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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 #64243 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64243)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature,
-Science, and Art, No. 753, June 1, 1878, 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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, No.
- 753, June 1, 1878
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: William Chambers
- Robert Chambers
-
-Release Date: January 09, 2021 [eBook #64243]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, NO. 753, JUNE 1, 1878 ***
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL
-
-OF
-
-POPULAR
-
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.
-
-Fourth Series
-
-CONDUCTED BY WILLIAM AND ROBERT CHAMBERS.
-
-NO. 753. SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1878. PRICE 1½_d._]
-
-
-
-
-BIANCONI.
-
-
-Charles Bianconi was altogether a very remarkable person, and not less
-for his energy and perseverance than for his public services, ought
-to be kept in remembrance. He was by birth an Italian—not, however,
-an Italian of the lethargic south, but of the northern mountainous
-district bordering on the Lake of Como. We might call him an Italian
-highlander. Belonging to a respectable though not affluent family,
-he was born on the 24th September 1786. At school he made so little
-progress as to be thought little better than a dunce. People did not
-quite understand his character. His impulse was to work, not to study.
-He wanted to have something to do, and if put on a fair track, was not
-afraid of being left behind in the ordinary business of life. With
-this adventurous disposition, and with a good physical stamina, he was
-bound for eighteen months to Andrea Faroni, who was to take him to
-London, and there learn the business of a dealer in prints, barometers,
-and small telescopes. Faroni did not strictly fulfil his part of the
-contract. Instead of proceeding to London, he took the boy to Dublin,
-at which he arrived in 1802; so there he was started in a business
-career in Ireland when sixteen years of age. Helpless, friendless,
-without money, and ignorant of the English language, his fate was
-rather hard; but his privations only served to strengthen his powers of
-self-reliance. Like a hero, he determined to overcome all difficulties.
-
-Faroni, his master, seems to have made a trade of getting Italian
-boys into his clutches. Besides Bianconi, he had several others, whom
-he daily turned out to the streets to sell prints in a poor kind
-of frames, always making a point that they should set off on their
-travels without any money, and bring home to him the proceeds of
-their industry. At first, Bianconi was at a loss how to carry on his
-dealings. The only English word he was made acquainted with was ‘buy,
-buy;’ and when asked the price of his prints, he could only count on
-his fingers the number of pence he demanded. In a short time, he
-picked up other words; and gave so much satisfaction to his employer,
-that he was sent off to the country every Monday morning with two
-pounds worth of pictures, and a munificent allowance of fourpence in
-his pocket as subsistence-money until he returned on Saturday evening.
-How he contrived to live on less than a penny a day, is not mentioned.
-We daresay, he often got a warm potato as well as a night’s lodging
-from the kind-hearted peasantry to whom he exhibited his wares. Opening
-his pack was as good as a show. He carried a variety of Scripture
-pieces, pictures of the Royal family, and portraits of Bonaparte and
-his distinguished generals, all which were profoundly interesting,
-and found willing purchasers. On one occasion, an over-zealous
-magistrate, thinking there was a treasonous purpose in selling effigies
-of Bonaparte, arrested the young pedler, and kept him all night in a
-guard-room without fire or bedding, and only in the morning was he
-liberated, almost in a perishing condition. Every Saturday night,
-Bianconi returned to Dublin to deliver the money he had gathered, and
-this he did with an honesty which commanded that degree of confidence
-and respect which led to his professional advancement.
-
-Bianconi’s rambles during three to four years took him chiefly
-in a south-western direction from Dublin, towards Waterford,
-Carrick-on-Suir, and Clonmel, in which neighbourhood he made many
-friends in respectable circles, who were anxious to help him with their
-countenance and advice, of which as a foreigner he stood in need. So
-encouraged, he dropped the trade of pedler, and set up as a carver
-and gilder in Carrick in 1806. Not long afterwards, he removed to
-Waterford, and issued cards intimating that he was ‘a carver and gilder
-of the first class.’ It was a bold announcement; but he resolved to
-make up for deficiencies by incessant industry; and with the exception
-of two hours for meals, he worked from six o’clock in the morning until
-past midnight. Hear that, ye false friends of the working classes—ye
-preachers of the gospel of idleness! Bianconi remained two years in
-Waterford, and having improved in means and mechanical knowledge, he
-removed to Clonmel, in which he settled down for a permanence. Clonmel
-is a thriving borough of some importance, on the river Suir, chiefly in
-the county of Tipperary, and fourteen miles south from Cashel. We shall
-not go into any account of his growing trade in mirrors and gilded
-picture-frames; it is enough to say that Bianconi, by his suavity,
-integrity, and diligence in his calling, laid the foundation of his
-fortunes, by which he was enabled to project and carry out a very
-stupendous undertaking.
-
-A grand thought burst on Bianconi. He conceived the idea of
-establishing a system of cheap and commodious travelling through
-Ireland. The only public conveyances were a few mail and day coaches
-on the great lines of road. Across the country there was no means of
-transit between market-towns, except by private or specially hired
-carriages. The plan fallen upon was to start public cars, each with two
-wheels, drawn by a single horse, and carrying six passengers—three on
-each side, sitting with their faces outward, in the Irish fashion, with
-the driver on an elevated seat in front. The attempt was made in 1815,
-beginning with a car from Clonmel to Cahir, and subsequently extended
-to Tipperary and Limerick. The thing took. A grievous public want was
-supplied, and supplied by a foreigner. From town to town, this way and
-that way over hundreds of miles, Bianconi’s cars spread, and became a
-great institution. On certain routes, cars with four wheels drawn by
-two horses, with accommodation for twelve passengers, were established;
-and latterly there were cars drawn by four horses, accommodating
-sixteen passengers. At Clonmel there was a gigantic establishment, the
-centre of the organisation, and at the head of the whole was Bianconi,
-like the general at the head of an army—his carving and gilding
-business, of course, being given up, and nothing thought of but cars,
-horses, drivers, and way-bills.
-
-Bianconi’s head was not turned by his surprising success. He was
-not one of your foolish persons who, having hit upon a successful
-enterprise, leave it to its fate, and heedlessly take their ease. His
-genius for organisation was exercised now only for the first time. The
-smallest as well as the greatest matters occupied his attention; yet
-Bianconi was not a mere business monster, set on making money. He was
-generous in his gifts for pious objects and the support of schools;
-nor was he less noted for his profuse and genial hospitality. He
-had, however, higher claims to the character of a public benefactor.
-When his cars were generally established, he realised the pleasure
-of seeing the good they were doing. In a paper read by him at the
-British Association meeting in 1857, he speaks of the many advantages
-arising from the speedy and free communication he had set on foot.
-‘As the establishment extended, I was surprised and delighted at its
-commercial and moral importance. I found, as soon as I had opened
-communication with the interior of the country, the consumption of
-manufactured goods greatly increased. In the remote parts of Ireland,
-before my cars ran from Tralee to Cahirciveen in the south, from
-Galway to Clifden in the west, and from Ballina to Belmullet in the
-north-west, purchasers were obliged to give eight or nine pence a yard
-for calico for shirts, which they afterwards bought for three or four
-pence. The poor people, therefore, who previously could ill afford
-to buy one shirt, were enabled to buy two for a less price than they
-had paid for one, and in the same ratio other commodities came into
-general use at reduced prices.’ The introduction of railways naturally
-deranged the car traffic. But in 1857, Bianconi had still nine hundred
-horses, working sixty-seven conveyances, and travelling daily four
-thousand two hundred and forty-four miles. There was in fact as much
-car traffic as ever, only changed in many places into cross-roads, and
-running short distances in connection with railway stations—a fact
-which verifies what is obvious to everybody; for railways, instead
-of diminishing the number of horses in the country, as short-sighted
-people prognosticated, have greatly increased them. Bianconi felt a
-pride in thinking how through the agency of his cars the fisheries on
-the west of Ireland had been largely promoted, thereby contributing to
-the comfort and independence of the people; and he was prouder still to
-say, for the sake of Ireland, that his conveyances, though travelling
-night and day, and many of them carrying important mails, had never
-once been interrupted by any social disorder, and never suffered the
-slightest injury.
-
-From prudential considerations, Bianconi continued a bachelor
-until he was well established in the car business, and was in good
-circumstances. When, as he thought, the proper time had come, and
-he had a handsomely furnished house in Clonmel into which he might
-introduce a wife, he in 1827 married a young and amiable lady, Eliza
-Hayes, daughter of a stock-broker in Dublin. Of this marriage there
-was a family of a son and two daughters. The son died while still a
-young man, and the eldest daughter, Kate, died unmarried. The youngest
-daughter, Mary Ann, was married to Morgan John O’Connell, M.P. for
-Kerry, and nephew of the famous Dan. O’Connell. Surviving her husband,
-this lady has lately given to the world a memoir of her father,
-‘Charles Bianconi, a Biography’ (Chapman and Hall, London, 1878), to
-which we have been indebted for a number of interesting particulars.
-Mrs O’Connell’s recollections picture her father in his early married
-life as a man who gave little heed to home affairs. His time was
-divided on his cars, electioneering, and getting into the corporation
-of Clonmel. He was fond of his children, but too busy to think much
-about them. ‘For a man of such excellent common-sense in most things,’
-says his daughter, ‘he was not a judicious father. He suffered my
-handsome brother to grow up without a profession.’ This is not said
-disrespectfully, but to present a type of men in married life, who,
-with excellent abilities and good intentions, habitually neglect the
-rearing of their sons to any useful purpose. Who could not point to
-lamentable instances of this indiscretion, and the unhappy consequences
-which follow?
-
-Bianconi had an ambition. It was to be Mayor of Clonmel. Some will
-think this a weakness, but it was excusable. One who had begun life
-as a poor alien boy struggling with poverty, and cared for by nobody,
-wished to shew that by the revolution of fortune he was qualified for a
-position of honour and dignity. His ambition was gratified. In 1844, he
-was unanimously elected Mayor of Clonmel for the ensuing year; and such
-was the satisfaction he gave as a magistrate, that he was elected for
-a second term of office. For a position of this kind he was eminently
-qualified. He had learned to speak English with perfect fluency, and
-from observation was able to act his part in a manner equal to that of
-any native-born citizen. Intuitively he had caught up the fervour of
-the Irish character, as well as a knowledge of the legal disabilities
-which had hitherto exasperated the majority of the nation. A friend to
-justice and toleration, and on all sides desirous to promote peace and
-good-will, it is not surprising that he attained to popular favour.
-
-In Mrs O’Connell’s memoir of her father we have a glimpse of a few
-of his eccentricities. So anxious was he to be helpful when his
-interference could be of any use, that while acting as Mayor of Clonmel
-he did not mind clambering on the top of his cars to pack the luggage
-of passengers; and he would give himself any amount of trouble to get
-situations for young men in whom he had confidence. While generous
-in his charities, he was scrupulous to parsimony when there was a
-chance of making a good bargain. This trait of character, however, is
-not uncommon. We have heard related the anecdote of a wealthy London
-banker, who one day saw his coachman taking home a pie of tempting
-appearance for dinner. Inquiring the price of the pie, he learned that
-it cost half-a-crown. ‘If you please, James, I’ll take the bargain
-off your hands; there is half-a-crown for you, and you can easily get
-another pie for yourself.’ So saying, the banker secured the pie,
-which would last him for dinner for a week. Bianconi was equally acute
-in trying to turn the penny. ‘One day, in Fleet Street, just after
-he had engaged a four-wheeled cab, my father saw a stout gentleman
-walking very quickly towards him, and who was evidently in distress at
-not being able to find a conveyance. The spirit of Charles Bianconi,
-carman, woke up too strongly to be suddenly quelled. “I have a cab,
-sir,” he said. “If you will give me your fare, I will set you down
-where you like.” The stout gentleman was profuse with thanks, and said
-he wanted to go to the Exchange. When they were in the cab, he begged
-to be allowed to know to whom he was indebted. “My name is Bianconi,”
-said my father. “The great Bianconi?” replied the gentleman. “And what
-is your name, sir?” replied my father, without half the politeness of
-his companion. “My name, sir, is Rothschild.” My father, in telling me
-the story, admitted that he was so much overawed by the presence and
-the affability of so famous a man, that he had not presence of mind to
-return the compliment and say, “The great Rothschild?” This was by no
-means a singular instance of my father’s eccentricities in this way;
-often at home, in Ireland, when he was driving in his own carriage
-along the high-road, he would take in a traveller who would otherwise
-have gone by the car, provided that he paid the car fare.’
-
-In his broodings over change of circumstances, Bianconi had nourished
-another ambition than that of being some day Mayor of Clonmel. He
-wished to be a land-proprietor, but not being a natural-born subject,
-he was not, according to law, eligible for buying land until he went
-through certain formalities in 1831, after which he looked about for a
-suitable investment. His first and principal acquisition was Longfield,
-a property in Tipperary, extending to about a thousand English acres.
-On it was a large and cheerful house, overlooking the Suir, and
-well-wooded pleasure-grounds sloping down to the river. Here, with
-splendid views of distant mountains, Bianconi took up his residence—at
-his arrival on taking possession there being a grand flare-up of
-tenantry with no end of cheering, for the new landlord’s beneficence
-and means of disbursement were pretty well understood. Bianconi did
-not disappoint expectations. When famine, from the failure of the
-potato crops, spread over the land in 1848, he employed all who would
-work, and no one died from want at Longfield. His many improvements in
-fencing, draining, and building cottages with slated roofs gave some
-offence to neighbouring proprietors of the old school; but he did not
-mind being looked coldly upon, and by his independence of character
-gained general esteem and respect.
-
-Advancing in life, Bianconi disposed of his interest in the car system
-which he originated, several new proprietors taking his place. In 1851,
-he revisited Italy with his family, but found himself out of unison
-with all that fell under his notice. Some family property that devolved
-on him, he presented to several poor relations. It was a pleasure for
-him to return to Ireland, with which all his feelings were identified,
-and where he had made numerous warmly cherished acquaintances—among
-others, Daniel O’Connell, with whom he was in frequent correspondence.
-His daughter speaks of the immense mass of letters and papers which
-he left behind him, and presents us with a few specimens from persons
-of note, all in a complimentary strain. Referring to what he had
-effected by his ingenious enterprise, Lady Blessington writes to him
-from England—‘I thank you for discovering those noble qualities in
-my poor countrymen which neglect and injustice may have concealed,
-but have not been able to destroy. While bettering their condition,
-you have elevated the moral character of those you employ; you have
-advanced civilisation while inculcating a practical code of morality
-that must ever prove the surest path to lead to an amelioration of
-Ireland. Wisdom and humanity, which ought ever to be inseparable, shine
-most luminously in the plan you have pursued, and its results must win
-for you the esteem, gratitude, and respect of all who love Ireland.
-The Irish are not an ungrateful people, as they have too often been
-represented. My own feelings satisfy me on this point. Six of the
-happiest years of my life have been spent in your country [Italy],
-where I learned to appreciate the high qualities of its natives; and
-consequently I am not surprised, though delighted, to find one Italian
-conferring so many benefits on mine.’
-
-In 1865, when seventy-nine years of age, Bianconi suffered a serious
-misfortune. When driving a private car, part of the harness snapped,
-and he was thrown violently to the ground. His thigh-bone was broken;
-and rarely at his advanced age does any one recover from the effects
-of such accidents. In a moment of time he had been made a cripple for
-the remainder of his life. He now only moved about with crutches,
-or was wheeled about in a Bath-chair; yet he undertook journeys, of
-course with proper attendance, and did not lose his characteristic
-cheerfulness. ‘When long past eighty, when he got to be stout, lame,
-and helpless, he would visit the boys’ Reformatory in the Wicklow
-Mountains,’ and encountered other risks inappropriate to his age and
-infirmity. By the governing authorities in Ireland he was held in
-much esteem for the benefits he had conferred on the country. ‘That
-amiable, accomplished, and deservedly popular Viceroy, Lord Carlisle,
-never failed to single out Mr Bianconi at the Royal Dublin shows, or
-at the other places of public resort, when he happened to be present
-in his wheeled chair, for they were great friends, and Lord Carlisle
-esteemed him very highly. At first it was hardly expected he would have
-lived long after his mishap; but by God’s grace he remained with us for
-nearly another ten years.’
-
-Afflicted with paralysis and confined to bed, poor Bianconi passed
-peacefully away after a long and useful career. Mrs O’Connell, who was
-attending on him at the last, strangely omits to give the date of his
-decease, which was September 22, 1875, when within two days of being
-eighty-nine years of age. His body was interred in a mortuary chapel,
-which he had prepared for himself and family within the grounds at
-Longfield. Although he had latterly been unable to appear in public
-affairs, his loss was felt to be national. Looking to the manner in
-which he self-reliantly rose from obscurity to distinction, and to the
-success of his vast undertakings, his memory cannot but be endeared
-to his adopted country, which stands particularly in need of men with
-his sound common-sense and commercial enterprise. In conclusion, we
-might almost be warranted in saying that Charles Bianconi did more
-practically to advance the civilisation and the prosperity of Ireland
-than all its professed patriots and politicians put together.
-
- W. C.
-
-
-
-
-HELENA, LADY HARROGATE.
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI.—TO REMIND.
-
-‘Gentleman—that is, person—wanted most particularly to know—please to
-see him, Sir Sykes!’ deferentially hinted the under-butler, sliding on
-noiseless feet up to the angle of his master’s library table. ‘He was
-very pressing—send in card,’ continued the man, slurring over the words
-he uttered with that inimitable slipperiness of diction of which the
-English, and indeed Cockney man-servant possesses the monopoly, and
-which seems obsequiously to suggest rather than boldly to announce. Sir
-Sykes looked up in some surprise.
-
-‘Did he mention what he wanted?’ he asked.
-
-‘No, Sir Sykes,’ replied the under-butler, edging the emblazoned tray
-on which lay the card, a little nearer, as an experienced angler might
-bring his bait within striking distance of the pike that lay among the
-weeds.
-
-‘You may shew him in—here,’ said Sir Sykes, as, without taking the
-card, he read the name upon it, and which was legibly inscribed in a
-big, bold, black handwriting. With a bow the under-butler withdrew to
-execute his master’s orders.
-
-Great people—and a baronet of Sir Sykes Denzil’s wealth and position
-may for all practical purposes be classed among the great of the
-earth—are proverbially difficult of access. It is the business
-of those about them to hedge them comfortably in from flippant or
-interested intrusions which might ruffle the golden calm of their
-existence; and suspicious-looking strangers by no means find the door
-of such a mansion as Carbery, as a rule, fly open at their summons.
-
-The man who had on this occasion effected an entry was not one of those
-whose faces are their best letters of recommendation. The card he had
-given bore the name of Richard Hold, and under ordinary circumstances,
-such a caller as the mariner would never have succeeded in being put
-into communication with a higher dignitary than the house-steward
-or the groom of the chambers. However, by a judicious mixture of
-bribing and bullying, the visitor had induced the under-butler to do
-his errand. Under certain circumstances, half a sovereign is a sorry
-douceur, even to an under-butler, but when tendered in company with
-enigmatical threats of ‘starting with a rope’s end,’ by a seafaring
-personage of stalwart build and resolute air, such a coin becomes
-doubly efficacious as a persuader.
-
-Richard Hold, master mariner, came in with a curious gait and mien,
-half-slinking, half-swaggering, like a wolf that daylight has found far
-from the forests and among the haunts of men. He was dressed in very
-new black garments, ‘shore-going clothes,’ as he would himself have
-described them; and the hat that he carried in his hand was new and
-tall and hard. He had even provided himself with a pair of gloves, so
-desirous was he to omit no item of the customary garb of gentlemen; but
-these he carried loose, instead of subjecting his strong brown fingers
-to such unwonted confinement.
-
-‘I cannot say that I expected this honour, Mr Hold,’ said the baronet,
-stiffly motioning his unwelcome visitor to a seat.
-
-‘’Tis likely not,’ coolly returned the adventurer, as he took a survey
-of the apartment. ‘This sort of place, I don’t mind admitting, is a
-cut, or even two cuts above me. Still, business is business, Sir Sykes
-Denzil, Baronet, and has got to be attended to, I reckon, even in such
-a gen-teel spot as this is, mister!’
-
-There must be something in the American twang and the American forms of
-speech which all the world over hits the fancy of British-born rovers
-of Hold’s caste, for in every quarter of the globe our home-reared
-rovers affect the idiom, and sometimes the accent, of Sam Slick’s
-countrymen.
-
-‘I am scarcely aware, Mr Hold,’ said the baronet with cold politeness,
-‘what business it can be to which I am indebted for the favour of your
-company, to-day.’
-
-‘Aren’t you, though, skipper?’ echoed Hold, whose natural audacity,
-for a moment repressed by the weight as it were of the grandeur around
-him, began to assert itself afresh. ‘Well, let every fellow paddle his
-own canoe and shoe his own mustangs. The question is, Are you dealing
-fairly by me or are you not, Sir Sykes Denzil, Baronet?’
-
-‘I assure you that you are talking Greek to me,’ said the master of
-Carbery Chase, with a tinge of colour rising to his pale face.
-
-‘A nod,’ persisted Hold, ‘is as good every bit as a wink—you know the
-rest of it, mister. But since you want plain speaking, you shall have
-it. You can’t have forgot, no more than I can, that our bargain was
-just this: A certain young lady was to be married to a certain young
-gentleman.’
-
-‘I apprehend that you allude to—to my ward—Miss Ruth Willis,’ said the
-baronet hesitatingly.
-
-‘You’ve hit it exactly,’ exclaimed Hold, with a slap of his hard hand
-upon the crown of his hard hat, which sounded like a muffled drum,
-somewhat to the discomfiture of its proprietor, who eyed its ruffled
-surface ruefully. ‘When is the wedding to come off?’
-
-Sir Sykes contemplated his ruffianly visitor with a disgust which it
-required all his prudence to dissemble.
-
-‘In civilised society,’ he said coldly, ‘events of that sort do not
-take place with quite so expeditious a disregard of difficulties as
-your very apposite question suggests. In the backwoods it is perhaps
-otherwise.’
-
-‘In the backwoods,’ roughly retorted Hold, ‘we don’t shilly-shally
-about righting a wrong, no more than about the marrying of a young
-couple that hev made up their minds to it. And let me tell you, Sir
-Sykes Denzil, Baronet, the superfine Saxony you fine gentlemen wear
-covers bigger rogues, often, than ever did the deerskin hunting-shirt
-with its Indian embroidery of wampum and coloured quills. Backwoodsmen!
-I’ve been in white-fisted company less to be trusted than theirs.’
-
-Sir Sykes had imbibed too much of the spirit of that modern civilised
-society of which he spoke, to be readily nettled into a burst of anger
-by such taunts as these. Cool, save for one moment, from the first, the
-temperature of his calmly flowing blood seemed to grow more frigid as
-Hold’s warmed.
-
-‘You have, I assure you, Mr Hold, no cause whatever for irritation,’ he
-said smoothly: ‘I mean—to use your own expression, which I willingly
-adopt—fairly by you. I neither repudiate nor ignore our tacit compact.
-It is my dearest wish that my son should become the husband of the
-exemplary young lady in whose prosperity you interest yourself.’
-
-Hold gave a growl such as a bear, suddenly mollified by the gift of a
-glittering slice of toothsome honeycomb, might be expected to emit. His
-distrustful eye ranged over the baronet’s plausible face, as though to
-test the sincerity of the assurance which had just been given.
-
-‘We’re in the same boat,’ he said, in a tone that, if dogged, was less
-surly than before. ‘Our pumpkins, I guess, ought to go to the same
-market, they ought. But fair words don’t put fresh butter into a dish
-of boiled batatas. I’m a British bull-dog of the game old breed,’ he
-added gruffly; ‘and I keep the grip, however I’m handled. Is there a
-likelihood of the marriage coming off soonish?’
-
-‘I hope so,’ returned Sir Sykes. He would have given much to have
-avoided the slight embarrassment which he was conscious that his manner
-indicated, and which was not lost upon Hold’s watchful eye.
-
-‘No day fixed? No banns put up—stop! I forgot—you swells marry by
-special license of the Archbishop of Canterbury—no cake ordered; no
-fal-lals bespoken from the milliner; no breakfast; no orange-flowers,
-eh? Well, I wish to be reasonable about it, Sir Sykes, but there must
-be an end of this. Do the young people understand one another, or do
-they not?’
-
-‘It does not answer to _brusquer_ these things,’ returned Sir Sykes
-apologetically.
-
-‘It does not answer to _what_?’ interrupted Richard, to whose nautical
-ears the French word sounded odder than would have done a fragment of
-linguafranca or a scrap of Eboe or Mandingo.
-
-‘To be too precipitate,’ explained the baronet. ‘I have spoken to my
-son. He sees, I hope, the affair in a proper light. He is often in the
-society of Miss Willis, but—but’——
-
-Sir Sykes wavered miserably here. All his deportment seemed to fail him
-before Hold’s merciless eye, the very gaze of which probed him to the
-quick.
-
-‘Aren’t you captain in your own ship?’ asked the adventurer curtly.
-
-The baronet winced at the question. Captain in his own ship, in the
-sense that some men are commanders at home, he had never been. His own
-house, his own estate, had not from the first been managed in precise
-accordance with the views of him who owned them. But he had been a
-decorous captain, a captain who walked quarter-deck as solemnly as the
-greatest Tartar afloat, and who got lip-service and eye-service as a
-salve to his vanity, until quite recently.
-
-Now there was a strong and not altogether an obedient hand on the
-helm. A new broom was making, in the person of Enoch Wilkins,
-attorney-at-law, a clean sweep of various time-honoured abuses such as
-always do grow up about a great estate, and the wails of the indignant
-sufferers could not always be kept from reaching the reluctant ears of
-Sir Sykes. People who were docked of perquisites came in respectful
-bitterness of soul to the baronet, and humbly prayed that he would take
-their part as against Wilkins the lawyer and Abrahams the steward.
-
-Captain in his own ship! The word was a telling one, and it hit him
-hard. He was only captain in an ornamental sense, because Carbery
-was his freehold, and the baronetcy his, and he alone could sign
-receipts and draw cheques. He had loved his ease much; and now it was
-perpetually invaded. He was sorry for dismissed gamekeepers, and for
-tenants whose tenure was to expire on Lady-day. He gave them drafts on
-his banker as a plaster for the smart which he nevertheless felt sure
-was deserved. An unrespecting City solicitor, and the sharp London Jew
-whom Mr Wilkins had inducted into the stewardship, were swelling the
-rent-roll in despite of the feeble protests of the nominal lord of all.
-
-‘I can’t compel Captain Denzil to take a wife of my choosing; that is
-beyond the power of a modern English father, at least where sons are
-concerned,’ said Sir Sykes with a sickly smile.
-
-‘No; you can’t do that, skipper. To knot the ninetailed cat and give
-the young fellow six dozen for mutiny,’ said Hold, chuckling over the
-imaginary scene, ‘would be too strict discipline for mealy-mouthed days
-like these. But you might let him have it, Sir Sykes, though not quite
-so downright. Make him understand that his allowances and his liberty
-all depend on good behaviour, and then see what comes of it.’
-
-What Sir Sykes suffered during the delivery of this speech, could only
-be inferred from the fact that his lips became of a bluish white and
-that he drew his breath gaspingly.
-
-‘Believe me, Mr Hold,’ he said in a thin broken voice, which gained
-strength somewhat as he proceeded, ‘you may intrust the care of
-carrying out your wishes—that is, our wishes—to me. I understand my son
-best, and I’——
-
-He stopped again, gasping for breath, and the lines about his mouth,
-traced by pain, were visible enough to attract the notice of his
-unscrupulous guest.
-
-‘You shall have time, Sir Sykes Denzil, Baronet,’ he said
-apologetically; ‘take a fortnight if you like. I’m to be heard
-of meanwhile at old Plugger’s;’ and he threw the card of that
-establishment on the table.
-
-Then Sir Sykes rang the bell for wine, and the wine was brought. Hold
-tossed off a bumper of sherry.
-
-‘Your health, skipper,’ he said; ‘and success to the wedding.’ And so,
-with an impudent leer, he picked up his tall shining hat and departed.
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII.—A DIFFERENCE OF OPINION.
-
-‘It can’t be done, sir, at the price. I’d do a good deal to meet your
-wishes and that, and I don’t pretend to be more sentimental than my
-neighbours. But marrying is a serious sort of step, you know. One can’t
-cry off and pay forfeit, if one changes one’s mind a bit too late. Miss
-Willis is’——
-
-Thus far Captain Denzil; but now Sir Sykes interrupted his son with an
-irritation unusual to him: ‘Miss Willis is a great deal too good for
-you, I am afraid. Indeed I trust to her sound sense to keep some order
-in your affairs, and prevent you from driving at too headlong a pace
-along the road to ruin. Of course her pretensions to pedigree are very
-slight compared with our own, if that be the obstacle in your way.’
-
-‘Nobody cares much about ancient blood, in a woman at least,
-now-a-days,’ languidly replied Jasper. ‘She is lady enough to take the
-head of a dinner-table, or figure creditably in a London drawing-room,
-after a few weeks of training, and that’s as much as need be looked
-for. And I admit that Miss Willis is—very clever.’
-
-Except in the case of an authoress, no one ever applies the epithet
-‘Very clever’ to a lady save as a species of covert blame. Sir Sykes
-felt and looked uneasy as the words reached him.
-
-‘If you have any personal objection’—— he began.
-
-‘Not the least in the world,’ unceremoniously interrupted Jasper. ‘I’ll
-even stretch a point, and say I rather like the girl than otherwise.
-She’d go straight, I daresay, once the course was smooth and clear
-before her. But I do not think, father, you are treating me quite well.
-Carbery ought, you know it ought, to go in the direct line, as such
-properties do.’
-
-‘I apprehend your meaning,’ returned Sir Sykes in his coldest tone,
-‘to be that you resent as a grievance the fact that the estate is not
-entailed upon yourself. You should be more reasonable, and remember the
-singular circumstances under which I became master here.’
-
-‘It was a grand coup!’ exclaimed the captain, with an envious little
-sigh. ‘Such a stroke of luck does not come twice to the same family.’
-
-‘I got this great gift,’ pursued Sir Sykes, ‘from the hand of one who
-thought less of what he gave to me than of what, by making such a will,
-he took away from others. The old lord’s self-tormenting mind led him
-to exult, in the hopes that his testament extinguished, in the injury
-done to kith and kin.’
-
-‘It was a sell for the De Veres,’ muttered Jasper; ‘they didn’t on
-the whole take it badly.’ He looked up as he spoke at the glimmering
-blazonry of the great stained-glass window, and realised, for the
-first time perhaps, the vexation which the caprice of the late lord of
-Carbery had inflicted on those of his own race and name.
-
-‘The property,’ said Sir Sykes, ‘having become my own a score of years
-ago, is mine to give or to withhold at my death, as in my lifetime I
-may judge fitting.’
-
-‘You have told me that, sir, pretty often,’ retorted Jasper testily;
-‘of course it’s yours, and you can leave it to the Foundling Hospital
-if you like.’
-
-‘Common policy then would dictate,’ said Sir Sykes with deliberate
-emphasis, ‘the study of my wishes. And I wish very much indeed that
-Miss Willis should become your wife.’
-
-‘I can’t, as I said, do it at the price; really I can’t,’ rejoined
-Jasper sullenly, as he thrust his hand into a side-pocket and fingered
-the cigar-case that lay there. He did not dare to light a cigar in
-the library, much as he longed to seek solace in smoke; but he grew
-impatient for the interview to come to an end, and to recover his
-freedom.
-
-‘I offered a handsome income,’ said Sir Sykes with an offended look.
-‘Had not the sum proposed proved sufficient, that was a difficulty not
-insuperable. You had the option of beginning married life with the
-revenue of an average baronet.’
-
-‘Yes; but you see, sir, you are a trifle above the mark of an average
-baronet’ responded the captain; ‘and I naturally should like when
-my turn comes—I hope it will be a long time first—to fill the same
-position. A bare allowance, or a lump of settled money, won’t make me
-the equal of an ordinary eldest son; and I don’t see why, since by
-accident I’m not on a par with other fellows of my nominal rank and
-prospects, and I am required to marry without being allowed to choose
-for myself, I should not be put on a level with men of my own standing.’
-
-Sir Sykes fidgeted restlessly in his chair, and the lines of pain about
-his mouth, which grew more sharply defined every day, deepened almost
-perceptibly.
-
-‘Consider what you are asking of me,’ he said with an injured air; ‘to
-make myself a mere tenant for life where I have been for twenty years
-owner in fee-simple! Sons do not ask their fathers to entail an estate
-for their benefit.’
-
-‘I don’t see why I should be in a worse position than other fellows,’
-sullenly responded Jasper. ‘I may have been extravagant and that sort
-of thing; but there’s no reason why my extravagances should be totted
-up against me to a heavier sum-total than those of twenty I could name.
-Hookham, now, who let his father in for a hundred and eleven thousand
-the year that the French horse Plon-Plon won the Derby, is as safe of
-the Snivey estates as he is of the Snivey peerage.’
-
-‘The Earl of Snivey and his prodigal heir Lord Hookham,’ answered Sir
-Sykes with cold urbanity, ‘do not present a case, to my mind, precisely
-in point. You cannot in reason expect me, after the sacrifices I have
-already made on your behalf, to place you in the position, as you call
-it, of heir of entail. I am speaking to you less as a father than as a
-man of the world.’
-
-‘And as a man of the world, sir,’ said the incorrigible Jasper, ‘I
-trust you will excuse my saying that I scarcely care to be huddled and
-hustled into marrying I don’t know whom, unless at a very heavy figure,
-as my stock-broker, when I was fool enough to go on the Exchange, and
-burned my fingers over time-bargains, used to say. I can’t think why
-you should mind my coming next, as concerns Carbery Chase here.’
-
-This was a home question which, if arraigned before the stern tribunal
-of Minos and Rhadamanthus, Sir Sykes would not have found it easy to
-answer. He was in the habit of telling himself that Jasper was not a
-successor to whom the honour and welfare of a great family could with
-prudence be intrusted. Were he master, the old oaks in the Chase might
-soon be gambled down from their prescriptive loftiness, and mortgages
-might spring up like mushrooms. Here was a noble estate unencumbered,
-like some big diamond without a flaw to mar its lustre, and he was
-asked to let his spendthrift son inherit as of right. There were Lucy
-and Blanche to be provided for. They would marry, doubtless, and their
-husbands would probably expect that the brides’ hands should be heavy
-with much gold. The bulk of the property would devolve on Captain
-Denzil; but then it might be tied up with an ingenious testamentary
-rigour that should keep the future baronet in legal leading-strings
-through life. Sir Sykes cherished too lively a recollection of the
-shifts and straits of his own outlawed progenitor Sir Harbottle,
-to wish the reins of government to pass unreservedly into Jasper’s
-unsteady hands.
-
-But Sir Sykes had an unavowed motive for rejecting his son’s
-proposition. He was by no means sure how Enoch Wilkins of St Nicholas
-Poultney would receive such a suggestion. Mr Wilkins, that over-zealous
-pilot, who had insisted on assuming the guidance of affairs, might be
-furious at hearing that Jasper was to be promoted from heir-presumptive
-to heir-apparent. There was no alliance between the captain and the
-shrewd turf lawyer, from whom so much of his lightly expended cash had
-been extracted. Jasper by no means relished the elevation of Mr Wilkins
-to be his father’s Mentor and right-hand man. Mr Wilkins might guess
-that Sir Jasper would send his japanned deed-boxes elsewhere than to
-St Nicholas Poultney. And yet Sir Sykes could not venture to offend Mr
-Wilkins.
-
-The conversation was protracted for some half-hour or more, since Sir
-Sykes was sincerely desirous to carry his point; but it languished by
-degrees, and involved, as conversations on important topics are in real
-life apt to do, frequent repetitions of some stock phrase or threadbare
-argument. Sir Sykes essayed threats, veiled ones of course, and not
-very comprehensible even to himself. Jasper, however, was very little
-moved by such threats. There are things that a gentleman cannot do, and
-assuredly one of them is to turn his only son out of doors because he
-declines a wife of the parent’s choosing. And to no other menace was
-the captain amenable. He should probably, as a result of his father’s
-displeasure, get no cheques for the next few months; but this stoppage
-of pocket-money could not much affect the happiness of a graceless
-prodigal who, had he once got a sufficient sum in his possession, would
-have turned his back at once on Carbery and all that belonged thereto.
-
-Jasper, then, was singularly stubborn. He was in general as morally
-pliable as a jelly-fish, after the fashion of most so-called men of
-pleasure, but now he seemed for the nonce to have developed a backbone,
-and to be hard to bend. There was really some lurking sense of injury
-at his heart, and he felt on better terms with his own conscience
-than was often the case, as he resisted his father’s instances that
-he should marry Miss Willis, commence housekeeping on five thousand a
-year, and be a reformed character as well as a Benedict. He felt that
-all was not right, and was assured that a bride worth the taking would
-not be urged on his acceptance with such pertinacity.
-
-‘I do not see,’ repeated Jasper again and again, ‘why I should be in a
-worse position than other fellows.’
-
-From that formula, behind which, as behind a breastwork, he strongly
-intrenched himself nothing could drive him. It was not, as he explained
-with almost unnecessary candour, that he had any undue delicacy with
-regard to mercenary marriages; but that what he stipulated for was to
-be on a level with other spendthrifts of his own degree and set, with
-young Lord Hookham, with Lionel Rattlebury, and wild Lord Viscount
-Squandercash, and the rest. Entail the estate, so that it _must_ pass
-to him, Jasper, and post-obits would become practicable, and money be
-easily raised; and then Miss Willis was welcome to be the partner of
-his joys and sorrows—such was Jasper’s simple train of reasoning. It
-was a heavy price, but he stood out for it.
-
-Sir Sykes was not willing to pay the price, at the cost, it might be,
-of a second contest with Mr Enoch Wilkins, and the negotiation with his
-son came to no satisfactory conclusion. What was to be done? Hold had
-named a fortnight as the period of grace that he was disposed to grant;
-but the baronet was of opinion that it would not be politic to allow
-the time to expire without communicating with this man—who was in some
-sense his master. He would inform Hold of Captain Denzil’s unexpected
-obstinacy, and plead for a further delay, and—yes—he would send money.
-Money has often a wonderfully lenitive effect upon the temper, and its
-softening effects should be tried upon this buccaneering fellow.
-
-Sir Sykes penned his letter, touching as lightly as he could on
-Jasper’s recalcitrancy, and expressing sanguine hopes for the future.
-He said nothing about the entail, which had been the subject of the
-haggling debate between himself and the captain. It would hardly be
-prudent to tell Hold of that, lest Jasper should find an unexpected
-ally to back his demand.
-
-‘We had better, under the circumstances, give him, as I believe
-whale-fishers say, a little more line,’ wrote Sir Sykes in his
-confidential communication to Richard Hold, and he was weak enough to
-pride himself on his neat use of a nautical metaphor sure to tell with
-a seafaring man. And he signed a cheque for two hundred and fifty
-pounds, payable to Mr Richard Hold, or order, and inserted it in the
-letter, which he despatched by that night’s post. He could scarcely
-have done a more foolish thing.
-
-
-
-
-OUR VOLUNTEERS.
-
-
-Some persons are old enough to remember the Volunteer system which
-prevailed in the early years of the present century. It was an
-enthusiastically patriotic movement, for the country was threatened
-with invasion by Bonaparte, who, however, as is well known, never
-got beyond preparations at Boulogne, and by the victory of Nelson at
-Trafalgar received an effectual check. Volunteering at that time,
-though very hearty, was at best never anything else than playing at
-soldiering. The members of the various corps were only civilians in
-uniforms. Discipline was imperfect. At any fancied affront, a man sent
-in his gun and walked off.
-
-We can mention a case in point, which occurred about 1807. The colonel
-in command of the Westminster Volunteers, one day lost his temper on
-parade, and struck a member of the corps with the flat of his sword.
-Such was the general indignation at the outrage, that the greater
-number of both officers and men at once sent in their resignation,
-and the regiment was broken up. This anecdote was related to us by
-one of the sergeants, who resigned and sent in his sword and musket.
-Evidently, there could have been no solid reliance on a body of
-Volunteers so ill governed and held together so feebly. The whole
-fabric was at length dissolved, and was succeeded by militia regiments
-strictly under the articles of war.
-
-The volunteering system of our own day has step by step attained the
-character of a Landwehr, or reserve force, liable, if the occasion
-arises, to support the army of the line and the militia. It embraces
-infantry, cavalry, and artillery, and is constructed on a proper
-military basis. As in former times, each town or district has its own
-regiment of Volunteers, which may be concentrated at a short notice
-by telegraph. In the infancy of the present movement, the peer and
-the artisan, the gentleman and the shopkeeper, all ‘shouldered arms’
-together and marched gaily side by side. Dukes, earls, marquises,
-and cabinet ministers joined the ranks—Lord Palmerston (then
-Prime-minister) himself donning the uniform and learning his drill
-as a private in the London Irish Rifle Corps; while in the London
-Scottish, the Marquis (now Duke) of Abercorn did the same thing. This
-was all well and good; but it could not last long, nor did it. Liberty
-is the precious possession of all classes in this country, but perfect
-‘equality’ and ‘fraternity’ such as the above incidents indicated
-are virtues which have not yet attained to any very great degree
-of perfection amongst us. And so it came to pass that these noble
-recruits, whose support at that time to the Volunteer cause cannot of
-course be over-estimated, were among the first who ‘fell out,’ to make
-way for those who really meant ‘soldiering.’
-
-Royal reviews and Easter-Monday field-days attracted to the ranks
-of our citizen army all those who loved volunteering for the sake
-of making a show; but now that the movement has settled down into
-real earnest military work, the _true_ manhood of Britain is to the
-fore—the spirit which looks upon hard work with as light a heart as
-it looks on pleasure, when there is a lesson to be learned or a great
-object to be gained.
-
-The new movement was national in all its phases. The different corps
-adopted titles and mottoes which had some distinct connection or other
-with their country’s history, or with the local traditions of the
-counties in which they were raised. In the former category are the two
-national corps we have already named; and in the latter may be reckoned
-the ‘Robin Hoods,’ with their uniform of Lincoln green, which is the
-only thing about them, however, that reminds one of the days of Robin
-Hood and his jovial band.
-
-Though for some cause which we have never heard properly explained,
-there are no ‘colours’ or ‘standards’ in our Volunteer corps, each
-regiment has a motto, the favourite ones being _Defence, not Defiance_
-(which is the motto of the National Rifle Association), _Pro Aris et
-Focis_ (For our Hearths and Firesides), and _Pro Rege et Patria_ (For
-King and Country). If ever our Volunteers are used at all it will be in
-battalion formation, like the regular army, for an army of two hundred
-thousand men cannot all act as skirmishers, and their colours would be
-to them as much the embodiment of their country’s honour as those of
-the line are to the regiments of the regular army. The Volunteers of
-1804 possessed honourable emblems in the shape of banners or standards,
-many of which still adorn the walls of London’s historic fortress—the
-Tower.
-
-In the year 1860 the Volunteer movement received the patronage of Her
-Majesty the Queen, in a manner as practical as it was generous and
-graceful. The National Rifle Association, which may be said to be the
-mainspring of the whole affair, and which has since become one of
-our most popular institutions, had decided to hold the first annual
-contest in rifle-shooting at Wimbledon Common, and the great ‘Tir
-National’ of England was successfully inaugurated by the Queen firing
-the first shot. The rifle was laid for her, and Her Majesty pulled the
-trigger. By the aid of the ‘mechanical rest’ the bullet struck the
-bull’s-eye, and thus with an omen of happy import was commenced the
-series of contests which to-day has given us an army of sharpshooters
-ready to ‘do or die’ for Britain. The Queen then announced that she
-would give a prize of two hundred and fifty pounds to be shot for
-annually, the winner having the choice of receiving it either in money
-or in a souvenir of the same value. This prize, which is called the
-‘blue-ribbon’ of Wimbledon, can only be shot for by Volunteers; and to
-it are also attached the gold medal and badge of the National Rifle
-Association. The Prince Consort also gave an annual prize to be shot
-for, and this has been continued to the meeting by the Prince of Wales.
-
-These royal acts at once put the seal of popularity upon the Volunteer
-cause, and prizes of all kinds were offered for competition. Things
-were at first somewhat chaotic at Wimbledon; but as time wore on,
-the common changed its fair-like aspect, in which refreshment booths
-occupied the most prominent place, to the spectacle which it now always
-presents on these occasions—namely that of a neat and well-ordered
-encampment where, while the meeting lasts, the strictest military
-discipline is understood to prevail. Competitors from all parts of the
-world meet there annually, for many of the prizes are of a cosmopolitan
-nature. The Dominion of Canada and Australia send teams of marksmen,
-for whom special ‘challenge cups’ are prepared; while the Army and
-Navy, the two Houses of Parliament, and our great Public Schools also
-exhibit their skill in the use of the rifle.
-
-Our Volunteers had a good deal to put up with in the first few years
-of the movement from the street arabs and other idlers, who could find
-no better employment than to fling all kinds of rough sarcasm and what
-may appropriately be termed ‘gutter criticism’ at the members of the
-different corps. An unfortunate Volunteer, for instance, was fined
-for shooting a dog on Blackheath Common as he was going to drill, and
-almost immediately every Volunteer was hailed in the London streets
-with the cry of ‘Who shot the dog?’ Again, when the Volunteers met in
-the public parks for drill they were closely surrounded by a critically
-tantalising crowd, which obstructed their movements and laughed
-heartily at their mistakes. The comic papers were also filled with
-amusing caricatures of our citizen soldiers; and a great deal was done
-even in high places to throw cold-water upon this patriotic and popular
-movement. It has now, we are glad to record, outlived all this, and has
-become enthroned in the hearts of Englishmen as one of our greatest
-institutions. It numbered at first some two hundred thousand men,
-but this included persons of all ages, sizes, and classes; and after
-the first flush of enthusiasm passed off, the motives which actuated
-many of them were not so much military zeal or any of the more solid
-military virtues, as a love of novelty and a taste for good-fellowship.
-
-The Volunteers are now organised upon a somewhat different footing.
-No one is accepted as a recruit who is not physically able to
-undergo military work and marching; but should the Volunteer wish to
-quit the service, he must comply with the following rules as laid
-down in _Regulations for the Volunteer Force_. He must give to the
-commanding-officer of his corps fourteen days’ notice in writing of his
-intention to quit the corps. He must deliver in good order—fair wear
-and tear only excepted—all arms, clothing, and appointments that may
-have been issued to him. And he must pay all money due or becoming due
-by him, under the rules of the corps, either before or when he quits
-the corps. When the above regulations have been observed, the Volunteer
-is free to bid adieu to the ranks. His uniform is supplied to him free,
-but only on condition that he shall make himself an ‘efficient;’ a
-condition which if fulfilled, will earn for the funds of his corps the
-government capitation grant of thirty shillings per year. Efficiency is
-gained by attending a certain number of drills and parades and gaining
-a regulated score of marks for rifle-shooting.
-
-Thus at a small cost to the state the different corps are made
-self-supporting, the Volunteer himself being put to no expense beyond
-the time which he gives up to the necessary drills and parades. The
-Volunteers have now learned what military discipline is, and have, by
-their attending the exercises and manœuvres of the regular army, shewn
-themselves willing to submit to it. Most Volunteer officers also take
-a pride in knowing their duty, and are no longer helplessly dependent
-on the adjutant and the drill-instructor. Instead of being regarded in
-the light of a novelty, volunteering is now looked upon as a serious
-business by all engaged in it, and as a task which in its perfect
-fulfilment will render them worthy citizens of a great and widely
-extended empire.
-
-The service which the Volunteer movement has rendered to Britain is of
-incalculable value, for besides giving us a defending army of nearly
-two hundred thousand ‘efficient’ men, trained to the use of every
-weapon known in warfare, it has been a school in which, during the
-twenty years of its existence, thousands have learned those elementary
-principles of military life which, in the case of an invasion, would
-enable them again to come forward in defence of their Queen and
-country. The very fact of Great Britain possessing such an army would
-deter, and for aught we know to the contrary, may have deterred hostile
-nations from invading her shores.
-
-The two largest Volunteer corps are Scotch—namely the 1st Lanarkshire
-Artillery with seventeen batteries, and the 1st Edinburgh (Queen’s)
-Rifle Brigade with twenty-five companies; these being the only two
-corps whose strength entitles them to two adjutants each. The militia
-and yeomanry trainings of 1876 were attended by seventy-six thousand,
-and nine thousand five hundred officers and men respectively; while
-the annual inspections of the Volunteers for last year resulted in an
-attendance of 159,378 men of all ranks.
-
-We find by reference to the Annual Returns of the Volunteer corps,
-that no fewer than 16,306 officers and sergeants obtained Certificates
-of Proficiency in 1877. These are facts which it is consoling for the
-public to know, for they ought to dispel in the future any fear of the
-consequences of foreign invasion.
-
-The Civil War in America shewed us what a Volunteer army could do; and
-it behoves this country now to see that this magnificent force which it
-has at its disposal should be placed on such a footing in relation to
-the other forces as will for ever secure its services. Our Volunteers
-constitute a force to which no other country can present a parallel;
-and as such, irrespective of its being the means of doing away with the
-evils of conscription, is worthy of all the support which the state can
-give it, for certain events within the past few years have shewn us to
-what straits a country is driven, and how great is the misery of its
-people when it has been successfully invaded. As a sign of the times
-too, we may note with satisfaction the patriotic feeling which has,
-in the present crisis of our national history, induced many Volunteer
-corps to offer their services to the government for garrison duty at
-home, in the event of our army proceeding abroad, one regiment—the
-London Irish—even going so far, we learn, as to place itself at the
-absolute disposal of the government for service either in or out of the
-United Kingdom.
-
-Long may it be ere these shores are ever again approached by an enemy
-bent upon our destruction as a people; but we cannot shut our eyes to
-the fact that such an enterprise would perchance ere this have been
-effected if it had not been for the patriotic conduct of our youth, who
-have enabled Britain to cover herself with an impenetrable shield,
-and to find in the arms and hearts of her own sons that indomitable
-strength which is best and most appropriately expressed in the peaceful
-words that form the motto of our citizen army—namely _Defence, not
-Defiance_.
-
-
-
-
-MONSIEUR DE BOCHER.
-
-
-Badly as the streets of Paris were lighted at the close of the reign
-of Louis XV., the art of illuminating ballrooms was as well understood
-then as it is in the latter half of the nineteenth century. The guests
-who flocked to the receptions of M. de Bocher, after passing through
-streets in which a few flickering oil-lamps scarcely succeeded in
-making darkness visible, found themselves in the centre of floods of
-dazzling light, and surrounded by all that was bright, fashionable, and
-gay in the pleasure-loving city of Paris.
-
-Times had much altered since the days of the Grand Monarque, and the
-hard and fast lines of society, then so rigidly observed, were now
-well-nigh obliterated. A precursor of the great Revolution which was
-hereafter to overthrow the state, was to be found in the invasion of
-the saloons of the nobility by financiers and capitalists, who were
-received with open arms by those who wished either to borrow money from
-them, or to recruit their shattered fortunes by alliances with the
-money-bags of the period. Nor was this all; for the poets and writers
-of the day, anxious to secure the support of well-known and wealthy
-patrons, flocked to these reunions, which they enlivened with their
-geniality and wit.
-
-Monsieur de Bocher could lay but little real claim to the patrician
-prefix which he had for some years adhibited to his otherwise plebeian
-name. But he held a quasi-official appointment, which, although
-outside the Cabinet, gave him almost the dignity of a minister; while
-his well-known wealth and splendid entertainments attracted the best
-society in Paris. He was, moreover, a man of wit and learning, and
-as he possessed the somewhat rare faculty of playing the host to
-perfection, had an excellent cook and a cellar of first-class wine,
-his mansion in the Faubourg St Germain was one of the most popular in
-Paris. Dukes and peers, ambassadors and foreigners of distinction, the
-simple gentleman, the poet, the literary man, the barrister, and the
-capitalist, all found here a common ground for the display of their
-various talents. Fools were rare, for they soon found that the climate
-was not congenial; and the conversation was not only remarkable for its
-piquancy, but its intellectual character. Each guest, after paying his
-respects to Madame de Bocher, mixed at once in the throng, and was soon
-busied in discussing the last news of the day, or deep in the question
-which agitated Paris. Marmontel and Diderot, La Harpe and Helvetius,
-seldom missed a reception; but here, as indeed throughout Paris,
-Voltaire was the presiding genius. It was a hopeless struggle for any
-young author to attempt to hold his own against so powerful a clique.
-Voltaire denounced him before his face; Diderot caricatured him at the
-Café Procope; he was jeered and laughed at everywhere, and ended by
-submitting to his tormentors. The result of such a censorship was not
-difficult to foresee; and in a short time no literary effort which did
-not contain at least a covert attack upon religion, in accordance with
-the principles of the fashionable philosophy, had a chance of success.
-Let us now tell the story of M. de Bocher’s acquisition of wealth.
-
-His origin indeed was of the lowliest, for his father was but a working
-mason in the days of the Grand Monarque. One evening, as the father was
-returning home with his work-basket on his shoulder and trowel in hand,
-a man wrapped in a long brown cloak, and closely followed by a carriage
-without any armorial bearings or ciphers, tapped him on the shoulder
-and asked him whether he would like to earn five-and-twenty louis. The
-mason eagerly acquiesced; and having entered the carriage, his eyes
-were bandaged, and the horses started off at a great rate. For several
-hours the carriage was driven rapidly about the streets of Paris, with
-the obvious intention of making the occupant lose all trace of the
-route he had traversed; and when the object had been accomplished, the
-carriage stopped suddenly in the court-yard of a large mansion. Bocher
-was then desired to alight; and was at once conducted, his eyes still
-bandaged, into a kind of cellar, where his eyesight was restored to
-him. Here he found two men, both armed, and with their faces concealed
-by masks. The poor man was in an agony of terror, believing that his
-last hour had come, but was somewhat reassured by the gestures of his
-companions, who, fearful of trusting their voices, made signs to him to
-make some mortar of the lime which was lying on the floor. A hole in
-the wall disclosed a recess; and the two men raising with difficulty
-a weighty strong box, placed it in the interior, and made signs to
-the mason to build up the wall afresh. Bocher, seeing that nothing
-was required of him but the legitimate exercise of his craft, quickly
-recovered his self-possession; and guessing that the proprietors of the
-treasure were obliged to quit the country, and had hit upon this device
-for concealing it until better times should dawn upon them, the notion
-of appropriating it to his own use flashed like lightning across his
-brain.
-
-When he concluded his work, as if intending to give a last polish to
-its completion, he placed his hand, thickly covered with wet mortar,
-on the new wall, and thus left the distinct impression of his five
-fingers on the hiding-place of the treasure-deposit. The promised
-five-and-twenty louis were then faithfully counted out into his hand;
-his eyes were again bandaged, and he was re-conducted to the carriage,
-which after following the same course of deception for three long
-hours, at last deposited him in the same street as that in which the
-man in the brown cloak had found him.
-
-From that day forth Bocher abandoned the use of the hammer and
-trowel, and passed his time in wandering about Paris inspecting the
-houses advertised to be sold, directing his attention especially to
-the cellars and lower regions of the buildings; seeking everywhere,
-but without success, that imprint of his hand which would point the
-way to unlimited wealth. In the pursuit of this phantom, not only the
-twenty-five louis but all the little savings of his hard work rapidly
-melted away, and misery and hunger began to knock loudly at the mason’s
-door. One after another he sold the petty articles of furniture which
-had embellished his humble home, to procure the bread which was
-necessary to sustain life; and pale and in rags he wandered about
-Paris, reading every new announcement of vacant houses, and became a
-nuisance to the porters intrusted with the care of shewing them.
-
-Two years thus passed away—two long years, occupied day by day in
-seeking a fortune, and night by night in dreaming that it was found. He
-was returning home one evening, sad and dispirited, with the proceeds
-of the sale of the bed upon which his mother had died, and which had
-been one of the very last articles of furniture he possessed, when
-his eye was caught by a large posting-bill announcing the sale of a
-magnificent mansion belonging to the Duc de Cairoux, in the immediate
-vicinity of his own dwelling. He recollected the story of the sudden
-disappearance of the Duke, and on reading the bill, found that the
-property was sold under a legal decree, which constituted the heirs
-proprietors with a power of sale. A last hope crossed poor Bocher’s
-mind, and he at once proceeded to the house, and knocked hastily at the
-door. It was almost dark, and no one paid any attention to his eager
-summons. After a sleepless night he again made his appearance at the
-portal of the Duke’s mansion; but although it was now opened, another
-difficulty presented itself, for the porter hesitated to admit a man so
-ragged and dirty as the poor mason had become. At length, however, he
-agreed to do so upon the understanding that a servant accompanied the
-strange visitor during his survey of the premises. The powdered lackey
-was scarcely more courteous than the porter, and scornfully exhibited
-the rich furniture, pictures, and priceless china which adorned the
-apartments, to his humble companion. But these were not what Bocher had
-come to see, and at last he induced the man to shew him the cellars.
-Whilst the footman was descanting upon the quantity and quality of the
-wines around them, Bocher was anxiously scrutinising all the walls,
-in hopes of finding that print on the mortar which was to open to him
-the door to untold wealth. It was all in vain; and deaf to the man’s
-insolence, Bocher was on the point of leaving, convinced that his
-last hope had vanished like its predecessors, and that this could not
-have been the house he had visited on that eventful evening, when he
-suddenly perceived a small cellar situated in an angle of the wall,
-which had hitherto escaped observation. He turned back and examined it
-closely, his technical knowledge as a mason at once shewing him that
-the mortar in one part of the wall was much fresher than elsewhere. He
-approached the spot, and there—yes, there was no doubt about it—there
-were the marks of the five fingers, plain and distinct!
-
-‘At last, at last!’ he murmured to himself; and to make assurance
-doubly sure, he traced out each of the impressions with a trembling
-hand. There could be no doubt whatever about it. At last his long
-search was ended.
-
-Eight days afterwards the property was to be sold by auction, and
-numbers of the aristocracy of Paris sent their stewards to bid for it.
-It was put up at fifty thousand louis d’or, and two thousand louis were
-at once added by the steward of the Duc de Berri.
-
-‘Sixty thousand louis,’ said a voice from a corner; and the audience
-turning round to look at the man who had the audacity to outbid the
-richest man in Paris, discovered a poor man whom they had supposed to
-be a beggar.
-
-‘Sixty thousand louis,’ said the auctioneer; ‘sixty thousand louis are
-bid, and this fine property is going for only sixty thousand louis!’
-
-The steward added five thousand louis, and the offer was at once capped
-by the mendicant who bid seventy thousand louis. Thus the war was
-carried on until one hundred thousand louis were offered, and people
-were aghast at this extraordinary duel between the steward of the
-wealthy Duke and a miserable-looking beggar.
-
-‘One—hundred—and—ten—thousand—louis,’ slowly, but with emphasis,
-shouted the steward with a withering look at his ragged opponent.
-Bocher hesitated, for although he well remembered how heavy the strong
-box was, it was doubtful whether it contained so large a sum as
-this, and he was well aware that the penalty for non-payment was the
-Châtelet prison for life with all its horrors. There was not much time
-for reflection, for already the ‘Going, going’ of the auctioneer was
-sounding in his ears.
-
-‘One hundred and twenty thousand louis,’ he shouted; and ‘One hundred
-and twenty thousand louis are bid,’ repeated the auctioneer amidst a
-breathless silence. This time there was no advance on the bidding; and
-after waiting the stipulated time, the property was knocked down to
-Bocher; and the discomfited steward of the Duke quitted the field of
-battle, revenging himself with a bitter jest as he passed his conqueror.
-
-Bocher, with the penalty of non-payment of the enormous purchase-money
-staring him in the face, handed over the required sum within
-twenty-four hours, receiving in return the necessary title-deeds.
-
-The mason became a dealer in monopolies, and finished by leaving an
-immense fortune and a patent of nobility to his son.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Not contented with the house in Paris which had satisfied his father’s
-aspirations, the son built himself a splendid château at Montigny,
-where he had the honour of entertaining amongst other important
-personages, Louis XV. and M. de Voltaire. The château was built on a
-hill; and puffed up with the vanity of his riches, M. de Bocher had
-the presumption to attempt to surpass the great work of Louis XIV. at
-Versailles, by bringing the water from a greater distance and throwing
-it to a greater elevation. He had a theatre attached to the château,
-and lived the life of great land-proprietors in England, a state of
-things quite unknown in France. His museum of natural history, his
-collection of pictures by the old masters, his stud of horses, were all
-unrivalled, and moreover he had the luck to enjoy his good fortune to
-the last, for he died on the eve of the great Revolution, leaving two
-sons behind him to enjoy his mysteriously acquired wealth.
-
-
-
-
-FACTS WORTH KNOWING.
-
-
-From inquiries made among French hatters by Dr Delaunay, some curious
-facts concerning heads have come to light. In families developing
-towards a higher intellectual standard, heads increase from generation
-to generation; while families failing intellectually, shew a regular
-decrease in size. The men who made the Revolution of 1789 had bigger
-heads than their fathers; while the sons of the present ruling families
-in France are craniologically so deficient that hats have to be made
-specially for them. In Paris the largest heads are to be found in the
-quarter of the schools, and among the schools themselves the secular
-stand above the ecclesiastical.
-
-As flies are said to eat the animalcules in impure air, thus removing
-the seeds of disease, leanness in a fly is _primâ facie_ evidence of
-pure air in a house, while corpulency indicates foul wall-paper and bad
-ventilation. Talking of a foul and fresh atmosphere, there has lately
-been adopted in India a novel method of giving change of air to people
-who cannot afford to leave home. Patients go up in a balloon, which
-ascends to a certain height, and is there made captive. It seems that
-a few days passed in this atmosphere, which is quite different from
-that on the plains beneath, temporarily braces up the most languid
-of invalids. The importance to health of a free perspiration no less
-than of fresh air, and what dangers arise from perspiration being
-suddenly checked, has been proved by the fact that a person covered
-completely with a compound, impervious to moisture, will not live over
-six hours. On the occasion of some papal ceremonies, a poor child was
-once gilded all over with varnish and gold-leaf to represent the Golden
-Age. No wonder that it died in a few hours, when we consider that the
-amount of liquid matter which passes through the pores of the skin in
-twenty-four hours in an adult person of sound health, is about sixteen
-fluid ounces, or one pint. Besides this, a large amount of carbonic
-acid—a gaseous body—passes through the tubes; so we cannot fail to see
-the importance of keeping them in perfect working order by frequent
-ablutions or other means.
-
-It has often been stated that ocular weakness and diseases in various
-forms appear to have been rapidly increasing in recent times. Dr
-Loring, in discussing before the New York County Medical Society the
-serious question, ‘Is the human eye gradually changing its form under
-the influence of modern civilisation?’ confirms the opinion, so far at
-least as short-sightedness is concerned. Constant study, now incidental
-to the lives of so many, has, he says, a tendency to engender this
-derangement of the eye, and it is often transmitted to descendants. In
-his opinion, near-sightedness is a disease of childhood, and rarely
-develops itself after the fifteenth or eighteenth year. On examining
-the eyes of over two thousand scholars in the New York public schools,
-Dr Loring found that the proportion of those in a healthy condition
-were eighty-seven per cent. among children under seven years, while
-between that age and twenty-one, the proportion of normal eyes
-was but sixty-one; which shews, he thinks, that near-sightedness
-increases directly with the age to which schooling is extended.
-In Königsberg, Germany, he found considerably more than half the
-population were short-sighted; and in America it is more commonly met
-with among the older eastern cities than the new ones of the west.
-Among the most prominent causes of the disease are, in his opinion, a
-sedentary life, poor food, bad ventilation, and general disregard of
-hygienic requirements—all conducing to a laxity of tissue, of which
-near-sightedness is an indication.
-
-The experiments of Mr G. F. Train on himself would seem to give some
-corroboration to the reports of fasting girls that crop up from time to
-time. In an attempt to prove that eating is merely ‘an acquired habit,’
-he persisted in going without food for six days, and expects in time
-to be able to do without nourishment for a much longer period! His
-experiments, he asserts, prove three things: First, that all stories of
-terrible agony in starvation are nonsense; second, that fasting really
-improved his intelligence; and third, that a person who has fasted
-six days has no ravenous appetite. This, however, we should think is
-accounted for by the sufferer feeling quite past eating at a certain
-stage of starvation.—The problem of how to live on sixpence a day has
-been elucidated by a London physician, who writing in advocacy of
-vegetarianism, affirms that he knows many persons who keep themselves
-strong and well on that sum. He further says: ‘I have myself lived and
-maintained my full weight and power to work on threepence a day, and
-I have no doubt at all that I could live very well on a penny a day.’
-The ‘penny restaurant’ lately announced in New York, where a small cup
-of coffee, bread and butter, pork and beans, a slice of corned beef,
-oatmeal, and boiled rice, may be obtained at a cost of one cent for
-each item, offers the very means of carrying out this theory. What
-kind of ‘living’ could be enjoyed on that insignificant sum, is not
-explained by the learned experimenter; but without pushing theory to
-such an extreme, it is evident that a more careful and judicious outlay
-of small incomes would enable many unthinking persons to live well and
-economically, who may now deem such a thing impossible.
-
-The use of horse-flesh as an article of food has made great progress
-in Paris, where about a thousand horses per week are said to be
-slaughtered, the animals even being imported for that purpose. It is
-said that during the Exhibition, the hippophagists of Paris intend
-giving a banquet once a month to the journalists of all nations, where
-horse and ass flesh prepared in every seductive form will be served
-up.—The snail is becoming another fashionable article of diet in
-France, and for some time past a particular place has been appropriated
-for their sale in the Paris fish-markets. Snails, says one of the
-French journals, were highly esteemed by the Romans, our masters
-in gastronomy, and are now raised in many of the departments with
-success. In the sixteenth century the Capuchins of Fribourg possessed
-the art of fattening snails—an art not lost in our day, for in Lorraine
-and Burgundy they raise excellent snails, which find sure demand in
-the Paris market. There are now more than fifty restaurants and more
-than a thousand private tables in Paris where snails are accepted as a
-delicacy by upwards of ten thousand consumers; the monthly consumption
-of this mollusc being estimated at half a million. Frank Buckland tells
-us that snails are becoming scarce in the neighbourhood of London,
-where for some time snail-collecting has been a regular trade.
-
-It is a curious fact that so many dwellings once the homes of poets
-should have been public-houses at one time or another. Burns’s native
-cottage was a house of this description; the house in which Moore
-was born was a whisky-shop; and Shelley’s house at Great Marlow, a
-beer-shop. Even Coleridge’s residence at Nether Stowey, the very house
-in which the poet composed his sweet _Ode to the Nightingale_, became
-an ordinary beer-house. A house in which James Montgomery lived for
-forty years at Sheffield was a beer-shop; and the birthplace of Kirke
-White is now a house for retailing intoxicating beverages.
-
-Many facts relating to foreign countries, which strike Englishmen
-as being curious to a degree, reach us from time to time. A Spanish
-soldier, we are told, will fight for a week on an empty stomach,
-provided he can look forward to playing his guitar on the seventh day.
-In his country, if a bull intended for the fight falls ill, the animal
-is sent to an infirmary. The chief toreador Frasculeo has a fortune of
-two million francs; his combat costume represents one hundred thousand
-francs in diamonds alone; he is courted by the highest society in
-Madrid, is a member of the chief aristocratic club; yet his wife is
-a fishmonger’s daughter, and still helps her mother in the market.
-On days when her husband performs she sits at her balcony with her
-children to receive couriers, who come on horseback waving a white flag
-as a sign of success in the arena.—The account of how a titled lady in
-Russia has discovered to her cost the penalties of expressing in too
-emphatic a manner her disapproval of her governess’s behaviour, will,
-if true, convey a curious idea of some social customs in that country.
-The Princess Manweloff had a habit of striking her governess, a lady
-of noble birth, and the latter complained of her to the local justice.
-In this instance the law was a respecter of persons, and the Princess
-was ordered three days’ detention in her own house. The governess
-was dissatisfied, and appealed to a higher court, which sentenced
-the defendant to three months’ imprisonment in the common jail.—As
-a curious fact, it has been noted by Sir Samuel Baker that a negro
-has never been known to tame a wild elephant or any wild animal. The
-elephants employed by the ancient Carthaginians and Romans were trained
-by Arabs and others, never by negroes. It had often struck Sir Samuel
-as very distressing that the little children in Africa never had a pet
-animal; and though he often offered rewards for young elephants, he
-never succeeded in getting one alive.
-
-A curious instance of the acquisition and rejection of fortune reaches
-us from New Orleans. A stableman named Pathier, belonging to an hotel
-in that city, suddenly found himself heir to eighty thousand francs
-at the death of his mother; yet strange to say refused to accept the
-money. The law has in vain endeavoured to induce him to avail himself
-of the windfall: his only ambition is to smoke his pipe and groom the
-horses. To such an instance of contempt of riches it would be difficult
-to find a parallel.
-
-Some curious facts from the world of Nature crop up occasionally, which
-are well worthy of consideration. For instance, it has been proved
-that the bee may under certain circumstances turn out to be anything
-but the pattern of industry it is proverbially supposed to furnish.
-Australian colonists have from time to time taken out swarms of bees
-to their adopted land, in the hope of deriving practical benefit from
-the profusion of flowers with which the whole country abounds. For
-some little time the newly imported bees maintained their reputation
-for industry, storing up their food in the comfortable hives provided
-for them, and supplying the colonists with far superior honey to
-that collected by the indigenous honey-producers the ‘mellipones.’
-Presently, however, the hives were discovered unstocked at the end of
-the autumn, notwithstanding the long summers of the northern parts
-of Australia, and it was found that the bees entirely neglected to
-lay by a stock of food, as was their wont. Though the bees increased
-and the hives were always regularly tenanted, no honey was brought
-home. It soon became evident that, finding the perennial summer of the
-tropical parts of Australia afforded them abundance of food, without
-the intervention of long winters, the bees forsook their old habits,
-gave themselves up to a life of happy indolence, and no longer took the
-trouble to convey their superabundant supplies to the hives prepared
-for them. In short, there being no winters to provide for, the bees
-gave up the practice of storing honey.
-
-Tenacity of life in eels and cats is proverbial; but from an instance
-that occurred at Flinstow Farm, near Pembroke, it appears that the pig
-may claim to rank with other creatures in this respect. For sixteen
-days a pig was missed from the farmyard, and as every search failed to
-discover it, the conclusion was arrived at that it had been stolen.
-Some masons who were repairing a brick kiln on the farm one day
-discovered the missing animal, which had fallen into the kiln, and was
-unable to extricate itself. Though all that time without food, the pig
-when rescued was able to eat, and did not seem much the worse for its
-long imprisonment.
-
-An unexpected friend to man has been discovered in a kind of animalcule
-engendered by sewage, which prevents the decomposing matter from
-becoming a dangerous nuisance. Mr Angell, the public analyst for
-Hampshire, having examined the sewage-polluted fluid in Southampton
-Water, has discovered that where the suspended matters are thickest
-there is going on a silent destruction of the foul matters, through
-the agency of millions of the minute creatures, by some held to be
-of animal, but by Mr Angell believed to be of vegetable origin. On
-examining the muddy fluid through a microscope, it was found to contain
-myriads of little brown organisms, surrounded with a gelatinous
-substance. Each specimen was found to be active in its movements and
-of peculiar shape, being furnished with a belt of cilia round the
-centre of the body, and with a long transparent and very flexible tail.
-After death, these tiny atoms give off an odour similar to that of
-sea-weed, and change to a green colour. During life they evolve bubbles
-of oxygen gas, which serve to purify the water from the effects of
-the decomposing matter on which they themselves feed. It is a pity,
-however, that man, by polluting rivers with sewage, should stand so
-much in need of this self-developed scavenger.
-
-Canada, we are told, claims to have produced the largest cheese on
-record. It weighed seven thousand pounds, was six feet ten inches in
-diameter, three feet in height, and twenty-one feet in circumference;
-requiring one milking of seven thousand cows, or thirty-five tuns
-of milk to produce it.—Of numerical curious facts, it may not be
-uninteresting to state that no less than sixteen different shades of
-green are understood to be patronised by the fashionable world; and
-that fifteen persons may dine together a billion times without sitting
-twice in the same relative position, by merely changing a chair at each
-dinner. So much for the combination of numbers.
-
-
-
-
-A CURIOUS ANTIQUARIAN HOAX.
-
-
-Every one has doubtless read _The Antiquary_, and enjoyed the skill
-with which the keenest archæologist of the literary fraternity raised a
-laugh against his own favourite studies. The Kaim of Kinprunes and the
-‘A.D.L.L.’ furnish the standard jest with which the Oldbucks of every
-future age will be assailed, and the bodle that he ‘thocht was an auld
-coin’ helps in the attack. Scotland being thus the scene of the most
-famous fictional story of this kind, it is curious to find it also the
-home of one of the best authenticated antiquarian hoaxes known to have
-been practised.
-
-The story which we are about to narrate dates back to the reign of
-George the Third; and though now sixty years since, one of the parties
-to the hoax then perpetrated has just made the details of the story
-public in a letter read before the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland
-at an early meeting in the present year. The circumstances which led
-to the hoax being perpetrated were that, when the ruins of the eastern
-portion or choir of the old Abbey Church of Dunfermline were to be
-removed for the erection of what forms now the parish church, great
-anxiety was manifested to prove the truth of the statement, which,
-although found in the records, was to some extent believed to be
-doubtful, that Bruce the patriot king of Scotland was interred there.
-It may suffice for the purposes of the present sketch to state that the
-evidence that King Robert Bruce was really buried here is stated by the
-Rev. Peter Chalmers, in his _History of Dunfermline_, to be ‘clear,
-varied, and strong.’ Bruce died at Cardross in Dumbartonshire in 1329;
-and although he had confided to his faithful follower Sir James Douglas
-the task of conveying his heart to the Holy Land, Dunfermline was
-chosen by himself as his place of sepulture. Mr Chalmers quotes various
-entries in the Chartulary of Dunfermline in support of this; while in
-Barbour’s famous poem the king is spoken of as having been laid
-
- In a fayr tumb, intill the quer.
-
-In Fordun’s _Scotichronicon_ mention is also made of Bruce being
-interred ‘in the middle of the choir’ of the Abbey Church.
-
-When the excavations were being made in 1818 for the erection of the
-new church, the operations were watched by many with great interest;
-and the Barons of Exchequer in Scotland, in whose custody were the
-royal palaces, &c., took some pains to secure that the remains of the
-king, if found, should be properly treated. Fulfilling completely the
-expectations entertained, a body incased in lead was found by the
-excavators, occupying exactly the place which the king’s remains would
-be expected to do. It was inwrapped in a double casing of lead; and
-some fragments of gold-embroidered linen cloth were also found, shewing
-that here at least was the tomb of no common person. The skeleton was
-that of a kingly man, six feet in height, with a splendid head, and
-in every way worthy of Scotland’s hero. And when the body came to be
-examined, previous to its reinterment, it was found that the _sternum_
-or breast-bone had been sawn through longitudinally from top to bottom,
-this being the method adopted by the anatomists of the fourteenth
-century to reach the heart, for separate interment. This fact and the
-position of the body seemed to render it all but certain that the
-remains were those of Bruce; but still there remained a _possibility_
-of mistake.
-
-It was at this point the hoax was perpetrated of which we now proceed
-to speak. On the exhumation of the body, it was at once returned to
-the earth, and the place where it was found was closed in, flat stones
-being placed over the aperture. The discovery was reported to the
-Barons of Exchequer, and excited great interest in the minds of all
-Scottish people of patriotic or antiquarian feelings. Considerable
-delay, however, was made in determining what should be done; and it
-was not till November 1819 that, with much ceremony, the skeleton
-was recoffined and reinterred. The tomb was filled up with pitch,
-carefully built over and inclosed, and an elaborate Latin epitaph was
-prepared to the effect that the interesting discovery had been made
-amongst the ruins of the old church, &c. But as we have said, there
-was a possibility of mistake; and it entered into the heads of two
-young men that it would be a capital thing to convince the good folk
-of Dunfermline that their town really did contain the body of the
-king. One of these was the younger brother of the architect engaged in
-the new church, and the other an artist comrade. Their design was to
-get an old or old-looking bronze plate, and after inscribing suitable
-characters upon it, to find some means of getting it put into the
-partially opened grave, so that it would be discovered on proceeding
-with the work. Assisted by the gentleman who now tells the story, a
-plate was accordingly prepared bearing a device.
-
-When the discovery of the plate was made, its existence jumped so
-completely with the public wish, that it was hailed with unquestioning
-and extravagant joy. So much delight was manifested and so seriously
-was the jest taken, that the perpetrators of it were afraid to confess
-what they had done.
-
-A ludicrous incident occurred at the time. The provost of Dunfermline,
-a banker, sent for the artist, who joyfully waited on the chief
-magistrate, anticipating employment. This it was indeed, but of
-unexpected and unwelcome kind, for it was to make a drawing of his own
-plate, for the Transactions of one of the learned societies! His heart
-sunk, and his hand was tremulous; and he suggested to the provost that
-he could make the drawing better if allowed to take the plate home. The
-answer was startling. Amazed at the audacity of the request, the banker
-said: ‘I have more money in the bank just now than ever I had before;
-but I would rather give you the whole of it than let that plate out of
-my custody for an hour, until its destination is decided by the highest
-authorities.’ So the young artist had to sit down and make the drawing,
-afraid to hint at the ‘solemn mockery’ in which he was engaged. After a
-time suspicion fell on the plate, and it was generally believed to be a
-fabrication, although the details of the story were not known till now.
-The Rev. Mr Chalmers, whose work was published more than forty years
-ago, speaks of the plate as having been ‘satisfactorily ascertained
-not to be ancient.’ In Black’s _Guide to Scotland_, it is stated that
-the plate—of the _bona fides_ of which no doubt is expressed—may be
-seen in the Museum of the Society of Antiquaries at Edinburgh. But the
-estimation in which this relic (which would have been priceless if
-genuine) was held by the Society may be judged from the statement made
-by the Secretary at the meeting where the above story was made public,
-that he had had to search for the plate in the cellar in order to
-exhibit it to the Fellows.
-
-The narrator of the story of which the above is an outline is Mr
-John Nimmo, whose name is associated with two journals of widely
-different repute. A printer by trade, he left Edinburgh for Paris in
-the year 1821, and was for many years one of the principal employés
-on _Galignani_. He is now enjoying well-earned repose after a lengthy
-life of labour. The cause of Mr Nimmo’s leaving Scotland recalls the
-history of a painful event, he having been the printer of the _Beacon_,
-a newspaper which gained unenviable notoriety by its virulent personal
-attacks on men obnoxious to the government of the day. The newspaper
-is memorable in the local history of Scotland from the tragic event in
-which Mr Stewart of Dunearn was engaged. Mr Stewart had endeavoured in
-vain to ascertain by whom the articles were written, and when the name
-of Mr Nimmo was given, he refused to accept him as responsible. After a
-while the _Beacon_ was given up, and a successor of the same character
-was started in Glasgow. Mr Stewart discovered that some of the articles
-in the latter were in the handwriting of Sir Alexander Boswell, the
-eldest son of Johnson’s biographer. He challenged Sir Alexander; and in
-the duel which ensued the latter was mortally wounded; and Mr Stewart,
-who was subsequently tried for the offence, was acquitted. The fact
-that Mr Nimmo did not return to Scotland for many years after the
-perpetration of the hoax in which he was concerned, and that then he
-found the question, if not forgotten, certainly exciting no interest,
-may explain why he has only now made public, in a letter to an old
-friend in Edinburgh, the above curious story.
-
-
-
-
-VILLAGE VETERANS.
-
-
-We are somewhat proud of the number of hale old people in our village,
-the salubrity of which outsiders are apt to question, on account of
-its proximity to the Fens. No doubt ague is still known amongst us
-in some degree; but the intending visitor who for that reason equips
-himself with stores of quinine, evinces just such an exaggerated dread
-as that which inspired Dr Johnson to provide himself with pistols on
-his memorable journey to the Highlands. Our death-rate is quite within
-the average, and longevity is one of our strong points. We must admit
-of course that many of our veterans are placed rather early on the list
-by rheumatism or asthma; but it is astonishing how long they contrive
-to continue there in spite of coughs and stiff joints. We keep a mental
-register of them one and all, know each of them personally, and take a
-lively interest in their condition, as becomes a parish doctor. There
-is an additional zest to our observations in the marked individualities
-amongst them, which a protracted village life has always a tendency
-to produce; but over and above local and professional pride in their
-length of years and the pleasure which mere character-study yields,
-there are certain general and loftier human grounds on which we might
-excuse a few remarks regarding our village veterans.
-
-One sunny spot hard by the southern wall of the old bridge forms the
-favourite haunt of the old men in fine weather. There they muster in
-strength on the balmy summer mornings, and there the hardier of them
-forgather whenever there is a blink of sunshine.
-
-Most of them walk by the aid of two sticks, the halest amongst them
-requiring the assistance of at least one, and on these they lean as
-they rest their backs against the warm red-brick wall. It is curious to
-note the heartiness of their morning greetings, and the ‘I’m bravely,
-thank ye,’ with which an octogenarian doubled up with suffering will
-answer the challenge as to his health. Their next task is to compare
-notes as to the past night’s experience, this mutual review of coughs
-and other specific ailments being often couched in phrases more quaint
-than elegant; as when dear old Jemmy Baxter said to his listeners
-the other day: ‘Dash my wig, if I didn’t think I wor agoin’ to die.’
-Then follows much babbling of olden times, of strange things which
-happened when they were hale and hearty, of the sacks of corn they
-could carry, of the acres they could reap, of the hard work and big
-pay they had when the great drains were making, and not unseldom of
-the merry-makings and junketings of half a century ago. Or they talk
-with a keenness of interest, sadly suggestive, of the event of the
-day, be it the arrival of a new steam-plough or the latest twin-birth
-in the parish. Sometimes a scrap of news from the great world without,
-falls among them—a great shipwreck, a fresh battle, or a general
-election—and sets them agog with wonder and curiosity.
-
-Old age, like most other inevitable things, is a great leveller, and
-our group sometimes consists of individuals who have held very various
-positions in life. The chief spokesman and referee in all matters of
-gossip is an old man-of-war sailor. He has many a tale to tell of
-’board ship, but is best known as the village Zadkiel; a title given,
-we fancy, in derision rather than flattery. He has been every inch
-a seaman, and is even yet a good type of an old salt, in spite of
-rheumatism and crutches. The other veterans have for the most part
-been farm-labourers; some have been mechanics; several innkeepers
-and tradesmen; and one or two have been farmers in a small way. All
-now meet, however, on the common ground of age and infirmity. Old
-Dalboys, at one time the hectoring farmer of Longley, smokes the pipe
-of equality with Tommy Hill, whom for thirty years he had bullied
-as his horse-tender; while the superannuated schoolmaster gossips
-amicably with his ancient enemy the now retired sexton. They have
-buried old grudges, feuds, and animosities under that wall with the
-sunny southern exposure, as thoroughly as they must in any case do
-ere long under the chill walls of the old churchyard. No doubt they
-have their little childish jealousies still, but these are of a fresh
-growth. Sam Payne and Bill Shipley are both fond of the easy position
-afforded by the obtuse angle of a bend in the wall, and grumble a
-little when the other contrives to secure it. Occasionally John Shore,
-in the pride of his practical knowledge, will make a stir in the camp
-by doggedly disputing such a statement as that London lies north-east
-of Cambridge. At times, too, Billie Wright, who we fear is the butt of
-these veteran schoolboys, will totter off in dudgeon, because, being
-no smoker himself, some of the more vivacious of his mates get on the
-weather-side of him with their pipes. But these tiffs are harmless and
-ephemeral, and one can well afford to smile at and forget them in view
-of the genuine friendship and good-will that prevail.
-
-There is, by the way, a certain hour on a certain day of every
-week—Wednesday, we believe—which never fails to bring a number of our
-veterans to the old bridge, wet or dry, cloud or sunshine, westling
-wind or downright nor’-easter. On such occasions they have company in
-the shape of a limited number of widows, most of them also well up in
-years, who, let us remark, deserve a full share of whatever sympathy
-we may be disposed to grant to our cronies of the other sex. The
-occasion of this special weekly gathering is one which a stranger would
-consider eminently sad and painful. They are waiting to receive their
-dole from the relieving officer, who, having many districts to visit,
-and no sheltered stations at any of them, is compelled to perform his
-interesting duty in the open air. The poor old souls, especially in bad
-weather, look anxiously down the road for the appearance of the gig
-and gray pony which conveys their ‘father,’ as, with a kind of grim
-humour, they have styled the official. Knowing them as we do, however,
-and their general cheerfulness and contentment, we are not disposed
-to claim any undue commiseration for their lot in this respect. The
-distressing side of such a scene presents itself to the reflecting
-onlooker rather than to themselves. They have drifted gradually—in
-almost every case be it said by sheer stress of circumstances—into the
-condition of outdoor paupers, and their wants have vanished one by one
-with the decrease of their means. Besides, none of them is altogether
-dependent on the parochial allowance. One has several grandchildren who
-earn a little; another has a married daughter who struggles to spare a
-trifle; and a third has a wife, younger and stronger than himself, who
-goes out as nurse or charwoman; while all of them are the objects of
-many small kindnesses at the hands of their better-off and sympathetic
-neighbours. Their actual aliment indeed contrasts favourably with
-that of several others, whose pinched incomes, derived from their own
-savings, place them outside the pale of both public and private charity.
-
-The humble annals of some veterans of the latter class are, when
-rightly read, the record of doughty deeds, of amazing fortitude, and
-unwavering self-respect. Their old age is beset with petty cares that
-might daunt the hearts of younger men and women. Some are entirely
-alone in the world, having outlived kith and kin. They have to pinch
-and scrape, in the sternest and least lovely sense of that phrase, to
-make ends meet. Their daily anxiety is to keep out of debt; a dinner
-here and a supper there are ceded in the struggle, but there is no
-thought of surrender while life lasts. One old lady (we use the title
-advisedly, although she is only the widow of a jobbing carpenter) is
-now in her eighty-second year. She has buried all her family except
-one son, who is the village scapegrace and a sad thorn in his mother’s
-side. The cottage she occupies is her own; but her entire income from
-several other small properties is, when cleared of charges, only some
-seventeen pounds a year. She has no word of complaint to make, however,
-and her philosophy may be summed up in the few words she said to us
-the other day: ‘I am hearty for my years, sir. I have been able to pay
-my way all along and, God willing, I shall to the end. My only trouble
-is about Harry, and who knows but he may alter yet?’ Brave old heart
-and brave old comrades, who thus stand firm and undaunted in the last
-assault of the world and its cares!
-
-But whatever their lot and whatever claim some may have to special
-interest and regard, the mere fact that they are all veterans in the
-great human array, entitles them without distinction to the sympathy of
-a younger generation. What need to pry too closely into their careers?
-To what purpose the reflection, that this one or that one did not
-acquit himself according to the strict standards of thrift, prudence,
-or perseverance? Let us accept the helplessness of age, which may have
-been reached through failures and weaknesses, in the same tender spirit
-that we do the helplessness of childhood, whose inherent weaknesses are
-yet untried. They are all under the wall now whose shadow lengthens
-across their forms in the setting of the sun. May the light of human
-sympathy also linger with them to the end, till veteran after veteran
-has quitted the old bridge for his long home, and his earthly haunts
-know him no more.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Printed and Published by W. & R. CHAMBERS, 47 Paternoster Row, LONDON,
-and 339 High Street, EDINBURGH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_All Rights Reserved._
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Transcriber’s note—the following changes have been made to this text:
-
-Page 348: beaf to beef—“corned beef”.]
-
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, No. 753, June 1, 1878, by Various</div>
-
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-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
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-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, No. 753, June 1, 1878</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Various</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Editor: William Chambers and Robert Chambers</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 09, 2021 [eBook #64243]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, NO. 753, JUNE 1, 1878 ***</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_337"></a>{337}</span></p>
-
-<h1>CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL<br />
-OF<br />
-POPULAR<br />
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.</h1>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" >CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='center'>
-
-
-<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
-
-<a href="#BIANCONI">BIANCONI.</a><br />
-<a href="#HELENA_LADY_HARROGATE">HELENA, LADY HARROGATE.</a><br />
-<a href="#OUR_VOLUNTEERS">OUR VOLUNTEERS.</a><br />
-<a href="#MONSIEUR_DE_BOCHER">MONSIEUR DE BOCHER.</a><br />
-<a href="#FACTS_WORTH_KNOWING">FACTS WORTH KNOWING.</a><br />
-<a href="#A_CURIOUS_ANTIQUARIAN_HOAX">A CURIOUS ANTIQUARIAN HOAX.</a><br />
-<a href="#VILLAGE_VETERANS">VILLAGE VETERANS.</a><br />
-
-<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
-
-</p>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter" id="header" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/header.png" alt="Chambers’s Journal of Popular Literature, Science,
-and Art. Fourth Series. Conducted by William and Robert Chambers." />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<div class="center">
-<div class="header">
-<p class="floatl"><span class="smcap">No. 753.</span></p>
-<p class="floatr"><span class="smcap">Price</span> 1½<em>d.</em></p>
-<p class="floatc">SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1878.</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BIANCONI">BIANCONI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Charles Bianconi</span> was altogether a very remarkable
-person, and not less for his energy and perseverance
-than for his public services, ought to be
-kept in remembrance. He was by birth an Italian—not,
-however, an Italian of the lethargic south,
-but of the northern mountainous district bordering
-on the Lake of Como. We might call him
-an Italian highlander. Belonging to a respectable
-though not affluent family, he was born on the
-24th September 1786. At school he made so little
-progress as to be thought little better than a
-dunce. People did not quite understand his character.
-His impulse was to work, not to study.
-He wanted to have something to do, and if put on
-a fair track, was not afraid of being left behind in
-the ordinary business of life. With this adventurous
-disposition, and with a good physical
-stamina, he was bound for eighteen months to
-Andrea Faroni, who was to take him to London,
-and there learn the business of a dealer in prints,
-barometers, and small telescopes. Faroni did not
-strictly fulfil his part of the contract. Instead of
-proceeding to London, he took the boy to Dublin,
-at which he arrived in 1802; so there he was
-started in a business career in Ireland when sixteen
-years of age. Helpless, friendless, without
-money, and ignorant of the English language, his
-fate was rather hard; but his privations only
-served to strengthen his powers of self-reliance.
-Like a hero, he determined to overcome all
-difficulties.</p>
-
-<p>Faroni, his master, seems to have made a trade
-of getting Italian boys into his clutches. Besides
-Bianconi, he had several others, whom he daily
-turned out to the streets to sell prints in a poor
-kind of frames, always making a point that they
-should set off on their travels without any money,
-and bring home to him the proceeds of their
-industry. At first, Bianconi was at a loss how to
-carry on his dealings. The only English word he
-was made acquainted with was ‘buy, buy;’ and
-when asked the price of his prints, he could only
-count on his fingers the number of pence he
-demanded. In a short time, he picked up other
-words; and gave so much satisfaction to his employer,
-that he was sent off to the country every
-Monday morning with two pounds worth of
-pictures, and a munificent allowance of fourpence
-in his pocket as subsistence-money until he returned
-on Saturday evening. How he contrived to
-live on less than a penny a day, is not mentioned.
-We daresay, he often got a warm potato as well
-as a night’s lodging from the kind-hearted peasantry
-to whom he exhibited his wares. Opening
-his pack was as good as a show. He carried a
-variety of Scripture pieces, pictures of the Royal
-family, and portraits of Bonaparte and his distinguished
-generals, all which were profoundly interesting,
-and found willing purchasers. On one
-occasion, an over-zealous magistrate, thinking there
-was a treasonous purpose in selling effigies of
-Bonaparte, arrested the young pedler, and kept
-him all night in a guard-room without fire or
-bedding, and only in the morning was he liberated,
-almost in a perishing condition. Every Saturday
-night, Bianconi returned to Dublin to deliver the
-money he had gathered, and this he did with an
-honesty which commanded that degree of confidence
-and respect which led to his professional
-advancement.</p>
-
-<p>Bianconi’s rambles during three to four years
-took him chiefly in a south-western direction from
-Dublin, towards Waterford, Carrick-on-Suir, and
-Clonmel, in which neighbourhood he made many
-friends in respectable circles, who were anxious to
-help him with their countenance and advice, of
-which as a foreigner he stood in need. So encouraged,
-he dropped the trade of pedler, and set up
-as a carver and gilder in Carrick in 1806. Not
-long afterwards, he removed to Waterford, and
-issued cards intimating that he was ‘a carver
-and gilder of the first class.’ It was a bold
-announcement; but he resolved to make up for
-deficiencies by incessant industry; and with the
-exception of two hours for meals, he worked from
-six o’clock in the morning until past midnight.
-Hear that, ye false friends of the working classes—ye
-preachers of the gospel of idleness! Bianconi<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_338"></a>{338}</span>
-remained two years in Waterford, and having improved
-in means and mechanical knowledge, he
-removed to Clonmel, in which he settled down
-for a permanence. Clonmel is a thriving borough
-of some importance, on the river Suir, chiefly in
-the county of Tipperary, and fourteen miles south
-from Cashel. We shall not go into any account
-of his growing trade in mirrors and gilded picture-frames;
-it is enough to say that Bianconi, by his
-suavity, integrity, and diligence in his calling, laid
-the foundation of his fortunes, by which he was
-enabled to project and carry out a very stupendous
-undertaking.</p>
-
-<p>A grand thought burst on Bianconi. He conceived
-the idea of establishing a system of cheap
-and commodious travelling through Ireland. The
-only public conveyances were a few mail and
-day coaches on the great lines of road. Across
-the country there was no means of transit between
-market-towns, except by private or specially hired
-carriages. The plan fallen upon was to start public
-cars, each with two wheels, drawn by a single horse,
-and carrying six passengers—three on each side,
-sitting with their faces outward, in the Irish fashion,
-with the driver on an elevated seat in front. The
-attempt was made in 1815, beginning with a car
-from Clonmel to Cahir, and subsequently extended
-to Tipperary and Limerick. The thing took. A
-grievous public want was supplied, and supplied
-by a foreigner. From town to town, this way and
-that way over hundreds of miles, Bianconi’s cars
-spread, and became a great institution. On certain
-routes, cars with four wheels drawn by two horses,
-with accommodation for twelve passengers, were
-established; and latterly there were cars drawn
-by four horses, accommodating sixteen passengers.
-At Clonmel there was a gigantic establishment,
-the centre of the organisation, and at the head
-of the whole was Bianconi, like the general at the
-head of an army—his carving and gilding business,
-of course, being given up, and nothing
-thought of but cars, horses, drivers, and way-bills.</p>
-
-<p>Bianconi’s head was not turned by his surprising
-success. He was not one of your foolish persons
-who, having hit upon a successful enterprise, leave
-it to its fate, and heedlessly take their ease. His
-genius for organisation was exercised now only for
-the first time. The smallest as well as the greatest
-matters occupied his attention; yet Bianconi was
-not a mere business monster, set on making
-money. He was generous in his gifts for pious
-objects and the support of schools; nor was he
-less noted for his profuse and genial hospitality.
-He had, however, higher claims to the character of
-a public benefactor. When his cars were generally
-established, he realised the pleasure of seeing the
-good they were doing. In a paper read by him at
-the British Association meeting in 1857, he speaks
-of the many advantages arising from the speedy
-and free communication he had set on foot. ‘As
-the establishment extended, I was surprised and
-delighted at its commercial and moral importance.
-I found, as soon as I had opened communication
-with the interior of the country, the consumption
-of manufactured goods greatly increased. In the
-remote parts of Ireland, before my cars ran from
-Tralee to Cahirciveen in the south, from Galway
-to Clifden in the west, and from Ballina to
-Belmullet in the north-west, purchasers were
-obliged to give eight or nine pence a yard for
-calico for shirts, which they afterwards bought for
-three or four pence. The poor people, therefore,
-who previously could ill afford to buy one shirt,
-were enabled to buy two for a less price than they
-had paid for one, and in the same ratio other commodities
-came into general use at reduced prices.’
-The introduction of railways naturally deranged
-the car traffic. But in 1857, Bianconi had still
-nine hundred horses, working sixty-seven conveyances,
-and travelling daily four thousand two
-hundred and forty-four miles. There was in fact
-as much car traffic as ever, only changed in many
-places into cross-roads, and running short distances
-in connection with railway stations—a fact which
-verifies what is obvious to everybody; for railways,
-instead of diminishing the number of horses in the
-country, as short-sighted people prognosticated,
-have greatly increased them. Bianconi felt a
-pride in thinking how through the agency of his
-cars the fisheries on the west of Ireland had been
-largely promoted, thereby contributing to the
-comfort and independence of the people; and he
-was prouder still to say, for the sake of Ireland,
-that his conveyances, though travelling night and
-day, and many of them carrying important mails,
-had never once been interrupted by any social
-disorder, and never suffered the slightest injury.</p>
-
-<p>From prudential considerations, Bianconi continued
-a bachelor until he was well established in
-the car business, and was in good circumstances.
-When, as he thought, the proper time had come,
-and he had a handsomely furnished house in
-Clonmel into which he might introduce a wife, he
-in 1827 married a young and amiable lady, Eliza
-Hayes, daughter of a stock-broker in Dublin. Of
-this marriage there was a family of a son and two
-daughters. The son died while still a young man,
-and the eldest daughter, Kate, died unmarried.
-The youngest daughter, Mary Ann, was married to
-Morgan John O’Connell, M.P. for Kerry, and
-nephew of the famous Dan. O’Connell. Surviving
-her husband, this lady has lately given to the world
-a memoir of her father, ‘Charles Bianconi, a Biography’
-(Chapman and Hall, London, 1878), to
-which we have been indebted for a number of
-interesting particulars. Mrs O’Connell’s recollections
-picture her father in his early married life as
-a man who gave little heed to home affairs. His
-time was divided on his cars, electioneering,
-and getting into the corporation of Clonmel. He
-was fond of his children, but too busy to think
-much about them. ‘For a man of such excellent
-common-sense in most things,’ says his daughter,
-‘he was not a judicious father. He suffered my
-handsome brother to grow up without a profession.’
-This is not said disrespectfully, but to present a
-type of men in married life, who, with excellent
-abilities and good intentions, habitually neglect
-the rearing of their sons to any useful purpose.
-Who could not point to lamentable instances of
-this indiscretion, and the unhappy consequences
-which follow?</p>
-
-<p>Bianconi had an ambition. It was to be Mayor
-of Clonmel. Some will think this a weakness,
-but it was excusable. One who had begun life
-as a poor alien boy struggling with poverty,
-and cared for by nobody, wished to shew that
-by the revolution of fortune he was qualified
-for a position of honour and dignity. His ambition
-was gratified. In 1844, he was unanimously
-elected Mayor of Clonmel for the ensuing year; and
-such was the satisfaction he gave as a magistrate,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_339"></a>{339}</span>
-that he was elected for a second term of office.
-For a position of this kind he was eminently
-qualified. He had learned to speak English with
-perfect fluency, and from observation was able
-to act his part in a manner equal to that of any
-native-born citizen. Intuitively he had caught
-up the fervour of the Irish character, as well as
-a knowledge of the legal disabilities which had
-hitherto exasperated the majority of the nation.
-A friend to justice and toleration, and on all sides
-desirous to promote peace and good-will, it is
-not surprising that he attained to popular favour.</p>
-
-<p>In Mrs O’Connell’s memoir of her father we have
-a glimpse of a few of his eccentricities. So anxious
-was he to be helpful when his interference could
-be of any use, that while acting as Mayor of Clonmel
-he did not mind clambering on the top of his
-cars to pack the luggage of passengers; and he
-would give himself any amount of trouble to get
-situations for young men in whom he had confidence.
-While generous in his charities, he was
-scrupulous to parsimony when there was a chance
-of making a good bargain. This trait of character,
-however, is not uncommon. We have heard
-related the anecdote of a wealthy London banker,
-who one day saw his coachman taking home a pie
-of tempting appearance for dinner. Inquiring the
-price of the pie, he learned that it cost half-a-crown.
-‘If you please, James, I’ll take the bargain off
-your hands; there is half-a-crown for you, and you
-can easily get another pie for yourself.’ So saying,
-the banker secured the pie, which would last him
-for dinner for a week. Bianconi was equally acute
-in trying to turn the penny. ‘One day, in Fleet
-Street, just after he had engaged a four-wheeled
-cab, my father saw a stout gentleman walking very
-quickly towards him, and who was evidently in
-distress at not being able to find a conveyance.
-The spirit of Charles Bianconi, carman, woke up
-too strongly to be suddenly quelled. “I have a
-cab, sir,” he said. “If you will give me your fare,
-I will set you down where you like.” The stout
-gentleman was profuse with thanks, and said he
-wanted to go to the Exchange. When they were
-in the cab, he begged to be allowed to know to
-whom he was indebted. “My name is Bianconi,”
-said my father. “The great Bianconi?” replied
-the gentleman. “And what is your name, sir?”
-replied my father, without half the politeness of
-his companion. “My name, sir, is Rothschild.”
-My father, in telling me the story, admitted that
-he was so much overawed by the presence and
-the affability of so famous a man, that he had not
-presence of mind to return the compliment and
-say, “The great Rothschild?” This was by no
-means a singular instance of my father’s eccentricities
-in this way; often at home, in Ireland,
-when he was driving in his own carriage along the
-high-road, he would take in a traveller who would
-otherwise have gone by the car, provided that he
-paid the car fare.’</p>
-
-<p>In his broodings over change of circumstances,
-Bianconi had nourished another ambition than
-that of being some day Mayor of Clonmel. He
-wished to be a land-proprietor, but not being a
-natural-born subject, he was not, according to law,
-eligible for buying land until he went through
-certain formalities in 1831, after which he looked
-about for a suitable investment. His first and
-principal acquisition was Longfield, a property in
-Tipperary, extending to about a thousand English
-acres. On it was a large and cheerful house,
-overlooking the Suir, and well-wooded pleasure-grounds
-sloping down to the river. Here, with
-splendid views of distant mountains, Bianconi
-took up his residence—at his arrival on taking
-possession there being a grand flare-up of tenantry
-with no end of cheering, for the new landlord’s
-beneficence and means of disbursement were pretty
-well understood. Bianconi did not disappoint
-expectations. When famine, from the failure of
-the potato crops, spread over the land in 1848,
-he employed all who would work, and no one
-died from want at Longfield. His many improvements
-in fencing, draining, and building cottages
-with slated roofs gave some offence to neighbouring
-proprietors of the old school; but he did not
-mind being looked coldly upon, and by his independence
-of character gained general esteem and
-respect.</p>
-
-<p>Advancing in life, Bianconi disposed of his
-interest in the car system which he originated,
-several new proprietors taking his place. In 1851,
-he revisited Italy with his family, but found himself
-out of unison with all that fell under his
-notice. Some family property that devolved on
-him, he presented to several poor relations. It was
-a pleasure for him to return to Ireland, with which
-all his feelings were identified, and where he had
-made numerous warmly cherished acquaintances—among
-others, Daniel O’Connell, with whom he was
-in frequent correspondence. His daughter speaks
-of the immense mass of letters and papers which
-he left behind him, and presents us with a few
-specimens from persons of note, all in a complimentary
-strain. Referring to what he had effected
-by his ingenious enterprise, Lady Blessington writes
-to him from England—‘I thank you for discovering
-those noble qualities in my poor countrymen
-which neglect and injustice may have concealed,
-but have not been able to destroy. While bettering
-their condition, you have elevated the moral
-character of those you employ; you have advanced
-civilisation while inculcating a practical code of
-morality that must ever prove the surest path to
-lead to an amelioration of Ireland. Wisdom and
-humanity, which ought ever to be inseparable,
-shine most luminously in the plan you have pursued,
-and its results must win for you the esteem,
-gratitude, and respect of all who love Ireland.
-The Irish are not an ungrateful people, as they
-have too often been represented. My own feelings
-satisfy me on this point. Six of the happiest years
-of my life have been spent in your country [Italy],
-where I learned to appreciate the high qualities of
-its natives; and consequently I am not surprised,
-though delighted, to find one Italian conferring so
-many benefits on mine.’</p>
-
-<p>In 1865, when seventy-nine years of age, Bianconi
-suffered a serious misfortune. When driving
-a private car, part of the harness snapped, and he
-was thrown violently to the ground. His thigh-bone
-was broken; and rarely at his advanced age
-does any one recover from the effects of such
-accidents. In a moment of time he had been
-made a cripple for the remainder of his life. He
-now only moved about with crutches, or was
-wheeled about in a Bath-chair; yet he undertook
-journeys, of course with proper attendance, and
-did not lose his characteristic cheerfulness. ‘When
-long past eighty, when he got to be stout, lame,
-and helpless, he would visit the boys’ Reformatory<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_340"></a>{340}</span>
-in the Wicklow Mountains,’ and encountered other
-risks inappropriate to his age and infirmity. By
-the governing authorities in Ireland he was held
-in much esteem for the benefits he had conferred
-on the country. ‘That amiable, accomplished,
-and deservedly popular Viceroy, Lord Carlisle,
-never failed to single out Mr Bianconi at the
-Royal Dublin shows, or at the other places of
-public resort, when he happened to be present
-in his wheeled chair, for they were great friends,
-and Lord Carlisle esteemed him very highly. At
-first it was hardly expected he would have lived
-long after his mishap; but by God’s grace he
-remained with us for nearly another ten years.’</p>
-
-<p>Afflicted with paralysis and confined to bed,
-poor Bianconi passed peacefully away after a long
-and useful career. Mrs O’Connell, who was attending
-on him at the last, strangely omits to give
-the date of his decease, which was September 22,
-1875, when within two days of being eighty-nine
-years of age. His body was interred in a mortuary
-chapel, which he had prepared for himself and
-family within the grounds at Longfield. Although
-he had latterly been unable to appear in public
-affairs, his loss was felt to be national. Looking
-to the manner in which he self-reliantly rose from
-obscurity to distinction, and to the success of
-his vast undertakings, his memory cannot but
-be endeared to his adopted country, which stands
-particularly in need of men with his sound
-common-sense and commercial enterprise. In
-conclusion, we might almost be warranted in
-saying that Charles Bianconi did more practically
-to advance the civilisation and the prosperity
-of Ireland than all its professed patriots and
-politicians put together.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-W. C.
-</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="HELENA_LADY_HARROGATE">HELENA, LADY HARROGATE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XXXI.—TO REMIND.</h3>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Gentleman</span>—that is, person—wanted most particularly
-to know—please to see him, Sir Sykes!’
-deferentially hinted the under-butler, sliding on
-noiseless feet up to the angle of his master’s
-library table. ‘He was very pressing—send in
-card,’ continued the man, slurring over the words
-he uttered with that inimitable slipperiness of
-diction of which the English, and indeed Cockney
-man-servant possesses the monopoly, and which
-seems obsequiously to suggest rather than boldly
-to announce. Sir Sykes looked up in some
-surprise.</p>
-
-<p>‘Did he mention what he wanted?’ he asked.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, Sir Sykes,’ replied the under-butler, edging
-the emblazoned tray on which lay the card, a
-little nearer, as an experienced angler might bring
-his bait within striking distance of the pike that
-lay among the weeds.</p>
-
-<p>‘You may shew him in—here,’ said Sir Sykes,
-as, without taking the card, he read the name
-upon it, and which was legibly inscribed in a
-big, bold, black handwriting. With a bow the
-under-butler withdrew to execute his master’s
-orders.</p>
-
-<p>Great people—and a baronet of Sir Sykes
-Denzil’s wealth and position may for all practical
-purposes be classed among the great of the earth—are
-proverbially difficult of access. It is the
-business of those about them to hedge them comfortably
-in from flippant or interested intrusions
-which might ruffle the golden calm of their
-existence; and suspicious-looking strangers by no
-means find the door of such a mansion as Carbery,
-as a rule, fly open at their summons.</p>
-
-<p>The man who had on this occasion effected an
-entry was not one of those whose faces are their
-best letters of recommendation. The card he
-had given bore the name of Richard Hold, and
-under ordinary circumstances, such a caller as the
-mariner would never have succeeded in being put
-into communication with a higher dignitary than
-the house-steward or the groom of the chambers.
-However, by a judicious mixture of bribing and
-bullying, the visitor had induced the under-butler
-to do his errand. Under certain circumstances,
-half a sovereign is a sorry douceur, even to an
-under-butler, but when tendered in company with
-enigmatical threats of ‘starting with a rope’s end,’
-by a seafaring personage of stalwart build and
-resolute air, such a coin becomes doubly efficacious
-as a persuader.</p>
-
-<p>Richard Hold, master mariner, came in with a
-curious gait and mien, half-slinking, half-swaggering,
-like a wolf that daylight has found far from
-the forests and among the haunts of men. He
-was dressed in very new black garments, ‘shore-going
-clothes,’ as he would himself have described
-them; and the hat that he carried in his hand
-was new and tall and hard. He had even provided
-himself with a pair of gloves, so desirous
-was he to omit no item of the customary garb of
-gentlemen; but these he carried loose, instead of
-subjecting his strong brown fingers to such unwonted
-confinement.</p>
-
-<p>‘I cannot say that I expected this honour, Mr
-Hold,’ said the baronet, stiffly motioning his
-unwelcome visitor to a seat.</p>
-
-<p>‘’Tis likely not,’ coolly returned the adventurer,
-as he took a survey of the apartment. ‘This sort
-of place, I don’t mind admitting, is a cut, or even
-two cuts above me. Still, business is business,
-Sir Sykes Denzil, Baronet, and has got to be
-attended to, I reckon, even in such a gen-teel spot
-as this is, mister!’</p>
-
-<p>There must be something in the American twang
-and the American forms of speech which all the
-world over hits the fancy of British-born rovers
-of Hold’s caste, for in every quarter of the globe
-our home-reared rovers affect the idiom, and sometimes
-the accent, of Sam Slick’s countrymen.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am scarcely aware, Mr Hold,’ said the baronet
-with cold politeness, ‘what business it can be to
-which I am indebted for the favour of your
-company, to-day.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Aren’t you, though, skipper?’ echoed Hold,
-whose natural audacity, for a moment repressed by
-the weight as it were of the grandeur around him,
-began to assert itself afresh. ‘Well, let every
-fellow paddle his own canoe and shoe his own
-mustangs. The question is, Are you dealing fairly
-by me or are you not, Sir Sykes Denzil, Baronet?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I assure you that you are talking Greek to me,’
-said the master of Carbery Chase, with a tinge
-of colour rising to his pale face.</p>
-
-<p>‘A nod,’ persisted Hold, ‘is as good every bit
-as a wink—you know the rest of it, mister. But<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_341"></a>{341}</span>
-since you want plain speaking, you shall have it.
-You can’t have forgot, no more than I can, that
-our bargain was just this: A certain young lady
-was to be married to a certain young gentleman.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I apprehend that you allude to—to my ward—Miss
-Ruth Willis,’ said the baronet hesitatingly.</p>
-
-<p>‘You’ve hit it exactly,’ exclaimed Hold, with
-a slap of his hard hand upon the crown of his
-hard hat, which sounded like a muffled drum,
-somewhat to the discomfiture of its proprietor,
-who eyed its ruffled surface ruefully. ‘When is
-the wedding to come off?’</p>
-
-<p>Sir Sykes contemplated his ruffianly visitor
-with a disgust which it required all his prudence
-to dissemble.</p>
-
-<p>‘In civilised society,’ he said coldly, ‘events of
-that sort do not take place with quite so expeditious
-a disregard of difficulties as your very
-apposite question suggests. In the backwoods it
-is perhaps otherwise.’</p>
-
-<p>‘In the backwoods,’ roughly retorted Hold, ‘we
-don’t shilly-shally about righting a wrong, no
-more than about the marrying of a young couple
-that hev made up their minds to it. And let me
-tell you, Sir Sykes Denzil, Baronet, the superfine
-Saxony you fine gentlemen wear covers bigger
-rogues, often, than ever did the deerskin hunting-shirt
-with its Indian embroidery of wampum and
-coloured quills. Backwoodsmen! I’ve been in
-white-fisted company less to be trusted than
-theirs.’</p>
-
-<p>Sir Sykes had imbibed too much of the spirit
-of that modern civilised society of which he
-spoke, to be readily nettled into a burst of anger
-by such taunts as these. Cool, save for one moment,
-from the first, the temperature of his calmly
-flowing blood seemed to grow more frigid as Hold’s
-warmed.</p>
-
-<p>‘You have, I assure you, Mr Hold, no cause
-whatever for irritation,’ he said smoothly: ‘I
-mean—to use your own expression, which I willingly
-adopt—fairly by you. I neither repudiate
-nor ignore our tacit compact. It is my dearest
-wish that my son should become the husband of
-the exemplary young lady in whose prosperity
-you interest yourself.’</p>
-
-<p>Hold gave a growl such as a bear, suddenly
-mollified by the gift of a glittering slice of toothsome
-honeycomb, might be expected to emit. His
-distrustful eye ranged over the baronet’s plausible
-face, as though to test the sincerity of the assurance
-which had just been given.</p>
-
-<p>‘We’re in the same boat,’ he said, in a tone
-that, if dogged, was less surly than before. ‘Our
-pumpkins, I guess, ought to go to the same
-market, they ought. But fair words don’t put
-fresh butter into a dish of boiled batatas. I’m a
-British bull-dog of the game old breed,’ he added
-gruffly; ‘and I keep the grip, however I’m
-handled. Is there a likelihood of the marriage
-coming off soonish?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I hope so,’ returned Sir Sykes. He would
-have given much to have avoided the slight
-embarrassment which he was conscious that his
-manner indicated, and which was not lost upon
-Hold’s watchful eye.</p>
-
-<p>‘No day fixed? No banns put up—stop! I
-forgot—you swells marry by special license of the
-Archbishop of Canterbury—no cake ordered; no
-fal-lals bespoken from the milliner; no breakfast;
-no orange-flowers, eh? Well, I wish to be reasonable
-about it, Sir Sykes, but there must be an
-end of this. Do the young people understand one
-another, or do they not?’</p>
-
-<p>‘It does not answer to <i>brusquer</i> these things,’
-returned Sir Sykes apologetically.</p>
-
-<p>‘It does not answer to <i>what</i>?’ interrupted
-Richard, to whose nautical ears the French word
-sounded odder than would have done a fragment
-of linguafranca or a scrap of Eboe or Mandingo.</p>
-
-<p>‘To be too precipitate,’ explained the baronet.
-‘I have spoken to my son. He sees, I hope, the
-affair in a proper light. He is often in the society
-of Miss Willis, but—but’——</p>
-
-<p>Sir Sykes wavered miserably here. All his
-deportment seemed to fail him before Hold’s
-merciless eye, the very gaze of which probed him
-to the quick.</p>
-
-<p>‘Aren’t you captain in your own ship?’ asked
-the adventurer curtly.</p>
-
-<p>The baronet winced at the question. Captain
-in his own ship, in the sense that some men are
-commanders at home, he had never been. His
-own house, his own estate, had not from the first
-been managed in precise accordance with the
-views of him who owned them. But he had
-been a decorous captain, a captain who walked
-quarter-deck as solemnly as the greatest Tartar
-afloat, and who got lip-service and eye-service as
-a salve to his vanity, until quite recently.</p>
-
-<p>Now there was a strong and not altogether an
-obedient hand on the helm. A new broom was
-making, in the person of Enoch Wilkins, attorney-at-law,
-a clean sweep of various time-honoured
-abuses such as always do grow up about a great
-estate, and the wails of the indignant sufferers
-could not always be kept from reaching the reluctant
-ears of Sir Sykes. People who were
-docked of perquisites came in respectful bitterness
-of soul to the baronet, and humbly prayed that
-he would take their part as against Wilkins the
-lawyer and Abrahams the steward.</p>
-
-<p>Captain in his own ship! The word was a
-telling one, and it hit him hard. He was only
-captain in an ornamental sense, because Carbery
-was his freehold, and the baronetcy his, and he
-alone could sign receipts and draw cheques. He
-had loved his ease much; and now it was perpetually
-invaded. He was sorry for dismissed
-gamekeepers, and for tenants whose tenure was
-to expire on Lady-day. He gave them drafts on
-his banker as a plaster for the smart which he
-nevertheless felt sure was deserved. An unrespecting
-City solicitor, and the sharp London Jew
-whom Mr Wilkins had inducted into the stewardship,
-were swelling the rent-roll in despite of the
-feeble protests of the nominal lord of all.</p>
-
-<p>‘I can’t compel Captain Denzil to take a wife
-of my choosing; that is beyond the power of a
-modern English father, at least where sons are
-concerned,’ said Sir Sykes with a sickly smile.</p>
-
-<p>‘No; you can’t do that, skipper. To knot the
-ninetailed cat and give the young fellow six dozen
-for mutiny,’ said Hold, chuckling over the imaginary
-scene, ‘would be too strict discipline for
-mealy-mouthed days like these. But you might
-let him have it, Sir Sykes, though not quite so
-downright. Make him understand that his allowances
-and his liberty all depend on good behaviour,
-and then see what comes of it.’</p>
-
-<p>What Sir Sykes suffered during the delivery of
-this speech, could only be inferred from the fact<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_342"></a>{342}</span>
-that his lips became of a bluish white and that
-he drew his breath gaspingly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Believe me, Mr Hold,’ he said in a thin broken
-voice, which gained strength somewhat as he proceeded,
-‘you may intrust the care of carrying out
-your wishes—that is, our wishes—to me. I
-understand my son best, and I’——</p>
-
-<p>He stopped again, gasping for breath, and the
-lines about his mouth, traced by pain, were visible
-enough to attract the notice of his unscrupulous
-guest.</p>
-
-<p>‘You shall have time, Sir Sykes Denzil, Baronet,’
-he said apologetically; ‘take a fortnight if you
-like. I’m to be heard of meanwhile at old
-Plugger’s;’ and he threw the card of that establishment
-on the table.</p>
-
-<p>Then Sir Sykes rang the bell for wine, and the
-wine was brought. Hold tossed off a bumper of
-sherry.</p>
-
-<p>‘Your health, skipper,’ he said; ‘and success to
-the wedding.’ And so, with an impudent leer, he
-picked up his tall shining hat and departed.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XXXII.—A DIFFERENCE OF OPINION.</h3>
-
-<p>‘It can’t be done, sir, at the price. I’d do a
-good deal to meet your wishes and that, and I
-don’t pretend to be more sentimental than my
-neighbours. But marrying is a serious sort of
-step, you know. One can’t cry off and pay forfeit,
-if one changes one’s mind a bit too late. Miss
-Willis is’——</p>
-
-<p>Thus far Captain Denzil; but now Sir Sykes
-interrupted his son with an irritation unusual to
-him: ‘Miss Willis is a great deal too good for you,
-I am afraid. Indeed I trust to her sound sense to
-keep some order in your affairs, and prevent you
-from driving at too headlong a pace along the
-road to ruin. Of course her pretensions to pedigree
-are very slight compared with our own, if that be
-the obstacle in your way.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Nobody cares much about ancient blood, in a
-woman at least, now-a-days,’ languidly replied
-Jasper. ‘She is lady enough to take the head of
-a dinner-table, or figure creditably in a London
-drawing-room, after a few weeks of training, and
-that’s as much as need be looked for. And I
-admit that Miss Willis is—very clever.’</p>
-
-<p>Except in the case of an authoress, no one ever
-applies the epithet ‘Very clever’ to a lady save
-as a species of covert blame. Sir Sykes felt and
-looked uneasy as the words reached him.</p>
-
-<p>‘If you have any personal objection’—— he
-began.</p>
-
-<p>‘Not the least in the world,’ unceremoniously
-interrupted Jasper. ‘I’ll even stretch a point,
-and say I rather like the girl than otherwise.
-She’d go straight, I daresay, once the course was
-smooth and clear before her. But I do not think,
-father, you are treating me quite well. Carbery
-ought, you know it ought, to go in the direct line,
-as such properties do.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I apprehend your meaning,’ returned Sir Sykes
-in his coldest tone, ‘to be that you resent as a
-grievance the fact that the estate is not entailed
-upon yourself. You should be more reasonable,
-and remember the singular circumstances under
-which I became master here.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It was a grand coup!’ exclaimed the captain,
-with an envious little sigh. ‘Such a stroke of
-luck does not come twice to the same family.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I got this great gift,’ pursued Sir Sykes, ‘from
-the hand of one who thought less of what he gave
-to me than of what, by making such a will, he took
-away from others. The old lord’s self-tormenting
-mind led him to exult, in the hopes that his testament
-extinguished, in the injury done to kith and
-kin.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It was a sell for the De Veres,’ muttered
-Jasper; ‘they didn’t on the whole take it badly.’
-He looked up as he spoke at the glimmering
-blazonry of the great stained-glass window, and
-realised, for the first time perhaps, the vexation
-which the caprice of the late lord of Carbery had
-inflicted on those of his own race and name.</p>
-
-<p>‘The property,’ said Sir Sykes, ‘having become
-my own a score of years ago, is mine to give or
-to withhold at my death, as in my lifetime I may
-judge fitting.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You have told me that, sir, pretty often,’ retorted
-Jasper testily; ‘of course it’s yours, and
-you can leave it to the Foundling Hospital if
-you like.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Common policy then would dictate,’ said Sir
-Sykes with deliberate emphasis, ‘the study of
-my wishes. And I wish very much indeed that
-Miss Willis should become your wife.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I can’t, as I said, do it at the price; really I
-can’t,’ rejoined Jasper sullenly, as he thrust his
-hand into a side-pocket and fingered the cigar-case
-that lay there. He did not dare to light a
-cigar in the library, much as he longed to seek
-solace in smoke; but he grew impatient for the
-interview to come to an end, and to recover his
-freedom.</p>
-
-<p>‘I offered a handsome income,’ said Sir Sykes
-with an offended look. ‘Had not the sum proposed
-proved sufficient, that was a difficulty not insuperable.
-You had the option of beginning married
-life with the revenue of an average baronet.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes; but you see, sir, you are a trifle above
-the mark of an average baronet’ responded the
-captain; ‘and I naturally should like when my
-turn comes—I hope it will be a long time first—to
-fill the same position. A bare allowance, or
-a lump of settled money, won’t make me the equal
-of an ordinary eldest son; and I don’t see why,
-since by accident I’m not on a par with other
-fellows of my nominal rank and prospects, and
-I am required to marry without being allowed to
-choose for myself, I should not be put on a level
-with men of my own standing.’</p>
-
-<p>Sir Sykes fidgeted restlessly in his chair, and
-the lines of pain about his mouth, which grew
-more sharply defined every day, deepened almost
-perceptibly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Consider what you are asking of me,’ he said
-with an injured air; ‘to make myself a mere
-tenant for life where I have been for twenty years
-owner in fee-simple! Sons do not ask their
-fathers to entail an estate for their benefit.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t see why I should be in a worse position
-than other fellows,’ sullenly responded Jasper.
-‘I may have been extravagant and that sort of
-thing; but there’s no reason why my extravagances
-should be totted up against me to a heavier sum-total
-than those of twenty I could name. Hookham,
-now, who let his father in for a hundred
-and eleven thousand the year that the French
-horse Plon-Plon won the Derby, is as safe of the
-Snivey estates as he is of the Snivey peerage.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The Earl of Snivey and his prodigal heir<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_343"></a>{343}</span>
-Lord Hookham,’ answered Sir Sykes with cold
-urbanity, ‘do not present a case, to my mind, precisely
-in point. You cannot in reason expect me,
-after the sacrifices I have already made on your
-behalf, to place you in the position, as you call it,
-of heir of entail. I am speaking to you less as a
-father than as a man of the world.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And as a man of the world, sir,’ said the incorrigible
-Jasper, ‘I trust you will excuse my saying
-that I scarcely care to be huddled and hustled into
-marrying I don’t know whom, unless at a very
-heavy figure, as my stock-broker, when I was fool
-enough to go on the Exchange, and burned my
-fingers over time-bargains, used to say. I can’t
-think why you should mind my coming next, as
-concerns Carbery Chase here.’</p>
-
-<p>This was a home question which, if arraigned
-before the stern tribunal of Minos and Rhadamanthus,
-Sir Sykes would not have found it easy
-to answer. He was in the habit of telling himself
-that Jasper was not a successor to whom the
-honour and welfare of a great family could with
-prudence be intrusted. Were he master, the old
-oaks in the Chase might soon be gambled down
-from their prescriptive loftiness, and mortgages
-might spring up like mushrooms. Here was a
-noble estate unencumbered, like some big diamond
-without a flaw to mar its lustre, and he was asked
-to let his spendthrift son inherit as of right.
-There were Lucy and Blanche to be provided for.
-They would marry, doubtless, and their husbands
-would probably expect that the brides’ hands
-should be heavy with much gold. The bulk of
-the property would devolve on Captain Denzil;
-but then it might be tied up with an ingenious
-testamentary rigour that should keep the future
-baronet in legal leading-strings through life. Sir
-Sykes cherished too lively a recollection of the
-shifts and straits of his own outlawed progenitor
-Sir Harbottle, to wish the reins of government to
-pass unreservedly into Jasper’s unsteady hands.</p>
-
-<p>But Sir Sykes had an unavowed motive for
-rejecting his son’s proposition. He was by no
-means sure how Enoch Wilkins of St Nicholas
-Poultney would receive such a suggestion. Mr
-Wilkins, that over-zealous pilot, who had insisted
-on assuming the guidance of affairs, might be
-furious at hearing that Jasper was to be promoted
-from heir-presumptive to heir-apparent. There
-was no alliance between the captain and the
-shrewd turf lawyer, from whom so much of his
-lightly expended cash had been extracted. Jasper
-by no means relished the elevation of Mr Wilkins
-to be his father’s Mentor and right-hand man.
-Mr Wilkins might guess that Sir Jasper would
-send his japanned deed-boxes elsewhere than to
-St Nicholas Poultney. And yet Sir Sykes could
-not venture to offend Mr Wilkins.</p>
-
-<p>The conversation was protracted for some half-hour
-or more, since Sir Sykes was sincerely
-desirous to carry his point; but it languished by
-degrees, and involved, as conversations on important
-topics are in real life apt to do, frequent
-repetitions of some stock phrase or threadbare
-argument. Sir Sykes essayed threats, veiled ones
-of course, and not very comprehensible even to
-himself. Jasper, however, was very little moved
-by such threats. There are things that a gentleman
-cannot do, and assuredly one of them
-is to turn his only son out of doors because he
-declines a wife of the parent’s choosing. And to
-no other menace was the captain amenable. He
-should probably, as a result of his father’s displeasure,
-get no cheques for the next few months;
-but this stoppage of pocket-money could not much
-affect the happiness of a graceless prodigal who,
-had he once got a sufficient sum in his possession,
-would have turned his back at once on Carbery
-and all that belonged thereto.</p>
-
-<p>Jasper, then, was singularly stubborn. He was
-in general as morally pliable as a jelly-fish, after
-the fashion of most so-called men of pleasure, but
-now he seemed for the nonce to have developed
-a backbone, and to be hard to bend. There was
-really some lurking sense of injury at his heart,
-and he felt on better terms with his own conscience
-than was often the case, as he resisted his
-father’s instances that he should marry Miss
-Willis, commence housekeeping on five thousand
-a year, and be a reformed character as well as a
-Benedict. He felt that all was not right, and was
-assured that a bride worth the taking would not
-be urged on his acceptance with such pertinacity.</p>
-
-<p>‘I do not see,’ repeated Jasper again and again,
-‘why I should be in a worse position than other
-fellows.’</p>
-
-<p>From that formula, behind which, as behind
-a breastwork, he strongly intrenched himself
-nothing could drive him. It was not, as he
-explained with almost unnecessary candour, that
-he had any undue delicacy with regard to mercenary
-marriages; but that what he stipulated for
-was to be on a level with other spendthrifts of his
-own degree and set, with young Lord Hookham,
-with Lionel Rattlebury, and wild Lord Viscount
-Squandercash, and the rest. Entail the estate,
-so that it <i>must</i> pass to him, Jasper, and post-obits
-would become practicable, and money be easily
-raised; and then Miss Willis was welcome to be
-the partner of his joys and sorrows—such was
-Jasper’s simple train of reasoning. It was a heavy
-price, but he stood out for it.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Sykes was not willing to pay the price, at
-the cost, it might be, of a second contest with Mr
-Enoch Wilkins, and the negotiation with his son
-came to no satisfactory conclusion. What was to
-be done? Hold had named a fortnight as the
-period of grace that he was disposed to grant; but
-the baronet was of opinion that it would not be
-politic to allow the time to expire without communicating
-with this man—who was in some
-sense his master. He would inform Hold of
-Captain Denzil’s unexpected obstinacy, and plead
-for a further delay, and—yes—he would send
-money. Money has often a wonderfully lenitive
-effect upon the temper, and its softening effects
-should be tried upon this buccaneering fellow.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Sykes penned his letter, touching as lightly
-as he could on Jasper’s recalcitrancy, and expressing
-sanguine hopes for the future. He said nothing
-about the entail, which had been the subject
-of the haggling debate between himself and the
-captain. It would hardly be prudent to tell Hold
-of that, lest Jasper should find an unexpected ally
-to back his demand.</p>
-
-<p>‘We had better, under the circumstances, give
-him, as I believe whale-fishers say, a little more
-line,’ wrote Sir Sykes in his confidential communication
-to Richard Hold, and he was weak enough
-to pride himself on his neat use of a nautical
-metaphor sure to tell with a seafaring man. And
-he signed a cheque for two hundred and fifty<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_344"></a>{344}</span>
-pounds, payable to Mr Richard Hold, or order,
-and inserted it in the letter, which he despatched
-by that night’s post. He could scarcely have done
-a more foolish thing.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="OUR_VOLUNTEERS">OUR VOLUNTEERS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Some</span> persons are old enough to remember the
-Volunteer system which prevailed in the early
-years of the present century. It was an enthusiastically
-patriotic movement, for the country was
-threatened with invasion by Bonaparte, who, however,
-as is well known, never got beyond preparations
-at Boulogne, and by the victory of Nelson at
-Trafalgar received an effectual check. Volunteering
-at that time, though very hearty, was at best
-never anything else than playing at soldiering.
-The members of the various corps were only
-civilians in uniforms. Discipline was imperfect.
-At any fancied affront, a man sent in his gun and
-walked off.</p>
-
-<p>We can mention a case in point, which occurred
-about 1807. The colonel in command of the
-Westminster Volunteers, one day lost his temper
-on parade, and struck a member of the corps with
-the flat of his sword. Such was the general
-indignation at the outrage, that the greater number
-of both officers and men at once sent in their
-resignation, and the regiment was broken up.
-This anecdote was related to us by one of the
-sergeants, who resigned and sent in his sword
-and musket. Evidently, there could have been
-no solid reliance on a body of Volunteers so ill
-governed and held together so feebly. The whole
-fabric was at length dissolved, and was succeeded
-by militia regiments strictly under the articles of
-war.</p>
-
-<p>The volunteering system of our own day has
-step by step attained the character of a Landwehr,
-or reserve force, liable, if the occasion arises, to
-support the army of the line and the militia. It
-embraces infantry, cavalry, and artillery, and
-is constructed on a proper military basis. As
-in former times, each town or district has its own
-regiment of Volunteers, which may be concentrated
-at a short notice by telegraph. In the
-infancy of the present movement, the peer and
-the artisan, the gentleman and the shopkeeper,
-all ‘shouldered arms’ together and marched gaily
-side by side. Dukes, earls, marquises, and cabinet
-ministers joined the ranks—Lord Palmerston
-(then Prime-minister) himself donning the uniform
-and learning his drill as a private in the
-London Irish Rifle Corps; while in the London
-Scottish, the Marquis (now Duke) of Abercorn did
-the same thing. This was all well and good; but
-it could not last long, nor did it. Liberty is the
-precious possession of all classes in this country,
-but perfect ‘equality’ and ‘fraternity’ such as the
-above incidents indicated are virtues which have
-not yet attained to any very great degree of perfection
-amongst us. And so it came to pass that
-these noble recruits, whose support at that time
-to the Volunteer cause cannot of course be over-estimated,
-were among the first who ‘fell out,’ to
-make way for those who really meant ‘soldiering.’</p>
-
-<p>Royal reviews and Easter-Monday field-days
-attracted to the ranks of our citizen army all those
-who loved volunteering for the sake of making a
-show; but now that the movement has settled
-down into real earnest military work, the <i>true</i>
-manhood of Britain is to the fore—the spirit
-which looks upon hard work with as light a heart
-as it looks on pleasure, when there is a lesson to
-be learned or a great object to be gained.</p>
-
-<p>The new movement was national in all its
-phases. The different corps adopted titles and
-mottoes which had some distinct connection or
-other with their country’s history, or with the
-local traditions of the counties in which they
-were raised. In the former category are the two
-national corps we have already named; and in
-the latter may be reckoned the ‘Robin Hoods,’
-with their uniform of Lincoln green, which is the
-only thing about them, however, that reminds one
-of the days of Robin Hood and his jovial band.</p>
-
-<p>Though for some cause which we have never
-heard properly explained, there are no ‘colours’ or
-‘standards’ in our Volunteer corps, each regiment
-has a motto, the favourite ones being <i>Defence, not
-Defiance</i> (which is the motto of the National Rifle
-Association), <i>Pro Aris et Focis</i> (For our Hearths
-and Firesides), and <i>Pro Rege et Patria</i> (For King
-and Country). If ever our Volunteers are used
-at all it will be in battalion formation, like the
-regular army, for an army of two hundred thousand
-men cannot all act as skirmishers, and their
-colours would be to them as much the embodiment
-of their country’s honour as those of the
-line are to the regiments of the regular army.
-The Volunteers of 1804 possessed honourable
-emblems in the shape of banners or standards,
-many of which still adorn the walls of London’s
-historic fortress—the Tower.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1860 the Volunteer movement
-received the patronage of Her Majesty the Queen,
-in a manner as practical as it was generous and
-graceful. The National Rifle Association, which
-may be said to be the mainspring of the whole
-affair, and which has since become one of our
-most popular institutions, had decided to hold
-the first annual contest in rifle-shooting at
-Wimbledon Common, and the great ‘Tir National’
-of England was successfully inaugurated by the
-Queen firing the first shot. The rifle was laid
-for her, and Her Majesty pulled the trigger.
-By the aid of the ‘mechanical rest’ the bullet
-struck the bull’s-eye, and thus with an omen of
-happy import was commenced the series of contests
-which to-day has given us an army of sharpshooters
-ready to ‘do or die’ for Britain. The
-Queen then announced that she would give a prize
-of two hundred and fifty pounds to be shot for
-annually, the winner having the choice of receiving
-it either in money or in a souvenir of the
-same value. This prize, which is called the
-‘blue-ribbon’ of Wimbledon, can only be shot for
-by Volunteers; and to it are also attached the
-gold medal and badge of the National Rifle
-Association. The Prince Consort also gave an
-annual prize to be shot for, and this has been
-continued to the meeting by the Prince of Wales.</p>
-
-<p>These royal acts at once put the seal of popularity
-upon the Volunteer cause, and prizes of
-all kinds were offered for competition. Things
-were at first somewhat chaotic at Wimbledon; but
-as time wore on, the common changed its fair-like
-aspect, in which refreshment booths occupied the
-most prominent place, to the spectacle which it
-now always presents on these occasions—namely
-that of a neat and well-ordered encampment where,
-while the meeting lasts, the strictest military<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_345"></a>{345}</span>
-discipline is understood to prevail. Competitors
-from all parts of the world meet there annually,
-for many of the prizes are of a cosmopolitan
-nature. The Dominion of Canada and Australia
-send teams of marksmen, for whom special ‘challenge
-cups’ are prepared; while the Army and
-Navy, the two Houses of Parliament, and our
-great Public Schools also exhibit their skill in the
-use of the rifle.</p>
-
-<p>Our Volunteers had a good deal to put up with
-in the first few years of the movement from the
-street arabs and other idlers, who could find no
-better employment than to fling all kinds of rough
-sarcasm and what may appropriately be termed
-‘gutter criticism’ at the members of the different
-corps. An unfortunate Volunteer, for instance, was
-fined for shooting a dog on Blackheath Common
-as he was going to drill, and almost immediately
-every Volunteer was hailed in the London streets
-with the cry of ‘Who shot the dog?’ Again, when
-the Volunteers met in the public parks for drill
-they were closely surrounded by a critically tantalising
-crowd, which obstructed their movements
-and laughed heartily at their mistakes. The
-comic papers were also filled with amusing caricatures
-of our citizen soldiers; and a great deal
-was done even in high places to throw cold-water
-upon this patriotic and popular movement.
-It has now, we are glad to record, outlived all
-this, and has become enthroned in the hearts of
-Englishmen as one of our greatest institutions. It
-numbered at first some two hundred thousand
-men, but this included persons of all ages, sizes,
-and classes; and after the first flush of enthusiasm
-passed off, the motives which actuated many of
-them were not so much military zeal or any of the
-more solid military virtues, as a love of novelty
-and a taste for good-fellowship.</p>
-
-<p>The Volunteers are now organised upon a somewhat
-different footing. No one is accepted as a
-recruit who is not physically able to undergo
-military work and marching; but should the
-Volunteer wish to quit the service, he must
-comply with the following rules as laid down
-in <i>Regulations for the Volunteer Force</i>. He must
-give to the commanding-officer of his corps fourteen
-days’ notice in writing of his intention to quit
-the corps. He must deliver in good order—fair
-wear and tear only excepted—all arms, clothing,
-and appointments that may have been issued to
-him. And he must pay all money due or becoming
-due by him, under the rules of the corps,
-either before or when he quits the corps. When
-the above regulations have been observed, the
-Volunteer is free to bid adieu to the ranks. His
-uniform is supplied to him free, but only on condition
-that he shall make himself an ‘efficient;’
-a condition which if fulfilled, will earn for the
-funds of his corps the government capitation grant
-of thirty shillings per year. Efficiency is gained by
-attending a certain number of drills and parades
-and gaining a regulated score of marks for rifle-shooting.</p>
-
-<p>Thus at a small cost to the state the different
-corps are made self-supporting, the Volunteer himself
-being put to no expense beyond the time
-which he gives up to the necessary drills and
-parades. The Volunteers have now learned what
-military discipline is, and have, by their attending
-the exercises and manœuvres of the regular army,
-shewn themselves willing to submit to it. Most
-Volunteer officers also take a pride in knowing
-their duty, and are no longer helplessly dependent
-on the adjutant and the drill-instructor. Instead
-of being regarded in the light of a novelty, volunteering
-is now looked upon as a serious business
-by all engaged in it, and as a task which in its
-perfect fulfilment will render them worthy citizens
-of a great and widely extended empire.</p>
-
-<p>The service which the Volunteer movement
-has rendered to Britain is of incalculable value,
-for besides giving us a defending army of nearly
-two hundred thousand ‘efficient’ men, trained to
-the use of every weapon known in warfare, it has
-been a school in which, during the twenty years of
-its existence, thousands have learned those elementary
-principles of military life which, in the
-case of an invasion, would enable them again
-to come forward in defence of their Queen and
-country. The very fact of Great Britain possessing
-such an army would deter, and for aught we
-know to the contrary, may have deterred hostile
-nations from invading her shores.</p>
-
-<p>The two largest Volunteer corps are Scotch—namely
-the 1st Lanarkshire Artillery with seventeen
-batteries, and the 1st Edinburgh (Queen’s) Rifle
-Brigade with twenty-five companies; these being
-the only two corps whose strength entitles them
-to two adjutants each. The militia and yeomanry
-trainings of 1876 were attended by seventy-six
-thousand, and nine thousand five hundred officers
-and men respectively; while the annual inspections
-of the Volunteers for last year resulted in
-an attendance of 159,378 men of all ranks.</p>
-
-<p>We find by reference to the Annual Returns of
-the Volunteer corps, that no fewer than 16,306
-officers and sergeants obtained Certificates of Proficiency
-in 1877. These are facts which it is consoling
-for the public to know, for they ought to
-dispel in the future any fear of the consequences
-of foreign invasion.</p>
-
-<p>The Civil War in America shewed us what a
-Volunteer army could do; and it behoves this
-country now to see that this magnificent force
-which it has at its disposal should be placed on
-such a footing in relation to the other forces as
-will for ever secure its services. Our Volunteers
-constitute a force to which no other country can
-present a parallel; and as such, irrespective of
-its being the means of doing away with the evils
-of conscription, is worthy of all the support
-which the state can give it, for certain events
-within the past few years have shewn us to what
-straits a country is driven, and how great is the
-misery of its people when it has been successfully
-invaded. As a sign of the times too, we may note
-with satisfaction the patriotic feeling which has,
-in the present crisis of our national history,
-induced many Volunteer corps to offer their
-services to the government for garrison duty at
-home, in the event of our army proceeding abroad,
-one regiment—the London Irish—even going so
-far, we learn, as to place itself at the absolute disposal
-of the government for service either in or out
-of the United Kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>Long may it be ere these shores are ever again
-approached by an enemy bent upon our destruction
-as a people; but we cannot shut our eyes to
-the fact that such an enterprise would perchance
-ere this have been effected if it had not been for
-the patriotic conduct of our youth, who have
-enabled Britain to cover herself with an impenetrable<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_346"></a>{346}</span>
-shield, and to find in the arms and hearts
-of her own sons that indomitable strength which
-is best and most appropriately expressed in the
-peaceful words that form the motto of our
-citizen army—namely <i>Defence, not Defiance</i>.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="MONSIEUR_DE_BOCHER">MONSIEUR DE BOCHER.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Badly</span> as the streets of Paris were lighted at the
-close of the reign of Louis XV., the art of illuminating
-ballrooms was as well understood then as
-it is in the latter half of the nineteenth century.
-The guests who flocked to the receptions of M.
-de Bocher, after passing through streets in which
-a few flickering oil-lamps scarcely succeeded in
-making darkness visible, found themselves in the
-centre of floods of dazzling light, and surrounded
-by all that was bright, fashionable, and gay in the
-pleasure-loving city of Paris.</p>
-
-<p>Times had much altered since the days of the
-Grand Monarque, and the hard and fast lines of
-society, then so rigidly observed, were now well-nigh
-obliterated. A precursor of the great Revolution
-which was hereafter to overthrow the state,
-was to be found in the invasion of the saloons
-of the nobility by financiers and capitalists,
-who were received with open arms by those
-who wished either to borrow money from them,
-or to recruit their shattered fortunes by alliances
-with the money-bags of the period. Nor was this
-all; for the poets and writers of the day, anxious
-to secure the support of well-known and wealthy
-patrons, flocked to these reunions, which they
-enlivened with their geniality and wit.</p>
-
-<p>Monsieur de Bocher could lay but little real
-claim to the patrician prefix which he had for
-some years adhibited to his otherwise plebeian
-name. But he held a quasi-official appointment,
-which, although outside the Cabinet, gave him
-almost the dignity of a minister; while his well-known
-wealth and splendid entertainments attracted
-the best society in Paris. He was, moreover,
-a man of wit and learning, and as he possessed
-the somewhat rare faculty of playing the host to
-perfection, had an excellent cook and a cellar of
-first-class wine, his mansion in the Faubourg St
-Germain was one of the most popular in Paris.
-Dukes and peers, ambassadors and foreigners of
-distinction, the simple gentleman, the poet, the
-literary man, the barrister, and the capitalist, all
-found here a common ground for the display of
-their various talents. Fools were rare, for they
-soon found that the climate was not congenial;
-and the conversation was not only remarkable for
-its piquancy, but its intellectual character. Each
-guest, after paying his respects to Madame de
-Bocher, mixed at once in the throng, and was soon
-busied in discussing the last news of the day, or
-deep in the question which agitated Paris. Marmontel
-and Diderot, La Harpe and Helvetius,
-seldom missed a reception; but here, as indeed
-throughout Paris, Voltaire was the presiding genius.
-It was a hopeless struggle for any young author
-to attempt to hold his own against so powerful a
-clique. Voltaire denounced him before his face;
-Diderot caricatured him at the Café Procope; he
-was jeered and laughed at everywhere, and ended
-by submitting to his tormentors. The result of
-such a censorship was not difficult to foresee; and
-in a short time no literary effort which did not
-contain at least a covert attack upon religion, in
-accordance with the principles of the fashionable
-philosophy, had a chance of success. Let us now
-tell the story of M. de Bocher’s acquisition of
-wealth.</p>
-
-<p>His origin indeed was of the lowliest, for his
-father was but a working mason in the days of
-the Grand Monarque. One evening, as the father
-was returning home with his work-basket on his
-shoulder and trowel in hand, a man wrapped in a
-long brown cloak, and closely followed by a carriage
-without any armorial bearings or ciphers,
-tapped him on the shoulder and asked him
-whether he would like to earn five-and-twenty
-louis. The mason eagerly acquiesced; and having
-entered the carriage, his eyes were bandaged,
-and the horses started off at a great rate. For
-several hours the carriage was driven rapidly
-about the streets of Paris, with the obvious intention
-of making the occupant lose all trace of the
-route he had traversed; and when the object had
-been accomplished, the carriage stopped suddenly
-in the court-yard of a large mansion. Bocher was
-then desired to alight; and was at once conducted,
-his eyes still bandaged, into a kind of cellar,
-where his eyesight was restored to him. Here he
-found two men, both armed, and with their faces
-concealed by masks. The poor man was in an
-agony of terror, believing that his last hour had
-come, but was somewhat reassured by the gestures
-of his companions, who, fearful of trusting their
-voices, made signs to him to make some mortar
-of the lime which was lying on the floor. A hole
-in the wall disclosed a recess; and the two men
-raising with difficulty a weighty strong box, placed
-it in the interior, and made signs to the mason to
-build up the wall afresh. Bocher, seeing that
-nothing was required of him but the legitimate
-exercise of his craft, quickly recovered his self-possession;
-and guessing that the proprietors of
-the treasure were obliged to quit the country, and
-had hit upon this device for concealing it until
-better times should dawn upon them, the notion
-of appropriating it to his own use flashed like
-lightning across his brain.</p>
-
-<p>When he concluded his work, as if intending
-to give a last polish to its completion, he placed
-his hand, thickly covered with wet mortar, on
-the new wall, and thus left the distinct impression
-of his five fingers on the hiding-place of the
-treasure-deposit. The promised five-and-twenty
-louis were then faithfully counted out into his
-hand; his eyes were again bandaged, and he
-was re-conducted to the carriage, which after
-following the same course of deception for three
-long hours, at last deposited him in the same
-street as that in which the man in the brown
-cloak had found him.</p>
-
-<p>From that day forth Bocher abandoned the use<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_347"></a>{347}</span>
-of the hammer and trowel, and passed his time
-in wandering about Paris inspecting the houses
-advertised to be sold, directing his attention especially
-to the cellars and lower regions of the
-buildings; seeking everywhere, but without success,
-that imprint of his hand which would point the
-way to unlimited wealth. In the pursuit of this
-phantom, not only the twenty-five louis but all the
-little savings of his hard work rapidly melted
-away, and misery and hunger began to knock
-loudly at the mason’s door. One after another he
-sold the petty articles of furniture which had
-embellished his humble home, to procure the
-bread which was necessary to sustain life; and
-pale and in rags he wandered about Paris, reading
-every new announcement of vacant houses, and
-became a nuisance to the porters intrusted with
-the care of shewing them.</p>
-
-<p>Two years thus passed away—two long years,
-occupied day by day in seeking a fortune, and
-night by night in dreaming that it was found.
-He was returning home one evening, sad and
-dispirited, with the proceeds of the sale of the
-bed upon which his mother had died, and which
-had been one of the very last articles of furniture
-he possessed, when his eye was caught by a large
-posting-bill announcing the sale of a magnificent
-mansion belonging to the Duc de Cairoux, in the
-immediate vicinity of his own dwelling. He
-recollected the story of the sudden disappearance
-of the Duke, and on reading the bill, found that
-the property was sold under a legal decree, which
-constituted the heirs proprietors with a power of
-sale. A last hope crossed poor Bocher’s mind,
-and he at once proceeded to the house, and
-knocked hastily at the door. It was almost dark,
-and no one paid any attention to his eager summons.
-After a sleepless night he again made his
-appearance at the portal of the Duke’s mansion;
-but although it was now opened, another difficulty
-presented itself, for the porter hesitated to admit
-a man so ragged and dirty as the poor mason had
-become. At length, however, he agreed to do so
-upon the understanding that a servant accompanied
-the strange visitor during his survey of the
-premises. The powdered lackey was scarcely more
-courteous than the porter, and scornfully exhibited
-the rich furniture, pictures, and priceless china
-which adorned the apartments, to his humble
-companion. But these were not what Bocher had
-come to see, and at last he induced the man to
-shew him the cellars. Whilst the footman was
-descanting upon the quantity and quality of the
-wines around them, Bocher was anxiously scrutinising
-all the walls, in hopes of finding that print
-on the mortar which was to open to him the door
-to untold wealth. It was all in vain; and deaf
-to the man’s insolence, Bocher was on the point
-of leaving, convinced that his last hope had
-vanished like its predecessors, and that this could
-not have been the house he had visited on that
-eventful evening, when he suddenly perceived a
-small cellar situated in an angle of the wall,
-which had hitherto escaped observation. He turned
-back and examined it closely, his technical knowledge
-as a mason at once shewing him that the
-mortar in one part of the wall was much fresher
-than elsewhere. He approached the spot, and
-there—yes, there was no doubt about it—there
-were the marks of the five fingers, plain and
-distinct!</p>
-
-<p>‘At last, at last!’ he murmured to himself;
-and to make assurance doubly sure, he traced out
-each of the impressions with a trembling hand.
-There could be no doubt whatever about it. At
-last his long search was ended.</p>
-
-<p>Eight days afterwards the property was to be
-sold by auction, and numbers of the aristocracy of
-Paris sent their stewards to bid for it. It was put
-up at fifty thousand louis d’or, and two thousand
-louis were at once added by the steward of
-the Duc de Berri.</p>
-
-<p>‘Sixty thousand louis,’ said a voice from a
-corner; and the audience turning round to look
-at the man who had the audacity to outbid the
-richest man in Paris, discovered a poor man whom
-they had supposed to be a beggar.</p>
-
-<p>‘Sixty thousand louis,’ said the auctioneer;
-‘sixty thousand louis are bid, and this fine
-property is going for only sixty thousand louis!’</p>
-
-<p>The steward added five thousand louis, and
-the offer was at once capped by the mendicant
-who bid seventy thousand louis. Thus the war
-was carried on until one hundred thousand louis
-were offered, and people were aghast at this extraordinary
-duel between the steward of the wealthy
-Duke and a miserable-looking beggar.</p>
-
-<p>‘One—hundred—and—ten—thousand—louis,’
-slowly, but with emphasis, shouted the steward
-with a withering look at his ragged opponent.
-Bocher hesitated, for although he well remembered
-how heavy the strong box was, it was doubtful
-whether it contained so large a sum as this, and
-he was well aware that the penalty for non-payment
-was the Châtelet prison for life with all
-its horrors. There was not much time for reflection,
-for already the ‘Going, going’ of the auctioneer
-was sounding in his ears.</p>
-
-<p>‘One hundred and twenty thousand louis,’ he
-shouted; and ‘One hundred and twenty thousand
-louis are bid,’ repeated the auctioneer amidst a
-breathless silence. This time there was no advance
-on the bidding; and after waiting the stipulated
-time, the property was knocked down to Bocher;
-and the discomfited steward of the Duke quitted
-the field of battle, revenging himself with a bitter
-jest as he passed his conqueror.</p>
-
-<p>Bocher, with the penalty of non-payment of the
-enormous purchase-money staring him in the face,
-handed over the required sum within twenty-four
-hours, receiving in return the necessary title-deeds.</p>
-
-<p>The mason became a dealer in monopolies, and
-finished by leaving an immense fortune and a
-patent of nobility to his son.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Not contented with the house in Paris which
-had satisfied his father’s aspirations, the son
-built himself a splendid château at Montigny,
-where he had the honour of entertaining amongst
-other important personages, Louis XV. and M. de
-Voltaire. The château was built on a hill; and
-puffed up with the vanity of his riches, M. de
-Bocher had the presumption to attempt to surpass
-the great work of Louis XIV. at Versailles, by
-bringing the water from a greater distance and
-throwing it to a greater elevation. He had a
-theatre attached to the château, and lived the
-life of great land-proprietors in England, a state
-of things quite unknown in France. His museum
-of natural history, his collection of pictures by the
-old masters, his stud of horses, were all unrivalled,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_348"></a>{348}</span>
-and moreover he had the luck to enjoy his good
-fortune to the last, for he died on the eve of
-the great Revolution, leaving two sons behind
-him to enjoy his mysteriously acquired wealth.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="FACTS_WORTH_KNOWING">FACTS WORTH KNOWING.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">From</span> inquiries made among French hatters by
-Dr Delaunay, some curious facts concerning heads
-have come to light. In families developing towards
-a higher intellectual standard, heads increase from
-generation to generation; while families failing
-intellectually, shew a regular decrease in size.
-The men who made the Revolution of 1789 had
-bigger heads than their fathers; while the sons of
-the present ruling families in France are craniologically
-so deficient that hats have to be made
-specially for them. In Paris the largest heads are
-to be found in the quarter of the schools, and
-among the schools themselves the secular stand
-above the ecclesiastical.</p>
-
-<p>As flies are said to eat the animalcules in impure
-air, thus removing the seeds of disease, leanness
-in a fly is <i>primâ facie</i> evidence of pure air in a
-house, while corpulency indicates foul wall-paper
-and bad ventilation. Talking of a foul and fresh
-atmosphere, there has lately been adopted in India
-a novel method of giving change of air to people
-who cannot afford to leave home. Patients go up
-in a balloon, which ascends to a certain height,
-and is there made captive. It seems that a few
-days passed in this atmosphere, which is quite
-different from that on the plains beneath, temporarily
-braces up the most languid of invalids. The
-importance to health of a free perspiration no less
-than of fresh air, and what dangers arise from
-perspiration being suddenly checked, has been
-proved by the fact that a person covered completely
-with a compound, impervious to moisture,
-will not live over six hours. On the occasion
-of some papal ceremonies, a poor child was once
-gilded all over with varnish and gold-leaf to represent
-the Golden Age. No wonder that it died in
-a few hours, when we consider that the amount
-of liquid matter which passes through the pores
-of the skin in twenty-four hours in an adult
-person of sound health, is about sixteen fluid
-ounces, or one pint. Besides this, a large amount
-of carbonic acid—a gaseous body—passes through
-the tubes; so we cannot fail to see the importance
-of keeping them in perfect working order by
-frequent ablutions or other means.</p>
-
-<p>It has often been stated that ocular weakness
-and diseases in various forms appear to have been
-rapidly increasing in recent times. Dr Loring, in
-discussing before the New York County Medical
-Society the serious question, ‘Is the human eye
-gradually changing its form under the influence of
-modern civilisation?’ confirms the opinion, so far
-at least as short-sightedness is concerned. Constant
-study, now incidental to the lives of so many,
-has, he says, a tendency to engender this derangement
-of the eye, and it is often transmitted to
-descendants. In his opinion, near-sightedness is a
-disease of childhood, and rarely develops itself after
-the fifteenth or eighteenth year. On examining
-the eyes of over two thousand scholars in the New
-York public schools, Dr Loring found that the
-proportion of those in a healthy condition were
-eighty-seven per cent. among children under seven
-years, while between that age and twenty-one,
-the proportion of normal eyes was but sixty-one;
-which shews, he thinks, that near-sightedness increases
-directly with the age to which schooling
-is extended. In Königsberg, Germany, he found
-considerably more than half the population were
-short-sighted; and in America it is more commonly
-met with among the older eastern cities than the
-new ones of the west. Among the most prominent
-causes of the disease are, in his opinion, a sedentary
-life, poor food, bad ventilation, and general
-disregard of hygienic requirements—all conducing
-to a laxity of tissue, of which near-sightedness is
-an indication.</p>
-
-<p>The experiments of Mr G. F. Train on himself
-would seem to give some corroboration to the
-reports of fasting girls that crop up from time to
-time. In an attempt to prove that eating is
-merely ‘an acquired habit,’ he persisted in going
-without food for six days, and expects in time to
-be able to do without nourishment for a much
-longer period! His experiments, he asserts, prove
-three things: First, that all stories of terrible
-agony in starvation are nonsense; second, that
-fasting really improved his intelligence; and third,
-that a person who has fasted six days has no
-ravenous appetite. This, however, we should
-think is accounted for by the sufferer feeling quite
-past eating at a certain stage of starvation.—The
-problem of how to live on sixpence a day has
-been elucidated by a London physician, who
-writing in advocacy of vegetarianism, affirms that
-he knows many persons who keep themselves
-strong and well on that sum. He further says:
-‘I have myself lived and maintained my full
-weight and power to work on threepence a day,
-and I have no doubt at all that I could live very
-well on a penny a day.’ The ‘penny restaurant’
-lately announced in New York, where a small cup
-of coffee, bread and butter, pork and beans, a
-slice of corned beef, oatmeal, and boiled rice, may
-be obtained at a cost of one cent for each item,
-offers the very means of carrying out this theory.
-What kind of ‘living’ could be enjoyed on that
-insignificant sum, is not explained by the learned
-experimenter; but without pushing theory to such
-an extreme, it is evident that a more careful and
-judicious outlay of small incomes would enable
-many unthinking persons to live well and economically,
-who may now deem such a thing impossible.</p>
-
-<p>The use of horse-flesh as an article of food has
-made great progress in Paris, where about a thousand
-horses per week are said to be slaughtered,
-the animals even being imported for that purpose.
-It is said that during the Exhibition, the hippophagists
-of Paris intend giving a banquet once
-a month to the journalists of all nations, where
-horse and ass flesh prepared in every seductive
-form will be served up.—The snail is becoming
-another fashionable article of diet in France, and
-for some time past a particular place has been
-appropriated for their sale in the Paris fish-markets.
-Snails, says one of the French journals,
-were highly esteemed by the Romans, our masters
-in gastronomy, and are now raised in many of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_349"></a>{349}</span>
-departments with success. In the sixteenth century
-the Capuchins of Fribourg possessed the art of
-fattening snails—an art not lost in our day, for in
-Lorraine and Burgundy they raise excellent snails,
-which find sure demand in the Paris market.
-There are now more than fifty restaurants and
-more than a thousand private tables in Paris
-where snails are accepted as a delicacy by upwards
-of ten thousand consumers; the monthly consumption
-of this mollusc being estimated at half
-a million. Frank Buckland tells us that snails
-are becoming scarce in the neighbourhood of
-London, where for some time snail-collecting has
-been a regular trade.</p>
-
-<p>It is a curious fact that so many dwellings once
-the homes of poets should have been public-houses
-at one time or another. Burns’s native cottage
-was a house of this description; the house in
-which Moore was born was a whisky-shop; and
-Shelley’s house at Great Marlow, a beer-shop. Even
-Coleridge’s residence at Nether Stowey, the very
-house in which the poet composed his sweet <i>Ode
-to the Nightingale</i>, became an ordinary beer-house.
-A house in which James Montgomery lived for
-forty years at Sheffield was a beer-shop; and
-the birthplace of Kirke White is now a house
-for retailing intoxicating beverages.</p>
-
-<p>Many facts relating to foreign countries, which
-strike Englishmen as being curious to a degree,
-reach us from time to time. A Spanish soldier,
-we are told, will fight for a week on an empty
-stomach, provided he can look forward to playing
-his guitar on the seventh day. In his country, if
-a bull intended for the fight falls ill, the animal
-is sent to an infirmary. The chief toreador
-Frasculeo has a fortune of two million francs;
-his combat costume represents one hundred thousand
-francs in diamonds alone; he is courted by
-the highest society in Madrid, is a member of the
-chief aristocratic club; yet his wife is a fishmonger’s
-daughter, and still helps her mother in the market.
-On days when her husband performs she sits at
-her balcony with her children to receive couriers,
-who come on horseback waving a white flag as a
-sign of success in the arena.—The account of how
-a titled lady in Russia has discovered to her cost
-the penalties of expressing in too emphatic a
-manner her disapproval of her governess’s behaviour,
-will, if true, convey a curious idea of
-some social customs in that country. The Princess
-Manweloff had a habit of striking her governess,
-a lady of noble birth, and the latter complained of
-her to the local justice. In this instance the law
-was a respecter of persons, and the Princess was
-ordered three days’ detention in her own house.
-The governess was dissatisfied, and appealed to a
-higher court, which sentenced the defendant to
-three months’ imprisonment in the common jail.—As
-a curious fact, it has been noted by Sir
-Samuel Baker that a negro has never been known
-to tame a wild elephant or any wild animal. The
-elephants employed by the ancient Carthaginians
-and Romans were trained by Arabs and others,
-never by negroes. It had often struck Sir Samuel
-as very distressing that the little children in
-Africa never had a pet animal; and though he
-often offered rewards for young elephants, he
-never succeeded in getting one alive.</p>
-
-<p>A curious instance of the acquisition and rejection
-of fortune reaches us from New Orleans. A
-stableman named Pathier, belonging to an hotel in
-that city, suddenly found himself heir to eighty
-thousand francs at the death of his mother; yet
-strange to say refused to accept the money. The
-law has in vain endeavoured to induce him to avail
-himself of the windfall: his only ambition is to
-smoke his pipe and groom the horses. To such an
-instance of contempt of riches it would be difficult
-to find a parallel.</p>
-
-<p>Some curious facts from the world of Nature
-crop up occasionally, which are well worthy of
-consideration. For instance, it has been proved
-that the bee may under certain circumstances
-turn out to be anything but the pattern of industry
-it is proverbially supposed to furnish.
-Australian colonists have from time to time taken
-out swarms of bees to their adopted land, in the
-hope of deriving practical benefit from the profusion
-of flowers with which the whole country
-abounds. For some little time the newly imported
-bees maintained their reputation for industry,
-storing up their food in the comfortable
-hives provided for them, and supplying the
-colonists with far superior honey to that collected
-by the indigenous honey-producers the ‘mellipones.’
-Presently, however, the hives were discovered
-unstocked at the end of the autumn, notwithstanding
-the long summers of the northern
-parts of Australia, and it was found that the bees
-entirely neglected to lay by a stock of food, as was
-their wont. Though the bees increased and the
-hives were always regularly tenanted, no honey
-was brought home. It soon became evident that,
-finding the perennial summer of the tropical parts
-of Australia afforded them abundance of food,
-without the intervention of long winters, the bees
-forsook their old habits, gave themselves up to a
-life of happy indolence, and no longer took the
-trouble to convey their superabundant supplies
-to the hives prepared for them. In short, there
-being no winters to provide for, the bees gave up
-the practice of storing honey.</p>
-
-<p>Tenacity of life in eels and cats is proverbial;
-but from an instance that occurred at Flinstow
-Farm, near Pembroke, it appears that the pig may
-claim to rank with other creatures in this respect.
-For sixteen days a pig was missed from the farmyard,
-and as every search failed to discover it, the
-conclusion was arrived at that it had been stolen.
-Some masons who were repairing a brick kiln on
-the farm one day discovered the missing animal,
-which had fallen into the kiln, and was unable to
-extricate itself. Though all that time without food,
-the pig when rescued was able to eat, and did
-not seem much the worse for its long imprisonment.</p>
-
-<p>An unexpected friend to man has been discovered
-in a kind of animalcule engendered by
-sewage, which prevents the decomposing matter
-from becoming a dangerous nuisance. Mr Angell,
-the public analyst for Hampshire, having examined
-the sewage-polluted fluid in Southampton
-Water, has discovered that where the suspended
-matters are thickest there is going on a silent
-destruction of the foul matters, through the agency
-of millions of the minute creatures, by some held
-to be of animal, but by Mr Angell believed to be
-of vegetable origin. On examining the muddy
-fluid through a microscope, it was found to contain
-myriads of little brown organisms, surrounded
-with a gelatinous substance. Each specimen was
-found to be active in its movements and of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_350"></a>{350}</span>
-peculiar shape, being furnished with a belt of
-cilia round the centre of the body, and with a
-long transparent and very flexible tail. After
-death, these tiny atoms give off an odour similar
-to that of sea-weed, and change to a green colour.
-During life they evolve bubbles of oxygen gas,
-which serve to purify the water from the effects
-of the decomposing matter on which they themselves
-feed. It is a pity, however, that man, by
-polluting rivers with sewage, should stand so much
-in need of this self-developed scavenger.</p>
-
-<p>Canada, we are told, claims to have produced
-the largest cheese on record. It weighed seven
-thousand pounds, was six feet ten inches in
-diameter, three feet in height, and twenty-one
-feet in circumference; requiring one milking of
-seven thousand cows, or thirty-five tuns of milk
-to produce it.—Of numerical curious facts, it may
-not be uninteresting to state that no less than
-sixteen different shades of green are understood to
-be patronised by the fashionable world; and that
-fifteen persons may dine together a billion times
-without sitting twice in the same relative position,
-by merely changing a chair at each dinner. So
-much for the combination of numbers.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="A_CURIOUS_ANTIQUARIAN_HOAX">A CURIOUS ANTIQUARIAN HOAX.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Every</span> one has doubtless read <i>The Antiquary</i>, and
-enjoyed the skill with which the keenest archæologist
-of the literary fraternity raised a laugh
-against his own favourite studies. The Kaim of
-Kinprunes and the ‘A.D.L.L.’ furnish the standard
-jest with which the Oldbucks of every future age
-will be assailed, and the bodle that he ‘thocht was
-an auld coin’ helps in the attack. Scotland being
-thus the scene of the most famous fictional story
-of this kind, it is curious to find it also the home
-of one of the best authenticated antiquarian hoaxes
-known to have been practised.</p>
-
-<p>The story which we are about to narrate dates
-back to the reign of George the Third; and
-though now sixty years since, one of the parties
-to the hoax then perpetrated has just made
-the details of the story public in a letter read
-before the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland at
-an early meeting in the present year. The circumstances
-which led to the hoax being perpetrated
-were that, when the ruins of the eastern
-portion or choir of the old Abbey Church of
-Dunfermline were to be removed for the erection
-of what forms now the parish church, great anxiety
-was manifested to prove the truth of the statement,
-which, although found in the records, was to some
-extent believed to be doubtful, that Bruce the
-patriot king of Scotland was interred there. It
-may suffice for the purposes of the present sketch
-to state that the evidence that King Robert Bruce
-was really buried here is stated by the Rev. Peter
-Chalmers, in his <i>History of Dunfermline</i>, to be
-‘clear, varied, and strong.’ Bruce died at Cardross
-in Dumbartonshire in 1329; and although he had
-confided to his faithful follower Sir James Douglas
-the task of conveying his heart to the Holy Land,
-Dunfermline was chosen by himself as his place of
-sepulture. Mr Chalmers quotes various entries in
-the Chartulary of Dunfermline in support of this;
-while in Barbour’s famous poem the king is spoken
-of as having been laid</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">In a fayr tumb, intill the quer.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In Fordun’s <i>Scotichronicon</i> mention is also made
-of Bruce being interred ‘in the middle of the
-choir’ of the Abbey Church.</p>
-
-<p>When the excavations were being made in 1818
-for the erection of the new church, the operations
-were watched by many with great interest; and
-the Barons of Exchequer in Scotland, in whose
-custody were the royal palaces, &amp;c., took some
-pains to secure that the remains of the king, if
-found, should be properly treated. Fulfilling
-completely the expectations entertained, a body
-incased in lead was found by the excavators,
-occupying exactly the place which the king’s
-remains would be expected to do. It was inwrapped
-in a double casing of lead; and some
-fragments of gold-embroidered linen cloth were
-also found, shewing that here at least was the
-tomb of no common person. The skeleton was
-that of a kingly man, six feet in height, with a
-splendid head, and in every way worthy of Scotland’s
-hero. And when the body came to be
-examined, previous to its reinterment, it was found
-that the <i>sternum</i> or breast-bone had been sawn
-through longitudinally from top to bottom, this
-being the method adopted by the anatomists of
-the fourteenth century to reach the heart, for
-separate interment. This fact and the position of
-the body seemed to render it all but certain that
-the remains were those of Bruce; but still there
-remained a <i>possibility</i> of mistake.</p>
-
-<p>It was at this point the hoax was perpetrated
-of which we now proceed to speak. On the exhumation
-of the body, it was at once returned to the
-earth, and the place where it was found was
-closed in, flat stones being placed over the aperture.
-The discovery was reported to the Barons
-of Exchequer, and excited great interest in the
-minds of all Scottish people of patriotic or antiquarian
-feelings. Considerable delay, however,
-was made in determining what should be done;
-and it was not till November 1819 that, with
-much ceremony, the skeleton was recoffined and
-reinterred. The tomb was filled up with pitch,
-carefully built over and inclosed, and an elaborate
-Latin epitaph was prepared to the effect
-that the interesting discovery had been made
-amongst the ruins of the old church, &amp;c. But as
-we have said, there was a possibility of mistake;
-and it entered into the heads of two young men
-that it would be a capital thing to convince the
-good folk of Dunfermline that their town really
-did contain the body of the king. One of these was
-the younger brother of the architect engaged in
-the new church, and the other an artist comrade.
-Their design was to get an old or old-looking
-bronze plate, and after inscribing suitable characters
-upon it, to find some means of getting it
-put into the partially opened grave, so that it
-would be discovered on proceeding with the work.
-Assisted by the gentleman who now tells the story,
-a plate was accordingly prepared bearing a device.</p>
-
-<p>When the discovery of the plate was made,
-its existence jumped so completely with the public<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_351"></a>{351}</span>
-wish, that it was hailed with unquestioning and
-extravagant joy. So much delight was manifested
-and so seriously was the jest taken, that the perpetrators
-of it were afraid to confess what they
-had done.</p>
-
-<p>A ludicrous incident occurred at the time. The
-provost of Dunfermline, a banker, sent for the
-artist, who joyfully waited on the chief magistrate,
-anticipating employment. This it was indeed,
-but of unexpected and unwelcome kind, for it
-was to make a drawing of his own plate, for the
-Transactions of one of the learned societies! His
-heart sunk, and his hand was tremulous; and he
-suggested to the provost that he could make the
-drawing better if allowed to take the plate home.
-The answer was startling. Amazed at the audacity
-of the request, the banker said: ‘I have more
-money in the bank just now than ever I had
-before; but I would rather give you the whole of
-it than let that plate out of my custody for an
-hour, until its destination is decided by the highest
-authorities.’ So the young artist had to sit down
-and make the drawing, afraid to hint at the
-‘solemn mockery’ in which he was engaged.
-After a time suspicion fell on the plate, and it
-was generally believed to be a fabrication, although
-the details of the story were not known till now.
-The Rev. Mr Chalmers, whose work was published
-more than forty years ago, speaks of the plate
-as having been ‘satisfactorily ascertained not to
-be ancient.’ In Black’s <i>Guide to Scotland</i>, it is
-stated that the plate—of the <i>bona fides</i> of which
-no doubt is expressed—may be seen in the Museum
-of the Society of Antiquaries at Edinburgh. But
-the estimation in which this relic (which would
-have been priceless if genuine) was held by the
-Society may be judged from the statement made
-by the Secretary at the meeting where the above
-story was made public, that he had had to search
-for the plate in the cellar in order to exhibit it
-to the Fellows.</p>
-
-<p>The narrator of the story of which the above
-is an outline is Mr John Nimmo, whose name is
-associated with two journals of widely different
-repute. A printer by trade, he left Edinburgh for
-Paris in the year 1821, and was for many years
-one of the principal employés on <i>Galignani</i>. He
-is now enjoying well-earned repose after a lengthy
-life of labour. The cause of Mr Nimmo’s leaving
-Scotland recalls the history of a painful event, he
-having been the printer of the <i>Beacon</i>, a newspaper
-which gained unenviable notoriety by its virulent
-personal attacks on men obnoxious to the government
-of the day. The newspaper is memorable in
-the local history of Scotland from the tragic event
-in which Mr Stewart of Dunearn was engaged.
-Mr Stewart had endeavoured in vain to ascertain
-by whom the articles were written, and when the
-name of Mr Nimmo was given, he refused to accept
-him as responsible. After a while the <i>Beacon</i> was
-given up, and a successor of the same character
-was started in Glasgow. Mr Stewart discovered
-that some of the articles in the latter were in the
-handwriting of Sir Alexander Boswell, the eldest
-son of Johnson’s biographer. He challenged Sir
-Alexander; and in the duel which ensued the latter
-was mortally wounded; and Mr Stewart, who was
-subsequently tried for the offence, was acquitted.
-The fact that Mr Nimmo did not return to Scotland
-for many years after the perpetration of the
-hoax in which he was concerned, and that then
-he found the question, if not forgotten, certainly
-exciting no interest, may explain why he has only
-now made public, in a letter to an old friend in
-Edinburgh, the above curious story.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VILLAGE_VETERANS">VILLAGE VETERANS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> are somewhat proud of the number of hale
-old people in our village, the salubrity of which
-outsiders are apt to question, on account of its
-proximity to the Fens. No doubt ague is still
-known amongst us in some degree; but the intending
-visitor who for that reason equips himself with
-stores of quinine, evinces just such an exaggerated
-dread as that which inspired Dr Johnson to provide
-himself with pistols on his memorable journey to
-the Highlands. Our death-rate is quite within
-the average, and longevity is one of our strong
-points. We must admit of course that many of
-our veterans are placed rather early on the list by
-rheumatism or asthma; but it is astonishing how
-long they contrive to continue there in spite of
-coughs and stiff joints. We keep a mental register
-of them one and all, know each of them personally,
-and take a lively interest in their condition, as
-becomes a parish doctor. There is an additional
-zest to our observations in the marked individualities
-amongst them, which a protracted village life
-has always a tendency to produce; but over
-and above local and professional pride in their
-length of years and the pleasure which mere
-character-study yields, there are certain general
-and loftier human grounds on which we might
-excuse a few remarks regarding our village
-veterans.</p>
-
-<p>One sunny spot hard by the southern wall of
-the old bridge forms the favourite haunt of the
-old men in fine weather. There they muster in
-strength on the balmy summer mornings, and
-there the hardier of them forgather whenever
-there is a blink of sunshine.</p>
-
-<p>Most of them walk by the aid of two sticks, the
-halest amongst them requiring the assistance of at
-least one, and on these they lean as they rest
-their backs against the warm red-brick wall. It
-is curious to note the heartiness of their morning
-greetings, and the ‘I’m bravely, thank ye,’ with
-which an octogenarian doubled up with suffering
-will answer the challenge as to his health. Their
-next task is to compare notes as to the past night’s
-experience, this mutual review of coughs and
-other specific ailments being often couched in
-phrases more quaint than elegant; as when dear
-old Jemmy Baxter said to his listeners the other
-day: ‘Dash my wig, if I didn’t think I wor
-agoin’ to die.’ Then follows much babbling of
-olden times, of strange things which happened
-when they were hale and hearty, of the sacks of
-corn they could carry, of the acres they could reap,
-of the hard work and big pay they had when the
-great drains were making, and not unseldom of
-the merry-makings and junketings of half a century
-ago. Or they talk with a keenness of interest,
-sadly suggestive, of the event of the day, be it the
-arrival of a new steam-plough or the latest twin-birth
-in the parish. Sometimes a scrap of news
-from the great world without, falls among them—a
-great shipwreck, a fresh battle, or a general<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_352"></a>{352}</span>
-election—and sets them agog with wonder and
-curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>Old age, like most other inevitable things, is a
-great leveller, and our group sometimes consists of
-individuals who have held very various positions
-in life. The chief spokesman and referee in all
-matters of gossip is an old man-of-war sailor. He
-has many a tale to tell of ’board ship, but is best
-known as the village Zadkiel; a title given, we
-fancy, in derision rather than flattery. He has
-been every inch a seaman, and is even yet a
-good type of an old salt, in spite of rheumatism
-and crutches. The other veterans have for the
-most part been farm-labourers; some have been
-mechanics; several innkeepers and tradesmen;
-and one or two have been farmers in a small way.
-All now meet, however, on the common ground
-of age and infirmity. Old Dalboys, at one time
-the hectoring farmer of Longley, smokes the pipe
-of equality with Tommy Hill, whom for thirty
-years he had bullied as his horse-tender; while
-the superannuated schoolmaster gossips amicably
-with his ancient enemy the now retired sexton.
-They have buried old grudges, feuds, and animosities
-under that wall with the sunny southern
-exposure, as thoroughly as they must in any
-case do ere long under the chill walls of the old
-churchyard. No doubt they have their little
-childish jealousies still, but these are of a fresh
-growth. Sam Payne and Bill Shipley are both
-fond of the easy position afforded by the obtuse
-angle of a bend in the wall, and grumble a little
-when the other contrives to secure it. Occasionally
-John Shore, in the pride of his practical
-knowledge, will make a stir in the camp by doggedly
-disputing such a statement as that London
-lies north-east of Cambridge. At times, too,
-Billie Wright, who we fear is the butt of these
-veteran schoolboys, will totter off in dudgeon,
-because, being no smoker himself, some of the
-more vivacious of his mates get on the weather-side
-of him with their pipes. But these tiffs are
-harmless and ephemeral, and one can well afford to
-smile at and forget them in view of the genuine
-friendship and good-will that prevail.</p>
-
-<p>There is, by the way, a certain hour on a certain
-day of every week—Wednesday, we believe—which
-never fails to bring a number of our veterans
-to the old bridge, wet or dry, cloud or sunshine,
-westling wind or downright nor’-easter. On such
-occasions they have company in the shape of a
-limited number of widows, most of them also well
-up in years, who, let us remark, deserve a full
-share of whatever sympathy we may be disposed
-to grant to our cronies of the other sex. The
-occasion of this special weekly gathering is one
-which a stranger would consider eminently sad
-and painful. They are waiting to receive their
-dole from the relieving officer, who, having many
-districts to visit, and no sheltered stations at any
-of them, is compelled to perform his interesting
-duty in the open air. The poor old souls, especially
-in bad weather, look anxiously down the road for
-the appearance of the gig and gray pony which
-conveys their ‘father,’ as, with a kind of grim
-humour, they have styled the official. Knowing
-them as we do, however, and their general cheerfulness
-and contentment, we are not disposed to
-claim any undue commiseration for their lot in
-this respect. The distressing side of such a scene
-presents itself to the reflecting onlooker rather
-than to themselves. They have drifted gradually—in
-almost every case be it said by sheer stress
-of circumstances—into the condition of outdoor
-paupers, and their wants have vanished one by
-one with the decrease of their means. Besides,
-none of them is altogether dependent on the
-parochial allowance. One has several grandchildren
-who earn a little; another has a married
-daughter who struggles to spare a trifle; and a
-third has a wife, younger and stronger than himself,
-who goes out as nurse or charwoman; while
-all of them are the objects of many small kindnesses
-at the hands of their better-off and sympathetic
-neighbours. Their actual aliment indeed
-contrasts favourably with that of several others,
-whose pinched incomes, derived from their own
-savings, place them outside the pale of both
-public and private charity.</p>
-
-<p>The humble annals of some veterans of the
-latter class are, when rightly read, the record
-of doughty deeds, of amazing fortitude, and
-unwavering self-respect. Their old age is beset
-with petty cares that might daunt the hearts of
-younger men and women. Some are entirely
-alone in the world, having outlived kith and
-kin. They have to pinch and scrape, in the
-sternest and least lovely sense of that phrase, to
-make ends meet. Their daily anxiety is to keep
-out of debt; a dinner here and a supper there are
-ceded in the struggle, but there is no thought of
-surrender while life lasts. One old lady (we use
-the title advisedly, although she is only the
-widow of a jobbing carpenter) is now in her
-eighty-second year. She has buried all her family
-except one son, who is the village scapegrace and
-a sad thorn in his mother’s side. The cottage she
-occupies is her own; but her entire income from
-several other small properties is, when cleared of
-charges, only some seventeen pounds a year. She
-has no word of complaint to make, however, and
-her philosophy may be summed up in the few
-words she said to us the other day: ‘I am hearty
-for my years, sir. I have been able to pay my way
-all along and, God willing, I shall to the end. My
-only trouble is about Harry, and who knows but
-he may alter yet?’ Brave old heart and brave
-old comrades, who thus stand firm and undaunted
-in the last assault of the world and its cares!</p>
-
-<p>But whatever their lot and whatever claim
-some may have to special interest and regard, the
-mere fact that they are all veterans in the great
-human array, entitles them without distinction
-to the sympathy of a younger generation. What
-need to pry too closely into their careers? To
-what purpose the reflection, that this one or that
-one did not acquit himself according to the strict
-standards of thrift, prudence, or perseverance? Let
-us accept the helplessness of age, which may have
-been reached through failures and weaknesses, in
-the same tender spirit that we do the helplessness
-of childhood, whose inherent weaknesses are yet
-untried. They are all under the wall now whose
-shadow lengthens across their forms in the setting
-of the sun. May the light of human sympathy
-also linger with them to the end, till veteran
-after veteran has quitted the old bridge for his
-long home, and his earthly haunts know him no
-more.</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">Printed and Published by <span class="smcap">W. &amp; R. Chambers</span>, 47 Paternoster
-Row, <span class="smcap">London</span>, and 339 High Street, <span class="smcap">Edinburgh</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center"><i>All Rights Reserved.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p>[Transcriber’s note—the following changes have been made to this text:</p>
-
-<p>Page 348: beaf to beef—“corned beef”.]</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, NO. 753, JUNE 1, 1878 ***</div>
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