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+++ b/57433-0.txt
@@ -1,35 +1,8 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Southern Literary Messenger, Vol. I.,
-No. 7, March, 1835, by Various
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 57433 ***
-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 Southern Literary Messenger, Vol. I., No. 7, March, 1835
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: James E. Heath
-
-Release Date: July 2, 2018 [EBook #57433]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOUTHERN LITERARY MESSENGER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Ron Swanson
-
@@ -39,7 +12,7 @@ THE SOUTHERN LITERARY MESSENGER:
DEVOTED TO EVERY DEPARTMENT OF LITERATURE AND THE FINE ARTS.
-Au gré de nos desirs bien plus qu'au gré des vents.
+Au gré de nos desirs bien plus qu'au gré des vents.
_Crebillon's Electre_.
As _we_ will, and not as the winds will.
@@ -977,7 +950,7 @@ _might have been_. I have a tale to tell in its own essence rife with
horror--I would suppress it were it not a record more of feelings than
of facts.
-My baptismal name is Egæus--that of my family I will not mention. Yet
+My baptismal name is Egæus--that of my family I will not mention. Yet
there are no towers in the land more time-honored than my gloomy,
grey, hereditary halls. Our line has been called a race of
visionaries: and in many striking particulars--in the character of the
@@ -993,7 +966,7 @@ chamber, and with its volumes--of which latter I will say no more.
Here died my mother. Herein was I born. But it is mere idleness to say
that I had not lived before--that the soul has no previous existence.
You deny it. Let us not argue the matter. Convinced myself I seek not
-to convince. There is, however, a remembrance of ærial forms--of
+to convince. There is, however, a remembrance of ærial forms--of
spiritual and meaning eyes--of sounds musical yet sad--a remembrance
which will not be excluded: a memory like a shadow, vague, variable,
indefinite, unsteady--and like a shadow too, in the impossibility of
@@ -1205,9 +1178,9 @@ characteristics--I dwelt upon their peculiarities--I pondered upon
their conformation--I mused upon the alteration in their nature--and
shuddered as I assigned to them in imagination a sensitive and
sentient power, and even when unassisted by the lips, a capability of
-moral expression. Of Mad'selle Sallé it has been said, "_que tous ses
+moral expression. Of Mad'selle Sallé it has been said, "_que tous ses
pas etaient des sentiments_," and of Berenice I more seriously
-believed _que tous ses dents etaient des idées_.
+believed _que tous ses dents etaient des idées_.
And the evening closed in upon me thus--and then the darkness came,
and tarried, and went--and the day again dawned--and the mists of a
@@ -1286,7 +1259,7 @@ how came it _there_ upon my table, and why did I shudder in regarding
it? These were things in no manner to be accounted for, and my eyes at
length dropped to the open pages of a book, and to a sentence
underscored therein. The words were the singular, but simple words of
-the poet Ebn Zaiat. "_Dicebant mihi sodales si sepulchrum amicæ
+the poet Ebn Zaiat. "_Dicebant mihi sodales si sepulchrum amicæ
visitarem curas meas aliquantulum fore levatas._"[2] Why then, as I
perused them, did the hairs of my head erect themselves on end, and
the blood of my body congeal within my veins?
@@ -1843,7 +1816,7 @@ terms of poetical exaggeration their heroic achievements, and dwell
with fond recollection on their memories, but we can never form an
accurate idea of their feelings, any correct conception of their
sufferings, or properly estimate our debt of gratitude, until we can
-enter more fully into the _minutiæ_ of those events which general
+enter more fully into the _minutiæ_ of those events which general
history relates. So long therefore, as it is praiseworthy (and long
may it be so,) to set before our eyes the examples and characters of
revolutionary patriots, will it be interesting to examine such records
@@ -2702,7 +2675,7 @@ had brought the matter to a bearing without some stratagem; and she
wished Betty to tell her how she had gone about "courting the old
man." There was, withal, so much native simplicity about Betty, and
the manner of relating her own courtship and marriage is so like
-herself, that it would lose its _naïveté_ unless told in her own
+herself, that it would lose its _naïveté_ unless told in her own
homely Scotch way. Betty, into all, had a lisp in her speech, that is,
a defect in speech, by which the _s_ is always pronounced as _th_,
which added a still deeper shade of simplicity to her manner; but it
@@ -5403,7 +5376,7 @@ you a perfect idea of the places they represent. The council chamber
adjoins the library, and this and two other apartments are decorated
with the portraits of the deceased marshals of France; while the
originals are living, their likenesses are deposited in the "Salle des
-Marécheaux," at the Palace of the Tuilleries. In the church we saw the
+Marécheaux," at the Palace of the Tuilleries. In the church we saw the
mausoleum of Turenne and that of the famous engineer Vauban.[1] The
interior of the dome and the ceilings of six chapels surrounding it
are richly painted, and the tesselated pavement, interspersed with
@@ -5604,7 +5577,7 @@ widow of Henry 4th; it afterwards became the property of some of the
French nobility, but was finally restored to the crown. During the
revolution, it was used as a prison; the senate afterwards occupied
it; at present it contains the Chamber of Peers,--and its galleries
-are filled with the chêf d'oeuvres of modern artists, whose
+are filled with the chêf d'oeuvres of modern artists, whose
productions are not admitted into the Louvre until their death. Of
course the collection of paintings here is much smaller than at the
Louvre, but the pictures are all on the most interesting subjects and
@@ -5650,7 +5623,7 @@ From the Luxembourg we proceeded through a long sunny avenue, to the
observatory. On the left of the road, Arnaud our valet de place,
pointed out the spot upon which Marshal Ney was shot. "Regardez,
Mesdames! ce fut la (pointing with his finger) l'endroit ou le brave
-Maréchal Ney fut massacré--Jétais présent et il me semble que je le
+Maréchal Ney fut massacré--Jétais présent et il me semble que je le
vois tout sanglant dans le moment," said he, shuddering. We paused to
look at the once bloody spot, now verdant with grass and so sadly
interesting. The observatory may be considered a wonderful building,
@@ -5699,16 +5672,16 @@ annually, and the royal family always join in it. We shall go to see
it of course; and how I wish you, aunt Margaret and Albert were to be
of our party!
-The Pantheon, or Church of Saint Geneviève, is a magnificent
+The Pantheon, or Church of Saint Geneviève, is a magnificent
structure, and its dome is the most striking object that presents
itself as you approach Paris. The interior of it is beautifully
painted, the artist having chosen for his subject the apotheosis of
Louis XVI and his family. When the work was finished, the king went to
see it, and after looking at it attentively for a quarter of an hour,
he turned to the painter Gros who was anxiously awaiting his opinion,
-and said to him, "Eh bien Monsieur le _Baron_ votre ouvrage est trés
+and said to him, "Eh bien Monsieur le _Baron_ votre ouvrage est trés
bien fait!" thus recompensing his talents, by bestowing on him a title
-of nobility. Saint Geneviève, the patron Saint of Paris, is buried in
+of nobility. Saint Geneviève, the patron Saint of Paris, is buried in
the Pantheon, and her tomb is always surrounded by lighted tapers, the
votive offerings of those who come to demand her intercession for
pardon or blessing. In the vaults beneath the church, many
@@ -6320,7 +6293,7 @@ concession to the popular will. Accordingly the measures of Louis the
people, met with jealous opposition, or at best, with unwilling
acquiescence.
-The administration of Décazes, which was conducted upon wise and sound
+The administration of Décazes, which was conducted upon wise and sound
principles, was finally clamored down; and the court, finding the
people incapable of appreciating the mild and liberal measures of the
government, infused more strength into their system.
@@ -6339,8 +6312,8 @@ These feelings were put forth through the usual vents. The public
journals made the most of their liberty while it remained to them, and
kept up an incessant fire of various grades; from the grave
remonstrances of the "Constitutionnel," to the piquant badinage of the
-"Drapeau Blanc." The Salons, the Cafés, the Boulevards, the Tuileries,
-the Champs Elysées and the Pont Neuf exhibited the politicians of
+"Drapeau Blanc." The Salons, the Cafés, the Boulevards, the Tuileries,
+the Champs Elysées and the Pont Neuf exhibited the politicians of
their respective meridians, from the "riche banquier" to "Monsieur le
tondeur de chiens." The print shops displayed caricatures of the
Jesuits. Beranger "showed up" the royal family in his songs. Mars
@@ -6374,12 +6347,12 @@ Proceeding more rapidly and by a nearer route, I reached the Champ de
Mars, the scene of the review, in time to witness the king's arrival.
The Champ de Mars is a beautiful plain, artificially levelled; a
quarter of a mile in breadth, and extending from the Seine to the
-école militaire, rather more than half a mile in length--bounded on
+école militaire, rather more than half a mile in length--bounded on
each side by embankments, appearing to the eye like ramparts, which
are covered with turf and set with trees.[1]
-[Footnote 1: The Champ de Mars was the scene of the famous "fête de la
-fédération," which took place in 1790, on the 14th of July, the
+[Footnote 1: The Champ de Mars was the scene of the famous "fête de la
+fédération," which took place in 1790, on the 14th of July, the
anniversary of the taking of the Bastile; when the king, the
representatives of the people, and the other public functionaries, the
commandant of the National Guard, and delegates sent from each of the
@@ -6393,7 +6366,7 @@ time. The Bishop of Autun (Talleyrand) was the ministering flamen of
the solemnities. At the celebration an incident occurred, illustrating
the far seeing sagacity of this man, who thus early discerned the
frail and transient nature of that constitution, which its founders
-had decreed should be "une, indivisible, et impérissable." Lafayette,
+had decreed should be "une, indivisible, et impérissable." Lafayette,
as commandant of the National Guard, was the first to take the oath;
and as he approached the altar for that purpose, Talleyrand in an
under tone exhorted him to keep his countenance and not to laugh! thus
@@ -6415,7 +6388,7 @@ Here were the famed Cuirassiers, arrayed in triple steel--each one
looking the impersonation of war--men and horses forming a dense,
motionless, terrific mass.
-There, were the "Chevaux-légers," less imposing in appearance, but
+There, were the "Chevaux-légers," less imposing in appearance, but
dazzling the eye by the brilliancy of their dress and the rapidity of
their evolutions.
@@ -6432,19 +6405,19 @@ smiles were displayed in covered stages erected temporarily for the
purpose, and arranged at the inner foot of the embankment on either
side of the field.
-In a short time a flourish of trumpets at the école militaire,
+In a short time a flourish of trumpets at the école militaire,
announced the arrival of the King. The officers flew to their posts.
Every tongue was hushed, and every eye directed to that extremity of
the field at which the king now appeared, mounted on a white Arabian,
which he managed as one familiar to the seat. He was attended on
-either side by the royal dukes Angoulême and Orléans, (the present
-king) and followed by a splendid cortège of field marshals and general
+either side by the royal dukes Angoulême and Orléans, (the present
+king) and followed by a splendid cortège of field marshals and general
officers in gorgeous uniforms, and their horses highly caparisoned.
The king too, and the royal dukes, wore military uniforms, over which
hung the "cordon bleu." After the king and his suite, came an open
-barouche, in which appeared the royal ladies d'Angoulême, de Berri and
-d'Orléans.
+barouche, in which appeared the royal ladies d'Angoulême, de Berri and
+d'Orléans.
The magnificent cavalcade moved slowly on between the different bodies
of troops, going down on one side of the field and returning on the
@@ -6485,7 +6458,7 @@ that in both instances a strong expression of public opinion was
intended.
Of course it was not imagined that all this was not as well known to
-the king and his ministers, as to the authors and contrivers. Villèle,
+the king and his ministers, as to the authors and contrivers. Villèle,
the prime minister, was too sagacious and wary to leave unemployed any
means of obtaining information concerning every subject which agitated
the public mind--information indeed which was of the highest
@@ -6577,8 +6550,8 @@ face of the sunniest day with blackness and wrath.
The review was nearly finished, when a voice was heard from the
company which the king was at the moment passing, mingling with the
-cries of "vive le roi," the exclamations "à bas les ministres!" "à bas
-les Jésuites!"[2]
+cries of "vive le roi," the exclamations "à bas les ministres!" "à bas
+les Jésuites!"[2]
[Footnote 2: Down with the ministers, &c.]
@@ -6603,12 +6576,12 @@ the bitter waters of strife.
The troops were instantly dismissed by their officers, and they
mingling with the immense crowd of spectators, the whole mass returned
with tumultuous haste to the city, uttering cries of passion, of
-discontent or of derision. "À bas les ministres! à bas les Jésuites! à
-bas les Bourbons! vive la charte! au diable Villéle!" &c. &c., issued
+discontent or of derision. "À bas les ministres! à bas les Jésuites! à
+bas les Bourbons! vive la charte! au diable Villéle!" &c. &c., issued
from lips which but a few minutes before sent forth expressions of
attachment and loyalty.
-The residences of Villéle and Peyronnet, the two ministers against
+The residences of Villéle and Peyronnet, the two ministers against
whom popular indignation was chiefly directed, lay immediately in the
route of the returning crowd. A large number, including many of the
National Guard, stopped before the houses, which were separated only
@@ -6633,7 +6606,7 @@ sleep the few who sought repose.
During all this time the king and his cabinet, unterrified by the
denunciations which resounded in their ears, were planning in secret
-council at the Tuileries, a "coup d'état" which was to astonish
+council at the Tuileries, a "coup d'état" which was to astonish
France.
The next morning the Moniteur appeared as usual, and the very first
@@ -6641,7 +6614,7 @@ line of the first column, which was always appropriated to
annunciations made by authority of the government, consisted of the
following momentous words--
-"La Garde Nationale est licenciée"--(the National Guard is disbanded.)
+"La Garde Nationale est licenciée"--(the National Guard is disbanded.)
Had a volcano burst forth in the "place Vendome," the people of Paris
could not have been more astounded. The step was indeed of a boldness
@@ -6668,7 +6641,7 @@ that the agitation far exceeded that which was caused in Paris by the
news of Napoleon's flight from Elba and debarkation in France.]
On one of the nights when the agitation was greatest, I went to the
-Rue St. Honoré, one of the great thoroughfares of the city, to witness
+Rue St. Honoré, one of the great thoroughfares of the city, to witness
the movements of the crowd. When I arrived I found it so thronged as
to render it hazardous if not impossible to enter it. As far as by the
aid of the lights, the eye could reach in either direction, the entire
@@ -6722,7 +6695,7 @@ gendarmes to charge upon them, and several deaths were the result; it
soon became apparent that the excitement was subsiding. After the
expiration of the third day, the city began to wear a calmer aspect.
The affair merely furnished a theme for animated discussions in the
-cafés and for eloquent denunciations in the liberal prints. The surest
+cafés and for eloquent denunciations in the liberal prints. The surest
evidence, however, that all danger of a serious issue was for the
present at an end, was the fact that the little scandalous journals
which exist in every large city, began to serve up the subject in
@@ -6746,7 +6719,7 @@ the decision was made. At the dawn of day this decision was
communicated to the commanders of all the divisions of the disbanded
body; and with the first rays of the sun the startling annunciation
met the eyes of the astounded Parisians--"_La Garde Nationale est
-licenciée!_"
+licenciée!_"
The very style of the decree is worthy of remark, as being in strict
keeping with the rest. There is no labored preamble--no heavy article
@@ -6756,7 +6729,7 @@ conciliatory and cajoling declarations--no attempt to lead off the
public mind by sophistry and a maze of argument--none of this. But the
simple, naked, peremptory mandate of authority not expecting to be
questioned--The stern, terse, despotic "_sic vole_" of absolute
-rule--"_La Garde Nationale est licenciée!_"
+rule--"_La Garde Nationale est licenciée!_"
The shaft being shot, the cabinet remained perfectly quiet until the
effervescence and confusion created by the discharge, had subsided;
@@ -6766,7 +6739,7 @@ decided accession of power; and for a time at least, impeded the
progress of liberal principles in France. And although the influence
of these principles must, of course, finally have prevailed, there is
little doubt that the time for their ascendancy would have been longer
-deferred, had the successor of Villéle possessed his sagacity, his
+deferred, had the successor of Villéle possessed his sagacity, his
boldness, his energy, and his knowledge of the existing state of
things.
@@ -6888,7 +6861,7 @@ and in wretchedly bad taste.
In taking our leave of the author, we would also advise him, when he
writes another romance, to "sink the shop,"--or rather the
_profession_; and not to describe the wounds and bruises of his
-_dramatis personæ_ with that technical precision which only surgeons
+_dramatis personæ_ with that technical precision which only surgeons
and anatomists can fully comprehend. We would also recommend to him,
as a medical man, that when any unlucky hero of his is hereafter tied
to an Indian stake, by all means to have him rescued before the pine
@@ -7354,361 +7327,4 @@ _Winchester, Va._
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Southern Literary Messenger, Vol.
I., No. 7, March, 1835, by Various
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOUTHERN LITERARY MESSENGER ***
-
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diff --git a/57433-h/57433-h.htm b/57433-h/57433-h.htm
index 530bd8e..52b9d13 100644
--- a/57433-h/57433-h.htm
+++ b/57433-h/57433-h.htm
@@ -18,45 +18,7 @@
<body>
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Southern Literary Messenger, Vol. I.,
-No. 7, March, 1835, by Various
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-Title: The Southern Literary Messenger, Vol. I., No. 7, March, 1835
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-Author: Various
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-Editor: James E. Heath
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-Release Date: July 2, 2018 [EBook #57433]
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 57433 ***</div>
<center>THE</center>
<h1>SOUTHERN LITERARY MESSENGER:</h1>
@@ -7452,376 +7414,7 @@ directed, not to yourself, but to his very humble servant,</small></blockquote>
-<pre>
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