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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 #54534 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54534)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Irish Penny Journal, Vol. 1 No. 25,
-December 19, 1840, 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: The Irish Penny Journal, Vol. 1 No. 25, December 19, 1840
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: April 10, 2017 [EBook #54534]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IRISH PENNY JOURNAL, DEC 19, 1840 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Brownfox and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
-images generously made available by JSTOR www.jstor.org)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE IRISH PENNY JOURNAL.
-
- NUMBER 25. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1840. VOLUME I.
-
-[Illustration: THE MONUMENT TO THE MEMORY OF DR DOYLE, BY HOGAN.]
-
-In presenting our readers with a drawing, made expressly for the purpose,
-of the Monumental Sculpture intended to memorise the mortal form of an
-illustrious Irishman, who was beloved and honoured by the great mass of
-his countrymen, and respected for his talents by all, we have done that
-which we trust will give as much pleasure to most of our readers, as it
-has afforded gratification to ourselves.
-
-This monument is indeed a truly interesting one, whether considered in
-reference to its subject--the character of the distinguished individual
-whose memory it is designed to honour--the circumstances which have given
-it existence--or, lastly, as a work of high art, the production of an
-Irishman whose talents reflect lustre on his country. It is, however, in
-this last point of view only, that, consistently with the plan originally
-laid down for the conduct of our little periodical, we can venture to
-treat of it; and considered in this way, we cannot conceive a subject
-more worthy of attracting public attention or more legitimately within
-the scope of one of the primary objects our Journal was designed to
-effect--namely, to make our country, and its people, without reference to
-sect or party, more intimately known than they had been previously, not
-only to strangers, but even to Irishmen themselves.
-
-In our present object, therefore, of lending our influence, such as it
-is, to make the merits of a great Irish artist more thoroughly known
-and justly appreciated, by our countrymen in particular, than they have
-hitherto been, we are only discharging a duty necessarily imposed upon
-us; and the pleasure which we feel in doing so would be great indeed,
-if it were not diminished by the saddening reflection that it should
-be so necessary in the case of an artist of his eminence. But, alas!
-the scriptural adage, that no man is a prophet in his own country, is
-unfortunately nowhere so strikingly illustrated as in Ireland, and of
-this fact Mr Hogan is a remarkable example. Holding, as he unquestionably
-does, a high place among the most eminent sculptors of Europe, he is as
-yet unpatronized by the aristocracy of his native country--is indeed
-perhaps scarcely known to them.
-
-Mr Hogan is not, as generally supposed, a native of Cork: he was born at
-Tallow, in the county of Waterford, in 1800, where his father carried on
-the business of a builder. He is of good family, both by the paternal
-and maternal sides; his father being of the old Dalcassian tribe of the
-O’Hogans, the chiefs of whom were located in the seventeenth century at
-Ardcrony, in the county of Tipperary, four miles and a half to the north
-of Nenagh, where the remains of their castle and church are still to
-be seen. By the mother’s side he is descended from the celebrated Sir
-Richard Cox, Lord Chief Justice of Ireland in the reign of William and
-Mary, and Lord Chancellor in that of Queen Anne, his mother, Frances Cox,
-being the great-granddaughter of that eminent individual.
-
-Having received the ordinary school education, he was placed by his
-father, in the year 1812, under an attorney in Cork, named Michael
-Footte, with a view to his ultimately embracing the legal profession,
-and in this situation he remained for two years. This was the most
-unhappy period of his existence; for, like Chantrey, the greatest of
-British sculptors, who was also articled to an attorney, being endowed
-by nature expressly to become an artist, the original bias of his mind
-to drawing and carving had by this time become a passion; and despite of
-the frequent chastisements his master bestowed on him, in the exuberance
-of his zeal to curb what he considered his idle propensities, his whole
-soul was given, not to law, but to the Fine Arts, and an artist he became
-accordingly. His father and his master seeing the utter uselessness of
-any further attempts to divert his mind from its apparently destined
-course, he was released from his irksome employment, and at the age of
-fourteen entered the office of Mr Deane, now Sir Thomas Deane, of Cork,
-as an apprentice, where he was soon employed as a draughtsman and carver
-of models, with a view to his becoming ultimately an architect. In Mr
-Deane he found a master who had the intellect to enable him to appreciate
-his talents, and the good feeling to induce him to encourage them; and
-the first use he made of the chisels with which his patron supplied him,
-was to produce a carving in wood of a female skeleton the size of life,
-on which Dr Woodroffe for a season was able to lecture his pupils, as
-if it were, what it actually seems, a real skeleton in form and colour.
-Under the instruction of this gentleman Mr Hogan studied anatomy for
-several years, during which period he made for his improvement many
-carvings in wood of hands and feet, and also essayed his talents on a
-figure of Minerva the size of life, which still remains over the entrance
-of the Life and Fire Insurance Office in the South Mall.
-
-But though Mr Hogan was thus employed in pursuits congenial to his
-tastes, and to a great degree conducive to his future eminence as a
-sculptor, the idea of embracing sculpture as a profession did not occur
-to him for several years after, nor were the requisite means of study
-for that profession provided for the student in Cork at this time. There
-was as yet in that city no Academy of Arts or other institution like
-those in Dublin, provided, for the use of students, with those objects
-which are so essential to the formation of a correct taste in the
-higher departments of the Fine Arts, namely, a selection of casts from
-the antique statues: and until such subjects for study were acquired,
-the efforts of genius, however ardent, in the pursuit of beauty and
-excellence, were necessarily blind and fortuitous. Happily, however,
-this desideratum was at length supplied in Cork, where a Society for
-Promoting the Fine Arts was formed in February 1816; and to this
-Society the Prince Regent, in 1818, through the intercession of the
-late Marquis of Conyngham and other Irish noblemen who had influence
-with him, was induced to present a selection of the finest casts from
-the antique statues, which had been sent him as a gift by the Roman
-Pontiff, and the value of which the Prince but little appreciated. The
-result was not only beyond anything that the most sanguine could have
-anticipated in the rapid creation of artists of first-rate excellence,
-but also in establishing the fact that among our own countrymen the
-finest genius for art abundantly exists, and that it only requires
-the requisite objects for study, with encouragement, to develope it.
-The presence of these newly acquired treasures of ancient art, which
-consisted of one hundred and fifteen subjects selected by Canova, and
-cast under his direction, kindled a flame in Mr Hogan’s mind never to
-be extinguished but with life, and he immediately applied himself to
-their study with his whole heart and soul. Thus occupied he remained
-till 1823, surrounded and excited to emulation by the kindred spirits of
-Mac Clise, Scottowe, Ford--the glorious Ford!--Buckley the architect,
-equally glorious--Keller, his own brother Richard, and many other of
-lesser names--many of whom, alas for their own and their country’s fame!
-paid the price of their early distinction with their lives. Well may the
-people of Cork feel proud of this constellation of youthful genius--a
-brighter one was never assembled together in recent times.
-
-The period, however, had now arrived when the eagle wing of Hogan was
-to try its strength; and most fortunately for him, an accident at this
-time brought to Cork a man more than ordinarily gifted with the power to
-assist him in its flight. The person we allude to was the late William
-Paulett Carey, an Irishman no less distinguished for his abilities as a
-critical writer on works of art, than for his ardent zeal in aiding the
-struggles of genius, by making their merit known to the world. In August
-1823, this gentleman, on the occasion of paying a visit to the gallery of
-the Cork Society, “accidentally saw a small figure of a Torso, carved in
-pine timber, which had fallen down under one of the benches. On taking
-it up,” to continue Mr Carey’s own interesting narrative, “he was struck
-by the correctness and good taste of the design, and the newness of
-the execution. He was surprised to find a piece of so much excellence,
-apparently fresh from the tool, in a place where the arts had been so
-recently introduced, and where he did not expect to meet anything but
-the crude essays of uninstructed beginners. On inquiry he was informed
-it was the work of a young native of Cork, named Hogan, who had been
-apprenticed to the trade of a carpenter under Mr Deane, an eminent
-builder, and had at his leisure hours studied from the Papal casts, and
-practised carving and modelling with intense application. Hogan was then
-at work above stairs, in a small apartment in the Academy. The stranger
-immediately paid him a visit, and was astonished at the rich composition
-of a _Triumph of Silenus_, consisting of fifteen figures, about fourteen
-inches high, designed in an antique style, by this self-taught artist,
-and cut in bas-relief, in pine timber. He also saw various studies of
-hands and feet; a grand head of an Apostle, of a small size; a copy of
-Michael Angelo’s mask; some groups in bas-relief after designs by Barry;
-and a female skeleton, the full size, after nature; all cut with delicacy
-and beauty, in the same material. A copy of the antique _Silenus_ and
-_Satyrs_, in stone, was chiselled with great spirit; and the model of a
-Roman soldier, about two feet high, would have done credit to a veteran
-sculptor. A number of his drawings in black and white chalks, from the
-Papal casts, marked his progressive improvement and sense of ideal
-excellence. The defects in his performances were such as are inseparable
-from an early stage of untaught study, and were far overbalanced by their
-merits. When his work for his master was over for the day, he usually
-employed his hours in the evening in these performances. The female
-skeleton had been all executed during the long winter nights.”
-
-Becoming thus acquainted with Mr Hogan’s abilities, Mr Carey, with that
-surprising prophetic judgment with which he was so eminently gifted,
-at once predicted the young sculptor’s future fame, and proclaimed his
-genius in every quarter in which he hoped it might prove serviceable to
-him. He commenced by writing a series of letters, which were inserted
-in the Cork Advertiser, “addressed to the nobility, gentry, and opulent
-merchants, entreating them to raise a fund by subscription, to defray the
-expense of sending Hogan to Italy, and supporting him there for three
-or four years, to afford him the advantages of studying at Rome.” But
-for some time these letters proved ineffectual, and would probably have
-failed totally in their object but for Mr Carey’s untiring zeal. Acting
-under his direction, Mr Hogan was induced to address a letter to that
-noble patron of British genius, the late Lord de Tabley, then Sir John
-Fleming Leicester, and to send him at the same time two specimens of his
-carvings, “as the humble offering of a young self-taught artist.” This
-letter, which was backed by one from Mr Carey himself, was responded
-to at once in a letter written in the kindest spirit, and which
-contained an enclosure of twenty-five pounds as Sir John’s subscription
-to the proposed fund. This was the first money actually paid in, and
-subscriptions soon followed from others. Through Mr Carey’s enthusiastic
-representations, the Royal Irish Institution was induced to contribute
-the sum of one hundred pounds, and the Royal Dublin Society to vote
-twenty-five pounds for some specimens of his carvings which Mr Hogan
-submitted to their notice. These acts of liberality were honourable to
-those public bodies; yet, as Mr Carey well observed, it was to Lord de
-Tabley’s generosity that Mr Hogan’s gratitude was most due. Here, as he
-said, “was a young man of genius in obscurity, and wholly unknown to his
-lordship, rescued from adversity in the unpromising morning of life--a
-self-taught artist built up to fame and fortune by his munificence--a
-torch lighted, which I hope will burn bright for ages, to the honour of
-the empire. HOGAN may receive thousands of pounds from future patrons,
-but it is to Lord de TABLEY’S timely encouragement that he will be
-indebted for every thing.”
-
-The subscriptions collected for Mr Hogan amounted in all to the sum of
-two hundred and fifty pounds; and thus provided, he set out for Italy,
-visiting London on his way, for the purpose of presenting letters to
-Sir Thomas Lawrence and Sir Francis Chantrey, which Lord de Tabley had
-given him, in the hope that they would procure him recommendatory letters
-from those great artists that would be serviceable to him in Rome. But
-these introductions proved of little value to him. Chantrey expressed
-regret that he knew no one in the “Eternal City” to whom he could give
-him a letter; and though Lawrence kindly gave him an introduction to
-the Duchess of Devonshire, that distinguished lady had died a few days
-before Mr Hogan reached Rome; “so that,” as Mr Carey remarks, “he found
-himself an entire stranger, with little knowledge of the world, without
-acquaintance or patron, and incapable of speaking the language, at the
-moment of commencing his studies in Italy.”
-
-But the young sculptor, on leaving his native country, was provided by
-Lord de Tabley with something more valuable than these letters to British
-artists--namely, a commission to execute a statue in marble for him, as
-soon as he should think himself qualified by his preparatory studies for
-the undertaking.
-
-The statue, which was to launch the young sculptor into professional life
-in Italy, was commenced soon after, but was not completed before his
-noble patron had paid the debt of nature. Its subject, which is taken
-from Gessner’s Death of Abel, is EVE, who shortly after her expulsion
-from Paradise picks up a dead bird, which being the first inanimate
-creature that she has seen, fills her with emotions of surprise, terror,
-and pity. This statue, which is the size of life, and which is of
-exquisite beauty, is now at Lord de Tabley’s seat in Cheshire.
-
-While this statue was in progress, Mr Hogan conceived the subject and
-completed the model of his second great work--one in which the peculiar
-powers of his genius were more fully developed, and on the execution of
-which, from peculiar circumstances, he entered with the most excited
-enthusiasm. During the first year of his residence at Rome, Mr Hogan
-happening to be present at an evening meeting of artists of eminence, the
-conversation turned on the difficulty of producing any thing in sculpture
-perfectly original; and to Mr Hogan’s astonishment, the celebrated
-British sculptor Gibson stated as his opinion that it was impossible
-now to imagine an attitude or expression in the human figure which had
-not been already appropriated by the great sculptors of antiquity. This
-opinion, though coming from one to whom our countryman then looked up,
-appeared to him a strange and unsound one, and with the diffidence of
-an artist whose powers were as yet untried, he ventured to express his
-dissent from it; when Gibson, astonished at his presumption, somewhat
-pettishly replied, “Then let us see if _you_ are able to produce such
-an original work!” The challenge thus publicly offered could not be
-refused by one of Hogan’s temperament; and the young sculptor, stung with
-the taunt, lost no time in entering upon a work which was to test his
-abilities as an artist, and to rescue his character from the imputation
-of vanity and rashness. Under such feelings Mr Hogan toiled day and
-night at his work, till he submitted to the artists in whose presence
-the challenge had been offered, the result of his labours--his statue
-of the Drunken Faun--a work which the great Thorwaldsen pronounced a
-miracle of art, and which, if Hogan had never produced another, would
-have been alone sufficient to immortalize his name. It is to be regretted
-that this figure, which has all the beauty and truth of the antique
-sculpture, combined with the most perfect originality, and which Mr Hogan
-himself has recently expressed his conviction that it is beyond his
-power to excel, should never have been executed in marble; but a cast of
-it, presented by Lord de Tabley to the Royal Irish Institution (though
-intended by Mr Hogan for the Dublin Society), may still be seen in their
-deserted hall.
-
-We have given these, as we trust, not uninteresting details of Mr Hogan’s
-early life, at greater length than the limits assigned to our article
-can well allow, and we must notice his subsequent career in briefer
-terms. Though enrolled now among the resident sculptors in Rome, his
-difficulties were not yet over; and in spite of the most enthusiastic
-efforts on his part, they might and probably would have been ineffectual
-in sustaining him, if no friendly aid had come to his assistance. In two
-years after his arrival in Rome, or at the end of the year 1825, Hogan
-found himself again in a state of embarrassment, without a commission,
-his funds exhausted, or at least reduced to a state inadequate to the
-necessary outlay of a sculptor in the purchase of marble, the rent of a
-studio, and the payment of living models. For his extrication from these
-difficulties he was again indebted to the liberality of Lord de Tabley
-and the zeal of his advocate Mr Carey, by whom a second subscription was
-collected, chiefly in England, amounting to one hundred and fifty pounds;
-of which sum twenty-five pounds was contributed by Lord de Tabley in the
-first instance, and twenty-five pounds by the Royal Irish Institution.
-Trifling as this amount was, it proved sufficient for its object, and Mr
-Hogan was never again necessitated to receive pecuniary assistance from
-the public.
-
-He applied himself forthwith to the production of a marble figure
-intended for his friend and former master Sir Thomas Deane, but which
-when finished his necessities obliged him to dispose of to the present
-Lord Powerscourt, and for which he received one hundred pounds, being
-barely the cost of the marble and roughing out or boasting. This statue,
-which is about half the size of life, is now preserved in Powerscourt
-House; and we may remark, that it is the only work of our countryman in
-the possession of an Irish nobleman. His next important work was the
-exquisite statue of the Dead Christ, now placed beneath the altar of
-the Roman Catholic church in Clarendon Street. This work was originally
-ordered for a chapel in Cork by the Rev. Mr O’Keeffe; but that gentleman,
-on its arrival in Dublin, not being able to raise the funds required for
-its payment, permitted Mr Hogan to dispose of it to the clergymen of
-Clarendon Street, who paid for it the sum originally stipulated, namely,
-four hundred and fifty pounds; and we need scarcely add, that this statue
-is one of the most interesting objects of art adorning our metropolitan
-city. Mr Hogan subsequently executed a duplicate of this statue, but with
-some changes in the design, for the city of Cork; but we regret to have
-to add that he has been as yet but very inadequately rewarded for his
-labours on that work, a sum of two hundred and thirty-seven pounds being
-still due him, and the amount which he has actually received (two hundred
-pounds) being barely the cost of the marble and rough workmanship.
-
-The execution of this statue was followed by that of a large sepulchral
-monument in _basso relievo_ to the memory of the late Dr Collins, Roman
-Catholic Bishop of Cloyne--a figure of Religion holding in her lap a
-medallion portrait of the bishop. For this work Mr Hogan was to have
-received two hundred pounds, but there is still a balance of thirty
-pounds due to him.
-
-We next find Mr Hogan engaged on a second work for our city--the _Pieta_,
-or figures of the Virgin and the Redeemer, of colossal size, executed in
-plaster for the Rev. Dr Flanagan, Roman Catholic Rector of the chapel in
-Francis Street, which it now adorns. Of this work, an engraving, with a
-masterly description and eulogium from the pen of the Marchese Melchiori,
-a great authority in matters of critical taste in the fine arts, has
-been published in the _Ape Italiana_--a work of the highest authority,
-published monthly in Rome; and we should state for the honour of our
-country, that our own Hogan and the sculptor Gibson are the only British
-artists whose works have as yet found a place in it.
-
-Mr Hogan’s subsequent works, exclusive of a number of busts, may now
-be briefly enumerated. First, a marble figure of the late Archbishop
-of Paris, about two and a half feet high, executed for the Lord de
-Clifford; second, the Judgment of Paris--two figures in marble about the
-same height as the last--for General Sir James Riall, an Irish baronet
-resident in Bath; third, a monumental _alto relievo_ to the memory of
-Miss Farrell of Dublin, executed for her mother, and considered by
-Gibson as the best of all our sculptor’s works; fourth, a _Genio_ on a
-sarcophagus, a monument for the family of the late Mr Murphy of Cork;
-and, lastly, the Monument to Dr Doyle, on which we have now to utter a
-few remarks.
-
-Of the general design of this noble monument our prefixed illustration
-will afford a tolerably correct idea; but it would require more than one
-illustration of this kind to convey an adequate notion of its various
-beauties and merits, for there is scarcely a point in which it can be
-viewed in which it is not equally effective and striking. The subject,
-as a sculptural one should be, is of the most extreme simplicity, and
-yet of the most impressive interest--a Christian prelate in the act of
-offering up a last appeal to heaven for the regeneration of his country,
-which is personified by a beautiful female figure, who is represented in
-an attitude of dejection at his side. In this combination of the real and
-the allegorical there is nothing obscure or unintelligible even to the
-most illiterate mind. In the figure of the prostrate female we recognise
-at a glance the attributes of our country, and there existed no necessity
-for the name “Erin,” inserted in very questionable taste upon her zone,
-to determine her character. She is represented as resting on one knee,
-her body bent and humbled, yet in her majestic form retaining a fullness
-of beauty and dignity of character; her turret-crowned head resting on
-one arm, while the other, with an expression of melancholy abandonment,
-reclines on and sustains her ancient harp. In the male figure which
-stands beside her in an attitude of the most unaffected grace and
-dignity, we see a personification of the sublime in the Episcopal
-character. He stands erect, his enthusiastic and deeply intellectual
-countenance directed upwards imploringly, while with one hand he touches
-with delicate affection his earthly mistress, and with the other,
-stretched forth with passionate devotion, he appeals to heaven for her
-protection. This is true and enduring poetry; and, as expressive of the
-sentiment of religious patriotism unalloyed by any selfish consideration,
-is far superior to the thought which Moore has so exquisitely expressed
-in the well-known lines--
-
- “In my last humble prayer to the spirit above,
- Thy name shall be mingled with mine!”
-
-Such is the touching poetical sentiment embodied in this work, which,
-considered merely as a work of art, has merits above all praise.
-In the beauty of its forms, its classical purity of design, its
-simplicity and freedom from affectation or mannerism, its exquisite
-finish and characteristic execution, and its pervading grace, truth,
-and naturalness, it is beyond question the finest production of art in
-monumental sculpture that Irish genius has hitherto achieved; and, taken
-all and all, is, as we honestly believe, without a rival in any work of
-the same class in the British empire.
-
-We regret to have to state that Mr Hogan is, as we are informed, as yet
-unpaid for this great national work, or that at least there is more than
-a moiety of the sum agreed for, which was one thousand pounds, remaining
-due to him. But surely his country, which has the deepest interest in
-sustaining him in his career of glory, will not suffer him to depart from
-her shores without fulfilling her part of a compact with one who has so
-nobly completed his. We cannot believe it.
-
-It will be seen by a retrospective glance at the details which we have
-given of Mr Hogan’s labours during the past seventeen years in which
-he has been toiling as a professional artist, that those labours have
-been any thing but commensurately rewarded; they have indeed been barely
-sufficient to enable him to sustain existence. But brighter prospects
-are opening upon him for the future. His character as a sculptor is now
-established beyond the possibility of controversy. His merits have been
-recently recognised and honoured by the highest tribunal in the City of
-the Arts with a tribute of approbation never before bestowed on a native
-of the British Isles: he has been elected unanimously, and without any
-solicitation or anticipation on his part, a member of the oldest Academy
-of the Fine Arts in Europe--that which enrolled amongst its members the
-divine Raphael, and all the other illustrious artists of the age of
-Leo, and which holds its meetings upon their graves--the Academy of the
-Virtuosi del Pantheon. His fellow-countrymen are also beginning to have a
-just appreciation of his merits, and are coming forward nobly to supply
-him with employment for future years; and when he returns to his Roman
-studio, it will be to labour on works worthy of his country’s liberality,
-and calculated to raise her fame amongst the civilized nations of the
-world. Need we add, that he has our most ardent wishes for his future
-success and happiness!
-
- P.
-
-For the satisfaction of our readers we are induced to append to the
-preceding notice of Mr Hogan the following list of some of the principal
-commissions which he has recently received in Ireland;--
-
-The Monument to the late Mr Secretary Drummond.
-
-A Statue of the late Mr William Crawford of Cork, for which Mr Hogan is
-to receive L.1000.
-
-A monumental alto relievo, consisting of three figures, to the memory of
-the late Mr William Beamish, for Blackrock Chapel, Cork--L.650.
-
-Monument to the late Dr Brinkley, Bishop of Cloyne. A colossal figure in
-relievo for the Cathedral of Cloyne.
-
-An alto relievo for the Convent at Rathfarnham.
-
-An alto relievo for the Chapel at Ross, county of Wexford, commissioned
-from John Maher, Esq. M. P.--&c. &c.
-
-
-
-
-ON ANIMAL TAMING.
-
-FIRST ARTICLE.
-
-
-That all animals, however fierce and ungovernable may be their natural
-dispositions, have nevertheless implanted by a wise Providence within
-their breasts a certain awe, a vague, indefinable dread of man, which,
-although meeting with him for the first time, will induce them to fly his
-presence, or at all events shun encounter, is, we think, a fact which
-no observer of nature will deny. This instinct of submission to human
-beings exists among all creatures, and the greater the intelligence they
-possess, the more powerful is its operation. When we meet with instances
-of a nature calculated to overturn this theory--such as wild animals
-attacking and destroying travellers, or preying upon the shepherd as
-he guards his flock, with others of a similar description--instead of
-hastily presuming upon the falsity of the above position, we should
-rather seek for some explanation of the reasons which in these cases
-checked for the time the workings of the animal’s natural instinct.
-These will be for the most part easily enough discovered, if sought for
-in a spirit of impartial inquiry. The lion and the tiger are prompted
-by natural instinct to shun the haunts and the presence of man--they
-choose for their lairs dark and impenetrable forests--they select for
-their habitation a situation whither man has not as yet approached--and
-according as the work of settlement and cultivation advances, they
-retreat before it into their dark and gloomy fastnesses.
-
-Does the traveller encounter a lion or a tiger? The animal is prompted by
-nature to give place to him, and usually slinks off, growling with the
-thirst for blood, but still fearing to attack MAN. The shouts of women
-and children suffice to scare the fierce and rapacious wolves, as they
-descend in troops from the mountains to appease their hunger with victims
-from the flocks of the shepherds. The bear meets with the bold hunter or
-woodcutter in the American backwoods, but is never known to attack him,
-unless the instinct of submission to man is overruled by other instincts
-for the time more imperative in their demands. True, if the lion be
-_hungry_ when the traveller shall cross his path, he will sometimes,
-though such instances are of rare occurrence, attack and devour him.
-True, if the wolves are unable to satisfy their appetite by other means,
-they will attack and devour human beings; and if the bear be likewise
-rendered furious by the calls of hunger, she will treat the woodsman with
-little ceremony. Still these instances only show that hunger overcomes
-fear--an explanation which no one can refuse to admit. What indeed will
-not the gnawings of hunger effect? Has it not caused fathers to butcher
-their sons, mothers to devour the infant at their breast? When capable,
-then, of overcoming the most powerful of instincts, maternal affection,
-and that too in the teeth of reason, how can we wonder at its overcoming
-an inferior instinct, and that in a brute animal where there existed
-nothing to be overcome beyond that instinct? I might write a vast deal
-upon this subject; but my object is merely to show, at starting, that
-an instinctive awe of man, and a disposition to yield to his authority,
-is inherent in the lower animals. This, then, being the case, it will
-readily be perceived that the domestication of any animal by man only
-requires that he should carefully remove all obstacles to the operation
-of this instinctive principle; and on the other hand, employ suitable
-means to strengthen and establish it. There are, doubtless, but few of
-my readers who have not witnessed the performances of Van Amburgh, and
-likewise those of Van Buren with Batty’s collection. They have, I am
-sure, been greatly astonished at the degree of subjection to which these
-wild animals were reduced, and they are doubtless curious to learn how
-this end was attained. As I happened to make myself acquainted with
-the mode in which the subjection of these fierce brutes was effected,
-I am happy to be able to render them some information. The treatment
-was simple enough. It consisted mainly of two ingredients--1st, ample
-feeding, in order that the instinct of appetite should not present itself
-in opposition to that of dread of man; and, 2d, liberal chastisement
-and severe blows on the slightest appearance of rebellion, in order to
-strengthen and firmly establish their awe of him.
-
-I myself have devoted a good deal of time to the domestication of
-animals, and by following out the two principles just laid down, I found
-myself invariably successful. The polecat, although of inconsiderable
-size, is an animal of infinitely greater fierceness than the tiger; yet I
-had one so thoroughly domesticated that it was permitted to enjoy perfect
-liberty. I succeeded equally with the fox, the badger, and the _otter_,
-as a paper which recently appeared in the Penny Journal was designed to
-show. In fact, I should say that mere _fierceness_ is but a very slight
-obstacle to domestication--_timidity_ is much harder to be overcome.
-The timid races of animals require a mode of treatment directly opposed
-to the above. They require to have their _dread_ of man diminished, and
-their _boldness_ encouraged. If you wish to tame a very timid animal,
-instead of supplying it with food you must let it fast, in order to
-render it so bold with hunger that it will eat in your presence and from
-your hand. If you can get its confidence raised to such a degree that it
-will bite you or attempt to do so, so much the better--those little vices
-will afterwards be easily eradicated. I have succeeded in familiarizing
-the most timid creatures--the rat and the mouse, for instance. The public
-has already had an account of how I succeeded with the former of these
-animals in the pages of the “Medical Press” and “Naturalist.” Some of
-these days I shall give a paper on the latter in the Penny Journal.
-
-Van Amburgh has done much with his animals; but in consequence of
-exhibiting with specimens not as yet perfectly subdued, he has met
-with some severe accidents. More caution and less haste would have
-prevented these. One of the principal ingredients that should enter into
-the composition of an animal tamer, is COURAGE. If the animal you are
-endeavouring to domesticate perceive that you fear it--and animals are
-instinctively sharp-sighted--from that instant all chance of control
-ceases. You must be prepared to endure bites, scratches, &c. with, at all
-events apparent, recklessness, and should never suffer any thing to delay
-your chastisement: the severer it is, the less frequently will you have
-to repeat it. Van Amburgh possesses this ingredient in an eminent degree.
-I once saw him exhibiting with his superb Barbary lion, since dead; as he
-left the cage, the animal rushed at him, and succeeded in inflicting a
-sharp scratch upon his hand. Now, had Van Amburgh displayed fear, or in
-short acted otherwise than he did, his reign had been over, and the lion
-would in all probability have renewed his attack the next opportunity,
-and have killed him. But what did he do? He returned into the cage, and
-advancing sternly and undauntedly towards the lion, saluted him with a
-shower of blows over the head and face, with the small iron rod which he
-always carried with him. And mark the result. The brute at once yielded,
-quailed before his master, who, planting a foot upon the prostrate body
-of his late assailant, coolly wiped the blood from his hand, amidst the
-deafening plaudits of the spectators, who had witnessed the appalling
-scene with feelings more easily imagined than described.
-
-There is another description of animal taming, which I must not omit to
-mention, viz, by charms or drugs. There were, and are indeed still to
-be met with, although more rarely than formerly, persons who profess to
-be able, by some secret spell or charm, to tame the fiercest horse, or
-calm the fury of the most ferocious watch-dog. There are also persons who
-follow the trade of rat-catching, and pretend that by means of certain
-drugs they can entice away all the rats from the premises to which they
-are called in to exercise their skill. There are also a set of men in
-India and Persia who profess to charm serpents, and draw them from their
-holes. Of these last it is not at present my design to speak. I may,
-however, return to them in a future paper.
-
-The first of these, or those who pretend to possess the power of quelling
-the spirit of the horse, or appeasing the vigilant fury of the dog, are
-now but few in number, and very seldom to be met with. They abounded
-more in Ireland than they did in the sister kingdom, and were called
-“whisperers.” Perhaps the best mode in which I can bring them and their
-practices before my readers, is by giving them an account of the last and
-most celebrated whisperer that we recollect. His name was James Sullivan,
-and he possessed the power of taming the most furious horse, if left
-alone with him for about half an hour. The name of this singular man is
-recorded by Townsend in his “Survey of the County of Cork,” and we shall
-quote his account of Sullivan’s performances, to which he states himself
-to have been an eye-witness:--
-
-“James Sullivan was a native of the county of Cork, and an awkward
-ignorant rustic of the lowest class, generally known by the appellation
-of ‘the Whisperer;’ and his profession was horse-breaking. The credulity
-of the vulgar bestowed that epithet upon him from an opinion that he
-communicated his wishes to the animal by means of a whisper, and the
-singularity of his method gave some colour to the superstitious belief.
-As far as the sphere of his control extended, the boast of _veni, vidi,
-vici_, was more justly claimed by James Sullivan than by Cæsar, or even
-Bonaparte himself. How his art was acquired, or in what it consisted,
-is likely to remain for ever unknown, as he has lately left the world
-without divulging it. His son, who follows the same occupation, possesses
-but a small portion of the art, having either never learned its true
-secret, or being incapable of putting it in practice. The wonder of his
-skill consisted in the short time requisite to accomplish his design,
-which was performed in private, and without any apparent means of
-coercion. Every description of horse, or even mule, whether previously
-broke, or unhandled, whatever their peculiar vices or ill habits might
-have been, submitted without show of resistance to the magical influence
-of his art, and in the short space of half an hour became gentle and
-tractable. The effect, though instantaneously produced, was generally
-durable; though more submissive to him than to others, yet they seemed
-to have acquired a docility unknown before. When sent for to tame a
-vicious horse, he directed the stable in which he and the object of his
-experiment were placed, to be shut, with orders not to open the door
-until a signal was given. After a _tete-a-tete_ between him and the horse
-for about half an hour, during which little or no bustle was heard, the
-signal was made; and on opening the door, the horse was seen lying down,
-and the man by his side, playing familiarly with him, like a child with
-a puppy dog. From that time he was found perfectly willing to submit to
-discipline, however repugnant to his nature before. Some saw his skill
-tried on a horse which could never before be brought to stand for a smith
-to shoe him. The day after Sullivan’s half-hour lecture, I went, not
-without some incredulity, to the smith’s shop, with many other curious
-spectators, where we were eye-witnesses of the complete success of his
-art. This, too, had been a troop horse, and it was supposed, not without
-reason, that after regimental discipline had failed, no other would
-be found availing. I observed that the animal seemed afraid whenever
-Sullivan either spoke or looked at him. How that extraordinary ascendancy
-could have been obtained, it is difficult to conjecture. In common
-cases this mysterious preparation was unnecessary. He seemed to possess
-an instinctive power of inspiring awe, the result perhaps of natural
-intrepidity, in which I believe a great part of his art consisted;
-though the circumstance of the _tete-a-tete_ shows that upon particular
-occasions something more must have been added to it. A faculty like this
-would in other hands have made a fortune, and great offers have been made
-to him for the exercise of his art abroad; but hunting, and attachment to
-his native soil, were his ruling passions. He lived at home in the style
-most agreeable to his disposition, and nothing could induce him to quit
-Dunhallow and the foxhounds.” Other whisperers have lived since Sullivan,
-but none of them have attained an equal degree of fame. I met with one
-some years ago of the name of O’Hara, and I can truly affirm that his
-performances were indeed wonderful, and precisely similar to those of
-Sullivan. How O’Hara discovered the secret, I know not; neither am I sure
-that it was identical with that possessed by Sullivan. On one occasion,
-while under the influence of liquor, O’Hara was heard to declare that the
-secret lay in _rocking_ the horse; but on another, when equally tipsy,
-he mentioned _biting_ the animal’s ear. It is already I believe known to
-those acquainted with horses, that by grasping the shoulder with one hand
-just where the mane begins, and laying the other with firmness upon the
-crupper, and then swaying the animal backwards and forwards, beginning
-with a very gentle motion and gradually increasing it, you will in a
-few minutes be able to throw the horse on his side with a comparatively
-trifling degree of exertion; and it is certain that this treatment is
-frequently resorted to by knowing jockeys to break the spirit of a
-stubborn horse; for after having been thrown twice, or at most thrice,
-the spirit of the animal seems wholly subdued, and he appears possessed
-with the most unqualified respect and dread of the person who threw him.
-This was in all probability what O’Hara meant by _rocking_, and I have
-little doubt but that this was one of the component parts, at all events,
-of the treatment resorted to by the whisperers. As to _biting the ear_,
-I have seen this tried, and that successfully. If you succeed in getting
-the ear of the most vicious horse between your teeth, and bite it with
-all your force, you will find the rage of the animal suddenly subside,
-his spirit will appear to have forsaken him, and a word or a look from
-you will cause him to start and tremble with excess of terror. Once the
-ferocity of an animal is removed, it is an easy matter to conciliate his
-affections. May not these two modes of treatment combined, or one or the
-other, as the occasion seemed to require, have constituted the secret of
-the wonder-working whisperers? The suggestion is at least plausible, and
-the experiment should be fully tried ere it be rejected.
-
-In an article which appeared lately on the subject of animal taming in
-the _Times_ newspaper, mention is made of Mr King, owner of the “learned
-horse” at present exhibiting in London. This person states that his
-secret depends upon pressing a certain nerve in the horse’s mouth, which
-he calls the “nerve of susceptibility.” May not the set of whispering
-have likewise depended upon compressing with the teeth some similar nerve
-in the ear?
-
- H. D. R.
-
-
-
-
-RELICS.
-
-BY J. U. U.
-
-
-“Raphael was buried in the Pantheon (Sta. Maria della Rotunda), in
-a chapel which he had himself endowed, and near the place where his
-betrothed bride had been laid. The immediate neighbourhood was afterwards
-selected by other painters as their place of rest. Baldassane Peruzzi,
-Giovanni da Udine, Pierino del Vaga, Taddeo Zuccaro, and others, are
-buried near. No question had ever existed as to the precise spot
-where the remains of the master lay; but a few years since the Roman
-antiquaries began to raise doubts even respecting the church in which
-Raphael was buried. In the end, permission was obtained to make actual
-search; and Vasari’s account was in this instance verified. The tomb was
-found as he describes it, behind the altar itself of the chapel above
-mentioned. Four views of the tomb and its contents were engraved from
-drawings by Cammucini, and thus preserve the appearance that presented
-itself. The shroud had been fastened with a number of metal rings and
-points; some of these were kept by the sculptor Fabrio of Rome, who is
-also in possession of casts from the skull and right hand. Passavant
-remarks, judging from the cast, that the skull was of a singularly fine
-form. The bones of the hand were all perfect, but they crumbled into
-dust after the mould was taken. The skeleton measured about five feet
-seven inches. The coffin was extremely narrow, indicating a very slender
-frame. The precious relics were ultimately restored to the same spot,
-after being placed in a magnificent sarcophagus, presented by the present
-Pope.”--_Quarterly Review._
-
- Ay, there are glorious things even in the dust
- Which still must ever from the human heart
- Win homage next devotion. ’Tis in vain
- To ask the wherefore, or demand what are they
- Amid the keen realities of life?
- Old coin, or broken casque, or fretted stone--
- The waste of Time--the rack upon life’s shore
- Thrown up by the spent waves of centuries--
- They have no meaning in the vulgar tongue;
- Their very uses know them not--things past
- Into the chaos of forgotten forms.
- But here the root of this deep error lies.
-
- The world’s deep Lethé onward blindly glides,
- A perishable Present! glorious only
- Because no Future and no Past are seen
- To scare or shame its dreamy voyager.
- In dull forgetfulness the error lies,
- That hath no feeling of the mighty Past
- Espoused to sense, and purblind as the mole
- To all that meets the intellectual eye:
- To such Iona is a heap of stones,
- And Marathon a desert …
- … O, how changed!
- The meanest thing on which great Time hath set
- His awful stamp (the long-surviving thought
- Left by the mind of other days) appears
- To knowledge and the gaze of memory,
- More instantaneous than those words of power
- Which ancient legends say the tomb obeyed--
- The broken pillar, and the moss-grown pile,
- Dilate into antique magnificence:
- At once the stern old rampart crowns its height--
- The donjon keep, the tower of ancient pride,
- The rock-built fortress of old robber kings,
- Start into life, and from their portals pour
- Mailed foray forth, or pomp of feudal war.
- The temple swells from vacancy, o’erarching
- With pillared roof, and dim solemnity,
- The worship of old time. The dry bones live
- Of ancient ages: monarch, sage, and bard,
- Stand in their living lineaments, invested
- With power, or wisdom, or the gift of song.
-
- These still are common ruins--the remains
- Of those who were the vulgar of their day,
- Who battled, built, and traded, and so died,
- Leaving no trace but nameless monuments,
- The cast attire of ages, which but serve
- To show the present how the past went mad,
- And, like Cassandra, prophesy in vain.
- The earth yet bears more glorious vestiges
- Of Time’s illustrious few, whose memory
- Is greater than the greatest thing that lives--
- Haloed by veneration, wonder, love--
- Whose very tombs stand in life’s calendar
- Eras of thought once seen. Is there an eye
- Could coldly gaze on aught that bears a trace
- Of Avon’s matchless master of the breast?
- Who could approach old Dryburgh’s tombs, and feel not
- The illustrious presence of his great compeer,
- Whose tomb yet moistens with a nation’s woe,
- Whose star is young in heaven? Or who can walk
- Unmoved the cloisters and religious aisles
- Where Milton lies, renowned with “prophets old,”
- And honoured Newton, to whom the starred vault
- Is an enduring monument, as much
- As the Pantheon’s dome is Angelo’s?
-
- What is the pride of kings, the world’s vain splendour,
- To such a presence as they witnessed there
- Who disinterred the bones of Raphael,
- Awful from the repose of centuries?
- There stood that day a solemn, anxious crowd
- Around that altar which conceals beneath
- The mighty master’s relics--for there was a doubt
- If it were truly there that he was laid.
- And there they found all the dull grave could keep
- Of that Immortal. With no common awe
- They bent o’er his dark cell, as it disclosed
- Its treasure to the selfsame holy light
- That gladdened oft of old the master’s heart,
- And waked his heaven-eyed genius; while beneath
- The shadowy splendour of that spacious dome
- He stood in living sanctity, a pure
- And heavenly-minded man--even where they stood
- To gaze upon his dust--and all around
- He scattered bright and hallowed images
- Of perfect beauty--in their brightness there
- Still lying as he left them. Shadows fair
- Of angel form and feature--ye who gaze
- In clouded splendour through those cloisters old,
- Looking as things of life--could ye behold
- Those slender bones, they were the living hand
- Beneath whose touch ye started into being
- And grew to light and beauty, covering
- Your storied frescoes with the lines of grace,
- Harmonious hues and features of the sky.
- And yonder is your birthplace, yon light skull--
- The slight and delicate shrine of all that mind!
- ’Tis a strange thought how vast a world resolved
- In thy small compass! Senseless as thou art,
- Who could behold thee as a mouldering bone,
- The mere dust of unsphered humanity?
- There, from that lowly cell as rose to light
- The canonized remains of one whose mind
- Hath been a worship to the eye of ages,
- They were not seen thus coldly--time gave back
- Its venerable honours registered
- Deep in the heart of living Italy--
- A crown of many-tinted sanctities.
- Thy beauty, goodness, and pure innocence,
- Thy faculty of vision, gift divine,
- Rushed round thee as a glory--thou wert seen
- With all thy laurels round thy honoured tomb.
- Thine is no pile of unrecording stone--
- Pale marble column or tall pyramid,
- That vainly robs oblivion of its prey:
- Thy name lives on each lip--thy monuments
- Are treasures fondly kept midst precious things,
- Sought out in every land which the sun warms
- To nobler thoughts--thine are perennial wreaths
- Of trophies yet surviving, when the fame
- Of fields that rang through Europe, and made pale
- The peaceful hamlets of an hundred realms,
- Have shrunk within the fretted register,
- The silent scroll, named History--still the halls
- Of national state or regal pomp are bright
- With thy far-sought creations, costliest
- Among the treasured trophies of the mind;
- And as thy time on earth was consecrated
- To sacred labours meet for holy walls--
- So would I deem thy gifted spirit still,
- Invested in its light of heavenly thoughts,
- The minister of some pure temple, where
- No human errors mingle with the work.
-
-
-
-
-ON THE POWER OF FLUIDS.
-
-
-That weight is a property of liquids, has been acknowledged by the
-earliest observers; but the amount of that weight, its mode of acting,
-and application to practice, have been left for recent times to discover.
-A pint of water weighs somewhat more than a pound avoirdupois; and one
-unacquainted with the facts in hydrostatics might deem it of little
-consequence what shape the vessel that contained it might be, or what
-the disposition and length of the column of water--for, after all, what
-is it but a pound of water? No idea can be more erroneous. Under most
-circumstances, it is not so much the quantity of the fluid as the manner
-in which its particles are disposed, that determines its weight; and what
-may appear still more extraordinary, a small quantity of fluid may be
-made to balance, that is, to be of the same apparent weight as, a very
-large quantity. This may be proved by taking a pair of scales, putting a
-tumbler full of water into one dish, and balancing it by weights in the
-other, then inverting a smaller glass and immersing it in the tumbler,
-having the glass perfectly supported in the hand to prevent it touching
-the sides or bottom; a portion of the water will now flow over the sides
-of the tumbler--say one-half--yet the scales are still balanced; one-half
-of the water is of the same weight apparently as the whole. A piece
-of wood may be used instead of the glass with the same result, and it
-may be of a size nearly to fill the cavity of the tumbler; yet if the
-remaining water, which may amount to no more than a couple of spoonfuls,
-rise to the same level as it did when full, it will exactly balance the
-weights. This cannot be accounted for by saying that the wood or the
-glass was equal to the water displaced, for if we use lead, which is
-much heavier, or cork, and even card, which are much lighter, we shall
-meet with no difference. This property belongs to the water; and as the
-only constant fact was the same height of the fluid, to it must the
-explanation be referred; and we thus arrive at a first principle, a law
-in hydrostatics--that the pressure, or weight considered as a power, of
-any fluid, is not in proportion to its quantity, but to its depth.
-
-Aware of this principle, if we wish to use water as a power, we can
-economize it wonderfully, exerting a great pressure with a small
-quantity. If we take a small wooden box, water-tight, bore a hole in it,
-and fill it with water, adapt a long narrow tube to the hole, and fill
-it up with water, the box will now be burst, and that by the very small
-quantity contained in the tube. This tube may be a yard long, and very
-narrow in diameter, not holding more than two ounces of fluid, yet the
-pressure, being always in proportion to its depth, is the same as if it
-had been as broad as the box. This pressure amounts to nearly one pound
-on the square inch for every two feet of water. In the deepest parts of
-the ocean the pressure must be exceedingly great, so much so that it is
-probable they are uninhabitable, the pressure being too great for the
-existence of fishes. This pressure, together with the total absence of
-light at great depths, renders the existence of vegetable life also a
-doubtful matter. There is a certain depth beyond which divers cannot
-go, owing to the pressure of water on the surface of their chests being
-greater than the resistance of air inside, respiration being thereby
-impeded.
-
-A pipe a yard long, and acting on a yard square of fluid, will give a
-pressure equal to the weight of fifteen cwt. if we use water. Should we
-use quicksilver, the power of a ton weight may be obtained within the
-space of a square foot in breadth, by a tube somewhat less than three
-feet long, and not larger than a common goose quill--the pressure per
-square inch in these cases depending on the height of the column of fluid.
-
-We can now understand what extensive and sometimes irremediable injury
-may arise from the collection of a small but lofty column of water,
-opening into a wide but confined space below. This sometimes occurs
-when water gets into a narrow chink between buildings, and, finding its
-way down, opens finally into some cavity under the floor. The pressure
-exerted here is immense, and there are few bodies able to resist it. It
-is owing to this that the pipes for conveying water are burst, on account
-of the pressure exerted on the insides of the pipes; and this occurs the
-more frequently, the higher the source from which they are filled. In
-practice, every vessel containing liquid should increase in strength in
-proportion to its depth. We have no doubt that a process similar to this
-takes place on the large scale in nature, which is capable of uprooting
-trees, rending rocks, producing earthquakes; for if we suppose that some
-collections of water on the surface of a hill have found their way down
-through crevices into a cavity in the body of the mountain which has no
-external opening, as long as this cavity remains unfilled no evil arises,
-but when it and the crevices also are completely filled, the pressure
-exercised here is so immense, that even the sides of the hill cannot
-withstand it. Perhaps this occurrence has not been sufficiently noticed
-in explaining natural phenomena. It is usual to consider earthquakes and
-volcanoes as solely the result of chemical action, excluding entirely
-physical agency.
-
-The pressure of water may be rendered visible by blowing through a
-tube under water into a tall glass jar. The bubble of air, small at
-the bottom, as it rises, gradually enlarges from the diminution of the
-pressure.
-
-The hydrostatic bellows, formed upon this principle, consists of nothing
-more than a water-tight bellows, with a long pipe fixed into the valve
-aperture. If this pipe be three feet long, and hold a quarter of a pint
-of fluid, it will exert a pressure sufficient to raise three cwt. laid
-upon a bellows, the area of the upper side of which is equal to about a
-square foot and a half. Many are the uses to which this principle might
-be applied in the several arts.
-
-Bramah’s Press is almost the only machine which has been extensively
-used. By its means solid bars of iron can be cut through with ease. Hay
-and cotton have been compressed by its means into a very small compass.
-In the East Indies, where water-power is used, bales of cotton are
-compressed into one-half the size of those from the West Indies. By its
-means power may be multiplied, or rather concentrated, a thousand-fold.
-As commonly made, a man working it may, by using the same force that
-would raise half a cwt., apply a force amounting to twenty tons to the
-work in hand; and by varying the proportions of the machine, pressure
-might be brought to bear upon any body which would be perfectly
-irresistible.
-
-There is, however, in reality, be it distinctly understood, no power
-absolutely gained; but the man’s force is _concentrated_, as for instance
-in compressing the bale of cotton, to an extent which, if the ordinary
-mechanical powers of the lever or screw were employed, would require the
-aid of ponderous machinery.
-
-Mr Bramah was therefore greatly mistaken when he published it as the
-discovery of a new mechanical power: but he invented a beautiful and most
-effective means of simply accumulating a prodigious force by the very
-simple means of the hydrostatic pressure of fluids.
-
-Hydraulic or Bramah presses are applied in New York and other American
-ports for the purpose of raising large vessels on strong wooden platforms
-out of the water, for effecting repairs, &c. They are also employed in
-removing houses--some of them brick, and three stories high--from one
-part of a street to another. In this case strong wooden beams, like the
-ways used in ship-launching, are placed under the house, and in the
-direction of the intended site, and hydraulic presses are then employed
-for pushing the house along, with prodigious force, and so gradually
-and gently as not even to crack the plaster of a room ceiling. By
-the same means the roof of a large cotton factory near Aberdeen was
-raised _entire_, and an additional story added to the building, without
-displacing a single slate! In this instance the roof was lifted gradually
-about four inches at a time, progressing from end to end of the building,
-the height of the walls being increased by a single row of bricks at a
-time.
-
-Such are a few of the results of a single principle, a rule to which
-there is no exception, which holds equally good in the organic as in the
-inorganic world. Even the blood-vessels of the body are subject to this
-law--the sides of all vessels below the level of the heart enduring an
-additional outward pressure of half an ounce for every inch in height,
-which at the toes would amount to somewhere about two pounds. When a
-person stands erect in a bath, the pressure on all parts of the body is
-not equal; it is greater upon the legs than upon the trunk; the former
-are pressed upward, and hence in part the difficulty experienced in
-standing upon the bottom in deep water.
-
- T. A.
-
- * * * * *
-
-DISAGREEABLE PEOPLE.--Some persons are of so teazing and fidgetty a turn
-of mind, that they do not give you a moment’s rest. Everything goes
-wrong with them. They complain of a headache or the weather. They take
-up a book, and lay it down again--venture an opinion, and retract it
-before they have half done--offer to serve you, and prevent some one else
-from doing it. If you dine with them at a tavern, in order to be more
-at your ease, the fish is too little done--the sauce is not the right
-one; they ask for a sort of wine which they think is not to be had, or
-if it is, after some trouble, procured, do not touch it; they give the
-waiter fifty contradictory orders, and are restless and sit on thorns
-the whole of dinner time. All this is owing to a want of robust health,
-and of a strong spirit of enjoyment; it is a fastidious habit of mind,
-produced by a valetudinary habit of body: they are out of sorts with
-everything, and of course their ill-humour and captiousness communicates
-itself to you, who are as little delighted with them as they are with
-other things. Another sort of people, equally objectionable with this
-helpless class, who are disconcerted by a shower of heaven’s rain, or
-stopped by an insect’s wing, are those who, in the opposite spirit, will
-have every thing their own way, and carry all before them--who cannot
-brook the slightest shadow of opposition--who are always in the heat of
-an argument, unless where they disdain your understanding so much as not
-to condescend to argue with you--who knit their brows and roll their eyes
-and clench their teeth in some speculative discussion, as if they were
-engaged in a personal quarrel--and who, though successful over almost
-every competitor, seem still to resent the very offer of resistance to
-their supposed authority, and are as angry as if they had sustained some
-premeditated injury. There is an impatience of temper and an intolerance
-of opinion in this that conciliates neither our affection nor esteem.
-To such persons nothing appears of any moment but the indulgence of a
-domineering intellectual superiority, to the disregard and discomfiture
-of their own and everybody else’s comfort. Mounted on an abstract
-proposition, they trample on every courtesy and decency of behaviour;
-and though, perhaps, they do not intend the gross personalities they are
-guilty of, yet they cannot be acquitted of a want of due consideration
-for others, and of an intolerable egotism in the support of truth and
-justice. You may hear one of these impetuous declaimers pleading the
-cause of humanity in a voice of thunder, or expatiating on the beauty of
-a Guido, with features distorted with rage and scorn. This is not a very
-amiable or edifying spectacle.--_Hazlitt’s Table-Talk._
-
- * * * * *
-
-NECESSITY OF A THOROUGH EDUCATION.--Good education being a preparation
-for social life, necessarily embraces the whole man--body, head, and
-heart--for in social life the whole man is necessarily called into
-exertion in one way or another almost every hour. But this is not
-sufficient. There must be no preponderance, as well as no exclusion; a
-limited or biassed education produces monsters. Some are satisfied with
-the cultivation of a single faculty--some with the partial cultivation
-of each. A child is trained up to working; he is hammered into a hardy
-laborer--a stout material for the physical bone and muscle of the
-state. This is good, so far as it goes; but it is bad, because it goes
-no farther. He is not taught reading; he is not taught religion; above
-all, he is not taught thinking. He never looks into his other self; he
-soon forgets its existence; the man becomes all body; his intellectual
-and moral being lies fallow. The growth of such a system will be a
-sturdy race of machines--delvers and soldiers, but not men: so much
-brute physical energy swinging loosely through society at the discretion
-of those more spiritual natures to whom their education, neglected or
-perverted in another way, gives wickedness with power, and teaches the
-secrets of mind only as instruments to crush or bend men for their own
-selfish purposes. Others educate the intellectual and moral being only;
-the physical, once the building is raised, like an idle scaffolding,
-is cast by. But the omission is injurious--often fatal: malady is laid
-up, in all its thousand forms, in the infant and the child. It spreads
-out upon the man. When his spirit is in the flush of its strength, and
-his moral rivals his intellectual nature in compass and power, then it
-is that the despised portion of his being rises up and avenges itself
-for this contempt. The studious man feels, as he walks down life, a
-thousand minute retaliations for the prodigal waste of his youthful
-vigour. The body bows down beneath the burden of the mind; it wears
-gradually away into weakness and incompetency; clouds of sickness,
-pangs of pain, obscure, distort, weigh it to the earth. Health is not
-a thing of organization only, but of training; it is to be laid up bit
-by bit. We are to be _made_ healthy--tutored and practised into health.
-Omit health in favour of the intellectual and moral faculties, and
-you provide instruments, it is true, for mind, but instruments which,
-when wanted, cannot be used. Intellectual and moral education may rank
-before physical, but they are not more essential; the physical powers
-are the hewers of wood and the drawers of water for the spiritual. The
-base of the column is in the earth; but, without it, neither could the
-shaft stand firm above it, nor the capital ascend to the sky.--_Wyse on
-Education._
-
- * * * * *
-
-HOME.--The great end of prudence is to give cheerfulness to those hours
-which splendour cannot gild, and acclamation cannot exhilarate. Those
-soft intervals of unbended amusement, in which a man shrinks to his
-natural dimensions, and throws aside the ornaments or disguises which
-he feels in privacy to be useless incumbrances, and to lose all effect
-when they become familiar. To be happy at home is the ultimate result
-of all ambition, the end to which every enterprise and labour tends,
-and of which every desire prompts the prosecution. It is indeed at home
-that every man must be known by those who would make a just estimate of
-his virtue or felicity; for smiles and embroidery are alike occasional,
-and the mind is often dressed for show in painted honour and fictitious
-benevolence.--_Johnson._
-
- * * * * *
-
-If it were enacted that only persons of high rank should dine upon three
-dishes, the lower sort would desire to have three; but if commoners were
-permitted to have as many dishes as they pleased, whilst the nobility
-were limited to two, the inferior sort would not exceed that number. An
-order to abolish the wearing of jewels has set a whole country in an
-uproar; but if the order had only prohibited earrings to ladies of the
-first quality, other women would not have desired to wear them.--_The
-Reflector._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The very consciousness of being beloved by the object of our attachment,
-will disarm of its terrors even death itself.--_D’Israeli._
-
- * * * * *
-
-The petty sovereign of an insignificant tribe of North America every
-morning stalks out of his hovel, bids the sun good morrow, and points out
-to him with his finger the course he is to take for the day.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Love labour; if you do not want it for food, you may for physic.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Industry often prevents what lazy folly thinks inevitable. Industry
-argues an ingenuous, great, and generous disposition of soul, by
-unweariedly pursuing things in the fairest light, and disdains to enjoy
-the fruit of other men’s labours without deserving it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-He who lies under the dominion of any one vice must expect the common
-effects of it. If lazy, to be poor; if intemperate, to be diseased; if
-luxurious, to die betimes, &c.
-
- * * * * *
-
-With discretion the vicious preserve their honour, and without it the
-virtuous lose it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A good conscience is the finest opiate.--_Knox._
-
- * * * * *
-
- Printed and published every Saturday by GUNN and CAMERON, at
- the Office of the General Advertiser, No. 6, Church Lane,
- College Green, Dublin.--Agents:--R. GROOMBRIDGE, Panyer Alley,
- Paternoster Row, London; SIMMS and DINHAM, Exchange Street,
- Manchester; C. DAVIES, North John Street, Liverpool; J. DRAKE,
- Birmingham; SLOCOMBE & SIMMS, Leeds; FRAZER and CRAWFORD,
- George Street, Edinburgh; and DAVID ROBERTSON, Trongate,
- Glasgow.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Irish Penny Journal, Vol. 1 No.
-25, December 19, 1840, by Various
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IRISH PENNY JOURNAL, DEC 19, 1840 ***
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Irish Penny Journal, Vol. 1 No. 25,
-December 19, 1840, by Various
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
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-Title: The Irish Penny Journal, Vol. 1 No. 25, December 19, 1840
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-Author: Various
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IRISH PENNY JOURNAL, DEC 19, 1840 ***
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-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1>THE IRISH PENNY JOURNAL.</h1>
-
-<table summary="Headline layout">
- <tr>
- <td class="smcap">Number 25.</td>
- <td class="center">SATURDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1840.</td>
- <td class="right smcap">Volume I.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class="figcenter gap4" style="width: 430px;">
-<img src="images/hogan.jpg" width="430" height="500" alt="Hogan’s monument to Doyle" />
-</div>
-
-<h2>THE MONUMENT TO THE MEMORY OF DR DOYLE, BY HOGAN.</h2>
-
-<p>In presenting our readers with a drawing, made expressly
-for the purpose, of the Monumental Sculpture intended to
-memorise the mortal form of an illustrious Irishman, who
-was beloved and honoured by the great mass of his countrymen,
-and respected for his talents by all, we have done that
-which we trust will give as much pleasure to most of our
-readers, as it has afforded gratification to ourselves.</p>
-
-<p>This monument is indeed a truly interesting one, whether
-considered in reference to its subject&mdash;the character of the
-distinguished individual whose memory it is designed to honour&mdash;the
-circumstances which have given it existence&mdash;or,
-lastly, as a work of high art, the production of an Irishman
-whose talents reflect lustre on his country. It is, however, in
-this last point of view only, that, consistently with the plan
-originally laid down for the conduct of our little periodical,
-we can venture to treat of it; and considered in this way, we
-cannot conceive a subject more worthy of attracting public
-attention or more legitimately within the scope of one of the
-primary objects our Journal was designed to effect&mdash;namely, to
-make our country, and its people, without reference to sect or
-party, more intimately known than they had been previously,
-not only to strangers, but even to Irishmen themselves.</p>
-
-<p>In our present object, therefore, of lending our influence,
-such as it is, to make the merits of a great Irish artist more
-thoroughly known and justly appreciated, by our countrymen
-in particular, than they have hitherto been, we are only discharging
-a duty necessarily imposed upon us; and the pleasure
-which we feel in doing so would be great indeed, if it
-were not diminished by the saddening reflection that it should
-be so necessary in the case of an artist of his eminence. But,
-alas! the scriptural adage, that no man is a prophet in his
-own country, is unfortunately nowhere so strikingly illustrated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
-as in Ireland, and of this fact Mr Hogan is a remarkable example.
-Holding, as he unquestionably does, a high place
-among the most eminent sculptors of Europe, he is as yet unpatronized
-by the aristocracy of his native country&mdash;is indeed
-perhaps scarcely known to them.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Hogan is not, as generally supposed, a native of Cork:
-he was born at Tallow, in the county of Waterford, in 1800,
-where his father carried on the business of a builder. He is
-of good family, both by the paternal and maternal sides; his
-father being of the old Dalcassian tribe of the O’Hogans, the
-chiefs of whom were located in the seventeenth century at Ardcrony,
-in the county of Tipperary, four miles and a half to
-the north of Nenagh, where the remains of their castle and
-church are still to be seen. By the mother’s side he is descended
-from the celebrated Sir Richard Cox, Lord Chief
-Justice of Ireland in the reign of William and Mary, and Lord
-Chancellor in that of Queen Anne, his mother, Frances Cox,
-being the great-granddaughter of that eminent individual.</p>
-
-<p>Having received the ordinary school education, he was
-placed by his father, in the year 1812, under an attorney in
-Cork, named Michael Footte, with a view to his ultimately
-embracing the legal profession, and in this situation he remained
-for two years. This was the most unhappy period
-of his existence; for, like Chantrey, the greatest of British
-sculptors, who was also articled to an attorney, being endowed
-by nature expressly to become an artist, the original
-bias of his mind to drawing and carving had by this time become
-a passion; and despite of the frequent chastisements his
-master bestowed on him, in the exuberance of his zeal to curb
-what he considered his idle propensities, his whole soul was
-given, not to law, but to the Fine Arts, and an artist he became
-accordingly. His father and his master seeing the utter uselessness
-of any further attempts to divert his mind from its
-apparently destined course, he was released from his irksome
-employment, and at the age of fourteen entered the office of
-Mr Deane, now Sir Thomas Deane, of Cork, as an apprentice,
-where he was soon employed as a draughtsman and
-carver of models, with a view to his becoming ultimately
-an architect. In Mr Deane he found a master who had the
-intellect to enable him to appreciate his talents, and the good
-feeling to induce him to encourage them; and the first use he
-made of the chisels with which his patron supplied him, was
-to produce a carving in wood of a female skeleton the size
-of life, on which Dr Woodroffe for a season was able to lecture
-his pupils, as if it were, what it actually seems, a real skeleton
-in form and colour. Under the instruction of this gentleman
-Mr Hogan studied anatomy for several years, during
-which period he made for his improvement many carvings in
-wood of hands and feet, and also essayed his talents on a figure
-of Minerva the size of life, which still remains over the entrance
-of the Life and Fire Insurance Office in the South Mall.</p>
-
-<p>But though Mr Hogan was thus employed in pursuits congenial
-to his tastes, and to a great degree conducive to his
-future eminence as a sculptor, the idea of embracing sculpture
-as a profession did not occur to him for several years
-after, nor were the requisite means of study for that profession
-provided for the student in Cork at this time. There
-was as yet in that city no Academy of Arts or other institution
-like those in Dublin, provided, for the use of students, with
-those objects which are so essential to the formation of a correct
-taste in the higher departments of the Fine Arts, namely,
-a selection of casts from the antique statues: and until such
-subjects for study were acquired, the efforts of genius, however
-ardent, in the pursuit of beauty and excellence, were necessarily
-blind and fortuitous. Happily, however, this desideratum
-was at length supplied in Cork, where a Society for
-Promoting the Fine Arts was formed in February 1816; and
-to this Society the Prince Regent, in 1818, through the intercession
-of the late Marquis of Conyngham and other Irish
-noblemen who had influence with him, was induced to present
-a selection of the finest casts from the antique statues, which
-had been sent him as a gift by the Roman Pontiff, and the
-value of which the Prince but little appreciated. The result
-was not only beyond anything that the most sanguine could
-have anticipated in the rapid creation of artists of first-rate
-excellence, but also in establishing the fact that among our
-own countrymen the finest genius for art abundantly exists,
-and that it only requires the requisite objects for study, with
-encouragement, to develope it. The presence of these newly
-acquired treasures of ancient art, which consisted of one hundred
-and fifteen subjects selected by Canova, and cast under
-his direction, kindled a flame in Mr Hogan’s mind never to
-be extinguished but with life, and he immediately applied
-himself to their study with his whole heart and soul. Thus
-occupied he remained till 1823, surrounded and excited to
-emulation by the kindred spirits of Mac Clise, Scottowe,
-Ford&mdash;the glorious Ford!&mdash;Buckley the architect, equally
-glorious&mdash;Keller, his own brother Richard, and many other
-of lesser names&mdash;many of whom, alas for their own and their
-country’s fame! paid the price of their early distinction with
-their lives. Well may the people of Cork feel proud of this
-constellation of youthful genius&mdash;a brighter one was never assembled
-together in recent times.</p>
-
-<p>The period, however, had now arrived when the eagle wing
-of Hogan was to try its strength; and most fortunately for
-him, an accident at this time brought to Cork a man more than
-ordinarily gifted with the power to assist him in its flight.
-The person we allude to was the late William Paulett Carey,
-an Irishman no less distinguished for his abilities as a critical
-writer on works of art, than for his ardent zeal in aiding the
-struggles of genius, by making their merit known to the world.
-In August 1823, this gentleman, on the occasion of paying a
-visit to the gallery of the Cork Society, “accidentally saw a
-small figure of a Torso, carved in pine timber, which had fallen
-down under one of the benches. On taking it up,” to continue
-Mr Carey’s own interesting narrative, “he was struck by the
-correctness and good taste of the design, and the newness of the
-execution. He was surprised to find a piece of so much excellence,
-apparently fresh from the tool, in a place where the
-arts had been so recently introduced, and where he did not
-expect to meet anything but the crude essays of uninstructed
-beginners. On inquiry he was informed it was the work of a
-young native of Cork, named Hogan, who had been apprenticed
-to the trade of a carpenter under Mr Deane, an eminent
-builder, and had at his leisure hours studied from the Papal
-casts, and practised carving and modelling with intense application.
-Hogan was then at work above stairs, in a small
-apartment in the Academy. The stranger immediately paid
-him a visit, and was astonished at the rich composition of a
-<cite>Triumph of Silenus</cite>, consisting of fifteen figures, about fourteen
-inches high, designed in an antique style, by this self-taught
-artist, and cut in bas-relief, in pine timber. He also
-saw various studies of hands and feet; a grand head of an
-Apostle, of a small size; a copy of Michael Angelo’s mask;
-some groups in bas-relief after designs by Barry; and a female
-skeleton, the full size, after nature; all cut with delicacy and
-beauty, in the same material. A copy of the antique <cite>Silenus</cite>
-and <cite>Satyrs</cite>, in stone, was chiselled with great spirit; and the
-model of a Roman soldier, about two feet high, would have
-done credit to a veteran sculptor. A number of his drawings
-in black and white chalks, from the Papal casts, marked his
-progressive improvement and sense of ideal excellence. The
-defects in his performances were such as are inseparable from
-an early stage of untaught study, and were far overbalanced
-by their merits. When his work for his master was over for
-the day, he usually employed his hours in the evening in these
-performances. The female skeleton had been all executed
-during the long winter nights.”</p>
-
-<p>Becoming thus acquainted with Mr Hogan’s abilities, Mr
-Carey, with that surprising prophetic judgment with which
-he was so eminently gifted, at once predicted the young
-sculptor’s future fame, and proclaimed his genius in every
-quarter in which he hoped it might prove serviceable to him.
-He commenced by writing a series of letters, which were inserted
-in the Cork Advertiser, “addressed to the nobility, gentry,
-and opulent merchants, entreating them to raise a fund
-by subscription, to defray the expense of sending Hogan to
-Italy, and supporting him there for three or four years, to afford
-him the advantages of studying at Rome.” But for some time
-these letters proved ineffectual, and would probably have failed
-totally in their object but for Mr Carey’s untiring zeal. Acting
-under his direction, Mr Hogan was induced to address a letter
-to that noble patron of British genius, the late Lord de
-Tabley, then Sir John Fleming Leicester, and to send him at
-the same time two specimens of his carvings, “as the humble
-offering of a young self-taught artist.” This letter, which was
-backed by one from Mr Carey himself, was responded to at
-once in a letter written in the kindest spirit, and which contained
-an enclosure of twenty-five pounds as Sir John’s subscription
-to the proposed fund. This was the first money actually
-paid in, and subscriptions soon followed from others.
-Through Mr Carey’s enthusiastic representations, the Royal
-Irish Institution was induced to contribute the sum of one hundred
-pounds, and the Royal Dublin Society to vote twenty-five<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
-pounds for some specimens of his carvings which Mr
-Hogan submitted to their notice. These acts of liberality were
-honourable to those public bodies; yet, as Mr Carey well observed,
-it was to Lord de Tabley’s generosity that Mr Hogan’s
-gratitude was most due. Here, as he said, “was a young man of
-genius in obscurity, and wholly unknown to his lordship, rescued
-from adversity in the unpromising morning of life&mdash;a
-self-taught artist built up to fame and fortune by his munificence&mdash;a
-torch lighted, which I hope will burn bright for ages,
-to the honour of the empire. <span class="smcap">Hogan</span> may receive thousands
-of pounds from future patrons, but it is to Lord de <span class="smcap">Tabley’s</span>
-timely encouragement that he will be indebted for every thing.”</p>
-
-<p>The subscriptions collected for Mr Hogan amounted in all
-to the sum of two hundred and fifty pounds; and thus provided,
-he set out for Italy, visiting London on his way, for the
-purpose of presenting letters to Sir Thomas Lawrence and
-Sir Francis Chantrey, which Lord de Tabley had given him,
-in the hope that they would procure him recommendatory
-letters from those great artists that would be serviceable to
-him in Rome. But these introductions proved of little value
-to him. Chantrey expressed regret that he knew no one in
-the “Eternal City” to whom he could give him a letter; and
-though Lawrence kindly gave him an introduction to the
-Duchess of Devonshire, that distinguished lady had died a few
-days before Mr Hogan reached Rome; “so that,” as Mr
-Carey remarks, “he found himself an entire stranger, with
-little knowledge of the world, without acquaintance or patron,
-and incapable of speaking the language, at the moment
-of commencing his studies in Italy.”</p>
-
-<p>But the young sculptor, on leaving his native country, was
-provided by Lord de Tabley with something more valuable
-than these letters to British artists&mdash;namely, a commission to
-execute a statue in marble for him, as soon as he should think
-himself qualified by his preparatory studies for the undertaking.</p>
-
-<p>The statue, which was to launch the young sculptor into
-professional life in Italy, was commenced soon after, but was
-not completed before his noble patron had paid the debt of
-nature. Its subject, which is taken from Gessner’s Death of
-Abel, is <span class="smcap">Eve</span>, who shortly after her expulsion from Paradise
-picks up a dead bird, which being the first inanimate creature
-that she has seen, fills her with emotions of surprise, terror, and
-pity. This statue, which is the size of life, and which is of exquisite
-beauty, is now at Lord de Tabley’s seat in Cheshire.</p>
-
-<p>While this statue was in progress, Mr Hogan conceived the
-subject and completed the model of his second great work&mdash;one
-in which the peculiar powers of his genius were more
-fully developed, and on the execution of which, from peculiar
-circumstances, he entered with the most excited enthusiasm.
-During the first year of his residence at Rome, Mr Hogan
-happening to be present at an evening meeting of artists of
-eminence, the conversation turned on the difficulty of producing
-any thing in sculpture perfectly original; and to Mr
-Hogan’s astonishment, the celebrated British sculptor Gibson
-stated as his opinion that it was impossible now to imagine an
-attitude or expression in the human figure which had not been
-already appropriated by the great sculptors of antiquity.
-This opinion, though coming from one to whom our countryman
-then looked up, appeared to him a strange and unsound
-one, and with the diffidence of an artist whose powers were
-as yet untried, he ventured to express his dissent from it; when
-Gibson, astonished at his presumption, somewhat pettishly replied,
-“Then let us see if <em>you</em> are able to produce such an
-original work!” The challenge thus publicly offered could
-not be refused by one of Hogan’s temperament; and the young
-sculptor, stung with the taunt, lost no time in entering upon a
-work which was to test his abilities as an artist, and to rescue
-his character from the imputation of vanity and rashness.
-Under such feelings Mr Hogan toiled day and night at his
-work, till he submitted to the artists in whose presence the
-challenge had been offered, the result of his labours&mdash;his
-statue of the Drunken Faun&mdash;a work which the great Thorwaldsen
-pronounced a miracle of art, and which, if Hogan
-had never produced another, would have been alone sufficient
-to immortalize his name. It is to be regretted that this
-figure, which has all the beauty and truth of the antique
-sculpture, combined with the most perfect originality, and
-which Mr Hogan himself has recently expressed his conviction
-that it is beyond his power to excel, should never have been
-executed in marble; but a cast of it, presented by Lord de
-Tabley to the Royal Irish Institution (though intended by
-Mr Hogan for the Dublin Society), may still be seen in their
-deserted hall.</p>
-
-<p>We have given these, as we trust, not uninteresting details
-of Mr Hogan’s early life, at greater length than the limits assigned
-to our article can well allow, and we must notice his
-subsequent career in briefer terms. Though enrolled now
-among the resident sculptors in Rome, his difficulties were not
-yet over; and in spite of the most enthusiastic efforts on his part,
-they might and probably would have been ineffectual in sustaining
-him, if no friendly aid had come to his assistance. In
-two years after his arrival in Rome, or at the end of the year
-1825, Hogan found himself again in a state of embarrassment,
-without a commission, his funds exhausted, or at least reduced
-to a state inadequate to the necessary outlay of a sculptor in
-the purchase of marble, the rent of a studio, and the payment
-of living models. For his extrication from these difficulties
-he was again indebted to the liberality of Lord de Tabley and
-the zeal of his advocate Mr Carey, by whom a second subscription
-was collected, chiefly in England, amounting to one
-hundred and fifty pounds; of which sum twenty-five pounds
-was contributed by Lord de Tabley in the first instance, and
-twenty-five pounds by the Royal Irish Institution. Trifling
-as this amount was, it proved sufficient for its object, and Mr
-Hogan was never again necessitated to receive pecuniary assistance
-from the public.</p>
-
-<p>He applied himself forthwith to the production of a marble
-figure intended for his friend and former master Sir Thomas
-Deane, but which when finished his necessities obliged him to
-dispose of to the present Lord Powerscourt, and for which he
-received one hundred pounds, being barely the cost of the
-marble and roughing out or boasting. This statue, which is
-about half the size of life, is now preserved in Powerscourt
-House; and we may remark, that it is the only work of our
-countryman in the possession of an Irish nobleman. His next
-important work was the exquisite statue of the Dead Christ,
-now placed beneath the altar of the Roman Catholic church
-in Clarendon Street. This work was originally ordered for
-a chapel in Cork by the Rev. Mr O’Keeffe; but that gentleman,
-on its arrival in Dublin, not being able to raise the funds
-required for its payment, permitted Mr Hogan to dispose of
-it to the clergymen of Clarendon Street, who paid for it the
-sum originally stipulated, namely, four hundred and fifty
-pounds; and we need scarcely add, that this statue is one of
-the most interesting objects of art adorning our metropolitan
-city. Mr Hogan subsequently executed a duplicate of this
-statue, but with some changes in the design, for the city of
-Cork; but we regret to have to add that he has been as yet
-but very inadequately rewarded for his labours on that work,
-a sum of two hundred and thirty-seven pounds being still due
-him, and the amount which he has actually received (two hundred
-pounds) being barely the cost of the marble and rough
-workmanship.</p>
-
-<p>The execution of this statue was followed by that of a large
-sepulchral monument in <i lang="it">basso relievo</i> to the memory of the late
-Dr Collins, Roman Catholic Bishop of Cloyne&mdash;a figure of
-Religion holding in her lap a medallion portrait of the bishop.
-For this work Mr Hogan was to have received two hundred
-pounds, but there is still a balance of thirty pounds due to him.</p>
-
-<p>We next find Mr Hogan engaged on a second work for our
-city&mdash;the <i lang="it">Pieta</i>, or figures of the Virgin and the Redeemer, of
-colossal size, executed in plaster for the Rev. Dr Flanagan,
-Roman Catholic Rector of the chapel in Francis Street, which
-it now adorns. Of this work, an engraving, with a masterly
-description and eulogium from the pen of the Marchese Melchiori,
-a great authority in matters of critical taste in the
-fine arts, has been published in the <cite>Ape Italiana</cite>&mdash;a work
-of the highest authority, published monthly in Rome; and we
-should state for the honour of our country, that our own Hogan
-and the sculptor Gibson are the only British artists whose
-works have as yet found a place in it.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Hogan’s subsequent works, exclusive of a number of
-busts, may now be briefly enumerated. First, a marble figure
-of the late Archbishop of Paris, about two and a half feet
-high, executed for the Lord de Clifford; second, the Judgment
-of Paris&mdash;two figures in marble about the same height
-as the last&mdash;for General Sir James Riall, an Irish baronet resident
-in Bath; third, a monumental <i lang="it">alto relievo</i> to the memory
-of Miss Farrell of Dublin, executed for her mother, and
-considered by Gibson as the best of all our sculptor’s works;
-fourth, a <i lang="it">Genio</i> on a sarcophagus, a monument for the family
-of the late Mr Murphy of Cork; and, lastly, the Monument to
-Dr Doyle, on which we have now to utter a few remarks.</p>
-
-<p>Of the general design of this noble monument our prefixed
-illustration will afford a tolerably correct idea; but it would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
-require more than one illustration of this kind to convey an
-adequate notion of its various beauties and merits, for there
-is scarcely a point in which it can be viewed in which it is not
-equally effective and striking. The subject, as a sculptural
-one should be, is of the most extreme simplicity, and yet of the
-most impressive interest&mdash;a Christian prelate in the act of
-offering up a last appeal to heaven for the regeneration of his
-country, which is personified by a beautiful female figure, who
-is represented in an attitude of dejection at his side. In this
-combination of the real and the allegorical there is nothing
-obscure or unintelligible even to the most illiterate mind. In
-the figure of the prostrate female we recognise at a glance the
-attributes of our country, and there existed no necessity for
-the name “Erin,” inserted in very questionable taste upon her
-zone, to determine her character. She is represented as resting
-on one knee, her body bent and humbled, yet in her majestic
-form retaining a fullness of beauty and dignity of character;
-her turret-crowned head resting on one arm, while
-the other, with an expression of melancholy abandonment, reclines
-on and sustains her ancient harp. In the male figure
-which stands beside her in an attitude of the most unaffected
-grace and dignity, we see a personification of the sublime in the
-Episcopal character. He stands erect, his enthusiastic and
-deeply intellectual countenance directed upwards imploringly,
-while with one hand he touches with delicate affection his
-earthly mistress, and with the other, stretched forth with
-passionate devotion, he appeals to heaven for her protection.
-This is true and enduring poetry; and, as expressive of the
-sentiment of religious patriotism unalloyed by any selfish consideration,
-is far superior to the thought which Moore has so
-exquisitely expressed in the well-known lines&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“In my last humble prayer to the spirit above,</div>
-<div class="verse">Thy name shall be mingled with mine!”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Such is the touching poetical sentiment embodied in this
-work, which, considered merely as a work of art, has merits
-above all praise. In the beauty of its forms, its classical
-purity of design, its simplicity and freedom from affectation
-or mannerism, its exquisite finish and characteristic execution,
-and its pervading grace, truth, and naturalness, it is beyond
-question the finest production of art in monumental
-sculpture that Irish genius has hitherto achieved; and, taken
-all and all, is, as we honestly believe, without a rival in any
-work of the same class in the British empire.</p>
-
-<p>We regret to have to state that Mr Hogan is, as we are informed,
-as yet unpaid for this great national work, or that at
-least there is more than a moiety of the sum agreed for, which
-was one thousand pounds, remaining due to him. But surely
-his country, which has the deepest interest in sustaining him
-in his career of glory, will not suffer him to depart from her
-shores without fulfilling her part of a compact with one who
-has so nobly completed his. We cannot believe it.</p>
-
-<p>It will be seen by a retrospective glance at the details which
-we have given of Mr Hogan’s labours during the past seventeen
-years in which he has been toiling as a professional
-artist, that those labours have been any thing but commensurately
-rewarded; they have indeed been barely sufficient to
-enable him to sustain existence. But brighter prospects are
-opening upon him for the future. His character as a sculptor
-is now established beyond the possibility of controversy. His
-merits have been recently recognised and honoured by the
-highest tribunal in the City of the Arts with a tribute of approbation
-never before bestowed on a native of the British Isles:
-he has been elected unanimously, and without any solicitation
-or anticipation on his part, a member of the oldest Academy
-of the Fine Arts in Europe&mdash;that which enrolled amongst
-its members the divine Raphael, and all the other illustrious
-artists of the age of Leo, and which holds its meetings upon
-their graves&mdash;the Academy of the Virtuosi del Pantheon.
-His fellow-countrymen are also beginning to have a just appreciation
-of his merits, and are coming forward nobly to supply
-him with employment for future years; and when he returns
-to his Roman studio, it will be to labour on works worthy of
-his country’s liberality, and calculated to raise her fame
-amongst the civilized nations of the world. Need we add, that
-he has our most ardent wishes for his future success and happiness!</p>
-
-<p class="right">P.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p>For the satisfaction of our readers we are induced to append to the preceding
-notice of Mr Hogan the following list of some of the principal commissions
-which he has recently received in Ireland;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>The Monument to the late Mr Secretary Drummond.</p>
-
-<p>A Statue of the late Mr William Crawford of Cork, for which Mr Hogan
-is to receive L.1000.</p>
-
-<p>A monumental alto relievo, consisting of three figures, to the memory of
-the late Mr William Beamish, for Blackrock Chapel, Cork&mdash;L.650.</p>
-
-<p>Monument to the late Dr Brinkley, Bishop of Cloyne. A colossal figure
-in relievo for the Cathedral of Cloyne.</p>
-
-<p>An alto relievo for the Convent at Rathfarnham.</p>
-
-<p>An alto relievo for the Chapel at Ross, county of Wexford, commissioned
-from John Maher, Esq. M. P.&mdash;&amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h2 class="gap4">ON ANIMAL TAMING.</h2>
-
-<h3>FIRST ARTICLE.</h3>
-
-<p>That all animals, however fierce and ungovernable may be
-their natural dispositions, have nevertheless implanted by a
-wise Providence within their breasts a certain awe, a vague,
-indefinable dread of man, which, although meeting with him
-for the first time, will induce them to fly his presence, or at
-all events shun encounter, is, we think, a fact which no observer
-of nature will deny. This instinct of submission to
-human beings exists among all creatures, and the greater the
-intelligence they possess, the more powerful is its operation.
-When we meet with instances of a nature calculated to overturn
-this theory&mdash;such as wild animals attacking and destroying
-travellers, or preying upon the shepherd as he guards his
-flock, with others of a similar description&mdash;instead of hastily
-presuming upon the falsity of the above position, we should
-rather seek for some explanation of the reasons which in these
-cases checked for the time the workings of the animal’s natural
-instinct. These will be for the most part easily enough
-discovered, if sought for in a spirit of impartial inquiry. The
-lion and the tiger are prompted by natural instinct to shun the
-haunts and the presence of man&mdash;they choose for their lairs
-dark and impenetrable forests&mdash;they select for their habitation
-a situation whither man has not as yet approached&mdash;and according
-as the work of settlement and cultivation advances,
-they retreat before it into their dark and gloomy fastnesses.</p>
-
-<p>Does the traveller encounter a lion or a tiger? The animal
-is prompted by nature to give place to him, and usually slinks
-off, growling with the thirst for blood, but still fearing to
-attack <span class="smcapuc">MAN</span>. The shouts of women and children suffice to
-scare the fierce and rapacious wolves, as they descend in
-troops from the mountains to appease their hunger with victims
-from the flocks of the shepherds. The bear meets with
-the bold hunter or woodcutter in the American backwoods,
-but is never known to attack him, unless the instinct of submission
-to man is overruled by other instincts for the time
-more imperative in their demands. True, if the lion be <em>hungry</em>
-when the traveller shall cross his path, he will sometimes,
-though such instances are of rare occurrence, attack and devour
-him. True, if the wolves are unable to satisfy their
-appetite by other means, they will attack and devour human
-beings; and if the bear be likewise rendered furious by the
-calls of hunger, she will treat the woodsman with little
-ceremony. Still these instances only show that hunger overcomes
-fear&mdash;an explanation which no one can refuse to admit.
-What indeed will not the gnawings of hunger effect? Has it
-not caused fathers to butcher their sons, mothers to devour
-the infant at their breast? When capable, then, of overcoming
-the most powerful of instincts, maternal affection, and
-that too in the teeth of reason, how can we wonder at its
-overcoming an inferior instinct, and that in a brute animal
-where there existed nothing to be overcome beyond that instinct?
-I might write a vast deal upon this subject; but my
-object is merely to show, at starting, that an instinctive awe
-of man, and a disposition to yield to his authority, is inherent
-in the lower animals. This, then, being the case, it will readily
-be perceived that the domestication of any animal by
-man only requires that he should carefully remove all obstacles
-to the operation of this instinctive principle; and on the
-other hand, employ suitable means to strengthen and establish
-it. There are, doubtless, but few of my readers who
-have not witnessed the performances of Van Amburgh, and
-likewise those of Van Buren with Batty’s collection. They
-have, I am sure, been greatly astonished at the degree of subjection
-to which these wild animals were reduced, and they
-are doubtless curious to learn how this end was attained.
-As I happened to make myself acquainted with the mode in
-which the subjection of these fierce brutes was effected, I am
-happy to be able to render them some information. The
-treatment was simple enough. It consisted mainly of two ingredients&mdash;1st,
-ample feeding, in order that the instinct of
-appetite should not present itself in opposition to that of dread<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
-of man; and, 2d, liberal chastisement and severe blows on the
-slightest appearance of rebellion, in order to strengthen and
-firmly establish their awe of him.</p>
-
-<p>I myself have devoted a good deal of time to the domestication
-of animals, and by following out the two principles just
-laid down, I found myself invariably successful. The polecat,
-although of inconsiderable size, is an animal of infinitely
-greater fierceness than the tiger; yet I had one so thoroughly
-domesticated that it was permitted to enjoy perfect liberty.
-I succeeded equally with the fox, the badger, and the <em>otter</em>, as
-a paper which recently appeared in the Penny Journal was
-designed to show. In fact, I should say that mere <em>fierceness</em>
-is but a very slight obstacle to domestication&mdash;<em>timidity</em> is much
-harder to be overcome. The timid races of animals require
-a mode of treatment directly opposed to the above. They
-require to have their <em>dread</em> of man diminished, and their <em>boldness</em>
-encouraged. If you wish to tame a very timid animal,
-instead of supplying it with food you must let it fast, in order
-to render it so bold with hunger that it will eat in your presence
-and from your hand. If you can get its confidence
-raised to such a degree that it will bite you or attempt to do
-so, so much the better&mdash;those little vices will afterwards be
-easily eradicated. I have succeeded in familiarizing the most
-timid creatures&mdash;the rat and the mouse, for instance. The
-public has already had an account of how I succeeded with
-the former of these animals in the pages of the “Medical
-Press” and “Naturalist.” Some of these days I shall give
-a paper on the latter in the Penny Journal.</p>
-
-<p>Van Amburgh has done much with his animals; but in consequence
-of exhibiting with specimens not as yet perfectly
-subdued, he has met with some severe accidents. More caution
-and less haste would have prevented these. One of the
-principal ingredients that should enter into the composition
-of an animal tamer, is <span class="smcapuc">COURAGE</span>. If the animal you are endeavouring
-to domesticate perceive that you fear it&mdash;and animals
-are instinctively sharp-sighted&mdash;from that instant all
-chance of control ceases. You must be prepared to endure
-bites, scratches, &amp;c. with, at all events apparent, recklessness,
-and should never suffer any thing to delay your chastisement:
-the severer it is, the less frequently will you have to repeat
-it. Van Amburgh possesses this ingredient in an eminent
-degree. I once saw him exhibiting with his superb Barbary
-lion, since dead; as he left the cage, the animal rushed at
-him, and succeeded in inflicting a sharp scratch upon his hand.
-Now, had Van Amburgh displayed fear, or in short acted
-otherwise than he did, his reign had been over, and the lion
-would in all probability have renewed his attack the next opportunity,
-and have killed him. But what did he do? He
-returned into the cage, and advancing sternly and undauntedly
-towards the lion, saluted him with a shower of blows over the
-head and face, with the small iron rod which he always carried
-with him. And mark the result. The brute at once yielded,
-quailed before his master, who, planting a foot upon the prostrate
-body of his late assailant, coolly wiped the blood from
-his hand, amidst the deafening plaudits of the spectators, who
-had witnessed the appalling scene with feelings more easily
-imagined than described.</p>
-
-<p>There is another description of animal taming, which I
-must not omit to mention, viz, by charms or drugs. There
-were, and are indeed still to be met with, although more
-rarely than formerly, persons who profess to be able, by some
-secret spell or charm, to tame the fiercest horse, or calm the
-fury of the most ferocious watch-dog. There are also persons
-who follow the trade of rat-catching, and pretend that
-by means of certain drugs they can entice away all the rats
-from the premises to which they are called in to exercise their
-skill. There are also a set of men in India and Persia who
-profess to charm serpents, and draw them from their holes.
-Of these last it is not at present my design to speak. I may,
-however, return to them in a future paper.</p>
-
-<p>The first of these, or those who pretend to possess the
-power of quelling the spirit of the horse, or appeasing the vigilant
-fury of the dog, are now but few in number, and very
-seldom to be met with. They abounded more in Ireland than
-they did in the sister kingdom, and were called “whisperers.”
-Perhaps the best mode in which I can bring them and their
-practices before my readers, is by giving them an account of
-the last and most celebrated whisperer that we recollect. His
-name was James Sullivan, and he possessed the power of
-taming the most furious horse, if left alone with him for about
-half an hour. The name of this singular man is recorded by
-Townsend in his “Survey of the County of Cork,” and we shall
-quote his account of Sullivan’s performances, to which he states
-himself to have been an eye-witness:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“James Sullivan was a native of the county of Cork, and an
-awkward ignorant rustic of the lowest class, generally known
-by the appellation of ‘the Whisperer;’ and his profession was
-horse-breaking. The credulity of the vulgar bestowed that
-epithet upon him from an opinion that he communicated his
-wishes to the animal by means of a whisper, and the singularity
-of his method gave some colour to the superstitious belief.
-As far as the sphere of his control extended, the boast
-of <i lang="la">veni, vidi, vici</i>, was more justly claimed by James Sullivan
-than by Cæsar, or even Bonaparte himself. How his art was
-acquired, or in what it consisted, is likely to remain for ever
-unknown, as he has lately left the world without divulging it.
-His son, who follows the same occupation, possesses but a
-small portion of the art, having either never learned its true
-secret, or being incapable of putting it in practice. The
-wonder of his skill consisted in the short time requisite to accomplish
-his design, which was performed in private, and
-without any apparent means of coercion. Every description
-of horse, or even mule, whether previously broke, or unhandled,
-whatever their peculiar vices or ill habits might have
-been, submitted without show of resistance to the magical influence
-of his art, and in the short space of half an hour became
-gentle and tractable. The effect, though instantaneously produced,
-was generally durable; though more submissive to him
-than to others, yet they seemed to have acquired a docility
-unknown before. When sent for to tame a vicious horse, he
-directed the stable in which he and the object of his experiment
-were placed, to be shut, with orders not to open the
-door until a signal was given. After a <i lang="fr">tete-a-tete</i> between
-him and the horse for about half an hour, during which
-little or no bustle was heard, the signal was made; and
-on opening the door, the horse was seen lying down, and
-the man by his side, playing familiarly with him, like a
-child with a puppy dog. From that time he was found
-perfectly willing to submit to discipline, however repugnant
-to his nature before. Some saw his skill tried on a horse
-which could never before be brought to stand for a smith to
-shoe him. The day after Sullivan’s half-hour lecture, I went,
-not without some incredulity, to the smith’s shop, with many
-other curious spectators, where we were eye-witnesses of the
-complete success of his art. This, too, had been a troop
-horse, and it was supposed, not without reason, that after regimental
-discipline had failed, no other would be found availing.
-I observed that the animal seemed afraid whenever Sullivan
-either spoke or looked at him. How that extraordinary
-ascendancy could have been obtained, it is difficult to conjecture.
-In common cases this mysterious preparation was unnecessary.
-He seemed to possess an instinctive power of inspiring
-awe, the result perhaps of natural intrepidity, in which
-I believe a great part of his art consisted; though the circumstance
-of the <i lang="fr">tete-a-tete</i> shows that upon particular occasions
-something more must have been added to it. A faculty like
-this would in other hands have made a fortune, and great offers
-have been made to him for the exercise of his art abroad;
-but hunting, and attachment to his native soil, were his ruling
-passions. He lived at home in the style most agreeable to
-his disposition, and nothing could induce him to quit Dunhallow
-and the foxhounds.” Other whisperers have lived since
-Sullivan, but none of them have attained an equal degree of
-fame. I met with one some years ago of the name of O’Hara,
-and I can truly affirm that his performances were indeed wonderful,
-and precisely similar to those of Sullivan. How
-O’Hara discovered the secret, I know not; neither am I sure
-that it was identical with that possessed by Sullivan. On one
-occasion, while under the influence of liquor, O’Hara was
-heard to declare that the secret lay in <em>rocking</em> the horse; but
-on another, when equally tipsy, he mentioned <em>biting</em> the animal’s
-ear. It is already I believe known to those acquainted with
-horses, that by grasping the shoulder with one hand just where
-the mane begins, and laying the other with firmness upon the
-crupper, and then swaying the animal backwards and forwards,
-beginning with a very gentle motion and gradually increasing
-it, you will in a few minutes be able to throw the horse on his
-side with a comparatively trifling degree of exertion; and it
-is certain that this treatment is frequently resorted to by
-knowing jockeys to break the spirit of a stubborn horse; for
-after having been thrown twice, or at most thrice, the spirit
-of the animal seems wholly subdued, and he appears possessed
-with the most unqualified respect and dread of the person who
-threw him. This was in all probability what O’Hara meant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
-by <em>rocking</em>, and I have little doubt but that this was one of
-the component parts, at all events, of the treatment resorted
-to by the whisperers. As to <em>biting the ear</em>, I have seen this
-tried, and that successfully. If you succeed in getting the
-ear of the most vicious horse between your teeth, and bite it
-with all your force, you will find the rage of the animal suddenly
-subside, his spirit will appear to have forsaken him, and
-a word or a look from you will cause him to start and tremble
-with excess of terror. Once the ferocity of an animal is
-removed, it is an easy matter to conciliate his affections.
-May not these two modes of treatment combined, or one or
-the other, as the occasion seemed to require, have constituted
-the secret of the wonder-working whisperers? The suggestion
-is at least plausible, and the experiment should be fully
-tried ere it be rejected.</p>
-
-<p>In an article which appeared lately on the subject of animal
-taming in the <cite>Times</cite> newspaper, mention is made of Mr
-King, owner of the “learned horse” at present exhibiting in
-London. This person states that his secret depends upon
-pressing a certain nerve in the horse’s mouth, which he calls
-the “nerve of susceptibility.” May not the set of whispering
-have likewise depended upon compressing with the teeth some
-similar nerve in the ear?</p>
-
-<p class="right">H. D. R.</p>
-
-<h2 class="gap4">RELICS.<br />
-<span class="smaller">BY J. U. U.</span></h2>
-
-<p>“Raphael was buried in the Pantheon (Sta. Maria della
-Rotunda), in a chapel which he had himself endowed, and near
-the place where his betrothed bride had been laid. The immediate
-neighbourhood was afterwards selected by other
-painters as their place of rest. Baldassane Peruzzi, Giovanni
-da Udine, Pierino del Vaga, Taddeo Zuccaro, and others,
-are buried near. No question had ever existed as to the precise
-spot where the remains of the master lay; but a few years
-since the Roman antiquaries began to raise doubts even respecting
-the church in which Raphael was buried. In the
-end, permission was obtained to make actual search; and
-Vasari’s account was in this instance verified. The tomb was
-found as he describes it, behind the altar itself of the chapel
-above mentioned. Four views of the tomb and its contents
-were engraved from drawings by Cammucini, and thus preserve
-the appearance that presented itself. The shroud had
-been fastened with a number of metal rings and points; some
-of these were kept by the sculptor Fabrio of Rome, who is also
-in possession of casts from the skull and right hand. Passavant
-remarks, judging from the cast, that the skull was of a
-singularly fine form. The bones of the hand were all perfect,
-but they crumbled into dust after the mould was taken. The
-skeleton measured about five feet seven inches. The coffin
-was extremely narrow, indicating a very slender frame. The
-precious relics were ultimately restored to the same spot,
-after being placed in a magnificent sarcophagus, presented by
-the present Pope.”&mdash;<cite>Quarterly Review.</cite></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Ay, there are glorious things even in the dust</div>
-<div class="verse">Which still must ever from the human heart</div>
-<div class="verse">Win homage next devotion. ’Tis in vain</div>
-<div class="verse">To ask the wherefore, or demand what are they</div>
-<div class="verse">Amid the keen realities of life?</div>
-<div class="verse">Old coin, or broken casque, or fretted stone&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">The waste of Time&mdash;the rack upon life’s shore</div>
-<div class="verse">Thrown up by the spent waves of centuries&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">They have no meaning in the vulgar tongue;</div>
-<div class="verse">Their very uses know them not&mdash;things past</div>
-<div class="verse">Into the chaos of forgotten forms.</div>
-<div class="verse">But here the root of this deep error lies.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">The world’s deep Lethé onward blindly glides,</div>
-<div class="verse">A perishable Present! glorious only</div>
-<div class="verse">Because no Future and no Past are seen</div>
-<div class="verse">To scare or shame its dreamy voyager.</div>
-<div class="verse">In dull forgetfulness the error lies,</div>
-<div class="verse">That hath no feeling of the mighty Past</div>
-<div class="verse">Espoused to sense, and purblind as the mole</div>
-<div class="verse">To all that meets the intellectual eye:</div>
-<div class="verse">To such Iona is a heap of stones,</div>
-<div class="verse">And Marathon a desert …</div>
-<div class="verse indent12">… O, how changed!</div>
-<div class="verse">The meanest thing on which great Time hath set</div>
-<div class="verse">His awful stamp (the long-surviving thought</div>
-<div class="verse">Left by the mind of other days) appears</div>
-<div class="verse">To knowledge and the gaze of memory,</div>
-<div class="verse">More instantaneous than those words of power</div>
-<div class="verse">Which ancient legends say the tomb obeyed&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">The broken pillar, and the moss-grown pile,</div>
-<div class="verse">Dilate into antique magnificence:</div>
-<div class="verse">At once the stern old rampart crowns its height&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">The donjon keep, the tower of ancient pride,</div>
-<div class="verse">The rock-built fortress of old robber kings,</div>
-<div class="verse">Start into life, and from their portals pour</div>
-<div class="verse">Mailed foray forth, or pomp of feudal war.</div>
-<div class="verse">The temple swells from vacancy, o’erarching</div>
-<div class="verse">With pillared roof, and dim solemnity,</div>
-<div class="verse">The worship of old time. The dry bones live</div>
-<div class="verse">Of ancient ages: monarch, sage, and bard,</div>
-<div class="verse">Stand in their living lineaments, invested</div>
-<div class="verse">With power, or wisdom, or the gift of song.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">These still are common ruins&mdash;the remains</div>
-<div class="verse">Of those who were the vulgar of their day,</div>
-<div class="verse">Who battled, built, and traded, and so died,</div>
-<div class="verse">Leaving no trace but nameless monuments,</div>
-<div class="verse">The cast attire of ages, which but serve</div>
-<div class="verse">To show the present how the past went mad,</div>
-<div class="verse">And, like Cassandra, prophesy in vain.</div>
-<div class="verse">The earth yet bears more glorious vestiges</div>
-<div class="verse">Of Time’s illustrious few, whose memory</div>
-<div class="verse">Is greater than the greatest thing that lives&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Haloed by veneration, wonder, love&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Whose very tombs stand in life’s calendar</div>
-<div class="verse">Eras of thought once seen. Is there an eye</div>
-<div class="verse">Could coldly gaze on aught that bears a trace</div>
-<div class="verse">Of Avon’s matchless master of the breast?</div>
-<div class="verse">Who could approach old Dryburgh’s tombs, and feel not</div>
-<div class="verse">The illustrious presence of his great compeer,</div>
-<div class="verse">Whose tomb yet moistens with a nation’s woe,</div>
-<div class="verse">Whose star is young in heaven? Or who can walk</div>
-<div class="verse">Unmoved the cloisters and religious aisles</div>
-<div class="verse">Where Milton lies, renowned with “prophets old,”</div>
-<div class="verse">And honoured Newton, to whom the starred vault</div>
-<div class="verse">Is an enduring monument, as much</div>
-<div class="verse">As the Pantheon’s dome is Angelo’s?</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">What is the pride of kings, the world’s vain splendour,</div>
-<div class="verse">To such a presence as they witnessed there</div>
-<div class="verse">Who disinterred the bones of Raphael,</div>
-<div class="verse">Awful from the repose of centuries?</div>
-<div class="verse">There stood that day a solemn, anxious crowd</div>
-<div class="verse">Around that altar which conceals beneath</div>
-<div class="verse">The mighty master’s relics&mdash;for there was a doubt</div>
-<div class="verse">If it were truly there that he was laid.</div>
-<div class="verse">And there they found all the dull grave could keep</div>
-<div class="verse">Of that Immortal. With no common awe</div>
-<div class="verse">They bent o’er his dark cell, as it disclosed</div>
-<div class="verse">Its treasure to the selfsame holy light</div>
-<div class="verse">That gladdened oft of old the master’s heart,</div>
-<div class="verse">And waked his heaven-eyed genius; while beneath</div>
-<div class="verse">The shadowy splendour of that spacious dome</div>
-<div class="verse">He stood in living sanctity, a pure</div>
-<div class="verse">And heavenly-minded man&mdash;even where they stood</div>
-<div class="verse">To gaze upon his dust&mdash;and all around</div>
-<div class="verse">He scattered bright and hallowed images</div>
-<div class="verse">Of perfect beauty&mdash;in their brightness there</div>
-<div class="verse">Still lying as he left them. Shadows fair</div>
-<div class="verse">Of angel form and feature&mdash;ye who gaze</div>
-<div class="verse">In clouded splendour through those cloisters old,</div>
-<div class="verse">Looking as things of life&mdash;could ye behold</div>
-<div class="verse">Those slender bones, they were the living hand</div>
-<div class="verse">Beneath whose touch ye started into being</div>
-<div class="verse">And grew to light and beauty, covering</div>
-<div class="verse">Your storied frescoes with the lines of grace,</div>
-<div class="verse">Harmonious hues and features of the sky.</div>
-<div class="verse">And yonder is your birthplace, yon light skull&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">The slight and delicate shrine of all that mind!</div>
-<div class="verse">’Tis a strange thought how vast a world resolved</div>
-<div class="verse">In thy small compass! Senseless as thou art,</div>
-<div class="verse">Who could behold thee as a mouldering bone,</div>
-<div class="verse">The mere dust of unsphered humanity?</div>
-<div class="verse">There, from that lowly cell as rose to light</div>
-<div class="verse">The canonized remains of one whose mind</div>
-<div class="verse">Hath been a worship to the eye of ages,</div>
-<div class="verse">They were not seen thus coldly&mdash;time gave back</div>
-<div class="verse">Its venerable honours registered</div>
-<div class="verse">Deep in the heart of living Italy&mdash;</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
-<div class="verse">A crown of many-tinted sanctities.</div>
-<div class="verse">Thy beauty, goodness, and pure innocence,</div>
-<div class="verse">Thy faculty of vision, gift divine,</div>
-<div class="verse">Rushed round thee as a glory&mdash;thou wert seen</div>
-<div class="verse">With all thy laurels round thy honoured tomb.</div>
-<div class="verse">Thine is no pile of unrecording stone&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Pale marble column or tall pyramid,</div>
-<div class="verse">That vainly robs oblivion of its prey:</div>
-<div class="verse">Thy name lives on each lip&mdash;thy monuments</div>
-<div class="verse">Are treasures fondly kept midst precious things,</div>
-<div class="verse">Sought out in every land which the sun warms</div>
-<div class="verse">To nobler thoughts&mdash;thine are perennial wreaths</div>
-<div class="verse">Of trophies yet surviving, when the fame</div>
-<div class="verse">Of fields that rang through Europe, and made pale</div>
-<div class="verse">The peaceful hamlets of an hundred realms,</div>
-<div class="verse">Have shrunk within the fretted register,</div>
-<div class="verse">The silent scroll, named History&mdash;still the halls</div>
-<div class="verse">Of national state or regal pomp are bright</div>
-<div class="verse">With thy far-sought creations, costliest</div>
-<div class="verse">Among the treasured trophies of the mind;</div>
-<div class="verse">And as thy time on earth was consecrated</div>
-<div class="verse">To sacred labours meet for holy walls&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">So would I deem thy gifted spirit still,</div>
-<div class="verse">Invested in its light of heavenly thoughts,</div>
-<div class="verse">The minister of some pure temple, where</div>
-<div class="verse">No human errors mingle with the work.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class="gap4">ON THE POWER OF FLUIDS.</h2>
-
-<p>That weight is a property of liquids, has been acknowledged
-by the earliest observers; but the amount of that weight, its
-mode of acting, and application to practice, have been left for
-recent times to discover. A pint of water weighs somewhat
-more than a pound avoirdupois; and one unacquainted with
-the facts in hydrostatics might deem it of little consequence
-what shape the vessel that contained it might be, or what the
-disposition and length of the column of water&mdash;for, after all,
-what is it but a pound of water? No idea can be more erroneous.
-Under most circumstances, it is not so much the quantity of
-the fluid as the manner in which its particles are disposed, that
-determines its weight; and what may appear still more extraordinary,
-a small quantity of fluid may be made to balance,
-that is, to be of the same apparent weight as, a very large
-quantity. This may be proved by taking a pair of scales,
-putting a tumbler full of water into one dish, and balancing
-it by weights in the other, then inverting a smaller glass and
-immersing it in the tumbler, having the glass perfectly supported
-in the hand to prevent it touching the sides or bottom;
-a portion of the water will now flow over the sides of the tumbler&mdash;say
-one-half&mdash;yet the scales are still balanced; one-half of
-the water is of the same weight apparently as the whole. A piece
-of wood may be used instead of the glass with the same result,
-and it may be of a size nearly to fill the cavity of the tumbler;
-yet if the remaining water, which may amount to no more
-than a couple of spoonfuls, rise to the same level as it did when
-full, it will exactly balance the weights. This cannot be accounted
-for by saying that the wood or the glass was equal
-to the water displaced, for if we use lead, which is much heavier,
-or cork, and even card, which are much lighter, we shall
-meet with no difference. This property belongs to the water;
-and as the only constant fact was the same height of the fluid,
-to it must the explanation be referred; and we thus arrive at
-a first principle, a law in hydrostatics&mdash;that the pressure, or
-weight considered as a power, of any fluid, is not in proportion
-to its quantity, but to its depth.</p>
-
-<p>Aware of this principle, if we wish to use water as a power,
-we can economize it wonderfully, exerting a great pressure
-with a small quantity. If we take a small wooden box, water-tight,
-bore a hole in it, and fill it with water, adapt a long
-narrow tube to the hole, and fill it up with water, the box will
-now be burst, and that by the very small quantity contained
-in the tube. This tube may be a yard long, and very narrow
-in diameter, not holding more than two ounces of fluid,
-yet the pressure, being always in proportion to its depth, is the
-same as if it had been as broad as the box. This pressure
-amounts to nearly one pound on the square inch for every two
-feet of water. In the deepest parts of the ocean the pressure
-must be exceedingly great, so much so that it is probable they
-are uninhabitable, the pressure being too great for the existence
-of fishes. This pressure, together with the total absence
-of light at great depths, renders the existence of vegetable
-life also a doubtful matter. There is a certain depth beyond
-which divers cannot go, owing to the pressure of water on the
-surface of their chests being greater than the resistance of
-air inside, respiration being thereby impeded.</p>
-
-<p>A pipe a yard long, and acting on a yard square of fluid,
-will give a pressure equal to the weight of fifteen cwt. if we
-use water. Should we use quicksilver, the power of a ton
-weight may be obtained within the space of a square foot in
-breadth, by a tube somewhat less than three feet long, and
-not larger than a common goose quill&mdash;the pressure per square
-inch in these cases depending on the height of the column of
-fluid.</p>
-
-<p>We can now understand what extensive and sometimes
-irremediable injury may arise from the collection of a small
-but lofty column of water, opening into a wide but confined
-space below. This sometimes occurs when water gets into a
-narrow chink between buildings, and, finding its way down,
-opens finally into some cavity under the floor. The pressure
-exerted here is immense, and there are few bodies able to
-resist it. It is owing to this that the pipes for conveying water
-are burst, on account of the pressure exerted on the insides
-of the pipes; and this occurs the more frequently, the higher
-the source from which they are filled. In practice, every
-vessel containing liquid should increase in strength in proportion
-to its depth. We have no doubt that a process similar
-to this takes place on the large scale in nature, which is capable
-of uprooting trees, rending rocks, producing earthquakes;
-for if we suppose that some collections of water on the surface
-of a hill have found their way down through crevices into a
-cavity in the body of the mountain which has no external
-opening, as long as this cavity remains unfilled no evil arises,
-but when it and the crevices also are completely filled, the
-pressure exercised here is so immense, that even the sides of
-the hill cannot withstand it. Perhaps this occurrence has
-not been sufficiently noticed in explaining natural phenomena.
-It is usual to consider earthquakes and volcanoes as solely the
-result of chemical action, excluding entirely physical agency.</p>
-
-<p>The pressure of water may be rendered visible by blowing
-through a tube under water into a tall glass jar. The bubble
-of air, small at the bottom, as it rises, gradually enlarges
-from the diminution of the pressure.</p>
-
-<p>The hydrostatic bellows, formed upon this principle, consists
-of nothing more than a water-tight bellows, with a long pipe
-fixed into the valve aperture. If this pipe be three feet long,
-and hold a quarter of a pint of fluid, it will exert a pressure
-sufficient to raise three cwt. laid upon a bellows, the area of
-the upper side of which is equal to about a square foot and a
-half. Many are the uses to which this principle might be applied
-in the several arts.</p>
-
-<p>Bramah’s Press is almost the only machine which has been
-extensively used. By its means solid bars of iron can be cut
-through with ease. Hay and cotton have been compressed
-by its means into a very small compass. In the East Indies,
-where water-power is used, bales of cotton are compressed
-into one-half the size of those from the West Indies. By its
-means power may be multiplied, or rather concentrated, a
-thousand-fold. As commonly made, a man working it may,
-by using the same force that would raise half a cwt., apply
-a force amounting to twenty tons to the work in hand; and
-by varying the proportions of the machine, pressure might be
-brought to bear upon any body which would be perfectly irresistible.</p>
-
-<p>There is, however, in reality, be it distinctly understood,
-no power absolutely gained; but the man’s force is <em>concentrated</em>,
-as for instance in compressing the bale of cotton, to
-an extent which, if the ordinary mechanical powers of the
-lever or screw were employed, would require the aid of ponderous
-machinery.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Bramah was therefore greatly mistaken when he published
-it as the discovery of a new mechanical power: but he
-invented a beautiful and most effective means of simply accumulating
-a prodigious force by the very simple means of the
-hydrostatic pressure of fluids.</p>
-
-<p>Hydraulic or Bramah presses are applied in New York
-and other American ports for the purpose of raising large
-vessels on strong wooden platforms out of the water, for
-effecting repairs, &amp;c. They are also employed in removing
-houses&mdash;some of them brick, and three stories high&mdash;from one
-part of a street to another. In this case strong wooden
-beams, like the ways used in ship-launching, are placed under
-the house, and in the direction of the intended site, and hydraulic
-presses are then employed for pushing the house
-along, with prodigious force, and so gradually and gently as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
-not even to crack the plaster of a room ceiling. By the same
-means the roof of a large cotton factory near Aberdeen was
-raised <em>entire</em>, and an additional story added to the building,
-without displacing a single slate! In this instance the roof
-was lifted gradually about four inches at a time, progressing
-from end to end of the building, the height of the walls being
-increased by a single row of bricks at a time.</p>
-
-<p>Such are a few of the results of a single principle, a rule to
-which there is no exception, which holds equally good in the
-organic as in the inorganic world. Even the blood-vessels of
-the body are subject to this law&mdash;the sides of all vessels below
-the level of the heart enduring an additional outward pressure
-of half an ounce for every inch in height, which at the toes
-would amount to somewhere about two pounds. When a
-person stands erect in a bath, the pressure on all parts of the
-body is not equal; it is greater upon the legs than upon the
-trunk; the former are pressed upward, and hence in part the
-difficulty experienced in standing upon the bottom in deep
-water.</p>
-
-<p class="right">T. A.</p>
-
-<p class="gap4"><span class="smcap">Disagreeable People.</span>&mdash;Some persons are of so teazing
-and fidgetty a turn of mind, that they do not give you a moment’s
-rest. Everything goes wrong with them. They complain
-of a headache or the weather. They take up a book,
-and lay it down again&mdash;venture an opinion, and retract it before
-they have half done&mdash;offer to serve you, and prevent some
-one else from doing it. If you dine with them at a tavern, in
-order to be more at your ease, the fish is too little done&mdash;the
-sauce is not the right one; they ask for a sort of wine which
-they think is not to be had, or if it is, after some trouble, procured,
-do not touch it; they give the waiter fifty contradictory
-orders, and are restless and sit on thorns the whole of
-dinner time. All this is owing to a want of robust health, and
-of a strong spirit of enjoyment; it is a fastidious habit of
-mind, produced by a valetudinary habit of body: they are out
-of sorts with everything, and of course their ill-humour and
-captiousness communicates itself to you, who are as little delighted
-with them as they are with other things. Another
-sort of people, equally objectionable with this helpless class,
-who are disconcerted by a shower of heaven’s rain, or stopped
-by an insect’s wing, are those who, in the opposite spirit, will
-have every thing their own way, and carry all before them&mdash;who
-cannot brook the slightest shadow of opposition&mdash;who are
-always in the heat of an argument, unless where they disdain
-your understanding so much as not to condescend to argue
-with you&mdash;who knit their brows and roll their eyes and clench
-their teeth in some speculative discussion, as if they were engaged
-in a personal quarrel&mdash;and who, though successful over
-almost every competitor, seem still to resent the very offer of
-resistance to their supposed authority, and are as angry as if
-they had sustained some premeditated injury. There is an
-impatience of temper and an intolerance of opinion in this that
-conciliates neither our affection nor esteem. To such persons
-nothing appears of any moment but the indulgence of a domineering
-intellectual superiority, to the disregard and discomfiture
-of their own and everybody else’s comfort. Mounted
-on an abstract proposition, they trample on every courtesy
-and decency of behaviour; and though, perhaps, they do not
-intend the gross personalities they are guilty of, yet they cannot
-be acquitted of a want of due consideration for others,
-and of an intolerable egotism in the support of truth and justice.
-You may hear one of these impetuous declaimers pleading
-the cause of humanity in a voice of thunder, or expatiating
-on the beauty of a Guido, with features distorted with rage
-and scorn. This is not a very amiable or edifying spectacle.&mdash;<cite>Hazlitt’s
-Table-Talk.</cite></p>
-
-<p class="gap4"><span class="smcap">Necessity of a Thorough Education.</span>&mdash;Good education
-being a preparation for social life, necessarily embraces
-the whole man&mdash;body, head, and heart&mdash;for in social life the
-whole man is necessarily called into exertion in one way or
-another almost every hour. But this is not sufficient. There
-must be no preponderance, as well as no exclusion; a limited
-or biassed education produces monsters. Some are satisfied
-with the cultivation of a single faculty&mdash;some with the partial
-cultivation of each. A child is trained up to working;
-he is hammered into a hardy laborer&mdash;a stout material for
-the physical bone and muscle of the state. This is good, so
-far as it goes; but it is bad, because it goes no farther. He
-is not taught reading; he is not taught religion; above all,
-he is not taught thinking. He never looks into his other self;
-he soon forgets its existence; the man becomes all body; his
-intellectual and moral being lies fallow. The growth of
-such a system will be a sturdy race of machines&mdash;delvers
-and soldiers, but not men: so much brute physical energy
-swinging loosely through society at the discretion of those
-more spiritual natures to whom their education, neglected or
-perverted in another way, gives wickedness with power, and
-teaches the secrets of mind only as instruments to crush or
-bend men for their own selfish purposes. Others educate the
-intellectual and moral being only; the physical, once the building
-is raised, like an idle scaffolding, is cast by. But the
-omission is injurious&mdash;often fatal: malady is laid up, in all its
-thousand forms, in the infant and the child. It spreads out
-upon the man. When his spirit is in the flush of its strength,
-and his moral rivals his intellectual nature in compass and
-power, then it is that the despised portion of his being rises
-up and avenges itself for this contempt. The studious man
-feels, as he walks down life, a thousand minute retaliations
-for the prodigal waste of his youthful vigour. The body
-bows down beneath the burden of the mind; it wears gradually
-away into weakness and incompetency; clouds of sickness,
-pangs of pain, obscure, distort, weigh it to the earth.
-Health is not a thing of organization only, but of training;
-it is to be laid up bit by bit. We are to be <em>made</em> healthy&mdash;tutored
-and practised into health. Omit health in favour of
-the intellectual and moral faculties, and you provide instruments,
-it is true, for mind, but instruments which, when
-wanted, cannot be used. Intellectual and moral education
-may rank before physical, but they are not more essential;
-the physical powers are the hewers of wood and the drawers
-of water for the spiritual. The base of the column is in the
-earth; but, without it, neither could the shaft stand firm
-above it, nor the capital ascend to the sky.&mdash;<cite>Wyse on Education.</cite></p>
-
-<p class="gap4"><span class="smcap">Home.</span>&mdash;The great end of prudence is to give cheerfulness
-to those hours which splendour cannot gild, and acclamation
-cannot exhilarate. Those soft intervals of unbended amusement,
-in which a man shrinks to his natural dimensions, and
-throws aside the ornaments or disguises which he feels in privacy
-to be useless incumbrances, and to lose all effect when
-they become familiar. To be happy at home is the ultimate
-result of all ambition, the end to which every enterprise and
-labour tends, and of which every desire prompts the prosecution.
-It is indeed at home that every man must be known
-by those who would make a just estimate of his virtue or felicity;
-for smiles and embroidery are alike occasional, and
-the mind is often dressed for show in painted honour and fictitious
-benevolence.&mdash;<cite>Johnson.</cite></p>
-
-<p class="gap4">If it were enacted that only persons of high rank should
-dine upon three dishes, the lower sort would desire to have
-three; but if commoners were permitted to have as many
-dishes as they pleased, whilst the nobility were limited to two,
-the inferior sort would not exceed that number. An order to
-abolish the wearing of jewels has set a whole country in an
-uproar; but if the order had only prohibited earrings to ladies
-of the first quality, other women would not have desired to
-wear them.&mdash;<cite>The Reflector.</cite></p>
-
-<p class="gap4">The very consciousness of being beloved by the object of
-our attachment, will disarm of its terrors even death itself.&mdash;<cite>D’Israeli.</cite></p>
-
-<p class="gap4">The petty sovereign of an insignificant tribe of North America
-every morning stalks out of his hovel, bids the sun good
-morrow, and points out to him with his finger the course he
-is to take for the day.</p>
-
-<p class="gap4">Love labour; if you do not want it for food, you may for
-physic.</p>
-
-<p class="gap4">Industry often prevents what lazy folly thinks inevitable.
-Industry argues an ingenuous, great, and generous disposition
-of soul, by unweariedly pursuing things in the fairest light,
-and disdains to enjoy the fruit of other men’s labours without
-deserving it.</p>
-
-<p class="gap4">He who lies under the dominion of any one vice must expect
-the common effects of it. If lazy, to be poor; if intemperate,
-to be diseased; if luxurious, to die betimes, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="gap4">With discretion the vicious preserve their honour, and without
-it the virtuous lose it.</p>
-
-<p class="gap4">A good conscience is the finest opiate.&mdash;<cite>Knox.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>Printed and published every Saturday by <span class="smcap">Gunn</span> and <span class="smcap">Cameron</span>, at the Office
-of the General Advertiser, No. 6, Church Lane, College Green, Dublin.&mdash;Agents:&mdash;<span class="smcap">R.
-Groombridge</span>, Panyer Alley, Paternoster Row, London;
-<span class="smcap">Simms</span> and <span class="smcap">Dinham</span>, Exchange Street, Manchester; <span class="smcap">C. Davies</span>, North
-John Street, Liverpool; <span class="smcap">J. Drake</span>, Birmingham; <span class="smcap">Slocombe &amp; Simms</span>,
-Leeds; <span class="smcap">Frazer</span> and <span class="smcap">Crawford</span>, George Street, Edinburgh; and
-<span class="smcap">David Robertson</span>, Trongate, Glasgow.</p></div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Irish Penny Journal, Vol. 1 No.
-25, December 19, 1840, by Various
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