also are by no means dwindling
-away. On the contrary, they are increasing
-both in Africa and in America.
-We must therefore be careful before we
-deny the recuperative powers even of
-retrogressive savages, and we must look
-for other evidence beyond mere statistics
-in support of their hopeless degeneracy.</p>
-
-<p>Historical evidence of such gradual
-degeneracy is, from the nature of the
-case, almost impossible. We must
-trust, therefore, to less direct proof. I
-believe there is some distinct historical
-evidence in the case of the Central and
-South American races, that at the time
-of the arrival of Columbus and his successors
-civilisation had really been
-decaying for some time in America.<a id="FNanchor_17_17" href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">17</a>
-But in nearly all other cases we have to
-look out for other proofs in support of
-a higher antecedent civilisation possessed
-by tribes who, as we know them at
-present, have to be classed as savages.
-Such proofs, if they exist, must be sought
-for in language, religion, customs, tools,
-and works of art.</p>
-
-<p>As I look upon language neither as a
-ready-made gift of God nor as a natural
-growth of the human mind, but as, in
-the true sense of the word, a work of
-human art, I must confess that nothing
-has surprised me so much as the high
-art displayed in the languages of so-called
-savages. I do not wish to exaggerate;
-and I know quite well that a
-great abundance of grammatical forms,
-such as we find in these savage dialects,
-is by no means a proof of high intellectual
-development. But if we consider
-how small is the number of words and
-ideas in the ordinary vocabulary of an
-English peasant,<a id="FNanchor_18_18" href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">18</a> and if then we find
-that one dialect of the Fuegians, the
-Tagan, consists of about 30,000 words,<a id="FNanchor_19_19" href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">19</a>
-we certainly hesitate before venturing to
-classify the possessors of so vast an inherited
-wealth as the descendants of
-poor savages, more savage than themselves.
-Such facts cannot be argued
-away. We cannot prevent people from
-despising religious concepts different
-from their own, or from laughing at
-customs which they themselves could
-never adopt. But such a treasure of
-conceptual thought as is implied in the
-possession of a vocabulary of 30,000 entries
-cannot be ignored in our estimate
-of the antecedents of this Fuegian race.
-I select the Fuegians as a crucial test
-simply because Darwin<a id="FNanchor_20_20" href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">20</a> selected them
-as the strongest proof of his own theory,
-and placed them almost below the level
-reached by the most intelligent animals.
-I have always had a true regard for Darwin,
-and what I admired in him more than
-anything else was his fearlessness, his
-simple devotion to truth. I believe that
-if he had seen that his own theories were
-wrong, he would have been the first to
-declare it, whatever his followers might
-have said. But in spite of all that, no
-man can resist the influence of his own
-convictions. When Darwin looked at
-the Fuegians, he no doubt saw what he
-tells us, but then he saw it with Darwinian
-eyes. According to his account,
-the party of Fuegians whom he saw resembled
-the devils which come on the
-stage in such plays as <cite>Der Freischütz</cite>.<a id="FNanchor_21_21" href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">21</a>
-“Viewing such men, one can hardly
-believe,” he says, “that they are fellow-creatures,
-and inhabitants of the same
-world” (p. 235). “Their language, according
-to our notions, scarcely deserves
-to be called articulate. Captain Cook
-has compared it to a man clearing his
-throat, but certainly no European ever
-cleared his throat with so many hoarse,
-guttural, and clicking sounds.”</p>
-
-<p>Now, even with regard to their
-physical aspect, Darwin must have
-either been very unlucky in the Fuegians
-whom he met, or he cannot have kept
-himself quite free from prejudice. Captain
-Parker Snow, in his <cite>Two Years
-Cruise of Tierra del Fuego</cite> (London
-1857), speaks of them as without the
-least exaggeration really beautiful representatives
-of the human race. Professor
-Virchow, when exhibiting a number of
-Fuegians at Berlin, strongly protested
-against the supposition of the Fuegians
-being by nature an inferior race, so that
-they might be considered as a connecting
-link between ape and man. But
-what shall we say of Darwin's estimate
-of the Fuegian language? Here we
-can judge for ourselves, and I doubt
-whether, so far as this sound is concerned,
-anyone would consider Fuegian
-as inferior to English. Giacomo Bove,
-when speaking of the Tagan dialect,
-says, “le parole di quella sono dolci,
-piacevoli, piene di vocali.” And though
-he admits that some of the other dialects
-are harsher, yet that is very far as yet
-from the sound of clearing the throat.</p>
-
-<p>And, even if the sound of their language
-was as guttural as some of the
-Swiss dialects, how shall we account for
-the wealth of their vocabulary? Every
-concept embodied in their language is
-the result of hard intellectual labor; and
-although here again excessive wealth may
-be an embarrassment, yet there remains
-enough to prove a past that must have
-been very different from the present.</p>
-
-<p>The workman must at least have been
-as great as his work; and if the ruins of
-Central America tell us of architects
-greater than any that country could produce
-at present, the magnificent ruins
-in the dialects, whether of Fuegians,
-Mohawks, or Hottentots, tell us of mental
-builders whom no one could match
-at present. Even in their religious beliefs
-there are here and there rays of
-truth which could never have proceeded
-from the dark night of their actual
-superstitions. The Fuegians, according
-to Captain FitzRoy, believe in a just
-god and a great spirit moving about in
-forests and mountains. They may believe
-in a great deal more, but people
-who believe in a great spirit in forests
-and mountains, and in a just god, are
-not on the lowest step of the ladder
-leading from earth to heaven.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke of Argyll, in examining the
-principal races that are commonly called
-savage, has pointed out that degraded
-races generally inhabit the extreme ends
-of continents or tracts of country almost
-unfit for human habitation, or again
-whole islands difficult of access except
-under exceptionally favorable conditions.
-He naturally concludes that they
-did not go there of their own free will,
-but that they represent conquered
-races, exiles, weaklings, cowards, criminals,
-who saved nothing but their life in
-their flight before more vigorous conquerors,
-or in their exile from countries
-that had thrown them off like poison.
-Instead of looking on the inhabitants of
-Tierra del Fuego as children of the soil,
-Autochthones, or the immediate descendants
-of the mythical Proanthropoi,
-the Duke points out that it is far more
-likely they may have come from the north;
-that their ancestors may have participated
-in the blessings of the soil and climate
-of Chili, Peru, Brazil, or Mexico,
-possibly in the early civilisation of that
-part of the world; and that the wretchedness
-of the country into which they
-were driven fully accounts for their present
-degradation. Take away the wretchedness
-of their present home, educate a
-baby, as Captain FitzRoy did, under the
-beneficent influences of an English sky
-and of European civilisation, and in one
-generation, as Mr. Darwin tells us, “his
-intellect was good, and his disposition
-nice.”</p>
-
-<p>It is quite fair that those who oppose
-this theory should call upon the Duke to
-establish his view by the evidence of language.
-If the Fuegians were the descendants
-of the same race which reached a
-high pitch of civilisation in Peru, Mexico,
-or Central America, their language
-ought to show the irrefragable proof of
-such descent. If it did, his position
-would be impregnable. Unfortunately
-the materials now at hand have not yet
-been sufficiently examined to enable us
-to say either yes or no. Nor must we
-forget that language, when it is not fixed
-by a popular literature, is liable among
-nomadic tribes to unlimited variation.
-The number of languages spoken<a id="FNanchor_22_22" href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">22</a>
-throughout the whole of North and
-South America has been estimated to
-considerably exceed twelve hundred;
-and on the northern continent alone
-more than five hundred distinct languages
-are said to be spoken, which
-admit of classification among seventy-five
-ethnical groups, each with essential
-linguistic distinctions, pointing to its own
-parent stock. Some of these languages
-are merely well-marked dialects, with
-fully developed vocabularies. Others
-have more recently acquired a dialectic
-character in the breaking up and scattering
-of dismembered tribes, and present a
-very limited range of vocabulary, suited
-to the intellectual requirements of a
-small tribe or band of nomads. The
-prevailing condition of life throughout
-the whole North American continent
-was peculiarly favorable to the multiplication
-of such dialects and their growth
-into new languages, owing to the constant
-breaking up and scattering of
-tribes, and the frequent adoption into
-their numbers of the refugees from other
-fugitive broken tribes, leading to an intermingling
-of vocabularies and fresh
-modifications of speech. It is to be hoped
-that the study of native American languages
-may before long receive that
-attention which it so fully deserves. It
-must be taken up in good earnest, and
-with all the accuracy which we are accustomed
-to in a comparative study of
-Indo-European languages. All ethnological
-questions must for the present be
-kept in abeyance till the linguistic witness
-can be brought into court, and it
-would be extraordinary if the laurels
-that can here be gained should fail to
-stimulate the ambition of some young
-scholar in America.</p>
-
-<p>As to the Fuegians at Cape Horn, so
-at the North Pole the Eskimos, however
-low their present state of civilisation,
-have been looked upon as immigrants
-from a centre of civilisation located in a
-more temperate zone. The Eskimo
-leads the only life that is possible in his
-latitudes. Why he should have migrated
-there, unless driven by <i lang="fr">force majeure</i>, is
-impossible to say. Unless we are willing
-to admit a special Eskimo Adam, we
-have no choice except to look upon him
-either as a withering offshoot of the
-American moundbuilders, or as a weak
-descendant of Siberian nomads.</p>
-
-<p>In Africa, the most degraded races, the
-Bushmen, are clearly a corruption of the
-Hottentots, while it is well known that
-some eminent ethnologists look upon the
-Hottentots as degraded emigrants from
-Egypt. How much higher the civilisation
-of Africa stood in former ages, we
-know from the monuments of Egypt and
-Nubia, from the histories of Phœnicia,
-Carthage, and Numidia. If among the
-ruins of these ancient centres of civilisation
-we now find tribes whom European
-travellers would call savage, we see again
-that in the evolution of man retrogression
-is as important an element as progression.</p>
-
-<p>Even in Australasia, where we meet
-with the most repulsive customs and the
-most hopeless barbarism, the Duke of
-Argyll shows that, according to the
-principles of evolution, the separation
-of the islands from the Asiatic continent
-would date from a period anterior to the
-age of man, and that here too man must
-be an immigrant, a degraded offshoot
-from that branch of the human race
-which in China or India has risen to
-some kind of civilised life. For further
-details the pages in the last book of the
-Duke of Argyll, particularly chapter x.,
-on the “Degradation of Man,” should
-be consulted. It must suffice here to
-quote his summing up:—</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Instead of assuming these (savage) tribes to
-be the nearest living representatives of primeval
-man, we should be more safe in assuming them
-to represent the widest departure from that
-earliest condition of our race which, on the
-theory of development, must of necessity have
-been associated at first with the most highly
-favorable conditions of external nature.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>We have thus seen that, wherever we
-seem to lay hold of primeval savages who
-are supposed to represent to us the unchanged
-image of the primeval man, the
-evidence of their having been autochthonous
-in the places where we now find
-them is very weak, the proofs that they
-have never changed are altogether wanting;
-while geographical, physical, and
-linguistic considerations make it probable,
-though no more, that they originally
-came from more favored countries,
-that they were driven in the struggle for
-life into inhospitable climates, and that
-in accommodating themselves to the
-requirements of their new homes they
-gradually descended from a higher level
-of civilisation, indicated by their language
-and religion, to that low level
-in which we find them now. Some of
-them have sunk so low that, like individual
-members of the noblest families in
-Europe, they can no longer be reclaimed.
-Others, however, though shaken by sudden
-contact with the benefits and the
-dangers of a higher civilisation, may regain
-their former health and vigor, and,
-from having been retrogressive savages,
-become once more progressive in the
-great struggle for existence.</p>
-
-<p>But if in the cases just mentioned we
-feel inclined to recognise the influence of
-degradation, and if we class such races
-as the Fuegians, the Eskimos, the Bushmen
-and Hottentots, the Papuans and
-brown Polynesians, as retrogressive
-savages, the question arises where we
-can hope to find specimens of the progressive
-savage, or rather of the natural
-man, who might teach us something of
-what man may have been before civilisation
-completely changed him into an
-artificial being, forgetful of the essential
-purposes of life, and who feels at home
-no longer in fields and forests, on rivers
-or mountains, but only in that enchanted
-castle of custom and fashion which he
-has erected for himself out of the unmeaning
-fragments of former ages?</p>
-
-<p>My answer is that after we have collected
-the primitive tools and weapons
-which lie buried beneath the abodes of
-civilised man, our best chance of learning
-some of the secrets of primitive
-civilisation is to study the sacred hymns
-and the ancient legends of India, the
-traditions embodied in the Homeric
-poems, and whatever has been preserved
-to us of the most ancient literature of
-the progressive races of the world, the
-Italic, Celtic, Slavonic, and Teutonic
-races. This of course applies to the
-Aryan race only. The Semitic races are
-represented to us in their progress from
-a nomadic to a more or less civilised life
-in the Old Testament, in the earliest
-ballads of the Arabs, and in passages
-scattered in the inscriptions of Assyrians,
-Babylonians, and Phœnicians. China
-too in its ancient literature allows us an
-insight into the age of a nascent society,
-while Egypt discloses to us the most
-ancient of all civilisations, which can
-boast of a literature at a time when the
-very idea of writing was as yet unknown
-to all other nations.</p>
-
-<p>It is easy to say that all this is modern.
-In one sense no doubt it is. The Vedic
-literature, the most ancient of the whole
-Aryan race, presupposes a succession of
-intellectual strata which no chronology
-can measure. The language of the
-Veda is a work of art which it must have
-taken generations to build up. But is it
-reasonable to expect anything less
-modern in the history of the human
-race? And is there not a continuity in
-language and thought which allows us to
-see even in these literary remains, call
-them as modern as you like, something
-of the first dawn of human life. French
-is a very modern language, but in <i lang="fr">chien</i>
-we still hear the Sanskrit <i lang="sa">ṥvan</i>; in <em>journal</em>
-we recognise the old Vedic deity
-<i lang="sa">Dyaus</i>. In the same way we can go
-back from what is common to Sanskrit,
-Greek, and Latin, to what was the common
-language of the Aryans before they
-broke up in different nationalities. In
-that common Aryan vocabulary, again,
-we can distinguish between what is radical
-and primitive and what is formal
-and secondary. Thus we may go back
-beyond all so-called historical limits to
-a stage of primitive thought, represented
-by a small number of radical concepts,
-and a still smaller number of formal
-elements. And is not that enough? Is
-it not more historical and more trustworthy,
-at all events, than all <i lang="la">à priori</i>
-speculations? and have we not at least a
-right to demand this from our <i lang="la">à priori</i>
-friends, that, in running their tunnel
-from the other end, they should take
-care that when it emerges into the daylight
-of history it should meet the tunnel
-which comparative philology, mythology,
-and theology have carefully dug out on
-the opposite side through the solid rock
-of facts? It will never do for <i lang="la">à priori</i>
-theories to run counter to <i lang="la">à posteriori</i>
-facts. It is a fact, for instance, proved
-by historical evidence, that fetichism
-represents a secondary stage in the
-growth of religion, and that it presupposes
-an earlier stage, in which the name
-and the concept of something divine,
-the predicate of every fetich, was formed.
-It would be fatal, therefore, to any system
-of <i lang="la">à priori</i> reasoning if it placed
-fetichism before that phase in the development
-of human thought which is represented
-by the first formation of divine
-concepts. It would be a real hysteron-proteron.</p>
-
-<p>Again, it is a fact, proved by historical
-evidence, that all the words of the
-Aryan languages are derived from definite
-roots, expressive of definite concepts.
-It would therefore be fatal,
-again, to any system of <i lang="la">à priori</i> reasoning
-if it attempted to derive words direct
-from more or less inarticulate cries
-or imitations of cries, and not from that
-small number of roots which has been
-proved to supply all that is really wanted
-in explanation of all the facts of Aryan
-speech.</p>
-
-<p>Again, it is a fact, proved by historical
-evidence, that most of the ancient
-deities of the Aryan nations have names
-expressive of the great powers of nature,
-and it would be an insult to all historical
-scholarship if our <i lang="la">à priori</i> friends were to
-attempt to prove once more that the worship
-of Zeus was derived from a general
-reverence felt for a gentleman of the
-name of Sky, or the belief in Eos from
-a sentimental devotion excited by a
-young lady of the name of Dawn. I believe
-it will be admitted by all honest anthropologists
-that the philological identification
-of one single word, Dyaus in
-the Veda and Zeus in Homer, has done
-more for rectifying our ideas of the true
-course of ancient Aryan civilisation than
-all the myths and customs of savages put
-together.</p>
-
-<p>There was a time when the students
-of Oriental literature were inclined to
-claim an extravagant antiquity for the
-books which they had rescued from
-oblivion. But that tendency has now
-been changed into the very opposite.
-There may be traces of it among Chinese,
-sometimes among Egyptian and Accadian
-scholars, but wherever we have
-to deal with a real literature, whether
-in India, Persia, or Palestine, scholars
-are far more anxious to point out what
-is modern than what is ancient, whether
-in the Veda the Avesta, or the Old
-Testament. I certainly do not feel
-guilty of ever having claimed an excessive
-antiquity for the Rig-Veda. From
-the very first, though I placed the whole
-of Vedic literature before Buddhism,
-say the sixth century <span class="smcap">B.C.</span> and though,
-owing to the changes in language, style,
-and thought which are clearly perceptible
-in different parts of Vedic literature,
-owing also to certain astronomical
-dates, I ventured to place it between
-1000 and 1500 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>, yet I have never concealed
-my impression that some portions
-of the Veda may turn out to be of far
-more recent origin.<a id="FNanchor_23_23" href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">23</a></p>
-
-<p>But is not that sufficient? Is it not
-perfectly marvellous that so much that is
-really old, so much that carries us back
-more than 3,000 years, should have been
-preserved to us at all? Why will people
-ask for what is impossible? Savages
-they say, do not read and write, and yet
-they want to have trustworthy information
-from literary documents composed
-by those very savages who cannot read
-and write. Among the Aryan nations,
-I do not believe in any written books
-before the sixth century <span class="smcap">B.C.</span> In China,
-books may have been older, papyri are
-older in Egypt, and clay tablets in Babylon.
-But even when literature began,
-the very last that ancient people do is to
-write about themselves, about their manners
-and customs. What we know of
-the manners and customs of ancient
-people, when they were still passing
-through that phase which we call progressive
-savagery, comes to us from
-strangers only. As modern travellers
-give us full accounts of the life of
-savages who cannot speak and write for
-themselves, our only chance of learning
-something about our own ancestors, before
-they began to write, would be from
-ancient travellers who were interested in
-these promising savages. Now it is a
-piece of excessive good luck that, with
-regard to one of the Aryan races, with
-regard to our own Teutonic ancestors,
-we possess such a book, written by a
-stranger who felt deeply interested in
-German savages, and who has told us
-what they were, before they could write
-and tell us themselves what they were.
-If we want to study the progressive savage,
-not as he ought to have been, according
-to <i lang="la">à priori</i> philosophy, nor as
-he might have been, according to what
-we see among Fuegians of the present
-day, but as he really was according to
-the best information that could be collected
-by the best of historians, we must,
-read and read again the <cite>Germania</cite> of
-Tacitus.</p>
-
-<p>If history means the evidence of contemporary
-eye-witnesses, I doubt whether
-history will ever enable us to see
-further into the natural transition of
-barbarism into civilisation than in the
-<cite>Germania</cite> of Tacitus. To divide civilisation
-from barbarism by a sharp line is
-of course impossible. There are remnants
-of barbarism in the most advanced
-state of civilisation, and there
-are sparks of civilisation in the most
-distant ages of barbarism—at least of
-that healthy barbarism which is represented
-to us in the <cite>Germania</cite>, and of
-which we find but scanty fragments in
-the ancient literature of the civilising
-nations of the world.</p>
-
-<p>Here we may see ourselves as we
-were not quite two thousand years ago.
-Here we may see from how small beginnings
-the highest civilisation may be
-reached. Here we may study the
-natural man as he really was, in some
-respects certainly a savage, but a progressive
-savage, as we know from his
-later history, and certainly without one
-sign of that corruption and decay which
-is so plainly visible in Hottentots and
-Papuans.</p>
-
-<p>This book, the account of the site,
-the manners, and the inhabitants of
-Germany, by Tacitus, has had various
-fates. To every German, to every member
-of the Teutonic race, it has always
-been a kind of national charter, a
-picture of a golden age, adorned with
-all that is considered most perfect, pure,
-and noble in human nature; whereas
-French <em>savants</em> have often either ridiculed
-the work of Tacitus as a mere
-romance, or so interpreted his words as
-to turn the ancient Germans into real
-Hottentots.</p>
-
-<p>This controversy has been carried on
-during several centuries. M. Guizot,
-for instance, in his <cite>History of Civilisation</cite>
-completely ignoring the distinction
-between retrogressive and progressive
-savages, tried to show that there was
-little to choose between the Germans of
-Tacitus and the Red Indians of the
-present day.</p>
-
-<p>This controversy became embittered
-by a curious circumstance. Whereas
-Tacitus and other Roman writers spoke
-in glowing terms of the Teutonic races,
-their remarks on the Gauls, the ancient
-inhabitants of France, were not only far
-from complimentary, but happened to
-touch on points on which Frenchmen
-are particularly sensitive. Tertullian,
-who was a great admirer of the Jews,
-was very wroth with Tacitus because he
-used very anti-Semitic language. He
-actually calls Tacitus a “brawler, and
-the greatest teller of lies,”<a id="FNanchor_24_24" href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">24</a> The
-French do not differ much from that
-opinion, not so much because Tacitus
-spoke ill of the Jews, and likewise of
-the Celts of Gaul, as because he spoke
-so well of the <i lang="fr">paysans du Danube</i>. The
-ancient classical writers dwell rather
-strongly on the unfavorable side of the
-Celtic character. It is well known how
-low an opinion Aristotle formed of
-Celtic morality. Strabo says that the
-Celts are simple, but proud and sensitive,
-fond of dress and ornaments. It
-is even hinted that they dyed their hair,
-and allowed their mustache to grow, so
-that it interfered with the comfort of
-eating and drinking.<a id="FNanchor_25_25" href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">25</a> Strabo goes on
-to say that they are not malicious, but
-reckless, changeable, fond of innovation,
-and never to be depended on. They
-are quick in their resolutions, but often
-inconsiderate, fond of war, brave, but
-intolerably conceited if victorious, and
-quite demoralised if defeated. Polybius
-confirms that their first onslaught is
-terrible, but both Cæsar and Livy agree
-as to their want of steadiness and perseverance.
-Other Latin authors add that
-they are unmanageable and inclined to
-revolutions, and that, owing to continual
-factions, many are obliged to leave
-the country, and to try their fortunes
-as adventurers elsewhere. Still darker
-colors were added by others to this picture
-of national depravity. The state of
-morality in Gaul was such that it was
-considered infamous for a father to be
-seen in company with his son before the
-latter had come of age. At the death
-of a nobleman his widow was, as a
-matter of course, subjected to a trial as
-to whether she had been the cause of her
-husband's death. Strabo affirms that it
-was their custom to cut off the heads of
-their enemies after a battle, and to hang
-them on the heads of their horses, or
-nail them over their doors. While German
-scholars composed this mosaic out
-of all the stones that classical writers
-had ever thrown at the inhabitants of
-Gaul, French writers retaliated by either
-throwing discredit on Tacitus, the supposed
-encomiast of the Germans, or by
-showing that the account which Tacitus
-gives of the ancestors of the Teutonic
-race proves better than anything else
-that, at his time, the Germans had not
-yet emerged from a state of the grossest
-barbarism, and were incapable, therefore,
-as yet of vices of which they maintain
-are the outcome of a more advanced
-state of civilisation.</p>
-
-<p>To my mind, apart from any national
-idiosyncrasies, the description which
-Tacitus gives us of the Germans, as he
-had seen them, is perfectly unique and
-invaluable as a picture of what I should
-willingly call the life of progressive savages.
-What should we give if, besides
-the hymns of the Rig-Veda, we had the
-accounts of travellers who had actually
-seen the ancient Rishis of India with
-their flocks and families, their priests
-and sacrifices, their kings and battles?
-What should we give if, besides the
-Homeric poems, we had the work of an
-eyewitness who could describe to us the
-real Troy, and the real fight between
-Greece and Asia Minor? This is what
-Tacitus has done for Germany, and at a
-time when the ancient religion was still
-living, when the simple laws of a primitive
-society were still observed, and
-when the epic poems of a later time were
-still being sung as ballads at the feasts
-of half-naked warriors! In Tacitus,
-therefore, and not in the missionary
-accounts of Melanesian savages, should
-we study the truly primitive man, primitive
-in the only sense in which we shall
-ever know of primitive man, and primitive
-certainly in a far truer sense than
-Papuans or Fuegians are likely to be in
-the nineteenth century. I cannot understand
-how an historian like Guizot
-could have allowed himself to be so
-much misguided by national prejudice
-as to speak of Tacitus as a kind of
-Montaigne or Rousseau, who, in a fit of
-disgust with his own country, drew a
-picture of Germany as a mere satire on
-Roman manners, or to call the <cite>Germania</cite>
-“the eloquent sulking of a
-patriotic philosopher who wishes to see
-virtue where he does not find the disgraceful
-effeminacy and the elegant
-depravity of an old society.” Surely
-the work of Tacitus cannot have been
-very fresh in the memory of the great
-French historian when he delivered this
-judgment. If Tacitus, like Rousseau or
-Voltaire, had intended to draw the
-picture of an ideal barbarism, would he
-have mentioned the many vices of the
-German Utopia, the indolence of the
-Germans, their drunkenness, their
-cruelty to slaves, their passion for gambling,
-and their riotous revels? Besides,
-three-fourths of his book treat of subjects
-which have no bearing whatever on
-Roman society, nay, which are of so
-little interest to the general reader that
-I doubt whether many Romans would
-have taken the trouble to read them.
-The facts which came to the knowledge
-of Tacitus are so loosely strung together
-that his book looks more like a collection
-of memoranda than the compact and
-pointed pamphlet of a political satirist.
-We need only read the letters of Voltaire
-on England, or Montalembert's pamphlet,
-<cite>De l'Angleterre</cite>, in order to perceive
-the difference between a political
-satire and an historical memoir. No
-doubt a man of the temper of Tacitus
-would naturally dwell with satisfaction
-on the bright side of the German character,
-and, while holding before the eyes of
-his own nation the picture of a brave and
-simple, religious and independent race,
-might naturally think of what Rome once
-had been, and was no longer. But there
-is no more sarcasm or satire in his work
-than is inseparable from a straightforward
-statement of facts when addressed
-to ears no longer accustomed to the
-sound of unvarnished truth.</p>
-
-<p>So little did M. Guizot perceive the
-unique character of the <cite>Germania</cite> of
-Tacitus as an historical document of the
-earliest stage of society, that he amused
-himself with collecting from various
-books of travel a number of facts observed
-among the very lowest races in
-America and Africa, which, as he thinks,
-form an exact parallel to the statements
-of Tacitus with regard to the good and
-bad qualities of the Germans. His
-parallel columns, which occupy nearly
-ten pages, are certainly amusing, but
-they prove nothing, least of all that there
-was no difference between the healthy
-sons of Germany and the tattooed cannibals
-of New Zealand. If they prove
-anything, it is that there is one kind of
-barbarism through which every nation
-has to pass, the childhood and wild
-youth of a race, to be followed by the
-mature vigor of a nation's manhood, and
-that there is another kind of barbarism
-which leads to nothing, but ends in mere
-brutality, shrinking from contact with
-higher civilisation and succumbing when
-it attempts to imitate with monkeyish
-delight the virtues and vices of a more
-advanced society. Why is it that the
-fresh breezes of European civilisation
-proved fatal to the consumptive barbarism
-of the wretched inhabitants of
-Australia, while the strong constitution
-of the Germans of Tacitus resisted
-even the poisonous vapors of Roman
-life? When the results are so different,
-surely there must be a difference in the
-antecedents, and though M. Guizot is
-successful in showing that in some respects
-the ancient Germans did the same
-things and said the same things as Ojibways
-and Papuans, he forgets in drawing
-his conclusion the old proverb, <i lang="la">Si duo
-dicunt idem, non est idem</i>.</p>
-
-<p>After these remarks it will perhaps
-seem less surprising that students of
-antiquity should decline to answer the
-point-blank question whether man began
-his life on earth as a savage. Every
-definition that has been attempted of
-a savage in general, has broken down as
-soon as it was confronted with facts.
-The only characteristic of the savage
-which remained, and was strong enough
-to withstand the sharpest cross-examination,
-was cannibalism. But I am not
-aware that even the most extreme believers
-in the primitive savage would insist
-on his having been necessarily a cannibal,
-a kind of human Kronos, swallowing
-his own kith and kin.</p>
-
-<p>Every attempt to place the savage who
-can <em>no longer</em> be called civilised in the
-place of the savage who can <em>not yet</em> be
-so-called, could only end, as it has, in
-utter confusion of thought.</p>
-
-<p>Something, however, will be gained,
-or at all events some kind of mutual
-understanding will become possible, if
-in future discussions on the character of
-primitive man a careful distinction is
-made between the two kinds of savages,
-the progressive and the retrogressive.
-When that distinction has once been
-grasped, the question whether man began
-as a savage has no longer anything
-perplexing about it. Man certainly began
-as a savage, but as a progressive
-savage. He certainly did not begin with
-an innate knowledge of reading, writing
-and arithmetic; but, on the other
-hand, there is nothing to lead us to suppose
-that he was a being altogether foul
-and filthy, that when he grew up he invariably
-ill-treated his wife or wives, and
-that still later in life he passed his time
-in eating his children.</p>
-
-<p>If we must need form theories or
-reason by analogy on the primitive state
-of man, let us go to the nearest <i lang="fr">ci-près</i>,
-such as the Vedic Hindus, or the Germans
-as described by Cæsar and
-Tacitus, but not to Fuegians, who in
-time and probably in space also are the
-most widely removed from the primitive
-inhabitants of our globe. If we knew
-nothing of the manners and customs of
-the Saxons, when they first settled in
-these isles, should we imagine that they
-must have resembled the most depraved
-classes of modern English society? Let
-us but once see clearly that the Fuegian,
-whether as described by Darwin or by
-Parker Snow, is the most modern of
-human beings, and we shall pause before
-we see in him the image of the first
-ancestor of the human race. Wherever
-we look we can see the rise and fall of
-the human race. We can see it with
-our own eyes, if we look at the living
-representatives of some of our oldest and
-noblest families; we can read it in history
-if we compare ancient India with
-modern India, ancient Greece with modern
-Greece. The idea that the Fuegian
-was salted and preserved for us during
-many thousands of years, so that we
-might study in him the original type of
-man, is nothing but a poetical sentiment
-unsupported alike by fact, analogy, and
-reason.</p>
-
-<p>I know full well that when I speak of
-the Germans of Tacitus or of the Aryans
-of the Veda as the <i lang="fr">ci-près</i> of primitive
-man, all the indications of modern, or
-at all events of secondary and tertiary
-thought which I have pointed out myself
-in the hymns of the Rig-Veda, and which
-might easily be collected from the book
-of Tacitus, will be mustered against me.
-Must I quote the old saying again: <i lang="la">Est
-quoddam prodire tenus si non datur ultra</i>?
-All I maintain is that these historical
-documents bring us as near to the primitive
-man as historical documents can
-bring us; but that the nearest point
-within our reach is still very far from the
-cradle of the human race, no one has
-pointed out more often than myself.</p>
-
-<p>There is, however, plenty of work
-still to be done in slowly following up
-the course of human progress and tracing
-it back to its earliest stages, as far
-as literary, monumental, and traditional
-documents will allow us to do so.
-There are many intricate windings of
-that historical river to be explored,
-many riddles to be solved, many lessons
-to be learnt. One thing only is quite
-certain—namely, that the private diary
-of the first man will never be discovered,
-least of all at Cape Horn.</p>
-
-<p>I have thus tried to show how untenable
-is the theory which would boldly
-identify the modern savage with primitive
-man, and how cautious we ought to
-be whenever we take even a few hints
-here and there from degraded tribes of
-the present day in order to fill out our
-imaginary picture of the earliest civilisation
-of our race. Some lessons, and
-even important lessons, may be learnt
-from savages, if only they are studied in
-a truly scholarlike spirit, as they have
-been, for instance, by Callaway and
-Codrington, by Waitz and Tylor. But
-if the interpretation of an Homeric custom
-or myth requires care, that of African
-or Polynesian customs or myths
-requires ten times greater care, and
-if a man shrinks from writing on the
-Veda because he does not know Sanskrit,
-he should tremble whenever he writes
-the names of Zulus, unless he has some
-idea of what Bântu grammar means.</p>
-
-<p>In arguing so far, I have carefully
-kept to the historical point of view,
-though I am well aware that the principal
-traits in the imaginary picture of
-primitive man are generally taken from
-a very different source. We are so made
-that for everything that comes before us
-we have to postulate a cause and a beginning.
-We therefore postulate a
-cause and a beginning for man. The
-ethnologist is not concerned with the
-first cause of man, but he cannot resist
-the craving of his mind to know at least
-the beginning of man.</p>
-
-<p>Most ethnologists used to hold that,
-as each individual begins as a child,
-mankind also began as a child; and they
-imagined that a careful observation of
-the modern child would give them some
-idea of the character of the primeval
-child. Much ingenuity has been spent
-on this subject since the days of Voltaire,
-and many amusing books have
-been the result, till it was seen at last that
-the modern baby and the primeval baby
-have nothing in common but the name,
-not even a mother or a nurse.</p>
-
-<p>It is chiefly due to Darwin and to the
-new impulse which he gave to the theory
-of evolution that this line of argument
-was abandoned as hopeless. Darwin
-boldly asked the question whose child the
-primeval human baby could have been,
-and he answered it by representing the
-human baby as the child of non-human
-parents. Admitting even the possibility
-of this <i lang="la">transitio in aliud genus</i>, which the
-most honest of Darwin's followers
-strenuously deny, what should we gain
-by this for our purpose—namely, for
-knowing the primitive state of man, the
-earliest glimmerings of the human intellect?
-Our difficulties would remain exactly
-the same, only pushed back a little
-further.</p>
-
-<p>Disappointing as it may sound, the
-fact must be faced, nevertheless, that
-our reasoning faculties, wonderful as
-they are, break down completely before
-all problems concerning the origin of
-things. We may imagine, we may believe,
-anything we like about the first
-man; we can know absolutely nothing.
-If we trace him back to a primeval cell,
-the primeval cell that could become a
-man is more mysterious by far than the
-man that was evolved from a cell. If
-we trace him back to a primeval pro-anthropos,
-the pro-anthropos is more unintelligible
-to us than even the protanthropos
-would be. If we trace back the
-whole solar system to a rotating nebula,
-that wonderful nebula which by evolution
-and revolution could become an inhabitable
-universe is, again, far more
-mysterious than the universe itself.</p>
-
-<p>The lesson that there are limits to our
-knowledge is an old lesson, but it has to
-be taught again and again. It was
-taught by Buddha, it was taught by
-Socrates, and it was taught for the last
-time in the most powerful manner by
-Kant. Philosophy has been called the
-knowledge of our knowledge; it might
-be called more truly the knowledge of
-our ignorance, or, to adopt the more
-moderate language of Kant, the knowledge
-of the limits of our knowledge.—<cite>Nineteenth
-Century.</cite></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2 id="LE_BONHOMME_CORNEILLE">LE BONHOMME CORNEILLE.</h2>
-
-<p class="aut">BY HENRY M. TROLLOPE.</p>
-
-
-<p>The Marquis de Dangeau wrote, in
-his journal for the 1st of October, 1684:
-“Aujourd'hui est mort le bonhomme
-Corneille.” The illustrious dramatist
-was an old man, for he had been born
-in 1606. He was a good old fellow in
-his way, being always an honest and upright
-man, though the appellation “le
-bonhomme” was less frequently given to
-him than to La Fontaine.</p>
-
-<p>Had it been as much the fashion fifty
-years ago as now to honor great men by
-anniversaries, in the year 1836 a more
-gracious homage might have been paid
-to the author of <cite>Le Cid</cite>. At Christmastime
-in that year this play burst upon
-Paris. As a bombshell carries with it
-destruction, the <i>Cid</i> gave sudden and
-unexpected delight to all who saw it.
-It is the first of French tragedies that
-has left a mark; no earlier tragedy is
-now generally remembered. Corneille
-woke up to find himself famous. It appears
-that, though he was by no means
-a novice, he was as much astonished as
-anyone at the great success of his play.
-The Court liked it, and the town liked
-it. It was at once translated into many
-languages. In France people learnt
-passages of it by heart, and for a while
-there was a popular saying, “Cela est
-beau comme le <i>Cid</i>.” If the good folk
-in Paris had only bethought themselves
-in 1836 of celebrating the bi-centenary
-of the appearance of the <i>Cid</i> the event
-would have sounded happier than of
-now celebrating the author's death.
-But fashion rules much in this world.
-It has not yet become fashionable to
-recollect the date of a great man's great
-work—fifty years ago it had not become
-fashionable to have centenaries at all;
-so that now, all other excuses failing,
-we must seize upon the bi-centenary of
-Corneille's death as a date upon which
-to honor him. Let us hope that on the
-6th of June, 1906, the ter-centenary of
-his birth, a more joyful note may be
-sung.</p>
-
-<p>We have said that Pierre Corneille
-was a good old fellow in his way, but it
-was his misfortune that his way was not
-more like that of other men. He was
-very poor during the last ten or twelve
-years of his life. He walked out one
-day with a friend, and went into a shop
-to have his shoe mended. During the
-operation he sat down upon a plank, his
-friend sitting beside him. After the
-cobbler had finished his job Corneille
-took from his purse three bits of money
-to pay for his shoe, and when the two
-gentlemen got home Corneille's friend
-offered him his purse, but he declined
-all assistance. Corneille was of a proud
-and independent nature. He is reported
-to have said of himself, “Je suis
-saoûl de gloire, mais affamé d'argent.”
-He has been accused of avarice—unjustly,
-we think—because he tried to get as
-much money as he could for his plays.
-If a man wants money he will try to obtain
-that which he thinks should belong
-to him. And if he wants it badly, his
-high notions of dignity—if it be only
-mock dignity—will go to the wall. No
-fine gentleman nowadays would think it
-beneath him to take £100 from a publisher
-or from a theatrical manager after
-it had been fairly earned. Some ask for
-their £100 before it has been earned.
-Two hundred years ago a poet was supposed
-to be paid with honor and glory,
-but, unfortunately for himself, Corneille
-wanted more solid acknowledgment.
-And two hundred years ago the rights
-of authorship were not so well understood
-as now. In France, as in England,
-very few men could have lived by
-their pen alone. It is true that the dramatists
-were among the most fortunate,
-but many years had elapsed since Corneille's
-plays had been popular at the
-theatre. In 1670 Molière, as theatrical
-manager, had given him 2,000 francs for
-a piece. This was considered a large
-sum, and it may be doubted if Molière's
-company ever got back their money.
-The play was <cite>Tite et Bérénice</cite>, and it
-was played alternately with <cite>Le Bourgeois
-Gentilhomme</cite>. We may judge which of
-the two plays we should like to see best.
-Corneille had to make the most of his
-2,000 francs, for his pension, supposed
-to be paid to him every year from the
-Civil List, was always delayed. The
-year was made to have fifteen months!
-Sometimes the pension was not paid at
-all. So that poor Corneille was hard
-pressed for money in the latter years of
-his life, from 1672 to 1684, while his
-years of greatest triumph had been from
-1636 to 1642. And he had small resources
-except what had come to him
-from writing. His two sons went into
-the army, and he had to provide for
-them at a time when his payments from
-the theatre were diminishing. There is
-no evidence which should make us think
-he was avaricious or greedy for money.</p>
-
-<p>In his manner Corneille was apt to be
-awkward and ungainly. A contemporary
-says that when he first saw him he
-took him for a tradesman at Rouen.
-Rouen was his birthplace, and there he
-lived until his avocations compelled
-him, against his will, to live in Paris.
-Like La Fontaine, he made a poor figure
-in society. He did not talk well. He
-was not good company, and his friends
-were bound to confess that he was rather
-a bore. Those who knew him well
-enough would hint to him his defects,
-at which he would smile, and say, “I
-am none the less Pierre Corneille.”
-But his physiognomy, when observed,
-was far from commonplace. His nephew,
-Fontenelle, says of him: “His face was
-pleasant enough; a large nose, a good
-mouth, his expression lively, and his
-features strongly marked and fit to be
-transmitted to posterity in a medal or in
-a bust.” Corneille begins a letter to
-Pellisson with the following verses, describing
-himself:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">En matière d'amour je suis fort inégal,</div>
- <div class="verse">Je l'écris assez bien, je le fais assez mal;</div>
- <div class="verse">J'ai la plume féconde et la bouche stérile,</div>
- <div class="verse">Bon galant au théâtre et fort mauvais en ville;</div>
- <div class="verse">Et l'on peut rarement m'écouter sans ennui</div>
- <div class="verse">Que quand je me produis par la bouche d'autrui.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>This is a charming little bit of autobiography.
-And in the same letter, after
-the verses, the old poet says, “My poetry
-left me at the same time as my teeth.”</p>
-
-<p>All this he writes, laughing in his
-sleeve. But often enough he was melancholy
-and depressed. Again we quote
-from Fontenelle: “Corneille was of a
-melancholy temperament. He required
-stronger emotions to make him hopeful
-and happy than to make him mournful
-or despondent. His manner was
-brusque, and sometimes rude in appearance,
-but at bottom he was very easy to
-live with, and he was affectionate and
-full of friendliness.” When he heard
-of large sums of money being given to
-other men for their plays, for pieces that
-the world liked perhaps better than his
-own, he got unhappy, for he felt that
-his glory was departing from him. Need
-we go back two hundred years to find
-instances of men who have become unhappy
-from similar causes? There are
-many such in London and in Paris at
-this moment. Early in his career, before
-the days of the <i>Cid</i>, he was proud
-of his calling. He gloried in being one
-of the dramatic authors of his time.
-He says:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Le théâtre est un fief dont les rentes sont bonnes.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>And also:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Mon travail sans appui monte sur le théâtre,</div>
- <div class="verse">Chacun en liberté l'y blâme ou l'idolâtre.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Then he had the ball at his feet, and all
-the world was before him. He had just
-made his name, and was honored by
-Richelieu—being appointed one of his
-five paid authors. But minister and
-poet did not like each other. The autocrat
-was in something of the same position
-towards his inferior as is the big boy
-towards the little boy who gets above
-him at school. The big boy wanted to
-thrash the little boy, and the little boy
-wouldn't have it; but at last he had to
-suffer for his precociousness. The big
-boy summoned other little boys to his
-assistance, and made them administer
-chastisement to the offender. This was
-the examination of the <i>Cid</i> by the Academy.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“En vain, contre le <i>Cid</i> un ministre se ligue,</div>
- <div class="verse">Tout Paris pour Chimène a les yeux de Rodrigue;</div>
- <div class="verse">L'Académie en corps a beau le censurer,</div>
- <div class="verse">Le public révolté s'obstine à l'admirer.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Corneille was a voluminous writer.
-He wrote nearly as many plays as Shakespeare,
-but his later ones are not equal
-to those of his best days. And he wrote
-a translation in verse of the <cite>Imitatione
-Christi</cite>. This was a pecuniary success.
-The book was bought and eagerly read,
-though now it is rarely taken down from
-the shelf. But his prose, unlike Racine's,
-which charms by its grace, is insignificant.
-And, unlike Racine, his
-speech when he was received into the
-French Academy was dull, and disappointed
-everybody. An Academical reception
-is one of the occasions in which
-Frenchmen have always expected that
-the recipient of honor should distinguish
-himself. But it was not in Corneille's
-power to please his audience by
-making a speech. We need not be too
-heavy upon him because his glory was
-not universal. As he said of himself,
-he was none the less Pierre Corneille.
-Readers have generally extolled Corneille
-too highly, or have not given him his
-due praise. This is partly from the fact
-that after his great success he wrote
-much that was unworthy of his former
-self; and partly, we believe at least,
-that even in his best plays he is too
-spasmodic. His fine lines come out too
-much by starts, amidst much that is
-uninteresting. The famous “Qu'il
-mourût” (<cite>Horace</cite>, Act III., sc. 6) is
-very grand, and the next line, though
-not English in sentiment, is fine. But
-the four succeeding lines are washy, and
-take away from the dignity of what has
-just gone before. Instinctively Corneille
-was a dramatist, and had it not
-been for the laws of the unities which
-bound him down to conventional and
-unwise rules, he would in all probability
-have risen higher in the world's esteem.
-He was also a poet, having the gift of
-poetical expression more at his command
-than the larger measure of composition
-in prose. His lines are often
-sweet and very stirring, for he was
-moved towards his subject with a true
-feeling of poetic chivalry. None of his
-lines is more quoted than one in which
-he proudly spoke of himself:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Je ne dois qu'à moi seul toute ma renommée.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<p class="right">—<cite>Gentleman's Magazine.</cite></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2><a name="CHARLES_DICKENS_AT_HOME" id="CHARLES_DICKENS_AT_HOME">CHARLES DICKENS AT HOME.</a><br />
-
-<span class="smcap"><small>With Especial Reference to His Relations with Children</small>.</span></h2>
-
-<p class="aut">BY HIS ELDEST DAUGHTER.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>Charles Dickens was a very little
-and very sickly boy, but he had always
-the belief that this circumstance had
-brought to him the inestimable advantage
-of having greatly inclined him to
-reading.</p>
-
-<p>When money troubles came upon his
-parents, the poor little fellow was taken
-away from school and kept for some
-time at an occupation most distasteful to
-him, with every surrounding that could
-jar on sensitive and refined feelings.
-But the great hardship, and the one
-which he felt most acutely, was the want
-of the companionship of boys of his own
-age. A few years later on we read in
-“Mr. Forster's Life” a schoolfellow's
-description of Charles Dickens: “A
-healthy-looking boy, small, but well-built,
-with a more than usual flow of
-spirits, inclining to harmless fun,
-seldom, if never, I think, to mischief.
-He usually held his head more erect
-than lads ordinarily do, and there was a
-general smartness about him.” This is
-also a very good personal description of
-the man.</p>
-
-<p>I have never heard him refer in any
-way to his own childish days, excepting
-in one instance, when he would tell the
-story of how, when he lived at Chatham
-he and his father often passed Gad's
-Hill in their walks, and what an admiration
-he had for the red-brick house with
-its beautiful old cedar trees, and how it
-seemed to him to be larger and finer
-than any other house; and how his
-father would tell him that if he were to
-be very persevering and were to work
-hard he might perhaps some day come
-to live in it. I have heard him tell this
-story over and over again, when he had
-become the possessor of the very place
-which had taken such a hold upon his
-childish affections. Beyond this, I cannot
-recall a single instance of any allusion
-being made by him to his own early childhood.</p>
-
-<p>He believed the power of observation
-in very young children to be close and
-accurate, and he thought that the recollection
-of most of us could go further
-back than we supposed. I do not know
-how far my own memory may carry me
-back, but I have no remembrance of my
-childhood which is not immediately associated
-with him.</p>
-
-<p>He had a wonderful attraction for children
-and a quick perception of their
-character and disposition; a most winning
-and easy way with them, full of
-fun, but also of a graver sympathy with
-their many small troubles and perplexities,
-which made them recognise a friend
-in him at once.</p>
-
-<p>I have often seen mere babies, who
-would look at no other stranger present,
-put out their tiny arms to him with unbounded
-confidence, or place a small
-hand in his and trot away with him,
-quite proud and contented at having
-found such a companion; and although
-with his own children he had sometimes
-a sterner manner than he had with
-others, there was not one of them who
-feared to go to him for help and
-advice, knowing well that there was no
-trouble too trivial to claim his attention,
-and that in him they would always find
-unvarying justice and love. When any
-treat had to be asked for, the second
-little daughter, always a pet of her
-father's, was pushed into his study by
-the other children, and always returned
-triumphant. He wrote special prayers
-for us as soon as we could speak, interested
-himself in our lessons, would
-give prizes for industry, for punctuality,
-for neat and unblotted copy-books. A
-word of commendation from him was
-indeed most highly cherished, and would
-set our hearts glowing with pride and
-pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>His study, to us children, was rather a
-mysterious and awe-inspiring chamber,
-and while he was at work no one was
-allowed to enter it. We little ones had
-to pass the door as quietly as possible,
-and our little tongues left off chattering.
-But at no time through his busy life was
-he too busy to think of us, to amuse us,
-or to interest himself in all that concerned
-us. Ever since I can remember
-anything I remember him as the
-good genius of the house, and as its
-happy, bright, and funny genius. He
-had a peculiar tone of voice and way
-of speaking for each of his children, who
-could tell, without being called by name
-which was the one addressed. He had
-funny songs which he used to sing to
-them before they went to bed. One in
-particular, about an old man who caught
-cold and rheumatism while sitting in an
-omnibus, was a great favorite, and as it
-was accompanied by sneezes, coughs,
-and gesticulations, it had to be sung
-over and over again before the small
-audience was satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>I can see him now, through the mist
-of years, with a child nearly always on
-his knee at this time of the evening, his
-bright and beautiful eyes full of life and
-fun. I can hear his clear sweet voice
-as he sang to those children as if he had
-no other occupation in the world but to
-amuse them; and when they grew older,
-and were able to act little plays, it was
-their father himself, who was teacher,
-manager, and prompter to the infant
-amateurs. These theatricals were undertaken
-as earnestly and seriously as
-were those of the grown up people. He
-would teach the children their parts
-separately; what to do and how to do it,
-acting himself for their edification. At
-one moment he would be the dragon in
-“Fortunio,” at the next one of the
-seven servants, then a jockey—played
-by the youngest child, whose little legs
-had much difficulty to get into the tiny
-top-boots—until he had taken every part
-in the play.</p>
-
-<p>As with his grown-up company of
-actors, so with his juvenile company,
-did his own earnestness and activity
-work upon them and affect each personally.
-The shyest and most awkward
-child would come out quite brilliantly
-under his patient and always encouraging
-training.</p>
-
-<p>At the juvenile parties he was always
-the ruling spirit. He had acquired by
-degrees an excellent collection of conjuring
-tricks, and on Twelfth Night—his
-eldest son's birthday—he would very
-often, dressed as a magician, give a conjuring
-entertainment, when a little figure
-which appeared from a wonderful and
-mysterious bag, and which was supposed
-to be a personal friend of the conjuror,
-would greatly delight the audience by
-his funny stories, his eccentric voice and
-way of speaking, and by his miraculous
-appearances and disappearances. Of
-course a plum pudding was made in a hat,
-and was always one of the great successes
-of the evening. I have seen many
-such puddings, but no other conjurer has
-been able to put into a pudding all the
-love, sympathy, fun, and thorough enjoyment
-which seemed to come from the
-hands of this great magician. Then,
-when supper time came, he would be
-everywhere at once, serving, cutting up
-the great twelfth cake, dispensing the
-bonbons, proposing toasts, and calling
-upon first one child and then another for
-a song or recitation. How eager the
-little faces looked for each turn to come
-round, and how they would blush and
-brighten up when the magician's eyes
-looked their way!</p>
-
-<p>One year, before a Twelfth Night
-dance, when his two daughters were
-quite tiny girls, he took it into his head
-that they must teach him and his friend
-John Leech the polka. The lessons
-were begun as soon as thought of, and
-continued for some time. It must have
-been rather a funny sight to see the two
-small children teaching those two men—Mr.
-Leech was over six feet—to
-dance, all four as solemn and staid as
-possible.</p>
-
-<p>As in everything he undertook, so in
-this instance, did Charles Dickens throw
-his whole heart into the dance. No one
-could have taken more pains than he
-did, or have been more eager and
-anxious, or more conscientious about
-steps and time than he was. And often,
-after the lesson was over, he would jump
-up and have a practice by himself.
-When the night of the party came both
-the small dancing mistresses felt anxious
-and nervous. I know that the heart of
-one beat very fast when the moment for
-starting off arrived. But both pupils
-acquitted themselves perfectly, and were
-the admiration of all beholders.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Roger de Coverley was always
-the finale to those dances, and was a
-special favorite of Charles Dickens, who
-kept it up as long as possible, and was
-as unflagging in his dancing enthusiasm
-as was his own “Fizziwig” in his.</p>
-
-<p>There can be but little doubt that the
-children who came to those parties, and
-who have lived to grow up to be men
-and women, remember them as something
-bright and sunny in their young
-lives, and must always retain a loving
-feeling for their kind and genial host.</p>
-
-<p>In those early days when he was living
-in Devonshire Terrace, his children
-were quite babies. And when he paid
-his first visit to America—accompanied
-by Mrs. Dickens—they were left under
-the care of some relations and friends.
-Anyone reading “The Letters of
-Charles Dickens” must be touched by
-his frequent allusions to these children,
-and by the love and tenderness expressed
-in his longings to see them
-again.</p>
-
-<p>I can recall but very little of those
-days. I can remember our being
-obliged to spend much of the time at the
-house of a dear and good friend, but
-where the children of the house were
-very severely and sternly brought up.
-And I can remember how my little sister
-used to cry whenever she had to go
-there. I have also a vague remembrance
-of the return of the travellers,
-and of being lifted up to a gate and kissing
-my father through the bars. I do
-not know how the gate came to be shut,
-but imagine that he, in his impatience
-and eagerness to see us again, must have
-jumped out of the carriage before there
-was time for the gate to be opened.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot at all recall his appearance at
-this time, but know from old portraits
-that his face was beautiful. I think he
-was fond of dress, and must have been
-rather a dandy in his way. Carrying my
-memory further on, I <em>can</em> remember him
-as very handsome. He had a most
-beautiful mouth, sensitive, strong, and
-full of character. This was, unfortunately,
-hidden when he took to wearing—some
-years afterwards—a beard and
-mustache. But this is the only alteration
-I can remember in him, as to me
-his face never seemed to change at all.
-He had always an active, young, and
-boyish-looking figure, and a way of holding
-his head a little thrown back, which
-was very characteristic. This carriage
-of the head, and his manner altogether,
-are exactly inherited by one of his sons.</p>
-
-<p>Charles Dickens was always a great
-walker, but in these days he rode and
-drove more than he did in later years.
-He was fond of the game of battledore
-and shuttlecock, and used constantly to
-play with friends on summer evenings.
-There is a little drawing by the late
-Daniel Maclise, where a shuttlecock is to
-be seen in the air. This is suggestive of
-many and many a pleasant evening in
-the garden, which was shut in all round
-by a high wall, and where, in summer
-time, a tent was always put up, and
-where, after dinner the family would adjourn
-for “dessert,” This was always
-considered by us a special treat.</p>
-
-<p>As the children grew older, there
-were evenings when they would be
-allowed to drive out into the country,
-and then get out of the carriage and
-walk with “Papa.” It seems now as if
-the wild flowers which used to be gathered
-on those evenings in the country
-lanes were sweeter and more beautiful
-than any which grow nowadays! The
-very lanes have all disappeared and
-grown into houses. But the memory of
-the one who originated those treats, and
-who was the good spirit of the time, can
-<em>never</em> be blotted out.</p>
-
-<p>Charles Dickens brought a little white
-Havannah spaniel with him from America,
-and from that time there were always
-various pets about the house. In
-particular there was an eagle and a
-raven. The eagle had a sort of grotto
-made for him in the garden, to which he
-was chained, and being chained he was
-not quite such an object of terror to the
-children as the raven was. This raven,
-with its mischievous nature, delighted in
-frightening them. One of the little daughters
-had very chubby, rosy legs, and the
-raven used to run after and peck at
-them, until poor “Tatie's leds” became
-a constant subject for commiseration.
-Yet the raven was a great source of
-amusement to the family, and there were
-countless funny stories about him. He
-was especially wicked to the eagle; as
-soon as his food was brought to him, the
-raven would swoop down upon it, take
-it just beyond the eagle's reach, mount
-guard over it, dancing round it, and
-chuckling. When he considered he had
-tantalised the poor bird enough, he would
-eat the food as deliberately and slowly
-as possible, and then hop away perfectly
-contented with himself. He was not
-the celebrated Grip of “Barnaby
-Rudge,” but was given after the death
-of that bird.</p>
-
-<p>In bringing up his children, Charles
-Dickens was always most anxious to impress
-upon them that as long as they
-were honest and truthful, so would they
-always be sure of having justice done to
-them. To show how strongly he felt
-about this, and what a horror he had of
-their being frightened, or in any way
-unnecessarily intimidated, his own words
-shall be quoted:—</p>
-
-<p>“In the little world in which children
-have their existence, whosoever brings
-them up, there is nothing so finely perceived
-and so finely felt as injustice.
-It may only be small injustice that the
-child can be exposed to; but the child
-is small, and its rocking-horse stands as
-many hands high, according to scale,
-as a big-boned Irish hunter.” And
-again:—“It would be difficult to overstate
-the intensity and accuracy of an
-intelligent child's observation. At that
-impressible time of life, it must sometimes
-produce a fixed impression. If
-the fixed impression be of an object
-terrible to the child, it will be (for want
-of reasoning upon) inseparable from
-great fear. Force the child at such a
-time, be Spartan with it, send it into the
-dark against its will, and you had better
-murder it.”</p>
-
-<p>He was always tender with us, as I
-have said, in our small troubles and
-trials. When the time came for the
-eldest son to be sent to a boarding-school,
-there was great grief in the
-nursery at Devonshire Terrace, and he
-came unexpectedly upon one of his
-daughters who was putting away some
-school-books, and crying bitterly at the
-time. To him the separation could not
-have seemed such a terrible one, as the
-boy was certainly to come home once a
-month, if not once a week. But he
-soothed the weeping child, and reasoned
-with her, using much the same arguments
-as he did years afterwards, when
-the well-beloved Plorn went to Australia—namely,
-that these partings were
-“Hard, hard things, but must be
-borne,” until at last the sobs ceased,
-and the poor aching little heart had
-found consolation in his loving sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>There are so many people, good, kind,
-and affectionate, but who can <em>not</em> remember
-that they once were children
-themselves, and looked out upon the
-world with a child's eyes <em>only</em>!</p>
-
-<p>A third daughter was born in Devonshire
-Terrace, but only lived to be nine
-months old. Her death was very sudden,
-and happened while Charles
-Dickens was presiding at a public dinner.
-He had been playing with the
-baby before starting for the dinner, and
-the little thing was then as well and as
-bright as possible.</p>
-
-<p>An evening or two after her death,
-some beautiful flowers were sent and
-were brought into the study, and the
-father was about to take them upstairs
-and place them on the little dead baby,
-when he suddenly gave away completely.
-It is always very terrible to see
-a man weep; but to see your own father
-weep, and to see this for the first time
-as a child, fills you with a curious awe.</p>
-
-<p>When the grave where the little Dora
-was buried was opened, a few years ago,
-and the tiny coffin was seen lying at the
-bottom of it, the remembrance of that
-evening in the study at Devonshire Terrace
-was fresh in the minds of some of
-those who were standing at the grave.</p>
-
-<p>It was always a great honor and
-delight to any of the children to have
-any special present from “Papa,” and
-on the occasion of a daughter's birthday
-a watch had been promised, and the day
-was eagerly looked forward to by the
-whole of the family. When the morning
-arrived, Charles Dickens was not well,
-and was unable to get up to breakfast,
-but the little girl was sent for, and went
-up to his bedside in a state of trembling
-and anxious expectation. He put his
-arms round her and kissed her, wishing
-her “Many happy returns of the day,”
-and took a case from under his pillow
-and opened it. But when she saw first
-a gold watch, and then when he turned
-it and showed an enamelled back, with
-her initials also in enamel, it was many
-seconds before the joyful Oh! could be
-gasped out; but when it <em>did</em> come, and
-she met her father's eyes, I don't think
-they were freer from a certain sort of
-moisture than were those of the happy
-and delighted child.</p>
-
-<p>When the move was made from
-Devonshire Terrace to Tavistock House—a
-far larger and handsomer house than
-the old home—Charles Dickens promised
-his daughters a better bedroom than they
-ever had before, and told them that he
-should choose “the brightest of papers”
-for it, but that they were not to see
-“the gorgeous apartment” until it was
-ready for their use. But when the time
-came for the move, and the two girls
-were shown their room, it surpassed
-even their expectations. They found it
-full of love and thoughtful care, and as
-pretty and as fresh as their hearts could
-desire, and with not a single thing in it
-which had not been expressly chosen for
-them, or planned by their father. The
-wall-paper was covered with wild-flowers,
-the two little iron bedsteads were
-hung with a flowery chintz. There were
-two toilet-tables, two writing-tables, two
-easy chairs, etc., etc., all so pretty and
-elegant, and this in the days when bedrooms
-were not, as a rule, so luxurious
-as they are now.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding his constant and
-arduous work, he was never too busy to
-be unmindful of the comfort and welfare
-of those about him, and there was
-not a corner in any of his homes, from
-kitchen to garret, which was not constantly
-inspected by him, and which did
-not boast of some of his neat and orderly
-contrivances. We used to laugh
-at him sometimes and say we believed
-that he was personally acquainted with
-every nail in the house.</p>
-
-<p>It was in this home, some few years
-later, that the first grown-up theatricals
-were given. And these theatricals were
-very remarkable, in that nearly every
-part was filled by some celebrated man
-in either literature or art.</p>
-
-<p>Besides being a really great actor,
-Charles Dickens as a manager was quite
-incomparable. His “company” was as
-well trained as any first-class professional
-company, and although always
-kind and pleasant, he was feared and
-looked up to by every member of his
-company. The rehearsals meant business
-and hard work, and sometimes
-even tears to a few, when all did not go
-quite satisfactorily. Each one knew
-that there could be no trifling, no playing
-at work. As in the children's performances
-so in these later ones did he
-know every part, and enter heart and
-soul into each character. If any new
-idea came into his head, he would at
-once propound it to the actor or actress,
-who, looking upon that earnest face and
-active figure, would do his or her very
-best to gain a managerial smile of approval.</p>
-
-<p>He had a temporary theatre built out
-into the garden, and the scenes were
-painted by some of the greatest scene-painters
-of the day. A drop-scene,
-representing Eddystone lighthouse, by
-the late Clarkson Stanfield, R.A., was
-afterwards framed and covered with
-glass, and hung in the entrance hall of
-Gad's Hill.</p>
-
-<p>In the play called “The Lighthouse,”
-written by Mr. Wilkie Collins, the great
-effect at the end of an act was to come
-from a storm, and the rehearsing of this
-storm was a very serious matter indeed.
-There was a long wooden box with peas
-in it, to be moved slowly up and down
-to represent rain—a wheel to be turned
-for wind—a piece of oilcloth to be
-dashed upon oilcloth and slowly dragged
-away, for the waves coming up and
-then receding, carrying the pebbles
-along with them—a heavy weight rolled
-about upon the floor above the stage,
-for thunder, etc., etc.</p>
-
-<p>At the time of the storm the manager's
-part kept him on the stage, but during
-rehearsal he somehow or other managed
-to be in the hall where the storm was
-worked, as well as on the stage, for he
-sometimes appeared with the rain, sometimes
-with the wind, sometimes with the
-thunder, until he had seen each separate
-part made perfect. This storm was
-pronounced by the audience a most
-wonderful success. I know there was
-such a noise “behind the scenes” that
-we could not hear ourselves speak, and
-it was most amusing to watch all the
-actors in their sailor dresses and their
-various “make-ups,” gravely and solemnly
-pounding away at these raw materials.</p>
-
-<p>Then the suppers after these evenings
-were so delightful! Many and many of
-the company, besides the dear manager,
-have passed away, but many still remain
-to remember them.</p>
-
-<p>Until he came into possession of
-Gad's Hill, Charles Dickens was in the
-habit of removing his whole household
-to some seaside place every summer.
-For many years Broadstairs was the favorite
-spot, and for some seasons he
-rented a house there, called Fort House.
-It stood on a hill surrounded by a nice
-garden, a little out of the town, and
-close to the cliff, and was a home of
-which he was very fond. Since those
-days the name of it has been changed to
-Bleak House. During these seaside
-visits he would take long walks, in all
-weathers—and always accompanied by
-one faithful friend and companion—and
-would get as brown and as weather-beaten
-as any of the sailors about, of
-whom he was the special favorite. I
-think he had some of the sailor element
-in himself. One always hears of sailors
-being so neat, handy, and tidy, and he
-possessed all these qualities to a wonderful
-extent. When a sea captain retires,
-his garden is always the trimmest about,
-the gates are painted a bright green,
-and of course he puts up a flag-staff.
-The garden at Gad's Hill was the trimmest
-and the neatest, green paint was on
-every place where it could possibly be
-put, and the flag staff had an endless
-supply of flags.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>There was one year spent in Italy,
-when the children were still very young,
-and another year in Switzerland, at
-Lausanne; but after Broadstairs, Boulogne
-became the favorite watering-place.
-It was here, in a charming villa,
-quite out of the town, that he and his
-youngest son, “The Plorn,” would wander
-about the garden together admiring
-the flowers, the little fellow being taught
-to show his admiration by holding up
-his tiny arms. It was a pretty sight to
-watch them down the long avenue, the
-baby looking so sweet in its white frock
-and blue ribbons, either carried in his
-father's arms, or toddling by his side
-with his little hand in his, and a most
-perfect understanding between them!
-There were always anecdotes to be told
-of the Plorn after these walks, when his
-father invariably wound up with the assertion
-that he was “a noble boy.”
-Being the youngest of the family, he was
-made a great pet of, especially by his
-father, and was kept longer at home
-than any of his brothers had been.</p>
-
-<p>Charles Dickens writes to his sister-in-law
-in the year 1856:—“Kiss the
-Plorn for me, and expound to him that
-I am always looking forward to meeting
-him again, among the birds and flowers
-in the garden on the side of the hill at
-Boulogne.” And when he had to part
-with this son in 1868, he says in a letter
-to a friend, “Poor Plorn is gone to
-Australia. It was a hard parting at the
-last. He seemed to me to become once
-more my youngest and favorite little
-child as the day drew near, and I did
-not think I could have been so shaken.”
-The housekeeper at his office, who saw
-him after he had taken leave of the boy,
-told “how she had never seen the master
-so upset, and that when she asked
-him how Mr. Edward went off he burst
-into tears, and couldn't answer her a
-word.”</p>
-
-<p>During the years spent at Tavistock
-House one of his daughters was, for a
-time, a great invalid, and after a worse
-attack of illness than usual her father
-suggested that she should be carried as
-far as the study, and lie on the sofa
-there, while he was at work. This was
-of course considered an immense privilege,
-and even if she had not felt as
-weak and ill as she did, she would have
-been bound to remain as still and quiet
-as possible. For some time there was
-no sound to be heard in the room but
-the rapid working of the pen, when suddenly
-he jumped up, went to the looking-glass,
-rushed back to his writing-table
-and jotted down a few words;
-back to the glass again, this time talking
-to his own reflection, or rather to the
-simulated expression he saw there, and
-was trying to catch before drawing it in
-words, then back again to his writing.
-After a little he got up again, and stood
-with his back to the glass, talking softly
-and rapidly for a long time, then <em>looking</em>
-at his daughter, but certainly never <em>seeing</em>
-her, then once more back to his table,
-and to steady writing until luncheon
-time. It was a curious experience, and
-a wonderful thing to see him throwing
-himself so entirely <em>out</em> of himself
-and <em>into</em> the character he was writing
-about. His daughter has very seldom
-mentioned this incident, feeling as if it
-would be almost a breach of confidence
-to do so. But in these reminiscences of
-her father, she considers it only right
-that this experience should be mentioned,
-showing as it does his characteristic
-earnestness and method of work.</p>
-
-<p>Often, after a hard morning's writing,
-when he has been alone with his family,
-and no visitors in the house, he has
-come in to luncheon and gone through
-the meal without uttering a word, and
-then has gone back again to the work in
-which he was so completely absorbed.
-Then again, there have been times when
-his nerves have been strung up to such
-a pitch that any sudden noise, such as
-the dropping of a spoon, or the clatter
-of a plate, seemed to cause him real
-agony. He never could bear the least
-noise when he was writing, and waged a
-fierce war against all organ-grinders,
-bands, etc.</p>
-
-<p>In 1856 the purchase of Gad's Hill
-was made. Charles Dickens had never
-been inside the house until it was his
-own. For once we may hope and believe
-that a childish dream was realised,
-for certainly some of the happiest years
-of his home-life were spent in the house
-he had so coveted and admired when he
-was quite a small boy. “It has never
-been to me like any other house,” were
-his own words.</p>
-
-<p>For the first three years, Gad's Hill
-was only used by him as a summer residence,
-but after the sale of Tavistock
-House, in 1860, it became his home;
-and from this time, until the year of his
-death, his great delight was to make
-“the little freehold” as comfortable,
-complete, and pretty as possible. Every
-year he had some “bright idea,” or
-some contemplated “wonderful improvement”
-to propound to us. And it
-became quite a joke between him and
-his youngest daughter—who was constantly
-at Gad's Hill—as to what the
-next improvement was to be. These
-additions and alterations gave him endless
-amusement and delight, and he
-would watch the growing of each one
-with the utmost eagerness and impatience.
-The most important <em>out</em>-door
-“improvement” he made, was a tunnel
-to connect the garden with the shrubbery,
-which lay on the opposite side of
-the high road, and could only be approached
-by leaving the garden, crossing
-the road, and unlocking a gate.
-The work of excavation began, of course
-from each side, and on the day when it
-was supposed that the picks would meet
-and the light appear, Charles Dickens
-was so excited that he had to “knock
-off work,” and stood for hours waiting
-for this consummation, and when at last
-it did come to pass, the workmen were
-all “treated,” and there was a general
-jubilee. This “improvement” was a
-great success, for the shrubbery was a
-nice addition to the garden, and moreover
-in it, facing the road, grew two
-very large and beautiful cedar-trees.
-Some little time after Monsieur Fechter
-sent his friend a two-roomed châlet,
-which was placed in the shrubbery.
-The upper room was prettily furnished,
-and fitted all round with looking-glasses
-to reflect the view, and was used by
-Charles Dickens as a study throughout
-the summer. He had a passion for
-light, bright colors, and looking-glass.
-When he built a new drawing-room he
-had two mirrors sunk into the wall opposite
-each other, which, being so
-placed, gave the effect of an endless
-corridor. I do not remember how
-many rooms could thus be counted, but
-he would often call some of us, and ask
-if we could make out another room, as
-<em>he</em> certainly could.</p>
-
-<p>For one “improvement” he had looking-glass
-put into each panel of the dining-room
-door, and showing it to his
-youngest daughter said, with great pride,
-“Now, what do you say to <em>this</em>, Katie?”
-She laughed and said, “Well, really,
-papa, I think when you're an angel your
-wings will be made of looking-glass, and
-your crown of scarlet geraniums!”</p>
-
-<p>He loved all flowers, but especially
-bright flowers, and scarlet geraniums
-were his favorite of all. There were
-two large beds of these on the front
-lawn, and when they were fully out,
-making one scarlet mass, there was
-blaze enough to satisfy even <em>him</em>. Even
-in dress he was fond of a great deal of
-color, and the dress of a friend who
-came to his daughter's wedding quite
-delighted him because it was trimmed
-with a profusion of cherry-colored ribbon.
-He used constantly to speak about
-it afterwards in terms of the highest admiration.</p>
-
-<p>The large dogs at Gad's Hill were
-quite a feature of the place, and were
-also rather a subject of dread to outsiders.
-But this was desirable, as the
-house really required protection, standing
-as it did on the high road, which was
-frequented by tramps of a wild and low
-order, who, in the hopping season, were
-sometimes even dangerous; and the
-dogs, though as gentle as possible to
-their own people, knew that they were
-the guardians of the place, and were
-terribly fierce to all intruders. Linda—a
-St. Bernard, and a beautiful specimen
-of that breed—had been as a puppy living
-in the garden at Tavistock House
-before she was taken to Gad's Hill.
-She and Turk, a mastiff, were constant
-companions in all their master's walks.
-When he was away from home, and the
-ladies of the family were out alone with
-the dogs, Turk would at once feel the
-responsibility of his position, and guard
-them with unusual devotion, giving up
-all play in an instant when he happened
-to see any suspicious-looking figure approaching;
-and he never made a mistake
-in discovering the tramp. He would
-then keep on the outside of the road,
-close to his mistresses, with an ominous
-turning up of the lip, and with anything
-but the usually mild expression in his
-beautiful large brown eyes, and he
-would give many a look back before he
-thought it safe to be off again on his
-own account. Of all the large dogs—
-and there were many at different times—these
-two were the best loved by their
-dear master.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Bouncer, a little white Pomeranian
-with black eyes and nose, the very
-sweetest and most bewitching of her sex,
-was a present to the eldest daughter, and
-was brought by her, a puppy of only six
-weeks old, to Tavistock House. “The
-boys,” knowing that the little dog was
-to arrive, were ready to receive their sister
-at the door, and escorted her, in a
-tremendous state of excitement, up to
-the study. But when the little creature
-was put down on the floor to be exhibited
-to Charles Dickens, and showed her
-pretty figure and little bushy tail curling
-tightly over her back, they could keep
-quiet no longer, but fairly screamed and
-danced with delight. From that moment
-he took to the little dog and made
-a pet of her, and it was he who gave her
-the name of Mrs. Bouncer. He delighted
-to see her out with the large dogs,
-because she looked “so preposterously
-small” by the side of them. He had a
-peculiar voice and way of speaking for
-her, which she knew perfectly well and
-would respond to at once, running to
-him from any part of the house or garden
-directly she heard the call. To be
-stroked with a foot had great fascinations
-for Mrs. Bouncer, and my father
-would often and often take off his boot
-of an evening and sit stroking the little
-creature while he read or smoked for an
-hour together. And although there
-were times, I fear, when her sharp bark
-must have irritated him, there never was
-an angry word for Bouncer.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was Dick, the eldest
-daughter's canary, another important
-member of the household, who came
-out of his cage every morning at breakfast
-time and hopped about the table,
-pecking away at anything he had a fancy
-for, and perching upon the heads or
-shoulders of those present. Occasionally
-he would have naughty fits, when
-he would actually dare to peck his master's
-cheek. He took strong likes and
-dislikes, loving some people and really
-hating others. But a word from his
-mistress called him to order at once, and
-he would come to her when so called
-from any part of the room. After she
-had been away from home she always
-on her return went to the room where
-Dick lived and put her head just inside
-the door. At the very sight of her the
-bird would fly to the corner of his cage
-and sing as if his little throat would
-burst. Charles Dickens constantly followed
-his daughter and peeped into the
-room behind her, just to see Dick's rapturous
-reception of his mistress. When
-this pet bird died he had him buried in
-the garden, and a rose-tree planted over
-his grave, and wrote his epitaph:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse"><i>This is the grave of</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>DICK,</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>The best of birds.</i></div>.
- <div class="verse"><i>Born at Broadstairs, Midsr. 1851.</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Died at Gad's Hill Place, 14th Oct., 1866.</i></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>While Dick lived cats were of course
-tabooed, and were never allowed about
-the house; but after his death a white
-kitten called Williamina was given to
-one of the family, and she and her numerous
-offspring had a happy home at
-Gad's Hill.</p>
-
-<p>This cat ingratiated herself into favor
-with every one in the house, but she was
-particularly devoted to the master.
-Once, after a family of kittens had been
-born, she had a fancy that they should
-live in the study. So she brought them
-up, one by one, from the kitchen floor,
-where a comfortable bed had been provided
-for them, and deposited them in a
-corner of the study. They were taken
-down stairs by order of the master, who
-said he really could <em>not</em> allow the kittens
-to be in his room. Williamina tried
-again, but again with the same result.
-But when the third time she carried a
-kitten up the stairs into the hall, and
-from there to the study window, jumping
-in with it in her mouth, and laying
-it at her master's feet, until the whole
-family were at last before him, and she
-herself sat down beside them and gave
-him an imploring look, he could resist
-no longer, and Williamina carried the
-day. As the kittens grew up they became
-very rampagious, and swarmed up the
-curtains and played on the writing-table,
-and scampered among the book-shelves,
-and made such a noise as was never
-heard in the study before. But the same
-spirit which influenced the whole house
-must have been brought to bear upon
-those noisy little creatures to keep them
-still and quiet when necessary, for they
-were never complained of, and they were
-never turned out of the study until the
-time came for giving them away and
-finding good homes for them. One kitten
-was kept, and, being a very exceptional
-cat, deserves to be specially mentioned.
-Being deaf, he had no name
-given him, but was called by the servants
-“the master's cat,” in consequence
-of his devotion to him. He was
-always with his master, and used to
-follow him about the garden and sit with
-him while he was writing. One evening
-they were left together, the ladies of the
-house having gone to a ball in the neighborhood.
-Charles Dickens was reading
-at a small table on which a lighted candle
-was placed, when suddenly the candle
-went out. He was much interested
-in his book, relighted the candle, gave a
-pat to the cat, who he noticed was looking
-up at him with a most pathetic expression,
-and went on with his reading.
-A few minutes afterwards, the light getting
-dim, he looked up and was in time
-to see Puss deliberately put out the
-candle with his paw, and then gaze again
-appealingly at his master. This second
-appeal was understood, and had the desired
-effect. The book was shut, and
-Puss was made a fuss with and amused
-till bed-time. His master was full of
-this anecdote when we all met in the
-morning.</p>
-
-<p>During the summer months there was
-a constant succession of visitors at
-Gad's Hill, with picnics, long drives,
-and much happy holiday-making. At
-these picnics there was a frequent request
-to this lover of light and color of
-“<em>Please</em> let us have the luncheon in the
-shade at any rate.” He came to his
-daughter one day and said he had “a
-capital idea” about picnic luncheons.
-He wished each person to have his or
-her own ration neatly done up in one
-parcel, to consist of a mutton pie, a
-hard-boiled egg, a roll, a piece of butter,
-and a packet of salt. Of course this
-idea was faithfully carried out, but was
-not always the rule, as when the choice
-of food was put to the vote, it was
-found that many people cared neither
-for mutton-pie nor hard-boiled egg.
-But “the capital idea” of separate rations
-was always followed as closely as
-possible.</p>
-
-<p>Charles Dickens was a most delightful
-and genial host, had the power of putting
-the shyest people at ease with him
-at once, and had a charm in his manner
-peculiarly his own and quite indescribable.
-The charm was always there
-whether he was grave or gay, whether in
-his very funniest or in his most serious
-and earnest mood.</p>
-
-<p>He was a strict master in the way of
-insisting upon everything being done
-perfectly and exactly as he desired, but,
-on the other hand, was most kind, just,
-and considerate.</p>
-
-<p>His punctuality was a remarkable
-characteristic, and visitors used to wonder
-how it was that everything was done
-to the very minute, “almost by clockwork,”
-as some of them would remark.</p>
-
-<p>It is a common saying now in the
-family of some dear friends, where punctuality
-is not <em>quite</em> so well observed,
-“What would Mr. Dickens have said to
-this?” or, “Ah! my dear child, I wish
-you could have been at Gad's Hill to
-learn what punctuality means!”</p>
-
-<p>Charles Dickens was very fond of
-music, and not only of classical music.
-He loved national airs, old tunes, songs,
-and ballads, and was easily moved by
-anything pathetic in a song or tune, and
-was never tired of hearing his special
-favorites sung or played. He used to
-like to have music of an evening, and
-duets used to be played for hours together,
-while he would read or walk up
-and down the room. A member of his
-family was singing a ballad one evening
-while he was apparently deep in his
-book, when he suddenly got up, saying,
-“You don't make enough of that word,”
-and he sat down by the piano, showed
-her the way in which he wished it to be
-emphasized, and did not leave the instrument
-until it had been sung to his
-satisfaction. Whenever this song was
-sung, which it often was, as it became a
-favorite with him, he would always listen
-for that word, with his head a little on
-one side, as much as to say, “I wonder
-if she will remember.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a large meadow at the back
-of the garden in which, during the summer-time,
-many cricket matches were
-held. Although never playing himself,
-he delighted in the game, and would sit
-in his tent, keeping score for one side,
-the whole day long. He never took to
-croquet; but had lawn-tennis been
-played in the Gad's Hill days, he would
-certainly have enjoyed it. He liked
-American bowls, at which he used constantly
-to play with his male guests.
-For one of his “improvements” he had
-turned a waste piece of land into a croquet-ground
-and bowling-green.</p>
-
-<p>In the meadow he used to practice
-many of his “readings;” and any stranger
-passing down the lane and seeing
-him gesticulating and hearing him talking,
-laughing, and sometimes it may be
-weeping, must surely have thought him
-out of his mind! The getting up of
-these “readings” gave him an immense
-amount of labor and fatigue, and the
-sorrowful parts tried him greatly. For
-instance, in the reading of “Little Dombey,”
-it was hard work for him so to
-steel his heart as to be able to read the
-death without breaking down or displaying
-too much emotion. He often told
-how much he suffered over this story,
-and how it would have been impossible
-for him to have gone through with it had
-he not kept constantly before his eyes
-the picture of his own Plorn alive and
-strong and well.</p>
-
-<p>His great neatness and tidiness have
-already been alluded to, as also his wonderful
-sense of order. The first thing
-he did every morning, before going to
-work, was to make a complete circuit of
-the garden, and then to go over the
-whole house, to see that everything was
-in its place. And this was also the first
-thing he did upon his return home, after
-long absence. A more thoroughly orderly
-nature never existed. And it must
-have been through this gift of order that
-he was enabled to make time—notwithstanding
-any amount of work—to give
-to the minutest household details. Before
-a dinner-party the <i>menu</i> was always
-submitted to him for approval, and he
-always made a neat little plan of the table,
-with the names of the guests marked
-in their respective places, and a list of
-“who was to take in who” to dinner,
-and had constantly some “bright idea”
-or other as to the arrangement of the
-table or the rooms.</p>
-
-<p>Among his many attributes, that of a
-doctor must not be forgotten. He was
-invaluable in a sick room, or in any sudden
-emergency; always quiet, always
-cheerful, always useful and skilful, always
-doing the right thing, so that his
-very presence seemed to bring comfort
-and help. From his children's earliest
-days his visits, during any time of sickness,
-were eagerly longed for and believed
-in, as doing more good than those
-even of the doctor himself. He had a
-curiously magnetic and sympathetic
-hand, and his touch was wonderfully
-soothing and quieting. As a mesmerist
-he possessed great power, which he used,
-most successfully, in many cases of great
-pain and distress. He had a strong
-aversion to saying good-bye, and would
-do anything he possibly could to avoid
-going through the ordeal. This feeling
-must have been natural to him, for as
-early as the “Old Curiosity Shop” he
-writes: “Why is it we can better bear to
-part in spirit than in body, and while we
-have the fortitude to bid farewell have
-not the nerve to say it? On the eve of
-long voyages, or an absence of many
-years, friends who are tenderly attached
-will separate with the usual look, the
-usual pressure of the hand, planning one
-final interview for the morrow, while
-each well knows that it is but a feint to
-save the pain of uttering that one word,
-and that the meeting will never be!
-Should possibilities be worse to bear
-than certainties?” So all who love
-him, and who know the painful dislike
-<em>he</em> had to that word, are thankful that
-he was spared the agony of that last,
-long Farewell.</p>
-
-<p>Almost the pleasantest times at Gad's
-Hill were the winter gatherings for
-Christmas and the New Year, when the
-house was more than full, and the bachelors
-of the party had to be “put up”
-in the village. At these times Charles
-Dickens was at his gayest and brightest,
-and the days passed cheerily and merrily
-away. He was great at games, and
-many of the evenings were spent in playing
-at Yes and No, Proverbs, Russian
-Scandal, Crambo, Dumb Crambo—in
-this he was most exquisitely funny—and
-a game of Memory, which he particularly
-liked.</p>
-
-<p>The New Year was always welcomed
-with all honors. Just before twelve
-o'clock everybody would assemble in the
-hall, and he would open the door and
-stand in the entrance, watch in hand—how
-many of his friends must remember
-him thus, and think lovingly of the picture!—as
-he waited, with a half-smile on
-his attentive face, for the bells to chime
-out the New Year. Then his voice
-would break the silence with, “A Happy
-New Year to us all.” For many minutes
-there would be much embracing,
-hand-shaking, and good-wishing; and
-the servants would all come up and get
-a hearty shake of the hand from the beloved
-“master.” Then hot spiced
-wine would be distributed, and good-health
-drunk all round. Sometimes
-there would be a country dance, in
-which the host delighted, and in which
-he insisted upon every one joining, and
-he never allowed the dancing—and real
-dancing it was too—to flag for an instant,
-but kept it up until even <em>he</em> was
-tired and out of breath, and had at last
-to clap his hands, and bring it to an
-end. His thorough enjoyment was most
-charming to witness, and seemed to infect
-every one present.</p>
-
-<p>One New Year's Day at breakfast, he
-proposed that we should act some charades,
-in dumb show, that evening.
-This proposal being met with enthusiasm,
-the idea was put into train at
-once. The different parts were assigned,
-dresses were discussed, “properties”
-were collected, and rehearsing went on
-the whole day long. As the home visitors
-were all to take part in the charades,
-invitations had to be sent to the more
-intimate neighbors to make an audience,
-an impromptu supper had to be arranged
-for, and the day was one of continual
-bustle and excitement, and the rehearsals
-were the greatest fun imaginable. A
-dear old friend volunteered to undertake
-the music, and he played delightfully all
-through the acting. These charades
-made one of the pleasantest and most
-successful of New Year's evenings spent
-at Gad's Hill.</p>
-
-<p>But there were not only grown-up
-guests invited to the pretty cheerful
-home. In a letter to a friend Charles
-Dickens writes: “Another generation
-begins to peep above the table. I once
-used to think what a horrible thing it
-was to be a grandfather. Finding that
-the calamity falls upon me without my
-perceiving any other change in myself, I
-bear it like a man.” But as he so disliked
-the name of grandfather as applied
-to himself, those grandchildren were
-taught by him to call him “Venerables.”
-And to this day some of them
-still speak of him by this self-invented
-name.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>Now there is another and younger
-family who never knew “Venerables,”
-but have been all taught to know his
-likeness, and taught to know his books
-by the pictures in them, as soon as
-they can be taught anything, and whose
-baby hands lay bright flowers upon the
-stone in Westminster Abbey, every June
-9 and every Christmas Eve. For in remembrance
-of his love for all that is gay
-in color, none but the brightest flowers,
-and also some of the gorgeous American
-leaves, sent by a friend for the purpose,
-are laid upon the grave, making that
-one spot in the midst of the vast and
-solemn building bright and beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>In a letter to Plorn before his departure
-for Australia, Charles Dickens
-writes: “I hope you will always be
-able to say in after life, that you had a
-kind father.” And to this hope, each
-one of his children can answer with a
-loving, grateful heart, that so it was.—<cite>Cornhill
-Magazine.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2 id="THE_SUMMER_PALACE_PEKING">THE SUMMER PALACE, PEKING.</h2>
-
-<p class="aut">BY C. F. GORDON CUMMING.</p>
-
-
-<p>I think the only enjoyable time of
-the day, during the burning summer in
-dusty, dirty, dilapidated Peking, is the
-very early morning, before the sun rises
-high, and while the air still feels fresh,
-and one can enjoy sitting in the cool
-courts which take the place of gardens,
-and listen to the quaint music of the
-pigeons as they fly overhead. This is
-no dove-like cooing, but a low melodious
-whistle like the sighing of an Eolian
-harp or the murmur of telegraph wires
-thrilled by the night wind. It is produced
-by the action of cylindrical pipes
-like two finger-ends, side by side, about
-an inch and a half in length. These are
-made of very light wood and filled with
-whistles. Some are globular in form
-and are constructed from a tiny gourd.
-These little musical boxes are attached
-to the tail feathers of the pigeon in such
-a manner that as he flies the air shall
-blow through the whistle, producing the
-most plaintive tones, especially as there
-are often many pigeons flying at once—some
-near, some distant, some just overhead,
-some high in the heavens; so the
-combined effect is really melodious. I
-believe the Pekingese are the only people
-who thus provide themselves with a
-dove orchestra, though the use of pigeons
-as message-bearers is common to
-all parts of the Empire.</p>
-
-<p>There is one form of insect life here
-which is a terrible nuisance—namely,
-the sand-flies, which swarm in multitudes.
-They are too cruel, every one is
-bitten, and the irritation is so excessive
-that few people have sufficient determination
-to resist scratching. So of course
-there is a most unbecoming prevalence
-of red spots, suggestive of a murrain of
-measles!</p>
-
-<p>I have been told that I am singularly
-unfortunate in the season of my visit,
-and that if only I had come in September
-I should have found life most enjoyable
-(I recollect some of the residents at
-Aden likewise assuring me that they
-really learnt to think their blazing rock
-quite pleasant!) I suppose that I am
-spoilt by memories of green Pacific isles
-and sweet sea breezes, so I can only
-compassionate people who, till two
-months ago, were ice-bound—shut off
-from the world by a frozen river—and
-now are boiled and stifled!</p>
-
-<p>Such of them, however, as can get
-away from their work in the city have
-the delightful resource of going to the
-hills, and establishing themselves as
-lodgers at one of the many almost forsaken
-temples, where a few poor priests
-are very glad to supplement their small
-revenues by a sure income of barbaric
-coin. The Pekingese themselves are in
-the habit of thus making summer trips
-to the hills—so many of the temples
-have furnished rooms to let—with a
-view to encouraging the combination of
-well-paid temple service with this pleasant
-change of air.</p>
-
-<p>I am told that many of these temples
-are charmingly situated, and have beautifully
-laid-out grounds. A group called
-“The Eight Great Temples” is described
-as especially attractive. They
-are dotted on terraces along the face of
-the western mountains, about twelve
-miles from the city, and among their attractions
-are cool pools in shady grottoes
-all overgrown with trailing vines
-and bright blossoms; stone fountains,
-where numberless gold-fish swim in crystalline
-water, which falls from the mouth
-of a great marble dragon; curious inscriptions
-in Thibetan and Chinese characters,
-deeply engraven on the rocks
-and colored red; fine groups of Scotch
-firs, and old walnut-trees; and in
-springtime I am told that our dear familiar
-lilac blossoms in perfection. Then
-there are all manner of quaintly ornamental
-pagodas and temples, great and
-small, with innumerable images and
-pictures, and silken hangings, and all
-the paraphernalia so attractive to the
-artistic eye.</p>
-
-<p>Among the points of chief interest in
-the immediate neighborhood of Peking,
-the Summer Palace of course holds a
-foremost place, and there I found my
-way yesterday by paying the penalty of
-eight hours of anguish in a hateful
-springless cart, which is the cab of Peking,
-and the only mode of locomotion
-for such as are not the happy possessors
-of horses.</p>
-
-<p>The manifold interests of the day,
-however, far more than compensated for
-the drawbacks of even dust and bumping,
-which is saying a great deal. A
-member of one of the Legations had
-kindly undertaken to show me the various
-points of interest to the north-west
-of the city, and we agreed to try and
-escape some heat by starting at 3.30
-<span class="smcap">A.M.</span>, at which hour I was accordingly
-ready, waiting in the courtyard to open
-the gate. It was a most lovely morning,
-the clear moonlight mingling with the
-dawn, and the air fresh and pleasant. I
-had full leisure to enjoy it, for the
-carter, who had promised to be at the
-Japanese Legation by three, was wrapped
-in slumber. So my companion had to
-begin his day's work by a two miles'
-walk to fetch me. Luckily, my carter
-had been more faithful, so we started in
-very fair time; indeed, I profited by
-the delay, for as we passed through the
-great northern gate, there on the dusty
-plain—just outside the walls—we came
-in for a grand review of the Eight Banners,
-by Prince Poah of the Iron Crown.
-Such a pretty, animated scene, with all
-these Tartar regiments galloping about,
-and their gay standards flashing through
-the smoke of artillery and the dust-clouds,
-which seem to blend the vast
-plain with the blue distant hills and the
-great gray walls and huge three-storied
-keep which forms the gateway.</p>
-
-<p>The latter is that Anting Gate of
-which we heard so much at the time
-when it was given up to the British army
-after the sacking of the Summer Palace;
-not, however, till their big guns were
-planted on the raised terraces within the
-sacred park of the Temple of Earth, all
-ready to breach the walls.</p>
-
-<p>The Prince's large blue tent was
-pitched on a slightly rising ground apart
-from the others, and was constantly surrounded
-by gorgeous officers in bright
-yellow raiment, with round, flat black
-hats and long feathers, who were galloping
-to and fro, directing grand charges
-of cavalry. It did seem so funny to see
-a whole army of ponies; for there are
-no horses here, unless the foreign residents
-chance to import any.</p>
-
-<p>These Eight Banners are all Manchus
-or Mongol Tartars, or at any rate are
-descended from such, Chinese troops
-being ranged under the green standard.
-These Eight Banners which, as I have
-said, are multiplied, are plain white,
-red, blue, and yellow, and the same colors
-repeated, and distinguished by a
-white edge and white spot. These companies
-are supposed to defend different
-sides of the city, the colors having some
-mystic relation to the points of the compass;
-except that yellow is in the middle,
-where it guards the Imperial Palace.
-Red guards the south, blue the north,
-and white the west, whilst the east is
-nominally given up to the green standard,
-which, however, being composed of
-Chinamen, is not admitted to the honor
-of guarding the forbidden city. I am
-told that the Banner Army numbers upwards
-of a hundred thousand men, who
-supply Tartar garrisons for the principal
-cities of the Empire.</p>
-
-<p>We got out of the cart and secured a
-good position on a small hillock, whence
-we had a capital view. A number of
-Tartar soldiers who were off duty gathered
-round, and were quite captivated
-by the loan of my opera-glasses. Then
-they showed us their wretched firearms
-(which certainly did not look as if any
-European could have superintended the
-arsenal where they were manufactured),
-and also their peculiar belts, containing
-charges of powder only, and yet we are
-told that in addition to first-class firearms,
-which are being ceaselessly manufactured
-at the Government arsenals at
-Tientsin, Shanghai, Canton, Foochow,
-Nankin, and other less important places,
-the Chinese Government spares no expense
-in buying both ammunition and
-firearms of European manufacture. I
-suppose they are kept in reserve for real
-war!</p>
-
-<p>A picturesque company of archers
-rode by on stout ponies, holding their
-bridles in the right hand, and in the left
-their bows, the arrows being cased in a
-leathern quiver, slung across the shoulders.
-As to their swords, instead of
-hanging from the waist, they are stuck
-under the saddle-flap; each man's cap
-is adorned with the tails of two squirrels,
-which is the correct military decoration.
-Now though we Scots are quite
-ready to believe that blackcocks were
-created for the express purpose of bequeathing
-their tails to adorn the caps
-of the London Scottish (the said tails
-having very much the jovial, independent
-character of the bird itself), it really
-is impossible to see the fitness of things
-in selecting poor little squgs as military
-emblems, unless to suggest the wisdom
-of he who fights and runs away! Anyhow,
-it now seems as if we might find a
-profitable market for all the thousands
-of squirrel's tails which are annually
-wasted in our north-country woods. I
-quite forgot to take note of the fan and
-the pipe, which I am told are invariable
-items in the accoutrements of the Chinese
-soldiers.<a id="FNanchor_26_26" href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">26</a></p>
-
-<p>Returning to our cart we next drove
-to the Ta-tsoon-tsu, or Temple of the
-Great Bell. It is a large Buddhist monastery.
-The priests, who occupy separate
-houses, are a civil, kindly lot, very
-different from the Lamas of the Yung-ho-Kung!
-There are curious paintings
-of Buddhist saints in the halls; but the
-great object of interest is the huge bell,
-which is said to be the largest hanging
-bell in the world. Anyhow, it is a wonderful
-piece of casting, being nearly
-eighteen feet high and forty-five feet in
-circumference, and is of solid bronze
-four inches thick. It is one of eight
-great bells which were cast by command
-of the Emperor Yung-lo about <span class="smcap">A.D.</span>
-1400, and this giant is said to have cost
-the lives of eight men, who were killed
-during the process of casting. The
-whole bell, both inside and out, is covered
-with an inscription in embossed
-Chinese characters about half an inch
-long, covering even the handle, the total
-number being 84,000! I am told that
-this is a whole classic.</p>
-
-<p>This gigantic bell hangs in a two-storied
-pagoda, and underneath the beam
-from which it is suspended hangs a little
-bell, and a favorite amusement of Chinese
-visitors to the temple is to ascend
-to a gallery, whence they throw small
-coins at the little bell, in hopes of hitting
-it, on the same principle, I suppose, that
-they spit chewed prayer-papers at certain
-gods in the hope of hitting them!
-The throwing of cash is certainly more
-profitable to the priests, as the coins fall
-into a rim round the great bell and become
-temple property. This great bell,
-which is struck on the outside by a suspended
-ram of wood, is only sounded
-when—in times of drought—the Emperor
-in person or the Imperial Princes
-as his deputies come to this temple to
-pray for rain. Theoretically, they are
-supposed not to rise from their knees
-till the rain falls in answer to their
-prayer, and responsive to the vibrations
-of the mighty bell.</p>
-
-<p>There is sore need of rain now, so I
-suppose the bell will be struck ere long.
-Apparently it is reserved as a last resource,
-for already the little Emperor
-and the Empresses Regent have been
-pleading for rain in the gorgeous yellow
-tiled temple at the entrance to the Forbidden
-City, and Prince Yeh, as the
-Emperor's deputy, has been repeatedly
-sent to pray for rain in a most strange
-open-air temporary sanctuary close to
-the Bell Temple. We discovered this
-quite by chance, having observed a large
-circular inclosure in the middle of a field
-of standing corn.</p>
-
-<p>We halted and went to see what it
-was, and we found that it consisted of
-eight screens of coarse yellow mats, with
-great yellow dragons designed on them.
-Four of the screens form a circle having
-four gaps. The other four are straight,
-and are placed outside, so as to guard
-and conceal the entrances. In the centre
-a square raised platform of earth
-forms a rude altar, at the four corners
-of which are four vases of the coarsest
-pottery, containing plants; straggling
-and much trampled corn grows between
-and around them, as in the field outside.
-In a small tent close by we found a
-sleepy watchman, who told us about the
-Prince's devotional visits to this very
-primitive oratory.</p>
-
-<p>After four hours of intolerably weary
-jolting in our dreadful cart, we arrived
-at Wan-Shu-Shan, which is the only
-portion of the grounds of the Summer
-Palace (the Yuen-Ming-Yuen) to which
-foreigners are still admitted, as they have
-there wrought such hopeless ruin that I
-suppose it is not thought worth while to
-shut them out; and truly it is sickening
-even now to look on such a scene of
-devastation. The park, which is now
-once more closed to the barbarians,
-contains fine palatial buildings, faced
-with colonnades and altogether of a very
-Italian type, having been built under the
-direction of the Jesuits, but the beautiful
-pleasure grounds, where we wandered
-over wooded hills all strewn with beautiful
-ruins, is purely Chinese, and as such
-is to me far more interesting.</p>
-
-<p>Our first halt was beside a well whose
-waters are so deliciously crystalline and
-cold that they seemed to our parched
-and dusty throats as a true elixir. So
-famous is this pure spring that the daily
-supply for the Imperial Palace is brought
-thence in barrels, in a cart flying a yellow
-flag, with an inscription in black
-characters stating that it travels on the
-Emperor's business—a warning to all
-men to make way for it. The water
-near the city is all bad and brackish, so
-such a spring as this is a priceless boon.</p>
-
-<p>This wonderland has been so often
-described since its destruction, that in
-its present aspect the whole seems familiar
-ground; but it is new to me to learn
-anything concerning it in its palmy days,
-from the pen of an eyewitness, and so I
-have been much interested in reading a
-curious account of these Imperial pleasure-grounds
-written in 1743 by Mons.
-Attiret, a French missionary, whose talent
-for painting led to his receiving an
-order to make drawings for the Emperor
-at the Summer Palace.</p>
-
-<p>He tells how he and his companions
-were conducted to Peking by a Chinese
-official, who would on no account allow
-them to look out of the windows of
-their covered boats to observe the country,
-still less to land at any point. The
-latter part of the journey they were carried
-in litters, in which they were shut
-up all the day long, only halting at
-wretched inns. Naturally, when they
-were released from this tedious captivity
-and beheld these beautiful grounds—the
-Yuen-Ming-Yuen—the Garden of gardens,
-they supposed themselves in Paradise,
-and here they seem to have remained
-for a considerable time.</p>
-
-<p>M. Attiret describes the ornamental
-buildings, containing the most beautiful
-and valuable things that could be obtained
-in China, the Indies, and even
-Europe—ancient vases of fine porcelain,
-silk cloths of gold and silver, carved
-furniture of valuable wood, and all manner
-of rare objects. He counted no less
-than two hundred of these palaces, each
-of which he declared to be large enough
-to accommodate the greatest nobleman
-in Europe with all his retinue. Some
-of these towns were built of cedar-wood,
-brought at great expense from a distance
-of fifteen hundred miles; some
-were gilded, painted, and varnished.
-Many had their roofs covered with
-glazed tiles of different colors, red, yellow,
-blue, green, and purple, arranged
-in patterns.</p>
-
-<p>What chiefly astonished the artist was
-the variety which had been obtained in
-designing these pleasure houses, not
-only as regarded their general architecture
-but such minor details as the forms
-of the doors and windows, which were
-round, oval, square, and of all manner
-of angled figures, while some were
-shaped like fans, others like flowers,
-vases, birds, beasts, and figures.</p>
-
-<p>In the courts and passages he saw
-vases of porcelain, brass, and marble
-filled with flowers, while in the outer
-courts stood mythological figures of animals,
-and urns with perfumes burning
-in them, resting on marble pedestals.</p>
-
-<p>Most of these buildings were but one
-story high, and, being built on artificially
-raised ground, were approached
-by rough steps of artificial rock work.
-Some of these were connected one with
-another by fanciful winding porticoes or
-colonnades, which in places were raised
-on columns, and in others were so led
-as to wind by the side of a grove or by
-a river bank.</p>
-
-<p>Wonderful ingenuity was displayed in
-so placing these houses as to secure the
-greatest possible variety of situation,
-and to command the most varied views.
-Every natural feature of the ground had
-been elaborated, so as to produce charming
-landscapes, which could scarcely be
-recognised as artificial; hills, of from
-ten to sixty feet in height, were constructed,
-divided by little valleys and
-watered by clear streams forming cascades
-and lakes, one of which was five
-miles in circumference. On its calm
-waters floated beautiful pleasure-boats,
-including one magnificent house-boat for
-the amusement of the ladies of the palace.</p>
-
-<p>In every direction, winding paths led
-to quaint little pavilions and charming
-grottoes, while artificial rock-work was
-made the nursery for all manner of
-beautiful flowers, much care being bestowed
-on securing a great variety for
-every season of the year. Flowering
-trees were scattered over the grassy
-hills, and their blossoms perfumed the
-air. Each stream was crossed at frequent
-intervals by most picturesque and
-highly ornamental bridges of wood,
-brick or freestone adorned with fanciful
-kiosks, in which to repose while admiring
-the view. He says the triumph of
-art was to make these bridges twist
-about in such an extraordinary manner
-that they were often three times as long
-as if they had been led in a direct line.
-Near some of them were placed some
-very remarkable triumphal arches, either
-of elaborately carved wood or of marble.</p>
-
-<p>M. Attiret awards the palm of beauty
-to a palace of a hundred apartments,
-standing in an island in the middle
-of the large lake, and commanding a
-general view of all the other palaces,
-which lay scattered round its shores, or
-half concealed among the groves, which
-were so planted as to screen them from
-one another. Moreover, from this point
-all the bridges were visible, as each rivulet
-flowed to the lake, round which the
-artificial hills rose in a series of terraces,
-forming a sort of amphitheatre.</p>
-
-<p>On the brink of the lake were network
-houses for all manner of strange waterfowl,
-and in a large reservoir, inclosed
-by a lattice work of fine brass wire, were
-a multitude of beautiful gold and silver
-fish. Other fish there were of all manner
-of colors—red, blue, green, purple,
-and black—these were likewise inclosed.
-But the lake must have been well stocked,
-as fishing was one of the favorite recreations
-of the nobles.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes there were mimic sea-fights
-and other diversions for the entertainment
-of the Court, and occasionally
-illuminations, when every palace, every
-boat, almost every tree was lighted up,
-and brilliant fireworks, which M. Attiret
-declared far exceeded anything of the
-sort he had witnessed in France or
-Italy.</p>
-
-<p>As to the variety of lanterns displayed
-at the great Feast of Lanterns, it
-was altogether amazing. From the ceiling
-of every chamber in every palace,
-they were suspended from the trees on
-the hills, the kiosks on the bridges.
-They were shaped like fishes, birds, and
-beasts, vases, fruits, flowers, and boats
-of different form and size. Some were
-made of silk, some of horn, glass,
-mother-of-pearl, and a thousand other
-materials. Some were painted, some
-embroidered, some so valuable that it
-seemed as if they could not have been
-produced under a thousand crowns. On
-every rivulet, river, and lake floated
-lanterns made in the form of little boats,
-each adding something to the fairy-like
-scene.</p>
-
-<p>At the time when the Barbarian army
-so ruthlessly forced their way into this
-Chinese paradise it was in the most perfect
-order—a feature by no means common
-even in the houses of the greatest
-mandarins.</p>
-
-<p>Forty small palaces, each a marvel of
-art, occupied beautiful sites within the
-grounds, and the footpaths leading from
-one to another were faultlessly neat.
-The sheets of ornamental water, lakes,
-and rivers were all clean, and each
-marble bridge was a separate object of
-beauty, while from out the dense foliage
-on the hill, yellow tiled roofs, curled up
-at the ends, gleamed like gold in the sunlight.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>Within the palace were stored such
-treasures of exquisitely carved jade,
-splendid old enamels, bronzes, gold and
-silver, precious jewels of jade and rubies,
-carved lapis lazuli, priceless furs and
-richest silks, as could only have been
-accumulated by a long dynasty of Celestial
-rulers.</p>
-
-<p>Cruel indeed was the change when a
-few hours later the allied forces arrived.
-The English cavalry was the first to
-reach the ground, but did not enter.
-The French quickly followed by another
-approach, and at once proceeded to sack
-the palace; so that when the British were
-allowed to join in the work of devastation
-and indiscriminate plunder, all the
-most obviously valuable treasure had
-already been removed, while the floors
-were strewn knee-deep with broken fragments
-of priceless china, and every sort
-of beautiful object too cumbersome or
-too fragile for rough and ready removal,
-and therefore ruthlessly smashed with the
-butt ends of muskets, to say nothing of
-the piles of most gorgeous silks and
-satins and gold embroideries, which lay
-unheeded among the ruins.</p>
-
-<p>Then when the best of the steeds had
-been stolen, the doors were locked and
-Indian troops were posted to guard the
-treasures that remained (no easy task),
-till it should be possible to divide them
-equally between the forces. When this
-had been done the share apportioned to
-the British was at once sold by public
-auction, in order that an immediate distribution
-of prize money might allay the
-very natural jealousy which would otherwise
-have been aroused by the sight of
-French soldiers laden with the Sycee
-silver and other treasures which they
-had appropriated.</p>
-
-<p>But though wagon-loads of what
-seemed the most precious objects were removed,
-these were as nothing compared
-with what was left and destroyed, when
-the order was given to commence the
-actual demolition of the principal buildings:
-a work on which two regiments
-were employed for two whole days, ere
-the hand of the destroyer was stayed
-by a treaty of peace, and so happily a
-few wonderful and unique buildings still
-remain as a suggestion of vanished
-glories.</p>
-
-<p>Of course all this was done with the
-best possible intentions, by way of
-punishing the Emperor himself and his
-great nobles for the official deeds of
-treachery, rather than injure the innocent
-citizens of Peking. Yet it seems that
-these would have accepted any amount
-of personal loss and suffering rather
-than this barbarous destruction of an
-Imperial glory—an act which has so impressed
-the whole nation with a conviction
-that all foreigners are barbarous
-Vandals, that it is generally coupled with
-their determined pushing of the opium
-trade. These two crimes form the
-double-barrelled weapon of reproach
-wherewith Christian missionaries in all
-parts of the Empire are assailed, and
-their work grievously hindered.</p>
-
-<p>We devoted about three hours to exploring
-these beautiful grounds, of which
-might well be said, “Was never scene
-so sad so fair!” Even the ornamental
-timber was cut for firewood by the allied
-barbarians, though enough remains to
-beautify the landscape.</p>
-
-<p>The grounds are enclosed by a handsome
-wall of dark-red sandstone with a
-coping of glazed tiles, and its warm color
-contrasts pleasantly with the rich greens
-of the park and the lovely blue lake with
-its reedy shores, and floating lotus blossoms.
-One of the most conspicuous objects
-is a very handsome stone bridge of
-seventeen arches, graduated from quite
-small arches on either side to very high
-ones in the centre. It is commonly
-called the marble bridge, because of its
-beautiful white marble balustrades with
-about fifty pillars on either side, on each
-of which sits a marble lion, and of all
-these I am told that no two are quite alike.
-Each end of this bridge is guarded by
-two large lions, also of marble. This
-bridge connects the mainland with an
-island about a quarter of a mile in circumference;
-it is entirely surrounded
-with a marble balustrade like that of the
-bridge. In the centre of the isle is an
-artificial mound, on which, approached
-by flights of steps, and enclosed by yet
-another marble balustrade, are the ruins
-of what must have been a beautiful temple.</p>
-
-<p>Another very striking bridge, which
-spans a stream flowing into the lake, is
-called the Camel's Hump, and has only
-one very steep arch, about forty feet
-high. What makes this look so very peculiar
-is the fact that the banks on either
-side are almost level with the stream, so
-the elevation is purely fanciful. The
-bridge also has a beautiful marble balustrade.</p>
-
-<p>A third, very similar to this last,
-crosses another winding of the stream,
-where it flows through flooded rice-fields,
-and so appears like an extension
-of the lake. Along this stream there
-is a fine avenue of willow-trees fully a
-mile in length.</p>
-
-<p>Ascending a wooded hill, which is
-dotted all over with only partially
-destroyed buildings, we thence had a
-most lovely view of all the park, looking
-down on the blue lake, the winding
-streams, the various bridges, the blue
-mountain range, and the distant city of
-Peking with a foreground of most picturesque
-temple buildings and fine Scotch
-firs, dark rocks and green creepers.</p>
-
-<p>Though the general feeling is one of
-desolation (as one climbs stairways,
-passing between numberless mounds of
-rubble, entirely composed of beautifully
-glazed tiles of every color of the rainbow,
-and all in fragments), there are,
-nevertheless, some isolated buildings
-which happily have quite escaped.
-Among these are several most beautiful
-seven-story pagodas. Of one, which is
-octagonal, the lower story is adorned
-with finely sculptured Indian gods.
-Two others are entirely faced and roofed
-with the loveliest porcelain tiles—yellow
-gold, bright green, and deep blue.
-They are exquisitely delicate and are
-quite intact; even the tremulous bells
-suspended from the leaves still tinkling
-with every breath of air.</p>
-
-<p>Another building, which is still almost
-perfect, is a beautiful little bronze
-temple, near to which is a fine triple
-pai-low, or commemorative arch, and
-there are others of indescribable form,
-such as a little globe resting on a great
-one, and the whole surmounted by a
-spire representing fourteen canopies.
-But nothing save colored sketches (of
-which I secured a few) could really give
-any idea of this strange place or of these
-singular buildings.</p>
-
-<p>On the summit of the hill there still
-stands a very large two-storied brick
-building, entirely faced with glittering
-glazed tiles of dazzling yellow, emerald
-green, and blue, with a double roof of
-yellow porcelain tiles; among its decorations
-are a multitude of images of Buddha
-in brown china. It is approached by a
-grand triple gateway of white marble and
-colored tiles, like one we saw at the Confucian
-temple in the city of Peking.</p>
-
-<p>There are also a great variety of
-huge stone pillars and tablets, all highly
-sculptured; the dragon and other
-mythical animals appearing in all directions.
-There are bronze beasts and
-marble beasts, but only those of such
-size and weight as to have baulked all
-efforts of thieving visitors, whether
-native or foreign, whose combined
-efforts have long since removed every
-portable image and ornament.</p>
-
-<p>To me the most interesting group of
-ruins is a cluster of very ornamental
-small temple buildings, some with conical,
-others, with tent-shaped roofs, but
-all glazed with the most brilliantly green
-tiles, and all the pillars and other woodwork
-painted deep red. On either side
-of the principal building are two very
-ornamental pagoda-shaped temples, exactly
-alike, except that the green roof
-of one is surmounted by a dark-blue
-china ornament, the other by a similar
-ornament in bright yellow.</p>
-
-<p>Each is built to contain a large rotatory
-cylinder on the prayer-wheel principle,
-with niches for a multitude of
-images. In fact they are small editions
-of two revolving cylinders with five hundred
-disciples of Buddha, which attracted
-me at the great Lama temple as
-being the first link to Japanese Scripture-wheels,
-or Thibetan prayer-wheels which
-I have seen in China, and the existence
-of which has apparently passed unnoticed.
-It is needless to add that of
-course every image has been stolen, and
-only the revolving stands now remain in
-a most rickety condition.</p>
-
-<p>When we could no longer endure the
-blazing heat, we descended past what
-appears to have been the principal temple,
-of which absolutely nothing remains
-standing—only a vast mound of brilliant
-fragments of broken tiles, lying on a
-great platform; steep zigzag stairs
-brought us to the foot of the hill, where
-great bronze lions still guard the forsaken
-courts.</p>
-
-<p>Parched with thirst, we returned to the
-blessed spring of truly living water, and
-drank and drank again, cup after cup,
-till the very coolies standing by laughed.
-Then once again climbing into the
-horrible vehicle of torture, we retraced
-our morning route, till we reached a
-very nice clean restaurant, where we
-ordered luncheon. We were shown into
-a pretty little airy room upstairs, commanding
-a very fine view of the grounds
-we had just left. After the preliminary
-tiny cup of pale yellow tea, basins of
-boiling water were brought in, with a
-bit of flannel floating in each, that we
-might wash off the dust in orthodox
-Chinese fashion. The correct thing is
-to wring out the flannel, and therewith
-rub the face and neck with a view to
-future coolness.</p>
-
-<p>Luncheon (eaten with chop sticks,
-which I can now manage perfectly) consisted
-of the usual series of small dishes,
-little bits of cold chicken with sauce,
-little bits of hot chicken boiled to rags,
-morsels of pork with mushrooms, fragments
-of cold duck with some other sort
-of fungus, watery soup, scraps of pigs'
-kidneys with boiled chestnuts, very
-coarse rice, pickled cucumber, garlic and
-cabbage, patty of preserved shrimps, all
-in infinitesimal portions, so that, but
-for the plentiful supply of rice, hungry
-folk would find it hard to appease the
-inner wolf. Tiny cups of rice wine
-followed by more tea completed the repast
-for which a sum equivalent to sixteen
-shillings was demanded, and of
-course refused; nevertheless, necessitating
-a troublesome argument.</p>
-
-<p>We hurried away as soon as possible,
-being anxious to visit a very famous
-Lama temple, the “Wang-Tzu,” or
-Yellow Temple. As we drove along I
-was amazed to notice how singularly
-numerous magpies are hereabouts.
-They go about in companies of six or
-eight, and are so tame and saucy that
-they scarcely take the trouble to hop
-aside as we pass.</p>
-
-<p>Though the drive seemed very long
-still, we never suspected anything amiss
-till suddenly we found ourselves near the
-gates of the city; when we discovered
-that our worthy carter, assuming that he
-knew the time better than we did, and
-that we should be locked out of the city
-at sunset, had deliberately taken a wrong
-road, and altogether avoided the Yellow
-Temple. Reluctantly yielding to British
-determination, he sorrowfully turned,
-and we had to endure a long extra
-course of bumping ere we reached the
-temple, which is glazed with yellow tiles
-(an Imperial privilege which is conceded
-to Lamas).</p>
-
-<p>This is a very large Lama monastery,
-full of objects of interest, of which the
-most notable is a very fine white marble
-monument to a grand Lama who died
-here. It is of a purely Indian design, and
-all round it are sculptured scenes in the
-life and death of Buddha, Of course,
-having lost so much time, we had very
-little to spare here, so once more betook
-us to the cart and jolted back to
-Peking.</p>
-
-<p>As we crossed the dreary expanse of
-dusty plain, a sharp wind sprang up, and
-we had a moderate taste of the horrors
-of a dust-storm, and devoutly hope
-never to be subjected to a real one.</p>
-
-<p>The dread of being locked out is by
-no means unfounded. Punctually at a
-quarter to six, one of the soldiers on
-guard strikes the gong which hangs at
-the door, and continues doing so for five
-minutes with slow regular strokes. Then
-a quickened beat gives notice that only
-ten minutes' grace remains, then more
-and more rapidly fall the strokes, and the
-accustomed ear distinguishes five varieties
-of beat, by which it is easy to calculate
-how many minutes remain. From
-the first stroke every one outside the
-gate hurries towards them, and carts,
-foot passengers, and riders stream into
-the city with much noise and turmoil.
-At six o'clock precisely the guard unite
-in a prolonged unearthly shout, announcing
-that time is up. Then the
-ponderous gates are closed, and in
-another moment the rusty lock creaks,
-and the city is secure for the night.</p>
-
-<p>Then follows the frightful and unfragrant
-process of street watering, of which
-we had full benefit, as our tired mule
-slowly dragged us back to our haven of
-rest under the hospitable roof of the
-London Missionary Society.—<cite>Belgravia.</cite></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2 id="THE_CAMORRA">THE CAMORRA.</h2>
-
-<p>Most foreign visitors to Naples are
-inclined to think that the Camorra is as
-entirely a thing of the past as the Swiss
-guards that used to protect the King of
-the Two Sicilies, or the military pageant
-that was formerly held in honor of Santa
-Maria Piedigrotta, the Madonna who
-was once nominated commander-in-chief
-of the Neapolitan armies, and led them
-to victory. Young men with gorgeous,
-if somewhat tawdry, caps and jewelry
-are no longer to be seen sauntering
-through the streets and markets with an
-insolent air of mastery which no one
-dares to question; and the old man who
-used to collect money for the lamps of
-the Madonna—a request which, somehow,
-no coachman ever refused—have
-vanished from the cabstands. The outward
-glory of the Camorra has passed
-away; it is anxious now to conceal instead
-of displaying its power; but
-among the older residents in Naples
-there are many who believe that this
-strange secret society has never exercised
-a greater influence than it does at
-present, though it is possible that the interest
-it is said to have lately taken in
-politics may lead to its fall. In fact,
-such an interference in public affairs is
-a distinct departure from the principles
-on which the earlier traditions of the
-association were founded.</p>
-
-<p>The whole subject is of course
-shrouded in mystery. There are important
-points connected with it on
-which it is impossible to obtain trustworthy
-information, as all who have any
-real knowledge of the facts have the
-strongest personal reasons for concealing
-them. Still, the organization of the
-lower ranks of the society is well known
-to the police, and it is by no means impossible
-to form a clear conception of
-its real character and aims, though it is
-necessary to sift every statement made
-about them with unusual care, as the
-inquirer must be on his guard not only
-against the romance and exaggeration of
-popular fancy, but also against a desire
-to mislead. It is only by inadvertence
-that any correct information is likely to
-be given, and as soon as the stranger
-exhibits an interest in the subject, he is
-supplied with a splendid stock of pure
-inventions. He must look and listen,
-and refrain from questioning as much as
-possible, unless he has the good fortune
-to meet an intelligent official connected
-with the police, or still better one who
-served the deposed dynasty. Before
-entering on the subject itself, however,
-a digression will be necessary in order
-to explain to English readers how such
-an association could be formed, and
-what were the circumstances that favored
-its growth and have hitherto secured its
-existence.</p>
-
-<p>With respect to Sicily, Dr. Franchetti
-tells us that, whenever several men combine
-to support their own interests in opposition
-to those of their neighbors, that
-is Mafia. Where the condition of society
-is favorable, such combinations become
-exceedingly powerful. The strongest,
-the most enterprising, and the most violent
-inhabitants unite together. The will
-of each member is law in as far as the
-outside world is concerned; in executing
-it his companions will shrink neither from
-force nor fraud, and all they expect is that
-he should be ready to render similar services
-in his turn. When such a body has
-been formed in a district where the law
-is not powerful enough to hold it in
-check, the other members of the community
-must either tamely submit to its oppressions,
-put themselves under its protection,
-or form a new Mafia of their own.
-Now the Camorra is only a fully-developed
-and highly-organized Mafia.</p>
-
-<p>It owes its long existence and its great
-influence chiefly to two circumstances.
-Family feeling in Naples is much stronger
-than in the North. Not only do parents
-and children, brothers and sisters cling
-together through life, but even distant
-cousins are recognized as relations
-whose interests must be guarded and
-advanced. If your cook's uncle happens
-to have a friend who is a butcher,
-nothing will induce him to buy your
-meat at any other shop; if your boy is
-sent to fetch a cab, he will waste half an
-hour looking for some distant acquaintance
-of his aunt's. As soon as you
-take a servant your custom becomes the
-property of his family connections. If
-you attempt to prevent this, you only
-embitter your life with a vain endeavor
-to thwart petty intrigues. If you dismiss
-your man, you only change your
-set of tradesmen; if you submit good
-humoredly, you soon begin to be regarded
-as a patron of the whole family,
-and will therefore be treated with all
-fitting consideration and esteem. The
-single members will serve you honestly,
-and even go out of their way to please
-you. It is clear that a society so clannish
-is excellently suited for a Mafia.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, the uncertainty of
-the law under the old dynasty might well
-serve as an excuse for a good deal of self-assertion
-and self-defence. The tyranny
-of the Bourbons, it is true, was chiefly
-exercised upon the educated members of
-the middle class, whom they suspected,
-not unjustly, of designs against their rule.
-For the poor and the uneducated they
-did a good deal, often in a rather unwise
-way, and they never seem intentionally
-to have oppressed them. But the police
-are generally said to have been corrupt,
-the influence of the man of birth and
-wealth was great, and it was doubtless at
-times capriciously exercised. Against
-this the individual was powerless; when
-a large number were bound together by
-secret pledges, they could ensure respect
-and consideration.</p>
-
-<p>It must not, however, be thought that
-there was anything heroic even in the
-old Camorra. It was not a league of
-justice and freedom, but simply an
-association which was pledged to advance
-the interests of its members, to
-right their wrongs, and to protect them to
-the utmost against every external power,
-including that of the law. And it has
-always maintained this character.
-Though it has occasionally done acts of
-justice and mercy, these are by no
-means its chief, or even an important,
-object; though many of its members
-belong to the criminal classes, it is not
-a society for the furtherance of crime.
-It pays no respect to the law except from
-prudential motives, and, as it has often
-dirty work to do, it makes use of dirty
-hands; but many men in all classes who
-are otherwise perfectly honest and respectable
-belong to it, and find their
-advantage in doing so.</p>
-
-<p>To a certain extent, however, the
-aims of the Camorra have grown with
-the growth of its power. In the face of
-so powerful an association, it became
-necessary for those who did not belong
-to it to take steps to guard their own
-interests, and most of them did so by
-seeking its protection. This could be
-obtained by the payment of a tribute
-which consisted either of a fixed tax or
-of a percentage on profits. Thus the
-association claims, and has long claimed,
-a right to levy an impost on all meat,
-fish, fruit, and vegetables exposed for
-sale in the markets, on all goods sold in
-the streets, on the winnings in all games
-of chance played in public, and on all
-cab hire. Very stringent laws have
-been enacted against this practice, and
-the Government has from time to time
-made energetic efforts to suppress it, but
-without success. The peasants and fishermen
-are eager to pay the illegal tax.
-The threat not to accept it will awe the
-most refractory among them into obedience
-to the other regulations of the Association,
-for they know that if the countenance
-of the Society is withdrawn, it
-will soon become impossible for them
-to visit the market. For a week or two
-they may thrive under the exceptional
-care of the police, but as soon as the
-attention of the authorities relaxes, customers
-will be crowded away from their
-stalls, their goods will be pilfered, and
-their boats or carts, as the case may be,
-either seriously injured or put vexatiously
-out of gear. The mere fact
-that the Camorra has ceased to favor
-So-and-so is enough to expose him to
-the violence and the wiles of half the
-roughs and thieves of the district, as
-well as to the tricks and torments of the
-most impish crowd of street boys that
-any European town can show.</p>
-
-<p>The Camorra dues are, therefore, an
-insurance against theft and annoyance.
-Those who pay them are not members of
-the fraternity, they for the most part
-know nothing of its constitution, and
-they can make no claim upon it, except
-for protection, on their way from the
-gates of the town to the market-place, and
-during their stay there. This, however,
-is highly valuable, and it is honestly exercised.
-Some years ago a party of
-fishermen brought a rather unusual supply
-to market, and left their wares standing
-at the accustomed place while they
-went into a neighboring coffee-house to
-breakfast. They were stolen, and the
-men applied to the official representative
-of the Camorra as naturally an
-Englishman would to the police. He
-asked some questions, took a few notes,
-and then bid them leave the market for a
-time, and come back at a certain hour.
-They did so, and on their return found
-their fish standing where they had
-originally left it, “not a sardine was
-missing.” Such events are constantly
-occurring.</p>
-
-<p>The almost unlimited influence which
-the association exercises over the criminal
-classes is due less to the fact that many
-of them are enrolled among its members
-than to the extraordinary information it
-can command as to any detail of city life.
-In every district it has a body of highly-trained
-agents, as to whose education
-and organization we may perhaps have
-an opportunity of saying something in a
-future number. These men are all eye
-and ear, and if a question is proposed to
-them by their superiors as to the private
-life of any one who resides in their district,
-it will go hard if they are not able
-to supply a trustworthy answer in a few
-days. Hence it would be almost impossible
-for a criminal to escape the
-officers of justice if the Camorra
-sincerely desired his arrest. It never
-interferes in such matters, however, except
-when one of its members or tributaries
-has been wronged, and compensation
-is refused. This rarely happens;
-but when it does it is said that its vengeance
-is swift and implacable, while it
-takes the perfectly legal form of a judicial
-sentence. Nor does the victim
-escape from its power when the prison
-gates close upon him. Some members
-of the association are almost sure to be
-confined within the same gloomy precincts,
-and they spare no pains to render
-the life of the foe of their society intolerable
-by a thousand petty vexations
-which the gaolers could not prevent,
-even if they cared to incur the personal
-danger of endeavoring to do so. As a
-rule, they prefer to stand on a good
-footing with the Camorrists, and to employ
-their influence in keeping the other
-prisoners in order.</p>
-
-<p>When a dispute arises, either in the
-streets or market-places, between persons
-who have purchased the protection
-of the association, it is usually referred
-to one of its agents whose decision is
-regarded as final, and so great is the
-reputation of many of these men for
-justice and fair play, that they are frequently
-requested to arbitrate on matters
-with which they have officially no concern
-whatever. On such occasions it is
-usual to make a present to the amateur
-judge, proportionate in worth to the
-matter he has settled, or at least to invite
-him to a sumptuous dinner. In a
-similar way these Camorrists form the
-court of honor of the lazzaroni. All
-questions of vendetta which have their
-origin in a sense of honor rather than
-personal hatred are submitted to them,
-and it is only just to recognize that they
-almost invariably do their best to bring
-about a reconciliation, though they themselves
-are notoriously ready to use their
-knives. In a word, whatever the ultimate
-purposes of the Camorra may be—they
-are doubtless always lawless, and
-not unfrequently criminal—its influence
-over the poorer classes is not an unmixed
-evil. It is unscrupulous both in forming
-and executing its designs, but when
-its own interests are not involved, it can
-be both just and merciful. There are
-honest and well-to-do tradesmen in Naples
-who would never have risen from
-the gutter, if, in their boyhood, the
-Camorra had not given them a fair start
-and something more.—<cite>Saturday Review.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2 id="THE_DECAY_OF_IRISH_HUMOR">THE DECAY OF IRISH HUMOR.</h2>
-
-
-<p>The above heading was suggested to
-us by a friend as the subject of a paper
-some months back, but it was not until
-much time had elapsed, and not a little
-reflection had been devoted to the
-matter, that we felt ourselves constrained
-to admit its unwelcome truth. For
-to acknowledge that Irish humor is on
-the wane is a serious admission at the
-present day, when we are suffering from
-an undoubted dearth of that commodity
-on this side of the Channel; when laughter
-has been effectually quenched at St.
-Stephen's; when our interest in the best
-comic paper is almost entirely centred in
-the illustrations, and not the text; and
-when we have grown to be strangely dependent
-upon America for light reading
-of all sorts. This year—an exceptionally
-uninteresting year for the reader—has,
-it is true, been marked by a new departure
-or a reaction in the direction
-of startling sensation and melodramatic
-plots—engendered perhaps by a desire
-to escape from the unromantic common
-placeness of our daily surroundings,
-culminating in Mr. Stevenson's tale,
-“The Bodysnatcher,” in the Christmas
-number of the <cite>Pall Mall Gazette</cite>, which
-literally reeks of the charnel-house. But
-this movement, apart from its general
-literary or constructive merit, is from
-its very nature opposed to sunshine and
-mirth. The advent of a new humorist
-was hailed by some critics on the appearance
-of “Vice Versâ,” but his second
-considerable contribution to fiction,
-“The Giant's Robe,” is anything but a
-cheerful book. Lastly, at least two conscious
-and elaborate attempts have been
-made during the last six months to transplant
-the squalid anatomical photography
-of Zola into the realm of English fiction.
-Where, then, in these latter days are
-we to look for native humorists? Not
-in the ranks of Irish politicians surely,
-for the Irish political fanatic is anything
-but a comic personage, and the whole
-course of the Nationalist agitation has
-been unredeemed by any humorous
-passage. There are no Boyle Roches,
-or O'Connells, or Dowses, or even
-O'Gormans, to be found amongst the
-followers of Mr. Parnell. The cold,
-impassive address of their leader, utterly
-un-Irish in its character, and, perhaps,
-only the more effective on that account,
-has infected them all. Mr. O'Donnell
-has now and then let fly a sardonic
-shaft; but Mr. Justin McCarthy reserves
-his graceful pleasantry for the
-pages of his novels, save no one occasion
-when Mr. Gladstone pounced down on
-a “bull” of preternatural magnitude.
-Acrimony, virulence, and powers of invective,
-these are abundantly displayed
-by Messrs. Sexton, Healy, and O'Brien;
-but as for humor, there is none of it.
-For otherwise would they not have seen
-the logical outcome of their decision (we
-speak of the Nationalists as a whole) to
-rename the Dublin streets,—we mean the
-corollary that they should in many cases
-divest themselves also of their indubitably
-Sassenach patronymics in favor of
-Celtic and national names? From their
-own point of view, Charles Stewart Parnell
-is an odious combination, and should
-give place, let us say, to Brian Boroihme
-O'Toole. If we turn from politics to
-literature, we shall find much the same
-state of things prevailing. Irishmen are
-remarkably successful as journalists, but
-the prizes of that profession draw them
-away from their own country; their lives
-are spent amid other surroundings, less
-favorable to the development of their
-characteristic humor, which encourage
-their facile wits to waste themselves in
-mere over-production. Some of the
-very best specimens of recent Irish
-verse are to be found in the pages of
-<cite>Kottabos</cite>, a magazine supported by the
-members of Trinity College, Dublin.
-But although it is hardly a good sign
-that the best work of this kind should
-flourish under Academic patronage, we
-have been sincerely grieved to learn that
-<cite>Kottabos</cite> is no more, and the goodly
-company of <i>Kottabistæ</i> finally disbanded.</p>
-
-<p>If we descend to the other end of the
-social scale, we shall find that a variety
-of causes have conspired to diminish or
-even destroy the sense of humor with the
-possession of which tradition has credited
-the Irish peasant. It is only fair,
-however, to premise that much of what
-strikes an appreciative visitor as humorous
-in the speech of an Irish peasant is
-wholly unconscious in the speaker, and
-arises from his casting his sentences in
-the diffuse form of his mother-tongue,
-or from his use of imposing phrases picked
-up from the books read during his
-school-time. The first of these causes
-probably accounts for many picturesque
-expressions, such as “to let a screech
-out of oneself;” where an Englishman
-would merely say, “to shout,” or
-“screech;” the second explains the use
-of words like “extricate,” “congratulate,”
-by bare-legged gossoons in remote
-mountain glens. Among the destructive
-agents alluded to above, the tourist occupies
-a prominent position. For when the
-native inhabitants at any favorite place
-of resort found that it paid them to
-amuse the visitors, they cultivated the
-faculty and spoilt it in the cultivation. If
-we are asked for an example, we have only
-to mention the Killarney guide, a creature
-who is to every true Irishman <em>anathema</em>,—a
-tedious retailer of stories concocted
-during the slack season. A more
-serious cause of decay of late years has
-been the emigration which is slowly draining
-certain districts of the South and
-West of the cream of their population.
-In some parts of Kerry it is well-nigh
-impossible to get young and vigorous
-laborers; and the national game of
-“hurly” has completely died out, in
-consequence of the dearth of able-bodied
-players. We regard this as a serious
-loss, for though matches between the
-teams of rival villages often led to subsequent
-“ructions,” the game was a fine
-one and a good outlet for the excitable
-side of the Celtic character, which now
-finds a far less healthy field for expansion.
-All attempts to teach the peasants
-cricket have failed. Though fine
-athletes and unsurpassed jumpers, they
-lacked the coolness, the patience, and
-faculty of co-operating so essential to
-success in cricket. From this absence
-of vigorous youth, there results a dearth
-of “play-boys”—<i>i.e.</i>, jokers, merry fellows—which
-is not likely to be remedied
-in this generation. Even in former
-years, before the <i lang="fr">entente cordiale</i> between
-landlord and tenant had been so rudely
-severed, it struck us as a symptom of decadence—unless,
-may-be, it was a mere
-compliment to the “quality,”—that on
-all festive gatherings where gentle and
-simple met on a friendly footing, the
-singers as often as not chose for the
-delectation of their superiors some old
-popular music-hall song of six or seven
-seasons back, which had filtered down
-from London through the provinces to
-Dublin, and so slowly made its way into
-our remote district. Thus we have heard
-“The Grecian Bend” rendered with the
-richest brogue imaginable, which partly
-alleviated the Philistinism of the song.
-The Irish peasantry, it should be remarked,
-do not sing Moore's Irish melodies,
-with few exceptions, in spite of the
-charm of the airs to which the words
-are wedded, which is an adequate proof,
-if any were wanted, that he has no claim
-to be considered a national poet. Few
-readers realise that by far his finest work
-is in the domain of satire, on which his
-title to immortality is far more securely
-based than on his erotic dactyls. Nor
-do the peasants, as a rule, know much of
-Lover, whose amusing ballads have a
-great and well-merited popularity in the
-middle and upper classes of Irish society.
-The reason of this is, perhaps, to be
-found in the character of the music, generally
-Lover's own, which is a sort of
-compromise between an Irish melody of
-the flowing type and the modern drawing-room
-ballad. Genuine Irish music
-is a barbarous thing enough—a wild,
-nasal chant, freely embellished with trills
-and turns—and to this setting the peasantry
-in the outlying districts still sing a
-good many songs in Irish or in English,
-in the latter case generally translations.
-To this must be added a certain number
-of ballads which trace their source to the
-events of the last few years. Nothing
-can be gained from an attempt to write
-down the Land League from a literary
-point of view, and we are very far from
-harboring such an intention. But these
-songs are, in the main, dreary and abusive,
-as one might naturally expect, for
-the events of recent years have not been
-conducive to mirth in Ireland. Here
-is a fragment from one on the landlords
-of Ireland:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“The bare, barren mountains and bog, I must state,</div>
- <div class="verse">The poor Irish farmer he must cultivate;</div>
- <div class="verse">Whilst the land-shark is watching</div>
- <div class="verse">His chance underhand,</div>
- <div class="verse">To gobble his labor, his house, and his land.</div>
- <div class="verse">But the Devil is fishing, and he'll soon get a pull,</div>
- <div class="verse">Of those bad landlords and agents</div>
- <div class="verse">His net is near full....</div>
- <div class="verse">Then hurrah! for the Land League,</div>
- <div class="verse">And Parnell so brave;</div>
- <div class="verse">Each bad landlord, my boys,</div>
- <div class="verse">We'll muzzle him tight.</div>
- <div class="verse">May the banner of freedom</div>
- <div class="verse">And green laurels wave</div>
- <div class="verse">O'er the men of the Land League,</div>
- <div class="verse">And Parnell so brave.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Irish humor is not dead yet, but it is
-decaying or dormant; and if ever, in
-spite of the malign influence of the Gulf
-Stream, and the Nationalist Party, and
-a sense of their past wrongs, and race-hatred,
-and half-a-dozen other drawbacks,
-Ireland should recover her sanity
-and grow prosperous and contented,
-then, and not till then, may we expect to
-see her sons grow merry as well as wise,—unless,
-indeed, their sense of humor
-is entirely improved out of them in the
-process. Judging from the character of
-the men of Antrim, this is not impossible.
-But valuable as is the gift of humor,
-the harmony of Great Britain would
-not be too dearly bought by its sacrifice.—<cite>The
-Spectator.</cite></p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2 id="PRINCE_BISMARCKS_CHARACTER">PRINCE BISMARCK'S CHARACTER.</h2>
-
-<p>The late general election in Germany
-showed results which have signally verified
-Prince Bismarck's calculations on
-the tendencies of modern democracy.</p>
-
-<p>The Liberalists, who represent the
-opinions of the Manchester school, lost
-a great number of seats—no less than
-forty-four; while signal victories were
-won by the Conservatives, the Catholics,
-and the Socialists. The doctrines of
-the Liberals were treated with unequivocal
-contempt in the large cities, and
-several members of the party retained
-their seats only through the support
-grudgingly given to them by Socialist
-electors at the second ballot. At the
-first ballot the Socialists testified to
-their absolute hatred of the Liberals by
-voting for Conservative or Catholic candidates
-in constituencies where they
-were not strong enough to carry candidates
-of their own; but at the second
-ballot they dictated terms to the sorely
-mortified party whose overthrow they
-had caused, and agreed to assist Liberals
-who promised to vote for a repeal of
-the law against Socialists. The Liberals
-swallowed the leek and made the promise,
-though throughout the electoral campaign
-they had denounced the Socialists
-as the worst enemies of human progress.
-The Socialists, on their side, went
-to the polls as if obeying the injunction
-which Ferdinand Lassalle laid upon
-working-men eighteen months before
-his death<a id="FNanchor_27_27" href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">27</a>: “I have always been a Republican,
-but, promise me, my friends,
-that if ever a struggle should take place
-between the Divine Right Monarchy and
-the miserable Liberal middle-class,
-you will fight on the King's side against
-the <i lang="fr">bourgeois</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>German Conservatives have regretted
-that Lassalle died at least six years too
-soon, for it is supposed that if he had
-witnessed the triumphs of Bismarck's
-policy and the unification of Germany
-after the war of 1870, he would have
-used his influence over the working
-classes to make them trust the great
-and successful champion of their nation.
-This, however, is doubtful, for
-the post-mortem examination of Lassalle's
-body revealed that he had in him
-the germs of disease by which his intellect
-would have gradually deteriorated.
-He had become a voluptuary before he
-died, and had he lived a little longer he
-might simply have been dazzled by the
-conqueror s glory, and have lost his influence
-by accepting honors and favors
-too readily as the reward of his homage.
-On the other hand, if Lassalle had remained
-head-whole and heart-whole,
-Bismarck and he could not have lived
-together. Both giants, one must have
-succumbed to the other after some formidable
-encounter. The two spent an
-afternoon in company at the height of
-the <i lang="de">Conflikt-Zeit</i>, when Bismarck was
-wrestling with the Liberal opposition in
-the Prussian Parliament. They smoked
-and drank beer, laughed like old friends
-over the events of the day, talked long
-and with deepening earnestness over
-the world's future, and separated well
-pleased with each other. But Lassalle
-is believed to have shown his hand a
-little too openly to his host. There were
-points where the policy of the two blended,
-and one point of ultimate convergence
-might have been found if Lassalle's
-only object had been to seek it; but his
-personal ambition was at least equal to
-his zeal as a reformer. “He is a composer,”
-said Edward Lasker, “who will
-never think his music well executed unless
-he conducts the orchestra.”</p>
-
-<p>It is well to remember what were the
-views of Lassalle about Germany, and
-how much they differed from those of
-his inferior successor in the leadership
-of the Socialists, Karl Marx. In a historical
-tragedy, “Franz von Sickingen,”
-which Lassalle published in 1859, he declared
-that “the sword is the god of
-this world, the word made flesh, the
-instrument of all great deliverances, the
-necessary tool of all useful undertakings.”
-In the 3d scene of Act III. Franz
-von Sickingen, the hero in whom Lassalle
-portrays himself, exclaims against
-the sordid ambition of petty princes,
-adding: “How are you to make the
-soul of a giant enter into the bodies of
-pigmies? ... what we want is a strong
-and united Germany free from the yoke
-of Rome—an empire under an evangelical
-emperor.”<a id="FNanchor_28_28" href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">28</a></p>
-
-<p>This has been also the wish of Bismarck's
-life—and this wish he has
-realised; the obstacles he had to surmount
-before achieving success offer a
-most curious subject for study. The political
-difficulties have furnished matter
-for many books, but something remains
-to be said of the social difficulties.</p>
-
-<p>“A conqueror's enemies are not all
-in front of him,” said Wallenstein, and
-we know Voltaire's apologue about
-that “grain of sand in the eye which
-checked Alexander's march.” Bismarck,
-like other great fighters, has had to
-shake off friends—real friends—tugging
-at his arm. He has had to foil boudoir
-cabals more powerful than Parliamentary
-majorities. He has got into those
-little scrapes which Lord Beaconsfield
-compared to sudden fogs in a park:
-“You may have the luck to walk
-straight home through them, or they
-may cause you to go miles out of your
-way and to miss anything, from a dinner
-to an appointment on which all
-your prospects depend.” Bismarck
-again has known the worry and agony
-of being unable to convince persons of
-thick head or of timorous conscience,
-whose co-operation was absolutely indispensable
-to him. Lord Chesterfield
-well said that the manner of a man's
-discourse is of more weight than the
-matter, for there are more people with
-ears to be charmed than with minds to
-understand. Bismarck is no charmer;
-he has had to contend with the disadvantage
-of cumbersome speech moved
-by slow thoughts, and of a temper inflammable
-as touchwood. For many
-years he was considered by those who
-knew him best to be more of a trooper
-than a politician.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Ampthill once found him reading
-Andersen's story on the Ugly Duckling,
-which relates how a duck hatched
-a swan's egg, and how the cygnet was
-jeered at by his putative brethren, the
-ducklings, until one day a troop of lordly
-swans, floating down the river, saluted
-him as one of their race. “Ah,”
-observed Bismarck, “it was a long time
-before my poor mother could be persuaded
-that in hatching me she had
-not produced a goose.”</p>
-
-<p>Bismarck was born in 1814, and at
-the age of seventeen went to the University
-of Göttingen. Here he joined
-a <i lang="de">Verbindung</i>—one of those student
-associations whose members wear flat
-caps of many colors, hold interminable
-<i lang="de">Kneipen</i> or beer-carousals, and fight rapier
-duels with the members of other
-clubs. Bismarck's <i lang="de">Verbindung</i> was select,
-containing none but the sons of
-noblemen, and it called itself by Kotzebue's
-name, out of antagonism to a Liberal
-club which was named after Karl
-Sand, Kotzebue's murderer.<a id="FNanchor_29_29" href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">29</a> There
-hangs in one of the rooms at Varzin, a
-pencil sketch of young Otto Bismarck
-fighting with a “Sandist” who was the
-great swashbuckler of his party. Both
-combatants are dressed, as is still the
-custom for such meetings, in padded
-leather jackets, tall hats, iron spectacles
-with wire netting over the glasses, and
-they wear thick stocks covering all the
-neck and throat. Only parts of the
-face are exposed, the object of the fighters
-being not to inflict deadly injuries,
-but to slit each other's cheeks, or to
-snip off the tip of a nose. Bismarck's
-adversary, named Konrad Koch, was a
-towering fellow with such a long arm
-that he had all the advantage; and after
-a few passes he snicked Bismarck along
-the left cheek down to the chin, making
-a wound of which the scar can be
-seen to this day. But before the duel
-he had bragged that he would make the
-“Kotzebuan” wear the “Sandist”
-color, red—and, laughing triumphantly
-at the fulfilment of his threat, as he saw
-Bismarck drenched in blood, he so infuriated
-the latter that the Kotzebuan
-insisted on having another bout. This
-was contrary to the regulations of student
-duels, which always end with first
-blood, so Bismarck had to take patience
-until his cut was healed, and until he
-could prove his fitness to meet Koch
-again, by worsting a number of Sandists.
-The rapier duels were, and are
-now, regular Saturday afternoon pastimes,
-taking place in a gymnastic room,
-and the combatants on either side being
-drawn by lot; but it is a rule that,
-when a student has beaten an opponent,
-he may decline duelling with him again
-until this antagonist works his way up
-to him, so to say, by prevailing over all
-other swordsmen who may care to challenge
-him. Bismarck had to fight nearly
-half-a-dozen duels before he could cross
-swords with Koch again, but on this
-second occasion he dealt the Sandist a
-master-slash on the face and remained
-victorious.</p>
-
-<p>This series of duels had some important
-consequences. A satirical paper called
-<cite>Der Floh</cite> (<cite>The Flea</cite>), which was published
-at Hanover, inserted an article
-against student fights, and pretty clearly
-designated young Bismarck as a truculent
-fellow. Bismarck went to Hanover,
-called on the editor of the paper, and
-holding up to his nose the cutting of the
-offensive article, requested him to swallow
-it. One version of the story says
-that the editor's mouth was forced open
-and that the article was thrust into it in
-a pellet; another version states that a
-scrimmage ensued and that the student,
-after giving and receiving blows and
-kicks, was hustled out of the office. But
-it is certain that the affair reached the ears
-of the Rector of Göttingen University,
-who sent for Bismarck and rebuked him
-in a paternal way for his pugnacity.
-Bismarck did not accept the reproof.
-To the Rector's astonishment he made an
-indignant speech, expressing his detestation
-of Frenchmen, French principles
-and revolutionary Germans, whom he
-called Frenchmen in disguise. He
-prayed that the sword of Joshua might
-be given him to exterminate all these.
-“Well, my young friend, you are preparing
-great trouble for yourself,” remarked
-the Rector, with a shake of the
-head; “your opinions are those of another
-age.” “Good opinions re-flower
-like the trees after winter,” was Bismarck's
-answer.</p>
-
-<p>At this time, however, Bismarck's
-principles were not yet well set. The
-son of a Pomeranian squire, he had the
-<i>Junker's</i> abhorrence of Radicals, and
-from the study of J. J. Rousseau's
-“Emile,” he had derived the idea that
-all cities are nests of corruption.
-Though he execrated Rousseau's name,
-he was so far his disciple as to look upon
-country life as the perfect life; in fact,
-he was an idealist, and he was often
-sadly at a loss for arguments with which
-to refute the reasoning of political opponents.
-This tormented him, for he did
-not wish to be a man like that Colonel
-in Hacklander's “Tale of the Regiment,”
-who said of a philosopher: “I
-felt the fellow was going to convince
-me, so I kicked him down stairs.”
-From Göttingen he went to the University
-of Berlin, and there vexed his
-soul in many disputations, without acquiring
-the consciousness that he was
-growing really strong in logic. At last
-he heard in a Lutheran church a sermon
-which left a lasting impression on his
-mind. He has often spoken of it since
-as “my Pentecost.”</p>
-
-<p>The preacher was treating of infidelity
-in connection with Socialist aspirations,
-and he observed that men could not
-live without faith in some ideal. Those
-men who reject the doctrine of immortality
-and of a world after this,
-delude themselves with visions of an
-earthly paradise. The Socialist's dream
-is nothing else; and his shibboleths of
-equality, fraternity and co-operation,
-are but a paraphrase of the Christian's
-“love one another.” Love is not necessary
-to the fulfilment of the Socialist's
-schemes than it is to the realisation
-of one's image of Heaven. A world in
-which there shall be no poor—in which
-each man shall receive according to his
-needs and work to the full measure of
-his capacities, having no individual advancement
-to expect from his industry,
-but content to see other men, less capable,
-fed out of the surplus of his earnings—what
-would this be but a paradise
-purged of all human passions—envy,
-jealousy, covetousness and sloth? Unless
-there were universal love, how could
-all the members of a Socialist community
-be expected to work to their
-utmost? And if every man did not
-work his best, so that the weak and the
-clumsy might live at the expense of the
-strong and the clever, how could the
-community exist?</p>
-
-<p>This was the substance of the sermon
-which Bismarck heard, and those words
-“the Socialist's Earthly Paradise” have
-remained fixed in his memory ever since
-as a terse demonstration as to the inanity
-of Socialism. State Socialism is of
-course another matter, and very early in
-life Bismarck came to the conclusion
-that the wise ruler must try to make
-himself popular by humoring the fancies
-of the people, whatever they may be,
-and however they may vary. If he can
-divert the people's fancies towards the
-objects of his own preference, so much
-the better, and it must be part of his
-business to endeavor to do this. But if
-he cannot lead, he must seem to lead
-while letting himself be pushed onward.
-“The people must be led without knowing
-it,” said Napoleon in a letter which
-he wrote to Fouché to decline Barrère's
-offer of pamphlets extolling the Emperor's
-policy. Bismarck has described
-universal suffrage as “the government
-of a house by its nursery;” but he
-added: “You can do anything with
-children if you play with them.”</p>
-
-<p>It has been one of the secrets of Bismarck's
-strength that he has never let
-himself be imposed upon by inflated talk
-about the “majesty of the People.”
-The Democracy has been in his eyes a
-mere multitude of mediocrities. “<i lang="fr">Cent
-imbéciles ne font pas un sage</i>,” said Voltaire,
-and though La Rochefoucauld
-inclines to the contrary opinion in some
-of his well-known aphorisms,<a id="FNanchor_30_30" href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">30</a> it is a
-provable fact that the only successful
-rulers are those who have had eyes enabling
-them to analyse the component
-elements of a crowd. As sportsmen
-delight in tales of the chase, and soldiers in
-anecdotes of war, so Bismarck has always
-taken a peculiar pleasure in stories
-showing how one man by presence of
-mind has mastered an angry mob, or outwitted
-it, or coaxed it into good humor.
-A sure way to make him laugh is to tell
-him such stories, and it must be added
-that he likes them all the better when
-they exhibit the <i lang="fr">bon enfant</i> side of the
-popular character.</p>
-
-<p>During the siege of Paris, whilst he
-was at Versailles, a pass was applied for
-by a relation of M. Cuvillier Fleury, the
-eminent critic and member of the French
-Academy. The Chancellor at once
-gave the pass, saying: “M. Fleury is an
-admirable man. I know a capital story
-about him.” The story was this: M.
-Fleury, who had been tutor to the Duc
-d'Aumale, was in 1848 Private Secretary
-to the Duchess of Orleans. When
-the revolution of February broke out,
-a rabble invaded the Palais Royal, where
-the Princess resided, and began smashing
-works of art, pictures, statuettes,
-and nicknacks. All the household was
-seized with panic except M. Fleury,
-who, throwing off his coat, smeared his
-face and hands with coal, caught up a
-poker, and rushed among the mob,
-shouting: “Here, I'll show you where
-the best pictures are.” So saying, he
-plied his poker upon furniture of no
-value, and, thus winning the confidence
-of the roughs, was able to lead them out
-of the royal apartments into the kitchen
-regions, where they spent their patriotic
-fury upon the contents of the larder and
-cellar. The sequel of this story is very
-droll, and Bismarck relates it with great
-relish. A few days after he had saved
-the Palais Royal, M. Fleury was recognised
-in the streets as the Duchess of
-Orleans's Secretary, and mobbed. He
-was being somewhat roughly hustled
-when a hulking water-carrier elbowed
-his way through the throng and roared:
-“Let that man be! He is one of the
-right sort. He led us to the pillage of
-the Palais Royal the other day!”</p>
-
-<p>Bismarck once told Lord Bloomfield
-that he had the highest opinion of
-Charles Mathews, the actor. It turned
-out that this opinion was not based on
-any particular admiration for Mathews's
-professional talent, but on his coolness
-during a theatrical riot which Bismarck
-witnessed during a visit to London.
-Mathews was manager of a theatre, and
-for want of pay, part of his company
-had struck work. It was impossible to
-perform the piece advertised, so pit and
-gallery grew clamorous. In the midst
-of the hubbub, Mathews came before
-the curtain and jovially announced that,
-although he must disappoint the audience
-of the comedy which they had expected,
-he was ready to perform anything they
-pleased, provided only that he could
-satisfy the majority. A voice from the
-gallery sang out: “'Box and Cox.'”
-“Well, that is an excellent play,” said
-Mathews gravely, “but before my
-honorable friend puts a motion for its
-performance, I think he should explain
-to the audience why he prefers it to all
-others.” This turned a general laugh
-against the “mover,” who of course became
-bashful and could explain nothing.
-Mathews then made a chaffing
-little speech on the comparative merits
-of various plays, and at length withdrew,
-saying that as he could discern
-nothing like unanimity among the audience,
-he thought it best that they should
-all agree to meet him another day, but
-that meanwhile those who liked to apply
-for their money at the doors should have
-it. It seems that a number of men had
-come to the theatre on purpose to create
-a disturbance, but Mathews's banter
-put the whole audience into good humor,
-and the house was emptied without any
-riot.<a id="FNanchor_31_31" href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">31</a></p>
-
-<p>Bismarck has another favorite story
-about mobs. When the Grand Duke
-Constantine of Russia went as Viceroy
-to Poland in 1862, he was received in
-the streets of Warsaw with cries of
-“Long live the Constitution!” A
-Prussian, Count Perponcher, who was
-present, asked a vociferating Pole who
-“Constitutiona” was? “I suppose it's
-his wife,” answered the Pole. “Well,
-but he has children,” said Perponcher,
-“so you should cry: “Hurrah for
-Constitutiona and the little Constitutions,””
-which the Pole at once did.
-Hearing Bismarck tell this anecdote—not
-for the first time probably—his son-in-law
-Count Rantzau, once said: “You
-can make a mob cry anything by paying
-a few men among them a mark apiece to
-start the shouting.” “<i lang="de">Nein</i>, but you
-need not waste your marks,“ demurred
-the Chancellor, ”<i lang="de">es gibt immer Esel
-genug, die schreien unbezahlt</i>.” (There
-are always asses to bray gratis).</p>
-
-<p>The knowledge of how men can be
-swayed involves an accurate estimate of
-the influence which oratory exercises
-over them. Bismarck, as we have said,
-is not eloquent, and it is one of his
-maxims that a man of many words cannot
-be a man of action. “The best
-Parliamentary speeches”—he said, in
-conversation with M. Pouyer Quertier
-about M. Thiers—“are those which men
-have delivered to criticise other men's
-work, or to set forth what they themselves
-were <em>going</em> to do, or to apologize
-for what they have left undone.”</p>
-
-<p>Action speaks for itself. “When I
-hear of ministers in parliamentary countries
-making long speeches to defend
-their policy, it always strikes me that
-there has been very little policy; and I
-am reminded of those big dishes of stew
-which our frugal German housewives
-serve up on Mondays with the remnants
-of Sunday's dinner—lots of cabbage and
-carrots, making a great show, with small
-scraps of meat.”</p>
-
-<p>Action fascinates the masses as much
-as speech,<a id="FNanchor_32_32" href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">32</a> for it demands courage,
-which is of all virtues the rarest.<a id="FNanchor_33_33" href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">33</a> Pastor
-Stocker, of anti-Semitic renown, relates
-that Bismarck once asked him whether
-there were any text in the Bible saying,
-“All men are cowards?” “No, you are
-thinking of the text: 'The Cretans are
-all liars,'” said Stocker. “Liars—cowards,
-it comes to much the same thing,”
-answered Bismarck; “but it's not true
-only of the Cretans;” and he then
-asked Stocker whether the latter had
-met many thoroughly brave men. The
-Court pastor replied that there might
-be several definitions of courage; but
-Bismarck interrupted him with a boisterous
-laugh: “Oh, yes, the moral
-courage of letting one's face be smacked
-rather than fight a duel; I have met
-plenty of men who had that.”</p>
-
-<p>Bismarck's own courage is that of a
-mastiff, and in early life it often got
-him into scrapes. We have remarked
-how some of these might have been
-detrimental to his whole career. Whilst
-he was doing his One Year Voluntariate
-in the Prussian Light Infantry, he paid
-a visit to Schleswig, which was then
-under Danish rule. One day, wearing
-his uniform, he was seated in a <i lang="de">Brauerei</i>
-when he overheard two gentlemen
-holding a political conversation and
-expressing extreme Liberal sentiments.
-With amazing impudence he walked up
-to their table and requested that: “If
-they must talk nonsense, they would
-use an undertone.” The two Schleswigers
-told the <i>Junker</i> to mind his own
-business, whereupon Bismarck caught
-up a beer-jug and dashed its contents
-in their faces. This affair caused very
-serious trouble. Bismarck was taken
-into custody and ordered out of the
-country. On joining his regiment he was
-placed under arrest again, and there
-was an interchange of diplomatic notes
-about him. He only escaped severe
-punishment through powerful intercession
-being employed at Court on his
-behalf.</p>
-
-<p>Some years later when Bismarck had
-been appointed to the Legation at
-Frankfort (a post which he owed to
-the delight with which Frederick William
-IV. had read his bluff speeches in
-the Prussian Lower House), he was present
-at a public ball, where a member of
-the French Corps Législatif, M. Jouvois
-de Clancy, was pointed out to him as
-a noted fire-eater. This gentleman had
-been a Republican, but had turned his
-coat after the <i lang="fr">coup d'état</i>. He was a
-big man with dandified airs, but evidently
-not much accustomed to society,
-for he had brought his hat—not a compressible
-one—into the ball-room; and
-in waltzing he held it in his left hand.
-The sight of the big Frenchman careering
-round the room with his hat extended
-at arm's length was too much for
-Bismarck's sense of fun; so, as M.
-Jouvois revolved past him, he dropped
-a copper coin into the hat. One may
-imagine the scene. The Frenchman,
-turning purple, stopped short in his
-dancing, led back his partner to her
-place, and then came with flashing eyes
-to demand satisfaction. There would
-have been assault and battery on the
-spot if friends had not interposed; but
-on the following day the Frenchman
-and the Prussian met with pistols and
-the former was wounded. Unfortunately
-for Bismarck, M. Jouvois knew Louis
-Schneider, the ex-comedian, who had
-become Court Councillor to Frederick
-William IV., and was that eccentric
-monarch's favorite companion. Schneider
-had but a moderate fondness for
-Bismarck, and he represented his act of
-<i lang="fr">gaminerie</i> in so unfavorable a light to
-the King that his Majesty instructed
-the Foreign Office to read the newly
-appointed diplomatist a severe lecture.</p>
-
-<p>Bismarck has never liked Frenchmen.
-His feelings towards them savor of contempt
-in their expression, but there is
-more of hatred than of genuine disdain
-in them, and much of this hatred has
-its source in religious fervor. Bismarck
-is a believer. The sceptical levity of
-most Frenchmen, the profanity and licentiousness
-of their literature, their
-want of reverence for all things, whether
-of Divine or of human ordinance—all
-this shocks the statesman, who still
-reads his Bible with a simple faith, and
-who has attentively noted the doom
-which is threatened to nations who are
-disobedient, During the Franco-German
-War, Countess Bismarck, hearing
-that her husband had lost the travelling-bag
-in which he carried his Bible, sent
-him another with this naïve letter: “As
-I am afraid you may not be able to buy
-a Bible in France, I send you two copies
-of the Scriptures, and have marked the
-passages in Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel
-<em>which relate to France</em>—also the
-verse in the Psalms which says that
-'The unbeliever shall be rooted out.'”</p>
-
-<p>Carlyle saw affinities between the
-character of Cromwell and that of Bismarck,
-but the only resemblance between
-the two men is physical. One may question
-how far Cromwell was a believer:
-he certainly had as little respect for sacred
-words as he had for cathedrals and
-kings, and he juggled with texts of
-Scripture as it suited his purpose. Bismarck
-has never canted. His acknowledgments
-of Divine mercies have only
-been expressed where national triumphs
-were concerned—never where his own
-personal enterprises had to be lauded.
-On the other hand, he has evinced
-strong religious scruples under circumstances
-when few men would have credited
-him with such. He has spent more
-sleepless hours from thinking over the
-deposition of George V. of Hanover
-than Cromwell did from fretting over
-Charles I.'s execution. He reconciled
-that deposition with the dictates of his
-reason, but not with those of his faith in
-the inviolability of kings. When it had
-been decided to annex Hanover, the
-Crown lawyers were instructed to draw
-up a report of legal justifications for this
-measure; but when Bismarck had read
-half through this document, he threw it
-aside with irritation: “Better nothing
-than that—it reminds me of Teste's
-Memorandum on the confiscation of the
-estates of the Orleans family.”<a id="FNanchor_34_34" href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">34</a></p>
-
-<p>Again Bismarck, while making it the
-chief occupation of his life to study
-how the Plebs might be managed, has
-never stooped to such immoral means
-for this purpose as the French officials
-of the Second Empire employed. He
-was deeply interested in Napoleon III.'s
-experiments with universal suffrage.
-The whole system of plébiscites, official
-candidatures, prefectoral newspapers,
-and electoral districts, so arranged
-that peasant votes should neutralise
-those of Radical working-men, seemed
-to him “very pretty,” as he once told a
-disgusted Republican refugee. But the
-encouragement given by De Morny, De
-Persigny, and others to every kind of
-immorality that could amuse the people—frivolous
-newspapers, improper novels
-and plays, gambling clubs, and outrageous
-fashions in dress—this was a
-very different affair. De Morny was
-fond of quoting the anecdote about Alcibiades
-having cut off the tail of his
-dog to give the Athenians something to
-talk about, and during Bismarck's short
-stay in Paris as Ambassador in 1862, he
-and the Prussian statesman had more
-than one conversation about the art of
-ruling. Bismarck had the frankness to
-say that he looked upon the comedies of
-Dumas the younger, and indeed on most
-French plays of the lighter sort, as
-grossly corrupting to the public morals.
-“<i lang="la">Panem et circenses</i>,” smiled De Morny.
-“<i lang="la">Panem et saturnalia</i>,” muttered Bismarck.</p>
-
-<p>Another point upon which De Morny
-and Bismarck could not agree, was about
-the qualities that are requisite in a
-public servant. De Morny cared nothing
-for character. The men whom he
-recommended for prefectships or posts
-in the diplomatic service were, for the
-most part, adventurers—brilliant, witty,
-<i lang="fr">diseurs de rien</i> and cajolers of the other
-sex. “A French Ambassador,” he maintained,
-“should always consider himself
-accredited <i lang="fr">auprès des reines</i>.” Bismarck
-loathes ladies' men: and he had the
-poorest opinion of Napoleon III.'s
-diplomatists. His own ideal of a State
-functionary is the blameless man without
-debts or entanglements—laborious,
-but not pushing, well-educated but not
-abounding in ideas, a man in all things
-obedient. His sneering judgment on
-plenipotentiaries like M. Benedetti and
-the Duc de Gramont is well known. He
-called them “dancing dogs without
-collars.” They never seemed to have a
-master, he complained, “but stood up
-on their hind legs and performed their
-antics without authority from man alive.
-If they barked, you were sure to hear a
-voice from Paris crying to them to be
-quiet. If they fawned you might expect
-to see them receive some sly kick,
-warning them that they ought to be up
-and biting.” Bismarck conceived some
-liking and respect for Napoleon III.,
-whom he saw to be better than his
-<i lang="fr">entourage</i>. Had the Emperor's health
-remained good, the war of 1870 would
-doubtless never have taken place; but so
-early as 1862 Bismarck perceived that
-Napoleon III.'s bodily ailments were
-causing an indolence of mind that left
-the Emperor at the mercy of intriguing
-counsellors; and what he observed in
-his subsequent visits to Paris in 1867
-and to Plombières in 1868, confirmed
-these impressions. His ceaseless study
-of France as the great enemy that would
-have to be coped with soon, moreover
-added to his deep and moody detestation
-of that country. When the formal
-declaration of war by France reached
-Berlin in July 1870, Count Bismarck
-was staying for a few days at Varzin.
-The news was communicated to him by
-a telegram which was put into his hands
-just as he was returning from a drive.
-He at once sprang into his carriage, to
-go to the railway station, and on his
-way through the village of Wussow, he
-saw the parish minister standing at the
-door of his manse. “I said nothing
-to him,” ejaculated Bismarck, in relating
-the story long afterwards to some
-friends, “but I just made a sign as of
-two sabre-cuts crosswise, and he quite
-understood.”</p>
-
-<p>The pastor of Wussow understood the
-sign of the cross in sword-cuts to mean
-crusade, and as such the war against
-France was viewed by all good Prussians.
-Bismarck and the village clergyman
-were at one in regarding the French
-people as the Beast of the Apocalypse,
-and Paris as Babylon. Such sentiments
-are not incompatible with Christian
-piety, for there must be militants in the
-Church. But where Bismarck ceases to
-be a Christian in the common acceptance
-of that term, is in his exaggerated
-contempt for almost all men as individuals.<a id="FNanchor_35_35" href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">35</a></p>
-
-<p>His want of charity—we do not of
-course mean in almsgiving, for in this
-respect he is as generous as the Princess,
-his wife, allows him to be—is the
-most unamiable and disconcerting trait
-in his nature. Disconcerting because
-misanthrophy is an evidence of moral
-short-sightedness, begetting timidity and
-rendering a man incapable of forming
-disciples to carry on his work. Without
-trustfulness, a statesman can make no real
-friends. It may be said that uncharitableness
-like Bismarck's must be the
-result of many disenchantments; but a
-man who only keeps rooks and ravens
-must not complain that all birds are
-black. The men who were at different
-times Bismarck's most zealous helpmates—Count
-Harry Arnim, Herr Delbrück,
-Count Stolberg and Count
-Eulenborg—were all discarded as soon
-as they gave the smallest sign, not of
-mutiny, but of independence. Bismarck
-would not accept advice or remonstrance
-from them; he required on all occasions
-that blind obedience which is not loyal
-service, but servility. For the same
-cause he would never employ Herr
-Edward Lasker, whose great talents as
-a financier and parliamentary debater
-would have been of immense value to
-the monarchy. He has rejected the
-advances of Herr Bennigsen, the Hanoverian
-founder of the <i lang="de">Nationalverein</i>,
-who is now leader of the National
-Liberals; and those of Dr. Rudolph
-Gneist, who is one of the ablest politicians
-in Germany, but who had the misfortune
-to take the wrong side during
-the <i lang="de">Conflikt-Zeit</i>. Opposition, as Bismarck
-has often taken care to impress
-upon his hearers, shall never be <i lang="de">regierungsfähig</i>
-so long as he holds office.
-He abominates the Parliamentary system
-which brings to power men who have
-begun life as demagogues agitating for
-the abolition of this and that, and who,
-afterwards, are obliged to make shameless
-recantations, or to quibble away
-their words. The contrary system of
-selecting for his assistants only men who
-have never sown political wild oats is,
-however, compelling Bismarck to rely
-now on such henchmen as Herr Von
-Puttkamer and Herr Hofmann. The
-former is the Chancellor's brother-in-law,
-an excellent subordinate, supple as
-a glove, but with no originality of mind
-or firmness that could enable him to remain
-Home Minister if he were not
-propped up in this post. Herr Hofmann
-is also a mere painstaking bureaucrat,
-who, if he did not hear the voice
-of command, would be quite inapt to
-think for himself. Of late Prince Bismarck
-is said to have been training his
-son, Count Herbert to act as his Secretary
-and to take his place by-and-by.
-Count Herbert is a clever man, but
-dynasties of <i lang="fr">maires du palais</i> have never
-succeeded in any country, and it is
-strange Bismarck should have forgotten
-that the Hohenzollern dynasty has owed
-its rapid rise to a respect for that principle
-which he is now ignoring, namely
-the selection of the best men without
-favoritism. If independence of mind
-and character have been eyed with suspicion
-by the Prussian kings, as they
-now are by the Chancellor, Germany
-would have had no Bismarck.</p>
-
-<p>The popular idea of a genial,
-soldierly, blunt-spoken Bismarck is a
-wrong one. Bismarck can be jovial
-among friends and good-humoredly
-affable with strangers; but genial he is
-not. There is a sarcastic tone in his
-voice which grates on the ears of all
-who are brought in contact with him for
-the first time, and his unconcealed mistrust
-for the rectitude of all public men,
-of no matter what country, who do not
-happen to be in his good graces at the
-time, is too often offensive. It must be
-remembered that when Bismarck has
-quarrelled with public men, it has generally
-been because, having changed an
-opinion himself, he has been unable to
-persuade men to do the same at a moment's
-notice. Turn by turn, Free-trader
-and Protectionist, inclining one
-day to the Russian, another to the
-Austrian alliance, coquetting at one time
-with England, then with Italy, and even
-with France, he has ever been actuated
-by the sole desire to use every passing
-wind which might push the interest of
-his Government. He has declined to
-formulate any policy in details, because
-against such a policy parties might
-coalesce, whereas by veering and tacking
-often, he throws disunion among his opponents.
-He appropriates what is best
-in the new designs of this or that party,
-takes for his Sovereign and himself the
-credit of carrying them into execution,
-and then leaves the original promoters
-with a sense that power has gone out of
-them—that they have been played with,
-but that they have nothing to complain
-of.</p>
-
-<p>This policy of variations, however,
-has exposed Bismarck to some cutting
-rebukes from loyal Prussians whose
-consciences were not acrobatic. The
-trouble with Count Harry Arnim began
-when this diplomatist—“<i lang="de">Der Affe</i>,” as
-he was nicknamed by his familiars—said
-to Countess Von Redern, at one of the
-Empress Augusta's private parties, that
-he had hitherto been trying to walk on
-his feet in Paris, but that from “his
-latest instructions he gathered that he
-was expected until further notice to walk
-on his hands.” The saying was reported
-to Bismarck and made “his three
-hairs bristle.” “The 'Ape' has only
-been employed, because we thought him
-quadrumanous,“ he exclaimed, and from
-that moment there was war between the
-two men.</p>
-
-<p>Another time Bismarck had to bear a
-snub from a young nobleman of the
-House of Hatzfelt. This gentleman,
-being left in charge of a Legation during
-the absence of the Minister, sent home
-a despatch embodying views favorable
-to the policy which the Chancellor had,
-until then, been pursuing towards the
-country where the attaché was residing.
-But it so chanced that the Chief of the
-Legation had been summoned to Berlin
-on purpose to receive instructions for a
-change of policy; so that when the
-attaché's despatch arrived, it gave no
-pleasure in Wilhelmstrasse, and the
-Chancellor spoke testily of its writer as
-a ”<i lang="de">Schafsköpf</i>.” Hearing this, the
-attaché resigned. He was a young man
-of high spirit, who had many friends at
-Court, and it was pointed out to the
-Chancellor by an august peacemaker,
-that the young fellow had not been very
-well-treated. Somewhat grudgingly—for
-he does not like to make amends—the
-Chancellor was induced to send his
-Secretary to the ex-attaché offering to
-reinstate him. But the recipient of this
-dubious favor drew himself up stiffly and
-said: “Germany has not fallen to so
-low a point that she needs to be served
-by <i lang="de">Schafsköpf</i>; and for the rest, you
-may tell the Chancellor that I have not
-been trained to turn somersaults.”<a id="FNanchor_36_36" href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">36</a></p>
-
-<p>It has been mentioned that Bismarck
-has had to contend with many a boudoir
-cabal. The Empress Augusta's long
-antipathy to him is no secret, and the
-Chancellor has never had to congratulate
-himself much on the friendliness of the
-Crown Prince's and Princess's circle.
-The ill-will of royal ladies enlists that
-of many other persons influential in
-society; but it stands to Bismarck's
-honor that he has never used newspapers
-to combat these drawing-room foes.
-The revelations made to the public some
-years since by an ex-member of the
-“Reptile's Bureau” were no doubt in
-the main true, and they showed that
-the Chancellor had raised the art of
-“nobbling” the Press to a high pitch of
-perfection. Not only had he, all over
-Germany, newspapers supported in part
-out of the Secret Service Fund and inspired
-wholly by the Press Bureau, but
-he has been accused of employing
-hirelings on the staffs of newspapers reputed
-as independent, and through these
-he was in a position to procure the insertion
-of articles in foreign journals,
-these effusions being afterwards reprinted
-in German papers as genuine
-expressions of foreign opinion.</p>
-
-<p>All this constituted a very powerful
-organization, which the Chancellor
-might have used with telling effect in
-fighting society caballers. But while
-he has not scrupled to direct the
-heaviest artillery of his newspapers and
-not unfrequently torpedo attacks against
-open political opponents, he would
-never let his difficulties with “<i lang="de">die
-Wespen</i>” as he called society aggressors,
-be made the subjects of Press comments.
-Newspapers, guilty of assailing
-members of the Imperial family or of
-the Court household, have been unsparingly
-prosecuted by his orders.
-“<i lang="de">Er is kein Journaliste!</i>” exclaimed a
-too zealous partisan-writer, who had
-gone to the Chancellerie with a proposal
-for creating in Berlin a newspaper like
-the Paris <cite>Figaro</cite>, “<i lang="de">er könne sich nicht
-auf die feine Malice zu verstehen</i>.” This
-may be rendered as, “He won't throw
-mud;” and it is no small compliment
-to the integrity of a statesman, whom
-his enemies are wont to describe as
-more astute than Machiavelli, and more
-unscrupulous than Richelieu.<a id="FNanchor_37_37" href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">37</a></p>
-
-<p>In the autumn of the present year the
-Pope gave a commission to the painter
-Lenbach to paint a portrait of Prince
-Bismarck. The Chancellor agreed to
-sit; the artist went several times to
-Varzin, and people have been asking
-ever since what is the meaning of this
-strange fancy of Leo XIII.'s to have a
-portrait of the arch-enemy of Rome, the
-formidable champion of the Kulturkampf.
-A French journalist has suggested
-that there is at the Vatican an
-artistic Index Expurgatorius—a <i lang="fr">Galerie
-des Réprouvés</i>—and that Bismarck's
-portrait is to hang there in the place
-of honor, between that of Dositheus the
-Samaritan, and Isaac Laquedem the
-Wandering Jew.</p>
-
-<p>It is more likely that the Pope aspires
-to some political <i lang="fr">rapprochement</i> with
-Germany, and if he have such a hope it
-must have come to him from the knowledge
-that the Chancellor would not object
-to a reconciliation. But if Bismarck
-consents to make peace with the
-Vatican, and to find some official post
-for Herr Windhorst, it would not be that
-any of his own private Lutheran prejudices
-against Rome have vanished.
-He is a doughty Protestant in whose
-religion there is no variableness, but he
-may veer on the Kulturkampf as he did
-on that of free trade, simply because,
-having failed, after doing his best, to
-crush the Catholics, he will see no use in
-recommencing the struggle. And whatever
-is useless seems to Bismarck a
-thing which should not be attempted,
-indeed, many of his great triumphs
-hitherto have been won by shaking
-hands with yesterday's enemy, and saying
-“Let us two stand together.” Before
-long the world may see Prince Bismarck
-recognise the Roman Catholic
-Church as one of the greatest living
-forces of Continental Conservatism, and
-enlist its services in the work of “dishing”
-both Liberals and Socialists. It
-is significant that in one of his few
-autumn speeches, Bismarck was heard
-quoting Joseph De Maistre's dictum
-about the Soldier and the Priest being
-the sentries of civilisation.—<cite>Temple
-Bar.</cite></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2 id="A_FEW_NOTES_ON_PERSIAN_ART">A FEW NOTES ON PERSIAN ART.</h2>
-
-
-<p>The limner's art in Persia has few patrons,
-and the professional draughtsman
-of the present day in that country must
-needs be an enthusiast, and an art-lover
-for art's sake, as his remuneration is so
-small as to be a mere pittance; and
-the man who can live by his brush must
-be clever indeed. The Persians are an
-eminently practical people, and buy
-nothing unless it be of actual utility;
-hence the artist has generally to sink to
-the mere decorator; and as all, even the
-very rich, expect a great deal for a little
-money, the work must be scamped in
-order to produce a great effect for a
-paltry reward. The artists, moreover,
-are all self-taught, or nearly so, pupilage
-merely consisting of the drudgery of
-preparing the canvas, panel, or other
-material for the master, mixing the
-colors, filling in backgrounds, varnishing,
-&amp;c. There are no schools of art,
-no lectures, no museums of old or contemporary
-masters, no canons of taste,
-no drawing from nature or the model, no
-graduated studies, or system of any
-kind. There is, however, a certain
-custom of adhering to tradition and the
-conventional; and most of the art workmen
-of Iran, save the select few, are
-mere reproducers of the ideas of their
-predecessors.</p>
-
-<p>The system of perspective is erroneous;
-but neither example nor argument
-can alter the views of a Persian artist
-on this subject. Leaving aside the
-wonderful blending of colors in native
-carpets, tapestries, and embroideries,
-all of which improve by the toning influence
-of age, the modern Persian
-colorist is remarkable for his skill in the
-constant use of numerous gaudy and incongruous
-colors, yet making one
-harmonious and effective whole, which
-surprises us by its daring, but compels
-our reluctant admiration.</p>
-
-<p>Persian pictorial art is original, and
-it is cheap; the wages of a clever artist
-are about one shilling and sixpence a
-day. In fact, he is a mere day-laborer,
-and his terms are, so many days' pay
-for a certain picture. In this pernicious
-system of time-work lies the cause of
-the scamping of many really ingenious
-pieces of work.</p>
-
-<p>As a copyist the Persian is unrivalled;
-he has a more than Chinese accuracy
-of reproduction; every copy is
-a fac-simile of its original, the detail
-being scamped, or the reverse, according
-to the scale of payment. In unoriginal
-work, such as the multiplication of some
-popular design, a man will pass a lifetime,
-because he finds it pay better to
-do this than to originate. This kind of
-unoriginal decoration is most frequent
-in the painted mirror cases and book-covers,
-the designs of which are ancient;
-and the painter merely reproduces the
-successful and popular work of some old
-and forgotten master.</p>
-
-<p>But where the Persian artist shines is
-in his readiness to undertake any style or
-subject; geometrical patterns—and they
-are very clever in originating these;
-scroll-work scenes from the poets; likenesses,
-miniatures, paintings of flowers
-or birds; in any media, on any substance,
-oils, water, or enamel, and
-painting on porcelain; all are produced
-with rapidity, wonderful spirit, and
-striking originality. In landscape, the
-Persian is very weak; and his attempts
-at presenting the nude, of which he is
-particularly fond, are mostly beneath
-contempt. A street scene will be painted
-in oils and varnished to order “in a
-week” on a canvas a yard square, the
-details of the painting desired being furnished
-in conversation. While the patron
-is speaking, the artist rapidly makes an
-outline sketch in white paint; and any
-suggested alterations are made in a few
-seconds by the facile hand of the <i lang="ur">ustad
-nakosh</i> (master-painter), a term used to
-distinguish the artist from the mere
-portrait-painter or <i lang="ur">akkas</i>, a branch of
-the profession much despised by the
-artists, a body of men who consider
-their art a mechanical one, and their
-guild no more distinguished than those
-of other handicraftsmen.</p>
-
-<p>A Persian artist will always prefer to
-reproduce rather than originate, because,
-as a copy will sell for the same
-price as an original, by multiplication
-more money can be earned in a certain
-time, than by the exercise of originality.
-Rarely, among the better class of artists,
-is anything actually out of drawing;
-the perspective is of course faulty,
-and resembles that of early specimens of
-Byzantine art. Such monstrosities as
-the making the principal personages
-giants, and the subsidiaries dwarfs, are
-common; while the beauties are represented
-as much bejewelled; but this is
-done to please the buyer's taste, and the
-artist knows its absurdity. There is
-often considerable weakness as to the
-rendering of the extremities; but as the
-Persian artist never draws, save in portraiture,
-from the life, this is not to be
-wondered at.</p>
-
-<p>The writer has before him a fair instance
-of the native artist's rendering of
-the scene at the administration of the
-bastinado. This picture is an original
-painting in oils, twenty-four inches by
-sixteen on <i lang="fr">papier-mâché</i>. The details
-were given to the artist by the writer in
-conversation, sketched by him in white
-paint on the <i lang="fr">papier mâché</i> during the
-giving of the order, in the course of half
-an hour; and the finished picture was
-completed, varnished, and delivered in a
-week. The price paid for this original
-work in oils in 1880 was seven shillings
-and sixpence. The costumes are quite
-accurate in the minutest detail; the
-many and staring colors employed are
-such as are in actual use; while the
-general <i lang="fr">mise en scène</i> is very correct.</p>
-
-<p>Many similar oil-paintings were executed
-for the writer by Persian artists,
-giving graphic renderings of the manners
-and customs of this little-known country.
-They were always equally spirited, and
-minutely correct as to costume and
-detail, at the same low price; a small
-present for an extraordinarily successful
-performance gladdening the heart of the
-artist beyond his expectations.</p>
-
-<p>As to original work by Persian artists
-in water-color, remuneration is the same—so
-much per diem. A series of water-colors
-giving minute details of Persian
-life were wished; and a clever artist
-was found as anxious to proceed as the
-writer was to obtain the sketches. The
-commission was given, and the subjects
-desired carefully indicated to the artist,
-who, by a rapid outline sketch in pencil,
-showed his intelligence and grasp of the
-subject. The writer, delighted at the
-thought of securing a correct and permanent
-record of the manners and customs
-of a little-known people, congratulated
-himself. But, alas! he counted
-his chickens before hatching; for the
-artist, on coming with his next water-color,
-demanded, and received, a double
-wage. A similar result followed the
-finishing of each drawing; and though
-the first only cost three shillings, and
-the second six, the writer was reluctantly
-compelled to stop his commissions, after
-paying four times the price of the first
-for his third water-color, on the artist
-demanding twenty-four shillings for a
-fourth—not that the work was more, but
-as he found himself appreciated, the wily
-painter kept to arithmetical progression
-as his scale of charge; a very simple
-principle, which all artists must devoutly
-wish they could insist on.</p>
-
-<p>For a reduced copy of a rather celebrated
-painting, of which the figures
-were life-size, of what might be called,
-comparatively speaking, a Persian old
-master—for this reduction, in oils,
-fourteen inches by eight, and fairly well
-done, the charge was a sovereign. The
-piece was painted on a panel. The
-subject is a royal banqueting scene in
-Ispahan—the date a century and a half
-ago. The dresses are those of the time—the
-ancient court costume of Persia.
-The king in a brocaded robe is represented
-seated on a carpet at the
-head of a room, his drinking-cup in his
-hand; while his courtiers are squatted
-in two rows at the sides of the room,
-and are also carousing. Minstrels and
-singers occupy the foreground of the
-picture; and a row of handsome dancing-girls
-form the central group. All the
-figures are portraits of historical personages;
-and, in the copy, the likenesses
-are faithfully retained.</p>
-
-<p>The palaces of Ispahan are decorated
-with large oil paintings by the most
-eminent Persian artists of their day. All
-are life-size, and none are devoid of
-merit. Some are very clever, particularly
-the likenesses of Futteh Ali Shah
-and his sons, several of whom were strikingly
-like their father. As Futteh Ali
-Shah had an acknowledged family of
-seventy-two, this latter fact is curious.
-These paintings are without frames,
-spaces having been made in the walls to
-receive them. The Virgin Mary is frequently
-represented in these mural
-paintings; also a Mr. Strachey, a young
-diplomate who accompanied the English
-mission to Persia in the reign of our
-Queen Elizabeth, is still admired as a
-type of adolescent beauty. He is represented
-with auburn hair in the correct
-costume of the period; and copies of
-his portrait are still often painted on
-the pen-cases of amateurs. These pen-cases,
-or <i>kalamdans</i>, are the principal
-occupation of the miniature-painter.
-As one-fourth of the male population of
-Persia can write, and as each man has
-one or more pen-cases, the artist finds a
-constant market for his wares in their
-adornment. The pen-case is a box of
-<i lang="fr">papier-mâché</i> eight inches long, an inch
-and a half broad, and the same deep.
-Some of them, painted by artists of renown,
-are of great value, forty pounds
-being a common price to pay for such a
-work of art by a rich amateur. Several
-fine specimens may be seen in the Persian
-Collection at the South Kensington
-Museum. It is possible to spend a
-year's hard work on the miniatures
-painted on a pen-case. These are very
-minute and beautiful. The writer possesses
-a pen-case, painted during the
-lifetime of Futteh Ali Shah, a king of
-Persia who reigned long and well. All
-the faces—none more than a quarter of
-an inch in diameter—are likenesses;
-and the long black beard of the king
-reaching to his waist, is not exaggerated,
-for such beards are common in Persia.</p>
-
-<p>Bookbinding in Persia is an art, and
-not a trade; and here the flower and
-bird painter finds his employment.
-Bright bindings of boards with a leather
-back are decorated by the artist, principally
-with presentments of birds and
-flowers, both being a strange mixture of
-nature and imagination; for if a Persian
-artist in this branch thinks that he can
-improve on nature in the matter of
-color, he attempts it. The most startling
-productions are the result; his
-nightingales being birds of gorgeous
-plumage, and the colors of some of his
-flowers saying much for his imagination.
-This method of “painting the lily” is
-common in Persia; for the narcissus—bouquets
-of which form the constant ornament
-in spring of even the poorest
-homes—is usually “improved” by rings
-of colored paper, silk, or velvet being
-introduced over the inner ring of the
-petals. Startling floral novelties are the
-result; and the European seeing them
-for the first time, is invariably deceived,
-and cheated into admiration of what
-turns out afterwards to be a transparent
-trick. Of course, this system of binding
-each book in an original cover of its
-own, among a nation so literary as the
-Persians, gives a continuous and healthy
-impetus to the art of the flower-painter.</p>
-
-<p>Enamelling in Persia is a dying art.
-The best enamels are done on gold, and
-often surrounded by a ring or frame of
-transparent enamel, grass-green in color.
-This green enamel, or rather transparent
-paste, is supposed to be peculiar to the
-Persian artist. At times, the gold is
-hammered into depressions, which are
-filled with designs in enamel on a white
-paste, the spaces between the depressions
-being burnished gold. Large
-<em>plaques</em> are frequently enamelled on gold
-for the rich; and often the golden
-water-pipes are decorated with enamels,
-either alone, or in combination with incrusted
-gems.</p>
-
-<p>Yet another field remains to the Persian
-artist—that of engraving on gold,
-silver, brass, copper, and iron. Here
-the work is usually artistically good, and
-always original, no two pieces being
-alike.</p>
-
-<p>Something must be said about the
-artist and his studio. Abject poverty is
-the almost universal lot of the Persian
-artist. He is, however, an educated
-man, and generally well-read. His
-marvellous memory helps him to retain
-the traditional attributes of certain well-known
-figures: the black-bearded Rustum
-(the Persian Hercules), and his opponent
-the Deev Suffid or White Demon;
-Leila and Mujnūn, the latter of
-whom retired to the wilderness for love
-of the beautiful Leila; and in a painfully
-attenuated state, all his ribs being very
-apparent, is always represented as conversing
-with the wild beasts, who sit
-around him in various attitudes of respectful
-attention. Dr. Tanner could
-never hope to reach the stage of interesting
-emaciation to which the Persian artists
-represent Mujnūn to have attained.
-Another popular subject is that of Solomon
-in all his glory.</p>
-
-<p>These legends are portrayed with
-varying art but unquestionable spirit,
-and often much humor; while the
-poetical legends of the mythical history
-of ancient Persia, full of strange imagery,
-find apt illustrators in the Persian
-artist. The palmy days of book-illustration
-have departed; the cheap
-reprints of Bombay have taken away the
-<i lang="fr">raison d'être</i> of the caligraphist and
-book-illustrators, and the few really
-great artists who remain are employed
-by the present Shah in illustrating his
-great copy of the <cite>Arabian Nights</cite> by
-miniatures which emulate the beauty and
-detail of the best specimens of ancient
-monkish art, or in making bad copies of
-European lithographs to “adorn” the
-walls of the royal palaces.</p>
-
-<p>As for the painter's studio, it is
-usually a bare but light apartment, open
-to the winds, in a corner of which, on a
-scrap of matting, the artist kneels, sitting
-on his heels. (It tires an oriental to sit
-in a chair.) A tiny table a foot high
-holds all his materials; his paints are
-mixed on a tile; and his palette is
-usually a bit of broken crockery. His
-brushes he makes himself. Water-pipe
-in mouth—a luxury that even an artist
-can afford, in a country where tobacco
-is fourpence a pound—his work held
-on his knee in his left hand, without a
-mahl-stick or the assistance of a color-man,
-the artist squats contentedly at his
-work. He is ambitious, proud of his
-powers, and loves his art for art's sake.
-Generally, he does two classes of work—the
-one the traditional copies of the
-popular scenes before described, or the
-painting on pen cases—by this he lives;
-the other purely ideal, in which he
-deals with art from a higher point of
-view, and practises the particular branch
-which he affects.</p>
-
-<p>As a painter of likenesses, the Persian
-seldom succeeds in flattering. The
-likeness is assuredly obtained; but the
-sitter is usually “guyed,” and a caricature
-is generally the result. This is
-not the case in the portraits of females,
-and in the ideal heads of women and
-children. The large dreamy eye and
-long lashes, the full red lips, and naturally
-high color, the jetty or dark auburn
-locks (a color caused by the use of
-henna, a dye) of the Persian women in
-their natural luxuriance, lend themselves
-to the successful production of the
-peculiarly felicitous representation of
-female beauty in which the Persian artist
-delights. Accuracy in costume is highly
-prized, and the minutiæ of dress are indicated
-with much aptness, the varied
-pattern of a shawl or scarf being rendered
-with almost Chinese detail. Beauty
-of the brunette type is the special choice
-of the artist and amateur, and “salt”—as
-a high-colored complexion is termed—is
-much admired.</p>
-
-<p>Like the ancient Byzantine artist, the
-Persian makes a free use of gold and
-silver in his work. When wishing to
-represent the precious metals, he first
-gilds or silvers the desired portion of the
-canvas or panel, and then with a fine
-brush puts in shadows, etc. In this way
-a strangely magnificent effect is produced.
-The presentments of mailed
-warriors are done in this way; and the
-jewelled chairs, thrones, and goblets in
-which the oriental mind delights. Gilt
-backgrounds, too, are not uncommon,
-and their effect is far from displeasing.</p>
-
-<p>The painting of portraits of Mohammed,
-Ali, Houssein, and Hassan—the
-last three, relatives of the Prophet,
-and the principal martyred saints in the
-Persian calendar, is almost a trade in
-itself, though the representation of the
-human form is contrary to the Mohammedan
-religion, and the saints are generally
-represented as veiled and faceless
-figures. Yet in these particular cases,
-custom has overridden religious law, and
-the <i>Schamayūl</i> (or portrait of Ali) is
-common. He is represented as a portly
-personage of swarthy hue; his dark and
-scanty beard, which is typical of the
-family of Mohammed, crisply curled;
-his hand is grasping his sword; and he
-is usually depicted as wearing a green
-robe and turban (the holy color of the
-<i>Seyyuds</i> or descendants of the Prophet).
-A nimbus surrounds his head; and he
-is seated on an antelope's skin, for the
-Persians say that skins were used in
-Arabia before the luxury of carpets was
-known there.</p>
-
-<p>Humble as is the lot of the Persian
-artist, he expects to be treated by the
-educated with consideration, and would
-be terribly hurt at any want of civility.
-One well-known man, Agha Abdullah of
-Shiraz, generally insisted on regaling
-the writer with coffee, which he prepared
-himself when his studio was visited.
-To have declined this would have been
-to give mortal offence. On one of these
-visits, his little brasier of charcoal was
-nearly extinguished, and the host had
-recourse to a curious kind of fire-igniter,
-reviver, or rather steam-blast, that as
-yet is probably undescribed in books.
-It was of hammered copper, and had a
-date on it that made it three hundred
-years old. It was fairly well modelled;
-and this curious domestic implement was
-in the similitude of a small duck preening
-its breast; consequently, the open
-beak, having a spout similar to that of a
-tea-kettle, was directed downwards. The
-Persian poured an ounce or so of water
-into the copper bird, and placed it on
-the expiring embers. Certainly the result
-was surprising. In a few minutes the
-small quantity of water boiled fiercely;
-a jet of steam was emitted from the open
-bill, and very shortly the charcoal was
-burning brightly. The water having all
-boiled away, the Persian triumphantly
-removed this scientific bellows with his
-tongs, and prepared coffee.</p>
-
-<p>No mention has been made of the
-curious bazaar pictures, sold for a few
-pence. These cost little, but are very
-clever, and give free scope for originality,
-which is the great characteristic of
-the Persian artist. They consist of
-studies of town-life, ideal pictures of
-dancing-girls, and such-like. All are
-bold, ingenious, and original. But
-bazaar pictures would take a chapter to
-themselves, and occupy more space than
-can be spared.—<cite>Chambers's Journal.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2 id="HOW_INSECTS_BREATHE">HOW INSECTS BREATHE.</h2>
-
-<p class="aut">BY THEODORE WOOD.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>Perhaps in the entire range of insect
-anatomy there is no point more truly
-marvellous than the manner in which the
-respiratory system is modified, in order
-to suit it to the peculiar requirements of
-its owners.</p>
-
-<p>In many ways the structure of the insects
-is wonderful enough. They are
-gifted with muscles of extraordinary
-strength, and are yet destitute of bones
-to which those muscles can be attached;
-they possess a circulatory system, and
-are yet without a heart; they perform
-acts involving the exercise of certain
-mental qualities, and are yet without a
-brain. But, more remarkable still, they
-breathe atmospheric air without the aid
-of lungs.</p>
-
-<p>And this for a very good reason. It
-can be neither too often nor too strongly
-insisted upon that, throughout animated
-nature, Structure is in all cases subservient
-to Habit. If in any animal we find
-some singular development in bodily
-form, we may be quite sure that there is
-a peculiarity in the life-history which
-renders such development of particular
-service, and so may often gain very complete
-information with regard to the
-habits by a mere glance at external characteristics.
-If, for example, the general
-shape is cylindrical, the toes webbed,
-and the hair set closely against the body,
-we may safely conclude that the animal
-is one intended for a life in the water.
-If the form is conical, the limbs short,
-and the claws large and strong, that it is
-one which burrows in the earth. If the
-jaws are large and massive, the teeth
-long and sharply pointed, and the muscular
-power is concentrated principally
-into the fore-parts of the body, that it is
-a beast of prey. And so on with minor
-details.</p>
-
-<p>And this rule holds equally good in
-the case of the insects, which are devoid
-of lungs for the very sufficient reason
-that those organs are necessarily weighty,
-and consequently unsuitable to the requirements
-of beings which are in great
-measure creatures of air. In all animals
-intended for a more or less aerial existence
-every particle of superfluous weight
-must be dispensed with, in order that
-the strain upon the muscles of flight may
-be reduced to the least possible degree.
-Take the bats, and see how the skeleton
-has been attenuated until it scarcely
-seems capable of affording the necessary
-rigidity to the frame. Take the birds,
-and see how a large portion of the body
-is occupied by supplementary air-cells,
-which permeate the very bones themselves,
-and thus minimize the weight
-without detracting from the strength.
-And so also with the insects, but in a
-different manner.</p>
-
-<p>For in them the very lungs themselves
-are taken away, and replaced by a respiratory
-system of great simplicity, and
-yet of wonderful intricacy, which penetrates
-to every part of the structure,
-and simultaneously aerates the whole of
-the blood contained in the body. In
-other words, an insect is one large
-Lung.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If we take any moderately large insect,
-say a wasp or a hornet, we can see, even
-with the naked eye, that a series of
-small spot-like marks runs along either
-side of the body. These apparent spots,
-which are generally eighteen or twenty
-in number, are in fact the apertures
-through which air is admitted into the
-system, and are generally formed in such
-a manner that no extraneous matter can
-by any possibility find entrance. Sometimes
-they are furnished with a pair of
-horny lips, which can be opened and
-closed at the will of the insect; in other
-cases they are densely fringed with stiff,
-interlacing bristles, forming a filter,
-which allows air, and air alone, to pass.
-But the apparatus, of whatever character
-it may be, is always so wonderfully
-perfect in its action that it has been
-found impossible to inject the body of a
-dead insect with even so subtle a medium
-as spirits of wine, although the subject
-was first immersed in the fluid, and
-then placed beneath the receiver of an
-air-pump.</p>
-
-<p>The apertures in question, which are
-technically known as “spiracles,” communicate
-with two large breathing-tubes,
-or “tracheæ,” which extend through the
-entire length of the body. From these
-main tubes are given off innumerable
-branches, which run in all directions,
-and continually divide and subdivide
-until a wonderfully intricate network is
-formed, pervading every part of the
-structure, and penetrating even to the
-antennæ and claws.</p>
-
-<p>Physiologists tell us that if in the human
-frame the nerves, the muscles, and
-the veins and arteries could be separated
-from one another, while retaining their
-own relative positions, each would be
-found to possess the perfect human form.
-In other words, there would be the nerve-man,
-the muscle-man, and the blood-vessel-man,
-as well as the bone-man
-which supplies the framework of the
-whole. In the same way we may speak
-of the tracheal, or breathing-tube insect;
-for the two main tubes and the endless
-ramifications of their branches, if they
-could be detached from the surrounding
-tissues while themselves suffering no displacement,
-would exhibit to us the form
-of the insect from which they were taken,
-and that so exactly that in many cases
-we should almost be able to recognize
-the species.</p>
-
-<p>In the smaller branches of these air-vessels
-considerable variety is to be
-found. Some retain their tubular character
-to their very termination. Others
-assume a curious beaded form, dilating
-at short intervals into small chambers;
-while yet others abruptly resolve themselves
-into sac-like reservoirs, in which
-a comparatively large quantity of air is
-stored up. From the larger vessels are
-thrown off vast numbers of exceedingly
-delicate filaments, so small that a very
-powerful microscope is necessary in
-order to detect them, which float loosely
-in the blood, and furnish it with the
-constant supply of oxygen necessary for
-its purification.</p>
-
-<p>Now, we may well ask ourselves how
-it is that these tubes, which are of almost
-inconceivable delicacy, should remain
-open during the various movements of
-which the flexible body is capable. Why
-is it, for instance, that the air-supply of
-the lower leg is not cut off when the
-limb is bent at the knee-joint? or from
-the head, when that important part of
-the frame is tucked away beneath the
-body? How does the Earwig contrive to
-breathe while folding its wings by the aid
-of its tail-forceps? or many of the Cocktail-beetles
-when curled up in their peculiar
-attitude of repose?</p>
-
-<p>The answer to these questions is simple
-enough, and may be discovered by a
-glance at one of the most familiar of our
-own inventions—the flexible gas-tube.
-This preserves its tubular form no matter
-to what degree it may be bent or twisted,
-for coiled closely within it is a spiral wire,
-which obliges the interior of the pipe
-to retain its diameter almost unaltered
-alike when straight or curved. And as
-with this, so with the tracheæ of the
-insect, whose walls are formed of a
-double layer, the one lying inside the
-other, while between the two, and surrounding
-the inner, is coiled a fine but
-very strong elastic thread, whose convolutions
-allow the vessel to be bent in
-any required direction without losing its
-cylindrical form. By the exercise of a
-little care the anatomist can often unwind
-an inch or two of this spiral thread
-from a single branch of the tracheæ of
-a tolerably large insect, so closely is it
-coiled, and so elastic its character.</p>
-
-<p>It will thus be seen that each expansion
-of the respiratory muscles causes
-the air to rush to every part of the body,
-the entire bulk of the blood being consequently
-aerated at each respiration.
-This fact is a most important one, for, as
-it is not necessary that the blood should
-be brought to a definite centre, as in the
-higher animals, before it can be re-vivified,
-and then despatched through another
-series of vessels upon its errand
-of invigorating the frame, the necessity
-for a circulatory system is almost wholly
-at an end, and a large amount of weight
-consequently dispensed with. Insects
-have neither veins nor arteries, one principal
-vessel running along the back, and
-the blood passing slowly through this,
-and flowing between the various organs
-of the body until it again enters it at the
-opposite extremity to that from which it
-emerged.</p>
-
-<p>Nor is this all. With ourselves, as
-with the higher animals in general, nearly
-one-half of the blood, the venous, is
-always effete and useless, requiring to
-pass through the lungs before it can
-again be rendered fit for service. When
-this is vivified and pumped back by the
-heart into the system, that which was
-before arterial becomes venous in its
-turn; and so on. But not in the case
-of the insects. The whole bulk of their
-blood is arterial, if we may use the expression
-in speaking of animals which
-do not possess a vascular system. In
-other words, being incessantly vivified
-throughout the body, owing to the comprehensive
-character of the respiratory
-apparatus, no portion of it becomes at
-any time effete from the exhaustion of
-the contained oxygen. Blood so thoroughly
-and continually aerated, therefore,
-can practically perform double
-work, and need be far less in volume
-than in beings whose circulation is conducted
-upon different principles. The
-tracheal structure, consequently, while
-itself detracting from rather than adding
-to the substance of the body, permits
-of the abolition, not only of lungs,
-but also of veins and arteries and of a
-considerable proportion of the blood,
-so that the weight of the insect is reduced
-to the least possible degree.</p>
-
-<p>There is yet another point to be considered,
-and that a very curious and at
-present unexplained one. Upon careful
-investigation we find that the tracheæ
-extend beyond the limits of the circulation,
-showing that they must serve
-some secondary purpose in addition to
-that generally attributed to them. For
-nature provides nothing in vain, and
-would not without good and sufficient
-reason have carried the breathing-tubes
-farther than necessary for their primary
-object of regenerating the blood. As to
-what this purpose may be, however, we
-have no certain knowledge, and can only
-conjecture that it is in some way connected
-with the olfactory system. It is
-well known that the sense of scent is
-in many insects very highly developed,
-enabling them to ascertain the position
-of their food while yet at a considerable
-distance. Burying-beetles and blowflies,
-for instance, will detect the faintest
-odor of putrid carrion, and will
-wing their way without hesitation to the
-spot whence it proceeds. Ivy-blossom,
-again, will attract almost every butterfly
-and moth in the neighborhood, and
-this clearly by reason of its peculiar
-fragrance.</p>
-
-<p>It may be, therefore, that the perfection
-of the organs of scent in insects
-is due to the fact that they are distributed
-throughout the body, instead of
-being localized as is the case with animals
-higher in the scale. That they
-must be connected with the respiratory
-apparatus would seem, judging by analogy,
-to be indisputable, for, so far as
-we know, an odor cannot be appreciated
-unless the air containing it be allowed
-to pass more or less rapidly over
-the olfactory nerves. And in no other
-part of an insect's structure could this
-requisite so well be observed as in the
-tracheæ themselves, through which a
-stream of air is continually passing, and
-which penetrate to the remotest parts of
-the body.</p>
-
-<p>With so wonderful a respiratory system,
-it naturally follows that an insect
-must be particularly susceptible to the
-effects of any poisonous vapor, which,
-being immediately carried to all parts of
-the body, must speedily be attended
-by fatal results. And this is the case
-in a very marked degree. A moth or
-beetle, which will live for hours, and
-even days, after receiving an injury
-which would cause instant death to a
-more highly organized being, will yet
-succumb in a few seconds to the fumes
-of ether or chloroform, owing to the
-fact that the deadly influence is simultaneously
-exerted upon all the nerve-centres
-of the body, instead of being
-confined to one or two alone.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the respiratory system
-of insects as a group. We have seen
-how air is admitted into the body, how
-the entire bulk of the blood is continuously
-aerated, and how every particle
-of needless weight has carefully been
-dispensed with. There are many species,
-however, whose mode of life renders
-necessary certain further developments,
-in order that respiration may be carried
-on under circumstances which would
-otherwise render it impossible. Such,
-for example, are the various aquatic insects,
-which, while spending the greater
-part of their existence beneath the surface
-of the water, must yet be enabled
-to command a continual supply of atmospheric
-air. They are not, as a rule,
-furnished with gills like the fish, for it
-is necessary that they should be able to
-leave their ponds and streams at will,
-and become for the time terrestrial or
-aerial beings, subject to the same conditions
-as others of their class. But
-they are, nevertheless, provided with
-certain modifications of structure, which
-enable them to breathe with equal ease,
-whether submerged in the water, crawling
-upon the ground, or flying through
-the air.</p>
-
-<p>Even in these modifications there is
-considerable variety, dependent in all
-cases upon the requirements of the individual
-species. The Water-beetles,
-for instance, which must be able to lurk
-concealed among the weeds, &amp;c., until a
-victim comes within their reach, and then
-to pursue and overtake it, carry down
-with them a supply of air in a kind of
-reservoir, situated between the body and
-the wing-cases. The former of these is
-concave and the latter convex, so that
-a chamber of considerable size is
-formed, containing sufficient for their
-requirements during a tolerably long
-period of time. And in these insects
-the spiracles, instead of being situated
-along the sides of the body, are placed
-upon the upper surface of the abdomen,
-so that they open into the air-chamber
-itself, and allow the respiration to be
-carried on without the slightest difficulty
-or inconvenience.</p>
-
-<p>There is only one drawback to this arrangement,
-and that is, that the increased
-buoyance prevents the insect from remaining
-beneath the water excepting at
-the expense of active exertion, unless it
-can find some submerged object to
-which to cling. Even this disadvantage,
-however, is more apparent than real,
-for, while on the watch for prey, it is
-necessary for the insect to remain as
-motionless as possible, and, when engaged
-in swimming, the peculiar action
-of the oar-like limbs neutralizes the tendency
-to rise towards the surface.</p>
-
-<p>Upon an average, a water-beetle remains
-from fifteen to twenty minutes
-without requiring to breathe; this
-period being capable of considerable
-extension should occasion arise. I have
-forced one of these insects, for instance,
-to stay beneath the surface for nearly an
-hour and a half, by alarming it as often
-as it attempted to rise. Generally
-speaking, however, before the first half
-hour is over, the beetle allows itself to
-float to the surface, protrudes the tips
-of the wing-cases, and expels the exhausted
-air from the cavity beneath
-them; a fresh supply is then taken in,
-and the insect again dives, the entire
-operation occupying barely a second of
-time.</p>
-
-<p>The Water Scorpion affords us an instance
-of a perfectly different structure.</p>
-
-<p>Here we have a being, feeding upon
-living prey, which it must capture for
-itself, and yet sluggish and slow of
-foot. By stratagem alone, therefore,
-can it hope to succeed, and it accordingly
-lies hidden among the dead leaves,
-sticks, &amp;c., at the bottom of the water
-until some luckless insect passes within
-reach of its jaw-like fore-limbs. But
-this may not occur for hours, and it is
-imperatively necessary that no alarm
-should be given by frequent journeys to
-the surface in search of air. So, the
-extremity of the body is furnished with
-a curious organ consisting of two long
-filaments, which are, in reality, tubular,
-and which serve to convey air to the
-spiracles. The extreme tips of these
-project slightly above the surface when
-the insect is at rest at the bottom of the
-pond, so that respiration can be carried
-on without difficulty, and without necessitating
-the slightest change of position.</p>
-
-<p>A still more curious structure, although
-of very much the same character, is afforded
-us by the grubs of the common
-Drone-fly. These are inhabitants of the
-thickest and most fetid mud, dwelling
-entirely beneath its surface, and consequently
-cut off from all personal communication
-with the atmosphere. But
-from the end of the body proceeds a
-long tube, which can be lengthened or
-shortened at will, somewhat after the
-manner of a telescope, and which conveys
-air to the spiracles just as do
-the tail filaments of the water scorpion.
-Unable to change their position, these
-“rat-tailed maggots,” as they are popularly
-called, are yet independent of any
-alteration in the depth of the water above
-them, for the air-tube can be instantly
-regulated to the required length, and so
-insure an uninterrupted supply of air.</p>
-
-<p>Yet another system we find employed
-in the case of the grub of the Dragon-fly,
-which stands almost alone among insects
-in its power of extracting the
-necessary oxygen from the water itself.
-This is one of the most rapacious of
-living beings, ever upon the watch for
-prey, and securing its victims, not by
-stealth and fraud, but by open attack.
-Its swimming powers, consequently, are
-of a very high order, and are due to an
-organ which serves the double purpose
-of locomotion and respiration, and
-which is one of the most wonderful
-pieces of structure to be found in the
-whole of the insect world.</p>
-
-<p>If a dragon-fly grub be even casually
-examined, a curious five-pointed appendage
-will be noticed at the extremity of
-the body. If these five points be carefully
-separated they will be seen to surround
-the entrance to a tubular passage,
-of about the diameter of an ordinary
-pin. This passage runs throughout almost
-the entire length of the body, and,
-by the expansion and contraction of the
-abdominal muscles, can be opened and
-closed at will.</p>
-
-<p>When open, of course, it is instantly
-filled with water; when closed, the contents
-are driven out with some little
-force. Consequently, the action of the
-ejected fluid upon the surrounding water
-drives the insect sharply forward, just
-as a sky-rocket rises into the air owing
-to the action of the expelled gases upon
-the atmosphere. As soon as the effect
-of the first stroke is at an end a second
-contraction of the body takes place, and
-the operation is repeated as often as
-necessary. The water, while in the swimming
-tube, however, is exhausted of its
-oxygen, for the entrances to the respiratory
-system are inside instead of outside
-the body, and act in much the same
-manner as do the gills of a fish. The
-insect, therefore, is not obliged to visit
-the surface of the water at all, and can
-continue to search for prey without interruption.</p>
-
-<p>Such are some of the many modifications
-brought about in insect structure
-by the requirements of the respiratory
-organs alone. Each, as will be noticed,
-is specially adapted to individual wants,
-and each is absolutely perfect in its own
-way, insuring a continual supply of oxygen
-for the purification of the blood,
-whatever the conditions under which life
-may be carried on.—<cite>Good Words.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2><a name="PIERRES_MOTTO" id="PIERRES_MOTTO">PIERRE'S MOTTO:</a><br />
-
-<small>A CHACUN SELON SON TRAVAIL</small>.</h2>
-
-<p class="aut">A TALK IN A PARISIAN WORKSHOP ABOUT THE UNEQUAL DISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>“<i lang="fr">A chacun selon son travail</i>, To each
-man according to his work, that's my
-way of looking at it. Go by that motto
-and things will soon come right.”</p>
-
-<p>I heard this said, with great emphasis,
-by Pierre Nigaud to some of his mates
-as I entered the workshop. I went
-there every month to collect the contributions
-to a Provident Insurance Club,
-to which several of the men belonged.
-Pierre was on the whole an industrious
-as well as clever workman, and had
-joined the club readily, as he thought it
-right to save something for his wife and
-children, and to provide for a rainy day,
-as the saying is.</p>
-
-<p>I had observed, however, that Pierre
-on the last occasion when I saw him was
-less frank than he used to be, and did
-not hand over his money with the same
-cheerful goodwill as formerly. What
-was the cause I did not know, but he
-soon made it plain. He had been listening
-to some plausible people, or reading
-some shallow treatises that made him
-discontented with his lot.</p>
-
-<p>“I was just saying when you came
-in,” he began, “<i lang="fr">A chacun selon son travail</i>,
-To each man according to his work.
-Don't you think that a good motto?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it sounds good, but it depends
-how you apply it, and what you are talking
-about.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was talking, I and my mates,
-about the great inequality among people.
-Riches are distributed in a very
-strange and, I say, unjust fashion. Is
-it not unjust that, while so many poor
-fellows have to work hard to gain a few
-pence a day, there are wealthy Nabobs
-who haul in gold by shovelfuls? I read
-in a paper the other day that the English
-Duke of Westminster has an income
-of twenty millions of francs, which
-brings him at least 50,000 francs a day!”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite true, and he is far from being
-the most wealthy man you might name,
-I believe the Californian Mackay has
-about seventy millions of income.
-Rothschild, of Frankfort, left more than
-a milliard. Astor and Vanderbilt, of
-New York, and other millionaires on both
-sides the ocean, have untold wealth.”</p>
-
-<p>“There, you see,” said Pierre; “and
-what appears to me the worst wrong of
-all is that these huge incomes belong
-to people who do next to nothing, while
-poverty is oftenest the lot of those who
-work and toil the hardest. I call this
-downright injustice. <i lang="fr">A chacun selon son
-travail.</i> The riches ought to be with
-those that work. That's my way of
-looking at it.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Pierre,” said I; “there
-is a good deal of truth in what you say.
-It is quite true that in regard to the distribution
-of wealth, as in regard to many
-other things, this world is far from being
-perfect. But do you think that if you
-had the re-arrangement of society, and
-the redistribution of riches, you could
-proceed on some other and better plan?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly. I believe, without any
-presumption, that I could,” said Pierre.
-“What seems to me difficult is not to
-make things better, but to make them
-any worse than they are now!”</p>
-
-<p>One of the workmen here said that
-nothing was simpler than to take the
-surplus wealth of these rich men, and
-divide it amongst the deserving poor.</p>
-
-<p>“That plan is just a little too simple,”
-I remarked. “All the millions of a
-Rothschild would go a very little way, if
-divided among the population of Paris
-alone, and we should soon have to resort
-to other schemes to redress the ever-renewed
-inequalities. No; no; what I
-want Pierre to show us is some better
-system of society, and he thinks he has
-the key to the problem in his favorite
-motto, <i lang="fr">A chacun selon son travail</i>. But
-just let me remind you that in ancient
-times there was a king of Spain who was
-a bit of an astronomer; and looking at
-the heavens, and wondering at the complicated
-movements of the stars, he said
-that if he had been consulted in the
-matter he could have made a much
-better and simpler arrangement. Your
-purpose is not so ambitious and presumptuous
-as his, for the heavens are the
-work of the Almighty, who has imposed
-upon Nature certain fixed laws; whereas
-the laws of society are the work of
-men, and men are liable to err. Let us
-then hear what improvement you can
-suggest in the laws and usages which
-regulate the distribution of wealth.”</p>
-
-<p>Pierre was somewhat taken aback, for
-he felt that the existing arrangements of
-society were very complex, and it was
-not easy to determine where the reform
-should begin.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said I, “let us suppose that
-a number of persons were set on shore
-upon an island, where none had any
-rights or property beyond the others.
-Let us suppose that there are as yet no
-laws, that there is no government, no past
-history: all are free and equal, and you
-have full power to organise the distribution
-of wealth in this new society, and
-to decide what is to be the share of
-each. Come now, you have a <i lang="fr">carte
-blanche</i>, let us hear what you would
-do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Pierre, “I should begin
-by deciding that every one was to do
-what he would and what he could, and
-that every one should keep what he was
-able by his work and industry to obtain.
-<i lang="fr">A chacun selon son travail</i>: behold my
-fundamental rule!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is an excellent rule,” I said,
-“and I do not think any one could find
-a better. It appears to me to be just,
-and also eminently practical, for it would
-stimulate every one to produce by his
-industry as much as he could. I see by
-this that you are no advocate of Communism.”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly not,” said Pierre. “Communism
-is a very good thing in a family,
-where every one exerts himself to
-work for those he loves, and accepts
-without murmur his share of work,
-certain that the mother, or whoever
-is housekeeper, manages the common
-purse with thrift, and in the interest
-of all. But in a large society, I do not
-think that men are equally willing to
-exert themselves for those whom they
-have no knowledge of and no special
-attachment to. Besides, in Communism
-under the State, the manager holding the
-purse strings would be no other than the
-Government, and I would not have confidence
-in its management being wise
-and economical.”</p>
-
-<p>“I quite agree with you. But let us
-return to your plan. After establishing
-your principle, “to each one the produce
-of his labor,” what would you do then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing at all; every one would
-then stand on his own bottom. He that
-works well would have sufficient, and he
-who did no work would have nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“You do not imagine,” I observed,
-“that you would obtain equality by
-these conditions? Since every one has
-to take his part in the work, it is evident
-that these parts will be small or great,
-according as each is industrious or not.
-You would soon come to have in your
-new society the rich and the poor.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, perhaps; but at all events
-there would be none too rich or too
-poor.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know that? Here are
-two families: in one the habits of work,
-of order, of economy, are hereditary;
-the other is given, from father to son,
-to idleness, improvidence, and dissipation.
-The distance that separates these
-families, small at first, must go on increasing,
-till in the natural course of
-things, sooner or later, there would come
-to be the same inequality as between
-Rothschild and a beggar. It would only
-be a question of time.”</p>
-
-<p>Pierre's companions, who were listening
-attentively to the discussion, here
-murmured assent, or what would correspond
-to the “Hear, hear!” of more
-formal debates. Pierre, however, merely
-remarked that this result might seem opposed
-to his views, but that he nevertheless
-accepted it; “because,” said he,
-“in this case the inequality of riches
-would at least be the result of work and
-of the efforts of each worker. There
-would be no injustice.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon me, Pierre, but I think that
-your motto is still causing you to cherish
-some illusions. Let me show you my
-way of looking at it. <i lang="fr">A chacun selon son
-travail</i>, you say, To every one the
-product of his own industry. But what is
-the proprietor to do with the product of
-his labor? He will no doubt sell all that
-is over and above what he needs for his
-own use, and the price of what is sold
-will form his income. But the price of
-things depends on a variety of conditions
-independent of our personal labor
-and our own will; such for instance, as
-the vicissitudes of seasons and the variations
-of the markets. Out of a difference
-of ten francs in the price of wine
-may result the fortune or the ruin of a
-proprietor, and that proves nothing as to
-his having himself labored well or ill.
-The revenue or net profit is rarely in
-exact proportion to the labor bestowed,
-in farming or vine-growing or any other
-industry. What we call chance will
-always play its part in the affairs of this
-world, and in the new world which you
-are planning you cannot hinder Fortune
-from dispensing her favors in an unequal
-fashion; it is not without reason
-that she is represented with a bandage
-over her eyes!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, bah!” exclaimed Pierre; “you
-disconcert me with your suppositions.
-What do you want? I firmly believe that
-in my colony, as everywhere, there will
-be good and bad luck, but while the
-chances are equal for all, and there is no
-place for wrong-doing or trickery, I
-console myself. At least you will admit
-that my principle, <i lang="fr">A chacun le produit de
-son travail</i>, will have this good result,
-that it will render impossible the existence
-of rich idle people who pass their
-life in doing nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you quite sure of that, Pierre?
-If any one after working ten or twenty
-years has produced enough property to
-suffice for his wants during the remainder
-of his days, do you pretend to hinder
-him from spending in his own way, in
-idleness if he pleases, what he had
-amassed by his labors?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly not, because such a one
-would be living on the product of his
-own toil. Let a man rest in the evening
-after having worked hard in the morning,
-and let him live in ease in his old
-age after having produced enough by the
-toil of his youth; I see no harm in that.
-I have no wish to condemn the members
-of my colony to forced labor in perpetuity.
-The only idlers that I wish to
-exclude are those who live without ever
-having worked at all or produced anything—the
-<i lang="fr">rentiers</i>, as they call them, or
-idle people, who live on their income, or
-the interest of their money.”</p>
-
-<p>“Stop now, Pierre; do you admit
-that a man who has obtained anything
-by his labor has the right to do what he
-pleases with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Assuredly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Here is a man who has made a loaf
-of bread. You admit his right to eat it
-all if he is hungry, or to set part of it
-aside if he has not appetite at the time
-for all of it, or even to throw some of it
-away, as he pleases.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it is a consequence of my principle,
-<i lang="fr">A chacun le produit de son travail</i>.
-He who creates wealth has the right
-to dispose of it as he pleases. But
-what has that to do with your argument?”</p>
-
-<p>“Just this. If he who produces a
-thing can do what he pleases with it, he
-can surely give it where he pleases. If,
-then, it suits me to make every day a
-loaf for you, and to give it to you; still
-more, if it pleases me to give to you out
-of my property or to bequeath to you
-after my death enough bread, or, what
-comes to the same thing, enough money
-to support you during your life, you will
-have acquired the means of walking
-about with your hands in your pockets
-like an idle gentleman. You will, in
-fact, have become a <i lang="fr">rentier</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Never,” said Pierre, “never. If I
-allowed such parasites to exist in my
-new society it would be no better than
-the old.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then don't talk any more about
-your motto, <i lang="fr">A chacun le produit de son
-travail</i>. If you adopt this principle you
-must adopt also its consequences, whether
-you like them or not. If, according
-to your system, you admit to every one
-the right of disposing of the fruit of his
-labor, you must admit the right to receive
-as well as to give. Where the worker
-is master of his own property it depends
-on him whether he will create a
-<i lang="fr">rentier</i>, and you cannot prevent him except
-by decreeing that he is incapable of
-disposing of what belongs to him. Beware
-of what must happen otherwise. If in
-your new society you prevented parents
-from giving or leaving to their children
-the property they have amassed, there
-would be risk of their amassing far less
-or of dissipating what they had already
-been able to accumulate by their industry
-and thrift, which would be a great loss
-for all. We must allow, in fact, and it
-is to the honor of human nature, that
-there are very many in this world who
-work more and save more for their children
-and for others rather than for themselves.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, sir, if in my new society there
-must eventually be rich and poor, workers
-and non-workers: if the portion of
-each is not necessarily proportioned to
-their labor then how, I wish to know,
-would this new society which I have
-taken such trouble to plan and organise,
-how would it differ from the society in
-which we now live?”</p>
-
-<p>“In nothing at all, my good friend,
-and this it just what I wished to demonstrate
-to you. You see that the world in
-which we live is, after all, not so badly
-organised, seeing that the new one which
-you have tried to create on better principles,
-as you imagined, turns out, at
-the end of the account, to be an exact
-reproduction of the existing system.”—<cite>Leisure
-Hour.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2 id="BEHIND_THE_SCENES">BEHIND THE SCENES.</h2>
-
-<p class="aut">BY F. C. BURNAND.</p>
-
-
-<p>During the past year there has been
-a considerable amount of discussion,
-within the circumference of a comparatively
-inconsiderable circle, as to the
-social position of the professional actor.
-It is a subject that crops up from time
-to time, attracting more or less attention
-to itself, from those outside the boundary,
-according to whatever may happen
-to be the prevalent artistic development,
-or the latest fashionable craze. The
-tone of the disputants and the weight
-of their individual character must, of
-course, be taken into account. The
-actor is of all professors of any kind of
-art the one who is most before the public.
-The result of his study is ephemeral:
-“he struts and frets his hour
-upon the stage and then is heard no
-more,” though nowadays the strutting
-and fretting are not by any means limited
-to the hour upon the stage; and at the
-present time there seems to be some
-anxiety on the part of the children of
-Thespis to obtain such an authoritative
-definition of their status, as shall put
-their position in society above all question,
-by placing them on a level with the
-members of the recognised professions.
-It is asserted that the professional actor
-is far differently situated now from what
-he was fifty, or even thirty years ago.
-Actor and actress are, it is pointed out,
-received everywhere, petted, fêted,
-lionized, and made much of; our young
-men of birth and education but of
-limited purse, take to the stage, professionally,
-as a honorable means of earning
-their livelihood, just as the youngest son
-of a good, but impoverished family, used
-to be sent into the Church in order to
-hold a family living. Further, it has
-been said that for our young ladies to go
-on the stage is not now considered, as
-heretofore, a disgrace, but, on the contrary,
-rather a plume in their bonnet.
-Altogether it may be fairly inferred
-that there has recently been a movement
-theatrewards, favorable to the
-social prospects of the professional
-actor. But has it been anything more
-than this? Is the actor's calling one
-whit nearer being recognised as on a
-social equality with the regular professions
-than it was fifty years ago?</p>
-
-<p>Throughout this article I shall use the
-word “society” in its widest and most
-comprehensive acceptation, except of
-course where its limitation is expressly
-stated.</p>
-
-<p>A “status in society” means a certain
-standing among one's fellow subjects,
-fixed by law, recognised by traditional
-usage, and acknowledged by every one,
-from the highest to the lowest. Formerly,
-it must be admitted, that as one of
-the “rogues and vagabonds” by Act of
-Parliament the actor, <i>quâ</i> actor, had no
-more status in society than the professional
-beggar with whom he was unjustly
-classed.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“The strolling tribe, a despicable race,</div>
- <div class="verse">Like wandering Arabs, shift from place to place.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>And even now, when this blot on our
-statute-book has been erased, a respectable
-theatrical company, travelling in the
-provinces, is described in the law courts
-as “a company of strolling players.”
-Undoubtedly, in a liberal age, the actor's
-disabilities have been removed; but is
-he not asking for what is an impossibility
-from the very nature of the case,
-when he advances a claim for the recognition
-of his “calling” as on an equality
-with the acknowledged professions,
-which, of themselves, confer a certain
-honorable <em>status</em> on their members,
-stamping them, so far, gentlemen? A
-man who is a gentleman by birth and
-education is, as Mrs. Micawber phrases
-it, “eligible” for the best society; and
-he can only forfeit his social position by
-misconduct. Now, one question is,
-does “going on the stage” imply forfeiture
-of social position? To consider
-this impartially we must get entirely
-away from Leo Hunter associations and
-cliques established on the mutual-admiration
-principle. The test cases are
-soon and easily put. Let us suppose the
-case of the son of an impoverished peer.
-He cannot afford to be idle. He has a
-liking for the bar: he passes his examination
-and becomes a barrister; or he
-has an inclination for the Church, and
-there being a family living vacant, and
-plenty of interest to get him on, he takes
-orders. In either case does he forfeit
-his social position? Certainly not: if
-anything, he improves it by becoming a
-member of an honorable and dignified
-profession. Supposing he has money,
-and prefers soldiering or sailoring to
-doing absolutely nothing, does he forfeit
-his social position by becoming an
-officer? Certainly not: on the contrary
-he improves his already good social
-status. I maintain that, <i lang="la">prima facie</i>,
-for a man to be an officer, a barrister, or
-a clergyman, is in itself a passport to
-any English society. Wherever he is
-personally unknown, it is assumed that
-he is a gentleman, until the contrary is
-proved; and this assumption is on the
-strength of his profession only. Let the
-rank of our hypothetical peer's son be
-subsequently discovered, and for that
-representative portion of society which
-has “entertained an angel unawares,”
-he has the recommendation of his nobility
-<em>plus</em> the social position implied by
-his profession.</p>
-
-<p>But how if the son of our “poor nobleman”
-have a taste for theatricals, and,
-after being at Eton and Oxford, determine
-on “adopting the stage as a profession,”
-or, as it might be more correctly
-put, “in lieu of a profession.”
-What will his noble father and his
-relatives say to this step? Will they
-be as pleased as if he were going into
-the army, or to the bar, or into the
-Church? Not exactly. If he became
-an officer, a barrister, or a clergyman,
-the event would be officially notified in
-due form; but if he went on the stage
-there would be startling paragraphs in
-the papers announcing “The Son of an
-Earl on the Stage,” “The Honorable
-Mr. So-and-So has adopted the profession
-of the stage, &amp;c., &amp;c.” “Well,
-and why not?” some will exclaim; and
-others will commend his pluck, and
-say, “Quite right too.” I entirely
-agree with them. But the point is, has
-the young gentleman taken a step up the
-social ladder, or has he gone more than
-two or three down? Has he improved
-his position, or injured it? Certainly,
-as matters stand, there can be but one
-answer,—the step he has taken has seriously
-affected the position to which his
-birth and education entitle him.</p>
-
-<p>As a barrister on circuit I have supposed
-him received <i>quâ</i> barrister with
-his legal brethren; as an officer, quartered
-in a garrison town, we know he
-will be received <i>quâ</i> officer, with his
-brother officers, and no questions
-asked; and I have alluded to the satisfaction
-that will be felt (snobbery
-of course is taken for granted everywhere)
-when his rank is discovered.
-But as a player with other players in a
-country town, will he be received by
-society, it being understood that <em>because</em>
-he is a player, <em>therefore</em> he is a gentleman
-by birth and education? On becoming
-a soldier, or a barrister, does
-any one change his name? No: but on
-going “on the stage” it is the rule for
-any one to conceal his identity under
-some name widely different from his
-own, just as he conceals his individuality
-behind the footlights with cosmetics,
-burnt cork, and an eccentric wig.
-When it is ascertained who he is, will
-this same society, which would have received
-him as a barrister, be satisfied
-and delighted? No, probably scandalised.
-It will be with these simple, old-fashioned
-persons a foregone conclusion
-that this scion of a noble house must be
-a loose sort of fellow, and they will
-decide that the less they see of him the
-better.</p>
-
-<p>There is one reason why the aspirant
-for Thespian honors (if such he really
-be) should change his name, and that is
-the chance of failure. If he goes on the
-stage as somebody else, and fails as
-somebody else, very few will hear of it,
-and he may quit “the boards” none the
-worse, perhaps for the experience; but
-for some considerable time, until in fact
-he has “lived it down,” he will be very
-careful to conceal this episode in his
-career from the world at large.</p>
-
-<p>Before getting at the very essence of
-the difficulty, I will ask in what light do
-our upper-middle class, and upper-lower
-middle class, and the remainder of that
-form (the public school divisions are useful)
-regard the stage as a means of earning
-a livelihood?</p>
-
-<p>We must put out of the case entirely
-all instances of genius. An histrionic
-genius <em>will</em> be an actor, and his success
-will justify his choice. The force of his
-genius will take him everywhere.
-Genius excuses a multitude of faults and
-solecisms. We must, too, leave out of
-the question cases of exceptional talent,
-where there is more than an occasional
-spark of the <i lang="fr">feu sacré</i>. Whether
-histrionic genius could be better utilised
-than on the stage, may occur to some
-serious minds with a decided anti-theatrical
-bias. But the histrion for the
-stage, and the stage for the histrion,
-and we must take the stage as it is for
-what it is, and not for what it is not.
-Such a reform of the stage, as shall give
-its members something like the status
-they very properly covet, is a matter for
-future consideration. Let it be understood
-then—and I cannot impress this too
-often on those who do me the honor of
-reading my contribution towards the
-discussion,—that I am only speaking of
-very ordinary men and women taking to
-the stage as a means of earning their
-livelihood. The men first; it is not yet
-awhile <i lang="fr">place aux dames</i>, when professions
-are concerned.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever theatrical biography I have
-taken up, I can call to mind but very
-few instances of a man going on the
-stage with the full approbation of his
-relatives. Let his parents be small or
-large tradesmen, civil servants, clerks in
-the City, no matter what, they rarely
-took kindly to their son “going on the
-stage.” It was so: is it not so now?
-The bourgeois is as dead against his son
-becoming an actor as ever he was.
-Scratch the British bourgeois and you'll
-come upon the puritan.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>Supposing a tradesman, free from narrow
-prejudices, and theatrically inclined,
-a regular theatre-goer in fact,—will he
-be one whit more favorable to his son's
-becoming an actor? No: rather the
-contrary. He will not indeed regard
-him as going straight to a place unmentionable,
-as probably he will not consider
-the religious bearings of the “vocation”
-at all, but he will not give the youth
-his blessing, and he may contemplate
-omitting his name from his will. Supposing
-this same son had told his father
-that he wanted to be a barrister, and in
-order to do so he should like, as a first
-step, to serve as a clerk in a solicitor's
-office, wouldn't the old tradesman be
-pleased? Certainly. He might, indeed,
-prove to the lad that if he would stick to
-the business he would be better off for a
-certainty, but, all the same, the youth's
-aspirations would give his parent considerable
-pleasure. And, to be brief,
-here is a case which will bring the question
-directly home to every one; given
-equality in every other respect, and
-which would be preferred as a son-in-law,
-the ordinary actor, or the briefless
-barrister?</p>
-
-<p>The question of the social status of
-the stage is still more important as
-affecting ladies who have to earn their
-livelihood. At the present day there are
-more chances of suitable employment
-for educated, respectably-connected
-girls than there were fifty years ago. As
-yet, however, the demand exceeds the
-supply. Few occupations insure to successful
-ladies such good pay as stage-playing;
-but, as in the previous instances,
-“on the spear side,” so now
-we must consider the case of girls of
-ordinary intelligence, well brought up,
-not by any means geniuses, with no particular
-talent, and who have to earn
-their living. If they cannot paint plates
-and doileys, or copy pictures in oils, if
-they object to any clerkly drudgery
-that has something menial in it, and if,
-as has been affirmed, they “turn with a
-sigh of relief towards the vista of the
-stage,” let us see what this “vista” has
-to offer, and on what terms. And to do
-this we had better take a glance at
-“professional,” <i>i.e.</i>, “theatrical” life.</p>
-
-<p>What Tom Robertson, whose personal
-experience of every variety of theatrical
-life was considerable, in his thoroughly
-English (let us be grateful for this, at
-all events) play of <i>Caste</i> left to the imagination,
-in giving us Eccles as a
-widower, and bestowing an honest,
-hard-working lover on Polly (this was a
-mistake, except as a concession to respectability,
-for Polly was never meant to
-be a Mrs. Sam Gerridge, a small tradesman's
-wife, or, if she were, so much the
-worse for Sam), M. Halévy in his
-<cite>Monsieur et Madame Cardinal</cite> has put
-before his readers very plainly. The
-scenes in Georges Ohnet's <cite>Lise Flueron</cite>
-are not merely peculiar to the French
-stage; and only to those who want to
-know the seamy side of a strolling player's
-life would I recommend <cite>A Mummer's
-Wife</cite>, but not otherwise, as the
-realism of Mr. Moore's story is repulsive.
-Be it remembered, however,
-that the best chance for girls who seek
-an engagement at a London theatre,
-is to travel with a company “on
-tour,” and so learn experience by constant
-and frequently varying practice.
-“The Stage” is an art, and not a profession,
-and an art which, as a means of
-obtaining a bare livelihood, is open to
-everybody possessing ordinary natural
-faculties, offering employment without
-requiring from the applicants any special
-qualification or any certificate from
-schoolmaster, pastor, or master, and
-therefore it must be the resort of all
-who, unable or unwilling to do anything
-else, are content to earn their few shillings
-a week, and to be in the same category
-with Garrick, Macready, Phelps,
-and Kean; for the “super” who earns
-his money by strict attention to business,
-and who has night after night, for
-a lifetime, no more than a few lines to
-say, is briefly described in the census as
-“Actor,” as would be the leading tragedian
-or comedian of the day. He is a
-supernumerary, <i>i.e.</i>, a supernumerary
-actor; and a supernumerary, abbreviated
-to “super,” attached to the
-theatre, he lives and dies. In civil and
-Government offices there are supernumeraries.
-They are supernumerary
-clerks, and none the less clerks on that
-account. If taken on to the regular staff
-they cease to be called supernumeraries,
-and if a super on the stage should exhibit
-decided histrionic talent, he, too,
-would cease to be a super and become
-an actor, that is, he would drop the
-qualification of “supernumerary.” So
-for the “extra ladies,” as they are
-politely termed, who are the female
-supers. As a rule, the extras are a good,
-hard-working people as you will find
-anywhere. They have “come down”
-to this, and in most cases consider their
-position as a descent in the social scale,
-no matter what they may have been before.
-A few may take the place for the
-sake of obtaining “an appearance,”
-with a view to something better; some as
-a means of honest livelihood, and to help
-the family in its “little house in Stangate;”
-and others, to whom a small
-salary is not so much an object as to obtain
-relief from the monotony of evenings
-at home, take to the stage in this,
-or any other capacity, as “extras” in
-burlesque, in pantomime, or as
-strengthening a chorus; and to these
-the theatre is a source of profitable
-amusement. These being some of the
-essential component parts of most
-theatrical companies, would any of us
-wish our daughters to “go on the
-stage?”</p>
-
-<p>There can be but one answer to this:
-No; certainly we would rather they
-did not choose the stage as the means of
-earning a livelihood. But some objector
-will say, “Surely my daughter need
-not associate with such persons as you
-describe.” I answer No; she need not
-off the stage, but how is she to avoid
-it in the theatre? Your daughter,
-my dear sir, is not all at once a Mrs.
-Siddons; she is a beginner. Perhaps
-she never will be a Mrs. Siddons; perhaps
-she will never get beyond playing a
-soubrette, or, if she cannot deliver her
-lines well, and has not the fatal gift of
-beauty, she may, being there only to
-earn her livelihood, be compelled to remain
-among the extras. At all events,
-she cannot expect to consort in the
-theatre with the stars and with the
-leading ladies. The manageress may
-“know her at home,” and do everything
-she can for her; but she cannot
-be unjust to others, and your daughter
-must dress in the same room with the
-“extras,” just as Lord Tomnoddy,
-should he choose to take the Queen's
-shilling, must put up with the other
-privates in barracks. The officers may
-have “known him at home,” but that
-can't be helped now. Your daughter,
-my dear lady, goes on to the stage in
-preference to being a governess, to earn
-money to relieve her parents of a burden,
-and to replenish the family purse.
-Excellent motive! But can you, her
-mother, always be with her? Can you
-accompany her to rehearsals, and be
-with her every evening in the dressing-room
-of the theatre, where there are
-generally about a dozen others, more or
-less according to the accommodation provided
-by the theatre? If you make your
-companionship a <i lang="la">sine quâ non</i>, will it not
-prevent any manager from engaging your
-daughter? They cannot have the dressing-rooms
-full of mothers; they cannot
-spare the space, and mothers cannot be
-permitted to encumber green-rooms and
-the “wings.” You may have implicit
-confidence in your child and in her manager
-and manageress, but the latter have
-something else to do besides looking
-after your daughter. “Some theatres,”
-you will say, “are more respectable than
-others.” True; but your daughter having
-to earn her daily bread by her profession,
-cannot select her theatre. It is
-a hard saying, that beggars must not be
-choosers. Lucky for your daughter if
-she obtains employment in a small
-theatre where only comedy is played.<a id="FNanchor_38_38" href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">38</a>
-But the chances are against her, and she
-will be compelled to take the first engagement
-that offers itself, which will
-probably be at some large theatre where
-there is employment for any number of
-extra ladies, and where the salaries are
-really very good, if your daughter is
-only showy enough to make herself an
-attraction. You ask “what sort of
-attraction?” Well, have you any objection
-to her appearing as a page in an
-extravaganza? Consider that anyone
-who plays Shakespeare's heroines, Viola
-or Rosalind, must wear much the same
-costume; but the other ladies who play
-pages, and some of whom will be her
-companions in the dressing-room, are
-they just the sort of girls you would like
-your daughter to be with every evening
-of her life? If your well-brought-up
-daughter does go there one of two
-things will happen,—she will be either
-so thoroughly disgusted at all she hears
-and sees that she will never go near the
-place after the first week, or she will
-unconsciously deteriorate in tone, until
-the fixed lines of the moral boundary
-have become blurred and faint. If
-among these surroundings a girl remain
-pure in heart, it is simply nothing short
-of a miracle of grace. Would you like
-to expose your daughter to this atmosphere?
-Of course not. How can I
-put the question? but I <em>do</em> put the question,
-after giving you the information of
-the facts of the case. Even in a first-class
-theatre, for a Shakespearian
-revival, there must be a large number of
-all sorts engaged, and with them, your
-daughter, as beginner, will have to consort,
-and she cannot have her mother
-always at her elbow. Besides her
-mother cannot neglect her other daughters,
-or her household duties, to attend
-to the youthful actress.</p>
-
-<p>Now supposing a young lady at once
-obtains an engagement at a reputable
-theatre, and is cast for a good part.
-What then? Then the atmosphere of
-the theatre at its best is not a pleasant
-one. Your daughter will be astonished
-at the extraordinary variations of manner,
-from the abjectly servile to the free-and-easy,
-described in Mr. Namby's
-case as “Botany Bay gentility.” She
-will hear everybody “my dearing” one
-another. At first she will not understand
-half that is said, and very little
-that is meant. When they all warm to
-their work, the veneer of politeness is
-soon rubbed off, and actor and actress
-are seen as the real artistes they are.
-The stage manager comes out strongly
-too; strange words are used, and
-whether it be high art or not that is
-being illustrated, there is pretty sure to
-be a considerable amount of forcible
-language employed in the excitement of
-the moment. Your daughter's ideas
-of propriety will be rudely shocked at
-every turn. When she ceases to be even
-astonished, she will be unconsciously
-deteriorating.</p>
-
-<p>There is one sort of girl to whom all
-this does no harm, and that is the girl
-who comes of a hard-working professional
-theatrical family, who has been
-decently brought up in the middle of it
-all from a child, whose father and
-mother are in the theatre, thoroughly
-respectable people, and as careful of
-their daughter s morals as though she
-were the niece of a bishop. Such a
-girl as this, if she remain on the stage,
-will be a tolerable actress, always sure
-of an engagement. She will marry a
-decent, respectable actor, of some one
-connected with theatricals, will bring up
-a family excellently, will be really religious
-without ostentation, will never
-lose her self-respect, and in her own
-way be perfectly domesticated, happy
-and contented. Or she may marry some
-one in a good social position: if so, she
-will quit the stage without regret, because
-she is not of the stuff of which
-great actresses are made; but she will
-look back on her theatrical experience
-with affection for her parents to whom
-she owed so much. She is neither
-Esther, nor Polly Eccles, nor is she in
-the position of the well-brought-up
-young lady we have been considering.
-But she is an admirable woman, in whatever
-station of life her lot may be cast,
-and not a bit of a snob.</p>
-
-<p>For a young lady, travelling with a
-company would be simply impossible,
-unless accompanied by her mother, or
-by some trustworthy relative. A manageress
-might undertake the guardianship
-and execute the trust conscientiously.
-But this is an exceptional case.</p>
-
-<p>There is another point, and a very
-important one, to be considered, and
-that is the artistic temperament. If a
-young lady of attractive personal appearance
-possesses histrionic talent, then in
-proportion to her talent will be her
-temperament. She will be impulsive,
-passionate, impressionable, self-willed,
-impatient of control, simple, confiding,
-and vain, but artistically vain, and
-desirous of applause. She will be
-illogical, inconsistent, full of contradictions,
-fond of variety, and unable to
-exist without excitement. It only requires
-her to be a genius to be duped by
-the first schemer that throws himself in
-her way.</p>
-
-<p>So, when the theatrical profession is
-brought before you, my dear madam, as
-a calling for your daughter to follow, you
-see that on the one hand there is mediocrity
-and deterioration of character,
-and on the other success, at, probably,
-a ruinous price. This does not apply,
-and again I impress it on my readers, to
-those who are to the manner born.
-They will lead jog-trot lives, study their
-parts, make puddings, act mechanically
-every night, knit socks in the green-room,
-and be virtuous and happy to the
-end of their days. Their artistic temperament
-will not lead them very far
-astray, unless they have the <i lang="fr">feu sacré</i>,
-and then, it is likely, they will make a
-hasty marriage, repent at leisure, and
-try to forget they ever bore a husband's
-name by making one for themselves. In
-some recent French romance an ex-actress
-is warning her daughter who has
-married a prince, against the fascinations
-of a young painter. The princess
-turns on her mother with, “Est ce ma
-faute à moi si j'ai dans les veines du sang
-d'artiste?” And the ex-comédienne
-feels the full force of her daughter's retort,
-which has in it a certain amount of
-truth. Public life has great dangers for
-young women of the artistic temperament:
-mothers cannot be always with
-them, and sheep-dogs are expensive and
-untrustworthy. Chance or ill-luck may
-bring your daughter, madam, to the
-stage, but you would not choose it for
-her, that is, the stage, being as it is, and
-as it is likely to be under the present conditions.
-When those conditions are
-altered for the better, it will be time
-enough for society to change its opinion
-on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>But, it is urged, the present state of
-the stage is a vast improvement on the
-past; that the actor is a person of more
-consideration than formerly, and not
-necessarily tabooed from all society,
-but on the contrary, he is to be met in
-the very best drawing-rooms. It may
-be that a few, whom you may count on
-the fingers of both hands, have the
-<i lang="fr">entrée</i> to the best society. It may be
-so; I am not in a position to deny it.
-But their genius, or talent, and their
-unblemished reputation have combined
-to place them on that pedestal exalted
-above their fellows. But was it not
-always so? Have there not always been
-a privileged few among the actors, as
-among other citizens of the Great Republic
-of Art and Letters, who have
-been admitted to the assemblies of the
-great, and whose hospitality the great
-have condescended to accept in return?
-Go back thirty years and at least a
-dozen names of prominent actors and
-actresses will occur to us as having been
-received in the best society. Now, in
-their time, the number of West-end
-theatres was about one-third of what it
-is at the present day. Therefore, if five
-actors were received by society then,
-there should be fifteen received now.
-If there are not, the stage of to-day is
-socially on the same level with the stage
-of thirty years ago, and has not advanced
-a step; if the number of presentable
-actors is, nowadays, less, then the stage
-has retrograded. I cannot make out
-that there are more received than
-formerly. There are a few University
-men on the stage, men of birth and education,
-entitled to be received in good
-society. But now we are speaking of
-only a section of society, and are begging
-the original question.</p>
-
-<p>And why, from the nature of the case,
-cannot the stage ever rank with the
-recognised professions? Because, as a
-means of earning a livelihood, that is as
-a mere employment, the stage is open to
-all the world. Unlike painting, literature,
-and music, it requires no special
-knowledge of any sort; it can be practised
-as well by the unlearned as, though
-not with the same facility, by the
-learned. It is a self-educating profession.
-Physical gifts, up to a certain
-point, will make up for deficiency in talent:
-but given talent, and with perseverance
-and application even for the most
-illiterate, success is certain. Given
-genius, then “reading and writing”
-seem to “come by nature,” and though
-there may always be a little difficulty with
-the spelling, yet triumph is sure and
-swift. The stage requires no matriculation;
-but for an actor of talent, who
-loves his art, there is no limit to his
-studies,—one helps another, one leads
-to another. As far as society is concerned,
-there should be no one more
-thoroughly qualified to play a leading
-part in the very highest, the most intellectual,
-and most cultivated society,
-than the actor or actress, who is rising
-in or who has reached the summit of
-“the profession.” Scarcely a subject
-can be named that is not, in its degree,
-almost essential—a strong word, but
-on consideration used correctly—to the
-perfection of the actor's art. A first-rate
-actor should be an admirable Crichton.
-The best preparation for the stage is,
-as I have elsewhere insisted, a thorough
-education. True, that it is so for every
-calling, but especially for the stage. To
-belong to the bar of England is an
-honor in itself, even though the barrister
-never gets a brief and could do nothing
-with it if he did. To belong to the stage
-of England is <em>not</em> an honor in itself.
-To the genius, the talents, and the
-private worth of our eminent actors in
-the past and in the present, our stage
-owes its lustre. They owed nothing
-to the stage, the stage everything to
-them.</p>
-
-<p>The desire to raise the social status of
-the actor so that the term actor shall be
-“synonymous with gentleman,” is worthy
-of all praise. To make it possible
-for young ladies of education to take to
-acting as a means of earning a livelihood,
-would be a great social benefit.</p>
-
-<p>When a youth, well brought up, takes
-to the stage, he should not be immediately
-treated as a pariah. On the contrary,
-if ever there be a time in a young man's
-career when more than ever he stands in
-need of good home traditions, the companionship
-of his equals, and the encouragement
-of his superiors, it is when
-he has honestly chosen, as a means of
-earning his living, the stage as a profession.
-That, for evident reasons, it has
-been usually selected by the dissolute,
-the idle, and those to whom any restraint
-is distasteful, accounts to a great extent
-for the disrepute in which the stage has
-been held. Of course the statute-book
-and the puritanism of the seventeenth
-century have much to answer for in the
-popular estimate of the players. There
-is a strong leaven of Puritanism amongst
-us, and, in some respects, so much the
-better; but also among very excellent
-people of various religious opinions,
-there has been, and it exists now, a sort
-of vague idea that the stage has always
-been under the positive ban of the
-Church. In the temporary laws and
-regulations of different countries, enforced
-by narrow-minded men, civil or
-ecclesiastical, may be found the origin
-of this mistaken notion. The Church
-has never pronounced the stage the
-anathema. On the contrary, she has
-patronised the stage, and the first mimes
-who entered France from Italy rather
-resembled members of a religious order
-in their pious fervor, than actors of a
-later date in their laxity. If players
-were refused Christian burial, it was
-when they had neither lived nor died as
-even nominal Christians, and in such
-cases even “maimed rites” would savor
-of hypocrisy. In France the actors
-themselves were under this hallucination.
-M. Regnier tells us how in 1848 a deputation
-of comedians went to Monseigneur
-Affre to ask him to get the sentence
-of excommunication removed from the
-theatrical profession. “L'illustre prélat
-leur répondit qu'il n'y avait pas à la lever,
-parcequ'elle n'avait jamais été formulée,
-et que les comédiens français,
-comme les comédiens de tous les autres
-pays catholiques, pouvaient participer
-aux sacraments.”</p>
-
-<p>It would be a comparatively easy task
-to trace the origin of this floating but
-perfectly false tradition, but I have already
-overrun the limit of this article.
-In the time of Louis XIII. the actors
-were excellent church-goers, had their
-children baptised, frequented the sacraments,
-and were on the best terms
-with curés of Paris; and it will be a
-consolation to those actors among us
-who, like the doll in the song, “pine for
-higher society” to be reminded, that
-the grand monarch himself did not disdain
-to stand god-father at the font to
-the first-born of Molière, and to do the
-like office to the third child of Domenico
-Biancolelli, the Italian harlequin.</p>
-
-<p>Our leading actors and actresses of
-the present day will naturally strive, no
-less than those of the past, to do their
-best for the stage, and, in return, the
-patrons of the drama will do their best
-for them. But to claim for it, as its right,
-the social status of the recognised professions,
-and to be fussily indignant with
-society at large for refusing to acknowledge
-this groundless claim, is degrading
-to an art which should be as independent
-and as exalted as virtue, and content
-with virtue's reward.—<cite>Fortnightly Review.</cite></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2 id="GO_TO_THE_ANT">GO TO THE ANT.</h2>
-
-<p>In the market-place at Santa Fé, in
-Mexico, peasant women from the neighboring
-villages bring in for sale trayfuls
-of living ants, each about as big and
-round as a large white currant, and each
-entirely filled with honey or grape-sugar,
-much appreciated by the ingenuous Mexican
-youth as an excellent substitute for
-Everton toffee. The method of eating
-them would hardly command the approbation
-of the Society for the Prevention
-of Cruelty to Animals. It is simple and
-primitive, but decidedly not humane.
-Ingenuous youth holds the ant by its
-head and shoulders, sucks out the honey
-with which the back part is absurdly
-distended, and throws away the empty
-body as a thing with which it has now
-no further sympathy. Maturer age buys
-the ants by the quart, presses out the
-honey through a muslin strainer, and
-manufactures it into a very sweet intoxicating
-drink, something like shandygaff,
-as I am credibly informed by bold persons
-who have ventured to experiment
-upon it, taken internally.</p>
-
-<p>The curious insect which thus serves
-as an animated sweetmeat for the Mexican
-children is the honey-ant of the
-Garden of the Gods; and it affords a
-beautiful example of Mandeville's
-charming paradox that personal vices
-are public benefits—<i lang="la">vitia privata humana
-commoda</i>. The honey-ant is a greedy individual
-who has nevertheless nobly devoted
-himself for the good of the community
-by converting himself into a
-living honey-jar, from which all the
-other ants in his own nest may help
-themselves freely from time to time, as
-occasion demands. The tribe to which
-he belongs lives underground, in a dome-roofed
-vault, and only one particular
-caste among the workers, known as rotunds
-from their expansive girth, is told
-off for this special duty of storing honey
-within their own bodies. Clinging to
-the top of their nest, with their round,
-transparent abdomens hanging down
-loosely, mere globules of skin enclosing
-the pale amber-colored honey, these
-Daniel Lamberts of the insect race look
-for all the world like clusters of the little
-American Delaware grapes, with an ant's
-legs and head stuck awkwardly on to the
-end instead of a stalk. They have, in
-fact, realised in everyday life the awful
-fate of Mr. Gilbert's discontented sugar-broker,
-who laid on flesh and “adipose
-deposit” until he became converted at
-last into a perfect rolling ball of globular
-humanity.</p>
-
-<p>The manners of the honey-ant race
-are very simple. Most of the members
-of each community are active and roving
-in their dispositions, and show no tendency
-to undue distension of the nether
-extremities. They go out at night and
-collect nectar or honey-dew from the gall-insects
-on oak-trees; for the gall-insect,
-like love in the old Latin saw, is fruitful
-both in sweets and bitters, <i lang="fr">melle et felle</i>.
-This nectar they then carry home, and
-give it to the rotunds or honey-bearers,
-who swallow it and store it in their round
-abdomen until they can hold no more,
-having stretched their skins literally to
-the very point of bursting. They pass
-their time, like the Fat Boy in “Pickwick,”
-chiefly in sleeping, but they cling
-upside down meanwhile to the roof of
-their residence. When the workers in
-turn require a meal, they go up to the
-nearest honey-bearer and stroke her gently
-with their antennæ. The honey-bearer
-thereupon throws up her head and regurgitates
-a large drop of the amber liquid.
-(“Regurgitates” is a good word, which
-I borrow from Dr. McCook, of Philadelphia,
-the great authority upon honey-ants;
-and it saves an immense deal of
-trouble in looking about for a respectable
-periphrasis). The workers feed
-upon the drops thus exuded, two or three
-at once often standing around the living
-honey-jar, and lapping nectar together
-from the lips of their devoted comrade.
-This may seem at first sight rather an unpleasant
-practice on the part of the ants;
-but, after all, how does it really differ
-from our own habit of eating honey
-which has been treated in very much
-the same unsophisticated manner by the
-domestic bee?</p>
-
-<p>Worse things than these, however,
-Dr. McCook records to the discredit of
-the Colorado honey-ant. When he was
-opening some nests in the Garden of the
-Gods, he happened accidentally to knock
-down some of the rotunds, which
-straightway burst asunder in the middle,
-and scattered their store of honey on the
-floor of the nest. At once the other ants,
-tempted away from their instinctive task
-of carrying off the cocoons and young
-grubs, clustered around their unfortunate
-companion, like street boys around
-a broken molasses barrel, and instead of
-forming themselves forthwith into a
-volunteer ambulance company, proceeded
-immediately to lap up the honey
-from their dying brother. On the other
-hand, it must be said, to the credit of the
-race, that (unlike the members of Arctic
-expeditions) they never desecrate the remains
-of the dead. When a honey-bearer
-dies at his post, a victim to his
-zeal for the common good, the workers
-carefully remove his cold corpse from
-the roof where it still clings, clip off the
-head and shoulders from the distended
-abdomen, and convey their deceased
-brother piecemeal, in two detachments,
-to the formican cemetery, undisturbed.
-If they chose, they might only bury the
-front half of their late relation, while they
-retained his remaining moiety as an available
-honey-bag: but from this cannibal
-proceeding ant-etiquette recoils in decent
-horror; and the amber globes are
-“pulled up galleries, rolled along rooms,
-and bowled into the graveyard, along
-with the juiceless heads, legs, and other
-members.” Such fraternal conduct
-would be very creditable to the worker
-honey-ants, were it not for a horrid
-doubt insinuated by Dr. McCook that
-perhaps the insects don't know they
-could get at the honey by breaking up
-the body of their lamented relative. If
-so, their apparent disregard of utilitarian
-considerations may really be due not to
-their sentimentality but to their hopeless
-stupidity.</p>
-
-<p>The reason why the ants have taken
-thus to storing honey in the living bodies
-of their own fellows is easy enough to
-understand. They want to lay up for
-the future, like prudent insects that they
-are; but they can't make wax, as the
-bees do, and they have not yet evolved
-the purely human art of pottery. Consequently—happy
-thought—why not tell
-off some of our number to act as jars on
-behalf of the others? Some of the community
-work by going out and gathering
-honey; they also serve who only stand
-and wait—who receive it from the workers,
-and keep it stored up in their own
-capacious india-rubber maws till further
-notice. So obvious is this plan for converting
-ants into animated honey-jars,
-that several different kinds of ants in different
-parts of the world, belonging to the
-most widely distinct families, have independently
-hit upon the very self-same device.
-Besides the Mexican species, there
-is a totally different Australian honey-ant,
-and another equally separate in Borneo
-and Singapore. This last kind does
-not store the honey in the hind part of
-the body, technically known as the abdomen,
-but in the middle division which
-naturalists call the thorax, where it forms
-a transparent bladder-like swelling, and
-makes the creature look as though it
-were suffering with an acute attack of
-dropsy. In any case, the life of a honey-bearer
-must be singularly uneventful, not
-to say dull and monotonous; but no
-doubt any small inconvenience in this
-respect must be more than compensated
-for by the glorious consciousness that
-one is sacrificing one's own personal
-comfort for the common good of universal
-anthood. Perhaps, however, the ants
-have not yet reached the Positivist stage,
-and may be totally ignorant of the enthusiasm
-of formicity.</p>
-
-<p>Equally curious are the habits and
-manners of the harvesting ants, the
-species which Solomon seems to have had
-specially in view when he advised his
-hearers to go to the ant—a piece of advice
-which I have also adopted as the
-title of the present article, though I by no
-means intend thereby to insinuate that
-the readers of this magazine ought properly
-to be classed as sluggards. These
-industrious little creatures abound in
-India: they are so small that it takes
-eight or ten of them to carry a single
-grain of wheat or barley; and yet they
-will patiently drag along their big burden
-for five hundred or a thousand yards to
-the door of their formicary. To prevent
-the grain from germinating, they bite off
-the embryo root—a piece of animal intelligence
-outdone by another species of
-ant, which actually allows the process
-of budding to begin, so as to produce
-sugar, as in malting. After the
-last thunderstorms of the monsoon the
-little proprietors bring up all the grain
-from their granaries to dry in the tropical
-sunshine. The quantity of grain
-stored up by the harvesting ants is often
-so large that the hair-splitting Jewish
-casuists of the Mishna have seriously
-discussed the question whether it belongs
-to the landowner or may lawfully be appropriated
-by the gleaners. “They do
-not appear,” says Sir John Lubbock,
-“to have considered the rights of the
-ants.” Indeed our duty towards insects
-is a question which seems hitherto
-to have escaped the notice of all moral
-philosophers. Even Mr. Herbert
-Spencer, the prophet of individualism,
-has never taken exception to our gross
-disregard of the proprietary rights of
-bees in their honey, or of silkworms in
-their cocoons. There are signs, however,
-that the obtuse human conscience
-is awakening in this respect; for when
-Dr. Loew suggested to bee-keepers the
-desirability of testing the commercial
-value of honey-ants, as rivals to the bee,
-Dr. McCook replied that “the sentiment
-against the use of honey thus taken
-from living insects, which is worthy of
-all respect, would not be easily overcome.”</p>
-
-<p>There are no harvesting ants in Northern
-Europe, though they extend as far
-as Syria, Italy, and the Riviera, in which
-latter station I have often observed
-them busily working. What most careless
-observers take for grain in the nests
-of English ants are of course really the
-cocoons of the pupæ. For many years,
-therefore, entomologists were under the
-impression that Solomon had fallen
-into this popular error, and that when
-he described the ant as “gathering her
-food in the harvest” and “preparing
-her meat in the summer,” he was speaking
-rather as a poet than as a strict
-naturalist. Later observations, however,
-have vindicated the general accuracy
-of the much-married king by
-showing that true harvesting ants do
-actually occur in Syria, and that they
-lay by stores for the winter in the very
-way stated by that early entomologist,
-whose knowledge of “creeping things”
-is specially enumerated in the long list
-of his universal accomplishments.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Lincecum of Texan fame has
-even improved upon Solomon by his
-discovery of those still more interesting
-and curious creatures, the agricultural
-ants of Texas. America is essentially a
-farming country, and the agricultural
-ants are born farmers. They make regular
-clearings around their nests, and on
-these clearings they allow nothing to
-grow except a particular kind of grain,
-known as ant-rice. Dr. Lincecum maintains
-that the tiny farmers actually sow
-and cultivate the ant-rice. Dr. McCook,
-on the other hand, is of opinion that the
-rice sows itself, and that the insects'
-part is limited to preventing any other
-plants or weeds from encroaching on the
-appropriated area. In any case, be they
-squatters or planters, it is certain that
-the rice, when ripe, is duly harvested,
-and that it is, to say the least, encouraged
-by the ants, to the exclusion of
-all other competitors. “After the maturing
-and harvesting of the seed,” says
-Dr. Lincecum, “the dry stubble is cut
-away and removed from the pavement,
-which is thus left fallow until the ensuing
-autumn, when the same species of
-grass, and in the same circle, appears
-again, and receives the same agricultural
-care as did the previous crop.” Sir
-John Lubbock, indeed, goes so far as to
-say that the three stages of human progress—the
-hunter, the herdsman, and
-the agriculturist—are all to be found
-among various species of existing ants.</p>
-
-<p>The Saüba ants of tropical America
-carry their agricultural operations a step
-further. Dwelling in underground nests,
-they sally forth upon the trees, and cut
-out of the leaves large round pieces,
-about as big as a shilling. These pieces
-they drop upon the ground, where another
-detachment is in waiting to convey
-them to the galleries of the nest. There
-they store enormous quantities of these
-round pieces, which they allow to decay
-in the dark, so as to form a sort of miniature
-mushroom bed. On the mouldering
-vegetable heap they have thus piled
-up, they induce a fungus to grow, and
-with this fungus they feed their young
-grubs during their helpless infancy.
-Mr. Belt, the “Naturalist in Nicaragua,”
-found that native trees suffered far less
-from their depredations than imported
-ones. The ants hardly touched the local
-forests, but they stripped young plantations
-of orange, coffee, and mango trees
-stark naked. He ingeniously accounts
-for this curious fact by supposing that an
-internecine struggle has long been going
-on in the countries inhabited by the Saübas
-between the ants and the forest trees.
-Those trees that best resisted the ants,
-owing either to some unpleasant taste or
-to hardness of foliage have in the long
-run survived destruction; but those
-which were suited for the purpose of the
-ants have been reduced to nonentity,
-while the ants in turn were getting slowly
-adapted to attack other trees. In
-this way almost all the native trees have
-at last acquired some special means of
-protection against the ravages of the
-leaf-cutters; so that they immediately
-fall upon all imported and unprotected
-kinds as their natural prey. This ingenious
-and wholly satisfactory explanation
-must of course go far to console the
-Brazilian planters for the frequent loss
-of their orange and coffee crops.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Alfred Russel Wallace, the co-discoverer
-of the Darwinian theory
-(whose honors he waived with rare
-generosity in favor of the older and
-more distinguished naturalist), tells a
-curious story about the predatory habits
-of these same Saübas. On one occasion,
-when he was wandering about in search
-of specimens on the Rio Negro, he
-bought a peck of rice, which was tied up,
-Indian fashion, in the local bandanna of
-the happy plantation slave. At night
-he left his rice incautiously on the bench
-of the hut where he was sleeping; and
-next morning the Saübas had riddled the
-handkerchief like a sieve, and carried
-away a gallon of the grain for their own
-felonious purposes. The underground
-galleries which they dig can often be
-traced for hundreds of yards; and Mr.
-Hamlet Clark even asserts that in one
-case they have tunnelled under the bed
-of a river where it is a quarter of a
-mile wide. This beats Brunel on his own
-ground into the proverbial cocked hat,
-both for depth and distance.</p>
-
-<p>Within doors, in the tropics, ants are
-apt to put themselves obtrusively forward
-in a manner little gratifying to any except
-the enthusiastically entomological
-mind. The winged females, after their
-marriage flight, have a disagreeable habit
-of flying in at the open doors and windows
-at lunch time, settling upon the
-table like the Harpies in the Æneid, and
-then quietly shuffling off their wings one
-at a time, by holding them down against
-the table-cloth with one leg, and running
-away vigorously with the five others.
-As soon as they have thus disembarassed
-themselves of their superfluous members,
-they proceed to run about over the lunch
-as if the house belonged to them, and
-to make a series of experiments upon
-the edible qualities of the different dishes.
-One doesn't so much mind their
-philosophical inquiries into the nature
-of the bread or even the meat; but
-when they come to drowning themselves
-by dozens, in the pursuit of knowledge,
-in the soup and the sherry, one feels
-bound to protest energetically against
-the spirit of martyrdom by which they
-are too profoundly animated. That is
-one of the slight drawbacks of the
-realms of perpetual summer: in the poets
-you see only one side of the picture—the
-palms, the orchids, the humming-birds,
-the great trailing lianas; in practical
-life you see the reverse side—the
-thermometer at 98°, the tepid drinking-water,
-the prickly heat, the perpetual
-languor, the endless shoals of aggressive
-insects. A lady of my acquaintance, indeed,
-made a valuable entomological
-collection in her own dining-room, by
-the simple process of consigning to pillboxes
-all the moths and flies and beetles
-that settled upon the mangoes and star-apples
-in the course of dessert.</p>
-
-<p>Another objectionable habit of the
-tropical ants, viewed practically, is their
-total disregard of vested interests in the
-case of house-property. Like Mr. George
-and his communistic friends, they disbelieve
-entirely in the principle of private
-rights in real estate. They will eat
-their way through the beams of your
-house till there is only a slender core of
-solid wood left to support the entire
-burden. I have taken down a rafter in
-my own house in Jamaica, originally 18
-inches thick each way, with a sound circular
-centre of no more than 6 inches in
-diameter, upon which all the weight
-necessarily fell. With the material extracted
-from the wooden beams they
-proceed to add insult to injury by building
-long covered galleries right across the
-ceiling of your drawing-room. As may
-be easily imagined, these galleries do
-not tend to improve the appearance of
-the ceiling; and it becomes necessary to
-form a Liberty and Property Defence
-League for the protection of one's personal
-interests against the insect enemy.
-I have no objection to ants building
-galleries on their own freehold, or even
-to their nationalising the land in their
-native forests; but I do object strongly
-to their unwarrantable intrusion upon
-the domain of private life. Expostulation
-and active warfare, however, are
-equally useless. The carpenter-ant has
-no moral sense, and is not amenable
-either to kindness or blows. On one occasion,
-when a body of these intrusive
-creatures had constructed an absurdly
-conspicuous brown gallery straight across
-the ceiling of my drawing-room, I determined
-to declare open war against
-them, and getting my black servant to
-bring in the steps and a mop, I proceeded
-to demolish the entire gallery just
-after breakfast. It was about twenty
-feet long, as well as I can remember, and
-perhaps an inch in diameter. At one
-o'clock I returned to lunch. My black
-servant pointed, with a broad grin on
-his intelligent features, to the wooden
-ceiling. I looked up: in those three
-hours the carpenter-ants had reconstructed
-the entire gallery, and were
-doubtless mocking me at their ease, with
-their uplifted antennæ, under that safe
-shelter. I retired at once from the unequal
-contest. It was clearly impossible
-to go on knocking down a fresh gallery
-every three hours of the day or night
-throughout a whole lifetime.</p>
-
-<p>Ants, says Mr. Wallace, without one
-touch of satire, “force themselves upon
-the attention of everyone who visits the
-tropics.” They do, indeed, and that
-most pungently; if by no other method,
-at least by the simple and effectual one
-of stinging. The majority of ants in
-every nest are of course neuters, or
-workers, that is to say, strictly speaking,
-undeveloped females, incapable of laying
-eggs. But they still retain the ovipositor,
-which is converted into a sting,
-and supplied with a poisonous liquid to
-eject afterwards into the wound. So
-admirably adapted to its purpose is this
-beautiful provision of nature, that some
-tropical ants can sting with such violence
-as to make your leg swell and confine
-you for some days to your room; while
-cases have even been known in which the
-person attacked has fainted with pain,
-or had a serious attack of fever in consequence.
-It is not every kind of ant,
-however, that can sting; a great many
-can only bite with their little hard horny
-jaws, and then eject a drop of formic
-poison afterwards into the hole caused
-by the bite. The distinction is a delicate
-physiological one, not much appreciated
-by the victims of either mode of
-attack. The perfect females can also
-sting, but not, of course, the males, who
-are poor, wretched, useless creatures,
-only good as husbands for the community,
-and dying off as soon as they have
-performed their part in the world—another
-beautiful provision, which saves
-the workers the trouble of killing them
-off, as bees do with drones after the
-marriage flight of the queen bee.</p>
-
-<p>The blind driver-ants of West Africa
-are among the very few species that render
-any service to man, and that, of
-course, only incidentally. Unlike most
-other members of their class, the driver-ants
-have no settled place of residence;
-they are vagabonds and wanderers upon
-the face of the earth, formican tramps,
-blind beggars, who lead a gipsy existence,
-and keep perpetually upon the move,
-smelling their way cautiously from one
-camping-place to another. They march
-by night, or on cloudy days, like wise
-tropical strategists, and never expose
-themselves to the heat of the day in
-broad sunshine, as though they were no
-better than the mere numbered British
-Tommy Atkins at Coomassie or in the
-Soudan. They move in vast armies across
-country, driving everything before
-them as they go; for they belong to the
-stinging division, and are very voracious
-in their personal habits. Not only do
-they eat up the insects in their line of
-march, but they fall even upon larger
-creatures and upon big snakes, which
-they attack first in the eyes, the most
-vulnerable portion. When they reach a
-negro village the inhabitants turn out
-<i lang="fr">en masse</i>, and run away, exactly as if the
-visitors were English explorers or brave
-Marines, bent upon retaliating for the
-theft of a knife by nobly burning down
-King Tom's town or King Jumbo's
-capital. Then the negroes wait in the
-jungle till the little black army has passed
-on, after clearing out the huts by the
-way of everything eatable. When they
-return they find their calabashes and
-saucepans licked clean, but they also
-find every rat, mouse, lizard, cockroach,
-gecko, and beetle completely cleared out
-from the whole village. Most of them
-have cut and run at the first approach
-of the drivers; of the remainder, a few
-blanched and neatly-picked skeletons
-alone remain to tell the tale.</p>
-
-<p>As I wish to be considered a veracious
-historian, I will not retail the further
-strange stories that still find their way
-into books of natural history about the
-manners and habits of these blind marauders.
-They cross rivers, the West
-African gossips declare, by a number of
-devoted individuals flinging themselves
-first into the water as a living bridge,
-like so many six-legged Marcus Curtiuses,
-while over their drowning bodies the
-heedless remainder march in safety to
-the other side. If the story is not true,
-it is at least well invented; for the ant-commonwealth
-everywhere carries to the
-extremest pitch the old Roman doctrine
-of the absolute subjection of the individual
-to the State. So exactly is this the
-case that in some species there are a few
-large, overgrown, lazy ants in each nest,
-which do no work themselves, but accompany
-the workers on their expeditions;
-and the sole use of these idle
-mouths seems to be to attract the attention
-of birds and other enemies, and so
-distract it from the useful workers, the
-mainstay of the entire community. It
-is almost as though an army, marching
-against a tribe of cannibals, were to
-place itself in the centre of a hollow
-square formed of all the fattest people
-in the country, whose fine condition and
-fitness for killing might immediately
-engross the attention of the hungry enemy.
-Ants, in fact, have, for the most
-part, already reached the goal set before
-us as a delightful one by most current
-schools of socialist philosophers, in which
-the individual is absolutely sacrificed in
-every way to the needs of the community.</p>
-
-<p>The most absurdly human, however,
-among all the tricks and habits of ants
-are their well-known cattle-farming and
-slaveholding instincts. Everybody has
-heard, of course, how they keep the
-common rose-blight as milch cows, and
-suck from them the sweet honey-dew.
-But everybody, probably, does not yet
-know the large number of insects
-which they herd in one form or another
-as domesticated animals. Man has, at
-most, some twenty or thirty such,
-including cows, sheep, horses, donkeys,
-camels, llamas, alpacas, reindeer,
-dogs, cats, canaries, pigs, fowl, ducks,
-geese, turkeys, and silkworms. But
-ants have hundreds and hundreds,
-some of them kept obviously for purposes
-of food; others apparently as
-pets; and yet others again, as has been
-plausibly suggested, by reason of superstition
-or as objects of worship. There
-is a curious blind beetle which inhabits
-ants' nests, and is so absolutely dependent
-upon its hosts for support that it has
-even lost the power of feeding itself. It
-never quits the nest, but the ants bring
-it in food and supply it by putting the
-nourishment actually into its mouth.
-But the beetle, in return, seems to secrete
-a sweet liquid (or it may even be a stimulant
-like beer, or a narcotic like tobacco)
-in a tuft of hairs near the bottom of the
-hard wing-cases, and the ants often lick
-this tuft with every appearance of satisfaction
-and enjoyment. In this case,
-and in many others, there can be no
-doubt that the insects are kept for the
-sake of food or some other advantage
-yielded by them.</p>
-
-<p>But there are other instances of insects
-which haunt ants' nests, which it is far
-harder to account for on any hypothesis
-save that of superstitious veneration.
-There is a little weevil that runs about
-by hundreds in the galleries of English
-ants, in and out among the free citizens,
-making itself quite at home in their
-streets and public places, but as little noticed
-by the ants themselves as dogs are in
-our own cities. Then, again, there is a
-white woodlouse, something like the
-common little armadillo, but blind from
-having lived so long underground, which
-walks up and down the lanes and alleys
-of antdom, without ever holding any
-communication of any sort with its hosts
-and neighbors. In neither case has Sir
-John Lubbock ever seen an ant take the
-slightest notice of the presence of these
-strange fellow-lodgers. “One might almost
-imagine,” he says, “that they had the cap
-of invisibility.” Yet it is quite clear
-that the ants deliberately sanction the
-residence of the weevils and woodlice in
-their nests, for any unauthorised intruder
-would immediately be set upon and
-massacred outright. Sir John Lubbock
-suggests that they may perhaps be tolerated
-as scavengers; or, again, it is
-possible that they may prey upon the
-eggs or larvæ of some of the parasites to
-whose attacks the ants are subject. In
-the first case, their use would be similar
-to that of the wild dogs in Constantinople
-or the common black John-crow vultures
-in tropical America: in the second case,
-they would be about equivalent to our
-own cats or to the hedgehog often put in
-farmhouse kitchens to keep down cockroaches.</p>
-
-<p>The crowning glory of owning slaves,
-which many philosophic Americans (before
-the war) showed to be the highest
-and noblest function of the most advanced
-humanity, has been attained by more
-than one variety of anthood. Our great
-English horse-ant is a moderate slave-holder;
-but the big red ant of Southern
-Europe carries the domestic institution
-many steps further. It makes regular
-slave-raids upon the nests of the small
-brown ants, and carries off the young in
-their pupa condition. By-and-by the
-brown ants hatch out in the strange nest,
-and, never having known any other life
-except that of slavery, accommodate
-themselves to it readily enough. The
-red ant, however, is still only an occasional
-slaveowner; if necessary, he can
-get along by himself, without the aid of
-his little brown servants. Indeed, there
-are free states and slave states of red
-ants side by side with one another, as of
-old in Maryland and Pennsylvania: in
-the first, the red ants do their work
-themselves, like mere vulgar Ohio farmers;
-in the second, they get their work
-done for them by their industrious little
-brown servants, like the aristocratic first
-families of Virginia before the earthquake
-of emancipation.</p>
-
-<p>But there are other degraded ants,
-whose life-history may be humbly presented
-to the consideration of the Anti-Slavery
-Society, as speaking more eloquently
-than any other known fact for the
-demoralising effect of slaveowning upon
-the slaveholders themselves. The Swiss
-rufescent ant is a species so long habituated
-to rely entirely upon the services
-of slaves that it is no longer able to
-manage its own affairs when deprived by
-man of its hereditary bondsmen. It has
-lost entirely the art of constructing a
-nest; it can no longer tend its own
-young, whom it leaves entirely to the
-care of negro nurses; and its bodily
-structure even has changed, for the jaws
-have lost their teeth, and have been converted
-into mere nippers, useful only as
-weapons of war. The rufescent ant, in
-fact, is a purely military caste, which has
-devoted itself entirely to the pursuit of
-arms, leaving every other form of activity
-to its slaves and dependents. Officers
-of the old school will be glad to
-learn that this military insect is dressed,
-if not in scarlet, at any rate in very decent
-red, and that it refuses to be bothered
-in any way with questions of transport
-or commissariat. If the community
-changes its nest, the masters are
-carried on the backs of their slaves to
-the new position, and the black ants have
-to undertake the entire duty of foraging
-and bringing in stores of supply for their
-gentlemanly proprietors. Only when
-war is to be made upon neighboring nests
-does the thin red line form itself into
-long file for active service. Nothing
-could be more perfectly aristocratic than
-the views of life entertained and acted
-upon by these distinguished slaveholders.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, the picture has its
-reverse side, exhibiting clearly the weak
-points of the slaveholding system. The
-rufescent ant has lost even the very power
-of feeding itself. So completely dependent
-is each upon his little black
-valet for daily bread, that he cannot so
-much as help himself to the food that is
-set before him. Hüber put a few slaveholders
-into a box with some of their
-own larvæ and pupæ, and a supply of
-honey, in order to see what they would
-do with them. Appalled at the novelty
-of the situation, the slaveholders seemed
-to come to the conclusion that something
-must be done; so they began
-carrying the larvæ about aimlessly in
-their mouths, and rushing up and down
-in search of the servants. After a while,
-however, they gave it up and came to the
-conclusion that life under such circumstances
-was clearly intolerable. They
-never touched the honey, but resigned
-themselves to their fate like officers and
-gentlemen. In less than two days, half
-of them had died of hunger, rather than
-taste a dinner which was not supplied to
-them by a properly constituted footman.
-Admiring their heroism or pitying their
-incapacity, Hüber, at last, gave them
-just one slave between them all. The
-plucky little negro, nothing daunted by
-the gravity of the situation, set to work
-at once, dug a small nest, gathered together
-the larvæ, helped several pupæ
-out of the cocoon, and saved the lives of
-the surviving slaveowners. Other naturalists
-have tried similar experiments,
-and always with the same result. The
-slaveowners will starve in the midst of
-plenty rather than feed themselves without
-attendance. Either they cannot or
-will not put the food into their own
-mouths with their own mandibles.</p>
-
-<p>There are yet other ants, such as the
-workerless <i>Anergates</i>, in which the degradation
-of slaveholding has gone yet
-further. These wretched creatures are
-the formican representatives of those
-Oriental despots who are no longer even
-warlike, but are sunk in sloth and luxury,
-and pass their lives in eating bang or
-smoking opium. Once upon a time, Sir
-John Lubbock thinks, the ancestors of
-<i>Anergates</i> were marauding slaveowners,
-who attacked and made serfs of other
-ants. But gradually they lost not only
-their arts but even their military prowess,
-and were reduced to making war by
-stealth instead of openly carrying off
-their slaves in fair battle. It seems
-probable that they now creep into a nest
-of the far more powerful slave ants,
-poison or assassinate the queen, and
-establish themselves by sheer usurpation
-in the queenless nest. “Gradually,” says
-Sir John Lubbock, “even their bodily
-force dwindled away under the enervating
-influence to which they had subjected
-themselves, until they sank to their
-present degraded condition—weak in
-body and mind, few in numbers, and
-apparently nearly extinct, the miserable
-representatives of far superior ancestors,
-maintaining a precarious existence as
-contemptible parasites of their former
-slaves.” One may observe in passing,
-that these wretched do-nothings cannot
-have been the ants which Solomon
-commended to the favorable consideration
-of the sluggard; though it is curious
-that the text was never pressed into
-the service of defence for the peculiar
-institution by the advocates of slavery in
-the South, who were always most anxious
-to prove the righteousness of their
-cause by most sure and certain warranty
-of Holy Scripture.—<cite>Cornhill Magazine.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2 id="LITERARY_NOTICES">LITERARY NOTICES.</h2>
-
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Episodes of My Second Life.</span> By Antonio
-Gallenga (Luigi Mariotti). English and
-American Experiences. Philadelphia: <i>J. B.
-Lippincott &amp; Co.</i></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The autobiographer in this case (for the last
-year has been singularly rich in interesting
-autobiography) is not in any degree, at least for
-Americans, an eminent and well-known personage.
-But, in spite of this, his record of experience
-and vicissitude is full of interest,
-and we may almost say fascinating. His
-threescore years and ten have been crowded
-with events which, if not in themselves strikingly
-dramatic, are at least striking in the
-telling, for he has all the art of an accomplished
-<i lang="fr">raconteur</i>, simple, direct and vigorous
-in style, and knowing perfectly when to glide
-over with little stress, when to put on his color
-with a vigorous and lavish brush. Mr. Gallenga
-(this being his true name) was in the
-latter part of his life a leading correspondent
-of the London <cite>Times</cite>, having achieved a high
-reputation in this direction prior to the days
-of Dr. Russell and Archibald Forbes. His
-work and position brought him into confidential
-relations with many of the most important
-men and events of Europe from 1840
-to 1875, and he describes these in a racy
-fashion which will command attention, we
-think.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Gallenga as a youth of twenty took part
-in the Italian struggle for liberty in 1831, under
-the name of Luigi Mariotti. It was one of
-those brief episodes of revolution with which
-Italy was convulsed so often before the great
-final dead-lock came, which drove the hated
-<i>Sedischi</i> from her soil. The young patriot
-was for a short time in prison, but finally
-escaped, and lived for a while as a tutor in
-Tangiers. Thence he came to America, to
-carve a career for himself, and located himself
-in Boston in 1836. Here he speedily found
-employment as teacher, lecturer and writer,
-and was fortunate in securing the friendship
-and goodwill of the leading people of the city.
-Boston was then without dispute the only
-literary centre of the country, in spite of a
-few brilliant names in New York, and Sig.
-Gallenga seems to have found congenial employment
-and companionship from the outset.
-His reminiscences of such men as Edward
-Everett, Fields, Ticknor, Prescott and others
-are entertaining, and his sketch of the whole
-entourage of Boston society is given with a
-refreshing <i lang="fr">naïveté</i>, as well as with graceful
-vivacity. Among the minor incidents which
-lend humor to the book is the author's experience
-with a young American beauty, with
-whom he was in love, and whom in his impulsive
-and passionate Italian way, he clasped
-in his arms and kissed. He professes himself
-highly astonished because the damsel was
-greatly enraged and ordered him from the
-house, ending the acquaintance then and there.
-After spending four years in America under
-unusually agreeable conditions, Mr. Gallenga,
-who was still known under his pseudonym of
-Mariotti, took ship for England, and bade a
-final farewell to the country of which he
-speaks in such cordial and even affectionate
-terms. Settling in London good luck still
-followed him. He secured introductions to
-prominent persons, was accorded recognition
-at once, and became acquainted with many
-of the people, both literary and otherwise, best
-worth knowing in England. A great interest
-in Italian affairs and literature was then the
-rage, and Mr. Gallenga, who was a scholar
-and an able writer, found ample opportunity
-and occupation in contributing to the magazines
-and reviews on subjects which he discussed
-<i lang="fr">con amore</i>. A book which he published
-gave him repute beyond that of a mere
-fugitive writer, and he was fortunate in
-making literature lucrative as well as honorable.
-His gossip about prominent people
-and occurrences in London forty years ago, is
-very entertaining, and he shows as much skill
-in throwing light on the English life of that
-day as he had done in describing America.
-Twenty years of literary and professorial
-work, were frequently broken up by long residences
-in Italy, during which he sat for a time
-in the Italian Parliament, and helped to pave
-the way for that consolidation of Italian interests
-which at last led to Solferino and
-Magenta, and the grand result of Italian
-unity. He seems to have been accorded an
-important place in the councils and deliberations
-of his nation, and to have been an important
-agent in bringing about those relations
-which freed Italy from foreign domination.
-In 1859 our author became connected with
-the <cite>Times</cite> as correspondent, and since that
-time has been employed on many of the most
-delicate and important commissions. He
-represented them in the Franco-Italian-Austrian
-War, and succeeded Dr. Russell at the
-time of our late civil conflict; was sent repeatedly
-to every part of Europe, and, for a
-good while had a roving commission to write
-whatever he saw worth reporting and discussing,
-particularly on the peoples and events
-of the Mediterranean seaboard countries, from
-the straits of Gibraltar to the Dardanelles.
-Mr. Gallenga tells his story (and he has much
-to tell) with the vivacity of an Italian and
-with the ability of a trained man-of-letters.
-A number of books, mostly on historical and
-political subjects, have given him a recognized
-literary place aside from mere journalism,
-and he reviews a long, diversified and interesting
-career with an interest and satisfaction
-which he fully communicates to his readers.
-We have rarely read a volume more packed
-with interesting matter, narrated with the
-skill which comes of long training.</p>
-
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A Historical Reference Book, comprising
-a Chronological Table of Universal
-History, a Chronological Dictionary
-of Universal History, a Biographical
-Dictionary with Geographical Notes
-for the Use of Students, Teachers and
-Readers.</span> By Louis Heilprin. New York:
-<i>D. Appleton &amp; Co.</i></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The plan adopted in this handy reference
-book of historical dates and events has been
-to deal separately with the events of different
-countries, and an excellent system has been
-followed with great thoroughness. The author
-is very well known as an industrious and
-painstaking scholar, the results of whose work
-can be depended on. About many historical
-dates there is much confusion, and the difficulties
-in coming to a conclusion are great. Mr.
-Heilprin very modestly states the obstacles in
-the way of perfect accuracy, and convinces the
-reader that, if blunders have been made, they
-are such as are absolutely unavoidable in the
-dire chaos which envelops many of even the
-most important facts of history so far as certainty
-of year is concerned. We may be sure
-that every caution and pains have been taken
-by the author. In many cases where it is impossible
-to reach an absolute statement, two
-dates are given, the preferable one stated first.
-Such a book as this is of the greatest convenience,
-and one that a well-informed or
-studious man can hardly afford to be without.
-A remarkable seeming omission, however,
-is the non-assignment of date to the Christian
-era, or any reference to the life and career
-that gave it significance. The studious avoidal
-seems significant, but we may explain it on the
-theory that the absolute date of Christ's birth
-cannot be absolutely fixed within several years.
-On the whole, indeed, with this one exception
-(perhaps an unavoidable one) the compilation
-appears to be all such a work should.</p>
-
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Bermuda: An Idyll of the Summer Islands.</span>
-By Julia C. R. Dorr. New York:
-<i>Charles Scribner's Sons</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The germ of this book was in an article
-called “Bermudan Days” published in the <cite>Atlantic
-Monthly</cite> for December, 1883, and we
-find the paper incorporated with the work.
-The volume is a brightly written account of a
-vacation of three months in the Bermudas,
-one of the most charming sanitariums of our
-western seas. So much has been written
-about the pleasant lotos-lands of the North
-and South Antilles, that no new facts can be
-now told about them. But the old background
-of cloudless skies, summer seas, and
-balmy ocean breezes, which make such places
-as the Bahamas and the Bermudas earthly
-paradises, never get tedious or dull when seen
-and felt through the medium of a fresh and
-lively nature. In winter time especially, when
-the bleak cold of the north starts the imagination
-travelling toward summer climates, and
-those condemned to stay in cold weather, sigh
-for the delights of the more fortunate voyager,
-such books as the one before us make
-very pleasant reading. The author describes
-the attractions of Bermudan life: its roses and
-sunshine, its novel sights and sounds, the picturesque
-aspects of a primitive, contented, lazy
-population, delightful sails over beautiful seas,
-and all the episodes of the sojourn with the
-keenest enjoyment, and a skilful literary
-touch. The very essence of an agreeable book
-of this kind is an utter lack of anything like
-fine writing. Mrs. Dorr certainly shows good
-taste in this matter, though one might fancy
-the temptation would be great to try what is
-so often called word-painting. She tells us
-what she has to say, and she has many good
-things to tell us, too, in a lively, racy, picturesque,
-but utterly unpretentious way. Of
-course we do not expect anyone to write a
-book about the Bermudas, without giving us
-something of the oft-repeated tale of its history
-and traditions; but Mrs. Dorr has spared
-us from overmuch, and does not weary the
-attention. The enjoyable portion of the work
-is the personal impressions and experiences of
-herself and her party. As every traveller or
-tourist with a literary taste, finds it essential,
-nowadays, to serve the sight-seeing up in
-book form, we can only wish that more of
-them had the good taste and lively nature of
-the present author.</p>
-
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Elements of Zoology.</span> (<i>Appleton's Science
-Text-Books.</i>) By C. F. Holder, Fellow of
-the New York Academy of Sciences, etc.,
-and T. B. Holder, A.M., Curator Zoology,
-American Museum of Natural History. New
-York: <i>D. Appleton &amp; Co.</i></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This new manual of one of the most interesting
-branches of science, is equally adapted
-for the school or for family reading. The object
-of the authors, which is to present in plain
-and concise language and in the light of the
-latest research and investigation, the life history
-of the various groups making up the animal
-kingdom has been well done. The best
-authorities have been followed. The authors,
-too, have introduced a great deal of matter of
-a descriptive and narrative matter, such as
-will thoroughly interest their young readers,
-such as the growth of the coral, nest-building
-fishes, luminous animals, animal electricians,
-hibernation, mimicry, etc., things which make
-certain phases of science almost like a fairy
-tale. The dry classification of science has but
-little attraction except to the professional scientist,
-and the authors have avoided this rock
-of dreariness as far as possible. The aim of
-the book seems to be largely to encourage the
-reader to become an original investigator, and
-to use his eyes and ears intelligently in observing
-the order of animated nature. The
-cuts are nicely and cleanly made, and the volume
-is very neat, though gotten up for service
-and not for ornament.</p>
-
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Reality of Religion.</span> By Henry J.
-Van Dyke, Jr., D.D. New York: <i>Charles
-Scribner's Sons</i>.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In this day of scepticism without, and dry-rot
-within, it well becomes the champions of
-the Christian faith to enter the lists with the
-keenest weapons furnished for the fight. Dr.
-Van Dyke argues, not from the standpoint of
-the dialectician, or from that of the defender
-of historical Christianity. It is the personal
-argument drawn from needs of human nature
-which he has here elaborated. He says: “We
-do not sneer at the dogmas of theology. They
-are certainly as important as the dogmas of
-science. We do not despise the questions of
-ritual. They are at least of equal consequence
-with the questions of social order. But religion
-is infinitely beyond all these. It is
-more vital and more profound. It does not
-appeal to the intellect alone. It is not satisfied
-with the conclusions of logic. Nor does it
-rest at ease upon the æsthetic sense. It
-reaches down into the very depths of the living,
-throbbing, human heart, and stirs a longing
-which nothing outward and formal can
-ever fill—<em>the longing for personal fellowship
-with God</em>.” It is this need of religion in the
-soul as essential to satisfy its truest and deepest
-longing which furnishes the keynote of the
-argument. He insists that religion is as absolute
-a reality, which we can feel and know in
-our spiritual life, as is the bread we eat to sustain
-our physical life. Dr. Van Dyke considers
-the subject under the heads of “A Real
-Religion Necessary;” “The Living God;”
-“The Living Soul” “The Living Word;”
-“The Living Sacrifice;” and “The Living
-Christ.” In the last, of course, we find the
-key-stone and cap, as well, of the logic of his
-thesis. The work will give comfort and satisfaction
-to many Christian souls, and is not unworthy
-of Dr. Van Dyke as an accomplished
-stylist. Chastened, yet glowing, subdued, yet
-strong, the book is one which should have a
-large number of readers among those devoted
-to the interests of the Church of Christ.</p>
-
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Enchiridion of Wit: The Best Specimens
-of English Conversational Wit.</span>
-Philadelphia: <i>J. B. Lippincott &amp; Co.</i></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>This collection has aimed to avoid both the
-characteristics of the jest-book or of table-talk.
-Its place is between the two, being compiled
-from the annals of conversation, and comprising
-at the same time only those jests and
-stories which possess the stamp of wit as distinguished
-from humor or drollery. That the
-collection is good, one needs only to read the
-pleasant prefatory essay, which is very gracefully
-and brightly written, to feel sure that the
-taste and knowledge of the writer or editor
-have been well displayed in his work of selection.
-It goes without saying that many of the
-anecdotes are old and familiar. Many of the
-very best things ever said in the world, of
-course, are what we term “Joe Millers.”
-That they should be otherwise, would argue but
-bad taste on the part of our predecessors. But
-our present author has gleaned in many an outlying
-field as well as in the well travelled
-road, and gives us very satisfactory showing
-for his literary excursus in new directions.
-Some of the stories in the book we do not remember
-to have seen before in any similar
-work.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2 id="FOREIGN_LITERARY_NOTES">FOREIGN LITERARY NOTES.</h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> monument to Virgil at Pietole (which
-is supposed to be the Andes of the Romans),
-near Mantua, was unveiled lately.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> death of a popular Russian novelist, B.
-M. Markievich, on the 30th of last month, is
-reported from St. Petersburg.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> original autographs of the love-letters
-addressed by John Keats to Miss Fanny Brawne
-in the years 1819-20 will be sold by Messrs.
-Sotheby, Wilkinson &amp; Hodge the first week in
-March, together with six unpublished autograph
-letters of Charles Lamb.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A pamphlet</span> by Madame E. Coulombe is announced
-for immediate publication by Mr. Elliot
-Stock. This lady was associated with
-Madame Blavatsky for some years, and in this
-<i>brochure</i> tells what she heard and saw of Madame
-Blavatsky and the Theosophists with
-whom she came in contact in India and elsewhere.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Trinity College</span>, Dublin, is about to start
-a new paper with the title <cite>The Dublin University
-Review</cite>. The first number will appear on
-February 1st, and the issue will be bi-monthly,
-except during the long vacation. The paper
-will contain literary articles as well as university
-news of every description, and will be
-owned by a limited liability company.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Incorporated Society of Authors propose
-to send a deputation to the Prime Minister
-to urge the codification of the Copyright
-Acts, which are fourteen in number. Several
-of the chief publishers, not of books only, but
-also of prints and music, will be asked to join.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A conference</span> of elementary teachers, international
-in its character, has been summoned
-to meet at Havre. This is the first conference
-of the kind which has been organized in France,
-and it is expected that the Government will
-make a grant in aid of the expenses.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> article on Polish history and literature
-in the next volume of the “Encyclopædia Britannica”
-will be from the pen of Mr. Morfill,
-who will also contribute the articles on the
-Emperor Paul, and on Peter the Great.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Lowe</span>, correspondent of the <cite>Times</cite> at
-Berlin, is engaged in writing a biography of
-Prince Bismarck, which will appear next spring.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">M. Schlumberger</span>, the well known numismatist,
-and M. Benoist have lately been elected
-members of the Académie des Inscriptions et
-Belles-Lettres.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">An</span> exhibition is to be held in the Imperial
-Library at Constantinople of Turkish writing,
-bookbinding, and illumination, for which prizes
-are to be given.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">One</span> of the most important scholastic reforms
-now in progress in Turkey is that relating to
-the study of the Arabic language. As now
-conducted, this study absorbs years in a desultory
-way which might be applied to the acquisition
-of other branches of knowledge. With
-the view to abridge the course of study without
-impairing its quality, the Sultan has determined
-on founding a special medresseh for teaching
-Arabic on a scientific basis, and for this purpose
-has purchased from the funds of the civil
-list the property of the Guedik Pasha Theatre
-at Constantinople.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> long lost and often found commentary on
-the “Atharva-veda” seems at last on its way
-to publication. The whole of the commentary
-has not yet been found, but two-thirds of it are
-now in the hands of the pandits of Poona, who
-will prepare a critical publication of both text
-and commentary. The text of the “Atharva-veda”
-was published in the early days of Vedic
-scholarship by Roth and Whitney, and the latter
-scholar has lately published a very useful
-index.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> are enabled to state, says the <cite>Athenæum</cite>,
-that a popular edition of Her Majesty's recent
-work, “More Leaves from the Journal of a Life
-in the Highlands,” is in the press, and will be
-ready for publication in the course of a few
-weeks. The new edition will contain all the
-woodcut illustrations which appeared in the
-original edition, together with wood-engravings
-of the portraits, and will be uniform with
-the popular edition of the Queen's previous
-work, “Leaves from the Journal of our Life in
-the Highlands.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Alexander Del Mar</span>, according to the
-<cite>Academy</cite>, formerly Director of the Bureau of
-Statistics of the United States, whose <cite>History
-of the Precious Metals</cite> was published in 1880,
-has in the press a work on <cite>The History of
-Money from the Earliest Times to the Middle
-Ages</cite>, upon which he has been occupied for
-many years past. It will shortly be published
-by Messrs. Bell &amp; Sons.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">From</span> the <cite>Academy</cite> we quote the following
-amusing paragraph:</p>
-
-<p>“The <cite>Magazin für die Literatur des In- und
-Auslandes</cite> continues to be unfortunate when it
-meddles with the English language. Many of
-our readers will be acquainted with Victor
-Scheffel's charming German song—referring,
-we believe, to Heinrich von Ofterdingen—which
-has the refrain, 'Der Heini von Steier
-ist wieder im Land.' The <cite>Magazin</cite> of January
-10 publishes an 'English' translation of this
-poem, by Johanna Baltz, from which we quote
-the following specimen:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“'To finches and swallows tells sweet nightingale:</div>
- <div class="verse">“The song of a violin fills woodland and vale!</div>
- <div class="verse">Ye twitt'ners, ye singers, now silence your cant—</div>
- <div class="verse">Hark, Heini von Steier returned to his land!”</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“'Shoemaker is waving his furcap in glee:</div>
- <div class="verse">“The merciful heaven forgets neven me!</div>
- <div class="verse">Now shoes will be costly, soleleather gets scant—</div>
- <div class="verse">Hark, Heini von Steier returned to his land.“'”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> eighty-ninth birthday of Dr. Ranke (December
-21st) has excited interest throughout
-Germany, and elicited many expressions of the
-respect universally felt for him. The strength
-of the venerable historian defies the increase of
-years, and he works daily at his home in Berlin
-on the history which he hopes to complete.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. C. E. Pascoe</span> has issued a prospectus
-on the publication of English books in America.
-He says in effect that, though the lack of
-international copyright is one reason why English
-authors derive but little profit from the sale
-of their works in America, another and graver
-reason is, that as a class, they are in ignorance
-of the means for getting the best out of existing
-conditions. The usual method of procedure is
-for the English publisher to make proposals to
-an American publisher, or for the representative
-of an American firm in London to submit
-proposals to his principals in the United States.
-Mr. Pascoe points to the danger of losing a lucrative
-sale that this method entails. His prospectus,
-which is accompanied by letters from
-American publishers and some well-known
-English authors, is worth attention. Mr. Pascoe's
-address is 6 Southfields Road, West Hill,
-Wandsworth, S. W.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">An</span> early and hitherto unknown Arabic work
-has lately been added to the Museum Library.
-It is entitled “Kitāb al-Mohabbir”, and contains
-various historical notices and traditions
-relating to the ancient Arabs and to the time
-of Mohammed and his immediate successors.
-The author, Abu Sa'id al-Hasan al-Sukkari,
-lived in the third century of the Hijrah, and is
-well known as one of the earliest editors and
-commentators of the old poets, but the present
-work appears somehow to have escaped notice;
-it is neither mentioned in the Fihrist, nor by
-Ibn Khallikan or Soyuti. The two last-named
-authors state that Al-Sukkari died <span class="smcap">A.H.</span> 275;
-but according to Ibn Kāni' (Leyden Catalogue,
-vol. ii. p. 8) he lived on to <span class="smcap">A.H.</span> 290. The present
-work would show that the former date is
-decidedly wrong; for it contains a brief sketch
-of the Abbasides brought down by Al-Sukkari
-himself to the accession of Al-Mo'tadid, <i>i.e.</i>,
-<span class="smcap">A.H.</span> 279.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Among</span> other recent additions to the Arabic
-collection, the following are especially deserving
-of the attention of scholars: the earliest
-extant history of the Moslem conquest of
-Egypt, Africa, and Spain, by Ibn 'Abd al-Hakam,
-who died <span class="smcap">A.H.</span> 257, a twelfth century copy;
-“Zubdat al-Tawarikh,” a history of the Seljuk-dynasty,
-written shortly after its extinction,
-about <span class="smcap">A.H.</span> 620, by Sadr al-Din Abul Hasan
-Ali Ibn Abul Fawaris Nasir Husaini, a fine
-and apparently unique copy of the thirteenth
-century; “Kitab al-Osul,” an extensive and
-hitherto unknown work on Arabic grammar
-by one of the earliest writers on the subject,
-Ibn al-Sarraj, who died <span class="smcap">A.H.</span> 316, handsomely
-written, with all vowels, <span class="smcap">A.H.</span> 651; a fine and
-valuable copy of the “Makamat al-Hariri,”
-written by a grandson of the author, <span class="smcap">A.H.</span> 557
-(<i>i.e.</i>, forty years after Hariri's death), and consequently
-earlier than any copy of that standard
-work known to exist in European libraries.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> numbers of ladies attending the King's
-College classes at Observatory Avenue have
-been very high during the term that has just
-ended. The entries were nearly 600, which is a
-larger number than has been reached since the
-first year, 1878, when the classes started, and
-the present house hardly affords room for such
-numbers.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is not generally known that the <cite>Times</cite>
-attains its hundredth year on the 1st of January,
-1885. The prevailing notion is that the
-year in which it was founded was 1788, the
-truth being that the 940th number of the journal
-appeared on the first day in that year. The
-mistake is due to confounding a change in the
-title with the foundation of the journal. The
-actual facts are set forth in an article which
-Mr. Fraser Rae contributes to the January
-number of the <cite>Nineteenth Century</cite>. Amongst
-other things which will attract notice in that
-article is a verbatim copy of the inscription on
-the tablets affixed in honor of the conduct of
-the <cite>Times</cite> in the case of Bogle <i>v.</i> Lawson in
-1841, by a committee of bankers and merchants
-of the City, in the Royal Exchange, and over
-the entrance to the <cite>Times</cite> printing office. As
-these tablets are placed where the inscriptions
-on them cannot easily be read, and as copies
-of these inscriptions are not given in the works
-dealing with the City, the copy in the <cite>Nineteenth
-Century</cite> is a piece of historical information
-which will be novel to most readers.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> last number of <cite>Shakspeariana</cite> contains
-the somewhat surprising statement that Prof.
-Kuno Fischer is a convert to the Bacon-Shakspere
-theory, and will lecture upon it at Heidelberg
-this winter. From the same periodical we
-copy the following curious paragraph:—</p>
-
-<p>“A very remarkable discovery has been
-placed on record by the Hon. Ignatius Donnelly,
-who claims to have proof positive that
-Bacon was the author of Shakspere's plays.
-This is accomplished by means of a cipher which
-Bacon twice describes, whereby one writing
-could be infolded and hidden in another. The
-words of the hidden story have a definite relation
-to the acts and scenes of the plays, which
-is determined by counting. Attracted by 'I.
-Henry IV.'; II., i., ii., iv., and IV., ii., in
-which he found the words 'Francis,' 'Bacon'
-(twice), 'Nicholas' (twice), 'Bacon's,'
-'son,' 'master,' 'Kings,' 'exchequer,' 'St.
-Albans'—the name of Bacon's place of residence—and,
-in IV., ii., 'Francis' repeated
-twenty times on one page, Mr. Donnelly applied
-his key to it, with the following result:—Elizabeth
-during the Essex troubles became,
-as is known, incensed at the use made of the
-play of 'Richard II.,' in which is represented
-the deposition and killing of the King; and she
-made it one of the points of prosecution which
-cost Essex his head, that he had hired the company
-of players to which Shakspere belonged
-to represent it more than forty times in open
-streets and in tavern yards, in order to prepare
-the public mind for her own deposition and
-murder. History tells us that she caused the
-arrest of Haywarde, who wrote a prose narrative
-of the deposition of Richard II. and dedicated
-it to Essex, and he narrowly escaped a
-State prosecution. Mr. Donnelly shows that
-at the same time Shakspere was arrested as the
-author of the plays; he was threatened with
-the torture, and disclosed to the officers of the
-Crown the fact that Bacon was the real author
-of the plays. Bacon threw himself on the
-protection of his uncle, Lord Burleigh, the
-great Lord Treasurer, who saved him from exposure
-and prosecution, but revealed the truth
-to Elizabeth; and this is the explanation of the
-fact, that, as long as Elizabeth lived, she kept
-Bacon out of office and in poverty.”</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2 id="MISCELLANY">MISCELLANY.</h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Some Personal Recollections of George
-Sand.</span>—The recent unveiling of George Sand's
-statue at La Châtre has set people thinking
-about her afresh. At no time since “Indiana”
-and “Lelia” first revealed the existence of a
-new writer of transcendent power, has her
-place in French literature, and her influence on
-the social problems of the time, and the question
-whether her artistic creations will or will
-not live, been canvassed with more energy
-than during the past few weeks. Some personal
-recollections of George Sand given by Mrs.
-Ellis, the authoress of “Sylvestra,” may therefore
-be of interest: “Above twenty years
-ago,” writes Mrs. Ellis, “I spent three days
-in a French hotel (at Tours) with George Sand,
-without knowing who she was. She puzzled
-me all the time, and had in person something
-of the same effect on me that her character—attractive
-and repulsive—has still. She sat
-opposite me at a narrow <i lang="fr">table d'hôte</i>—a tall,
-large, strongly-built woman, with features in
-proportion to her size. Her eyes were fine,
-but her force of appearance was rather physical
-than intellectual. It must have been the
-brain beneath the strong features which teased
-me as it did, to make out to myself who she
-could be. She was mature, but in no decline
-of force, massive, grave, and restful, with nothing
-Gallic about her. The dark hair, eyes, and
-tint might have belonged to Italy or Spain,
-quite as well as to France, and the bearing,
-better. Her dress might have been called
-'dowdy.' It was of the type of the travelling
-Englishwoman, as French eyes see it, rather
-than French. I think her 'robe' was brown,
-which did not become her at all. Crimson
-would have suited her. She wore an ugly,
-large-brimmed, straw hat, with broad lace falling
-over the brim, at a time when Frenchwomen
-had hardly begun to wear hats, and—if
-my memory does not err—she wore it at
-dinner. Her companion was an elderly and
-feeble man, seemingly more than seventy.
-There was nothing in the appearance of the
-couple (viewing them as married folk) unlike
-that of many other French pairs, when, as is so
-often the case, the man 'ranges' himself at forty
-by the side of a young lady of half his years.
-My perplexing neighbor understood what I said
-to my husband in English, and offered me
-some little courteous attentions. There was no
-real speech between us. If I had known it was
-George Sand, I believe that I should not have
-spoken more, as I had not long before read
-some unpleasing remarks in her autobiography
-on the way in which she was annoyed by '<i lang="fr">les
-Anglaises</i>,' and on the '<i lang="fr">étranges sifflements</i>'
-which they introduced into the fine French
-tongue! She and I were the only two women
-in the hotel who ever went into a sort of reading-room
-adjoining the house to look at the
-newspapers. I had nearly settled with myself
-that she was a lady country squire, such as I
-used to see drive into Tours on market days,
-when one morning, on going, as I used to do,
-to the Imperial library, to draw from old illuminated
-MSS., my friend, the librarian, M.
-d'Orange, said to me, 'Madame, do you know
-that you have George Sand in your hotel?'
-When I went back, she had just gone with the
-gentleman who had lent her his name to travel
-with, for she was entered as his 'Comtesse' in
-the book of the hotel. He was a Radical Deputy.
-I told my lively landlady, who declared
-that M. d'Orange '<i lang="fr">n'en savait rien</i>,' and opened
-her book to show me the names of M. le
-Comte and Madame la Comtesse So-and-So.
-Then she said, 'If it was George Sand,' her
-books, '<i lang="fr">ma foi</i>,' of which she had read one or
-two—instancing a couple of the best—were not
-'<i lang="fr">grande chose</i>.' When I got back to England,
-I looked at a fine lithographed portrait of
-George Sand, and saw it was the woman.
-Perhaps it was for the best that I had not
-known who she was, as my impression, which
-is still vivid, remains of her as she seemed, and
-not such as my fancy would at once have set
-to work to make her out. Thinking of her
-afterward, I was reminded of that passage in
-her autobiography in which she tells how, in a
-moment of misery, she tested her own strength
-by lifting a large heavy stone, and said to herself
-in despair, 'And I may have to live forty
-years!' Also I thought of Alfred de Musset's
-taunting her—she never forgot it—with having
-no <i lang="fr">esprit</i>. Of '<i lang="fr">esprit Gallois</i>' she seems to have
-had little. The Northern races had the uppermost
-in her making, I should say. I have a
-notion that the Königsmarks were Pomeranian—of
-the Bismarck build—and had she not
-the blood of the Counts Horn? I forget.
-However, Marshal Saxe spoke for himself in
-her. Mr. Hamerton says that an intense desire
-to study character had its strong share in
-her illicit liaisons with poets, musicians, lawyers,
-novelists, etc., all being men above the
-common run. But here, again, I cannot help
-thinking that race descent from Augustus II.
-of Saxony and Aurore de Königsmark counted
-for much. Her genuine feeling for the poor,
-and a sort of homely motherliness, seem to
-have made her greatly loved by the Berry
-people.“—<cite>Spectator.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The American Senate.</span>—It is amusing to
-see discussions on the possible abolition of the
-American Senate, in which the disputants on
-one side do not seem to see that what they are
-proposing is the abolition of the federal system
-altogether. It has been explained over and
-over again—yet, as long as some seem not to
-understand so plain a matter, it must be explained
-once more—that a proposal to abolish
-the American Senate is quite a different matter
-from a proposal to abolish the French Senate.
-With regard to the French Senate the question
-is simply whether the business of the nation is
-likely to be best done by one House or by two.
-With regard to the American Senate we have
-to go much deeper. The House of Representatives
-represents the nation formed by the
-union of all the separate States; the Senate
-represents the separate States themselves.
-The federal nation is formed by the union of
-States differing widely in size and power, but
-equal in rights and dignity, each of which still
-keeps all such attributes of independent commonwealths
-as it has not formally given up to
-the federal power. To hinder alike the federal
-nation from being swamped by the States and
-the States from being swamped by the federal
-nation, it is needful to have one assembly in
-which each State has only that amount of voice
-to which it is entitled by its population, and
-another assembly in which each State, great
-and small, has an equal voice. If any party in
-the United States wishes altogether to get rid
-of the federal system, if they wish to get rid of
-the independence of the several States, if they
-wish the great names of Massachusetts and Virginia
-to mean no more than an English county
-or a French department, then let them propose
-the abolition of the Senate of the United
-States, and not otherwise. Yet even under
-a system where the Second Chamber is absolutely
-necessary, we see the comparative weakness
-of Second Chambers; its abolition can be
-discussed. And herein comes the wonderful
-wisdom of the founders of the American Constitution
-in strengthening the Senate with
-those powers of other kinds which make it
-something more than a Second Chamber or
-Upper House. And mark further that the
-Swiss <i>Ständerath</i> or <i>Conseil des États</i>, formed
-after the model of the American Senate, like it
-absolutely necessary if Switzerland is to remain
-a federal commonwealth, is far from holding
-the same position in the country which the
-American Senate holds. For it is a mere
-partner with the <i>Nationalrath</i>, and has not
-those special powers in and by itself which the
-American Senate has. But mark again that
-the great position of the American Senate is
-something which cannot exist along with our
-form of executive government. A President
-may be asked formally to submit his acts to
-be confirmed by one branch of the Legislature;
-a King can hardly be asked to do so.—<cite>Contemporary
-Review.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Shakespeare and Balzac.</span>—Yacht life gives
-ample leisure. I had employed part of mine
-in making sketches. One laughs at one's extraordinary
-performances a day or two after
-one has completed them. Yet the attempt is
-worth making. It teaches one to admire less
-grudgingly the work of real artists who have
-conquered the difficulties. Books are less trying
-to vanity, for one is producing nothing of
-one's own, and submitting only to be interested
-or amused, if the author can succeed in
-either. One's appetite is generally good on
-these occasions, and one can devour anything;
-but in the pure primitive element of sea, and
-mountains, and unprogressive peasantry, I had
-become somehow fastidious. I tried a dozen
-novels one after the other without success; at
-last, perhaps the morning we left Elversdale, I
-found on the library shelves ”<cite>Le Père Goriot</cite>.”
-I had read a certain quantity of “Balzac” at
-other times, in deference to the high opinion
-entertained of him. N——, a fellow of Oriel,
-and once Member for Oxford, I remembered
-insisting to me that there was more knowledge
-of human nature in “Balzac” than in Shakespeare.
-I had myself observed in him a
-knowledge of a certain kind of human nature
-which Shakespeare let alone—a nature in
-which healthy vigor had been corrupted into a
-caricature by highly seasoned artificial civilization.
-Hothouse plants, in which the flowers
-had lost their grace of form and natural beauty,
-and had gained instead a poison-loaded and
-perfumed luxuriance, did not exist in Shakespeare's
-time, and if they had they would probably
-not have interested him. However, I had
-not read “<cite>Le Père Goriot</cite>,” and as I had been
-assured that it was the finest of Balzac's
-works, I sat down to it and deliberately read
-it through. My first impulse after it was over
-was to plunge into the sea to wash myself.
-As we were going ten knots, there were objections
-to this method of ablution, but I felt
-that I had been in abominable company. The
-book seemed to be the very worst ever written
-by a clever man. But it, and N——'s reference
-to Shakespeare, led me into a train of
-reflections. Le Père Goriot, like King Lear,
-has two daughters. Like Lear, he strips himself
-of his own fortune to provide for them in
-a distinguished manner. He is left to poverty
-and misery while his daughters live in splendor.
-Why is Lear so grand? Why is Le Père
-Goriot detestable? In the first place, all the
-company in Balzac are bad. Le Père Goriot
-is so wrapped up in his delightful children, that
-their very vices charm him, and their scented
-boudoirs seem a kind of Paradise. Lear, in
-the first scene of the play, acts and talks like
-an idiot, but still an idiot with a moral soul in
-him. Take Lear's own noble nature from him,
-take Kent away, and Edgar, and the fool, and
-Cordelia—and the actors in the play, it must
-be admitted, are abominable specimens of
-humanity—yet even so, leaving the story as it
-might have been if Marlowe had written it instead
-of Shakespeare, Goneril and Regan
-would still have been terrible, while the Paris
-dames of fashion are merely loathsome. What
-is the explanation of the difference? Partly,
-I suppose, it arises from the comparative intellectual
-stature of the two sets of women.
-Strong natures and weak may be equally
-wicked. The strong are interesting, because
-they have daring and force. You fear them as
-you fear panthers and tigers. You hate, but
-you admire. M. Balzac's heroines have no intellectual
-nature at all. They are female swine
-out of Circe's sty; as selfish, as unscrupulous
-as any daughter of Adam could conveniently
-be, but soft, and corrupt, and cowardly, and
-sensual; so base and low that it would be
-a compliment to call them devils. I object to
-being brought into the society of people in a
-book whom I would shut my eyes rather than
-see in real life. Goneril and Regan would be
-worth looking at in a cage in the Zoological
-Gardens. One would have no curiosity to stare
-at a couple of dames caught out of Coventry
-Street or the Quadrant. From Shakespeare
-to Balzac, from the sixteenth century to the
-nineteenth, we have been progressing to considerable
-purpose. If the state of literature
-remains as it has hitherto been, the measure of
-our moral condition, Europe has been going
-ahead with a vengeance. I put out the taste
-of “<cite>Le Père Goriot</cite>” with “Persuasion.”
-Afterwards I found a book really worth reading,
-with the uninviting title of “Adventures in
-Sport and War,” the author of it a young
-Marquis de Compiègne, a ruined representative
-of the old French <i lang="fr">noblesse</i>, who appears
-first as a penniless adventurer seeking his fortune
-in America as a birdstuffer, and tempted
-by an advertisement into the swamps of
-Florida in search of specimens, a beggarly experience,
-yet told with <i lang="fr">naïveté</i> and simplicity,
-truth and honor surviving by the side of absolute
-helplessness. Afterwards we find him in
-France again, fighting as a private in the war
-with Germany, and taken prisoner at Sedan;
-and again in the campaign against the Commune,
-at the taking of Paris, and the burning
-of the Tuileries—a tragic picture, drawn, too,
-with entire unconsciousness of the condition
-to which Balzac, Madame Sand, and the rest
-of the fraternity had dragged down the French
-nation.—<cite>Longman's Magazine.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Dread of Old Age.</span>—We all of us,
-or at least all of us who are slipping past fifty,
-secretly dread old age, and regard with aversion
-its usual, or traditionally usual, conditions;
-and the sight of a man about whose
-years there can be no question, who has passed
-by thirty years the average limit of human life,
-and by ten years an extreme limit, and yet
-talks well, hears fairly well, sees perfectly well
-and could walk like another but for weakness,
-is pleasantly reassuring. If the man of a
-century can be like Sir Moses Montefiore, the
-man of ninety may be only a little indolent, the
-man of eighty hale and hearty, and the man of
-seventy retain “the fullest vigor of his faculties.”
-That is one secret, we are convinced, of
-the decided popularity of very old statesmen,
-and especially old statesmen of great vigor,
-a sense among the middle-aged that if they
-who are so visible can be so strong and active
-and full brilliancy, old age cannot be so dreadful
-after all. An apprehension has been removed
-or lessened, and a very keen one.
-Some of the dread no doubt is traditional,
-founded upon boyish recollections, and even
-upon books, Shakespeare in particular having
-expressed, in lines which have stuck in the
-national memory, an unusually strong sense
-of the infirmities of age. His celebrated lines
-were probably accurate at the time, for they
-are accurate now when applied to certain
-classes of the very poor; but they no longer
-describe the majority of the aged well-to-do.
-Whatever the cause, whether improved sanitary
-appliances, or greater temperance, or, as we
-should ourselves believe, an increase of the
-habit of persistently using the mind, and consistently
-taking interest in events, it is certain
-that the disease called senility is among the
-fully-fed much rarer than it used to be. The
-old lose their hearing, and their activity, and
-part of the keenness of their sight, and are
-supposed to be grown duller alike to pleasure
-and to pain; but they much seldomer become
-totally blind, or fatuous, or unable to control
-their features, or incapable of guiding themselves
-about. Men of eighty-four or five,
-who, in the early part of the century, would
-have fallen into second childhood—then a disease
-recognized not only by doctors, but by all
-men, and regarded as a sort of idiotcy—now
-talk easily, and glide over little deficiencies of
-memory, and are, apart from a not ungraceful
-physical weakness, truly men. The younger
-generation has, however, scarcely realised the
-change in its full extent, and fears age, therefore,
-unconsciously a little more acutely than
-it should, though it has reason for some of its
-fear. The lot of the old is not the happiest,
-even if they are fortunately placed. They
-suffer from the certainty that such physical ills
-as they have cannot be cured, and a fear that
-they will become worse, from a deficiency, not
-so much of occupation as of imperative occupation,
-the business occupation of middle-age
-and from that unconscious insolence of the
-babbling youth around them, which is, perhaps,
-most felt by the aged when youth is most loving
-and considerate. One does not want to be
-“considered” by a baby. They suffer from
-a jar between their own impression of their
-own wisdom, as a necessary product of
-their long experience, and a secret doubt
-whether the young, who evidently think so
-differently, can be all wrong, not to mention
-that actual disrespect which the peculiar conceit
-of the young always appears to indicate
-even when it is not intended. They suffer
-from their keen memory for disappointments,
-which sometimes in the reflections of the old exaggerate
-their bulk till life seems made up of little
-else—a phenomenon constantly observable
-in the monologues of the uneducated and ill-restrained.
-And they suffer most of all from
-the loss, ever-increasing as time slips along,
-not only of those dearest to them, but of accustomed
-intimates, and especially of friends who
-grow fewer not only from deaths, but from
-departures, alienations, and changes of condition
-and feeling. The very old, as far as our
-experience serves, are fortunate if, outside the
-circle of blood relations, they retain even one
-or two close friends: and this to some men
-and women, especially to those much
-dependent on conversation to stimulate their
-natures and “put them in spirits,” is the most
-irremediable of losses. They feel as if life had
-altered, and the very sunlight were less inspiring.
-Add that all the indulgences of hope, including
-day dreaming, become vapid—reason
-showing the unreality—and gradually cease,
-and we may admit that even under favorable
-circumstances old age is not an enviable condition,
-more especially among Englishmen and
-Americans, who feel little of that instinctive
-reverence for age, and belief in its nearness to
-the divine, which characterises all Asia and a
-large portion of Southern Europe. The
-Teutons think allusions to gray hairs, which
-Southerners regard as solemn, and will accept
-even in a theatre with applause, a little rhetorical
-or artificial. The respect for the old is not
-gone, but a certain reverence is, if it ever existed
-among us, which, remembering Shakespeare's
-lines and our own workhouse arrangements,
-we half incline to doubt.—<cite>Spectator.</cite></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A True Critic.</span>—He who has the genuine
-pictorial sense, of which not even the idea can
-be given to those who have not got it, is quickly
-discovered by those who have the same gift.
-They will detect him in the gallery by many signs.
-He is guided by instinct to stand at the right
-distance from the picture, which is not a mere
-matter of taste as most folk think, but the distance
-at which the picture has the same expanse
-to the eye as the real object replaced by it
-would have. A little nearer or a little farther
-he feels the picture bearing falsely. Falsely
-when things are represented which in the real
-view would alter (as the picture objects cannot)
-in their mutual effects by advancing towards
-or retreating from them. His eye goes right
-to the heart of the picture; the spot made to be
-such by the artifice of the painter. He is in no
-hurry to look elsewhere. He looks towards
-one point, but he sees the rest sufficiently without
-peeping about. His consciousness takes
-in the whole simultaneously, and for a while
-he examines nothing; forgets that he sees a
-picture, and feels the quickening within of the
-thoughts which such a scene might stir up.
-He can presently put aside all this and criticise
-if he cares to do so, just as the musician can
-cease from his tune and look to the strings or
-stops. For he is curious about the mechanism
-of the delightful delusion as the musician
-or the most enraptured of his audience may
-care to look into the arrangement of a musical
-instrument. But the picture like the violin, is
-not in operation at all while it is being examined.—<cite>Art
-Journal.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<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> As vagabonds are frequently mentioned
-in this narrative, and Mokrievitch himself became
-one of them, it may be well to explain
-that the wanderers so designated are simply
-tramps unfurnished with passports. A double
-stream of these waifs is always on the move through Siberia—one towards the east, the
-other towards the west—the latter free, the former
-generally in bonds. Many of the involuntary
-settlers either do not take kindly to work,
-or find their lot intolerable, and so make off
-on the first opportunity, begging their way,
-and living on the charity of the peasants, who
-never refuse a destitute traveller a crust of
-bread and a night's lodging. Not a few of
-these wanderers sink under the hardships to
-which they are exposed, or freeze to death in
-the forests, and the survivors are nearly always
-arrested before they reach the frontier of European
-Russia; but they cause the police a
-world of trouble. Having no papers, they are
-able to give false names, and deny being fugitive
-transports—which they almost invariably
-do. There is then nothing for it but to write
-to whatever address a man may give—generally
-some remote village—and inquire if he is
-known there. Should the answer be in the
-negative, the fact is taken as proof of the paperless
-one's guilt, and he is sent back in
-chains to the interior of Siberia. As likely as
-not, however, it will be in the affirmative, for
-there prevails among these outcasts a strange
-yet regular trade in what the vagabonds call
-“nests.” For instance, Ivan Ivanovitch, being
-in want of money, sells to Peter Iliouschka,
-who has a few kopecs to spare, the name and
-address of some mujik of his acquaintance,
-who long ago left his native village for parts
-unknown—or, perhaps, his own name and address.
-This is Peter's nest, and when he falls
-into the hands of the police he tells them he is
-Paul Lubovitch, from, let us say, Teteriwino,
-in the government of Koursk. On this, a missive
-is sent to the <i>starosta</i> of Teteriwino, who
-replies, in due course, to the effect that the
-village did once possess a Paul Lubovitch, but
-whether the person in question be the same
-man he is unable to say. The next proceeding
-is to send the <i lang="fr">soi-disant</i> Paul to Teteriwino for
-identification. This proceeding naturally results
-in the detection of the imposture, whereupon
-our friend Peter is condemned to a new
-term of exile, and sent back whence he came.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2_2" href="#FNanchor_2_2" class="label">2</a>
-Admiration, Hope, and Love. <i>Excursion</i>,
-b. iv.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3_3" href="#FNanchor_3_3" class="label">3</a>
-Admiration, Hope, and Love. <i>Excursion</i>,
-b. ix.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4_4" href="#FNanchor_4_4" class="label">4</a>
-Not only the <i>Ancient Mariner</i> and the first
-part of <i>Christabel</i>, but also <i>Kubla Khan</i> were
-composed at Nether Stovey among the Quantock
-Hills in 1797. The second part of <i>Christabel</i>
-belongs to the year 1800, and was written
-at Keswick, although not published till 1816.
-Nothing of the same quality was ever produced
-by Coleridge, although he continued to write
-verses.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5_5" href="#FNanchor_5_5" class="label">5</a>
-It is strange, however, to find Mr. Traill
-commending Coleridge's very last volume
-(1830) <i>On the Constitution of Church and State</i>,
-as “yielding a more characteristic flavor of the
-author's style” than the <i>Aids to Reflection</i>.
-Characteristic, no doubt, this volume is of the
-author's mode of thought; but in point of style,
-it and his <i>Lay Sermon</i> or <i>Statesman's Manual</i>
-in 1816 appear to us the most desultory and
-imperfect of all his writings.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6_6" href="#FNanchor_6_6" class="label">6</a>
-By Dr. James Marsh, an American divine,
-whose preliminary essay is prefaced to the fifth
-English edition, and by Mr. Green in his
-<i>Spiritual Philosophy</i> (1865), founded on Coleridge's
-teaching.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7_7" href="#FNanchor_7_7" class="label">7</a>
-<i>Spiritual Philosophy, founded on the Teaching
-of the late Samuel Taylor Coleridge.</i> By
-Jos. Henry Green, F.R.S., D.C.L. 1865.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8_8" href="#FNanchor_8_8" class="label">8</a>
-This was a favorite thought with Coleridge,
-as for example, in his <i>Literary Remains</i> (vol. i.
-p. 393-4): “The Trinity of Persons in the
-Unity of the Godhead would have been a necessary
-idea of my speculative reason. God must
-have had co-eternally an adequate idea of Himself
-in and through which He created all things.
-But this would only have been a speculative
-idea. Solely in consequence of our redemption
-does the Trinity become a doctrine, the belief
-of which as real is commanded by conscience.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9_9" href="#FNanchor_9_9" class="label">9</a>
-In his well-known translation of <i>Wilhelm
-Meister</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10_10" href="#FNanchor_10_10" class="label">10</a>
-Charles Hawley, <i>Addresses before the Cayuga
-County Historical Society</i>, 1883-84, p. 31.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11_11" href="#FNanchor_11_11" class="label">11</a>
-<i>The King Country; or, Explorations in
-New Zealand</i>, by T. H. Kerry; see Nicholls in
-the <i>Academy</i>, Aug. 23, 1884, p. 113.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12_12" href="#FNanchor_12_12" class="label">12</a>
-<i>The League of the Iroquois</i>, p. 12.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13_13" href="#FNanchor_13_13" class="label">13</a>
-Hawley, <i>l.c.</i>, p. 17.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14_14" href="#FNanchor_14_14" class="label">14</a>
-See, however, Daniel Wilson, <i>Pre-Aryan
-American Man</i>, p. 47.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15_15" href="#FNanchor_15_15" class="label">15</a>
-<i>Unity of Nature</i>, p. 393.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16_16" href="#FNanchor_16_16" class="label">16</a>
-<i>The Indians in the United States.</i>—In an
-interesting paper read at a recent meeting of
-the Académie des Sciences, M. Paul Passy,
-who has recently returned from a visit to the
-North-Western States of America, endeavored
-to show that the generally accepted theory of
-the eventual disappearance of the “red man”
-is erroneous, and that though certain tribes
-have been exterminated in war and others
-decimated by disease and “firewater,” the
-contact of civilisation is not necessarily fatal
-to the Indians. M. Passy states that there are
-at present 376,000 Indians in the country, of
-whom 67,000 have become United States citizens.
-The Indians in the reserve territories
-are in part maintained by the Government,
-many of them, however, earning their living
-by shooting and fishing, and also by agriculture.
-The progress which they have made in
-farming is shown by the fact that they had under
-cultivation in 1882 more than 205,000 acres
-of land, as against 157,000 in India. Moreover,
-the total Indian population, exclusive of
-the Indians who are citizens of the United
-States and of those in Alaska, had increased
-during the same interval by more than 5,000.
-M. Passy says that the Federal Government,
-though not doing nearly so much as it should
-for the education of Indian children, devoted a
-sum of $365,515 to this purpose in 1882, and
-in the State of New York the six Iroquois
-“nations” settled there have excellent schools,
-which three-fourths of their children regularly
-attend. The five “nations” in Indian territory
-are also well cared for in this respect, having
-11 schools for boarders, and 198 day schools
-attended by 6,183 children. In 1827, a Cherokee
-invented a syllabic alphabet of 85 letters,
-and this alphabet is now used for the publication
-of a newspaper in the Cherokee language.
-In addition to the tribes in cantonments, a
-great many children (about 8,000) are disseminated
-among the schools in the different States.
-There are also three normal and industrial
-schools in which, apart from elementary subjects,
-the boys are taught agriculture and different
-trades, and the girls sewing, cooking, and
-housekeeping. A journal in the Dakota
-tongue, called the <i>Yapi Oaye</i>, is published at
-Chicago for the benefit of the pupils in that
-region, and it is said that the Indians of the
-territories show themselves very anxious to
-learn, so much so that the Ometras of Nebraska
-have sold part of their territory so as to be
-able to keep up their schools. M. Passy adds
-that the Americans differ very much in their
-estimate of the sum required for providing all
-the young Indians with a sound education,
-some of them putting it as high as $10,000,000,
-while the lowest estimate is $3,000,000, or ten
-times as much as is now being spent. His
-conclusion is that if the Indians are destined to
-disappear, it will be because they become fused
-with the other citizens of the United States.—<i>Times</i>,
-Sept. 8, 1884.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17_17" href="#FNanchor_17_17" class="label">17</a>
-See Hawley, <i>l.c.</i>, p. 31.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18_18" href="#FNanchor_18_18" class="label">18</a>
-<i>Lectures on Science of Language</i>, vol. i. p.
-308.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19_19" href="#FNanchor_19_19" class="label">19</a>
-See Giacomo Bove, <i>Viaggio alla Patagonia
-ed alla Terra del Fuoco</i>, in <i>Nuova Antologia</i>,
-Dec. 15, 1881.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20_20" href="#FNanchor_20_20" class="label">20</a>
-<i>Travels</i>, Deutsch von Dieffenbach. Braunschweig,
-1844, p. 229.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_21_21" href="#FNanchor_21_21" class="label">21</a>
-Darwin, <i>Narrative of the Surveying Voyage
-of H.M.'s Ships “Adventure” and “Beagle,”</i>
-1839, vol. iii. p. 226.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_22_22" href="#FNanchor_22_22" class="label">22</a>
-D. Wilson, <i>Pre-Aryan American Man</i>, p. 4.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_23_23" href="#FNanchor_23_23" class="label">23</a>
-<i>Rig-Veda-Sanhita, the Sacred Hymns of the
-Brahmans, translated by M. M.</i>, Vol. i. p. xxxix.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_24_24" href="#FNanchor_24_24" class="label">24</a>
-Tertullian, <i>Apolog.</i> 16: “rabula et mendaciorum
-loquacissimus.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_25_25" href="#FNanchor_25_25" class="label">25</a>
-See Strabo, iv. 196; Plin. xvii. 12; Liv.
-xxxviii. 17.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_26_26" href="#FNanchor_26_26" class="label">26</a>
-The annual returns of the very necessary
-squirrel slaughter in the woods of Altyre, of
-Cawdor Castle, Beaufort Castle, and Darnaway
-Castle, each average one thousand squirrels.
-Thus these four estates might furnish four
-thousand tails per annum.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_27_27" href="#FNanchor_27_27" class="label">27</a>
-Lassalle was killed in a duel in 1864, at
-the age of thirty-nine.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_28_28" href="#FNanchor_28_28" class="label">28</a>
-In the play, Charles V. has a long conference
-with Franz, but ends by saying of him
-what Bismarck must have said to himself
-about Lassalle: “The man is great, but his is
-not the greatness which I seek, and which I
-can employ.”
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Der mann ist gross, doch ist es nicht die Grösse,</div>
- <div class="verse">Welche ich suche und gebrauchen kann.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_29_29" href="#FNanchor_29_29" class="label">29</a>
-Karl Sand, a student of Erlangen, assassinated
-Kotzebue at Manheim in 1819, and
-having ineffectually tried to commit suicide,
-was executed in the following year. In striking
-Kotzebue, he meant, as he said, “to exterminate
-the apologist of despotism.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_30_30" href="#FNanchor_30_30" class="label">30</a>
-“Personne n'a de l'esprit, comme tout le
-monde.” “On peut avoir plus d'esprit qu'un
-autre, mais non plus d'esprit que tous les autres.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_31_31" href="#FNanchor_31_31" class="label">31</a>
-Prince Bismarck does not care much about
-the theatre, and it may be mentioned that when
-he visited Paris in 1867, Offenbach's “Grande
-Duchesse,” which, as a skit upon militaryism,
-made so many laugh, excited in him only anger.
-He was especially indignant at the song
-of “Here is the Sabre of my Sire.” “You
-can't expect a pair of Jews (Offenbach and Ludovic
-Halévy) to feel any reverence for military
-traditions,” he said; “but now 'Le Sabre de
-mon Père' will be associated with ludicrous
-ideas in the minds of Frenchmen, and old generals
-will be ashamed to give their swords to
-their sons on account of this odious jingle.”
-At this same visit to Paris, however, Bismarck
-saw a performance of Sardou's “Nos bons Villageois”
-at the Gymnase, and he laughed loudly
-at the scene in which a Colonel, who is
-Mayor of his village, makes all the municipal
-Councillors sign a document acknowledging
-that they are “a troop of donkeys.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_32_32" href="#FNanchor_32_32" class="label">32</a>
-Two of Bismarck's heroes in history are
-Wallenstein and William the Silent. He once
-said of Marshal von Moltke: “Lucky man, he
-need only make his one speech a year in the
-Reichstag and then the echoes of cannon seem
-to be speaking for him!” Marshal von Moltke,
-however, speaks as well as he writes. His
-<i>Letters</i> to his late wife, while he was travelling
-in Turkey and the Danubian Provinces, are
-faultless in their composition, instructive,
-amusing, and models of style. All the qualities
-which distinguish them are to be found in
-the Marshal's speeches, which are clear, short,
-and captivate the attention, not less by what
-they contain than by the tuneful voice in
-which they are uttered.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_33_33" href="#FNanchor_33_33" class="label">33</a>
-Some years ago, when a young Prussian
-officer of noble family was turned out of the
-army for declining a challenge on conscientious
-grounds, an English clergyman sent
-Prince Bismarck a copy of the Diary of Mr.
-Adams, who was American Minister of the
-Court of St. James's at the beginning of this
-century. Mr. Adams speaks with admiration
-of the efforts which were being made to put
-down duelling in England by force of public
-opinion. Prince Bismarck, in courteously acknowledging
-the book, wrote: “There is much
-good sense in England, but you have not done
-away with duelling, as you suppose. There is
-more of it among your schoolboys, who fight
-with fists, than among those of any other country;
-and this may prevent the necessity for
-much fighting in after-life. English boys take
-rank at school according to their pluck, and
-hold that rank afterwards.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_34_34" href="#FNanchor_34_34" class="label">34</a>
-M. Teste had been one of Louis Philippe's
-Ministers. Getting into disgrace through
-financial jobberies, which subjected him to
-criminal proceedings, he had to resign his portfolio
-and retire altogether from public life. To
-revenge himself on Louis Philippe's family
-(though no member of it had had any share in
-his ruin) he privately drew up for Napoleon III.
-the report that was required to justify the seizure
-of the Orleans property. No respectable
-lawyer could be found to do this work.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_35_35" href="#FNanchor_35_35" class="label">35</a>
-After a dinner at Count Lehndorff's the
-conversation once fell upon religious topics,
-and Bismarck exclaimed: “I cannot understand
-how without faith in a revealed religion
-we can believe in God; nor do I see how, without
-faith in a God, Dispenser of all good and
-Supreme Judge, a man can do his duty. If I
-were not a Christian, I should not remain at
-my post. It can yield me nothing more in the
-way of honors; the exercise of power is no
-longer a pleasure but a worry, since I can never
-carry out the simplest scheme without struggles,
-trying to a man of my age and weak
-health. If I were ambitious of popularity, I
-could get it by retiring. All men would speak
-well of me if I lived in retirement. I should
-then perhaps have more real power than I
-have now. I should certainly have more
-power to help my friends. But it is because I
-believe in a Divine dispensation which has
-marked out Germany for great destinies that I
-remain at my post. I have a duty to perform
-and must continue to do it so long as I am
-permitted. If I am stricken down and rendered
-incapable for work, then I shall know
-that my time of rest has come; but not till
-then.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_36_36" href="#FNanchor_36_36" class="label">36</a>
-Bismarck has never had much veneration
-either for diplomatists or diplomacy. Here is
-an extract of a letter which he wrote to his
-wife in 1851 when he was at Frankfort: “In
-the art of saying nothing and in a great many
-words, I am making rapid progress. I write
-many pages of letters which read like leading
-articles, and if Manteuffel, after perusing them,
-can tell what they are about, he certainly knows
-more than I. Every one of us pretends to believe
-that his colleagues are full of ideas and
-plans; and yet all the time the whole body of
-us knows nothing, and each is aware that the
-others know nothing. No man, not even the
-most malicious sceptic of a democrat, can believe
-what charlatanism and big pretence is all
-this diplomacy.”
-</p>
-<p>
-It may be remarked, in view of Prince Bismarck's
-opinions on duelling, that for an affront
-like that which he offered to the young attaché,
-a French Admiral, the Bailli de Suffren, was
-killed by a lieutenant. The affront was offered
-on the high seas; the subaltern bore it at the
-time without a murmur, but on returning to
-France he resigned and sent the admiral a challenge,
-saying: “You are no longer my superior
-now. We are both gentlemen and you owe
-me a reparation.” In Germany this would
-have been impossible, for the attaché must
-have belonged either to the <i>Landwehr</i> or the
-<i>Landsturm</i>, so that the Chancellor as a general
-of the <i>Landwehr</i> remained always his superior.
-Thus in military countries one of the
-chief excuses for duelling—namely, that it enables
-a man to punish the insolence of office—cannot
-be urged.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_37_37" href="#FNanchor_37_37" class="label">37</a>
-A fact that speaks well for Prince Bismarck
-is that ladies are not afraid of him. Napoleon
-I. made women cower; they knew that his
-Corsican spitefulness would disdain no means
-of retaliation for a slight or an injury. But
-ladies have often been maliciously epigrammatical,
-or downright saucy to the Chancellor,
-without having anything worse to fear from
-him than scowls and grumbles.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_38_38" href="#FNanchor_38_38" class="label">38</a>
-The process of obtaining an engagement
-is the same for a lady as a gentleman, <i>i.e.</i> a
-visit to an agent's office, &amp;c., &amp;c. Here is an
-advertisement which evidently offers a rare
-chance:—
-</p>
-<p>
-“Wanted, ladies of attractive appearance,
-with good singing voices. Can be received for
-long pantomime season. Dresses found. Salaried
-engagement (an exceptionable opportunity
-for clever amateurs desirous of adopting
-the profession).”</p></div></div>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-
-<h3>Transcriber's Notes</h3>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected. Variations
-in hyphenation have been standardised but all other spelling and
-punctuation remains unchanged.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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