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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 #66075 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/66075)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Cornhill Magazine, Vol. I, January
-1860, 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: The Cornhill Magazine, Vol. I, January 1860
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: August 17, 2021 [eBook #66075]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: hekula03, Ian Crann and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from
- images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CORNHILL MAGAZINE, VOL.
-I, JANUARY 1860 ***
-
-
-
-
-
- THE
- CORNHILL MAGAZINE.
-
- JANUARY, 1860.
-
-
-
-
- Framley Parsonage. 1
- The Chinese and the “Outer Barbarians.” 26
- Lovel the Widower. 44
- Studies in Animal Life. 61
- Father Prout’s Inaugurative Ode 75
- Our Volunteers. 77
- A Man of Letters of the Last Generation. 85
- The Search for Sir John Franklin. 96
- The First Morning of 1860. 122
- Roundabout Papers.--No. I. 124
-
-
-
-
- Framley Parsonage.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- “OMNES OMNIA BONA DICERE.”
-
-When young Mark Robarts was leaving college, his father might well
-declare that all men began to say all good things to him, and to
-extol his fortune in that he had a son blessed with so excellent a
-disposition.
-
-This father was a physician living at Exeter. He was a gentleman
-possessed of no private means, but enjoying a lucrative practice,
-which had enabled him to maintain and educate a family with all the
-advantages which money can give in this country. Mark was his eldest
-son and second child; and the first page or two of this narrative must
-be consumed in giving a catalogue of the good things which chance and
-conduct together had heaped upon this young man’s head.
-
-His first step forward in life had arisen from his having been sent,
-while still very young, as a private pupil to the house of a clergyman,
-who was an old friend and intimate friend of his father’s. This
-clergyman had one other, and only one other, pupil--the young Lord
-Lufton, and, between the two boys, there had sprung up a close alliance.
-
-While they were both so placed, Lady Lufton had visited her son, and
-then invited young Robarts to pass his next holidays at Framley Court.
-This visit was made; and it ended in Mark going back to Exeter with a
-letter full of praise from the widowed peeress. She had been delighted,
-she said, in having such a companion for her son, and expressed a
-hope that the boys might remain together during the course of their
-education. Dr. Robarts was a man who thought much of the breath of
-peers and peeresses, and was by no means inclined to throw away any
-advantage which might arise to his child from such a friendship. When,
-therefore, the young lord was sent to Harrow, Mark Robarts went there
-also.
-
-That the lord and his friend often quarrelled, and occasionally
-fought,--the fact even that for one period of three months they never
-spoke to each other--by no means interfered with the doctor’s hopes.
-Mark again and again stayed a fortnight at Framley Court, and Lady
-Lufton always wrote about him in the highest terms.
-
-And then the lads went together to Oxford, and here Mark’s good fortune
-followed him, consisting rather in the highly respectable manner in
-which he lived, than in any wonderful career of collegiate success. His
-family was proud of him, and the doctor was always ready to talk of him
-to his patients; not because he was a prizeman, and had gotten medals
-and scholarships, but on account of the excellence of his general
-conduct. He lived with the best set--he incurred no debts--he was fond
-of society, but able to avoid low society--liked his glass of wine, but
-was never known to be drunk; and, above all things, was one of the most
-popular men in the university.
-
-Then came the question of a profession for this young Hyperion, and on
-this subject, Dr. Robarts was invited himself to go over to Framley
-Court to discuss the matter with Lady Lufton. Dr. Robarts returned with
-a very strong conception that the Church was the profession best suited
-to his son.
-
-Lady Lufton had not sent for Dr. Robarts all the way from Exeter for
-nothing. The living of Framley was in the gift of the Lufton family,
-and the next presentation would be in Lady Lufton’s hands, if it should
-fall vacant before the young lord was twenty-five years of age, and in
-the young lord’s hands if it should fall afterwards. But the mother and
-the heir consented to give a joint promise to Dr. Robarts. Now, as the
-present incumbent was over seventy, and as the living was worth 900_l_.
-a year, there could be no doubt as to the eligibility of the clerical
-profession.
-
-And I must further say, that the dowager and the doctor were justified
-in their choice by the life and principles of the young man--as far
-as any father can be justified in choosing such a profession for his
-son, and as far as any lay impropriator can be justified in making
-such a promise. Had Lady Lufton had a second son, that second son
-would probably have had the living, and no one would have thought it
-wrong;--certainly not if that second son had been such a one as Mark
-Robarts.
-
-Lady Lufton herself was a woman who thought much on religious matters,
-and would by no means have been disposed to place any one in a living,
-merely because such a one had been her son’s friend. Her tendencies
-were High Church, and she was enabled to perceive that those of young
-Mark Robarts ran in the same direction. She was very desirous that her
-son should make an associate of his clergyman, and by this step she
-would insure, at any rate, that. She was anxious that the parish vicar
-should be one with whom she could herself fully co-operate, and was
-perhaps unconsciously wishful that he might in some measure be subject
-to her influence. Should she appoint an older man, this might probably
-not be the case to the same extent; and should her son have the gift,
-it might probably not be the case at all.
-
-And therefore it was resolved that the living should be given to young
-Robarts.
-
-He took his degree--not with any brilliancy, but quite in the manner
-that his father desired; he then travelled for eight or ten months with
-Lord Lufton and a college don, and almost immediately after his return
-home was ordained.
-
-The living of Framley is in the diocese of Barchester; and, seeing
-what were Mark’s hopes with reference to that diocese, it was by no
-means difficult to get him a curacy within it. But this curacy he was
-not allowed long to fill. He had not been in it above a twelvemonth,
-when poor old Dr. Stopford, the then vicar of Framley, was gathered
-to his fathers, and the full fruition of his rich hopes fell upon his
-shoulders.
-
-But even yet more must be told of his good fortune before we can
-come to the actual incidents of our story. Lady Lufton, who, as I
-have said, thought much of clerical matters, did not carry her High
-Church principles so far as to advocate celibacy for the clergy. On
-the contrary, she had an idea that a man could not be a good parish
-parson without a wife. So, having given to her favourite a position in
-the world, and an income sufficient for a gentleman’s wants, she set
-herself to work to find him a partner in those blessings.
-
-And here also, as in other matters, he fell in with the views of his
-patroness--not, however, that they were declared to him in that marked
-manner in which the affair of the living had been broached. Lady Lufton
-was much too highly gifted with woman’s craft for that. She never told
-the young vicar that Miss Monsell accompanied her ladyship’s married
-daughter to Framley Court expressly that he, Mark, might fall in love
-with her; but such was in truth the case.
-
-Lady Lufton had but two children. The eldest, a daughter, had been
-married some four or five years to Sir George Meredith, and this
-Miss Monsell was a dear friend of hers. And now looms before me the
-novelist’s great difficulty. Miss Monsell,--or, rather, Mrs. Mark
-Robarts,--must be described. As Miss Monsell, our tale will have to
-take no prolonged note of her. And yet we will call her Fanny Monsell,
-when we declare that she was one of the pleasantest companions that
-could be brought near to a man, as the future partner of his home, and
-owner of his heart. And if high principles without asperity, female
-gentleness without weakness, a love of laughter without malice, and a
-true loving heart, can qualify a woman to be a parson’s wife, then was
-Fanny Monsell qualified to fill that station.
-
-In person she was somewhat larger than common. Her face would have been
-beautiful but that her mouth was large. Her hair, which was copious,
-was of a bright brown; her eyes also were brown, and, being so, were
-the distinctive feature of her face, for brown eyes are not common.
-They were liquid, large, and full either of tenderness or of mirth.
-Mark Robarts still had his accustomed luck, when such a girl as this
-was brought to Framley for his wooing.
-
-And he did woo her--and won her. For Mark himself was a handsome
-fellow. At this time the vicar was about twenty-five years of age, and
-the future Mrs. Robarts was two or three years younger. Nor did she
-come quite empty-handed to the vicarage. It cannot be said that Fanny
-Monsell was an heiress, but she had been left with a provision of some
-few thousand pounds. This was so settled, that the interest of his
-wife’s money paid the heavy insurance on his life which young Robarts
-effected, and there was left to him, over and above, sufficient to
-furnish his parsonage in the very best style of clerical comfort,--and
-to start him on the road of life rejoicing.
-
-So much did Lady Lufton do for her _protégé_, and it may well be
-imagined that the Devonshire physician, sitting meditative over his
-parlour fire, looking back, as men will look back on the upshot of
-their life, was well contented with that upshot, as regarded his eldest
-offshoot, the Rev. Mark Robarts, the vicar of Framley.
-
-But little has as yet been said, personally, as to our hero himself,
-and perhaps it may not be necessary to say much. Let us hope that by
-degrees he may come forth upon the canvas, showing to the beholder
-the nature of the man inwardly and outwardly. Here it may suffice to
-say that he was no born heaven’s cherub, neither was he a born fallen
-devil’s spirit. Such as his training made him, such he was. He had
-large capabilities for good--and aptitudes also for evil, quite enough:
-quite enough to make it needful that he should repel temptation as
-temptation only can be repelled. Much had been done to spoil him, but
-in the ordinary acceptation of the word he was not spoiled. He had too
-much tact, too much common sense, to believe himself to be the paragon
-which his mother thought him. Self-conceit was not, perhaps, his
-greatest danger. Had he possessed more of it, he might have been a less
-agreeable man, but his course before him might on that account have
-been the safer.
-
-In person he was manly, tall, and fair-haired, with a square forehead,
-denoting intelligence rather than thought, with clear white hands,
-filbert nails, and a power of dressing himself in such a manner that
-no one should ever observe of him that his clothes were either good or
-bad, shabby or smart.
-
-Such was Mark Robarts when at the age of twenty-five, or a little
-more, he married Fanny Monsell. The marriage was celebrated in his own
-church, for Miss Monsell had no home of her own, and had been staying
-for the last three months at Framley Court. She was given away by Sir
-George Meredith, and Lady Lufton herself saw that the wedding was what
-it should be, with almost as much care as she had bestowed on that of
-her own daughter. The deed of marrying, the absolute tying of the knot,
-was performed by the Very Reverend the Dean of Barchester, an esteemed
-friend of Lady Lufton’s. And Mrs. Arabin, the Dean’s wife, was of the
-party, though the distance from Barchester to Framley is long, and the
-roads deep, and no railway lends its assistance. And Lord Lufton was
-there of course; and people protested that he would surely fall in love
-with one of the four beautiful bridesmaids, of whom Blanche Robarts,
-the vicar’s second sister, was by common acknowledgment by far the most
-beautiful.
-
-And there was there another and a younger sister of Mark’s--who did
-not officiate at the ceremony, though she was present--and of whom no
-prediction was made, seeing that she was then only sixteen, but of whom
-mention is made here, as it will come to pass that my readers will know
-her hereafter. Her name was Lucy Robarts.
-
-And then the vicar and his wife went off on their wedding tour, the old
-curate taking care of the Framley souls the while.
-
-And in due time they returned; and after a further interval, in due
-course, a child was born to them; and then another; and after that came
-the period at which we will begin our story. But before doing so, may
-not assert that all men were right in saying all manner of good things
-to the Devonshire physician, and in praising his luck in having such a
-son?
-
-“You were up at the house to-day, I suppose?” said Mark to his wife, as
-he sat stretching himself in an easy chair in the drawing-room, before
-the fire, previously to his dressing for dinner. It was a November
-evening, and he had been out all day, and on such occasions the
-aptitude for delay in dressing is very powerful. A strong-minded man
-goes direct from the hall-door to his chamber without encountering the
-temptation of the drawing-room fire.
-
-“No; but Lady Lufton was down here.”
-
-“Full of arguments in favour of Sarah Thompson?”
-
-“Exactly so, Mark.”
-
-“And what did you say about Sarah Thompson?”
-
-“Very little as coming from myself; but I did hint that you thought,
-or that I thought that you thought, that one of the regular trained
-schoolmistresses would be better.”
-
-“But her ladyship did not agree?”
-
-“Well, I won’t exactly say that;--though I think that perhaps she did
-not.”
-
-“I am sure she did not. When she has a point to carry, she is very fond
-of carrying it.”
-
-“But then, Mark, her points are generally so good.”
-
-“But, you see, in this affair of the school she is thinking more of her
-_protégée_ than she does of the children.”
-
-“Tell her that, and I am sure she will give way.”
-
-And then again they were both silent. And the vicar having thoroughly
-warmed himself, as far as this might be done by facing the fire, turned
-round and began the operation _à tergo_.
-
-“Come, Mark, it is twenty minutes past six. Will you go and dress?”
-
-“I’ll tell you what, Fanny: she must have her way about Sarah Thompson.
-You can see her to-morrow and tell her so.”
-
-“I am sure, Mark, I would not give way, if I thought it wrong. Nor
-would she expect it.”
-
-“If I persist this time, I shall certainly have to yield the next; and
-then the next may probably be more important.”
-
-“But if it’s wrong, Mark?”
-
-“I didn’t say it was wrong. Besides, if it is wrong, wrong in some
-infinitesimal degree, one must put up with it. Sarah Thompson is very
-respectable; the only question is whether she can teach.”
-
-The young wife, though she did not say so, had some idea that her
-husband was in error. It is true that one must put up with wrong, with
-a great deal of wrong. But no one need put up with wrong that he can
-remedy. Why should he, the vicar, consent to receive an incompetent
-teacher for the parish children, when he was able to procure one
-that was competent? In such a case,--so thought Mrs. Robarts to
-herself,--she would have fought the matter out with Lady Lufton.
-
-On the next morning, however, she did as she was bid, and signified to
-the dowager that all objection to Sarah Thompson would be withdrawn.
-
-“Ah! I was sure he would agree with me,” said her ladyship, “when he
-learned what sort of person she is. I know I had only to explain;”--and
-then she plumed her feathers, and was very gracious; for, to tell the
-truth, Lady Lufton did not like to be opposed in things which concerned
-the parish nearly.
-
-“And, Fanny,” said Lady Lufton, in her kindest manner, “you are not
-going anywhere on Saturday, are you?”
-
-“No, I think not.”
-
-“Then you must come to us. Justinia is to be here, you know”--Lady
-Meredith was named Justinia--“and you and Mr. Robarts had better stay
-with us till Monday. He can have the little book-room all to himself on
-Sunday. The Merediths go on Monday; and Justinia won’t be happy if you
-are not with her.”
-
-It would be unjust to say that Lady Lufton had determined not to invite
-the Robarts’s if she were not allowed to have her own way about Sarah
-Thompson. But such would have been the result. As it was, however, she
-was all kindness; and when Mrs. Robarts made some little excuse, saying
-that she was afraid she must return home in the evening, because of the
-children, Lady Lufton declared that there was room enough at Framley
-Court for baby and nurse, and so settled the matter in her own way,
-with a couple of nods and three taps of her umbrella.
-
-This was on a Tuesday morning, and on the same evening, before
-dinner, the vicar again seated himself in the same chair before the
-drawing-room fire, as soon as he had seen his horse led into the stable.
-
-“Mark,” said his wife, “the Merediths are to be at Framley on Saturday
-and Sunday; and I have promised that we will go up and stay over till
-Monday.”
-
-“You don’t mean it! Goodness gracious, how provoking!”
-
-“Why? I thought you wouldn’t mind it. And Justinia would think it
-unkind if I were not there.”
-
-“You can go, my dear, and of course will go. But as for me, it is
-impossible.”
-
-“But why, love?”
-
-“Why? Just now, at the school-house, I answered a letter that was
-brought to me from Chaldicotes. Sowerby insists on my going over there
-for a week or so; and I have said that I would.”
-
-“Go to Chaldicotes for a week, Mark?”
-
-“I believe I have even consented to ten days.”
-
-“And be away two Sundays?”
-
-“No, Fanny, only one. Don’t be so censorious.”
-
-“Don’t call me censorious, Mark; you know I am not so. But I am so
-sorry. It is just what Lady Lufton won’t like. Besides, you were away
-in Scotland two Sundays last month.”
-
-“In September, Fanny. And that is being censorious.”
-
-“Oh, but, Mark, dear Mark! don’t say so. You know I don’t mean it.
-But Lady Lufton does not like those Chaldicotes people. You know Lord
-Lufton was with you the last time you were there; and how annoyed she
-was!”
-
-“Lord Lufton won’t be with me now, for he is still in Scotland. And
-the reason why I am going is this: Harold Smith and his wife will be
-there, and I am very anxious to know more of them. I have no doubt that
-Harold Smith will be in the government some day, and I cannot afford to
-neglect such a man’s acquaintance.”
-
-“But, Mark, what do you want of any government?”
-
-“Well, Fanny, of course I am bound to say that I want nothing; neither
-in one sense do I; but nevertheless, I shall go and meet the Harold
-Smiths.”
-
-“Could you not be back before Sunday?”
-
-“I have promised to preach at Chaldicotes. Harold Smith is going to
-lecture at Barchester, about the Australasian archipelago, and I am to
-preach a charity sermon on the same subject. They want to send out more
-missionaries.”
-
-“A charity sermon at Chaldicotes!”
-
-“And why not? The house will be quite full, you know; and I dare say
-the Arabins will be there.”
-
-“I think not; Mrs. Arabin may get on with Mrs. Harold Smith, though
-I doubt that; but I’m sure she’s not fond of Mrs. Smith’s brother. I
-don’t think she would stay at Chaldicotes.”
-
-“And the bishop will probably be there for a day or two.”
-
-“That is much more likely, Mark. If the pleasure of meeting Mrs.
-Proudie is taking you to Chaldicotes, I have not a word more to say.”
-
-“I am not a bit more fond of Mrs. Proudie, than you are, Fanny,” said
-the vicar, with something like vexation in the tone of his voice,
-for he thought that his wife was hard upon him. “But it is generally
-thought that a parish clergyman does well to meet his bishop now and
-then. And as I was invited there, especially to preach while all these
-people are staying at the place, I could not well refuse.” And then he
-got up, and taking his candlestick, escaped to his dressing-room.
-
-“But what am I to say to Lady Lufton?” his wife said to him, in the
-course of the evening.
-
-“Just write her a note, and tell her that you find I had promised to
-preach at Chaldicotes next Sunday. You’ll go, of course?”
-
-“Yes: but I know she’ll be annoyed. You were away the last time she had
-people there.”
-
-“It can’t be helped. She must put it down against Sarah Thompson. She
-ought not to expect to win always.”
-
-“I should not have minded it, if she had lost, as you call it, about
-Sarah Thompson. That was a case in which you ought to have had your own
-way.”
-
-“And this other is a case in which I shall have it. It’s a pity that
-there should be such a difference; isn’t it?”
-
-Then the wife perceived that, vexed as she was, it would be better that
-she should say nothing further; and before she went to bed, she wrote
-the note to Lady Lufton, as her husband recommended.
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- THE FRAMLEY SET, AND THE CHALDICOTES SET.
-
-It will be necessary that I should say a word or two of some of the
-people named in the few preceding pages, and also of the localities in
-which they lived.
-
-Of Lady Lufton herself enough, perhaps, has been written to introduce
-her to my readers. The Framley property belonged to her son; but
-as Lufton Park--an ancient ramshackle place in another county--had
-heretofore been the family residence of the Lufton family, Framley
-Court had been apportioned to her for her residence for life. Lord
-Lufton himself was still unmarried; and as he had no establishment at
-Lufton Park--which indeed had not been inhabited since his grandfather
-died--he lived with his mother when it suited him to live anywhere
-in that neighbourhood. The widow would fain have seen more of him
-than he allowed her to do. He had a shooting-lodge in Scotland, and
-apartments in London, and a string of horses in Leicestershire--much to
-the disgust of the county gentry around him, who held that their own
-hunting was as good as any that England could afford. His lordship,
-however, paid his subscription to the East Barsetshire pack, and then
-thought himself at liberty to follow his own pleasure as to his own
-amusement.
-
-Framley itself was a pleasant country place, having about it nothing
-of seignorial dignity or grandeur, but possessing everything necessary
-for the comfort of country life. The house was a low building of two
-stories, built at different periods, and devoid of all pretensions to
-any style of architecture; but the rooms, though not lofty, were warm
-and comfortable, and the gardens were trim and neat beyond all others
-in the county. Indeed, it was for its gardens only that Framley Court
-was celebrated.
-
-Village there was none, properly speaking. The high road went winding
-about through the Framley paddocks, shrubberies, and wood-skirted home
-fields, for a mile and a half, not two hundred yards of which ran in
-a straight line; and there was a cross-road which passed down through
-the domain, whereby there came to be a locality called Framley Cross.
-Here stood the “Lufton Arms,” and here, at Framley Cross, the hounds
-occasionally would meet; for the Framley woods were drawn in spite of
-the young lord’s truant disposition; and then, at the Cross also, lived
-the shoemaker, who kept the post-office.
-
-Framley church was distant from this just a quarter of a mile, and
-stood immediately opposite to the chief entrance to Framley Court. It
-was but a mean, ugly building, having been erected about a hundred
-years since, when all churches then built were made to be mean and
-ugly; nor was it large enough for the congregation, some of whom
-were thus driven to the dissenting chapels, the Sions and Ebenezers,
-which had got themselves established on each side of the parish, in
-putting down which Lady Lufton thought that her pet parson was hardly
-as energetic as he might be. It was, therefore, a matter near to Lady
-Lufton’s heart to see a new church built, and she was urgent in her
-eloquence, both with her son and with the vicar, to have this good work
-commenced.
-
-Beyond the church, but close to it, were the boys’ school and girls’
-school, two distinct buildings, which owed their erection to Lady
-Lufton’s energy; then came a neat little grocer’s shop, the neat grocer
-being the clerk and sexton, and the neat grocer’s wife, the pew-opener
-in the church. Podgens was their name, and they were great favourites
-with her ladyship, both having been servants up at the house.
-
-And here the road took a sudden turn to the left, turning, as it were,
-away from Framley Court; and just beyond the turn was the vicarage,
-so that there was a little garden path running from the back of the
-vicarage grounds into the churchyard, cutting the Podgens’s off into
-an isolated corner of their own;--from whence, to tell the truth, the
-vicar would have been glad to banish them and their cabbages, could he
-have had the power to do so. For has not the small vineyard of Naboth
-been always an eyesore to neighbouring potentates?
-
-The potentate in this case had as little excuse as Ahab, for nothing
-in the parsonage way could be more perfect than his parsonage. It
-had all the details requisite for the house of a moderate gentleman
-with moderate means, and none of those expensive superfluities which
-immoderate gentlemen demand, or which themselves demand--immoderate
-means. And then the gardens and paddocks were exactly suited to it;
-and everything was in good order;--not exactly new, so as to be raw
-and uncovered, and redolent of workmen; but just at that era of their
-existence in which newness gives way to comfortable homeliness.
-
-Other village at Framley there was none. At the back of the Court, up
-one of those cross-roads, there was another small shop or two, and
-there was a very neat cottage residence, in which lived the widow of
-a former curate, another _protégé_ of Lady Lufton’s; and there was a
-big, staring brick house, in which the present curate lived; but this
-was a full mile distant from the church, and farther from Framley
-Court, standing on that cross-road which runs from Framley Cross in a
-direction away from the mansion. This gentleman, the Rev. Evan Jones,
-might, from his age, have been the vicar’s father; but he had been for
-many years curate of Framley; and though he was personally disliked by
-Lady Lufton, as being low church in his principles, and unsightly in
-his appearance, nevertheless, she would not urge his removal. He had
-two or three pupils in that large brick house, and if turned out from
-these and from his curacy, might find it difficult to establish himself
-elsewhere. On this account, mercy was extended to the Rev. E. Jones,
-and, in spite of his red face and awkward big feet, he was invited to
-dine at Framley Court, with his plain daughter, once in every three
-months.
-
-Over and above these, there was hardly a house in the parish of
-Framley, outside the bounds of Framley Court, except those of farmers
-and farm labourers; and yet the parish was of large extent.
-
-Framley is in the eastern division of the county of Barsetshire, which,
-as all the world knows, is, politically speaking, as true blue a county
-as any in England. There have been backslidings even here, it is true;
-but then, in what county have there not been such backslidings? Where,
-in these pinchbeck days, can we hope to find the old agricultural
-virtue in all its purity? But, among those backsliders, I regret to
-say, that men now reckon Lord Lufton. Not that he is a violent Whig, or
-perhaps that he is a Whig at all. But he jeers and sneers at the old
-county doings; declares, when solicited on the subject, that, as far
-as he is concerned, Mr. Bright may sit for the county, if he pleases;
-and alleges, that being unfortunately a peer, he has no right even to
-interest himself in the question. All this is deeply regretted, for, in
-the old days, there was no portion of the county more decidedly true
-blue than that Framley district; and, indeed, up to the present day,
-the dowager is able to give an occasional helping hand.
-
-Chaldicotes is the seat of Nathaniel Sowerby, Esq., who, at the moment
-supposed to be now present, is one of the members for the Western
-Division of Barsetshire. But this Western Division can boast none of
-the fine political attributes which grace its twin brother. It is
-decidedly Whig, and is almost governed in its politics by one or two
-great Whig families.
-
-It has been said that Mark Robarts was about to pay a visit to
-Chaldicotes, and it has been hinted that his wife would have been as
-well pleased had this not been the case. Such was certainly the fact;
-for she, dear, prudent, excellent wife as she was, knew that Mr.
-Sowerby was not the most eligible friend in the world for a young
-clergyman, and knew, also, that there was but one other house in the
-whole county, the name of which was so distasteful to Lady Lufton. The
-reasons for this were, I may say, manifold. In the first place, Mr.
-Sowerby was a Whig, and was seated in Parliament mainly by the interest
-of that great Whig autocrat the Duke of Omnium, whose residence was
-more dangerous even than that of Mr. Sowerby, and whom Lady Lufton
-regarded as an impersonation of Lucifer upon earth. Mr. Sowerby, too,
-was unmarried--as indeed, also, was Lord Lufton, much to his mother’s
-grief. Mr. Sowerby, it is true, was fifty, whereas the young lord was
-as yet only twenty-six, but, nevertheless, her ladyship was becoming
-anxious on the subject. In her mind, every man was bound to marry as
-soon as he could maintain a wife; and she held an idea--a quite private
-tenet, of which she was herself but imperfectly conscious--that men
-in general were inclined to neglect this duty for their own selfish
-gratifications, that the wicked ones encouraged the more innocent in
-this neglect, and that many would not marry at all, were not an unseen
-coercion exercised against them by the other sex. The Duke of Omnium
-was the very head of all such sinners, and Lady Lufton greatly feared
-that her son might be made subject to the baneful Omnium influence, by
-means of Mr. Sowerby and Chaldicotes.
-
-And then Mr. Sowerby was known to be a very poor man, with a very large
-estate. He had wasted, men said, much on electioneering, and more in
-gambling. A considerable portion of his property had already gone into
-the hands of the Duke, who, as a rule, bought up everything around him
-that was to be purchased. Indeed it was said of him by his enemies,
-that so covetous was he of Barsetshire property, that he would lead a
-young neighbour on to his ruin, in order that he might get his land.
-What--oh! what if he should come to be possessed in this way of any of
-the fair acres of Framley Court? What if he should become possessed of
-them all? It can hardly be wondered at that Lady Lufton should not like
-Chaldicotes.
-
-The Chaldicotes set, as Lady Lufton called them, were in every way
-opposed to what a set should be according to her ideas. She liked
-cheerful, quiet, well-to-do people, who loved their Church, their
-country, and their Queen, and who were not too anxious to make a noise
-in the world. She desired that all the farmers round her should be able
-to pay their rents without trouble, that all the old women should have
-warm flannel petticoats, that the working men should be saved from
-rheumatism by healthy food and dry houses, that they should all be
-obedient to their pastors and masters--temporal as well as spiritual.
-That was her idea of loving her country. She desired also that the
-copses should be full of pheasants, the stubble-field of partridges,
-and the gorse covers of foxes;--in that way, also, she loved her
-country. She had ardently longed, during that Crimean war, that the
-Russians might be beaten--but not by the French, to the exclusion of
-the English, as had seemed to her to be too much the case; and hardly
-by the English under the dictatorship of Lord Palmerston. Indeed,
-she had had but little faith in that war after Lord Aberdeen had been
-expelled. If, indeed, Lord Derby could have come in!
-
-But now as to this Chaldicotes set. After all, there was nothing
-so very dangerous about them; for it was in London, not in the
-country, that Mr. Sowerby indulged, if he did indulge, his bachelor
-mal-practices. Speaking of them as a set, the chief offender was Mr.
-Harold Smith, or perhaps his wife. He also was a member of Parliament,
-and, as many thought, a rising man. His father had been for many years
-a debater in the House, and had held high office. Harold, in early
-life, had intended himself for the cabinet; and if working hard at his
-trade could ensure success, he ought to obtain it sooner or later.
-He had already filled more than one subordinate station, had been at
-the Treasury, and for a month or two at the Admiralty, astonishing
-official mankind by his diligence. Those last-named few months had
-been under Lord Aberdeen, with whom he had been forced to retire. He
-was a younger son, and not possessed of any large fortune. Politics
-as a profession was therefore of importance to him. He had in early
-life married a sister of Mr. Sowerby; and as the lady was some six or
-seven years older than himself, and had brought with her but a scanty
-dowry, people thought that in this matter Mr. Harold Smith had not
-been perspicacious. Mr. Harold Smith was not personally a popular man
-with any party, though some judged him to be eminently useful. He
-was laborious, well-informed, and, on the whole, honest; but he was
-conceited, long-winded, and pompous.
-
-Mrs. Harold Smith was the very opposite of her lord. She was a clever,
-bright woman, good-looking for her time of life--and she was now over
-forty--with a keen sense of the value of all worldly things, and a
-keen relish for all the world’s pleasures. She was neither laborious,
-nor well-informed, nor perhaps altogether honest--what woman ever
-understood the necessity or recognized the advantage of political
-honesty? but then she was neither dull nor pompous, and if she was
-conceited, she did not show it. She was a disappointed woman, as
-regards her husband; seeing that she had married him on the speculation
-that he would at once become politically important; and as yet Mr.
-Smith had not quite fulfilled the prophecies of his early life.
-
-And Lady Lufton, when she spoke of the Chaldicotes set, distinctly
-included, in her own mind, the Bishop of Barchester, and his wife
-and daughter. Seeing that Bishop Proudie was, of course, a man much
-addicted to religion and to religious thinking, and that Mr. Sowerby
-himself had no peculiar religious sentiments whatever, there would not
-at first sight appear to be ground for much intercourse, and perhaps
-there was not much of such intercourse; but Mrs. Proudie and Mrs.
-Harold Smith were firm friends of four or five years’ standing--ever
-since the Proudies came into the diocese; and therefore the bishop
-was usually taken to Chaldicotes whenever Mrs. Smith paid her brother
-a visit. Now Bishop Proudie was by no means a High Church dignitary,
-and Lady Lufton had never forgiven him for coming into that diocese.
-She had, instinctively, a high respect for the episcopal office;
-but of Bishop Proudie himself she hardly thought better than she did
-of Mr. Sowerby, or of that fabricator of evil, the Duke of Omnium.
-Whenever Mr. Robarts would plead that in going anywhere he would have
-the benefit of meeting the bishop, Lady Lufton would slightly curl her
-upper lip. She could not say in words, that Bishop Proudie--bishop as
-he certainly must be called--was no better than he ought to be; but by
-that curl of her lip she did explain to those who knew her that such
-was the inner feeling of her heart.
-
-And then it was understood--Mark Robarts, at least, had so heard,
-and the information soon reached Framley Court--that Mr. Supplehouse
-was to make one of the Chaldicotes party. Now Mr. Supplehouse was a
-worse companion for a gentlemanlike, young, High Church, conservative
-county parson than even Harold Smith. He also was in Parliament, and
-had been extolled during the early days of that Russian war by some
-portion of the metropolitan daily press, as the only man who could save
-the country. Let him be in the ministry, the _Jupiter_ had said, and
-there would be some hope of reform, some chance that England’s ancient
-glory would not be allowed in these perilous times to go headlong to
-oblivion. And upon this the ministry, not anticipating much salvation
-from Mr. Supplehouse, but willing, as they usually are, to have the
-_Jupiter_ at their back, did send for that gentleman, and gave him
-some footing among them. But how can a man born to save a nation, and
-to lead a people, be content to fill the chair of an under-secretary?
-Supplehouse was not content, and soon gave it to be understood that
-his place was much higher than any yet tendered to him. The seals of
-high office, or war to the knife, was the alternative which he offered
-to a much-belaboured Head of Affairs--nothing doubting that the Head
-of Affairs would recognize the claimant’s value, and would have before
-his eyes a wholesome fear of the _Jupiter_. But the Head of Affairs,
-much belaboured as he was, knew that he might pay too high even for Mr.
-Supplehouse and the _Jupiter_; and the saviour of the nation was told
-that he might swing his tomahawk. Since that time he had been swinging
-his tomahawk, but not with so much effect as had been anticipated. He
-also was very intimate with Mr. Sowerby, and was decidedly one of the
-Chaldicotes set.
-
-And there were many others included in the stigma whose sins were
-political or religious rather than moral. But they were gall and
-wormwood to Lady Lufton, who regarded them as children of the Lost
-One, and who grieved with a mother’s grief when she knew that her son
-was among them, and felt all a patron’s anger when she heard that her
-clerical _protégé_ was about to seek such society. Mrs. Robarts might
-well say that Lady Lufton would be annoyed.
-
-“You won’t call at the house before you go, will you?” the wife asked
-on the following morning. He was to start after lunch on that day,
-driving himself in his own gig, so as to reach Chaldicotes, some
-twenty-four miles distant, before dinner.
-
-“No, I think not. What good should I do?”
-
-“Well, I can’t explain; but I think I should call: partly, perhaps, to
-show her that as I had determined to go, I was not afraid of telling
-her so.”
-
-“Afraid! That’s nonsense, Fanny. I’m not afraid of her. But I don’t see
-why I should bring down upon myself the disagreeable things she will
-say. Besides, I have not time. I must walk up and see Jones about the
-duties; and then, what with getting ready, I shall have enough to do to
-get off in time.”
-
-He paid his visit to Mr. Jones, the curate, feeling no qualms of
-conscience there, as he rather boasted of all the members of Parliament
-he was going to meet, and of the bishop who would be with them. Mr.
-Evan Jones was only his curate, and in speaking to him on the matter he
-could talk as though it were quite the proper thing for a vicar to meet
-his bishop at the house of a county member. And one would be inclined
-to say that it was proper: only why could he not talk of it in the same
-tone to Lady Lufton? And then, having kissed his wife and children, he
-drove off, well pleased with his prospect for the coming ten days, but
-already anticipating some discomfort on his return.
-
-On the three following days, Mrs. Robarts did not meet her ladyship.
-She did not exactly take any steps to avoid such a meeting, but she did
-not purposely go up to the big house. She went to her school as usual,
-and made one or two calls among the farmers’ wives, but put no foot
-within the Framley Court grounds. She was braver than her husband, but
-even she did not wish to anticipate the evil day.
-
-On the Saturday, just before it began to get dusk, when she was
-thinking of preparing for the fatal plunge, her friend, Lady Meredith,
-came to her.
-
-“So, Fanny, we shall again be so unfortunate as to miss Mr. Robarts,”
-said her ladyship.
-
-“Yes. Did you ever know anything so unlucky? But he had promised Mr.
-Sowerby before he heard that you were coming. Pray do not think that he
-would have gone away had he known it.”
-
-“We should have been sorry to keep him from so much more amusing a
-party.”
-
-“Now, Justinia, you are unfair. You intend to imply that he has gone to
-Chaldicotes, because he likes it better than Framley Court; but that is
-not the case. I hope Lady Lufton does not think that it is.”
-
-Lady Meredith laughed as she put her arm round her friend’s waist.
-“Don’t lose your eloquence in defending him to me,” she said. “You’ll
-want all that for my mother.”
-
-“But is your mother angry?” asked Mrs. Robarts, showing by her
-countenance, how eager she was for true tidings on the subject.
-
-“Well, Fanny, you know her ladyship as well as I do. She thinks so very
-highly of the vicar of Framley, that she does begrudge him to those
-politicians at Chaldicotes.”
-
-“But, Justinia, the bishop is to be there, you know.”
-
-“I don’t think that that consideration will at all reconcile my mother
-to the gentleman’s absence. He ought to be very proud, I know, to find
-that he is so much thought of. But come, Fanny, I want you to walk back
-with me, and you can dress at the house. And now we’ll go and look at
-the children.”
-
-After that, as they walked together to Framley Court, Mrs. Robarts made
-her friend promise that she would stand by her if any serious attack
-were made on the absent clergyman.
-
-“Are you going up to your room at once?” said the vicar’s wife, as soon
-as they were inside the porch leading into the hall. Lady Meredith
-immediately knew what her friend meant, and decided that the evil day
-should not be postponed. “We had better go in, and have it over,”
-she said, “and then we shall be comfortable for the evening.” So the
-drawing-room door was opened, and there was Lady Lufton alone upon the
-sofa.
-
-“Now, mamma,” said the daughter, “you mustn’t scold Fanny much about
-Mr. Robarts. He has gone to preach a charity sermon before the bishop,
-and under those circumstances, perhaps, he could not refuse.” This was
-a stretch on the part of Lady Meredith--put in with much good nature,
-no doubt; but still a stretch; for no one had supposed that the bishop
-would remain at Chaldicotes for the Sunday.
-
-“How do you do, Fanny?” said Lady Lufton, getting up. “I am not
-going to scold her; and I don’t know how you can talk such nonsense,
-Justinia. Of course, we are very sorry not to have Mr. Robarts; more
-especially as he was not here the last Sunday that Sir George was with
-us. I do like to see Mr. Robarts in his own church, certainly; and I
-don’t like any other clergyman there as well. If Fanny takes that for
-scolding, why----”
-
-“Oh! no, Lady Lufton; and it’s so kind of you to say so. But Mr.
-Robarts was so sorry that he had accepted this invitation to
-Chaldicotes, before he heard that Sir George was coming, and----”
-
-“Oh, I know that Chaldicotes has great attractions which we cannot
-offer,” said Lady Lufton.
-
-“Indeed, it was not that. But he was asked to preach, you know; and Mr.
-Harold Smith----” Poor Fanny was only making it worse. Had she been
-worldly wise, she would have accepted the little compliment implied in
-Lady Lufton’s first rebuke, and then have held her peace.
-
-“Oh, yes; the Harold Smiths! They are irresistible, I know. How could
-any man refuse to join a party, graced both by Mrs. Harold Smith and
-Mrs. Proudie--even though his duty should require him to stay away?”
-
-“Now, mamma--” said Justinia.
-
-“Well, my dear, what am I to say? You would not wish me to tell a
-fib. I don’t like Mrs. Harold Smith--at least, what I hear of her;
-for it has not been my fortune to meet her since her marriage. It may
-be conceited; but to own the truth, I think that Mr. Robarts would
-be better off with us at Framley than with the Harold Smiths at
-Chaldicotes,--even though Mrs. Proudie be thrown into the bargain.”
-
-It was nearly dark, and therefore the rising colour in the face of Mrs.
-Robarts could not be seen. She, however, was too good a wife to hear
-these things said without some anger within her bosom. She could blame
-her husband in her own mind; but it was intolerable to her that others
-should blame him in her hearing.
-
-“He would undoubtedly be better off,” she said; “but then, Lady Lufton,
-people can’t always go exactly where they will be best off. Gentlemen
-sometimes must----”
-
-“Well--well, my dear, that will do. He has not taken you, at any
-rate; and so we will forgive him.” And Lady Lufton kissed her. “As it
-is,”--and she affected a low whisper between the two young wives--“as
-it is, we must e’en put up with poor old Evan Jones. He is to be here
-to-night, and we must go and dress to receive him.”
-
-And so they went off. Lady Lufton was quite good enough at heart to
-like Mrs. Robarts all the better for standing up for her absent lord.
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- CHALDICOTES.
-
-Chaldicotes is a house of much more pretension than Framley Court.
-Indeed, if one looks at the ancient marks about it, rather than
-at those of the present day, it is a place of very considerable
-pretension. There is an old forest, not altogether belonging to the
-property, but attached to it, called the Chase of Chaldicotes. A
-portion of this forest comes up close behind the mansion, and of
-itself gives a character and celebrity to the place. The Chase of
-Chaldicotes--the greater part of it, at least--is, as all the world
-knows, Crown property, and now, in these utilitarian days, is to be
-disforested. In former times it was a great forest, stretching half
-across the country, almost as far as Silverbridge; and there are bits
-of it, here and there, still to be seen at intervals throughout the
-whole distance; but the larger remaining portion, consisting of aged
-hollow oaks, centuries old, and wide-spreading withered beeches, stands
-in the two parishes of Chaldicotes and Uffley. People still come from
-afar to see the oaks of Chaldicotes, and to hear their feet rustle
-among the thick autumn leaves. But they will soon come no longer. The
-giants of past ages are to give way to wheat and turnips; a ruthless
-Chancellor of the Exchequer, disregarding old associations and rural
-beauty, requires money returns from the lands; and the Chase of
-Chaldicotes is to vanish from the earth’s surface.
-
-Some part of it, however, is the private property of Mr. Sowerby,
-who hitherto, through all his pecuniary distresses, has managed to
-save from the axe and the auction-mart that portion of his paternal
-heritage. The house of Chaldicotes is a large stone building, probably
-of the time of Charles the Second. It is approached on both fronts
-by a heavy double flight of stone steps. In the front of the house
-a long, solemn, straight avenue through a double row of lime-trees,
-leads away to lodge-gates, which stand in the centre of the village
-of Chaldicotes; but to the rear the windows open upon four different
-vistas, which run down through the forest: four open green rides,
-which all converge together at a large iron gateway, the barrier which
-divides the private grounds from the Chase. The Sowerbys, for many
-generations, have been rangers of the Chase of Chaldicotes, thus having
-almost as wide an authority over the Crown forest as over their own.
-But now all this is to cease, for the forest will be disforested.
-
-It was nearly dark as Mark Robarts drove up through the avenue of
-lime-trees to the hall-door; but it was easy to see that the house,
-which was dead and silent as the grave through nine months of the
-year, was now alive in all its parts. There were lights in many of the
-windows, and a noise of voices came from the stables, and servants were
-moving about, and dogs barked, and the dark gravel before the front
-steps was cut up with many a coach-wheel.
-
-“Oh, be that you, sir, Mr. Robarts?” said a groom, taking the parson’s
-horse by the head, and touching his own hat. “I hope I see your
-reverence well.”
-
-“Quite well, Bob, thank you. All well at Chaldicotes?”
-
-“Pretty bobbish, Mr. Robarts. Deal of life going on here now, sir. The
-bishop and his lady came this morning.”
-
-“Oh--ah--yes! I understood they were to be here. Any of the young
-ladies?”
-
-“One young lady. Miss Olivia, I think they call her, your reverence.”
-
-“And how’s Mr. Sowerby?”
-
-“Very well, your reverence. He, and Mr. Harold Smith, and Mr.
-Fothergill--that’s the duke’s man of business, you know--is getting off
-their horses now in the stable-yard there.”
-
-“Home from hunting--eh, Bob?”
-
-“Yes, sir, just home, this minute.” And then Mr. Robarts walked into
-the house, his portmanteau following on a footboy’s shoulder.
-
-It will be seen that our young vicar was very intimate at Chaldicotes;
-so much so that the groom knew him, and talked to him about the people
-in the house. Yes; he was intimate there: much more than he had given,
-the Framley people to understand. Not that he had wilfully and overtly
-deceived any one; not that he had ever spoken a false word about
-Chaldicotes. But he had never boasted at home that he and Sowerby were
-near allies. Neither had he told them there how often Mr. Sowerby
-and Lord Lufton were together in London. Why trouble women with such
-matters? Why annoy so excellent a woman as Lady Lufton?
-
-And then Mr. Sowerby was one whose intimacy few young men would wish
-to reject. He was fifty, and had lived, perhaps, not the most salutary
-life; but he dressed young, and usually looked well. He was bald, with
-a good forehead, and sparkling moist eyes. He was a clever man, and a
-pleasant companion, and always good-humoured when it so suited him. He
-was a gentleman, too, of high breeding and good birth, whose ancestors
-had been known in that county--longer, the farmers around would boast,
-than those of any other landowner in it, unless it be the Thornes
-of Ullathorne, or perhaps the Greshams of Greshamsbury--much longer
-than the De Courcys at Courcy Castle. As for the Duke of Omnium, he,
-comparatively speaking, was a new man.
-
-And then he was a member of Parliament, a friend of some men in power,
-and of others who might be there; a man who could talk about the world
-as one knowing the matter of which he talked. And moreover, whatever
-might be his ways of life at other times, when in the presence of a
-clergyman he rarely made himself offensive to clerical tastes. He
-neither swore, nor brought his vices on the carpet, nor sneered at the
-faith of the church. If he was no churchman himself, he at least knew
-how to live with those who were.
-
-How was it possible that such a one as our vicar should not relish
-the intimacy of Mr. Sowerby? It might be very well, he would say to
-himself, for a woman like Lady Lufton to turn up her nose at him--for
-Lady Lufton, who spent ten months of the year at Framley Court, and
-who during those ten months, and for the matter of that, during the
-two months also which she spent in London, saw no one out of her own
-set. Women did not understand such things, the vicar said to himself;
-even his own wife--good, and nice, and sensible, and intelligent as she
-was--even she did not understand that a man in the world must meet all
-sorts of men; and that in these days it did not do for a clergyman to
-be a hermit.
-
-’Twas thus that Mark Robarts argued when he found himself called upon
-to defend himself before the bar of his own conscience for going to
-Chaldicotes and increasing his intimacy with Mr. Sowerby. He did know
-that Mr. Sowerby was a dangerous man; he was aware that he was over
-head and ears in debt, and that he had already entangled young Lord
-Lufton in some pecuniary embarrassment; his conscience did tell him
-that it would be well for him, as one of Christ’s soldiers, to look
-out for companions of a different stamp. But nevertheless he went
-to Chaldicotes, not satisfied with himself indeed, but repeating to
-himself a great many arguments why he should be so satisfied.
-
-He was shown into the drawing-room at once, and there he found Mrs.
-Harold Smith, with Mrs. and Miss Proudie, and a lady whom he had never
-before seen, and whose name he did not at first hear mentioned.
-
-“Is that Mr. Robarts?” said Mrs. Harold Smith, getting up to greet him,
-and screening her pretended ignorance under the veil of the darkness.
-“And have you really driven over four-and-twenty miles of Barsetshire
-roads on such a day as this to assist us in our little difficulties?
-Well, we can promise you gratitude at any rate.”
-
-And then the vicar shook hands with Mrs. Proudie, in that deferential
-manner which is due from a vicar to his bishop’s wife; and Mrs.
-Proudie returned the greeting with all that smiling condescension
-which a bishop’s wife should show to a vicar. Miss Proudie was not
-quite so civil. Had Mr. Robarts been still unmarried, she also could
-have smiled sweetly; but she had been exercising smiles on clergymen
-too long to waste them now on a married parish parson.
-
-“And what are the difficulties, Mrs. Smith, in which I am to assist
-you?”
-
-“We have six or seven gentlemen here, Mr. Robarts, and they always go
-out hunting before breakfast, and they never come back--I was going to
-say--till after dinner. I wish it were so, for then we should not have
-to wait for them.”
-
-“Excepting Mr. Supplehouse, you know,” said the unknown lady, in a loud
-voice.
-
-“And he is generally shut up in the library, writing articles.”
-
-“He’d be better employed if he were trying to break his neck like the
-others,” said the unknown lady.
-
-“Only he would never succeed,” said Mrs. Harold Smith. “But perhaps,
-Mr. Robarts, you are as bad as the rest; perhaps you, too, will be
-hunting to-morrow.”
-
-“My dear Mrs. Smith!” said Mrs. Proudie, in a tone denoting slight
-reproach, and modified horror.
-
-“Oh! I forgot. No, of course, you won’t be hunting, Mr. Robarts; you’ll
-only be wishing that you could.”
-
-“Why can’t he?” said the lady with the loud voice.
-
-“My dear Miss Dunstable! a clergyman hunt, while he is staying in the
-same house with the bishop? Think of the proprieties!”
-
-“Oh--ah! The bishop wouldn’t like it--wouldn’t he? Now, do tell me,
-sir, what would the bishop do to you if you did hunt?”
-
-“It would depend upon his mood at the time, madam,” said Mr. Robarts.
-“If that were very stern, he might perhaps have me beheaded before the
-palace gates.”
-
-Mrs. Proudie drew herself up in her chair, showing that she did
-not like the tone of the conversation; and Miss Proudie fixed her
-eyes vehemently on her book, showing that Miss Dunstable and her
-conversation were both beneath her notice.
-
-“If these gentlemen do not mean to break their necks to-night,” said
-Mrs. Harold Smith, “I wish they’d let us know it. It’s half-past six
-already.”
-
-And then Mr. Robarts gave them to understand that no such catastrophe
-could be looked for that day, as Mr. Sowerby and the other sportsmen
-were within the stable-yard when he entered the door.
-
-“Then, ladies, we may as well dress,” said Mrs. Harold Smith. But as
-she moved towards the door, it opened, and a short gentleman, with a
-slow, quiet step, entered the room; but was not yet to be distinguished
-through the dusk by the eyes of Mr. Robarts. “Oh! bishop, is that you?”
-said Mrs. Smith. “Here is one of the luminaries of your diocese.” And
-then the bishop, feeling through the dark, made his way up to the vicar
-and shook him cordially by the hand. “He was delighted to meet Mr.
-Robarts at Chaldicotes,” he said--“quite delighted. Was he not going
-to preach on behalf of the Papuan Mission next Sunday? Ah! so he, the
-bishop, had heard. It was a good work, an excellent work.” And then Dr.
-Proudie expressed himself as much grieved that he could not remain at
-Chaldicotes, and hear the sermon. It was plain that his bishop thought
-no ill of him on account of his intimacy with Mr. Sowerby. But then he
-felt in his own heart that he did not much regard his bishop’s opinion.
-
-“Ah, Robarts, I’m delighted to see you,” said Mr. Sowerby, when they
-met on the drawing-room rug before dinner. “You know Harold Smith?
-Yes, of course you do. Well, who else is there? Oh! Supplehouse. Mr.
-Supplehouse, allow me to introduce to you my friend Mr. Robarts. It is
-he who will extract the five-pound note out of your pocket next Sunday
-for these poor Papuans whom we are going to Christianize. That is,
-if Harold Smith does not finish the work out of hand at his Saturday
-lecture. And, Robarts, you have seen the bishop, of course:” this he
-said in a whisper. “A fine thing to be a bishop, isn’t it? I wish I
-had half your chance. But, my dear fellow, I’ve made such a mistake; I
-haven’t got a bachelor parson for Miss Proudie. You must help me out,
-and take her in to dinner.” And then the great gong sounded, and off
-they went in pairs.
-
-At dinner Mark found himself seated between Miss Proudie and the lady
-whom he had heard named as Miss Dunstable. Of the former he was not
-very fond, and, in spite of his host’s petition, was not inclined to
-play bachelor parson for her benefit. With the other lady he would
-willingly have chatted during the dinner, only that everybody else at
-table seemed to be intent on doing the same thing. She was neither
-young, nor beautiful, nor peculiarly ladylike; yet she seemed to enjoy
-a popularity which must have excited the envy of Mr. Supplehouse, and
-which certainly was not altogether to the taste of Mrs. Proudie--who,
-however, fêted her as much as did the others. So that our clergyman
-found himself unable to obtain more than an inconsiderable share of the
-lady’s attention.
-
-“Bishop,” said she, speaking across the table, “we have missed you so
-all day! we have had no one on earth to say a word to us.”
-
-“My dear Miss Dunstable, had I known that----But I really was engaged
-on business of some importance.”
-
-“I don’t believe in business of importance; do you, Mrs. Smith?”
-
-“Do I not?” said Mrs. Smith. “If you were married to Mr. Harold Smith
-for one week, you’d believe in it.”
-
-“Should I, now? What a pity that I can’t have that chance of improving
-my faith. But you are a man of business, also, Mr. Supplehouse; so they
-tell me.” And she turned to her neighbour on her right hand.
-
-“I cannot compare myself to Harold Smith,” said he. “But perhaps I may
-equal the bishop.”
-
-“What does a man do, now, when he sets himself down to business? How
-does he set about it? What are his tools? A quire of blotting paper, I
-suppose, to begin with?”
-
-“That depends, I should say, on his trade. A shoemaker begins by waxing
-his thread.”
-
-“And Mr. Harold Smith----?”
-
-“By counting up his yesterday’s figures, generally, I should say;
-or else by unrolling a ball of red tape. Well-docketed papers and
-statistical facts are his forte.”
-
-“And what does a bishop do? Can you tell me that?”
-
-“He sends forth to his clergy either blessings or blowings-up,
-according to the state of his digestive organs. But Mrs. Proudie can
-explain all that to you with the greatest accuracy.”
-
-“Can she, now? I understand what you mean, but I don’t believe a word
-of it. The bishop manages his own affairs himself, quite as much as you
-do, or Mr. Harold Smith.”
-
-“I, Miss Dunstable?”
-
-“Yes, you.”
-
-“But I, unluckily, have not a wife to manage them for me.”
-
-“Then you should not laugh at those who have, for you don’t know what
-you may come to yourself, when you’re married.”
-
-Mr. Supplehouse began to make a pretty speech, saying that he would
-be delighted to incur any danger in that respect to which he might
-be subjected by the companionship of Miss Dunstable. But before he
-was half through it, she had turned her back upon him, and began a
-conversation with Mark Robarts.
-
-“Have you much work in your parish, Mr. Robarts?” she asked. Now, Mark
-was not aware that she knew his name, or the fact of his having a
-parish, and was rather surprised by the question. And he had not quite
-liked the tone in which she had seemed to speak of the bishop and his
-work. His desire for her further acquaintance was therefore somewhat
-moderated, and he was not prepared to answer her question with much
-zeal.
-
-“All parish clergymen have plenty of work, if they choose to do it.”
-
-“Ah, that is it; is it not, Mr. Robarts? If they choose to do it? A
-great many do--many that I know, do; and see what a result they have.
-But many neglect it--and see what a result _they_ have. I think it
-ought to be the happiest life that a man can lead, that of a parish
-clergyman, with a wife and family, and a sufficient income.”
-
-“I think it is,” said Mark Robarts, asking himself whether the
-contentment accruing to him from such blessings had made him satisfied
-at all points. He had all these things of which Miss Dunstable spoke,
-and yet he had told his wife, the other day, that he could not afford
-to neglect the acquaintance of a rising politician like Harold Smith.
-
-“What I find fault with is this,” continued Miss Dunstable, “that we
-expect clergymen to do their duty, and don’t give them a sufficient
-income--give them hardly any income at all. Is it not a scandal, that
-an educated gentleman with a family should be made to work half his
-life, and perhaps the whole, for a pittance of seventy pounds a year?”
-
-Mark said that it was a scandal, and thought of Mr. Evan Jones and his
-daughter;--and thought also of his own worth, and his own house, and
-his own nine hundred a year.
-
-“And yet you clergymen are so proud--aristocratic would be the genteel
-word, I know--that you won’t take the money of common, ordinary poor
-people. You must be paid from land and endowments, from tithe and
-church property. You can’t bring yourself to work for what you earn, as
-lawyers and doctors do. It is better that curates should starve than
-undergo such ignominy as that.”
-
-“It is a long subject, Miss Dunstable.”
-
-“A very long one; and that means that I am not to say any more about
-it.”
-
-“I did not mean that exactly.”
-
-“Oh! but you did though, Mr. Robarts. And I can take a hint of that
-kind when I get it. You clergymen like to keep those long subjects
-for your sermons, when no one can answer you. Now if I have a longing
-heart’s desire for anything at all in this world, it is to be able to
-get up into a pulpit, and preach a sermon.”
-
-“You can’t conceive how soon that appetite would pall upon you, after
-its first indulgence.”
-
-“That would depend upon whether I could get people to listen to me.
-It does not pall upon Mr. Spurgeon, I suppose.” Then her attention
-was called away by some question from Mr. Sowerby, and Mark Robarts
-found himself bound to address his conversation to Miss Proudie.
-Miss Proudie, however, was not thankful, and gave him little but
-monosyllables for his pains.
-
-“Of course you know Harold Smith is going to give us a lecture about
-these islanders,” Mr. Sowerby said to him, as they sat round the fire
-over their wine after dinner. Mark said that he had been so informed,
-and should be delighted to be one of the listeners.
-
-“You are bound to do that, as he is going to listen to you the day
-afterwards--or, at any rate, to pretend to do so, which is as much as
-you will do for him. It’ll be a terrible bore--the lecture I mean, not
-the sermon.” And he spoke very low into his friend’s ear. “Fancy having
-to drive ten miles after dusk, and ten miles back, to hear Harold Smith
-talk for two hours about Borneo! One must do it, you know.”
-
-“I daresay it will be very interesting.”
-
-“My dear fellow, you haven’t undergone so many of these things as I
-have. But he’s right to do it. It’s his line of life; and when a man
-begins a thing he ought to go on with it. Where’s Lufton all this time?”
-
-“In Scotland, when I last heard from him; but he’s probably at Melton
-now.”
-
-“It’s deuced shabby of him, not hunting here in his own county. He
-escapes all the bore of going to lectures, and giving feeds to the
-neighbours; that’s why he treats us so. He has no idea of his duty, has
-he?”
-
-“Lady Lufton does all that, you know.”
-
-“I wish I’d a Mrs. Sowerby _mère_ to do it for me. But then Lufton has
-no constituents to look after--lucky dog! By-the-by, has he spoken to
-you about selling that outlying bit of land of his in Oxfordshire? It
-belongs to the Lufton property, and yet it doesn’t. In my mind it gives
-more trouble than it’s worth.”
-
-Lord Lufton had spoken to Mark about this sale, and had explained to
-him that such a sacrifice was absolutely necessary, in consequence
-of certain pecuniary transactions between him, Lord Lufton, and Mr.
-Sowerby. But it was found impracticable to complete the business
-without Lady Lufton’s knowledge, and her son had commissioned Mr.
-Robarts not only to inform her ladyship, but to talk her over, and to
-appease her wrath. This commission he had not yet attempted to execute,
-and it was probable that this visit to Chaldicotes would not do much to
-facilitate the business.
-
-“They are the most magnificent islands under the sun,” said Harold
-Smith to the bishop.
-
-“Are they, indeed?” said the bishop, opening his eyes wide, and
-assuming a look of intense interest.
-
-“And the most intelligent people.”
-
-“Dear me!” said the bishop.
-
-“All they want is guidance, encouragement, instruction----”
-
-“And Christianity,” suggested the bishop.
-
-“And Christianity, of course,” said Mr. Smith, remembering that he
-was speaking to a dignitary of the Church. It was well to humour such
-people, Mr. Smith thought. But the Christianity was to be done in the
-Sunday sermon, and was not part of his work.
-
-“And how do you intend to begin with them?” asked Mr. Supplehouse, the
-business of whose life it had been to suggest difficulties.
-
-“Begin with them--oh--why--it’s very easy to begin with them. The
-difficulty is to go on with them, after the money is all spent. We’ll
-begin by explaining to them the benefits of civilization.”
-
-“Capital plan!” said Mr. Supplehouse. “But how do you set about it,
-Smith?”
-
-“How do we set about it? How did we set about it with Australia and
-America? It is very easy to criticize; but in such matters the great
-thing is to put one’s shoulder to the wheel.”
-
-“We sent our felons to Australia,” said Supplehouse, “and they began
-the work for us. And as to America, we exterminated the people instead
-of civilizing them.”
-
-“We did not exterminate the inhabitants of India,” said Harold Smith,
-angrily.
-
-“Nor have we attempted to Christianize them, as the bishop so properly
-wishes to do with your islanders.”
-
-“Supplehouse, you are not fair,” said Mr. Sowerby, “neither to Harold
-Smith nor to us;--you are making him rehearse his lecture, which is bad
-for him; and making us hear the rehearsal, which is bad for us.”
-
-“Supplehouse belongs to a clique which monopolizes the wisdom of
-England,” said Harold Smith; “or, at any rate, thinks that it does. But
-the worst of them is that they are given to talk leading articles.”
-
-“Better that, than talk articles which are not leading,” said Mr.
-Supplehouse. “Some first-class official men do that.”
-
-“Shall I meet you at the duke’s next week, Mr. Robarts,” said the
-bishop to him, soon after they had gone into the drawing-room.
-
-Meet him at the duke’s!--the established enemy of Barsetshire mankind,
-as Lady Lufton regarded his grace! No idea of going to the duke’s had
-ever entered our hero’s mind; nor had he been aware that the duke was
-about to entertain any one.
-
-“No, my lord; I think not. Indeed, I have no acquaintance with his
-grace.”
-
-“Oh--ah! I did not know. Because Mr. Sowerby is going; and so are the
-Harold Smiths, and, I think, Mr. Supplehouse. An excellent man is the
-duke;--that is, as regards all the county interests,” added the bishop,
-remembering that the moral character of his bachelor grace was not the
-very best in the world.
-
-And then his lordship began to ask some questions about the church
-affairs of Framley, in which a little interest as to Framley Court was
-also mixed up, when he was interrupted by a rather sharp voice, to
-which he instantly attended.
-
-“Bishop,” said the rather sharp voice; and the bishop trotted across
-the room to the back of the sofa, on which his wife was sitting.
-
-“Miss Dunstable thinks that she will be able to come to us for a couple
-of days, after we leave the duke’s.”
-
-“I shall be delighted above all things,” said the bishop, bowing low
-to the dominant lady of the day. For be it known to all men, that Miss
-Dunstable was the great heiress of that name.
-
-“Mrs. Proudie is so very kind as to say that she will take me in, with
-my poodle, parrot, and pet old woman.”
-
-“I tell Miss Dunstable, that we shall have quite room for any of her
-suite,” said Mrs. Proudie. “And that it will give us no trouble.”
-
-“‘The labour we delight in physics pain,’” said the gallant bishop,
-bowing low, and putting his hand upon his heart.
-
-In the meantime, Mr. Fothergill had got hold of Mark Robarts. Mr.
-Fothergill was a gentleman, and a magistrate of the county, but he
-occupied the position of managing man on the Duke of Omnium’s estates.
-He was not exactly his agent; that is to say, he did not receive his
-rents; but he “managed” for him, saw people, went about the county,
-wrote letters, supported the electioneering interest, did popularity
-when it was too much trouble for the duke to do it himself, and was, in
-fact, invaluable. People in West Barsetshire would often say that they
-did not know what _on earth_ the duke would do, if it were not for Mr.
-Fothergill. Indeed, Mr. Fothergill was useful to the duke.
-
-“Mr. Robarts,” he said, “I am very happy to have the pleasure of
-meeting you--very happy, indeed. I have often heard of you from our
-friend Sowerby.”
-
-Mark bowed, and said that he was delighted to have the honour of making
-Mr. Fothergill’s acquaintance.
-
-“I am commissioned by the Duke of Omnium,” continued Mr. Fothergill,
-“to say how glad he will be if you will join his grace’s party at
-Gatherum Castle, next week. The bishop will be there, and indeed nearly
-the whole set who are here now. The duke would have written when he
-heard that you were to be at Chaldicotes; but things were hardly quite
-arranged then, so his grace has left it for me to tell you how happy he
-will be to make your acquaintance in his own house. I have spoken to
-Sowerby,” continued Mr. Fothergill, “and he very much hopes that you
-will be able to join us.”
-
-Mark felt that his face became red when this proposition was made to
-him. The party in the county to which he properly belonged--he and his
-wife, and all that made him happy and respectable--looked upon the Duke
-of Omnium with horror and amazement; and now he had absolutely received
-an invitation to the duke’s house! A proposition was made to him that
-he should be numbered among the duke’s friends!
-
-And though in one sense he was sorry that the proposition was made to
-him, yet in another he was proud of it. It is not every young man, let
-his profession be what it may, who can receive overtures of friendship
-from dukes without some elation. Mark, too, had risen in the world,
-as far as he had yet risen, by knowing great people; and he certainly
-had an ambition to rise higher. I will not degrade him by calling him
-a tuft-hunter; but he undoubtedly had a feeling that the paths most
-pleasant for a clergyman’s feet were those which were trodden by the
-great ones of the earth.
-
-Nevertheless, at the moment he declined the duke’s invitation. He
-was very much flattered, he said, but the duties of his parish would
-require him to return direct from Chaldicotes to Framley.
-
-“You need not give me an answer to-night, you know,” said Mr.
-Fothergill. “Before the week is past, we will talk it over with Sowerby
-and the bishop. It will be a thousand pities, Mr. Robarts, if you will
-allow me to say so, that you should neglect such an opportunity of
-knowing his grace.”
-
-When Mark went to bed, his mind was still set against going to the
-duke’s; but, nevertheless, he did feel that it was a pity that he
-should not do so. After all, was it necessary that he should obey Lady
-Lufton in all things?
-
-
-
-
- The Chinese and the “Outer Barbarians.”
-
-
-China, and questions of Chinese policy--which only two years ago
-were the battle-field of fierce political contention, the subject of
-debates which menaced a Ministry with downfall, dissolved a Parliament,
-violently agitated the whole community at home, and engaged the
-controversies of the whole civilized world--seemed again to have been
-delivered over to that neglect and oblivion with which remote countries
-and their concerns are ordinarily regarded; but after the lull and the
-slumber, come again the rousing and the excitement, and China occupies
-anew the columns of the periodical press, and awakens fresh interest in
-the public mind.
-
-The startling events which have taken place on the _Tien-tsin_ river
-in China--popularly, but erroneously, known by the name of the
-Pei-Ho[1]--have re-kindled such an amount of attention and inquiry,
-that we feel warranted in devoting some of our earliest pages to
-the consideration of a topic involving our relations with a people
-constituting more than one-third of the whole human family, and
-commercial interests even now of vast extent, and likely to become in
-their future development more important than those which connect us
-with any other nation or region of the world. A brief recapitulation
-of the events preceding this last manifestation of Chinese duplicity
-will enable the reader to understand the character and objects of the
-Chinese government in their dealings with other nations.
-
-A series of successful military and naval operations led to the
-treaties with China of 1842. The arts and appliances of modern
-warfare--the civilization of a powerful western nation--were directed
-against armies and defenses which represented the unimproved strategy
-of the middle ages,[2] and against regions pacific in their social
-organization, yet disordered, and even dislocated by internecine
-dissensions, which the enfeebled imperial authority was wholly
-incompetent to subdue or to control. The reigning dynasty was little
-able to resist a shock so overwhelming to its stolid pride, and
-so unexpected to its ignorant shortsightedness. Its hold upon the
-people being rather that of traditional prestige than of physical
-domination, the humiliation felt was all the more intolerable because
-inflicted by those “barbarians,” who, according to Chinese estimate,
-are beyond “heaven’s canopy.” It is currently believed in China
-that our earlier intercourse with the “central land” had only been
-allowed by the gracious and pitying condescension of the “son of
-heaven” to supplications that China might be permitted, from her
-abounding superfluities, to provide for the urgent necessities of the
-“outer races,” which could not otherwise be supplied. “How,” said the
-benevolent councillors of the Great Bright Dynasty, “how, without the
-rhubarb of the Celestial dominions, can the diseases of the red-haired
-races be cured? how can their existence be supported without our
-fragrant tea? how can their persons be adorned, unless your sacred
-Majesty will allow their traders to purchase and to convey to them our
-beautiful silk? Think how far they come--how patiently they wait--how
-humbly they supplicate for a single ray from the lustrous presence. Let
-not their hearts be made disconsolate by being sent empty away.”
-
-Even after the severe lessons which the Chinese received in the war,
-and the sad exhibitions of their utter inability to offer any effectual
-resistance to our forces, the reports made by Keying, the negotiator of
-our first treaty, as to the proper manner of dealing with “barbarians,”
-are equally amusing and characteristic. These reports were honoured
-with the autograph approval of the emperor Taou-Kwang, written with
-“the vermilion pencil,”[3] and were found at Canton among the papers
-of Commissioner Yeh, to whom they had been sent for his guidance and
-instruction. In the end they proved fatal to the venerable diplomatist;
-for he having been sent down from the capital to Tien-tsin in order
-to meet the foreign ambassadors, and there to give practical evidence
-that he knew how to “manage and pacify” the Western barbarians, the
-documents which proved his own earlier treacheries were produced; he
-was put to open shame, and the poor old man, though a member of the
-Imperial family, was condemned to be publicly executed: a sentence
-which the emperor, in consideration for his high rank and extreme
-age, commuted into a permission, or rather a mandate, that he should
-commit suicide. Keying gratefully accepted this last favour from his
-sovereign, and so terminated his long and most memorable career.
-
-It is withal not the less true that these reports represent the
-concentrated wisdom of the sages of China, and are fair and reasonable
-commentaries upon the teachings of the ancient books in reference to
-the proper mode of subduing or taming the “outside nations;” and as
-they throw much light upon the course of the mandarins, and give us the
-key by which their policy may be generally interpreted, some account of
-them will be neither superfluous nor uninstructive.
-
-After stating that the English “barbarians” had been “pacified” in
-1842, and the American and French “barbarians” in 1844, Keying goes on
-to report that it had been necessary to “shift ground,” and change the
-measures by which they were to be “tethered.” “Of course,” he says,
-they must be dealt with “justly,” and their “feelings consulted;” but
-they cannot be restrained without “stratagems”--and thus he explains
-his “stratagems.” Sometimes they must be “ordered” (to obey), and “no
-reason given;” sometimes there must be “demonstrations” to disarm
-their “restlessness” and “suspicions;” sometimes they must be placed
-on a footing of “equality,” to make them “pleased” and “grateful;”
-their “falsehoods must be blinked,” and their “facts” not too closely
-examined. Being “born beyond” (heaven’s canopy), the barbarians “cannot
-perfectly understand the administration of the Celestial dynasty,”
-nor the promulgation of the “silken sounds” (imperial decrees) by
-the “Great Council.” Keying excuses himself for having, in order “to
-gain their good-will,” eaten and drunk with “the barbarians in their
-residences and ships;” but he was most embarrassed by the consideration
-shown by the barbarians towards “their women,”[4] whom they constantly
-introduced; but he did not deem it becoming “to break out in rebuke,”
-which would “not clear their barbarian dulness.” He urges, however, the
-increasing necessity of “keeping them off, and shutting them out.” He
-takes great credit for refusing the “barbarians’ gifts,” the receipt of
-which might, he says, have exposed him to the penalties of the law. He
-did accept some trifles; but, giving effect to the Confucian maxim of
-“receiving little and returning much,” he gave the barbarians in return
-“snuff-bottles, purses,” and a “copy of his insignificant portrait.”
-
-He says the “barbarians” have “filched Chinese titles for their
-rulers:” thus “assuming the airs of great authority,” which he
-acknowledges to be “no concern of ours;” but they will not accept any
-designation denoting dependency, nor adopt the lunar calendar, nor
-acknowledge patents of royalty from the “son of heaven.” They are so
-“uncivilized,” so “blindly ignorant” of propriety, that to require them
-to recognize becoming “inferiority” and “superiority,” would “lead to
-fierce altercation;” and after all, he recommends disregarding these
-“minor details,” in order to carry out “an important policy.” He
-presents to the “sacred intelligence” this hasty outline of the “rough
-settlement of the barbarian business.”[5] On the general character of
-the official papers seized in Yeh’s yamun, Mr. Wade reports:--
-
- “The foreigner is represented as inferior in civilization,
- unreasonable, crafty, violent, and in consequence dangerous. The
- instructions of the court are accordingly to lecture him fraternally
- or magisterially, and by this means it is hoped to keep in hand his
- perpetual tendency to encroach and intrude. A stern tone is to be
- adopted on occasion, but always with due regard to the avoidance of
- an open rupture.”
-
-There were grave omissions in Sir Henry Pottinger’s treaty of 1842.
-It left the shipping and commercial relations of the British colony
-of Hong Kong in a very unsatisfactory state, encumbering them with
-regulations to which it was found impossible to give effect; and the
-trade emancipated itself by its own irresistible energies to the common
-advantage of China and Great Britain. The treaty contained no clause
-declaring the British text to be the true reading, and the consequence
-was, various and embarrassing interpretations of the intentions of the
-negotiators; the Chinese naturally enough contending for the accuracy
-of their version, while, quite as naturally, our merchants would abide
-only by the English reading.[6] There is no condition providing for the
-revision of the treaty, and it is only under “the most favoured nation”
-clause, which concedes to us everything conceded to other powers, that
-we have a claim to a revision; but we cannot demand such revision,
-unless and until it is granted to the French or the Americans.
-
-But the most fatal mistake of all was that which fixed on Canton as the
-seat of our diplomatic relations with China. It removed our influence
-from the capital to the remotest part of the empire--to a province
-always looked upon with apprehension and distrust by the supreme
-authorities at Peking, and among a population remarkable alike for
-their unruly disposition and their intense and openly proclaimed hatred
-to foreigners. It had been Keying’s calculation (and his assurances
-were most welcome to the court) that the emperor would thus get rid
-of all annoyance from Western “barbarians,” who would be kept in
-order by the indomitable spirit of the Cantonese. No provision was
-made for personal access to the high commissioner charged with the
-conduct of “barbarian affairs,” still less for communication, even by
-correspondence, with the capital. This was the first great triumph of
-Chinese policy, and has been fertile in producing fruits of mischief
-and misery.
-
-Sir Henry Pottinger never visited Canton; he never examined the ground
-on which he placed the future representatives of Great Britain; he
-listened to the declarations of Keying, that the difficulties in the
-way of a becoming reception there were then insuperable; that they
-would be removed by time, which might render the turbulent Cantonese
-population more reasonable; he relied on the assurance that everything
-would be done to prepare the way for a happier state of things. No
-doubt there were difficulties; but they were not invincible: they
-ought, then and there, to have been surmounted. Pottinger little knew
-with what a faithless element he had to deal, and little dreamed that
-delay would be taken advantage of, not to lessen, but increase the
-resistance; that it would be employed not to facilitate, but to thwart
-our object--not to soothe, but to exasperate the people. Pottinger
-deemed his treaty a bridge to aid--Keying meant it to be a barrier
-to resist--our entrance into China. But Sir Henry, before his death,
-acknowledged his error, and deeply lamented that his confidence had
-been misplaced. Abundant evidence has since been furnished that the
-treaty was signed, not with the purpose of honestly giving effect to
-its conditions, but to get rid of the “barbarian” pressure, and to bide
-the time, when the treaty obligations could be got rid of altogether.
-
-Proofs were not wanting of this dishonest purpose, and, in consequence,
-after some hesitation, it was deemed necessary by the British
-Government to remind the Chinese that their obligation to admit her
-Majesty’s subjects into Canton had not been fulfilled; and they were
-advised that the Island of Chusan, which we held as a guarantee, would
-not be surrendered until security was given for the compliance with the
-treaty stipulation. A short delay was asked by the Chinese, and the
-assurance, under the authority of the “vermilion pencil,” was renewed,
-that arrangements would be made for our having access to the city.
-Chusan was in consequence given up to the Chinese authorities; but no
-steps were taken to prepare the “public mind” to receive us as friends
-and allies within the walls of Canton. On the contrary, incendiary
-placards, breathing the utmost enmity to foreigners, continued to be
-promulgated and pasted on the walls. In 1847, Sir John Davis, naturally
-impatient at Keying’s procrastination and subterfuges, determined to
-capture the Bogue forts, to move with military forces upon Canton,
-and to threaten the city into compliance with obligations so long
-trifled with and disregarded. Keying asked for time, and entered into
-a formal written engagement that the city should be opened in April,
-1849. When the time was at hand, Sir George Bonham, who had succeeded
-to the governorship of Hong Kong, sought an interview with Seu, who
-had replaced Keying as imperial commissioner. Seu did not hesitate
-to say that the ministers had been engaged in a common purpose of
-deception--that the Chinese and British were both aware the gates
-were not to be opened--that each had avoided the responsibility of
-bringing the matter to issue, and had left it to their successors.
-Seu said he would refer the question to the emperor. The emperor’s
-reply was the stereotyped instruction to all mandarins, who have any
-relations with foreigners: “Keep the barbarians at a distance if you
-can--but above all things keep the peace.” Now, though we had a large
-fleet at Hong Kong, the imperial commissioner had undoubtedly obtained
-information, from some quarter or other, that the fleet would not be
-employed hostilely, and that he might “resist the barbarian” without
-compromising the public tranquillity. So he negatived the demands of
-the British.
-
-That our forbearance was a grievous mistake there can be little
-hesitation in affirming. But the importance of the concession then
-made was little understood, except by the Chinese, and to it may
-be attributed the embarrassments which have since entangled our
-negotiations with China. As the British Government determined to
-leave the Canton question in a state of abeyance, Sir George Bonham
-prohibited the Queen’s subjects from attempting to enter the city--a
-prohibition which was taken immediate advantage of by the mandarins,
-who proclaimed that our right to enter the city had been finally and
-for ever withdrawn. By the orders of the emperor, who wrote to the high
-commissioner that he had read “with tears of joy” the report, which
-showed with what sagacity and courage he had, without the employment
-of force, thwarted “the seditious demands of the barbarians,” six
-triumphal arches were erected at the various entrances of the city of
-Canton, to celebrate the wisdom and valour of the authorities; and the
-names of all the distinguished Cantonese who had contributed to so
-glorious a consummation were ordered to be inscribed upon the monuments
-for immortal commemoration, while dignities and honours were showered
-down upon the principal actors. A grand religious ceremonial, in which
-all the high authorities took part, was also ordered to be celebrated
-in the Temple of Potoo, which is dedicated to a foreign deified idol,
-who is supposed to control the affairs of “Western barbarians.” These
-triumphal arches--magnificently built of granite--were blown up by the
-Allies after the capture of the city.
-
-It had indeed been long evident that it was the fixed purpose of the
-Chinese authorities to escape from treaty obligations as soon as
-they fancied that they were menaced by nothing more than a remote
-and uncertain danger; the bow returned to its original bent as the
-tightness of the string was relaxed. It was only while the pressure
-of our presence was felt that any disposition was shown to respect
-imperial engagements. The consuls of the United States and of France
-had at first been received becomingly in Canton, by the viceroy; but,
-in 1849, on the arrival of Consul Bowring, very subordinate mandarins
-were appointed to visit him: the imperial commissioner altogether
-refused any interview at any place. No official reception was therefore
-given by the high mandarins to the British consular authorities,
-who were utterly excluded from personal intercourse with them. The
-stipulation of the treaty that the mandarins should, in conjunction
-with the foreign authorities, assist in the arrangement of differences
-between Chinese and British subjects, was absolutely a dead letter; and
-the obligation on the part of the mandarins to aid officially in the
-recovery of debts due to foreigners was utterly disregarded, when the
-Chinese debtor was in a condition to bribe the native functionaries.
-
-The alienation and repulsion which had become the system and the rule
-of the Chinese authorities, had been productive of consequences most
-detrimental to their amicable relations with foreigners. Personal
-intercourse affords the greatest facilities for the arrangement of
-difficulties; and, even had the correspondence with the mandarins
-been of the most frank and friendly character, the settlement of all
-questions would have been greatly aided by frequent interviews. But
-these were always avoided, and often on pleas the most untenable:
-sometimes it was said that the weight of administrative business
-prevented the granting an audience--sometimes that the viceroy
-was preparing to attack the rebels, and might be visiting the
-interior--sometimes that an auspicious day must be waited for. Replies
-were sometimes long delayed; sometimes never given; and it was seldom
-that an answer was otherwise than evasive or unsatisfactory. There were
-many occasions on which the cabinets of the treaty powers directed
-their representatives to make communications, through the imperial
-commissioner, to the court of Peking; but only one instance occurred of
-any attention being paid to such communications: it was that connected
-with our entrance into the city, and the imperial reply was such as
-to encourage the viceroy in his perverse and perilous policy. The
-impossibility of obtaining personal access to the imperial commissioner
-was, in fact, not only a great grievance in itself, but it was the
-cause of the non-redress of every other grievance. It is not in the
-field of diplomatic controversy that European functionaries can have
-any fair chance with those who, preserving all the forms of courtesy,
-will deny facts, or invent falsehoods to suit the purposes of the
-moment.
-
-So great had been the disposition of the Chinese authorities to bring
-back matters to their position anterior to the treaties of 1812,
-that in Foochow Foo, the only other provincial city to which we
-had a right of access, and in which a viceregal government exists,
-the high authorities had refused all personal intercourse with the
-representatives of Great Britain, though the consular offices are
-established within the city walls. The superior officers of the great
-provincial cities have the right of direct intercourse with the court
-of Peking and with the emperor himself,--a right not possessed by any
-of the functionaries in the ports of Shanghae, Ningpo, or Amoy, but
-confined to those of Canton and Foochow, the one being the capital of
-the province of Kwantung, the other of the province of Fookien. The
-importance of our being in direct communication with those through
-whom alone we can communicate with the ministers, or the sovereign,
-at Peking, can hardly be over-estimated. Sir John Bowring visited
-Foochow, in 1853, in a ship of war, and after much resistance from
-the viceroy, was finally and officially received by him with every
-mark of distinction; and the result of that friendly reception was the
-amicable and satisfactory arrangement of every question--and there
-were many--then pending between British and Chinese subjects in the
-Fookien province. It is true that on more than one occasion the viceroy
-of Canton offered to receive the British plenipotentiary, not in his
-official yamun, but in a “packhouse” belonging to Howqua; and there
-were those who held that Sir John Bowring should have been satisfied
-with such condescension on the part of the Chinese commissioner.
-It should be remembered that in all the treaties with foreigners,
-the emperor has engaged that the same attentions shall be shown to
-foreign functionaries which can be claimed and are invariably shown
-to mandarins of similar rank. It was always a part of the policy of
-the Chinese to maintain in the eyes of the people that superiority
-of position which national pride and vanity had for ages rendered
-habitual; and the recognition of the right of foreign authorities
-to be elevated to the same height was one of the most important of
-the treaty concessions. But it was a treaty concession, and ought
-never to be allowed to become a dead letter. In our relations with
-Oriental governments, the only security for the observance of treaty
-engagements, is to be found in their rigid, but quiet and determined
-enforcement. To be considerate as to what you exact, is the dictate
-alike of prudence and of policy; but the attempt to disregard or
-violate any formal treaty stipulation should be resisted at its very
-earliest demonstration.
-
-Whatever grounds of complaint the British authorities might have
-against the Chinese, nothing was left undone to conciliate the good
-opinion of the mandarins. In 1854 an application was made by Yeh to
-this effect: he feared a rupture of the public peace, and feeling
-himself too weak to protect Canton from the invasion of the rebels,
-he asked for the assistance of the naval forces of the treaty powers.
-Sir John Bowring accompanied the admiral and the British fleet to the
-neighbourhood of that city, and in co-operation with the Americans,
-took such effectual measures for its security, that the intended attack
-was abandoned, and general tranquillity remained uninterrupted. This
-intervention was gratefully acknowledged by the people of Canton; but
-there is every reason to believe that the commissioner represented
-our amicable intervention as an act of vassalage, and the assistance
-rendered as having been in obedience to orders issued by imperial
-authority. Notwithstanding this and many other evidences of friendly
-sentiment and useful aid on our part, Yeh did not hesitate to represent
-to the court that the rebels and Western “barbarians” were acting in
-union, and he expressed his conviction that his policy would lead to
-the extermination of both.
-
-No one, in fact, who had attended to the progress of public events,
-could be unaware of the insecure position of our relations with the
-Chinese. Lord Palmerston said, in 1854:--
-
- “So far from our proceedings in China having had a tendency to
- disturb the peaceful relations between the British government and the
- Chinese empire, and to lead to encroachments upon their territory, we
- had, on the contrary, acted with the greatest forbearance. Ever since
- the conclusion of the treaty of Nanking the conduct of the Chinese
- authorities had been such as would have justified a rupture with
- that government. They had violated the engagements into which they
- had entered; and if any desire existed on the part of the British
- government to proceed against them, abundant cause had existed,
- almost since the termination of the last war. They had refused, on
- divers pretences, to admit us to parts of Canton to which we ought
- to have access, avoided their engagements with respect to the Hongs,
- and nullified their stipulations in regard to the Tariff. In point of
- fact, there was scarcely a single engagement they had not broken.”[7]
-
-Wearied with so many evasions, difficulties and delays, the ministers
-of the treaty powers, in 1854, determined to approach the capital, in
-order to represent to the court the unsatisfactory state of foreign
-relations with the imperial commissioner at Canton, and the necessity
-of redressing the many grievances of which they had to complain, and
-thus putting an end to a policy essentially unfriendly, which could not
-but lead to a fatal crisis, and which imperilled alike the interests
-of China and of all the nations who came into contact with her. It was
-hoped that the strong and united representations of the three ministers
-might alarm the emperor, or at all events obtain his serious attention
-to the dangers with which he was menaced. The attempt failed.[8] It
-could not but fail, through the incredible misrepresentations made
-to the Chinese court by the commissioners who were sent down by the
-emperor to meet the foreign envoys. As regards the outward forms of
-courtesy, the latter had perhaps no special ground of complaint.
-Tents were erected for their reception in the neighbourhood of the
-Takoo forts; and they were invited to a repast, in which, it may be
-worth notice, there was a display of ancient European steel knives
-and forks, with handsome porcelain handles, apparently of the age
-of Louis XIV. They were met on terms of equality, and the posts of
-honour were graciously conceded to them. But the urbane manners of
-the mandarins did not mislead the foreign ministers, who left them
-with the declaration that they were insuring for their country days of
-future sorrow. On the subject of their reports to the court of Peking,
-Mr. Reed says: “They illustrate the habitual faithlessness of Chinese
-officials.... They were certainly the most painful revelations of the
-mendacity and treacherous habits of the high officials of this empire
-ever given to the world. They cannot be read without contemptuous
-resentment.”[9]
-
-There was only one possible termination to a state of things so
-obviously unsatisfactory, menacing, and untenable. Everything that
-could be said or done, in the shape of friendly counsel, had been
-exhausted. The American commissioner, Mr. M‘Lane, reports to his
-government,[10] that on leaving China, he addressed to Keih,[11] the
-governor of Kiangsoo, the following memorable warning:--
-
- “Now, as my parting words, I say to you, if something is not done,
- our relations will become bad, our amity be disturbed. I believe
- that but for the officers of both governments there now might have
- been a state of things that might have led to a war; but we have
- exerted ourselves to prevent it.” [Governor Keih--“Yes.”] “I have
- done well, and on the eve of my departure am most _disinterested_ in
- what I say. I do not think it is in the power of either officers of
- either government long to preserve the peace. If the emperor does not
- listen, and appoint a commissioner to adjust the foreign relations,
- so sure as there is a God in the heavens, amity cannot be preserved.
- I say it in sincerity, as my parting words.”
-
-The personal character of Yeh tended greatly to complicate every
-international question. He represented the pride, presumption, and
-ignorance of a high mandarin, without the restraints which fear of
-imperial displeasure generally places upon Chinese functionaries.
-He was the instrument, and for some time the successful instrument,
-for carrying out the imperial policy as regarded foreign nations.
-He had a great reputation for learning, had won the most eminent
-literary grades, was a distinguished member of the highest college
-(the Hanlin), and the guardian of the heir apparent--indeed, on
-one occasion he called himself the fourth personage of the empire.
-Moreover, his despatches were much admired for their perspicuity and
-purity of language. He was strangely unacquainted with the geography,
-institutions, and policy of remote nations, and even made his ignorance
-a ground for self-congratulation. When questions of commercial interest
-were brought before him, he treated them as altogether below his
-notice, and on one occasion abruptly terminated a conversation by
-saying, “You speak to me as if I were a merchant, and not a mandarin.”
-He devoted himself to the study of necromancy, and relied on his
-“fortunate star;” believing that the city of Canton was impregnable, he
-made no serious arrangements for its defence.
-
-What Ke-ying preached, Yeh-ming practised; but Ke was a man of a
-gentle, Yeh of a ferocious nature; and the cautious cunning which often
-marked the course of the one was wholly wanting to the other. Yeh,
-armed as he was with powers of life and death, exercised them with a
-recklessness of which there is no equal example in history. He turned
-the execution-ground at Canton into a huge lake of blood; hundreds of
-rebels were beheaded daily. When he was asked whether he had really
-caused seventy thousand men to be decapitated, he boastingly replied
-that the number exceeded a hundred thousand; and to an inquiry whether
-he had inflicted upon women the horrible punishment called the cutting
-into ten thousand pieces, he answered, “Ay! they were worse than the
-men.”[12]
-
-It was the affair of the _Arrow_ which brought about the inevitable
-crisis. The question of Sir John Bowring’s action on that occasion was
-entangled with the party politics of the day, and little more need now
-be said than that the verdict of the country reversed the condemnatory
-decision of the House of Commons. Certain it is that the very build
-of a _lorcha_, so altogether unlike any Chinese junk in its external
-appearance, ought to have led the local authorities in Canton to be
-very cautious in their interference with her crew; and that the fact
-of her papers being in the hands of the British consul, and not of the
-Chinese custom-house, was _primâ facie_ evidence of her nationality.
-Since the brutal character of ex-Commissioner Yeh has been better
-understood, even those most forward to censure Sir John Bowring, for
-refusing to deliver over to that savage and sanguinary personage men
-who at all events believed themselves to be entitled to the protection
-of British authority,[13] cannot but have felt that they ought to
-have been more indulgent to his hesitation. That he carried with
-him the sympathy of the representatives of the treaty powers,--that
-Yeh’s policy was condemned by his colleagues and by the people in
-general,[14]--and that Yeh himself was finally degraded and disgraced
-by his own sovereign for his proceedings, are matters of historical
-record. Yeh, there is little doubt, would have been publicly executed,
-had he returned to China, notwithstanding the efforts of his father,
-who betook himself to Peking with a very large sum of money, hoping to
-be able--but failing--to propitiate the court.[15]
-
-The war was carried on by the Chinese according to their usual mode
-of dealing with foreign nations.[16] They had no chance of success in
-open combat, so they had recourse to the ordinary stratagems adopted by
-uncivilized races. An “anti-barbarian committee” was formed among them,
-under the auspices of the mandarins. They offered premiums from 100 up
-to 100,000 ounces of silver for assassinations of “the barbarians,”
-according to the gradation of rank, and similar graduated rewards for
-the capture of vessels, for acts of incendiarism, for denouncing those
-who sent provisions to Hong Kong. Intercourse was prohibited under pain
-of death; and provision was promised to be made for the families of
-those who might perish in any desperate enterprise against the “foreign
-devils.” But so well was the government of Hong Kong served, that only
-one of many attempts to injure the colony had any success. In this,
-however, 360 persons of all nations were poisoned; but, happily, from
-the excess of arsenic employed, which led to an immediate perception
-of the danger, very few lost their lives. No less than 25,000 of the
-inhabitants fled to the mainland in consequence of the menaces of
-the mandarins; yet, though there were not 400 effective men in the
-garrison, such was the efficiency of the naval department, so active
-the police, and so well-disposed the mass of the Chinese population,
-that scarcely any damage was inflicted on the colony.
-
-Canton was taken on the 29th of December. The resistance was
-ridiculous.[17] The walls were scaled by a handful of men, and Yeh,
-who had concealed himself, was captured. Why British authority, which
-would have been welcomed by the respectable part of the population,
-was not established under military law, and the whole administration
-of the public revenues taken into our hands, it is very difficult to
-explain. But at the meeting in which the English and French ambassadors
-informed the high Chinese authorities that the city had been captured
-and was held by the allied forces, both the governor of Kwang-tung and
-the Tartar general were allowed to be seated on the same elevation with
-the foreign ambassadors, and above the positions occupied by the naval
-and military commanders-in-chief who were left in charge of the city.
-Subordinate to these, an hermaphrodite government was created, called
-“the Allied Commissioners,” who were to be consulted on all occasions
-by the mandarins charged to carry on the administration of public
-affairs.
-
-A grand opportunity was thus lost of exhibiting to the Cantonese the
-benefits of a just and honest, however severe, administration: they
-could not but have been struck with the difference between the humane
-and equitable laws of foreigners, as contrasted with the corrupt and
-cruel dealings of the mandarins. The _Elgin Papers_ throw little light
-upon the atrocities which were perpetrated by the Chinese, long after
-our possession of the city. The prisons continued to be scenes of
-horrible tortures. It was thought necessary to destroy whole streets,
-in order to convey terror into districts where assassinations of the
-subjects of allied powers had taken place: all the eastern suburb of
-the city was razed to the ground, and not a respectable inhabitant
-was left amidst the desolation. There can be no doubt that Governor
-Pehkwei considered himself invested with supreme authority over Chinese
-subjects. He complains bitterly, in a despatch to Lord Elgin, of 31st
-January, 1858, of Consul Parkes’ interference--of his “overbearing” and
-unreasonably oppressive “conduct in disposing of Chinamen confined in
-the gaols of Canton. I ask, whether Chinese officers would be tolerated
-in their interference with British subjects confined in British gaols?”
-Lord Elgin does not, in his reply, assert British jurisdiction over
-the prisons in Canton; but says, Pehkwei will be required to release
-all prisoners entitled to the benefits of the amnesty; and in another
-despatch (p. 178), distinctly throws upon Pehkwei the responsibility of
-preserving the public peace. This anomalous state of matters awakened
-the attention of our Government at home: a despatch of Lord Malmesbury
-(14th June, 1858), says: “It will be a disgrace to the allied powers
-if they do not prevent such enormities as are practised in the prisons
-of Canton.” ... The “British name must be relieved from the disgrace
-and guilt of having connived at a state of things so monstrous and
-revolting.” As to the mixed authority of native mandarins and allied
-commissioners, Lord Malmesbury says: “It is wholly inefficient for
-all objects of administration and policy, and should be replaced by
-a military government acting under the rules of martial law.” He
-recommended that the allies should take possession of the custom-house
-revenues, and hold the balance after the payment of the local expenses.
-It is much to be regretted that these measures were not adopted.
-Undoubtedly, Lord Elgin exercised a sound discretion in not proceeding
-to Peking until “a lesson” had been given to Yeh’s obstinacy. Had he
-gone to the North it would have been deemed a confession that he had
-been foiled in the South, and compelled to appeal to the emperor, in
-order to relieve himself from the difficulties in which Yeh had placed
-him; for Yeh--who had chosen to represent the English “barbarians” as
-making common cause with the rebels, and in fact, being themselves in
-a state of rebellion against imperial authority--gave the court the
-assurance that, as he had been so successful in breaking up the native
-insurrection, so he would not fail “to drive the foreign ‘barbarians’
-into the sea.” In short, there could be little doubt, that had his
-calculations proved correct, a hostile policy would have pursued us in
-all the other parts of China, and our immense interests there have been
-placed in jeopardy.
-
-For some time the court ventured to dream that by Yeh’s indomitable
-bravery China might be wholly rid of the presence of the intrusive
-strangers.[18] It is known that the emperor was much displeased
-with a mandarin, who, having lived in Canton, and being acquainted
-with the power of the English, ventured to express doubts as to the
-trustworthiness of Yeh’s representations that he could bridle and
-extirpate the English barbarians;[19] and nothing less than the taking
-the Takoo forts by the allied forces, and an advance upon the capital
-(even after Yeh’s capture and humiliation) was likely to bring the
-court of Peking to a sense of its own weakness, and the necessity of
-listening to our representations and remonstrances.
-
-Every effort had been made to obstruct the progress of the allied
-ambassadors towards Peking; but they wisely determined not to delay
-their voyage to the Gulf of Pecheli, and, on the 24th April, they
-announced to the Chinese prime minister their arrival, at the mouth
-of the Tien-tsin river. The usual evasions were brought into play;
-and it was soon discovered that the commissioners sent down had no
-sufficient powers. On the 18th May, therefore, after consultation with
-the admirals, it was determined to “take the forts,” and to “proceed
-pacifically up the river;” on the 19th, notice was given to the
-Chinese, and on the 20th, the forts were in the hands of the Allies.
-On the 29th, the ambassadors reached Tien-tsin. On the same day they
-were advised that “the chief secretary of state,” and the president of
-one of the imperial boards, were ordered to proceed without delay “to
-investigate and despatch business.” After many discussions the Treaty
-was signed on the 26th June.
-
-The progress and the result of these negotiations only demonstrate
-that where our policy has failed, and where it will always fail in
-China, is in placing confidence in the Chinese. Our distrust must
-be the groundwork: it is the only sound foundation of our security.
-When the four ambassadors were at Tien-tsin, and had extorted from
-the fears of the Chinese treaties more or less humiliating to Chinese
-pride, according to the amount of pressure employed, it should have
-been foreseen that on the removal of that pressure the Chinese mind
-would resume its natural obstinacy. A treaty with China will always
-be waste paper, unless some security is obtained for giving it due
-effect. It is, therefore, greatly to be regretted that the ambassadors
-should have left the most difficult of questions, one most wounding to
-Chinese pride--the reception of foreign ministers at Peking, and the
-initiation of their constant residence at court--to be settled by their
-successors, who had neither the same high diplomatic position, nor the
-same large naval and military forces at their disposal. It may, indeed,
-be a question whether it was desirable to force upon the Chinese the
-recognition of our right to have an ambassador permanently fixed at
-the capital; but if we thought fit to insist on such recognition,
-there should certainly have been no vacillation--no disposition shown
-to surrender in any shape or on any terms the right which had been
-conceded. We could not plead want of experience, for we had abundant
-evidence of the determination of the Chinese to repudiate and deny
-every concession, the enjoyment of which was either rediscussed or
-deferred. We should have avoided, above all things, the transfer of the
-Canton question to Peking. Our right to enter Canton was incontestable.
-Shufflings and subterfuges on the part of the Chinese, hesitation and
-an erroneous estimate of the importance of the question on the part of
-the British Government and the British functionaries in China, led to
-one delay after another, and ended by an absolute denial of our treaty
-right, and an arming of the Chinese population to enforce that denial,
-accompanied at the same time by a Chinese proclamation mendaciously
-averring that we had withdrawn our claims. A similar course has been
-pursued at Peking. The Chinese, who have no notion--what Oriental
-has?--of privileges possessed and not exercised, saw in the willingness
-to give way to their representations, not, as we might have supposed,
-a consideration for their repugnancy, and a magnanimity in refraining
-from the enjoyment of a privilege distasteful to them, but an
-infirmity of purpose--a confession that we had asked for something
-we did not want, and which they felt to be a degradation needlessly
-and gratuitously imposed upon them. There is, in fact, neither safety
-nor dignity in any course but the stern, steady persistence in the
-assertion and enforcement of whatever conditions are the subject of
-imperial engagements.
-
-Lord Elgin returned to England, and Mr. Bruce was appointed his
-successor. It was at first announced that he had been furnished with
-ambassadorial powers, but as such powers would have entitled him to
-demand a personal reception by the emperor, it was, on reconsideration,
-very judiciously thought better to avoid a question which might lead to
-great embarrassments, and he was accredited as Minister Plenipotentiary
-to the Peking court. To our judgment it appears the instructions of
-Lord Malmesbury were too peremptory as to the course Mr. Bruce was
-to pursue; and if that course was to be insisted on, most inadequate
-means were provided.[20] It is but another example of those in the
-distance imagining they see more clearly than those who are near,
-and assuming an acquaintance with local circumstances--subject every
-hour to change--which, without the attributes of omnipresence and
-omniscience, it is impossible they should possess. Whatever may have
-been the views of the Cabinet at home, it is obvious that the forces
-which accompanied Mr. Bruce were as superfluous for peace as they
-were insufficient for war, and that he was placed in the embarrassing
-dilemma either of disobeying his orders, or of incurring great risk
-in the attempt to execute them. That the Admiral singularly overrated
-his own force, and under-estimated that of the Chinese, admits now of
-no controversy. But an indulgent judgment should be awarded to one so
-personally brave and self-sacrificing, and who was entitled to confide
-in the indomitable bravery of those he commanded; whose experience,
-too, of the general character of Chinese warfare was not likely to
-teach them prudence or caution.
-
-The first and the most natural inquiry is, what is likely to be
-the result of these disastrous events? If negotiations are wisely
-conducted, the probability is that the emperor will throw the blame
-on the local authorities, attribute to the misrepresentations which
-have been made any approval he may have given to those who attacked
-the Allies, and repudiate any intended complicity in the mismanagement
-of foreign relations. For it has hitherto been the invariable policy
-of the Chinese government to localize every quarrel, and to avoid any
-general war. There is no scruple about sacrificing any mandarin whose
-proceedings, though lauded and recompensed at first, have in the sequel
-proved injudicious or injurious.
-
-We cannot look forward, however, without apprehension--apprehension
-not from the possible defeat of our arms--they will be too strong, too
-efficient for defeat by any Chinese forces--but from their successful
-advance and overthrow of all resistance. Nothing can arrest their
-course to Peking, nor prevent the capture of that vast capital; but
-its possession may prove our great embarrassment. If the emperor,
-accompanied by his court, should retreat into Manchuria--if Peking be
-deserted, as Canton was, by all that is respectable and opulent--the
-Allies may find themselves amidst vacant streets, abandoned houses,
-a wandering, a starving population, too poor to migrate with their
-betters. Winter will come--the cruel, bitter winter of northern China;
-the rivers will be frozen, communications cut off; and with no war-ship
-in the Gulf of Pecheli, supplies must be inaccessible. Peking may even
-prove another Moscow to its conquerors.
-
-The condition of the French and Spanish expedition in Cochin China is
-full of present instruction. They are acting against a miserable and
-despised enemy. They have been for more than a year in possession of
-Turon, the principal harbour of the country; but they have not ventured
-to attack the adjacent capital. Disease has thinned their ranks;
-victories have brought no results, but ever new disappointment: every
-calculation of success having been thwarted by a patient but stubborn
-“no surrender.” It is a resistance that cannot be reached by strength
-of arms, nor dealt with by the cunning of diplomacy. May it serve as a
-warning in that wider field upon which we are entering in China!
-
-How is the social edifice to be constructed out of crumbling ruins? To
-overthrow the existing dynasty of China may be easy enough; indeed,
-the difficulty, as with that of Turkey, is its maintenance and
-preservation: its very feebleness cries to us for pity and mercy.
-It may yet totter on for generations, if not harshly shaken; but if
-it--fall--fall amidst its wrecked institutions--China, inviting as
-it is to foreign ambition and the lust of conquest, may become the
-battle-field of contending interests. Russia, moving steadily and
-stealthily forward in its march of territorial aggression; France,
-charged with what she fancies herself specially called upon to
-represent--the missionary propagand, with the Catholic world behind
-her; England, with those vast concerns which involve about one-ninth
-of the imperial and Indian revenues, and an invested capital exceeding
-forty millions sterling; and the United States, whose commerce may
-be deemed about one-third of that of Great Britain, to say nothing
-of Holland and Spain, who are not a little concerned, through their
-eastern colonies, in the well-being of China;--will then be engaged in
-a struggle for power, if not territory, the result of which cannot be
-anticipated; indeed we scarcely venture to contemplate such portentous
-complications.
-
-No thoughtful man will deny the necessity of teaching the Chinese
-that treaties must be respected, and perfidy punished. Duty and
-interest alike require this at our hands; but this is but one of many
-duties--one of many interests; and we would most emphatically say,
-_Respice finem_--look beyond--look to the end. The destruction of
-hundreds of thousands of Chinese, the ravaging of their great cities,
-may fail to accomplish the object we have in view. They have been but
-too much accustomed to such calamities, and their influences soon pass
-away from a nation so reckless of life. But it may be possible to exact
-penalties in a shape which will be more sensible to them, and more
-beneficial to us: for example, the administration of their custom-house
-revenues in Shanghae and Canton, and the payment out of these of all
-the expenses of the war.
-
-But is there nothing to hope from the Taiping movement? Nothing. It has
-become little better than dacoity: its progress has been everywhere
-marked by wreck and ruin; it destroys cities, but builds none; consumes
-wealth, and produces none; supersedes one despotism by another more
-crushing and grievous; subverts a rude religion by the introduction
-of another full of the vilest frauds and the boldest blasphemies. It
-has cast off none of the proud, insolent, and ignorant formulas of
-imperial rule; but, claiming to be a divine revelation, exacts the same
-homage and demands the same tribute from Western nations, to which the
-government of Peking pretended in the days of its highest and most
-widely recognized authority.
-
-We cannot afford to overthrow the government of China. Bad as it is,
-anarchy will track its downfall, and the few elements of order which
-yet remain will be whelmed in a convulsive desolation.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] Peiho, in Chinese, means a north or northern river, but no river
-in particular. No Chinaman applies the word to the locality which now
-bears the name on our charts. In Bristol, the Mersey would be deemed
-entitled to the name of the Peiho; in London, the Humber, the Tyne, or
-the Tweed.
-
-[2] The matchlock is still used in China, where even the flint has
-not been introduced. The late emperor, Taou-Kwang, had heard of
-“improvements in musketry,” and specimens of “percussion locks” were
-sent to Peking, but they were rejected; and the military examinations
-to this hour consist of feats of individual strength, the exercise of
-the bow and arrow, the spear and the shield. In the use of artillery
-there have been some improvements. The Chinese have purchased cannon
-for their fortifications and war-junks, both in Hong Kong and Macao,
-and of late from the Russians, for their forts of Takoo.
-
-[3] The emperor’s words are: “This was the only proper arrangement to
-be made (for the settlement of the treaties). We understand the whole
-question.” In 1854, when the foreign Ministers visited Tien-tsin,
-the imperial orders were conveyed to the mandarins in the following
-words:--“At your interview, you must snap short their deceit and
-arrogance, and foil their malicious sophistry.” Another imperial decree
-says:--“The barbarians study nothing but gain. Their hurrying backwards
-and forwards only means [more] trade and [lower] tariffs. When a trifle
-is granted on this score they naturally acquiesce and hold their
-tongues.”
-
-[4] Nothing is less intelligible to a high-bred mandarin than the
-desire of foreign females to be introduced to him. At Hong Kong, when
-English ladies were brought to see the ex-commissioner Yeh, he turned
-away, and refused to look at them, and on their departure, expressed
-his annoyance and disgust. He was invited at Calcutta to a ball given
-by the Governor of Bengal. Inquiring what was meant, he was told by
-his Chinese secretary, that a ball was a sport in which “men turned
-themselves round, holding the waists and turning round the wives of
-other men;” on which, he asked whether the invitation was meant for
-an insult? There was an amusing scene at Canton, when Chinese ladies
-were for the first time introduced to some of our British fair. The
-Chinese kept for some minutes tremblingly in the distance, afraid to
-approach, when one was heard to say to another, “They do not look so
-_very_ barbarous, after all;” and they moved a little forward to meet
-their guests; another whisper was heard, “Surely they have learnt how
-to behave themselves. Is it not wonderful?” and a third voice replied,
-“Yes! but you know they have been for some time in Canton!”
-
-[5] _Elgin Papers_, p. 175.
-
-[6] In the French treaty the discrepancies between the French and
-Chinese text are yet more striking. The Chinese text places Chinese
-subjects claimed by the authorities under conditions far less
-favourable than those provided by the French version.
-
-[7] _Debate_, July.
-
-[8] In the _Elgin Papers_ many pages are occupied with the details of
-the correspondence between the commissioners who came to the mouth of
-the Tien-tsin river and the court of Peking, and which were found in
-Yeh’s archives at Canton.
-
-[9] Speech at Philadelphia, quoted in _North American Review_, No.
-CLXXXV. p. 503.
-
-[10] _American Papers_, p. 417: _Despatch_ dated 27th November, 1857.
-
-[11] Keih was one of the most intelligent and honest of the high
-mandarins of China. He was killed in an action with the rebels soon
-after his last interview with the foreign ministers. He openly blamed
-the perversity of Yeh, whom he hoped to succeed in the office of high
-commissioner. Had his life been spared, and his counsels prevailed, he
-would have initiated a policy of conciliation and amity.
-
-[12] We give one of Yeh’s characteristic proclamations, issued during
-the siege of Canton:--
-
-“Yeh, governor-general of the two Kwang provinces, member of the
-cabinet, and baron of the empire, hereby proclaims for the general
-information:--
-
-“These are the contumacious English barbarians, who are akin to dogs
-and hogs, and like wolves and jackals in disposition, who make no
-distinction in the human relations, and are destitute of propriety
-or manners * * * * * who act as they list, have the tempers of wild
-beasts, and go here and there in wild recklessness, regardless of human
-rights or order.
-
-“These are they who have presumed, like flocks of ravens issuing
-from out their coverts, to cast contemptuous looks on celestial
-awe-inspiring dignity, and seeing that our troops were unprepared,
-suddenly have taken possession of our forts, and following the bent of
-their lawless wickedness have burned the shops and dwellings of our
-people. Gods and men are indignant, heaven and earth can no longer
-endure them, and well will it be for your people if you unite in
-particular, and with vigorous arm exterminate them altogether. Let
-soldiers and gentry exhibit their loyalty, and with the braves, known
-to be in every place, swear, as they exhibit a force and union like the
-driving tempest, that they will revenge the honour of their country.
-Let full obedience be given to his majesty’s rescript, and with firm
-purpose and stout arm sweep them off without remainder, burning their
-lairs, and exterminating their whole kith and kin.
-
-“Then the memorial of your merit will be seen in the palace, while the
-state stands secure in the greatness of its people, as in the golden
-days of Shun, and the elements genially combine to produce plenty,
-through the good rule universal in the land, as was seen in the halcyon
-days of Tsin.
-
-“The other nations of the West must all reverently obey our heavenly
-dynasty, according to their laws and their administrators, for they
-will be amerced in the same crimes (as the English) if they venture to
-copy their conduct.
-
-“Those native traitors who are serving these several tribes, by aiding
-their purposes, must be strictly watched after and judged, the worst
-of them by the extermination of their kindred, the lesser by the
-destruction of their own families.
-
-“Those who are employed as servants to any of the foreigners are
-allowed twenty days to return to their own patrimonies, there to pursue
-their several occupations. If they linger along in the hope of gain,
-they will be treated and punished as traitors.
-
-“Each one must tremblingly obey these orders without opposition.”
-
-[13] The words of the treaty are: “If it shall be ascertained or
-suspected that lawless natives of China, having committed crimes or
-offences against their own government, have fled, a communication shall
-be made to the proper English officer, in order that the said criminals
-and offenders may be rigidly searched for, seized, and, on proof or
-admission of their guilt, delivered up” to the Chinese authorities.
-
-[14] A thoroughly well-informed American gentleman, then on the spot,
-declares that the Cantonese prayed that some English ball might “make
-hit the Viceroy; he all same devil,” they said. “Yeh had no supporters
-among his own countrymen, except his immediate followers, natives of
-other provinces, and having no local interest. He ruled simply by
-terror, and all would have been glad to have seen him destroyed.”--_A
-Foreigner’s Evidence on the China Question_, p. 14.
-
-[15] Yeh died in Calcutta. So great was the quantity of gas emitted
-by his body after death, that the leaden coffin burst twice. On its
-arrival at Canton the Chinese would not allow the body to be brought
-into the city.
-
-[16] The following is the protest of the United States Commissioner,
-addressed to High Commissioner Yeh:--
-
- “_Legation of the U.S., Macao, Jan. 16, 1857._
-
-“The undersigned Commissioner and Minister Plenipotentiary of the
-United States of America in China is again compelled to address your
-Excellency, demonstrating and protesting against the violation of
-our treaty of amity, the laws of civilized nations, and the rules of
-justifiable war.
-
-“The United States Consul, who arrived from Hong Kong last evening,
-has appeared before the undersigned in person, and represented that
-a most diabolical deed has been perpetrated by Chinese subjects, who
-had administered poison in the bread supplied to the public in that
-colony and on board vessels in the harbour, to multitudes of men,
-women, and children, without distinction of nation; that he himself
-had partaken of the poison, from which he is still suffering, and that
-other citizens of the United States are rendered dangerously ill by the
-poisoned bread.
-
-“The undersigned, as in duty bound, solemnly protests against this
-unjustifiable mode of warfare. ‘The use of poison as a means of war
-is prohibited by the unanimous concurrence of all the public jurists
-of the present age. The custom of civilized nations has exempted the
-persons of the sovereign and his family, the members of the civil
-government, women and children, cultivators of the earth, artisans,
-labourers, merchants, men of science and letters, and generally all
-other public or private individuals engaged in the ordinary civil
-pursuits of life, from the effects of military operations, unless
-actually taken in arms, or guilty of some misconduct in violation of
-the usages of war, by which they forfeit this immunity.’ Now, by the
-manner in which the poison has been administered in Hong Kong, not
-only the innocent women and children, and all artisans, labourers,
-merchants, and men of science, belonging to the English nation, had
-their lives exposed, but the citizens and subjects of other nations
-who are on friendly relations with China. Americans, French, Russians,
-Portuguese, and Spaniards have all received the deadly poison; and that
-some may yet die, remains to be known.
-
-“The undersigned, therefore, on behalf of the Government of the United
-States, on the part of humanity, and (reverently) in the name of God,
-protests against this most barbarous deed; and as on former occasions
-when protesting against the offering of pecuniary rewards to perfidy
-and assassination of foreigners, must hold the imperial government of
-China responsible for all the consequences, both to individual and
-national interests.
-
- “His Excellency Yeh.” “PETER PARKER.”
-
-[17] One man appeared during the Canton conflict who is entitled to
-be mentioned with respect and honour--Wang, the Chinese admiral. He
-was well acquainted with the power of the British; and on one occasion
-had given evidence of great coolness and courage when accompanying
-H.M.S. _Columbine_ on an expedition against the pirates. He did his
-best to persuade Yeh from engaging in a quarrel which could not but be
-disastrous to the Chinese, but he failed, as everybody failed. “You
-may as well reason with a stone,” was the language of a deputation
-that sought the British officials. Wang received peremptory orders
-from Yeh to attack and destroy the British fleet in the Canton river.
-He answered that it was impossible: that an encounter must be fatal to
-the imperial war junks. The orders were renewed; and he said he would
-do his best--as he did in the affair at Fashan, when considerable
-damage was done to our boats, and many of our men lost their lives.
-Wang’s junk was captured; and the imperial warrant, on yellow silk,
-was found, recording a series of adventurous and valorous deeds; but
-Wang was ordered to be decapitated by Yeh, because he had not beaten
-the British. He fled, and was concealed for some time in a village
-on the banks of the river. He applied to the Governor of Hong Kong,
-asking to be allowed an asylum there, which was cordially offered; but
-severe illness prevented his removal. Yeh afterwards repented of his
-precipitation; recalled Wang to the public service; who stipulated that
-he should not be employed against Western nations.
-
-[18] The influence of Yeh at Peking was considerably strengthened
-by the support he received from Iliang, who obtained the credit of
-persuading the United States Commissioner, Mr. Marshall, not to proceed
-to the capital. Iliang, in one of his despatches to the emperor, says:
-“Whatever the barbarian chief may insinuate against Yeh-ming-chen, it
-is he whom they fear.”--_Elgin Papers_, p. 280.
-
-[19] When in the former war Commissioner Keshen humbly represented to
-the emperor Taou-Kwang, that it was impossible to resist the English,
-he was ordered to be executed for his mendacity. His life was saved by
-powerful friends at court.
-
-[20] “Her Majesty’s Government are prepared to expect that all the
-arts at which the Chinese are such adepts will be put in practice to
-dissuade you from repairing to the capital, even for the purpose of
-exchanging the ratifications of the treaty, but it will be your duty
-firmly, but temperately, to resist any propositions to that effect, and
-_to admit of no excuses_.
-
-“The Admiral in command of H.M.’s naval forces in China, has been
-directed to send up with you to the mouth of the Peiho a sufficient
-naval force.
-
-“_You will insist_ on your being received at Peking, and will refuse
-to exchange ratifications at any other place.”--_Despatch of Lord
-Malmesbury, 1st March, 1859._
-
-
-
-
- Lovel the Widower.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- THE BACHELOR OF BEAK STREET.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Who shall be the hero of this tale? Not I who write it. I am but the
-Chorus of the Play. I make remarks on the conduct of the characters: I
-narrate their simple story. There is love and marriage in it: there is
-grief and disappointment: the scene is in the parlour, and the region
-beneath the parlour. No: it may be the parlour and kitchen, in this
-instance, are on the same level. There is no high life, unless, to be
-sure, you call a baronet’s widow a lady in high life; and some ladies
-may be, while some certainly are not. I don’t think there’s a villain
-in the whole performance. There is an abominable selfish old woman,
-certainly: an old highway robber; an old sponger on other people’s
-kindness; an old haunter of Bath and Cheltenham boarding-houses (about
-which how can I know anything, never having been in a boarding-house at
-Bath or Cheltenham in my life?); an old swindler of tradesmen, tyrant
-of servants, bully of the poor--who, to be sure, might do duty for a
-villain, but she considers herself as virtuous a woman as ever was
-born. The heroine is not faultless (ah! that will be a great relief
-to some folks, for many writers’ good women are, you know, so _very_
-insipid). The principal personage you may very likely think to be no
-better than a muff. But is many a respectable man of our acquaintance
-much better? and do muffs know that they are what they are, or, knowing
-it, are they unhappy? Do girls decline to marry one if he is rich? Do
-we refuse to dine with one? I listened to one at Church last Sunday,
-with all the women crying and sobbing; and, oh, dear me! how finely
-he preached! Don’t we give him great credit for wisdom and eloquence
-in the House of Commons? Don’t we give him important commands in the
-army? Can you, or can you not, point out one who has been made a
-peer? Doesn’t your wife call one in the moment any of the children
-are ill? Don’t we read his dear poems, or even novels? Yes; perhaps
-even this one is read and written by--Well? _Quid rides?_ Do you mean
-that I am painting a portrait which hangs before me every morning in
-the looking-glass when I am shaving? _Après?_ Do you suppose that I
-suppose that I have not infirmities like my neighbours? Am I weak? It
-is notorious to all my friends there is a certain dish I can’t resist;
-no, not if I have already eaten twice too much at dinner. So, dear
-sir, or madam, have _you_ your weakness--_your_ irresistible dish
-of temptation? (or if you don’t know it, your friends do). No, dear
-friend, the chances are that you and I are not people of the highest
-intellect, of the largest fortune, of the most ancient family, of
-the most consummate virtue, of the most faultless beauty in face and
-figure. We are no heroes nor angels; neither are we fiends from abodes
-unmentionable, black assassins, treacherous Iagos, familiar with
-stabbing and poison--murder our amusement, daggers our playthings,
-arsenic our daily bread, lies our conversation, and forgery our common
-handwriting. No, we are not monsters of crime, or angels walking the
-earth--at least I know _one_ of us who isn’t, as can be shown any day
-at home if the knife won’t cut or the mutton comes up raw. But we are
-not altogether brutal and unkind, and a few folks like us. Our poetry
-is not as good as Alfred Tennyson’s, but we can turn a couplet for
-Miss Fanny’s album: our jokes are not always first-rate, but Mary
-and her mother smile very kindly when papa tells his story or makes
-his pun. We have many weaknesses, but we are not ruffians of crime.
-No more was my friend Lovel. On the contrary, he was as harmless and
-kindly a fellow as ever lived when I first knew him. At present, with
-his changed position, he is, perhaps, rather _fine_ (and certainly I
-am not asked to his _best_ dinner-parties as I used to be, where you
-hardly see a commoner--but stay! I am advancing matters). At the time
-when this story begins, I say, Lovel had his faults--which of us has
-not? He had buried his wife, having notoriously been henpecked by her.
-How many men and brethren are like him! He had a good fortune--I wish
-I had as much--though I daresay many people are ten times as rich. He
-was a good-looking fellow enough; though that depends, ladies, upon
-whether you like a fair man or a dark one. He had a country house, but
-it was only at Putney. In fact, he was in business in the city, and
-being a hospitable man, and having three or four spare bed-rooms, some
-of his friends were always welcome at Shrublands, especially after Mrs.
-Lovel’s death, who liked me pretty well at the period of her early
-marriage with my friend, but got to dislike me at last and to show me
-the cold shoulder. That is a joint I never could like (though I have
-known fellows who persist in dining off it year after year, who cling
-hold of it, and refuse to be separated from it). I say, when Lovel’s
-wife began to show me that she was tired of my company, I made myself
-scarce: used to pretend to be engaged when Fred faintly asked me to
-Shrublands; to accept his meek apologies, proposals to dine _en garçon_
-at Greenwich, the club, and so forth; and never visit upon him my
-wrath at his wife’s indifference--for after all, he had been my friend
-at many a pinch: he never stinted at Hart’s or Lovegrove’s, and always
-made a point of having the wine I liked, never mind what the price
-was. As for his wife, there was, assuredly, no love lost between us--I
-thought her a lean, scraggy, lackadaisical, egotistical, consequential,
-insipid creature: and as for his mother-in-law, who stayed at Fred’s
-as long and as often as her daughter would endure her, has anyone who
-ever knew that notorious old Lady Baker at Bath, at Cheltenham, at
-Brighton,--wherever trumps and frumps were found together; wherever
-scandal was cackled; wherever fly-blown reputations were assembled, and
-dowagers with damaged titles trod over each other for the pas;--who, I
-say, ever had a good word for that old woman? What party was not bored
-where she appeared? What tradesman was not done with whom she dealt?
-I wish with all my heart I was about to narrate a story with a good
-mother-in-law for a character; but then you know, my dear madam, all
-good women in novels are insipid. This woman certainly was not. She was
-not only not insipid, but exceedingly bad tasted. She had a foul, loud
-tongue, a stupid head, a bad temper, an immense pride and arrogance,
-an extravagant son, and very little money. Can I say much more of a
-woman than this? Aha! my good Lady Baker! I was a _mauvais sujèt_,
-was I?--I was leading Fred into smoking, drinking, and low bachelor
-habits, was I? I, his old friend, who have borrowed money from him any
-time these twenty years, was not fit company for you and your precious
-daughter? Indeed! _I_ paid the money I borrowed from him like a man;
-but did _you_ ever pay him, I should like to know? When Mrs. Lovel was
-in the first column of _The Times_, _then_ Fred and I used to go off to
-Greenwich and Blackwall, as I said; then his kind old heart was allowed
-to feel for his friend; _then_ we could have the other bottle of
-claret without the appearance of Bedford and the coffee, which in Mrs.
-L.’s time used to be sent in to us before we could ring for a second
-bottle, although she and Lady Baker had had three glasses each out of
-the first. Three full glasses each, I give you my word! No, madam, it
-was your turn to bully me once--now it is mine, and I use it. No, you
-old Catamaran, though you pretend you never read novels, some of your
-confounded good-natured friends will let you know of _this_ one. Here
-you are, do you hear? Here you shall be shown up. And so I intend to
-show up _other_ women and _other_ men who have offended me. Is one to
-be subject to slights and scorn, and not have revenge? Kindnesses are
-easily forgotten; but injuries!--what worthy man does not keep _those_
-in mind?
-
-[Illustration: I AM REFERRED TO CECILIA.]
-
-Before entering upon the present narrative, may I take leave to
-inform a candid public, that though it is all true, there is not a
-word of truth in it; that though Lovel is alive and prosperous, and
-you very likely have met him, yet I defy you to point him out; that
-his wife (for he is Lovel the Widower no more) is not the lady you
-imagine her to be, when you say (as you will persist in doing), “Oh,
-that character is intended for Mrs. Thingamy, or was notoriously
-drawn from Lady So-and-so.” No. You are utterly mistaken. Why, even
-the advertising-puffers have almost given up that stale stratagem of
-announcing “REVELATIONS FROM HIGH LIFE.--The _beau monde_ will be
-startled at recognizing the portraits of some of its brilliant leaders
-in Miss Wiggins’s forthcoming _Roman de Société_.” Or, “We suspect a
-certain ducal house will be puzzled to guess how the pitiless author
-of _May Fair Mysteries_ has become acquainted with (and exposed with
-a fearless hand) _certain family secrets_ which were thought only to
-be known to a few of the very highest members of the aristocracy.” No,
-I say; these silly baits to catch an unsuspecting public shall not be
-our arts. If you choose to occupy yourself with trying to ascertain if
-a certain cap fits one amongst ever so many thousand heads, you _may_
-possibly pop it on the right one: but the cap-maker will perish before
-he tells you; unless, of course, he has some private pique to avenge,
-or malice to wreak, upon some individual who can’t by any possibility
-hit again;--_then_, indeed, he will come boldly forward and seize upon
-his victim--(a bishop, say, or a woman without coarse, quarrelsome
-male relatives, will be best)--and clap on him, or her, such a cap,
-with such ears, that all the world shall laugh at the poor wretch,
-shuddering, and blushing beet-root red, and whimpering deserved tears
-of rage and vexation at being made the common butt of society. Besides,
-I dine at Lovel’s still; his company and cuisine are amongst the best
-in London. If they suspected I was taking them off, he and his wife
-would leave off inviting me. Would any man of a generous disposition
-lose such a valued friend for a joke, or be so foolish as to show him
-up in a story? All persons with a decent knowledge of the world will at
-once banish the thought, as not merely base, but absurd. I am invited
-to his house one day next week: _vous concevez_ I can’t mention the
-very day, for then he would find me out--and of course there would
-be no more cards for his old friend. He would not like appearing, as
-it must be owned he does in this memoir, as a man of not very strong
-mind. He believes himself to be a most determined, resolute person.
-He is quick in speech, wears a fierce beard, speaks with asperity to
-his servants (who liken him to a--to that before-named sable or ermine
-contrivance, in which ladies insert their hands in winter), and takes
-his wife to task so smartly, that I believe she believes he believes
-he is the master of the house. “Elizabeth, my love, he must mean A,
-or B, or D,” I fancy I hear Lovel say; and she says, “Yes; oh! it is
-certainly D--his very image!” “D to a T,” says Lovel (who is a neat
-wit). _She_ may know that I mean to depict her husband in the above
-unpretending lines: but she will never let me know of her knowledge
-except by a little extra courtesy; except (may I make this pleasing
-exception?) by a few more invitations; except by a look of those
-unfathomable eyes (gracious goodness! to think she wore spectacles ever
-so long, and put a lid over them as it were!), into which, when you
-gaze sometimes, you may gaze so deep, and deep, and deep, that I defy
-you to plumb half-way down into their mystery.
-
-When I was a young man, I had lodgings in Beak Street, Regent Street
-(I no more have lived in Beak Street than in Belgrave Square: but I
-choose to say so, and no gentleman will be so rude as to contradict
-another)--I had lodgings, I say, in Beak Street, Regent Street. Mrs.
-Prior was the landlady’s name. She had seen better days--landladies
-frequently have. Her husband--he could not be called the landlord,
-for Mrs. P. was manager of the place,--had been, in happier times,
-captain or lieutenant in the militia; then of Diss, in Norfolk, of
-no profession; then of Norwich Castle, a prisoner for debt; then of
-Southampton Buildings, London, law-writer; then of the Bom-Retiro
-Cacadores, in the service of H. M. the Queen of Portugal, lieutenant
-and paymaster; then of Melina Place, St. George’s Fields, &c.--I
-forbear to give the particulars of an existence which a legal
-biographer has traced step by step, and which has more than once been
-the subject of judicial investigation by certain commissioners in
-Lincoln’s-inn Fields. Well, Prior, at this time, swimming out of a
-hundred shipwrecks, had clambered on to a lighter, as it were, and was
-clerk to a coal-merchant, by the river-side. “You conceive, sir,” he
-would say, “my employment is only temporary--the fortune of war, the
-fortune of war!” He smattered words in not a few foreign languages.
-His person was profusely scented with tobacco. Bearded individuals,
-padding the muddy hoof in the neighbouring Regent Street, would call
-sometimes of an evening, and ask for “the captain.” He was known at
-many neighbouring billiard-tables, and, I imagine, not respected. You
-will not see enough of Captain Prior to be very weary of him and his
-coarse swagger, to be disgusted by his repeated requests for small
-money-loans, or to deplore his loss, which you will please to suppose
-has happened before the curtain of our present drama draws up. I think
-two people in the world were sorry for him: his wife, who still loved
-the memory of the handsome young man who had wooed and won her; his
-daughter Elizabeth, whom for the last few months of his life, and up
-to his fatal illness, he every evening conducted to what he called her
-“academy.” You are right. Elizabeth is the principal character in this
-story. When I knew her, a thin, freckled girl of fifteen, with a lean
-frock, and hair of a reddish hue, she used to borrow my books, and play
-on the First Floor’s piano, when he was from home--Slumley his name
-was. He was editor of the _Swell_, a newspaper then published; author
-of a great number of popular songs, a friend of several music-selling
-houses; and it was by Mr. Slumley’s interest that Elizabeth was
-received as a pupil at what the family called “the academy.”
-
-Captain Prior then used to conduct his girl to the Academy, but she
-often had to conduct him home again. Having to wait about the premises
-for two, or three, or five hours sometimes, whilst Elizabeth was doing
-her lessons, he would naturally desire to shelter himself from the cold
-at some neighbouring house of entertainment. Every Friday, a prize of
-a golden medal, nay, I believe sometimes of twenty-five silver medals,
-was awarded to Miss Bellenden and other young ladies for their good
-conduct and assiduity at this academy. Miss Bellenden gave her gold
-medal to her mother, only keeping five shillings for herself, with
-which the poor child bought gloves, shoes, and her humble articles of
-millinery.
-
-Once or twice the captain succeeded in intercepting that piece of gold,
-and I daresay treated some of his whiskered friends, the clinking
-trampers of the Quadrant pavement. He was a free-handed fellow when
-he had anybody’s money in his pocket. It was owing to differences
-regarding the settlement of accounts that he quarrelled with the
-coal-merchant, his very last employer. Bessy, after yielding once or
-twice to his importunity, and trying to believe his solemn promises
-of repayment, had strength of mind to refuse her father the pound
-which he would have taken. Her five shillings--her poor little slender
-pocket-money, the representative of her charities and kindnesses to
-the little brothers and sisters, of her little toilette ornaments,
-nay necessities; of those well-mended gloves, of those oft-darned
-stockings, of those poor boots, which had to walk many a weary mile
-after midnight; of those little knicknacks, in the shape of brooch
-or bracelet, with which the poor child adorned her homely robe or
-sleeve--her poor five shillings, out of which Mary sometimes found a
-pair of shoes, or Tommy a flannel jacket, and little Bill a coach and
-horse--this wretched sum, this mite, which Bessy administered among
-so many poor--I very much fear her father sometimes confiscated. I
-charged the child with the fact, and she could not deny me. I vowed a
-tremendous vow, that if ever I heard of her giving Prior money again,
-I would quit the lodgings, and never give those children lolly-pop,
-nor peg-top, nor sixpence; nor the pungent marmalade, nor the biting
-gingerbread-nut, nor the theatre-characters, nor the paint-box to
-illuminate the same; nor the discarded clothes, which became smaller
-clothes upon the persons of little Tommy and little Bill, for whom Mrs.
-Prior, and Bessy, and the little maid, cut, clipped, altered, ironed,
-darned, mangled, with the greatest ingenuity. I say, considering
-what had passed between me and the Priors--considering those money
-transactions, and those clothes, and my kindness to the children--it
-was rather hard that my jam-pots were poached, and my brandy-bottles
-leaked. And then to frighten her brother with the story of the
-inexorable creditor--oh, Mrs. Prior!--oh, fie, Mrs. P.!
-
-So Bessy went to her school in a shabby shawl, a faded bonnet, and a
-poor little lean dress flounced with the mud and dust of all weathers,
-whereas there were some other young ladies, fellow-pupils of hers, who
-laid out their gold medals to much greater advantage. Miss Delamere,
-with her eighteen shillings a week (calling them “_silver medals_,”
-was only my wit, you see), had twenty new bonnets, silk and satin
-dresses for all seasons, feathers in abundance, swansdown muffs and
-tippets, lovely pocket handkerchiefs and trinkets, and many and many
-a half-crown mould of jelly, bottle of sherry, blanket, or what not,
-for a poor fellow-pupil in distress; and as for Miss Montanville,
-who had exactly the same sal--well, who had a scholarship of exactly
-the same value, viz. about fifty pounds yearly--she kept an elegant
-little cottage in the Regent’s Park, a brougham with a horse all over
-brass harness, and a groom with a prodigious gold lace hat-band, who
-was treated with frightful contumely at the neighbouring cab-stand:
-an aunt or a mother, I don’t know which (I hope it was only an aunt),
-always comfortably dressed, and who looked after Montanville: and
-she herself had bracelets, brooches, and velvet pelisses of the very
-richest description. But then Miss Montanville was a good economist.
-_She_ was never known to help a poor friend in distress, or give a
-fainting brother and sister a crust or a glass of wine. She allowed
-ten shillings a week to her father, whose name was Boskinson, said to
-be clerk to a chapel in Paddington; but she would never see him--no,
-not when he was in hospital, where he was so ill; and though she
-certainly lent Miss Wilder thirteen pounds, she had Wilder arrested
-upon her promissory note for twenty-four, and sold up every stick of
-Wilder’s furniture, so that the whole academy cried shame! Well, an
-accident occurred to Miss Montanville, for which those may be sorry
-who choose. On the evening of the 26th of December, Eighteen hundred
-and something, when the conductors of the academy were giving their
-grand annual Christmas Pant--I should say examination of the Academy
-pupils before their numerous friends--Montanville, who happened to
-be present, not in her brougham this time, but in an aërial chariot
-of splendour drawn by doves, fell off a rainbow, and through the
-roof of the Revolving Shrine of the Amaranthine Queen, thereby very
-nearly damaging Bellenden, who was occupying the shrine, attired in a
-light-blue spangled dress, waving a wand, and uttering some idiotic
-verses composed for her by the Professor of Literature attached to the
-academy. As for Montanville, let her go shrieking down that trap-door,
-break her leg, be taken home, and never more be character of ours. She
-never could speak. Her voice was as hoarse as a fishwoman’s. Can that
-immense stout old box-keeper at the ---- theatre, who limps up to
-ladies on the first tier, and offers that horrible footstool, which
-everybody stumbles over, and makes a clumsy curtsey, and looks so
-knowing and hard, as if she recognized an acquaintance in the splendid
-lady who enters the box--can that old female be the once brilliant
-Emily Montanville? I am told there are _no_ lady box-keepers in the
-English theatres. This, I submit, is a proof of my consummate care
-and artifice in rescuing from a prurient curiosity the individual
-personages from whom the characters of the present story are taken.
-Montanville is _not_ a box-opener. She _may_, under another name,
-keep a trinket-shop in the Burlington Arcade, for what you know: but
-this secret no torture shall induce me to divulge. Life has its rises
-and its downfalls, and you have had yours, you hobbling old creature.
-Montanville, indeed! Go thy ways! Here is a shilling for thee. (Thank
-you, sir.) Take away that confounded footstool, and never let us see
-thee more!
-
-Now the fairy Amarantha was like a certain dear young lady of whom we
-have read in early youth. Up to twelve o’clock, attired in sparkling
-raiment, she leads the dance with the prince (Gradini, known as Grady
-in his days of banishment at the T. R. Dublin). At supper, she takes
-her place by the prince’s royal father (who is alive now, and still
-reigns occasionally, so that we will not mention his revered name). She
-makes believe to drink from the gilded pasteboard, and to eat of the
-mighty pudding. She smiles as the good old irascible monarch knocks
-the prime minister and the cooks about: she blazes in splendour: she
-beams with a thousand jewels, in comparison with which the Koh-i-noor
-is a wretched lustreless little pebble: she disappears in a chariot,
-such as a Lord Mayor never rode in:--and at midnight, who is that young
-woman tripping homeward through the wet streets in a battered bonnet, a
-cotton shawl, and a lean frock fringed with the dreary winter flounces?
-
-Our Cinderella is up early in the morning: she does no little portion
-of the house-work: she dresses her sisters and brothers: she prepares
-papa’s breakfast. On days when she has not to go to morning lessons
-at her academy, she helps with the dinner. Heaven help us! She has
-often brought mine when I have dined at home, and owns to having made
-that famous mutton-broth when I had a cold. Foreigners come to the
-house--professional gentlemen--to see Slumley on the first floor;
-exiled captains of Spain and Portugal, companions of the warrior her
-father. It is surprising how she has learned their accents, and has
-picked up French and Italian, too. And she played the piano in Mr.
-Slumley’s room sometimes, as I have said; but refrained from that
-presently, and from visiting him altogether. I suspect he was not a man
-of principle. His Paper used to make direful attacks upon individual
-reputations; and you would find theatre and opera people most curiously
-praised and assaulted in the _Swell_. I recollect meeting him, several
-years after, in the lobby of the opera, in a very noisy frame of mind,
-when he heard a certain lady’s carriage called, and cried out with
-exceeding strong language, which need not be accurately reported, “Look
-at that woman! Confound her! I made her, sir! Got her an engagement
-when the family was starving, sir! Did you see her, sir! She wouldn’t
-even look at me!” Nor indeed was Mr. S. at that moment a very agreeable
-object to behold.
-
-Then I remembered that there had been some quarrel with this man, when
-we lodged in Beak Street together. If difficulty there was, it was
-solved _ambulando_. He quitted the lodgings, leaving an excellent and
-costly piano as security for a heavy bill which he owed to Mrs. Prior,
-and the instrument was presently fetched away by the music-sellers, its
-owners. But regarding Mr. S.’s valuable biography, let us speak very
-gently. You see it is “an insult to literature” to say that there are
-disreputable and dishonest persons who write in newspapers.
-
-Nothing, dear friend, escapes your penetration: if a joke is made in
-your company, you are down upon it instanter, and your smile rewards
-the wag who amuses you: so you knew at once, whilst I was talking of
-Elizabeth and her academy, that a theatre was meant, where the poor
-child danced for a guinea, or five-and-twenty shillings per week.
-Nay, she must have had not a little skill and merit to advance to the
-quarter of a hundred; for she was not pretty at this time, only a
-rough, tawny-haired filly of a girl, with great eyes. Dolphin, the
-manager, did not think much of her, and she passed before him in his
-regiment of Sea-nymphs, or Bayadères, or Fairies, or Mazurka maidens
-(with their fluttering lances and little scarlet slyboots!) scarcely
-more noticed than private Jones standing under arms in his company when
-his Royal Highness the Field-marshal gallops by. There were no dramatic
-triumphs for Miss Bellenden: no bouquets were flung at her feet: no
-cunning Mephistopheles--the emissary of some philandering Faustus
-outside--corrupted her duenna, or brought her caskets of diamonds. Had
-there been any such admirer for Bellenden, Dolphin would not only not
-have been shocked, but he would very likely have raised her salary. As
-it was, though himself, I fear, a person of loose morals, he respected
-better things. “That Bellenden’s a good hhonest gurl,” he said to the
-present writer: “works hard: gives her money to her family: father a
-shy old cove. Very good family, I hear they are!” and he passes on to
-some other of the innumerable subjects which engage a manager.
-
-Now, why should a poor lodging-house keeper make such a mighty secret
-of having a daughter earning an honest guinea by dancing at a theatre?
-Why persist in calling the theatre an academy? Why did Mrs. Prior speak
-of it as such, to me who knew what the truth was, and to whom Elizabeth
-herself made no mystery of her calling?
-
-There are actions and events in its life over which decent Poverty
-often chooses to cast a veil that is not unbecoming wear. We can all,
-if we are minded, peer through this poor flimsy screen: often there
-is no shame behind it:--only empty platters, poor scraps, and other
-threadbare evidence of want and cold. And who is called on to show
-his rags to the public, and cry out his hunger in the street? At this
-time (her character has developed itself not so amiably since), Mrs.
-Prior was outwardly respectable; and yet, as I have said, my groceries
-were consumed with remarkable rapidity; my wine and brandy bottles
-were all leaky, until they were excluded from air under a patent
-lock;--my Morel’s raspberry jam, of which I was passionately fond, if
-exposed on the table for a few hours, was always eaten by the cat, or
-that wonderful little wretch of a maid-of-all-work, so active, yet so
-patient, so kind, so dirty, so obliging. Was it _the maid_ who took
-those groceries? I have seen the _Gazza Ladra_, and know that poor
-little maids are sometimes wrongfully accused; and besides, in my
-particular case, I own I don’t care who the culprit was. At the year’s
-end, a single man is not much poorer for this house-tax which he pays.
-One Sunday evening, being confined with a cold, and partaking of that
-mutton broth which Elizabeth made so well, and which she brought me, I
-entreated her to bring from the cupboard, of which I gave her the key,
-a certain brandy-bottle. She saw my face when I looked at her: there
-was no mistaking its agony. There was scarce any brandy left: it had
-all leaked away: and it was Sunday, and no good brandy was to be bought
-that evening.
-
-Elizabeth, I say, saw my grief. She put down the bottle, and she
-cried: she tried to prevent herself from doing so at first, but she
-fairly burst into tears.
-
-“My dear--dear child,” says I, seizing her hand, “you don’t suppose I
-fancy you----”
-
-“No--no!” she says, drawing the large hand over her eyes. “No--no!
-but I saw it when you and Mr. Warrington last ’ad some. Oh! do have a
-patting lock!”
-
-“A patent lock, my dear?” I remarked. “How odd that you, who have
-learned to pronounce Italian and French words so well, should make such
-strange slips in English? Your mother speaks well enough.”
-
-“She was born a lady. She was not sent to be a milliner’s girl, as I
-was, and then among those noisy girls at that--oh! that _place_!” cries
-Bessy, in a sort of desperation clenching her hand.
-
-Here the bells of St. Beak’s began to ring quite cheerily for evening
-service. I heard “Elizabeth!” cried out from lower regions by Mrs.
-Prior’s cracked voice. And the maiden went her way to Church, which she
-and her mother never missed of a Sunday; and I daresay I slept just as
-well without the brandy-and-water.
-
-Slumley being gone, Mrs. Prior came to me rather wistfully one day,
-and wanted to know whether I would object to Madame Bentivoglio, the
-opera-singer, having the first floor? This was too much, indeed! How
-was my work to go on with that woman practising all day and roaring
-underneath me? But after sending away so good a customer, I could not
-refuse to lend the Priors a little more money; and Prior insisted
-upon treating me to a new stamp, and making out a new and handsome
-bill for an amount nearly twice as great as the last: which he had no
-doubt under heaven, and which he pledged his honour as an officer and
-a gentleman that he would meet. Let me see: That was how many years
-ago?--Thirteen, fourteen, twenty? Never mind. My fair Elizabeth, I
-think if you saw your poor old father’s signature now, you would pay
-it. I came upon it lately in an old box I haven’t opened these fifteen
-years, along with some letters written--never mind by whom--and an old
-glove that I used to set an absurd value by; and that emerald-green
-tabinet waistcoat which kind old Mrs. Macmanus gave me, and which I
-wore at the L--d L--t--nt’s ball, Ph-n-x Park, Dublin, once, when I
-danced with _her_ there! Lord!--Lord! It would no more meet round my
-waist now than round Daniel Lambert’s. How we outgrow things!
-
-But as I never presented this united bill of 43_l._ odd (the first
-portion of 23_l._, &c. was advanced by me in order to pay an execution
-out of the house),--as I never expected to have it paid any more than I
-did to be Lord Mayor of London,--I say it was a little hard that Mrs.
-Prior should write off to her brother (she writes a capital letter),
-blessing Providence that had given him a noble income, promising him
-the benefit of her prayers, in order that he should long live to enjoy
-his large salary, and informing him that an obdurate creditor, who
-shall be nameless (meaning me), who had Captain Prior _in his power_
-(as if being in possession of that dingy scrawl, I should have known
-what to do with it), who held Mr. Prior’s acceptance for 43_l._ 14_s._
-4_d._ due on the 3rd July (my bill), would infallibly bring their
-family to RUIN, unless a part of the money was paid up. When I went up
-to my old college, and called on Sargent, at Boniface Lodge, he treated
-me as civilly as if I had been an undergraduate; scarcely spoke to me
-in hall, where, of course, I dined at the Fellows’ table; and only
-asked me to one of Mrs. Sargent’s confounded tea-parties during the
-whole time of my stay. Now it was by this man’s entreaty that I went to
-lodge at Prior’s; he talked to me after dinner one day, he hummed, he
-ha’d, he blushed, he prated in his pompous way, about an unfortunate
-sister in London--fatal early marriage--husband, Captain Prior, Knight
-of the Swan with two Necks of Portugal, most distinguished officer, but
-imprudent speculator--advantageous lodgings in the centre of London,
-quiet, though near the Clubs--if I was ill (I am a confirmed invalid),
-Mrs. Prior, his sister, would nurse me like a mother. So, in a word, I
-went to Prior’s: I took the rooms: I was attracted by some children:
-Amelia Jane (that little dirty maid before mentioned) dragging a
-go-cart, containing a little dirty pair; another marching by them,
-carrying a fourth well nigh as big as himself. These little folks,
-having threaded the mighty flood of Regent Street, debouched into the
-quiet creek of Beak Street, just as I happened to follow them. And the
-door at which the small caravan halted,--the very door I was in search
-of,--was opened by Elizabeth, then only just emerging from childhood,
-with tawny hair falling into her solemn eyes.
-
-The aspect of these little people, which would have deterred many,
-happened to attract me. I am a lonely man. I may have been ill-treated
-by some one once, but that is neither here nor there. If I had had
-children of my own, I think I should have been good to them. I thought
-Prior a dreadful vulgar wretch, and his wife a scheming, greedy little
-woman. But the children amused me: and I took the rooms, liking to hear
-overhead in the morning the patter of their little feet. The person I
-mean has several;--husband, judge in the West Indies. _Allons_! now you
-know how I came to live at Mrs. Prior’s.
-
-Though I am now a steady, a _confirmed_ old bachelor (I shall call
-myself Mr. Batchelor, if you please, in this story; and there is some
-one far--far away who knows why I will NEVER take another title), I
-was a gay young fellow enough once. I was not above the pleasures of
-youth: in fact, I learned quadrilles on purpose to dance with her
-that long vacation when I went to read with my young friend Lord
-Viscount Poldoody at Dub--psha! Be still, thou foolish heart! Perhaps I
-mis-spent my time as an undergraduate. Perhaps I read too many novels,
-occupied myself too much with “elegant literature” (that used to be our
-phrase), and spoke too often at the Union, where I had a considerable
-reputation. But those fine words got me no college prizes: I missed my
-fellowship: was rather in disgrace with my relations afterwards, but
-had a small independence of my own, which I eked out by taking a few
-pupils for little goes and the common degree. At length, a relation
-dying, and leaving me a farther small income, I left the university,
-and came to reside in London.
-
-Now, in my third year at college, there came to St. Boniface a young
-gentleman, who was one of the few gentlemen-pensioners of our society.
-His popularity speedily was great. A kindly and simple youth, he
-would have been liked, I daresay, even though he had been no richer
-than the rest of us; but this is certain, that flattery, worldliness,
-mammon-worship, are vices as well known to young as to old boys; and
-a rich lad at school or college has his followers, tuft-hunters,
-led-captains, little courts, just as much as any elderly millionary of
-Pall-Mall, who gazes round his club to see whom he shall take home to
-dinner, while humble trencher-men wait anxiously, thinking--Ah! will
-he take me this time? or will he ask that abominable sneak and toady
-Henchman again? Well--well! this is an old story about parasites and
-flatterers. My dear good sir, I am not for a moment going to say that
-_you_ ever were one; and I daresay it was very base and mean of us to
-like a man chiefly on account of his money. “I know”--Tom Lovel used to
-say--“I know fellows come to my rooms because I have a large allowance,
-and plenty of my poor old governor’s wine, and give good dinners: I
-am not deceived; but, at least, it is pleasanter to come to me and
-have good dinners, and good wine, than to go to Jack Highson’s dreary
-tea and turnout, or to Ned Roper’s abominable Oxbridge port.” And so
-I admit at once that Lovel’s parties _were_ more agreeable than most
-men’s in the college. Perhaps the goodness of the fare, by pleasing the
-guests, made them more pleasant. A dinner in hall, and a pewter-plate
-is all very well, and I can say grace before it with all my heart; but
-a dinner with fish from London, game, and two or three nice little
-_entrées_, is better--and there was no better cook in the university
-than ours at St. Boniface, and ah, me! there were appetites then, and
-digestions which rendered the good dinner doubly good.
-
-Between me and young Lovel a friendship sprang up, which, I trust, even
-the publication of this story will not diminish. There is a period,
-immediately after the taking of his bachelor’s degree, when many a
-university-man finds himself embarrassed. The tradesmen rather rudely
-press for a settlement of their accounts. Those prints we ordered
-_calidi juventâ_; those shirt-studs and pins which the jewellers would
-persist in thrusting into our artless bosoms; those fine coats we would
-insist on having for our books, as well as ourselves; all these have
-to be paid for by the graduate. And my father, who was then alive,
-refusing to meet these demands, under the--I own--just plea, that my
-allowance had been ample, and that my half-sisters ought not to be
-mulcted of their slender portions, in consequence of my extravagance, I
-should have been subject to very serious inconvenience--nay, possibly,
-to personal incarceration, had not Lovel, at the risk of rustication,
-rushed up to London to his mother (who then had _especial reasons_ for
-being very gracious with her son), obtained a supply of money from her,
-and brought it to me at Mr. Shackell’s horrible hotel, where I was
-lodged. He had tears in his kind eyes; he grasped my hand a hundred
-and hundred times as he flung the notes into my lap; and the recording
-tutor (Sargent was only tutor then) who was going to bring him up
-before the Master for breach of discipline, dashed away a drop from
-his own lid, when, with a moving eloquence, I told what had happened,
-and blotted out the transaction with some particular old 1811 Port, of
-which we freely partook in his private rooms that evening. By laborious
-instalments, I had the happiness to pay Lovel back. I took pupils,
-as I said; I engaged in literary pursuits: I became connected with a
-literary periodical, and I am ashamed to say, I imposed myself upon the
-public as a good classical scholar. I was not thought the less learned,
-when my relative dying, I found myself in possession of a small
-independency; and my _Translations from the Greek_, my _Poems by Beta_,
-and my articles in the paper of which I was part proprietor for several
-years, have had their little success in their day.
-
-Indeed at Oxbridge, if I did not obtain university honours, at least I
-showed literary tastes. I got the prize essay one year at Boniface, and
-plead guilty to having written essays, poems, and a tragedy. My college
-friends had a joke at my expense (a very small joke serves to amuse
-those port-wine-bibbing fogies, and keeps them laughing for ever so
-long a time)--they are welcome, I say, to make merry at my charges--in
-respect of a certain bargain which I made on coming to London, and in
-which, had I been Moses Primrose purchasing green spectacles, I could
-scarcely have been more taken in. _My_ Jenkinson was an old college
-acquaintance, whom I was idiot enough to imagine a respectable man:
-the fellow had a very smooth tongue, and sleek, sanctified exterior.
-He was rather a popular preacher, and used to cry a good deal in the
-pulpit. He, and a queer wine-merchant and bill-discounter, Sherrick by
-name, had somehow got possession of that neat little literary paper,
-the _Museum_, which, perhaps, you remember; and this eligible literary
-property my friend Honeyman, with his wheedling tongue, induced me
-to purchase. I bear no malice: the fellow is in India now, where I
-trust he pays his butcher and baker. He was in dreadful straits for
-money when he sold me the _Museum_. He began crying when I told him
-some short time afterwards that he was a swindler, and from behind
-his pocket-handkerchief sobbed a prayer that I should one day think
-better of him; whereas my remarks to the same effect produced an
-exactly contrary impression upon his accomplice, Sherrick, who burst
-out laughing in my face, and said, “The more fool you.” Mr. Sherrick
-was right. He was a fool, without mistake, who had any money-dealing
-with him; and poor Honeyman was right, too; I don’t think so badly of
-him as I did. A fellow so hardly pinched for money could not resist
-the temptation of extracting it from such a greenhorn. I daresay I
-gave myself airs as editor of that confounded _Museum_, and proposed
-to educate the public taste, to diffuse morality and sound literature
-throughout the nation, and to pocket a liberal salary in return for
-my services. I daresay I printed my own sonnets, my own tragedy, my
-own verses (to a Being who shall be nameless, but whose conduct has
-caused a faithful heart to bleed not a little). I daresay I wrote
-satirical articles, in which I piqued myself upon the fineness of my
-wit, and criticisms, got up for the nonce, out of encyclopædias and
-biographical dictionaries; so that I would be actually astounded at my
-own knowledge. I daresay I made a gaby of myself to the world: pray, my
-good friend, hast thou never done likewise? If thou hast never been a
-fool, be sure thou wilt never be a wise man.
-
-I think it was my brilliant _confrère_ on the first floor (he had
-pecuniary transactions with Sherrick, and visited two or three of her
-Majesty’s metropolitan prisons at that gentleman’s suit) who first
-showed me how grievously I had been cheated in the newspaper matter.
-Slumley wrote for a paper printed at our office. The same boy often
-brought proofs to both of us--a little bit of a puny bright-eyed chap,
-who looked scarce twelve years old, when he was sixteen; who in wit was
-a man, when in stature he was a child,--like many other children of the
-poor.
-
-This little Dick Bedford used to sit many hours asleep on my
-landing-place or Slumley’s, whilst we were preparing our invaluable
-compositions within our respective apartments. S. was a good-natured
-reprobate, and gave the child of his meat and his drink. I used to
-like to help the little man from my breakfast, and see him enjoy the
-meal. As he sate, with his bag on his knees, his head sunk in sleep,
-his little high-lows scarce reaching the floor, Dick made a touching
-little picture. The whole house was fond of him. The tipsy captain
-nodded him a welcome as he swaggered down stairs, stock, and coat, and
-waistcoat in hand, to his worship’s toilette in the back kitchen. The
-children and Dick were good friends; and Elizabeth patronized him,
-and talked with him now and again, in her grave way. You know Clancy,
-the composer?--know him better, perhaps, under his name of Friedrich
-Donner? Donner used to write music to Slumley’s words, or _vice versâ_;
-and would come now and again to Beak Street, where he and his poet
-would try their joint work at the piano. At the sound of that music,
-little Dick’s eyes used to kindle. “Oh, it’s prime!” said the young
-enthusiast. And I will say, that good-natured miscreant of a Slumley
-not only gave the child pence, but tickets for the play, concerts, and
-so forth. Dick had a neat little suit of clothes at home; his mother
-made him a very nice little waistcoat out of my undergraduate’s gown;
-and he and she, a decent woman, when in their best raiment, looked
-respectable enough for any theatre-pit in England.
-
-Amongst other places of public amusement which he attended, Mr. Dick
-frequented the academy where Miss Bellenden danced, and whence poor
-Elizabeth Prior issued forth after midnight in her shabby frock. And
-once, the captain, Elizabeth’s father and protector, being unable
-to walk very accurately, and noisy and incoherent in his speech, so
-that the attention of Messieurs of the police was directed towards
-him, Dick came up, placed Elizabeth and her father in a cab, paid the
-fare with his own money, and brought the whole party home in triumph,
-himself sitting on the box of the vehicle. I chanced to be coming
-home myself (from one of Mrs. Wateringham’s elegant tea _soirées_, in
-Dorset Square), and reached my door just at the arrival of Dick and his
-caravan. “Here, cabby!” says Dick, handing out the fare, and looking
-with his brightest eyes. It is pleasanter to look at that beaming
-little face, than at the captain yonder, reeling into his house,
-supported by his daughter. Dick cried, Elizabeth told me, when, a week
-afterwards, she wanted to pay him back his shilling; and she said he
-was a strange child, that he was.
-
-I revert to my friend Lovel. I was coaching Lovel for his degree
-(which, between ourselves, I think he never would have attained), when
-he suddenly announced to me, from Weymouth, where he was passing the
-vacation, his intention to quit the university, and to travel abroad.
-“Events have happened, dear friend,” he wrote, “which will make my
-mother’s home miserable to me (I little knew when I went to town about
-your business, what caused her _wonderful complaisance_ to me). She
-would have broken my heart, Charles (my Christian name is Charles), but
-its wounds have found a _consoler_!”
-
-Now, in this little chapter, there are some little mysteries
-propounded, upon which, were I not above any such artifice, I might
-easily leave the reader to ponder for a month.
-
-1. Why did Mrs. Prior, at the lodgings, persist in calling the theatre
-at which her daughter danced the Academy?
-
-2. What were the special reasons why Mrs. Lovel should be very gracious
-with her son, and give him 150_l._ as soon as he asked for the money?
-
-3. Why was Fred Lovel’s heart nearly broken? and 4. Who was his
-consoler?
-
-I answer these at once, and without the slightest attempt at delay
-or circumlocution. 1. Mrs. Prior, who had repeatedly received money
-from her brother, John Erasmus Sargent, D.D., Master of St. Boniface
-College, knew perfectly well that if the Master (whom she already
-pestered out of his life) heard that she had sent a niece of his on the
-stage, he would never give her another shilling.
-
-2. The reason why Emma, widow of the late Adolphus Loeffel, of
-Whitechapel Road, sugar-baker, was so particularly gracious to her son,
-Adolphus Frederic Lovel, Esq., of St. Boniface College, Oxbridge, and
-principal partner in the house of Loeffel aforesaid, an infant, was
-that she, Emma, was about to contract a second marriage with the Rev.
-Samuel Bonnington.
-
-3. Fred Lovel’s heart was so very much broken by this intelligence,
-that he gave himself airs of Hamlet, dressed in black, wore his long
-fair hair over his eyes, and exhibited a hundred signs of grief and
-desperation: until--
-
-4. Louisa (widow of the late Sir Popham Baker, of Bakerstown, Co.
-Kilkenny, Baronet,) induced Mr. Lovel to take a trip on the Rhine with
-her and Cecilia, fourth and only unmarried daughter of the aforesaid
-Sir Popham Baker, deceased.
-
-My opinion of Cecilia I have candidly given in a previous page.
-I adhere to that opinion. I shall not repeat it. The subject is
-disagreeable to me, as the woman herself was in life. What Fred found
-in her to admire, I cannot tell: lucky for us all that tastes, men,
-women, vary. You will never see her alive in this history. That is
-her picture, painted by the late Mr. Gandish. She stands fingering
-that harp with which she has often driven me half mad with her _Tara’s
-Halls_ and her _Poor Marianne_. She used to bully Fred so, and be so
-rude to his guests, that in order to pacify her, he would meanly say,
-“Do, my love, let us have a little music!” and thrumpty--thrumpty, off
-would go her gloves, and _Tara’s Halls_ would begin. “The harp that
-_once_” indeed! the accursed catgut scarce knew any other music, and
-“once” was a hundred times at least in _my_ hearing. Then came the
-period when I was treated to the cold joint which I have mentioned;
-and, not liking it, I gave up going to Shrublands.
-
-So, too, did my Lady Baker, but not of _her own free will_, mind
-you. _She_ did not quit the premises because her reception was too
-cold, but because the house was made a great deal too hot for her.
-I remember Fred coming to me in high spirits, and describing to me,
-with no little humour, a great battle between Cecilia and Lady Baker,
-and her ladyship’s defeat and flight. She fled, however, only as far
-as Putney village, where she formed again, as it were, and fortified
-herself in a lodging. Next day she made a desperate and feeble attack,
-presenting herself at Shrublands lodge-gate, and threatening that she
-and sorrow would sit down before it; and that all the world should know
-how a daughter treated her mother. But the gate was locked, and Barnet,
-the gardener, appeared behind it, saying, “Since you _are_ come, my
-lady, perhaps you will pay my missis the four-and-twenty shillings you
-borrowed of her.” And he grinned at her through the bars, until she
-fled before him, cowering. Lovel paid the little forgotten account; the
-best four-and-twenty shillings he had ever laid out, he said.
-
-Eight years passed away; during the last four of which I scarce saw
-my old friend, except at clubs and taverns, where we met privily, and
-renewed, not old warmth and hilarity, but old kindness. One winter
-he took his family abroad; Cecilia’s health was delicate, Lovel told
-me, and the doctor had advised that she should spend a winter in the
-south. He did not stay with them: he had pressing affairs at home; he
-had embarked in many businesses besides the paternal sugar-bakery; was
-concerned in companies, a director of a joint-stock bank, a man in
-whose fire were many irons. A faithful governess was with the children;
-a faithful man and maid were in attendance on the invalid; and Lovel,
-adoring his wife, as he certainly did, yet supported her absence with
-great equanimity.
-
-In the spring I was not a little scared to read amongst the deaths
-in the newspaper:--“At Naples, of scarlet fever, on the 25th ult.,
-Cecilia, wife of Frederick Lovel Esq., and daughter of the late Sir
-Popham Baker, Bart.” I knew what my friend’s grief would be. He had
-hurried abroad at the news of her illness; he did not reach Naples in
-time to receive the last words of his poor Cecilia.
-
-Some months after the catastrophe, I had a note from Shrublands. Lovel
-wrote quite in the old affectionate tone. He begged his dear old friend
-to go to him, and console him in his solitude. Would I come to dinner
-that evening?
-
-Of course I went off to him straightway. I found him in deep sables in
-the drawing-room with his children, and I confess I was not astonished
-to see my Lady Baker once more in that room.
-
-“You seem surprised to see me here, Mr. Batchelor!” says her ladyship,
-with that grace and good breeding which she generally exhibited; for
-if she accepted benefits, she took care to insult those from whom she
-received them.
-
-“Indeed, no,” said I, looking at Lovel, who piteously hung down his
-head. He had his little Cecy at his knee: he was sitting under the
-portrait of the defunct musician, whose harp, now muffled in leather,
-stood dimly in the corner of the room.
-
-“I am here not at my own wish, but from a feeling of duty towards
-that--departed--angel!” says Lady Baker, pointing to the picture.
-
-“I am sure when mamma was here, you were always quarrelling,” says
-little Popham, with a scowl.
-
-“This is the way those innocent children have been taught to regard
-me,” cries grandmamma.
-
-“Silence Pop!” says papa, “and don’t be a rude boy.”
-
-“Isn’t Pop a rude boy?” echoes Cecy.
-
-“Silence, Pop,” continues papa, “or you must go up to Miss Prior.”
-
-
-
-
- Studies in Animal Life.
-
- “Authentic tidings of invisible things;
- Of ebb and flow, and ever-during power,
- And central peace subsisting at the heart
- Of endless agitation.”--THE EXCURSION.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- Omnipresence of Life--The Microscope--An Opalina and its
- wonders--The uses of Cilia--How our lungs are protected from
- dust and filings--Feeding without a mouth or stomach--What is
- an organ?--How a complex organism arises--Early stages of a
- frog and a philosopher--How the plants feed--Parasites of the
- frog--Metamorphoses and migrations of Parasites--Life within
- life--The budding of animals--A steady bore--Philosophy of the
- infinitely little.
-
-Come with me, and lovingly study Nature, as she breathes, palpitates,
-and works under myriad forms of Life--forms unseen, unsuspected, or
-unheeded by the mass of ordinary men. Our course may be through park
-and meadow, garden and lane, over the swelling hills and spacious
-heaths, beside the running and sequestered streams, along the tawny
-coast, out on the dark and dangerous reefs, or under dripping caves
-and slippery ledges. It matters little where we go: everywhere--in
-the air above, the earth beneath, and waters under the earth--we are
-surrounded with Life. Avert your eyes awhile from our human world, with
-its ceaseless anxieties, its noble sorrow, poignant, yet sublime, of
-conscious imperfection aspiring to higher states, and contemplate the
-calmer activities of that other world with which we are so mysteriously
-related. I hear you exclaim,--
-
- “The proper study of mankind is man;”
-
-nor will I pretend, as some enthusiastic students seem to think, that
-
- “The proper study of mankind is _cells_;”
-
-but agreeing with you, that man is the noblest study, I would suggest
-that under the noblest there are other problems which we must not
-neglect. Man himself is imperfectly known, because the laws of
-universal Life are imperfectly known. His Life forms but one grand
-illustration of Biology--the science of Life,[21] as he forms but the
-apex of the animal world.
-
-Our studies here will be of Life, and chiefly of those minuter, or
-obscurer forms, which seldom attract attention. In the air we breathe,
-in the water we drink, in the earth we tread on, Life is everywhere.
-Nature _lives_: every pore is bursting with Life; every death is only
-a new birth, every grave a cradle. And of this we know so little,
-think so little! Around us, above us, beneath us, that great mystic
-drama of creation is being enacted, and we will not even consent to be
-spectators! Unless animals are obviously useful, or obviously hurtful
-to us, we disregard them. Yet they are not alien, but akin. The Life
-that stirs within us, stirs within them. We are all “parts of one
-transcendent whole.” The scales fall from our eyes when we think of
-this; it is as if a new sense had been vouchsafed to us; and we learn
-to look at Nature with a more intimate and personal love.
-
-Life everywhere! The air is crowded with birds--beautiful, tender,
-intelligent birds, to whom life is a song and a thrilling anxiety,
-the anxiety of love. The air is swarming with insects--those little
-animated miracles. The waters are peopled with innumerable forms, from
-the animalcule, so small that one hundred and fifty millions of them
-would not weigh a grain, to the whale, so large that it seems an island
-as it sleeps upon the waves. The bed of the seas is alive with polypes,
-crabs, star-fishes, and with sand-numerous shell-animalcules. The
-rugged face of rocks is scarred by the silent boring of soft creatures;
-and blackened with countless mussels, barnacles, and limpets.
-
-Life everywhere! on the earth, in the earth, crawling, creeping,
-burrowing, boring, leaping, running. If the sequestered coolness of
-the wood tempt us to saunter into its chequered shade, we are saluted
-by the murmurous din of insects, the twitter of birds, the scrambling
-of squirrels, the startled rush of unseen beasts, all telling how
-populous is this seeming solitude. If we pause before a tree, or
-shrub, or plant, our cursory and half-abstracted glance detects a
-colony of various inhabitants. We pluck a flower, and in its bosom
-we see many a charming insect busy at its appointed labour. We pick
-up a fallen leaf, and if nothing is visible on it, there is probably
-the trace of an insect larva hidden in its tissue, and awaiting there
-development. The drop of dew upon this leaf will probably contain its
-animals, visible under the microscope. This same microscope reveals
-that the _blood-rain_ suddenly appearing on bread, and awakening
-superstitious terrors, is nothing but a collection of minute animals
-(_Monas prodigiosa_); and that the vast tracts of snow which are
-reddened in a single night, owe their colour to the marvellous rapidity
-in reproduction of a minute plant (_Protococcus nivalis_). The very
-mould which covers our cheese, our bread, our jam, or our ink, and
-disfigures our damp walls; is nothing but a collection of plants. The
-many-coloured fire which sparkles on the surface of a summer sea at
-night, as the vessel ploughs her way, or which drips from the oars in
-lines of jewelled light, is produced by millions of minute animals.
-
-Nor does the vast procession end here. Our very mother-earth is formed
-of the débris of life. Plants and animals which have been, build up
-its solid fabric.[22] We dig downwards, thousands of feet below the
-surface, and discover with surprise the skeletons of strange, uncouth
-animals, which roamed the fens and struggled through the woods before
-man was. Our surprise is heightened when we learn that the very quarry
-itself is mainly composed of the skeletons of microscopic animals; the
-flints which grate beneath our carriage wheels are but the remains of
-countless skeletons. The Apennines and Cordilleras, the chalk cliffs
-so dear to homeward-nearing eyes--these are the pyramids of bygone
-generations of atomies. Ages ago, these tiny architects secreted
-the tiny shells, which were their palaces; from the ruins of these
-palaces we build our Parthenons, our St. Peters, and our Louvres. So
-revolves the luminous orb of Life! Generations follow generations; and
-the Present becomes the matrix of the Future, as the Past was of the
-Present: the Life of one epoch forming the prelude to a higher Life.
-
-When we have thus ranged air, earth, and water, finding everywhere a
-prodigality of living forms, visible and invisible, it might seem as
-if the survey were complete. And yet it is not so. Life cradles within
-Life. The bodies of animals are little worlds, having their own animals
-and plants. A celebrated Frenchman has published a thick octavo volume
-devoted to the classification and description of “The Plants which grow
-on Men and Animals;”[23] and many Germans have described the immense
-variety of animals which grow on and in men and animals; so that
-science can now boast of a parasitic Flora and Fauna. In the fluids and
-tissues, in the eye, in the liver, in the stomach, in the brain, in the
-muscles, parasites are found; and these parasites have often _their_
-parasites living in them!
-
-We have thus taken a bird’s-eye view of the field in which we may
-labour. It is truly inexhaustible. We may begin where we please, we
-shall never come to an end; our curiosity will never slacken.
-
- “And whosoe’er in youth
- Has thro’ ambition of his soul given way
- To such desires, and grasp’d at such delights,
- Shall feel congenial stirrings, late and long.”
-
-As a beginning, get a microscope. If you cannot borrow, boldly buy one.
-Few purchases will yield you so much pleasure; and while you are about
-it, do, if possible, get a good one. Spend as little money as you can
-on accessory apparatus and expensive fittings, but get a good stand
-and good glasses. Having got your instrument, bear in mind these two
-important trifles--work by daylight, seldom or never by lamplight; and
-keep the unoccupied eye _open_. With these precautions you may work
-daily for hours without serious fatigue to the eye.
-
-Now where shall we begin? Anywhere will do. This dead frog, for
-example, that has already been made the subject of experiments, and is
-now awaiting the removal of its spinal cord, will serve us as a text
-from which profitable lessons may be drawn. We snip out a portion of
-its digestive tube, which from its emptiness seems to promise little;
-but a drop of the liquid we find in it is placed on a glass slide,
-covered with a small piece of very thin glass, and brought under the
-microscope. Now look. There are several things which might occupy your
-attention; but disregard them now to watch that animalcule which you
-observe swimming about. What is it? It is one of the largest of the
-Infusoria, and is named _Opalina_. When I call this an Infusorium I
-am using the language of text-books; but there seems to be a growing
-belief among zoologists that the Opalina is not an Infusorium, but the
-infantile condition of some worm (_Distoma_?). However, it will not
-grow into a mature worm as long as it inhabits the frog; it waits till
-some pike, or bird, has devoured the frog, and then, in the stomach of
-its new captor, it will develop into its mature form: then, and not
-till then. This surprises you? And well it may; but thereby hangs a
-tale, which to unfold--for the present, however, it must be postponed,
-because the Opalina itself needs all our notice.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 1.
-
- A B
-
- OPALINA RANARUM.
-
- A Front view }
- } Magnified.
- B Side view }
-]
-
-Observe how transparent it is, and with what easy, undulating grace
-it swims about; yet this swimmer has no arms, no legs, no tail, no
-backbone to serve as a fulcrum to moving muscles: nay, it has no
-muscles to move with. ’Tis a creature of the most absolute abnegations:
-sans eyes, sans teeth, sans everything;--no, not sans everything, for
-as we look attentively we see certain currents produced in the liquid,
-and on applying a higher magnifying power we detect how these currents
-are produced. All over the surface of the Opalina there are delicate
-hairs, in incessant vibration: these are the _cilia_.[24] They lash the
-water, and the animal is propelled by their strokes, as a galley by its
-hundred oars. This is your first sight of that ciliary action of which
-you have so often read, and which you will henceforth find performing
-some important service in almost every animal you examine. Sometimes
-the cilia act as instruments of locomotion; sometimes as instruments of
-respiration, by continually renewing the current of water; sometimes
-as the means of drawing in food--for which purpose they surround the
-mouth, and by their incessant action produce a small whirlpool into
-which the food is sucked. An example of this is seen in the Vorticella
-(Fig. 2).
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 2.
-
-GROUP OF VORTICELLA NEBULIFERA, on a Stem of Weed, Magnified.
-
- A One undergoing spontaneous division.
-
- B Another spirally retracted on its stalk.
-
- C One with cilia retracted.
-
- D A bud detached and swimming free.]
-
-Having studied the action of these cilia in microscopic animals, you
-will be prepared to understand their office in your own organism. The
-lining membrane of your air-passages is covered with cilia; which may
-be observed by following the directions of Professor Sharpey, to whom
-science is indebted for a very exhaustive description of these organs.
-“To see them in motion, a portion of the ciliated mucous membrane may
-be taken from a recently-killed quadruped. The piece of membrane is
-to be folded with its free, or ciliated, surface outwards, placed on
-a slip of glass, with a little water or serum of blood, and covered
-with thin glass or mica. When it is now viewed with a power of 200
-diameters, or upwards, a very obvious agitation will be perceived on
-the edge of the fold, and this appearance is caused by the moving
-cilia with which the surface of the membrane is covered. Being set
-close together, and moving simultaneously or in quick succession, the
-cilia, when in brisk action, give rise to the appearance of a bright
-transparent fringe along the fold of the membrane, agitated by such
-a rapid and incessant motion that the single threads which compose
-it cannot be perceived. The motion here meant is that of the cilia
-themselves; but they also set in motion the adjoining fluid, driving
-it along the ciliated surface, as is indicated by the agitation of any
-little particles that may accidentally float in it. The fact of the
-conveyance of fluids and other matters along the ciliated surface, as
-well as the direction in which they are impelled, may also be made
-manifest by immersing the membrane in fluid, and dropping on it some
-finely-pulverized substance (such as charcoal in fine powder), which
-will be slowly but steadily carried along in a constant and determinate
-direction.”[25]
-
-It is an interesting fact, that while the direction in which the
-cilia propel fluids and particles is generally towards the interior
-of the organism, it is sometimes _reversed_; and, instead of beating
-the particles inwards, the cilia energetically beat them back, if
-they attempt to enter. Fatal results would ensue if this were not so.
-Our air-passages would no longer protect the lungs from particles of
-sand, coal-dust, and filings, flying about the atmosphere; on the
-contrary, the lashing hairs which cover the surface of these passages
-would catch up every particle, and drive it onwards into the lungs.
-Fortunately for us, the direction of the cilia is reversed, and they
-act as vigilant janitors, driving back all vagrant particles with a
-stern “No admittance--_even_ on business!” In vain does the whirlwind
-dash a column of dust in our faces--in vain does the air, darkened with
-coal-dust, impetuously rush up the nostrils: the air is allowed to pass
-on, but the dust is inexorably driven back. Were it not so, how could
-miners, millers, iron-workers, and all the modern Tubal Cains contrive
-to live in their loaded atmospheres? In a week, their lungs would be
-choked up.
-
-Perhaps, you will tell me that this _is_ the case: that manufacturers
-of iron and steel are very subject to consumption; and that there is a
-peculiar discoloration of the lungs which has often been observed in
-coal miners, examined after death.
-
-Not being a physician, and not intending to trouble you with medical
-questions, I must still place before you three considerations, which
-will show how untenable this notion is. First, although consumption
-may be frequent among the Sheffield workmen, the cause is not to be
-sought in their breathing filings, but in the sedentary and unwholesome
-confinement incidental to their occupation. Miners and coal-heavers
-are not troubled with consumption. Moreover, if the filings were
-the cause, all the artisans would suffer, when all breathe the same
-atmosphere. Secondly, while it is true that discoloured lungs have been
-observed in some miners, it has not been observed in all, or in many;
-whereas, it has been observed in men not miners, not exposed to any
-unusual amount of coal-dust. Thirdly, and most conclusively, experiment
-has shown that the coal-dust _cannot_ penetrate to the lungs. Claude
-Bernard, the brilliant experimenter, tied a bladder, containing a
-quantity of powdered charcoal, to the muzzle of a rabbit. Whenever the
-animal breathed, the powder within the bladder was seen to be agitated.
-Except during feeding time, the bladder was kept constantly on, so that
-the animal breathed only this dusty air. If the powder _could_ have
-escaped the vigilance of the cilia, and got into the lungs, this was
-a good occasion. But when the rabbit was killed and opened, many days
-afterwards, no powder whatever was found in the lungs, or bronchial
-tubes; several patches were collected about the nostrils and throat;
-but the cilia had acted as a strainer, keeping all particles from the
-air-tubes.
-
-The swimming apparatus of the Opalina has led us far away from the
-little animal, who has been feeding while we have been lecturing.
-At the mention of feeding, you naturally look for the food that is
-eaten, the mouth and stomach that eat. But I hinted just now that
-this ethereal creature dispenses with a stomach, as too gross for
-its nature; and of course, by a similar refinement, dispenses with
-a mouth. Indeed, it has no organs whatever, except the cilia just
-spoken of. The same is true of several of the Infusoria; for you must
-know that naturalists no longer recognize the complex organization
-which Ehrenberg fancied he had detected in these microscopic beings.
-If it pains you to relinquish the piquant notion of a microscopic
-animalcule having a structure equal in complexity to that of the
-elephant, there will be ample compensation in the notion which replaces
-it, the notion of an ascending series of animal organisms, rising
-from the structureless _amœba_ to the complex frame of a mammal. On
-a future occasion we shall see that, great as Ehrenberg’s services
-have been, his _interpretations_ of what he saw have one by one been
-replaced by truer notions. His immense class of Infusoria has been,
-and is constantly being, diminished; many of his animals turn out to
-be plants; many of them embryos of worms; and some of them belong
-to the same divisions of the animal kingdom as the oyster and the
-shrimp: that is to say, they range with the Molluscs and Crustaceans.
-In these, of course, there is a complex organization; but in the
-Infusoria, as now understood, the organization is extremely simple.
-No one now believes the clear spaces visible in their substance to be
-stomachs, as Ehrenberg believed; and the idea of the _Polygastrica_, or
-many-stomached Infusoria, is abandoned. No one believes the coloured
-specs to be eyes; because, not to mention the difficulty of conceiving
-eyes where there is no nervous system, it has been found that even the
-spores of some plants have these coloured specs; and they are assuredly
-not eyes. If, then, we exclude the highly-organized _Rotifera_, or
-“Wheel Animalcules,” which are genuine Crustacea, we may say that all
-Infusoria, whether they be the young of worms or not, are of very
-simple organization.
-
-And this leads us to consider what biologists mean by an _organ_: it
-is a particular portion of the body set apart for the performance of
-some particular function. The whole process of development is this
-setting apart for special purposes. The starting-point of Life is a
-single cell--that is to say, a microscopic sac, filled with liquid and
-granules, and having within it a nucleus, or smaller sac. Paley has
-somewhere remarked, that in the early stages, there is no difference
-discernible between a frog and a philosopher. It is very true; truer
-than he conceived. In the earliest stage of all, both the Batrachian
-and the Philosopher are nothing but single cells; although the one cell
-will develop into an Aristotle or a Newton, and the other will get
-no higher than the cold, damp, croaking animal which boys will pelt,
-anatomists dissect, and Frenchmen eat. From the starting-point of a
-single cell, this is the course taken: the cell divides itself into
-two, the two become four, the four eight, and so on, till a mass of
-cells is formed, not unlike the shape of a mulberry. This mulberry-mass
-then becomes a sac, with double envelopes, or walls: the inner wall,
-turned towards the yelk, or food, becomes the _assimilating_ surface
-for the whole; the outer wall, turned towards the surrounding medium,
-becomes the surface which is to bring frog and philosopher into contact
-and relation with the external world--the Non-Ego, as the philosopher,
-in after life, will call it. Here we perceive the first grand “setting
-apart,” or _differentiation_, has taken place: the embryo having an
-assimilating surface, which has little to do with the external world;
-and a sensitive, contractile surface, which has little to do with the
-preparation and transport of food. The embryo is no longer a mass
-of similar cells; it is already become dissimilar, _different_, as
-respects its inner and outer envelope. But these envelopes are at
-present uniform; one part of each is exactly like the rest. Let us,
-therefore, follow the history of Development, and we shall find that
-the inner wall gradually becomes unlike itself in various parts;
-and that certain organs, constituting a very complex apparatus of
-Digestion, Secretion, and Excretion, are all one by one wrought out of
-it, by a series of metamorphoses, or _differentiations_. The inner wall
-thus passes from a simple assimilating surface to a complex apparatus
-serving the functions of vegetative life.
-
-Now glance at the outer wall: from it also various organs have
-gradually been wrought: it has developed into muscles, nerves, bones,
-organs of sense, and brain: all these from a simple homogeneous
-membrane!
-
-With this bird’s-eye view of the course of Development, you will be
-able to appreciate the grand law first clearly enunciated by Goethe
-and Von Baer, as the law of animal life, namely, that Development is
-always from the general to the special, from the simple to the complex,
-from the homogeneous to the heterogeneous; and this by a gradual series
-of _differentiations_.[26] Or to put it into the music of our deeply
-meditative Tennyson:--
-
- “All nature widens upward. Evermore
- The simpler essence lower lies:
- More complex is more perfect--owning more
- Discourse, more widely wise.”
-
-You are now familiarized with the words “differentiation” and
-“development,” so often met with in modern writers; and have gained a
-distinct idea of what an “organ” is; so that on hearing of an animal
-without organs, you will at once conclude that in such an animal there
-has been no setting apart of any portion of the body for special
-purposes, but that all parts serve all purposes indiscriminately. Here
-is our Opalina, for example, without mouth, or stomach, or any other
-organ. It is an assimilating surface in every part; in every part a
-breathing, sensitive surface. Living on liquid food, it does not need
-a mouth to seize, or a stomach to digest, such food. The liquid, or
-gas, passes through the Opalina’s delicate skin, by a process which is
-called _endosmosis_; it there serves as food; and the refuse passes
-out again by a similar process, called _exosmosis_. This is the way in
-which many animals and all plants are nourished. The cell at the end
-of a rootlet, which the plant sends burrowing through the earth, has
-no mouth to seize, no open pores to admit the liquid that it needs;
-nevertheless the liquid passes into the cell, through its delicate
-cell-wall, and passes from this cell to _other_ cells, upwards from the
-rootlet to the bud. It is in this way, also, that the Opalina feeds: it
-is all-mouth, no-mouth; all-stomach, no-stomach. Every part of its body
-performs the functions which in more complex animals are performed by
-organs specially set apart. It feeds without mouth, breathes without
-lungs, and moves without muscles.
-
-The Opalina, as I said, is a parasite. It may be found in various
-animals, and almost always in the frog. You will, perhaps, ask why it
-should be considered a parasite; why may it not have been swallowed by
-the frog in a gulp of water? Certainly, nothing would have been easier.
-But to remove your doubts, I open the skull of this frog, and carefully
-remove a drop of the liquid found inside, which, on being brought
-under the microscope, we shall most probably find containing some
-animalcules, especially those named _Monads_. These were not swallowed.
-They live in the cerebro-spinal fluid, as the Opalina lives in the
-digestive tube. Nay, if we extend our researches, we shall find that
-various organs have their various parasites. Here, for instance, is a
-parasitic worm from the frog’s bladder. Place it under the microscope,
-with a high power, and behold! It is called _Polystomum_--many-mouthed,
-or, more properly, many-suckered. You are looking at the under side,
-and will observe six large suckers with their starlike clasps (_e_),
-and the horny instrument (_f_), with which the animal bores its way. At
-_a_ there is another sucker, which serves also as a mouth; at _b_ you
-perceive the rudiment of a gullet, and at _d_ the reproductive organs.
-But pay attention to the pretty branchings of the digestive tube (_c_)
-which ramifies through the body like a blood-vessel.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 3.
-
-POLYSTOMUM INTEGERRIMUM, Magnified.]
-
-This arrangement of the digestive tube is found in many animals, and
-is often mistaken for a system of blood-vessels. In one sense this
-is correct; for these branching tubes are carriers of nutriment, and
-the only circulating vessels such animals possess; but the nutriment
-is _chyme_, not blood: these simple animals have not arrived at the
-dignity of blood, which is a higher elaboration of the food, fitted for
-higher organisms.
-
-Thus may our frog, besides its own marvels, afford us many “authentic
-tidings of invisible things,” and is itself a little colony of Life.
-Nature is economic as well as prodigal of space. She fills the
-illimitable heavens with planetary and starry grandeurs, and the
-tiny atoms moving over the crust of earth she makes the homes of the
-infinitely little. Far as the mightiest telescope can reach, it
-detects worlds in clusters, like pebbles on the shore of Infinitude;
-deep as the microscope can penetrate, it detects Life within Life,
-generation within generation; as if the very Universe itself were not
-vast enough for the energies of Life!
-
-That phrase, generation within generation, was not a careless phrase;
-it is exact. Take the tiny insect (_Aphis_) which, with its companions,
-crowds your rose-tree; open it, in a solution of sugar-water, under
-your microscope, and you will find in it a young insect nearly formed;
-open that young insect with care, and you will find in it, also,
-another young one, less advanced in its development, but perfectly
-recognizable to the experienced eye; and beside this embryo you will
-find many eggs, which would in time become insects!
-
-Or take that lazy water-snail (_Paludina vivipara_), first made known
-to science by the great Swammerdamm, the incarnation of patience and
-exactness, and you will find, as he found, forty or fifty young snails,
-in various stages of development; and you will also find, as he found,
-some tiny worms, which, if you cut them open, will suffer three or four
-infusoria to escape from the opening.[27] In your astonishment you will
-ask, Where is this to end?
-
-The observation recorded by Swammerdamm, like so many others of this
-noble worker, fell into neglect; but modern investigators have made
-it the starting-point of a very curious inquiry. The worms he found
-within the snail are now called _Cercaria-sacs_, because they contain
-the _Cercariæ_, once classed as Infusoria, and which are now known to
-be the early forms of parasitic worms inhabiting the digestive tube,
-and other cavities, of higher animals. These _Cercariæ_ have vigorous
-tails, with which they swim through the water like tadpoles, and
-like tadpoles, they lose their tails in after life. But how, think
-you, did these sacs containing _Cercariæ_ get into the water-snails?
-“By spontaneous generation,” formerly said the upholders of that
-hypothesis; and those who condemned the hypothesis were forced to admit
-they had no better explanation. It was a mystery, which they preferred
-leaving unexplained, rather than fly to spontaneous generation. And
-they were right. The mystery has at length been cleared up.[28] I will
-endeavour to bring together the scattered details, and narrate the
-curious story.
-
-Under the eyelids of geese and ducks may be constantly found a
-parasitic worm (of the _Trematode_ order), which naturalists have
-christened _Monostomum mutabile_--Single-mouth, Changeable. This worm
-brings forth living young, in the likeness of active Infusoria, which,
-being covered with cilia, swim about in the water, as we saw the
-Opalina swim. Here is a portrait of one. (Fig. 4.)
-
-Each of these animalcules develops a sac in its interior. The sac
-you may notice in the engraving. Having managed to get into the body
-of the water-snail, the animalcule’s part in the drama is at an end.
-It dies, and in dying liberates the sac, which is very comfortably
-housed and fed by the snail. If you examine this sac (Fig. 5), you will
-observe that it has a mouth and digestive tube, and is, therefore, very
-far from being, what its name imports, a mere receptacle; it is an
-independent animal, and lives an independent life. It feeds generously
-on the juices of the snail, and having fed, thinks generously of the
-coming generations. It was born inside the animalcule; why should it
-not in turn give birth to children of its own? To found a dynasty, to
-scatter progeny over the bounteous earth, is a worthy ambition. The
-mysterious agency of Reproduction begins in this sac-animal; and in
-a short while a brood of _Cercariæ_ move within it. The sac bursts,
-and the brood escapes. But how is this? The children are by no means
-the “very image” of their parent. They are not sacs, nor in the least
-resembling sacs, as you see. (Fig. 6.)
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 4.
-
- A EMBRYO OF MONOSTOMUM MUTABILE.
- B Cercaria sac, just set free.
-
- _a_ Mouth; _b_ Pigment spots; _c_ Sac.--Magnified.]
-
-They have tails, and suckers, and sharp boring instruments, with
-other organs which their parent was without. To look at them you
-would as soon suspect a shrimp to be the progeny of an oyster, as
-these to be the progeny of the sac-animal. And what makes the paradox
-more paradoxical is, that not only are the _Cercariæ_ unlike their
-parent, but their parent was equally unlike its parent the embryo
-of _Monostomum_ (compare fig. 4). However, if we pursue this family
-history, we shall find the genealogy rights itself at last, and that
-this Cercaria will develop in the body of some bird into a _Monostomum
-mutabile_ like its ancestor. Thus the worm produces an animalcule,
-which produces a sac-animal, which produces a Cercaria, which becomes a
-worm exactly resembling its great-grandfather.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 5.
-
-CERCARIA SAC.
-
- A Mouth;
-
- B Digestive tube;
-
- C A Cercaria newly formed. Four others are seen in different
- stages.--Magnified.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 6.
-
-CERCARIA DEVELOPED.
-
- A Mouth; B, B, B Excretory organ; C Pigment spots; D Tail.
-]
-
-One peculiarity in this history is that while the _Monostomum_ produces
-its young in the usual way, the two _intermediate_ forms are produced
-by a process of budding, analogous to that observed in plants. Plants,
-as you know, are reproduced in two ways, from the seed, and from
-the bud. For seed-reproduction, peculiar organs are necessary; for
-bud-reproduction, there is no such differentiation needed: it is simply
-an out-growth. The same is true of many animals: they also bud like
-plants, and produce seeds (eggs) like plants. I have elsewhere argued
-that the two processes are essentially identical; and that both are
-but special forms of growth.[29] Not, however, to discuss so abstruse
-a question here, let us merely note that the Monostomum, into which
-the Cercaria will develop, produces eggs, from which young will issue;
-the second generation is not produced from eggs, but by internal
-budding; the third generation is likewise budded internally; but it,
-on acquiring maturity, will produce eggs. For this maturity, it is
-indispensable that the Cercaria should be swallowed by some bird or
-animal; only in the digestive tube can it acquire its egg-producing
-condition. How is it to get there? The ways are many; let us witness
-one:--
-
-In this watchglass of water we have several _Cercariæ_ swimming about.
-To them we add three or four of those darting, twittering insects
-which you have seen in every vase of pond-water, and have learned to
-be the larvæ, or early forms, of the _Ephemeron_. The _Cercariæ_ cease
-flapping the water with their impatient tails, and commence a severe
-scrutiny of the strangers. When Odry, in the riotous farce, _Les
-Saltimbanques_, finds a portmanteau, he exclaims, “_Une malle! ce doit
-être à moi!_” (“Surely this _must_ belong to me!”) This seems to be the
-theory of property adopted by the Cercaria: “An insect! surely this
-belongs to me!” Accordingly every one begins creeping over the bodies
-of the Ephemera, giving an interrogatory poke with the spine, which
-will pierce the first soft place it can detect. Between the segments of
-the insect’s armour a soft and pierceable spot is found; and now, lads,
-to work! Onwards they bore, never relaxing in their efforts till a hole
-is made large enough for them to slip in by elongating their bodies.
-Once in, they dismiss their tails as useless appendages; and begin what
-is called the process of _encysting_--that is, of rolling themselves up
-into a ball, and secreting a mucus from their surface, which hardens
-round them like a shell. Thus they remain snugly ensconced in the body
-of the insect, which in time develops into a fly, hovers over the pond,
-and is swallowed by some bird. The fly is digested, and the liberated
-Cercaria finds itself in comfortable quarters, its shell is broken, and
-its progress to maturity is rapid.
-
-Von Siebold’s description of another form of emigration he has
-observed in parasites will be read with interest. “For a long time,”
-he says, “the origin of the threadworm, known as _Filaria insectorum_,
-that lives in the cavity of the bodies of adult and larval insects,
-could not be accounted for. Shut up within the abdominal cavity
-of caterpillars, grasshoppers, beetles, and other insects, these
-parasites were supposed to originate by spontaneous generation, under
-the influence of wet weather or from decayed food. Helminthologists
-(students of parasitic worms) were obliged to content themselves with
-this explanation, since they were unable to find a better. Those who
-dissected these threadworms and submitted them to a careful inspection,
-could not deny the probability, since it was clear that they contained
-no trace of sexual organs. But on directing my attention to these
-entozoa, I became aware of the fact that they were not true _Filariæ_
-at all, but belonged to a peculiar family of threadworms, embracing
-the genera of _Gordius_ and _Mermis_. Furthermore, I convinced myself
-that these parasites wander away when full-grown, boring their way from
-within through any soft place in the body of their host, and creeping
-out through the opening. These parasites do not emigrate because they
-are uneasy, or because the caterpillar is sickly; but from that same
-internal necessity which constrains the horsefly to leave the stomach
-of the horse where he has been reared, or which moves the gadfly to
-work its way out through the skin of the oxen. The larvæ of both these
-insects creep forth in order to become chrysalises, and thence to
-proceed to their higher and perfect condition. I have demonstrated
-that the perfect, full-grown, but _sexless_ threadworms of insects are
-in like manner moved by their desire to wander out of their previous
-homes, in order to enter upon a new period of their lives, which ends
-in the development of their sex. As they leave the bodies of their
-hosts they fall to the ground, and crawl away into the deeper and
-moister parts of the soil. Threadworms found in the damp earth, in
-digging up gardens and cutting ditches, have often been brought to
-me, which presented no external distinctions from the threadworms of
-insects. This suggested to me that the wandering threadworms of insects
-might instinctively bury themselves in damp ground, and I therefore
-instituted a series of experiments by placing the newly-emigrated worms
-in flower-pots filled with damp earth. To my delight I soon perceived
-that they began to bore with their heads into the earth, and by degrees
-drew themselves entirely in. For many months I kept the earth in the
-flower-pots moderately moist, and on examining the worms from time to
-time I found they had gradually attained their sex-development, and
-eggs were deposited in hundreds. Towards the conclusion of winter I
-could succeed in detecting the commencing development of the embryos in
-these eggs. By the end of spring they were fully formed, and many of
-them having left their shells were to be seen creeping about the earth.
-I now conjectured that these young worms would be impelled by their
-instincts to pursue a parasitic existence, and to seek out an animal
-to inhabit and to grow to maturity in; and it seemed not improbable
-that the brood I had reared would, like their parents, thrive best
-in the caterpillar. In order, therefore, to induce my young brood to
-immigrate, I procured a number of very small caterpillars which the
-first spring sunshine had just called into life. For the purpose of
-my experiment I filled a watch-glass with damp earth, taking it from
-amongst the flower-pots where the threadworms had wintered. Upon
-this I placed several of the young caterpillars.” The result was as
-he expected; the caterpillars were soon bored into by the worms, and
-served them at once as food and home.[30]
-
-Frogs and parasites, worms and infusoria--are these worth the attention
-of a serious man? They have a less imposing appearance than planets
-and asteroids, I admit, but they are nearer to us, and admit of being
-more intimately known; and because they are thus accessible, they
-become more important to us. The life that stirs within us is also
-the life within them. It is for this reason, as I said at the outset,
-that although man’s noblest study must always be man, there are other
-studies less noble, yet not therefore ignoble, which must be pursued,
-even if only with a view to the perfection of the noblest. Many men,
-and those not always the ignorant, whose scorn of what they do not
-understand is always ready, despise the labours which do not obviously
-and directly tend to moral or political advancement. Others there are,
-who, fascinated by the grandeur of Astronomy and Geology, or by the
-immediate practical results of Physics and Chemistry, disregard all
-microscopic research as little better than dilettante curiosity. But
-I cannot think any serious study is without its serious value to the
-human race; and I know that the great problem of Life can never be
-solved while we are in ignorance of its simpler forms. Nor can anything
-be more unwise than the attempt to limit the sphere of human inquiry,
-especially by applying the test of immediate utility. All truths are
-related; and however remote from our daily needs some particular truth
-may seem, the time will surely come when its value will be felt. To
-the majority of our countrymen during the Revolution, when the conduct
-of James seemed of incalculable importance, there would have seemed
-something ludicrously absurd in the assertion that the newly-discovered
-differential calculus was infinitely more important to England and
-to Europe than the fate of all the dynasties; and few things could
-have seemed more remote from any useful end than this product of
-mathematical genius; yet it is now clear to every one that the conduct
-of James was supremely insignificant in comparison with this discovery.
-I do not say that men were unwise to throw themselves body and soul
-into the Revolution; I only say they would have been unwise to condemn
-the researches of mathematicians.
-
-Let all who have a longing to study Nature in any of her manifold
-aspects, do so without regard to the sneers or objections of men whose
-tastes and faculties are directed elsewhere. From the illumination
-of many minds on many points, Truth must finally emerge. Man is, in
-Bacon’s noble phrase, the minister and interpreter of Nature; let him
-be careful lest he suffer this ministry to sink into a priesthood,
-and this interpretation to degenerate into an immovable dogma. The
-suggestions of apathy, and the prejudices of ignorance, have at all
-times inspired the wish to close the temple against new comers. Let us
-be vigilant against such suggestions, and keep the door of the temple
-ever open.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[21] The needful term Biology (from _Bios_, life, and _logos_,
-discourse) is now becoming generally adopted in England, as in Germany.
-It embraces all the separate sciences of Botany, Zoology, Comparative
-Anatomy, and Physiology.
-
-[22] See EHRENBERG: _Microgeologie: das Erden und Felsen schaffende
-Wirken des unsichtbar kleinen selbstständigen Lebens auf der Erde_.
-1854.
-
-[23] CHARLES ROBIN: _Histoire Naturelle des Végétaux Parasites qui
-croissent sur l’Homme et sur les Animaux Vivants_. 1853.
-
-[24] From _cilium_, a hair.
-
-[25] _Quain’s Anatomy._ By SHARPEY AND ELLIS. Sixth edition. I., p.
-lxxiii. See also SHARPEY’S article, _Cilia_, in the _Cyclopædia of
-Anatomy and Physiology_.
-
-[26] GOETHE: _Zur Morphologie_, 1807. VON BAER: _Zur
-Entwickelungsgeschichte_, 1828. Part I., p. 158.
-
-[27] SWAMMERDAMM. _Bibel der Natur_, pp. 75-77.
-
-[28] By VON SIEBOLD. See his interesting work, _Ueber die
-Band-und-Blasenwürmer_. It has been translated by HUXLEY, and appended
-to the translation of KUECHENMEISTER _on Parasites_, published by the
-Sydenham Society.
-
-[29] _Seaside Studies_, pp. 308, _sq._
-
-[30] VON SIEBOLD: _Ueber Band-und-Blasenwürmer_. Translated by HUXLEY.
-
-
-
-
- Father Prout’s Inaugurative Ode
-
- TO THE AUTHOR OF “VANITY FAIR.”
-
-
- I.
-
- Ours is a faster, quicker age:
- Yet erst at GOLDSMITH’S homely Wakefield Vicarage,
- While Lady BLARNEY from the West End glozes
- Mid the PRIMROSES,
- Fudge! cries Squire THORNHILL,
- Much to the wonder of young greenhorn MOSES.
- Such word of scorn ill
- Matches the “Wisdom Fair” thy whim proposes
- To hold on CORNHILL.
-
-
- II.
-
- With Fudge, or Blarney, or the “Thames on Fire!”
- Treat not thy buyer;
- But proffer good material--
- A genuine Cereal,
- Value for twelvepence, and not dear at twenty.
- Such wit replenishes thy Horn of Plenty!
-
-
- III.
-
- Nor wit alone dispense,
- But sense:
- And with thy sparkling Xerez
- Let us have Ceres.
- Of loaf thou hast no lack,
- Nor set, like SHAKESPEARE’S zany, forth,
- With lots of sack,
- Of bread one pennyworth.
-
-
- IV.
-
- Sprightly, and yet sagacious,
- Funny, yet farinaceous,
- Dashing, and yet methodical--
- So may thy periodical,
- On this auspicious morn,
- Exalt its horn,
- Thron’d on the HILL OF CORN!
-
-
- V.
-
- Of aught that smacks of sect, surplice, or synod,
- Be thy grain winnow’d!
- Nor deign to win our laugh
- With empty chaff.
- Shun aught o’er which dullard or bigot gloats;
- Nor seek our siller
- With meal from TITUS OATES
- Or flour of JOSEPH MILLER.
-
-
- VI.
-
- There’s corn in Egypt still
- (Pilgrim from Cairo to Cornhill!)
- Give each his fill.
- But all comers among
- Treat best the young;
- Fill the big brothers’ knapsacks from thy bins,
- But slip the Cup of Love in BENJAMIN’S.
-
-
- VII.
-
- Next as to those
- Who bring their lumbering verse or ponderous prose
- To where good SMITH AND ELDER
- Have so long held their
- Well-garnish’d Cornhill storehouse--
- Bid them not bore us.
- Tell them instead
- To take their load next street, the HALL OF LEAD!
-
-
- VIII.
-
- Only one word besides--
- As he who tanneth hides
- Stocketh with proper implements his tannery:
- So thou, Friend! do not fail
- To store a stout corn flail,
- Ready for use, within thy Cornhill granary.
- Of old there walked abroad,
- Prompt to right wrongs, Caliph HAROUN AL RASHID:
- Deal thus with Fraud,
- Or Job or Humbug--thrash it!
-
-
- IX.
-
- Courage, old Friend! long found
- Firm at thy task, nor in fixt purpose fickle:
- Up! choose thy ground,
- Put forth thy shining sickle;--
- Shun the dense underwood
- Of Dunce or Dunderhood:
- But reap North, South, East, Far West,
- The world-wide Harvest!
-
-
-
-
- Our Volunteers.
-
-
-The French nation has indisputably the most warlike propensities
-of any in the world. Other countries make warlike preparations in
-self-defence, for the maintenance of their own rights and possessions,
-and to prevent any other power, or combination of powers, obtaining a
-position menacing to their safety, or injurious to their liberties.
-Their governments, when there are valid grounds for alarm, instil these
-apprehensions into the minds of the people, who are soon roused to meet
-the threatened danger. But the unremitting pursuit of the French nation
-is military glory: no government of that country can exist without
-ministering to it. France is now armed to the teeth, and ready to do
-battle for any cause--even “for an idea.”
-
-England is the nation which, perhaps sooner than any other, may be
-called upon to check her in the indulgence of this propensity; and this
-country also offers more points against which aggressive operations can
-be carried out. Hence it is natural that the preparations of France
-should be made chiefly with reference to a contest with Great Britain;
-and these preparations have now arrived at such formidable proportions
-that it would be infatuation in us to neglect the means of resistance.
-
-The strongest evidence in support of this hypothesis is to be found
-in the fact that the most extraordinary preparations which have
-been gradually but rapidly made by the French Government, at a vast
-expense--namely, its naval and coast armaments--can be directed against
-no other power but England. It does not necessarily follow that any
-aggressive measures are positively contemplated; but it is not the less
-essential for us to maintain a corresponding force, available not only
-against invasion, should it be attempted, but strong enough to protect
-our commerce by securing the freedom of the seas, and thus preventing
-this country from being reduced to a subordinate power.
-
-British statesmen know and declare, and the nation feels, that it is
-essential to the maintenance of our possessions, our commerce, and our
-influence, that we should have a preponderating naval force. Other
-governments may demur to this, and may even be disposed to dispute the
-point, as France appears to be now preparing to do. It then becomes
-a question of national power and resources. This is an unfortunate
-alternative, but it is one which will not admit of compromise or
-arbitration: _we_ consider an absolute superiority on the seas
-essential to the safety of our shores, the prosperity of our commerce,
-and the security of our colonies; _they_ manifest a determination to
-contest our maritime supremacy, and to create a force which shall give
-them even a preponderating influence.
-
-Let us put the case in what may be deemed the legitimate view,
-repudiating altogether any feeling of national animosity or prejudice.
-Whatever may be the result of the impending struggle for naval
-superiority--which does not altogether depend upon numerical force,
-but may be greatly influenced by the proficiency of either side in
-employing the newly-invented implements and modes of warfare--it
-must be conceded that we cannot expect our superiority will be so
-absolute as to enable us to trust entirely to our “wooden walls,” or to
-defensive armaments afloat: we must have an ample array of land forces
-to protect our homes, if menaced by the vast armies of France, which
-are constantly maintained in a state of full equipment and readiness.
-
-Large armaments maintained during times of peace are repugnant to
-the feelings and good sense of the English nation; and yet if other
-nations, less strongly animated by industrial impulses and the
-principles of political economy, will accumulate immense powers of
-aggression, we must, in self-defence, maintain efficient means of
-resisting them. Patriotic feeling and high spirit in the population,
-even though aided by abundance of arms and ammunition, will not now, as
-in olden times, suffice. Soldiership is become a scientific profession;
-and an apprenticeship to the art of war, with skill and experience in
-every branch of it, are absolutely necessary to oppose with success a
-well-trained and disciplined force.
-
-Our difficulties in the way of self-preservation are materially
-increased by the nature of our institutions and our feelings of
-personal independence. All other great nations in Europe have a
-power of compulsory enlistment; we have not: if we had, our standing
-forces for army and navy might be more moderate,--if we only retained
-efficacious means of rapid organization and equipment. According to
-our system, however, it is so long before we can procure the necessary
-number of men for the war establishment, that our only safety must
-consist in a much greater amount of permanent forces. In short, our
-purse must pay for our pride.
-
-The volunteer system, however, tends, in some degree, to remedy this
-disadvantage, and will become more and more valuable in proportion as
-it shall conform itself gradually to such arrangements as will make our
-volunteers efficient for acting with our regular forces.
-
-The first and prevalent idea from which the volunteer system sprang was
-of a _levée en masse_; that every man animated by British pluck and
-spirit (and they would number hundreds of thousands) should be well
-practised in the use of the rifle, and, in case of invasion, should
-turn out to oppose the enemy, to line the hedges, hang upon the flank
-and rear of the invading force, and cut it to pieces.
-
-That our volunteers, who have nobly come forward spontaneously, without
-any prompting from government, would be ready to devote their lives,
-as they are devoting their time and energies, to the defence of their
-country against invasion, no one who appreciates the English character
-will doubt; but that such a heterogeneous body of men, if opposed to
-a highly-trained and disciplined force of veteran soldiers, would be
-able to repel the attack of an army, is now generally admitted to be a
-fallacy; and it would be doing injustice to the intelligence and good
-sense of Englishmen to blink the truth, which must be obvious to every
-soldier who has had experience of actual warfare.
-
-Bodies of civilians, however courageous and well drilled, would be ill
-calculated to bear the hardships and fatigues of a soldier’s life; nor
-could they be relied upon, even as a matter of numbers: a rainy night
-or two in the open fields, and occasional short supplies of food, would
-thin their ranks prodigiously. It cannot be supposed that men of any
-class or nation, however brave, suddenly leaving comfortable homes and
-in-door pursuits, could endure that exposure and privation which is
-required of soldiers--men selected for their hardy constitutions and
-well-knit frames, and trained to implicit obedience, and habituated to
-act together. Composed of men of different descriptions and habits,
-without military discipline and organization, they would be wanting
-in cohesion and unity of action; or if each man or small party acted
-on individual impulse, their efforts would be unavailing to arrest
-the progress of an army advancing in solid masses, like some vast and
-complex machine animated by life and motion. Panics would be rife
-amongst them, and but few of the bravest even would stand when they
-heard the action gaining on their flanks and rear. Moreover, no general
-would know how to deal with numbers of them under his command, for fear
-of his dispositions being deranged by their proceedings; nor could
-any commissariat or other department be prepared to provide for so
-uncertain and fluctuating a body.
-
-A confidence in the efficiency of an armed population to resist
-the invasion of their country by regular armies has been created
-by reference to history; and the examples of the United States, of
-the Tyrol, of Spain, and others, have been triumphantly quoted; but
-an investigation into the circumstances of each case will show how
-greatly they all differ from such circumstances as would attend an
-attack upon England. In the cases cited, either the country was wild
-and mountainous, without communications and resources, the invading
-army small, or the contest greatly prolonged: rarely, if ever, has
-the invader been thoroughly checked _in his first progress_; but when
-forced to break into detachments and to act in small bodies, he has, by
-a spirited and energetic population, been harassed beyond his strength,
-and thus _eventually_ forced to abandon the attempt.
-
-It being evident, then, that a mere rising in mass of the population
-would be unavailing, and even mischievous, leading to a lamentable
-waste of life, and encouraging the invaders in proportion as the
-defenders were discomfited, we have now to consider the best means of
-utilizing the present volunteer movement, which assumes for its basis
-some degree of organization and training.
-
-Government prudently abstained from any interference with the movement,
-or from involving itself in any undertaking to organize the volunteers;
-for that would have led, not only to great and indefinite expenses, but
-to the abstracting of available resources from the established forces
-of the country, and also to other inconveniences, without, as yet, any
-reliable and adequate advantages in prospect. The movement being thus
-left to its own impulses, a large number of gentlemen, and others in
-sufficiently easy circumstances, determined to enrol themselves, in
-different localities, into self-supporting corps of riflemen. Their
-determination was most spirited and praiseworthy, and government,
-without pledging itself to any fixed or great amount of support, now
-affords, in many ways, aid and direction to the movement, without too
-minute an interference in its essentially voluntary arrangements.
-
-Thus we have already many thousands of stout hearts, constituting
-an _impromptu_ armed force, at little cost to government, advancing
-in organization and exercises, having arms and accoutrements, and
-above all, making preparation for thoroughly practising with the
-rifle--their strongest desire being to become first-rate shots. Here
-is a mass of most superb material; but we would earnestly impress
-upon the volunteers, and upon the country, not to rely too much upon
-stout hearts and good shots: much else is needful. It is quite a
-mistake to suppose that mere perfection in firing at a mark will make
-a good rifleman for the field. Volunteers, to be efficient in action,
-must form a component part of an army. Every part of an army in the
-field must be well in hand of the generals in command--light infantry
-and riflemen must be equal to all movements, in compact as well as
-dispersed order, and in the several combinations of the two. By this
-alone will they be really formidable, and by this alone will they
-acquire a confidence and steadiness which mere innate courage can never
-give.
-
-In order to act as riflemen and light infantry conjointly with
-regular troops, volunteers will require the highest possible training
-as soldiers. Ordinary infantry are put together and kept together,
-and--unlike those who must act more independently and with greater
-skill--are always under the eye and hand of the officer who directs
-the movement. In the confusion of action, and amidst inequalities of
-ground and varying circumstances, light troops are very much at a loss,
-until, by practice, they acquire a steadiness which is the result of a
-thorough knowledge of the business and of active exercise in it. By the
-term “acting as light infantry and riflemen” is not meant a system of
-irregular or guerilla warfare, for which it may be readily conceived
-that a volunteer force of citizens is entirely unfit.
-
-It is to be hoped that our volunteers will not listen to their
-flatterers who would persuade them that they will make efficient
-irregulars. No one who considers the composition of these bodies, and
-the habits and pursuits of the classes from which they spring, can
-seriously suppose that they would make anything of the kind. Neither
-the nature of this country, nor the occupations of its inhabitants,
-are favourable for an irregular system of warfare; nor would the rapid
-field operations consequent upon an invasion afford much opportunity
-for bringing irregular forces into play, even if we possessed the best
-in the world.
-
-In opposition to these views, it will be said that the universal
-employment of the rifle has effected a revolution in warfare, and that
-our riflemen, sheltered at a distance behind hedges and trees, would
-annihilate the enemy’s artillery and paralyze his operations. To this
-it may be answered that the enemy will employ riflemen for the same
-purpose, who will cover his artillery and produce an equal effect
-upon our own; that new systems of warfare are met with new systems of
-tactics, and that the advantage is always left with the highest-trained
-troops. In whatever order numbers of men may be brought into action,
-success will always attend that party which, _cæteris paribus_, brings
-the greatest number to bear upon a given point; and this can be
-effected only by the organization and discipline of regular troops.
-
-Let us hope, then, that the volunteers will earnestly practise
-those more complicated exercises which render light infantry the
-highest-trained body in an army. For this purpose they should, after
-being pretty well grounded in their business, give themselves up for a
-few weeks’ consecutive service at one of the great camps; this would
-give them a much better insight into the nature of the service, by
-which men of their intelligence would greatly profit. It is probable
-that many individuals in each corps would not be able to attend for
-such a long period; still, if there were a large party present, a tone
-of information on the real duties of a campaign would be instilled into
-the body as a whole, which would be most serviceable.
-
-Another advantage which would attend this occasional service of the
-volunteers at the camps would consist in their gradually habituating
-themselves to long marches, and to carrying a knapsack; both of which
-are matters of deep importance for rendering efficient service in the
-field: for, as Marshal Saxe truly remarks, the success of an army
-depends more upon the judicious use made of the legs than of the arms
-of the soldiers.
-
-Apprehensions have been entertained that our volunteers, composed,
-as they will be, of men accustomed to the comforts and conveniences
-of life, would, however animated by daring for fight, be disgusted
-not merely with the hardships, but (as compared with their usual
-habits) the indignities of a common soldier’s life, such as the hard
-fare, the necessary but menial occupations of cooking, the care and
-cleaning of their clothes and arms, and the discomfort of being
-huddled together in masses in tents, or houses, if they have the good
-fortune to obtain either. But they will, it is to be hoped, have well
-considered that such disagreeables are inevitable, and have made up
-their minds to bear with what will be, probably, the hardest task for
-them; considering, also, that it would hardly be for any long duration.
-They will recollect that on many parts of the Continent, young men
-of the easiest circumstances, and of rank and station in society,
-serve an apprenticeship in the regular army as privates, and submit
-to many of the discomforts of a private soldier’s life, even without
-the excitement of a state of warfare. There is more danger of the
-volunteers failing through want of physical hardihood to endure the
-fatigue of long marches, exposure to the weather, and the casualties
-of service in the field; and, therefore, preparatory service in a camp
-would be needful, not only to make them good soldiers, but to test
-their powers of endurance: for it should be borne in mind that a
-robust frame and strong constitution are essential to the efficiency
-of the soldier; and wanting these physical requisites, the best shot
-would soon become incapacitated, and consequently an incumbrance to the
-service.
-
-In some districts, the subscriptions raised for the general expenses
-of the volunteer corps are allowed to extend to aid the equipment of
-men of insufficient means to provide for themselves. This will have a
-most beneficial effect; for such men will mostly be of a hardy class
-and accustomed to muscular activity or out-door occupations; they will
-be selected because they possess the proper qualifications; and many of
-them subsequently, with all their military acquirements, may join the
-established army. In proportion as this system shall be extended, will
-the advantages resulting from the volunteer system be increased.
-
-Another very beneficial effect might be produced--and will probably
-arise out of the spirit of the rifle corps--in the establishment of
-rifle clubs for the practice of rifle-shooting as a recreation, with
-other out-door sports and games; more especially if these can be
-encouraged, so as to become general among that class of young men from
-which recruits are obtained for the army. Whatever may have been said
-against too much faith being placed in good marksmen, as the _only_
-essential attribute for our defenders, most indisputably that army
-which, equally well regulated in other points, shall be much superior
-generally in the art of rifle-shooting, will have an enormous advantage
-over its opponent; and even in a greater degree than is usually
-supposed.
-
-There is one class of volunteers, the formation of which will be
-attended with unexceptionable advantages; and that is localized bodies
-on the coast for service near their own homes. These may be either
-artillery or infantry, or better still, both combined: that is,
-infantry accustomed to exercise in the service of guns in battery. They
-will be always at their homes, and at their habitual occupations, till
-the period of action shall arrive; and a very few hours of occasional
-evening exercise will be sufficient, particularly during peace time,
-to afford a basis of organization for bodies which may be then rapidly
-made very efficient during war. As their service will be chiefly
-in batteries, or in fortified posts--or if in the open field, only
-in greatly superior numbers, and within confined limits, to oppose
-desultory landings--they will not need the field equipment, nor that
-refined knowledge and practice so necessary in every part of an army
-in a campaign. Their dress may be of a plain description, such as an
-artisan’s or gamekeeper’s jacket, and a foraging cap, which, though of
-some uniform pattern, may be suitable for ordinary wear. By such means,
-our coasts may be powerfully protected from any but very formidable
-efforts against them, at the smallest expense and waste of resources;
-and at the same time, these bodies will supply the place of regular
-troops, for which they will form an efficient substitute.
-
-In advocating the expediency of rendering the volunteer system
-attractive among the labouring classes, as, generally speaking, the
-most robust and hardy portion of the population, we must not be
-considered as implying any doubt of their thorough good feeling in the
-cause; it is absolutely necessary to stimulate, by some substantial
-recompence or boon, the exertions of those who are living, as it were,
-from hand to mouth, and on the smallest means. The inducement may be
-very moderate; still it should be such as to make the service in some
-degree popular and advantageous, and cause men who may be rejected or
-discharged to feel it as a punishment or misfortune.
-
-Whatever may be said in the way of general considerations affecting
-the volunteer system, will admit of exceptions. Thus many of the
-difficulties in the way of the efficiency of volunteer corps for
-service in the field will be greatly lessened in the case of those
-which may be chiefly composed of young men of active habits, and not
-yet settled in life: such as university corps, who would, without
-doubt, display a degree of hardihood, spirit, and intelligence not
-to be surpassed by any troops. And so with regard to the local
-bodies. Such corps as the dockyard volunteers, at all those great
-establishments, public and private, should be replaced on an improved
-system;--a system which should avoid expense and encroachment on a
-valuable part of their time, which were the failings of their original
-organization, and occasioned their being broken up.
-
-The noble spirit which originated the volunteer movement is one of
-which the nation may justly feel proud; it exhibits and fosters a
-patriotic and military spirit in the country, which will render us more
-fit than any other people to cope with a powerful enemy. The moral
-effect of this national movement will influence other countries; it
-will dissipate the erroneous idea that the English are only a trading,
-and not a warlike people, and make them more cautious of attacking us.
-
-In actual service, the volunteers will be valuable behind works; thus
-releasing a corresponding number of the regular troops from garrison
-service: but it cannot be too strongly impressed upon them, that
-unless they will submit to the necessary training as soldiers, and are
-complete in organization as infantry, no general in the world will have
-any confidence in them as a field force. The occasional embodiment
-of our volunteers at some of the great camps, as before recommended,
-would appear the most available means of training them for general
-service. It would also have another good effect, by demonstrating
-to many who are now carried away by their enthusiasm, how far they
-may be really calculated or prepared for the necessary trials and
-sacrifices incidental upon taking the field in the emergency. It will
-then be perceived by many that their age, want of physical stamina, or
-inability to dispense with habitual comforts which may be absolutely
-necessary to them, would render them totally unequal to the task they
-would willingly undertake. It would be far better that these should be
-weeded from the field corps of volunteers, and not remain to give a
-false appearance of their strength for actual service.
-
-Lastly, there may be some who, on reflection, must be aware that
-certain family ties, or private concerns, may imperatively forbid their
-joining the service at the last moment, and it would be far better
-that they should withdraw betimes from the engagement. For it should
-be borne in mind that these bodies are _volunteers_, in the strictest
-sense of the term; their presence or continuance in the field cannot
-be constrained. The effort to bear all the trials and hardships of a
-campaign requires a patience and endurance which will yield, even where
-there is thorough ardour in the cause, and great personal courage,
-unless supported by physical strength. The Volunteer Corps is a
-service in which the country must trust entirely to the honour of the
-individuals composing it; and certainly, those who shall stand the test
-will be peculiarly entitled to the gratitude of the nation.
-
-But while deprecating the employment in the field of any volunteers who
-are not hardy and trained soldiers, or who have households to protect
-and business to attend to, we must not be supposed to recommend the
-withdrawal from the ranks of all who are not available for actual
-service with regular troops: far from it. There is not a man who has
-been drilled as a volunteer but may be serviceable to the community in
-a variety of ways at home, by supplying the place of regular soldiers
-in mounting guard as sentries, acting as “orderlies” for transmitting
-orders between the government officers and head-quarters, as assistants
-in the hospital service, as extra clerks in the commissariat and other
-departments, and in serving as a military police. Indeed good service
-might be rendered to the country by gentlemen of character, ability,
-and intelligence, sufficiently _au fait_ to the business of a soldier
-to execute with military precision and promptitude such duties as would
-not involve any greater amount of fatigue and exposure than a man of
-average health and strength could sustain without injury: they would
-form a bodyguard, composed of fathers of families and the younger
-and less robust of the volunteers, for the protection of their homes
-and maintaining the peace of cities and towns; and competent to fill
-offices of trust in connection with the military and civil authorities.
-The country would thus derive the full benefit of the services of every
-volunteer in the kingdom; and no man who had entered the ranks but
-would have the satisfaction of knowing that he was serving his Queen
-and Country in the most effective way.
-
-
-
-
- A Man of Letters of the Last Generation.
-
-
-There are fashions in books, as there are in the cut of clothes, or
-the building of houses; and if from the great library of our race we
-take down the representative volumes, we shall find that successive
-ages differ almost as much as the several countries of the world. The
-one half of the century scarcely knows what the other half has done,
-save through its lasting works, among which books alone possess the
-gift of speech. Yet the guild of literature properly knows no bounds
-of space or time. If the tricks of craft like those of society belong
-to the passing day, literature has been, beyond all other human
-influences, enduring and continuous in the main current of its spirit;
-and each period has been the stronger if it has recognized so much
-of its possessions as was inherited from its predecessor, including
-the power to conquer more. A powerful sense of brotherhood clings to
-all the veritable members of the fraternity, whose highest diploma is
-posthumous; and we cannot see the lingering representatives of a past
-day depart, without feeling that one of the great family has gone. A
-writer whom we have lost in the year just closed peculiarly associated
-past and present, by his own hopeful work for “progress” towards the
-future, and his affectionate lingering with the past, and above all by
-the strong personal feeling which he brought to his work. LEIGH HUNT
-belonged essentially to the earlier portion of the nineteenth century;
-but, born in the year when Samuel Johnson died, living among the old
-poets, and labouring to draw forth the spirit which the first half has
-breathed into the latter half of the century, he may be said to have
-been one of those true servitors of the library who unite all ages with
-the one we live in. The representative man of a school gone by, in his
-history we read the introduction to our own.
-
-Isaac, the father of Leigh Hunt, was the descendant of one of the
-oldest settlers in luxurious Barbadoes. He was sent to develop better
-fortunes by studying at college in Philadelphia, where he _un_settled
-in life; for, having obtained some repute as an advocate, and married
-the daughter of the stern merchant, Stephen Shewell, against her
-father’s pleasure, Isaac contumaciously opposed the sovereign people
-by espousing the side of royalty, and fled with broken fortunes to
-England. Here he found not much royal gratitude, much popularity
-as a preacher in holy orders--taken as a refuge from want,--but no
-preferment. With tutorships, and help from relatives, he managed to
-rub on; he sent Leigh, the first of his sons born in England, to the
-school of Christ Hospital, and he lived long enough to see him an
-established writer. Isaac was a man rather under than above the middle
-stature, fair in complexion, smoothly handsome, so engaging in address
-as to be readily and undeservedly suspected of insincerity, and in most
-things utterly unlike his son. His wife, Mary Shewell, a tall, slender
-woman, with Quaker breeding, a dark thoughtful complexion, a heart
-tender beyond the wont of the world, and a conscience tenderer still,
-contributed more than the father to mould the habits and feelings of
-the son. School and books did the rest. His earlier days, save during
-the long semi-monastic confinement of the Blue-coat School, were passed
-in uncertain alternations between the care-stricken home and the more
-luxurious houses of wealthier relatives and friends. In his time
-Christ Hospital was the very nursery for a scholarly scholar. It was
-divided into the commercial, the nautical, and the grammar schools;
-in all, the scholars had hard fare, and much church service; and in
-the grammar school plenty of Greek and Latin. Leigh’s antecedents and
-school training destined him for the church; a habit of stammering,
-which disappeared as he grew up, was among the adverse accidents
-which reserved him for the vocation to which he was born--Literature.
-But before he left the unsettled roof of his parents, the youth had
-been to other schools besides Christ Hospital. His father had been
-a royalist flying from infuriated republicans, and doomed to learn
-in the metropolitan country the common mistrust of kings. He left
-America a lawyer, to become a clergyman here; and entered the pulpit a
-Church of England-man, to become, after the mild example of his wife,
-a Universalist. Born after his mother had suffered from the terrors
-of the revolution, and a severe attack of jaundice, Leigh inherited
-an anxious, speculative temperament; to be the sport of unimaginative
-brothers, who terrified him by personating the hideous “Mantichora,”
-about which he had tremblingly read and talked, and of schoolfellows,
-with their ghostly traditions and rough, summary, practical satire. He
-had been made acquainted with poverty, yet familiarized to the sight
-of ease and refined luxury. His father, if “socially” inclined, yet
-read eloquently and critically; his mother read earnestly, piously,
-and charitably; reading was the business of his school, reading was
-his recreation; and at the age of fifteen, he threw off his blue coat,
-a tall stripling, with West Indian blood, a Quaker conscience, and a
-fancy excited rather than disciplined by his scholastic studies, to put
-on the lax costume of the day, and be tried in the dubious ordeal of
-its laxer customs.
-
-His severest trial arose from the vanities, rather than the vices to
-which such a youth would be exposed. He had already been sufficiently
-“in love,”--now with the anonymous sister of a schoolfellow, next
-with his fair cousin Fanny, then with the enchanting Almeria,--to be
-shielded from the worst seductions that can beset a youth; and he was
-early engaged to the lady whom he married in 1809. But the vanities
-beset him in a shape of unwonted power. The stripling, whose essays
-the terrible Boyer, of the Blue-coat School, had crumpled up, became
-the popular young author of published poems, and not much later the
-stern critic of the _News_, whose castigations made actors wince and
-playwrights launch prologues at him. Thenceforward the vicissitudes
-of his life, save in the inevitable vicissitudes of mortality,
-were professional rather than personal; though he always threw his
-personality into his profession. He tried a clerkship under his brother
-Stephen, an attorney; and a clerkship in the War Office, under the
-patronage of the dignified Mr. Addington; but finally he left the
-desk, legal or official, for the desk literary, to devote himself
-to the _Examiner_, set up in 1808 with his brother John. He went to
-prison for two years in 1813, rather than forfeit his consistency as
-a political writer. It was as a vindicator of liberal principles in
-politics, sociology (word then unused), and art, that he attracted the
-friendship of Byron and Shelley; it was to accomplish the literary
-speculation of the _Liberal_ that he set out for Italy in 1821; it was
-to study Italy and the Italians, with a view to “improve” that and
-other “subjects,” that he stopped in Italy till the autumn of 1825.
-He returned to England to try his fortune with books in prose and
-verse, in periodicals of his own or others’; and it was in the midst
-of unrelinquished work that he placidly laid himself down to sleep
-in August, 1859,--his last words of anxiety being for Italy and her
-enlarging hopes, his latest breath uttering inquiries and messages
-of affection. This is essentially a literary life; but it is given
-to a literature in which there _is_ life,--for Leigh Hunt, although
-he dwelled and passed his days in the library, was no “book-worm,”
-divorced from human existence, its natural instincts and affections.
-On the contrary, he carried into his study a large heart and a strong
-pulse; to him the books spoke in the voice of his fellow-men, audible
-from the earliest ages, and he loved to be followed into his retreat by
-friends from the outer world.
-
-Leigh Hunt certainly was not driven to this little-broken retirement
-by the want of qualities which are attractive in society, or by
-the tastes that render society attractive; but under the force of
-remarkable contradictions in his character, he was often fain to
-waive what he desired and could easily have--“letting _I would not_
-wait upon _I may_,” with an apparent caprice most exasperating to the
-bystander. He professed readiness for “whatever is going forward,”
-seemed eager to meet any approaching pleasure; and then hung back with
-a coy, reluctant, anxious delay, that forbore its own satisfaction
-altogether. Probably this apparent contradiction may be traced to his
-origin and nurture. According to all evidence respecting his immediate
-progenitors, he was little of a Hunt, save in his gaiety and avowed
-love of “the pleasurable.” His natural energy, which showed itself in
-a robust frame, a powerful voice, a great capacity for endurance, and
-a strong will, seems to have been inherited from Stephen Shewell, the
-stern, headstrong, and implacable. From the Bickleys, possibly--the
-gallant Knight Banneret of King William’s Irish wars will pardon
-the doubt--his mother transmitted her own material tendency to an
-over-conscientious, reflective, hesitating temperament, which drew
-back from any action not manifestly and imperatively dictated by duty.
-The son showed all these contradictory traits even in his aspect and
-bearing.
-
-He was tall rather than otherwise,--five feet ten inches and a half
-when measured for the St. James’s Volunteers; though, in common with
-men whose length is in the body rather than the legs, his height
-diminished as he advanced in life. He was remarkably straight and
-upright in his carriage, with a short, firm step, and a cheerful,
-almost dashing approach,--smiling, breathing, and making his voice
-heard in little inarticulate ejaculations as he met a friend, in an
-irrepressible satisfaction at the encounter that not unfrequently
-conveyed high gratification to the arriver who was thus greeted. He
-had straight black hair, which he wore parted in the centre; a dark
-but not pale complexion; features compounded between length and a
-certain irregularity of outline, characteristic of the American mould;
-black eyebrows, firmly marking the edge of a brow, over which was a
-singularly upright, flat, white forehead, and under which beamed a pair
-of eyes dark, brilliant, reflecting, gay, and kind, with a certain
-look of observant humour, that suggested an idea of what is called
-slyness when it is applied to children or girls; for he had _not_ the
-aspect given to him in one of his portraits, of which he said that “the
-fellow looked as if he had stolen a tankard.” He had a head massive
-and tall, and larger than most men’s,--Byron, Shelley, and Keats wore
-hats which he could not put on; but it was not out of proportion to the
-figure, its outlines being peculiarly smooth and devoid of “bumps.” His
-upper lip was long, his mouth large and hard in the flesh; his chin
-retreating and gentle like a woman’s. His sloping shoulders, not very
-wide, almost concealed the ample proportions of his chest; though that
-was of a compass which not every pair of arms could span. He looked
-like a man cut out for action,--a soldier; but he shrank from physical
-contest, telling you that his sight was short, and that he was “timid.”
-We shall understand that mistaken candour better when we have examined
-his character a little further. Yet he did shrink from using his
-vigorous faculties, even in many ways. Nature had gifted him with an
-intense dramatic perception, an exquisite ear for music, and a voice of
-extraordinary compass, power, flexibility, and beauty. It extended from
-the C below the line to the F sharp above: there were no “passages”
-that he could not execute; the quality was sweet, clear, and ringing:
-he would equally have sung the music of _Don Giovanni_ or _Sarastro_,
-of _Oroveso_ or _Maometto Secondo_. Yet nature had not endowed him with
-some of the qualities needed for the practical musician,--he had no
-aptitude for mechanical contrivance, but faint enjoyment of power for
-its own sake. He dabbled on the pianoforte; delighted to repeat airs
-pleasing or plaintive; and if he would occasionally fling himself into
-the audacious revels of _Don Giovanni_, he preferred to be _Lindoro_ or
-_Don Ottavio_; and still more, by the help of his falsetto, to dally
-with the tender treble of the _Countess_ in _Figaro_, or _Polly_ in
-_Beggars’ Opera_. This waiving of the potential, this preference for
-the lightsome and tender, ran through all his character,--save when
-duty bade him draw upon his sterner resources; and then out came the
-inflexibility of the Shewell and the unyielding determination of the
-Hunts. But as soon as the occasion passed, the manner passed with it;
-and the man whose solemn, clear-voiced indignation had made the very
-floor and walls vibrate was seen tenderly and blandly extenuating the
-error of his persecutor and gaily confessing to a community of mistake.
-
-While he was yet at school, Hunt was pronounced by one of his
-schoolfellows a “fool for refining”--that is, one who was a fool
-in his judgment through a hair-splitting anxiety to be precise. A
-boy all his life, this leading foible of his boyhood attended him
-throughout. He has been likened to Hamlet,--only it was a Hamlet who
-was not a prince, but a hard-working man. The defect was increased
-in Leigh Hunt, as it evidently was in the prince, by a certain
-imperfection in understanding, appreciating, or thoroughly mastering
-the material, tangible, physical part of nature. This, again, is
-inconsistent with his own account of himself, but it will be confirmed
-by a close critical scrutiny of his writings. Over-sensitive, he was
-exquisitely conscious of such physical perceptions as he had. He was
-passionately fond of music, which he took to as we have seen. He was
-keenly impressed by painting and by colours,--which he defined with
-uncertainty, unless they were, what he liked them to be, very intense.
-He revelled in the aspect of the country,--but needed literary, poetic,
-or personal association, or habit, to help the appreciation of the
-landscape. His animation, his striking appearance, his manly voice,
-its sweetness and flexibility, the exhaustless fancy to which it gave
-utterance, his almost breathlessly tender manner in saying tender
-things, his eyes deep, bright, and genial, with a dash of cunning, his
-delicate yet emphatic homage,--all made him a “dangerous” man among
-women;--and he shrank back from the danger, the quickest to take alarm;
-confessing that “to err is human,” as if he _had_ erred in any but the
-most theoretical or imaginative sense! Remind him of his practical
-virtue, and, to disprove your too favourable construction, he would
-give you a sermon on the sins of the fancy, hallowed by quotations
-from the Bible--of which he was as much master as any clergyman--and
-illustrated by endless quotations from the poets in all languages, with
-innumerable biographical anecdotes of the said poets, to prove the
-fearful peril of the first step; and _also_ to prove that, though men,
-they were not bad men;--that it is not for us to cast the first stone,
-and that, probably, if they had been different, their poetry would have
-suffered, to the grievous loss of the library and mankind.
-
-He inculcated the study of minor pleasures with so much industry,
-that his writings have caused him to be taken for a minor voluptuary.
-His special apparatus for the luxury consisted in some old cloak to
-put about his shoulders when cold--which he allowed to slip off while
-reading or writing; in a fire--“to toast his feet”--which he let out
-many times in the day, with as many apologies to the servant for the
-trouble; and in a bill of fare, which he preposterously restricted
-for a fancied delicacy of stomach, and a fancied poison in everything
-agreeable, and which he could scarcely taste for a natural dulness of
-palate. Unable to perceive the smell of flowers, he habitually strove
-to imagine it. The Epicurean in theory was something like a Stoic in
-practice; and he would break off an “article” on the pleasures of
-feasting to ease his hunger, literally, with a supper of bread; turning
-round to enjoy by proxy, on report, the daintier food which he had
-provided for others. Eyeing the meat in another’s plate, he would quote
-Peter Pindar--
-
- “On my life, I could turn glutton,
- On such pretty-looking mutton;”
-
-but would still, with the relish of Lazarillo de Tormes, stick to his
-own “staff of life,” and quaff his water, jovially repeating after
-Armstrong, “Nought like the simple element dilutes.”
-
-Now, most excellent reader, are you in something of a condition to
-understand the man’s account of his own failings--his “improvidence”
-and his “timidity.” He had no grasp of things material; but
-exaggerating his own defects, he so hesitated at any arithmetical
-effort, that he could scarcely count. He has been seen unable to find
-3_s._ 6_d._ in a drawer full of half-crowns and shillings, since he
-could not see the “sixpence.” Hence his stewardship was all performed
-by others. He laboured enormously,--making fresh work out of everything
-he did; for he would not mention anything, however parenthetically,
-without “verifying” it. Hence it is true that he had scarcely time
-for stewardship, unless he had neglected his work and wages as a
-master-workman. He saw nothing until it had presented itself to him in
-a sort of literary, theoretical aspect, and hence endowed his friends,
-all round, with fictitious characters founded on fact. One was the
-thrifty housewife, another the steady man of business, a third the
-poetic enthusiast--and so on. And he _acted_ on these estimates, until
-sometimes he found out his mistake, and confessed that he “had been
-deceived.” The discovery was sometimes as imaginary as the original
-estimate, and friends, whose sterling qualities he could not overrate,
-have seen him, for the discovery of his mistake in regard to some
-fancied grace, avert his eye in cold “disappointment.” He made the
-same supposititious discoveries and estimates with himself. His mother
-had the jaundice before he was born; he had unquestionably a tendency
-to bilious affections; in the Greek poet’s account of Hercules and
-the Serpents, the more timid, because mortal, child, who is aghast at
-the horrid visitors sent by the relentless Juno, is called, as Leigh
-Hunt translated the oft-repeated quotation, “the extremely bilious
-Iphiclus;” and being bilious, Leigh Hunt set himself down as “timid.”
-He had probably felt his heart beat at the approach of danger, been
-startled by a sudden noise, or hesitated “to snuff a candle with his
-fingers,” which Charles the Fifth said would make any man know fear.
-Yet he had braved persecution in the refusal to fag at school; was an
-undaunted though not skilful rider; a swimmer not unacquainted with
-drowning risks; undismayed, except for others, when passing the roaring
-torrent at the broad ford,--when braving shipwreck in the British
-Channel, or the thunder-hurricane in the Mediterranean; he instantly
-confronted the rustic boors who challenged him on the Thames, or in the
-Apennines, and stood unmoved to face the sentence of a criminal court,
-though the sentence was to be the punishment he most dreaded--the
-prison.
-
-Such was the character of the man who came from school to be the
-critic, first of the drama, then of literature and politics; and then
-to be a workman in the schools where he had criticized. He brought to
-his labours great powers, often left latent, and used only in their
-superficial action; a defective perception of the tangible part of
-the subject; an imagination active, but overrating its own share
-in the business; an impulsive will, checked by an over-scrupulous,
-over-conscientious habit of “refining;” a nice taste, and an
-overwhelming sympathy with every form and aspect of human enjoyment,
-suffering, or aspiration. His public conduct, his devotion to “truth,”
-whether in politics or art, won him admiration and illustrious
-friendships. In a society of many severed circles he formed one centre,
-around which were gathered Lamb, Ollier, Barnes, Mitchell, Shelley,
-Keats, Byron, Hazlitt, Blanchard, Forster, Carlyle, and many more,
-departed or still living; some of them centres of circles in which
-Leigh Hunt was a wanderer, but all of them, in one degree or other,
-attesting their substantial value for his character. They influenced
-him, he influenced them, and through them the literature and politics
-of the century, more largely, perhaps, than any one of them alone. Let
-us see, then, what it was that he did.
-
-Even in the _News_ of 1805, when he was barely of age, and when he
-wrote with the dashing confidence of a youth wielding the combined
-ideas of Sam Johnson and Voltaire, the “damned boy,” as Kemble called
-him, established a repute for cultivation, consistency, taste, and
-independence; and he originated a style of contemporary criticism
-unknown to the newspaper press. In other words, he brought the
-standards of criticism which had before been confined to the lecture
-of academies or the library, into the daily literature which aids in
-shaping men’s judgments as they rise.
-
-We have seen how, under a name borrowed from the Tory party, the
-_Examiner_ was established, with little premeditation, a literary
-ambition, and the hope of realizing a modest wage for the work done. It
-found literature, poetry especially, sunk to the feeblest, tamest, and
-most artificial of graces,--the reaction upon the long-felt influence
-left by the debauchery of the Stuarts and the vulgarer coarseness
-of the early Georges. It found English monarchs and statesmen again
-forgetting the great lessons of the British constitution, with the
-press slavishly acquiescing. In 1808, an Irish Major had a “case”
-against the Horse Guards, of most corrupt and illicit favouritism:
-the _Examiner_ published the case, and sustained it. In 1809, a
-change of ministry was announced: the _Examiner_ hailed “the crowd of
-blessings that might be involved in such a change;” adding, “Of all
-monarchs, indeed, since the Revolution, the successor of George the
-Third will have the finest opportunity of becoming nobly popular.”
-In 1812, on St. Patrick’s day, a loyal band of guests significantly
-abstained from paying the usual courtesy to the toast of the Prince
-Regent, and coughed down Mr. Sheridan, who tried to speak up for his
-royal and forgetful friend. A writer in a morning paper supplied the
-omitted homage in a poem more ludicrous for its wretched verse than
-for the fulsome strain in which it called the Prince the “Protector
-of the Arts,” the “Mæcenas of the Age,” the “Glory of the People,” a
-“Great Prince,” attended by Pleasure, Honour, Virtue, Truth, and other
-illustrious vassals. The _Examiner_ showed up this folly by simply
-turning it into English, and in plain language describing the position
-and popular estimate of the Prince. For all these various acts the
-_Examiner_ was prosecuted, with various fortunes; but in the last case
-it was fined 1,000_l._, and its editor and publisher, the brothers
-Leigh and John Hunt, were sentenced to two years’ imprisonment. The
-_Examiner_ was no extravagant or violent paper; its writing was pretty
-nearly of the standard that would be required now for style, tone,
-and sentiment; but what would now be a matter of course in cultivated
-style, elevated tone, and independent sentiment, was then supposed to
-be not open to writers unprotected by privilege of Parliament. Not that
-the paper stood alone. Other writers, both in town and country, vied
-with it in independence; it excelled chiefly, perhaps, in the literary
-finish which Leigh Hunt imparted to journalism; but it was the more
-conspicuous for that finish. Its boldness won it high esteem. Offers
-came from “distinguished” quarters, on the one side, to bribe its
-silence for the Royal Horse Guards and its peccadilloes; on the other,
-to supply the proprietors with subscription, support, and retaliatory
-evidence. The _Examiner_ equally declined all encroachments on its
-complete independence, which was carried to a pitch of exclusiveness.
-This conduct told. The journal was thought dangerous to the régime--it
-was prosecuted, and its success was only the greater. The Court ceased
-to be what it had been, and the political system changed: the press of
-England became generally what the _Examiner_ was.
-
-The _Reflector_ was a quarterly journal, based on the _Examiner_ and
-its corps. Its more literary portion in its turn laid the basis for
-the _Indicator_, in which Leigh Hunt designed, with due deference,
-to revive the essays of the old _Spectator_ and _Tatler_. The grand
-distinction was, that in lieu of mere literary recreation, like the
-illustrious work of Addison, Steele, and Swift, it more directly
-proposed to _indicate_ the sources of pleasurable association and
-æsthetical improvement. In the _Reflector_, the _Indicator_, _Tatler_,
-and subsequent works of the same class, Leigh Hunt was assisted by
-Lamb, Barnes [afterwards editor of the _Times_], Aikin, Mitchell
-[Aristophanes], Keats, Shelley, Hazlitt, and Egerton Webbe,--the
-last cut short in a career rendered certain by his accomplishments,
-his music, his wit, and his extraordinary command of language as an
-instrument of thought. As in Robin Hood’s band, each man could beat
-his master at some one art, or perhaps more; but none excelled him
-in telling short stories, with a simplicity, a pathos, and a force
-that had their prototype less in the tales of Steele and Addison,
-than in the romantic poets of Italy. Few essayists have equalled,
-or approached, Leigh Hunt in the combined versatility, invention,
-and finish of his miscellaneous prose writings; and few, indeed,
-have brought such varied sympathies to call forth the sympathies
-of the reader--and always to good purpose,--in favour of kindness,
-of reflection, of natural pleasures, of culture, and of using the
-available resources of life. He used to boast that the _Indicator_ laid
-the foundation for the “two-penny trash” which assumed a more practical
-and widely popular form under Charles Knight’s enterprise. It has had
-a host of imitators, but is still special, and keeps its place in the
-library.
-
-Of his one novel, _Sir Ralph Esher_, suffice it to say, that he had
-desired to make it a sort of historical literary essay,--a species of
-unconcealed forgery, after the manner of a more cultivated and critical
-Pepys; and that the bookseller persuaded him to make it a novel:--of
-his dramatic works,--although he had an ambition to be counted among
-British dramatists, and had a discriminating dramatic taste,--that
-he combined, with the imperfect grasp of the tangible, a positive
-indifference to dramatic literature. The dramatic work which is reputed
-to be the most interesting of his compositions in this style, the
-_Prince’s Marriage_, is still unacted and unpublished.
-
-But in regard to the veritable British Parnassus, he had solid work
-to do, and he did it. Poetry amongst us had sunk to the lowest grade.
-Leigh Hunt found the mild Hayley, and the mechanical Darwin, occupying
-the field, Pope the accredited model, and he revolted against the
-copybook versification, the complacent subserviency and mean moralities
-of the muse in possession. He had read earnestly and extensively in
-the classics, ancient and English; he carried with him to prison the
-_Parnaso Italiano_, a fine collection of Italian poetical writers, in
-fifty-two volumes; and he was deeply imbued with the spirit which he
-found common to the poetical republic of all ages. He selected the
-episode of Paolo and Francesca, whom Dante places in the _Inferno_,
-and whose history was diligently hunted up to tell in the _Story of
-Rimini_. In it Leigh Hunt insisted on breaking the set cadence for
-which Pope was the professed authority, as he broke through the set
-morals which had followed in reaction upon the licence of many reigns.
-He shocked the world with colloquialisms in the heroic measure, and
-with extenuations of the fault committed by the two lovers against
-the law matrimonial. The offence, too, was perpetrated by a writer
-condemned to prison for bearding the constituted authorities. The
-poem and its fate were characteristic of the man and his position in
-poetical literature. The work was designed as a picture of Italy, and a
-tale of the natural affections rebelling against a tyranny more corrupt
-than the licence which it claimed to check. But when he wrote it, the
-poet had not been in Italy; and afterwards, with habitual anxiety to be
-“right,” he corrected many mistakes in the scenery--such as “the smoke
-goes dancing from the cottage trees,” where there are no such cottages
-as he imagined, and smoke is no feature in the landscape. He also
-restored the true historical conclusion, and instead of a gentlemanly
-duel, _comme il faut_, made the tale end in the fierce double murder by
-the husband. In its original shape, the _Story of Rimini_ touched many
-a heart, and created more sensation for its bolder verse and nature
-than others which followed it; in its amended form it gained in truth
-to art and fact, and in force of verse and colouring. Leigh Hunt had
-not the sustained melody and pulpit morals of the Lake School; but he
-gave the example and encouragement to writers of still greater force
-and beauty. He vindicated human right against official wrong, and
-suffered imprisonment, and denunciation more bitter than that poured on
-Shelley, whose political vindications burst forth with such a torrent
-of eloquence and imagination in the _Revolt of Islam_. Leigh Hunt
-asserted the beauty of natural passion,--but he did it tenderly and
-obliquely, himself returning from the slightest taste of passion to
-“the domesticities,” half begging pardon for his hardihood, and thus by
-implication confessing his naughtiness; and all the while hinting at
-the delicate subject of his tale by circumstance, rather than following
-it to its full inspirations. The greater part of the _Story of Rimini_
-is scene-painting, as if it were told by some bystander in the street,
-or some topographical visitor of the place. In the scene where the
-lovers so dangerously and fatally fall to reading “Launcelot of the
-Lake,”--“_quel giorno non legemmo più avanti_”--the larger portion of
-the canto is devoted to a description of the garden. Leigh Hunt does
-not, as Keats did, describe the sickening passion that gave the _Lamia_
-so ghastly a sense of her own hated form,--nor does he, as in the
-_Lamia_, pursue the couple to the place where Love
-
- “Hover’d and buzz’d his wings with fearful roar
- Above the lintel of their chamber door.”
-
-If pharisaical critics discovered objectionable “tendencies” in
-passages--almost in the _omitted_ passages of his writings--they
-could find no such impetuous and sublime argument as that to which
-the _Revolt of Islam_ rises in the canto where “the meteor to its far
-morass returned;” nor such lines as show that a fair authoress, whose
-book has been “the rage” at Mudie’s, had been among the myriads of
-Shelley’s readers. But although hesitating himself to plunge into the
-impetuous torrent of passion, like the fowl mistrustful of its own
-fitness for so stormy waters, Leigh Hunt was the friend, instigator,
-and encourager of that rebellion of letters which in the earlier half
-of our age produced Keats and Shelley, and the poetical literature of
-the latter half of the nineteenth century.
-
-Others improved upon the example, no doubt, and bore away the
-“_honores_.” At a late day, Lord John Russell obtained for Leigh
-Hunt a royal pension of £200 a year--a most welcome and gratefully
-acknowledged compensation of time and money torn from him in early
-years.
-
-Leigh Hunt’s miscellaneous poems extend over a great variety of
-subjects, from the classic legend of _Hero and Leander_, to the
-mediæval fabliau of the _Gentle Armour_, and the satirical critique of
-the _Feast of the Poets_. This last was published early in the author’s
-maturer career; it is “in his second manner,” and he afterwards revised
-many of the dicta on contemporary writers which he placed in the mouth
-of the chairman on that festive occasion, Apollo. But it helped to
-loosen the trammels of conventionalism in verse. The _Gentle Armour_,
-although true to a modern refinement, is also true to the spirit of the
-days of chivalry; it relates, in straightforward language, how a knight
-who had refused the bidding of his mistress to defend a falsehood--not
-her own--is punished by receiving the most feminine of garments as his
-cognizance at a tournament; and how, wearing that _alone_, he takes in
-his own person a bloody and reproving vengeance for the slight, in the
-end winning both fight and lady. The subject was thought “indelicate”
-by some who were less refined than the author--some descendants,
-perchance, of the proverbial Peeping Tom. The _Hero and Leander_ is
-a flowing and vivid recital of the ancient tale. The three works form
-good specimens of the spirit as well as execution of Leigh Hunt’s
-poetical writings. Of some of his smaller pieces it may be said that
-they had become classic in his lifetime--such as the reverential sonnet
-“On the Lock of Milton’s Hair” which he possessed; the exquisite
-parental tenderness of the lines “To T. L. H., in Sickness;” and the
-grandly Christian exaltation of charity in his _Abou-ben-Adhem_.
-
-As few men brought their personality more thoroughly into their
-writings, so few men, out of the bookworm pale aforesaid, were more
-thoroughly saturated with literature. He saw everything through books,
-or saw it dimly. Speaking of his return from Italy, he writes:--“I
-seemed more at home in England, even with Arcadian idealisms, than I
-had been in the land nearer their birthplace; for it was in England
-I first found them in books, and with England even my Italian books
-were more associated than with Italy itself.” And speaking of the
-_Parnaso Italiano_, he goes on:--“This book aided Spenser himself
-in filling my English walks with visions of gods and nymphs,--of
-enchantresses and magicians; for the reader might be surprised to
-know to what a literal extent such was the case.” He used to “envy”
-the “household waggon that one meets with in sequestered lanes” for
-its wanderings, but was daunted at the bare imagination of “parish
-objections” and raffish society; and so he ever recurred to “the
-stationary domesticities.” He failed in practical life, because he was
-not guided in it by literature. He could only apprehend so much of
-it as he found in the cyclopædia. On the other hand, he could render
-all that literature could give. His memory was marvellous; and to try
-him in history, biography, bibliography, or topography, was to draw
-forth an oral “article” on the topic in question. Ask him where was
-the Ouse, and he would tell you of all the rivers so called; what were
-the books on a given subject, and you had the list; “who was Colonel
-O’Kelly?” and you had a sketch of the colonel, of the horse “Eclipse,”
-of Epsom, and of horse-racing in general, as distinguished from the
-racing of the ancients or the modern riderless races of Italy--where,
-as in Florence, may still be seen a specimen of the biga sweeping
-round the meta “_fervidis evitata rotis_.” His conversation was an
-exhaustless _Curiosities of Literature_. The delighted visitor _read_
-his host,--but it was from a talking book, with cordial voice naturally
-pitched to every change of subject, animated gesture, sparkling
-eyes, and overflowing sympathy. In society Leigh Hunt was ever the
-perfect gentleman, not in the fashion, but always the scholar and
-the noble-minded man. But his diffidence was disguised, rather than
-removed, by his desire to agree with those around him, and to fall in
-with the humour of the hour. He was better known to his reader, either
-in his books, or, best of all, in his home, where familiarity tested
-his unfailing courtesy, daily intercourse brought forth the persevering
-goodness of his heart and conscience, and poverty did but fetch out the
-thorough-going generosity that not only “_would_ share,” but did share
-the last crust.
-
-
-
-
- The Search for Sir John Franklin.
-
- (FROM THE PRIVATE JOURNAL OF AN OFFICER OF THE “FOX”)
-
-
-The last of the Government expeditions in search of Franklin returned
-in 1854, without bringing further intelligence than had been previously
-ascertained, namely, that the missing ships had spent their first
-winter, 1845-46, at Beechey Island, and had departed thence without
-leaving a single record to say whence they came or in what direction
-they intended to explore in the following season.
-
-The war with Russia engrossed the public attention, and the Admiralty
-determined that nothing more could be done for our missing sailors.
-
-Franklin and his companions were pronounced to be dead, and the search
-to be closed. But many Arctic officers and private persons thought
-otherwise. By the extraordinary exertions of the previous expeditions
-the country to be searched had been reduced to a limited area in which
-the ships must be, if above water, and through which the crews must
-have travelled when they left their ships. Every other retreat from the
-Arctic Seas had been explored, and the Great Fish River alone remained
-unexamined.
-
-Later in the same year (1854), Dr. Rae, the celebrated traveller for
-the Hudson Bay Company, who was endeavouring to ascertain the northern
-extreme of America, brought home intelligence, which he had obtained
-from the Esquimaux of Boothia, of forty white people having been seen
-upon the west coast of King William Land in the spring of 1850: that
-they were travelling southward, and that later in the same year it was
-supposed they had all died in the estuary of a large river, which Dr.
-Rae conjectured to be the Great Fish River.
-
-In 1855, the Hudson Bay Company, at the request of the Admiralty, sent
-an expedition, conducted by Mr. Anderson, to explore the Fish River.
-Mr. Anderson returned, having ascertained that a portion of the missing
-crews had been on Montreal Island, in the mouth of that river; but Mr.
-Anderson, without an interpreter, or the means of going beyond the
-island, could only gather the most meagre information by signs from the
-Esquimaux, and by a few relics found upon the land. Where the ships had
-been left, or what had become of the people, seemed as great a mystery
-as ever.
-
-It was then that Lady Franklin (who had already sent out three
-expeditions) urged again that the search should be continued, and that
-our countrymen should not thus be left to their fate; but although her
-appeal was backed by the most competent officers, the season of 1856
-passed away without endeavours to clear up the mystery; and determining
-that another year should not be lost in vain entreaties, Lady Franklin
-once more undertook the responsibilities and the expenses of a final
-effort to rescue our long-lost sailors from their perhaps living death
-among the Esquimaux, or to follow up their footsteps in their last
-journey upon earth, and to give to the world the scientific results of
-the expedition for which those gallant men had given up their lives.
-
-[Illustration: DEPARTURE OF EXPLORING PARTIES FROM PORT KENNEDY.]
-
-In the spring of 1857 Lady Franklin commenced preparations for the
-contemplated expedition. She was supported by some of the most
-distinguished Arctic officers and scientific men, and the friends of
-Sir John Franklin, among whom were Sir Roderick Murchison, General
-Sabine, Captain Collinson, and many others.
-
-To Captain M‘Clintock was offered the command; and he who had served in
-three previous expeditions, and to whom are principally due the results
-of the extraordinary journeys over the ice that have been made during
-the search for Franklin, cheerfully accepted the appointment, as, in
-his own words, being the post of honour.
-
-The next thing was to seek a suitable vessel, and fortunately the _Fox_
-was in the market. Built for a yacht of some 180 tons register, with
-auxiliary steam-power applied to a lifting screw, the _Fox_ appeared
-in every way adapted for the service. She was at once purchased, and
-the necessary alterations and fortifying commenced; and such was the
-feeling of confidence in Captain M‘Clintock’s sincerity of purpose,
-his daring and determination, combined with eminent talent, and every
-qualification for command, that numbers sought the honour of serving
-with him. The few who were so fortunate as to be selected were soon
-appointed in their different capacities, and by the exertions of Lady
-Franklin and Captain M‘Clintock everything that could possibly conduce
-to the comfort or recreation of the ship’s company was supplied, and
-the _Fox_ was ready for sea by the end of June.
-
-We intended first to touch at some of the Danish settlements in
-Greenland, to purchase sledge-dogs; then to proceed to Beechey Island,
-and there to fill up stores from the depôt left by Sir E. Belcher.
-We were next to endeavour to sail down Peel Sound (supposed to be a
-strait), but failing by that channel, to try down Regent’s Inlet, and
-by the supposed Bellot Straits to reach the neighbourhood of the Great
-Fish River; and having in the summer of 1857 and following spring
-searched the adjacent country, we should return home either westward by
-Behring’s Straits, or by our outward route, according to circumstances.
-If we failed to reach King William Land or the Fish River, it was our
-intention to winter as near the desired position as possible, and by
-means of sledge journeys over the ice, to complete the search in the
-following spring. We hoped to finish the work in one year; but in this
-we were to be disappointed, as the narrative will show.
-
-We left Aberdeen on July 1, 1857; and after a favourable run across
-the Atlantic, we made our first acquaintance with the Arctic Seas when
-near the meridian of Cape Farewell, by falling in with the drift-wood
-annually brought from Arctic Asia by the great current known as the
-Spitzbergen current--the shattered and mangled state of these pine
-logs bearing evidence of their long water-and-ice-borne drift. This
-great Arctic current brings masses of ice from the Spitzbergen seas,
-at seasons completely filling up the fiords, harbours, and indentations
-on the south coast of Greenland, and often in a pack extending for 100
-miles southward of Cape Farewell. A whole fleet of whale ships were,
-in June, 1777, beset in lat. 76° north, and nearly in the meridian of
-Spitzbergen, and were drifted southward by the current, until one by
-one they were crushed. The last and only surviving ship arrived in
-October, in latitude 61°, in Davis’ Straits, and the crew escaped to
-the land near Cape Farewell, 116 in number, out of 450 men, who only a
-few short months before were looking forward to a happy return to their
-homes.
-
-Late in the summer, the weather mild and the nights short, and with
-steam-power at command, we had no occasion for much anxiety about this
-ice, but determined to push direct for Frederickshaab, and with a fair
-wind we steered to pass within sight of Cape Farewell. On the night of
-the 13th July, we were becalmed, and on the following day we steamed
-slowly to the north-westward, amidst countless numbers of sea-birds.
-At daylight the coast of Greenland showed out in all its wild
-magnificence. Cape Farewell bore north 45° east, distant twenty-five
-miles; but from the peculiar formation of the adjacent land the
-actual cape is difficult to distinguish. Hitherto we had not seen the
-Spitzbergen ice; and we hoped that we might follow the coast round to
-Frederickshaab without obstruction; but in the course of the forenoon
-a sudden fall in the temperature of the sea, with a haziness in the
-atmosphere to the northward, indicated our approach to ice. Straggling
-and water-washed pieces were soon met with, and in the evening the
-distant murmur of the sea, as it broke upon the edge of ice-floes,
-warned us of our being near to a pack.
-
-We made but little progress during the two following days, the winds
-being from the northward, and a dense ice-fog rolling down from the
-pack. On the 17th, Frederickshaab bearing N. 28° E., distant fifty
-miles, we determined upon endeavouring to push through the pack; and
-after being at times completely beset, and with a constant thick fog,
-we escaped into the inshore water, with a few slight rubs, having been
-carried by the drifting body of ice nearly thirty miles northward of
-our port. We sounded upon the Tallert bank; and on the fog lifting,
-the great glacier of Frederickshaab was revealed to us, and we bore
-away for the harbour, which we reached on the 19th. We had a little
-difficulty at first in making out the entrance to Frederickshaab; but a
-native kyack coming out to meet us, we were soon escorted in by a fleet
-of these small canoes.
-
-We found the natives busily breaking up the wreck of an abandoned
-timber ship, which had drifted to their harbour, with a few of the
-lower tiers of cargo still in her; and another wreck was said to be
-lying upon the Tallert bank--the same wreck, it is said, which Prince
-Napoleon had boarded on his homeward passage in the _Atlantic_ the
-previous year, and had left a record on her to prove the currents round
-Cape Farewell.
-
-The Danish authorities, ever ready to assist vessels entering the
-Greenland ports, supplied us with everything in their power, and after
-purchasing some cod-fish from the natives, we proceeded on our voyage.
-On leaving Frederickshaab, we experienced strong north winds, and had
-to beat up between the pack and the land, until off the settlement of
-Fiskernaas, on July 23rd. The temperature of the sea then rose from 35°
-to 46° Fahrenheit; and seeing no ice, we considered that we were past
-the limits of the Spitzbergen stream. Finding that our foretop masthead
-was sprung, we ran into Fiskernaas, to repair it. We purchased more
-cod-fish at Fiskernaas, at an almost nominal price. These fish are very
-plentiful, and the Danish authorities annually collect about 30,000
-from the Esquimaux, to be dried, and again served out to them in the
-winter, the habits of the natives being so improvident, that they will
-not make this provision for themselves. Having made a few magnetic and
-other observations, we sailed for Godhaab to procure a passage home for
-one of our seamen, who, it was feared, was too ill in health to stand
-the rigours of an Arctic winter. We met the Danish schooner coming
-out, and the captain kindly received our invalid on board, and took
-our letters for home. Outside Godhaab lie the Koku Islands, upon which
-Egede first landed in 1721, and commenced recolonizing Greenland. The
-mainland here is divided into four fiords, the largest being Godhaab
-Fiord (or Baal’s River on old charts), which extends up to the inland
-ice, and upon the shores of which are still to be seen many ruins of
-the ancient Scandinavians. Upon the Koku Islands we were near leaving
-the _Fox_, for in coming out, the wind fell suddenly calm, and the
-steam being down, we were drifting with a strong tide fast upon the
-rocks, and we only just towed the ship clear with all our boats. We now
-steered for Diskoe, and after passing some magnificent icebergs, one
-of which we found by measurement to be 270 feet above the sea, we saw
-the precipitous cliffs of the island, entered the harbour of Godhavn
-at night, and sailed on the following day for the beautiful fiord of
-Diskoe, where a smart young Esquimaux, Christian, by name, was received
-on board, as dog-driver to the expedition. We had not time to examine
-this fine fiord, which has never been explored, and which is thought to
-be of great extent; nor had we time to visit the Salmon River; but our
-guide brought us a few fish, and with salmon-trout and ptarmigan for
-breakfast, and a bouquet of flowers from the ladies of Godhavn upon the
-gun-room table, we had no cause to complain of the Arctic regions so
-far.
-
-We next steered for the Waigat Straits, intending to take in coals
-from the mines there. As we passed Godhavn, the Esquimaux guide seated
-himself in his kyack on the deck, and, notwithstanding a rough sea, he
-was launched out of the gangway at his own request; a feat wonderful
-to us, but evidently not strange to him, as he paddled away to the
-shore without further notice. The native kyack is so small and crank,
-that the natives cannot get in or out of it alongside a ship; but are
-generally pulled up or lowered with it in the bight of two ropes’ ends.
-
-As we approached the Waigat, thousands of eider ducks covered the
-water, and we shot many of the younger ones, but the old birds were
-too crafty for us, and kept out of range. We now never lost an
-opportunity of adding to our stock of fresh provisions, which already
-began to make a show in the rigging, where we could feast our eyes
-upon salmon, eider ducks, looms, cod-fish, ptarmigan, and seal beef,
-besides two old goats, that we had purchased at Frederickshaab. We
-entered the Waigat on August 3rd, on a beautiful day; and for wild
-and desolate grandeur, I suppose these straits have no equal--lofty,
-rugged mountains here abruptly facing the sea, or there presenting
-a sloping moss-covered declivity--mountain torrents, and the small
-streams, which, leaping over the very summits, at an elevation of 3,000
-to 4,000 feet, appear from beneath like threads of spun glass. In some
-places may be seen the foot of a glacier high up a ravine, as if there
-arrested in its course, or not yet grown sufficiently to fill up the
-valley, and bring its blight down to the sea; in other places beautiful
-valleys, green and grass-clothed, where the hare and ptarmigan love
-to pass their short summer with their young broods. The sea itself is
-scarcely less picturesque than the land; for thousands of icebergs, of
-every size and fantastic form, cast off from the ice-streams of the
-mainland, sail continually in these beautiful straits.
-
-We found the coal mine without difficulty, the seams of coal cropping
-out of the cliffs under which we anchored. It was a very exposed
-position, and the ground hard; the only safe way to lie would be by
-making fast to a piece of grounded ice, if one can be found, as anchors
-will not hold.
-
-In the early spring the ice-foot forms a natural wharf, and the coals
-may be collected, and at high water the boats can go alongside to
-receive the sacks. Now that steam has been introduced into the whale
-fishery, these coal mines must sooner or later become much frequented,
-and it is to be hoped that so valuable a resource will be taken
-advantage of. If moorings could be laid down, and natives from the
-opposite settlement of Atenadluk employed to collect coals in readiness
-for embarkation, a ship might readily fill up in a few hours.
-
-We had scarcely completed our coaling, when the weather began to
-threaten, the barometer fell, and shortly after noon it blew almost
-a gale from the southward. Our anchors soon began to jump over the
-ground, and the drift ice to set in. Steam was immediately got ready,
-and we ran through the straits to the north-westward. Passing the
-magnificent headland of Swarten Huk, we touched at the settlement
-of Proven to purchase dogs and seal-beef, and then bore away for
-Upernavik, steering close along the coast, and intending to attack the
-breeding-place of looms, at Saunderson’s Hope; but a strong south-west
-wind and high sea prevented our sending in the boats. Arrived off
-Upernavik, we obtained more dogs, and having left our last letters
-for home, we bore away, on the afternoon of August 6, to try to cross
-Baffin’s Bay.
-
-We were now fairly away from the civilized world, and all that we could
-look forward to, or hope for, was a speedy passage through the middle
-pack of Baffin’s Bay, a satisfactory finish of the work before us on
-the other side, and a return the following year to England. We had
-a fine ship and a fine crew, all eager to commence the more active
-duties of sledge travelling; and, indeed, on looking at our thirty
-large and ravenous dogs that crowded our decks, we could not but think
-that our sledge parties would solve, in the following spring, the
-extraordinary mystery of Franklin’s fate. How these hopes were to be
-disappointed that year the sequel will show. It is well for us that we
-cannot know what the morrow may bring forth. During August 7 and 8, we
-steered out due west from Upernavik to try to cross in that parallel
-of latitude; but on the evening of the latter day, the keenness of the
-air, the ice-blink ahead, and the fast increasing number of bergs,
-prepared us for seeing the Middle Pack. In the evening and during that
-night we passed streams of loose sailing ice, and on the morning of the
-8th further progress was stopped by impenetrable floes. This was in
-lat. 72° 40′ north, long. 59° 50′ west.
-
-Getting clear of the loose ice in the pack edge, we steered to the
-northward, to look for an opening in any place where we could attempt a
-passage. The ice, however, presented an impenetrable line, and having
-reached, on August 12, latitude 75° 10′ north, longitude 58° west, we
-made fast to an iceberg aground under the glacier. It was a lovely
-evening; the sky bright and clear, and the thermometer standing at 36°
-in the shade. Seals were playing about the ship, and we added to our
-stock of beef. But a dreary prospect rather damped our pleasure. The
-ice extended in one unbroken mass right into the land, and pressed
-hard upon the very coast; not a drop of water could be seen from the
-masthead, in the direction in which we desired to go. The southerly
-winds, before which we had been running, appeared to have driven the
-whole pack into the head of Melville Bay. The season was passing away,
-and without an early change to wind and a continuance of it from the
-northward, we were almost without a hope.
-
-In the evening we visited the glacier, but the _débris_ of shattered
-ice, and the innumerable bergs and floe pieces, prevented our getting
-close to its base. It was a beautifully calm night; not a sound to be
-heard, save the crashing of some enormous mass rent from the face of
-the glacier, or distant rumbling of the vast inland ice, as it moved
-slowly down towards the sea. Far away over the continent, nothing
-but the surface of glacier could be seen, excepting here or there a
-mountain peak, showing up through the ice; and the bright glare of the
-ice-blink shot up into the sky, giving a yellow tinge to the otherwise
-deep blue vault of heaven. Flights of ducks winged their way to the
-southward, reminding us that it was the season when those desolate
-regions were deserted, and that we should be left alone. Our distant
-ship was lying so surrounded with huge and lofty bergs, that only her
-masthead could be seen through an opening; and a low melancholy howling
-(such as an Esquimaux dog alone knows how to make) occasionally broke
-upon the ear--for our dogs had all gone up to the very top of a lofty
-berg, and were thus expressing their home-sick longings, and, perhaps,
-a foreboding of the unhappy fate that awaited many of them.
-
-We lay secured to the iceberg until the 16th August, when the wind
-changed to the north-eastward, and the floes began to move off the
-land and to separate. Now or never were we to get through; for to
-lose this opportunity would have shut us out from crossing that year,
-and have left us no other resource than to return to Greenland for the
-winter. M‘Clintock was not the man to turn back from his work, but
-would rather risk everything than leave a chance of our thus passing
-an inactive winter. The _Fox_ was therefore steered into a promising
-lead or lane of water, and all sail made to the breeze. We were in high
-spirits, and talked of getting into the west water on the morrow. But
-at night a dense fog came on, the wind shifted to the southward, and
-the floes again began to close upon and around us. There was no help
-for us--we were beset, and it appeared hopelessly so; for the season
-was fast passing away, and the new ice beginning to form. On the 17th
-the wind increased, and the weather was dark and dreary. We struggled
-on for a few ship’s lengths by the power of steam and canvas, and at
-night we unshipped the rudder, and lifted the screw, in anticipation of
-a squeeze.
-
-During the three weeks following we lay in this position, endeavouring,
-by every means, to move the ship towards any visible pool or lane of
-water. Once only did our hopes revive. On September 7, the wind had
-again been from the north-westward; the ice had slackened, and we made
-a final and desperate attempt to reach some water seen to the northward
-of us. We were blasting with gunpowder, heaving, and warping during the
-whole day, but at night the floes again closed. We had not now even a
-retreat; the tinker had come round, as the seamen say, and soldered
-us in; and from that time until the 17th of April, 1858, we never
-moved, excepting at the mercy of the ice, and drifted by the winds and
-currents. We had lost all command over the ship, and were freezing in
-the moving pack.
-
-Preparations for the winter were now made in earnest. We had thirty
-large dogs to feed besides ourselves, and we lost no opportunity of
-shooting seals. The sea-birds had all left for the southward; and the
-bears, which occasionally came to look at the ship, we could not chase,
-from the yet broken state of the ice. Provisions were got up upon deck,
-sledges and travelling equipages prepared, boats’ crews told off, and
-every arrangement made by the Captain in the event of our being turned
-out of the ship. As the winter advanced, the ship was housed over with
-canvas, and covered with snow; and we had made up our minds for a
-winter in the pack and a drift--whither? This we could not tell, but we
-argued from the known constant set to the southward, out of Baffin’s
-Sea and Davis’ Straits, that if our little ship survived through the
-winter, we should be released in the southern part of Davis’ Straits
-during the following summer.
-
-We were then in latitude 75° 24′ north, longitude 64° 31′ west, and
-westward of us could be seen a formidable line of grounded bergs,
-towards which, by our observations, we were driving. Our next eight
-months were passed in a manner that would be neither interesting to
-read nor to relate; but a few extracts from a private journal will show
-our mode of life.
-
-_Sept. 16._--We passed the grounded bergs last night, after
-considerable anxiety, for we feared we might be driven against them.
-We saw the floes opening and tearing up as sod before the plough; and
-had we come in contact with them, the ship must have been instantly
-destroyed. We are out all day long, by the sides of the water-pools,
-with our rifles, and shoot the seals in the head when they come up to
-breathe; they are now getting fat, and do not sink so readily as in the
-summer.
-
-_Oct. 17._--We obtained good observations, and found that we have
-drifted north-west 65 miles, since the 15th inst. It has been blowing
-hard from the south-eastward, and we consider that we have thus been
-carried helplessly along by the effect of a single gale.
-
-_Nov. 2._--A bear came to look at the ship at night, and our dogs soon
-chased him on to some thin ice, through which he broke. All hands
-turned out to see the sport, and notwithstanding the intense cold many
-of the people did not wait to put on their extra clothes. The bear was
-dispatched with our rifles, after making some resistance, and maiming
-several of the dogs. We have not seen the sun to-day; he has now taken
-his final departure from these latitudes. It is getting almost too
-dark to shoot seals, and we employ ourselves with such astronomical
-observations as are necessary to fix our position, and to calculate
-our drift, with observations upon the thermometer, barometer, and
-meteorology generally.
-
-_Nov. 28._--After a zigzag drift out to the westward, until the 24th
-inst., into latitude 75° 1′ N., longitude 70° W., we have commenced
-a southern drift, and we trust now to progress gradually out of the
-straits, until released in the spring. We have had considerable
-commotion and ruptures in the ice-floes lately, but fortunately the
-nips have not come too close to us. We ascend the masthead, to the
-crow’s-nest, every morning, to look out for water, for our dogs are
-getting ravenous, and we want food for them.
-
-_December 4._--Poor Scott died last night, and was buried through the
-floe this evening, all hands drawing his earthly remains upon a sledge,
-and the officers walking by the side. It was a bitterly cold night,
-the temperature 35° below zero, with a fresh wind, and the beautiful
-paraselene (ominous of a coming gale) lighting us on our way. The ice
-has been more quiet lately, and we are becoming more reconciled to our
-imprisonment.
-
-A reading, writing, and navigation school has commenced, and our
-Captain loses no opportunity of attending to the amusement and
-recreation of the men, so necessary in this dreary life. Besides the
-ordinary duties of cleaning the ship, the men are exercised in building
-snow houses, and preparing travelling equipage.
-
-_December 21._--The winter solstice. We have about half an hour’s
-partial daylight, by which the type of _The Times_ newspaper may be
-just distinguished on a board facing the south, where, near noon, a
-slight glimmer of light is refracted above the horizon, while in the
-zenith and northward the stars are shining brilliantly. In the absence
-of _light and shade_ we cannot see to walk over the ice, for the
-hummocks can scarcely be distinguished from the floe; all presents a
-uniform level surface, and, in walking, one constantly falls into the
-fissures, or runs full butt against the blocks of ice. We must now,
-therefore, be content with an hour or two’s tramp alongside, or on
-our snow-covered deck under housing; and, during the remainder of the
-day, we sit below in our little cabin, which has now crystallized by
-the breath condensing and freezing on the bulkheads, and we endeavour
-to read and talk away the time. But our subjects of conversation
-are miserably worn out; our stories are old and oft-repeated; we
-start impossible theories, and we bet upon the results of our new
-observations as to our progress, as we unconsciously drift and drift
-before the gale. At night we retire to our beds, thankful that another
-day has passed; a deathlike stillness reigns around, broken only by
-the ravings of some sleep-talker, the tramp of the watch upon deck, a
-passing bear causing a general rousing of our dogs, or a simultaneous
-rush of these poor ravenous creatures at our cherished stores of
-seal-beef in the shrouds; and, as we listen to the distant groaning and
-sighing of the ice, we thank God that we have still a home in these
-terrible wastes.
-
-_December 28._--During Divine service yesterday, the wind increased,
-and towards the afternoon we had a gale from the north-westward,
-attended with an unusual rise of temperature; to-day the gale
-continues, with a warm wind from the N.N.W.
-
-“The Danish settlers at Upernavik, in North Greenland, are at times
-startled by a similar sudden rise of temperature. During the depth of
-winter, when all nature has been long frozen, and the sound of falling
-water almost forgotten, rain will fall in torrents; and as rain in
-such a climate is attended with every discomfort, this is looked upon
-as a most unwelcome phenomenon. It is called the _Warm South-east
-Wind_. Now, if the Greenlanders at Upernavik are astonished at a warm
-_South-east Wind_, how much rather must the seamen, frozen up in the
-pack, be astonished at a warm _North-west Wind_. Various theories
-have been started to account for this phenomenon; but it appears most
-probable that a rotatory gale passes over the place, and that the rise
-in temperature is due to the direction from which the whole _mass of
-air_ may come, viz. from the southward, and not to the direction of
-_wind_ at the time.”
-
-Let us now return to the narrative, for our days were now becoming
-mere repetitions of each other. We saw no change, nor did we hope for
-any until the spring. Gale followed gale; and an occasional alarm of a
-disruption in the ice, a bear or seal hunt, formed our only excitement;
-indeed, we sometimes hoped for some crisis, were it only to break
-the dreadful monotony of our lives. Our walks abroad afforded us no
-recreation; on the contrary, it was really a trying task to spin out
-the time necessary for exercise. Talk of a dull turnpike-road at home!
-Are not the larks singing and the farm boys whistling? But with us
-what a contrast! Our walks were without an object; one had literally
-nothing to see or hear; turn north, south, east, or west, still snow
-and hummocks. You see a little black mark waving in the air: walk to
-it--it is a crack in a hummock. You think a berg is close to you; go to
-it--still a hummock, refracted through the gloom. The only thing to do
-is to walk to windward, so as to be certain of returning safe and not
-frostbitten, to pick out a smooth place, and form imaginary patterns
-with your footprints. Philosophers would bid us think and reflect; but
-if philosophers were shut up with us amid the silence and darkness of
-an Arctic winter, they would probably do as we did--endeavour to get
-away from their thoughts.
-
-By the 29th of January, we had drifted into latitude 72° 46′ north,
-longitude 62° west, and by the aid of refraction we saw the sun for the
-first time since November 2. We ought indeed to have greeted him on a
-meridian far westward of our present position, but it had been out of
-power to do more this year, and we could only hope for more success in
-the next. The weather had now become intensely cold, the mercury was
-frozen, and the spirit thermometer registered 46° below zero. We had
-great difficulty in clearing our bed-places of ice, and our blankets
-froze nightly to the ship’s side; but we had the sun to shine upon us,
-and that made amends for all. What a different world was now before our
-eyes! Even in those dreary regions where nothing moves, and no sounds
-are heard save the rustling of the snowdrift, the effects of the bright
-sun are so exhilarating that a walk was now quite enjoyable. If any
-one doubt how necessary light is for our existence, just let him shut
-himself up for three months in the coal-cellar, with an underground
-passage into the ice-house, where he may go for a change of air, and
-see if he will be in as good health and spirits at the end of the
-experiment as before. At all events, he will have obtained the best
-idea one can form at home of an Arctic winter in a small vessel, save
-that the temperature of the Arctic ice-house is -40°, instead of +32°,
-as at home; only 72° difference!
-
-On the 14th of February some of us walked out to where the ice was
-opening to the northward, and saw a solitary dovekie in winter plumage.
-These beautiful little birds appear to winter on the ice. The water,
-appearing deep black from the long absence of any relief from the
-eternal snow, was rippled by a strong wind, and the little waves, so
-small as to be compared to those of the Serpentine at home, sending
-forth to us a new, and, consequently, joyous sound, induced us to
-linger long by the side of the small lake--so long, that we were only
-reminded, by our faces beginning to freeze, that we were at least three
-miles from the ship, a gale blowing with thick snow-drift--besides no
-chance of getting anything for the pot.
-
-A memorable day was the 26th of February, when we opened the skylight
-and let in daylight below, where we had been living for four months by
-the light of our solitary dips. The change was indeed wonderful, and
-at first uncomfortable, for it exposed the manner in which we had been
-content to live. With proper clothing you may laugh at the climate,
-if not exposed too long without food. It is not the cold outside that
-is to be feared, but the damp, and plague-engendering state of things
-below. This can only be guarded against by having good fires and plenty
-of light.
-
-Towards the latter end of March, the ice was getting very unquiet,
-and we had frequent disruptions close to the ship. On the night of
-the 25th of March, a wide fissure, which had been opening and closing
-during the previous fortnight, closed with such force as to pile up
-tons and tons of ice within forty yards of the ship, and shattered our
-old floe in a line with our deck. The nipping continued, and on the
-following night a huge block was hurled within thirty yards from us.
-Another such a night and the little _Fox_ would have been knocked into
-lucifer matches, and we should have been turned out upon the floe.
-
-April was ushered in with a continuance of heavy northerly gales; we
-were constantly struggling with the ice. We were three times adrift,
-and expecting to see our ship destroyed; and on the night of the
-5th, the floes opened, and as their edges again came together, they
-threatened to tear everything up. We were on deck throughout the night;
-our boats and dogs were cut off from us, but with great exertion we
-managed to save the dogs, although we nearly lost some of our men who
-went in search of them. We that night secured the ship by the bower
-chains, and we afterwards had a few days’ quiet. On the 10th we saw the
-mountain peaks about Cape Dyer, on the west side of Davis’ Straits, the
-first land seen since the previous October. We had drifted into lat.
-66° 5′ N., and long. 58° 41′ W.; and we hoped that after passing Cape
-Walsingham, the pack would open out.
-
-On April 17, in a heavy storm, a general breaking-up of the ice took
-place, and we were turned completely out of our winter dock, and into
-an apparently open sea. A scene of wild confusion ensued; the floes
-were driving against each other in all directions, and the whole ocean
-of ice appeared in commotion, while a blinding snow-drift distorted
-and magnified every surrounding object. Our first care was to save our
-dogs; but as an Esquimaux dog always expects either a thrashing or to
-be put in harness when approached by a man, and the poor creatures were
-terror-stricken with the storm, they ran wildly about over the ice, and
-many of them were obliged to be abandoned to their fate, after sharing
-the perils of the winter with us. On board the ship, preparations were
-made to get her under command; for we were driving down upon the lee,
-and into loose ice, where our men could not have rejoined us with the
-boats. We shipped the rudder, and soon got some canvas upon the vessel,
-and having got the men and boats safely on board, we steered to the
-eastward, and really thought that we were released. A dark water-sky
-hung over the eastern horizon, and we thought that we were not far
-from the open ocean. But we had not proceeded more than some seventeen
-miles, when at midnight we came to a stoppage. It was fearfully dark
-and cold, and with the greatest difficulty we cleared the masses of
-ice. The water space in which we worked the ship became gradually less
-and less; we flew from side to side of this fast decreasing lake, until
-at last we had not room to stay the vessel. By 4 A.M. we were again
-beset.
-
-We now commenced a second drift with the pack, which took us down
-to latitude 64° north, and longitude 57° west, on the 25th April,
-when, towards midnight, a swell entered into the pack, and gradually
-increased, until the ice commenced churning up around the vessel, and
-dashing against her sides. These violent shocks continued throughout
-the morning, and really seemed as if they would soon destroy the ship.
-However, by the power of steam, we got the vessel’s head towards
-the swell, and with a strong fair wind, we commenced pushing out.
-After many narrow escapes from contact with the icebergs, we were
-by night in comparatively open water. We were free! and steered a
-course for the settlement of Holsteinborg, in Greenland, to recruit,
-and to prepare for another attempt. What a change on the following
-morning! Not a piece of ice could be seen, save a few distant bergs.
-We once more had our little vessel dancing under us upon the waters,
-innumerable sea-birds flew around us, and the very sea, in contrast
-to its late frozen surface, appeared alive with seals and whales. All
-nature seemed alive, and we felt as if we had risen from the dead! In
-the evening, the snow-covered peaks of Sukkertoppen were seen, and
-on the 28th of April, we moored in Holsteinborg harbour. Our anchors
-had not been down, nor had our feet touched the land since the 3rd
-of August. Ice-bound and imprisoned, we had drifted upwards of 1,200
-miles. Need it be added how thankful we were to that kind Providence
-who had watched over us, and under Him to our gallant Captain, to whose
-unremitting attentions to our comforts and safety we owed our health
-and deliverance!
-
-The winter in Greenland had been very severe, and the country was still
-snow-covered, and without an indication of spring. The natives were
-scarcely aroused from their winter’s sleep, and all our expectations of
-venison and ptarmigan feasts soon vanished. Very few reindeer had yet
-been taken, the season not commencing before July, when the hunters go
-up the fiords and kill them by thousands for the sake of their skins
-alone, leaving their carcasses to be devoured by the wolves.
-
-Our men, however, were bent upon enjoying themselves, and as Jack’s
-wants are few, with the aid of a couple of fiddlers and some bottles
-of grog, they kept up one continuous ball--patronized by all the fair
-Esquimaux damsels--in the dance-house on shore. The whole population
-had turned out to meet us. We were entertained by the kind-hearted
-dames upon stockfish and seal-beef, and such luxuries as they could
-afford, with a hearty welcome to their neat and cleanly houses; and we
-in our turn endeavoured to do the hospitalities on board the _Fox_ with
-pickled pork and preserved cabbage. It was new life to us, who had been
-confined so long in our little den, thus to mingle with these friendly
-people. Never was sympathy more needed. We arrived hungry and unshaven,
-our faces begrimed with oil-smoke, our clothes in tatters; the good
-women of Holsteinborg worked and washed for us, repaired our sadly
-disreputable wardrobes, danced for us, sang to us, and parted from us
-with tears and a few little presents by way of _souvenirs_, as if we
-could ever forget them. We wrote a few hasty letters, hoping that they
-would reach home in the autumn, and sailed once more upon our voyage.
-
-We wished to call at Godhavn for another Esquimaux and some more
-dogs, besides a few stores, of which we stood in need; so, sailing up
-the coast, we arrived off the harbour on the night of May 10, but an
-impenetrable stream of loose ice blockaded the entrance. It was a wild
-night, and snowing heavily; sea, air, ice islands and icebergs seemed
-all mingled in one common haze. We endeavoured to haul off the land,
-and near midnight we narrowly escaped destruction upon an island,
-which, seen suddenly on the lee-beam, was at first taken for a berg. We
-all thought our ship must be dashed upon the rocks, and we were only
-saved by the presence of mind and seamanship of our Captain, who never
-left the deck, and wore the ship within a few yards of the shore. We
-anchored next day at the Whale-fish Islands, and fell in there with
-the _Jane_ and _Heroine_ whalers, whose captains gave us a true Scotch
-welcome, and ransacked their ships to find some little comforts for
-us. We again tasted the roast beef of old England. From the islands,
-we crossed to Godhavn, where finding the harbour still full of ice, we
-hauled into a rocky creek outside, a perfect little dock just capable
-of holding the ship, but exposed to southerly winds.
-
-By the 25th of May we were prepared for another and final attempt to
-accomplish our mission, and to try our fortunes in the ice. We were
-certainly sobered down considerably by our late severe lesson; but
-although less confident in our own powers, a steady determination
-to do our best prevailed throughout the ship. Passing again through
-the Waigat, we stopped at the coal-deposits to fill up with fuel,
-and we shot a few ptarmigan while thus detained. We next stopped at
-Saunderson’s Hope, “the Cape where the fowls do breed,” but it was yet
-too early for eggs, and as the looms had no young to protect, they
-flew away in thousands at every discharge of a gun; we got but few of
-these, in our opinion, delicious birds. On the 31st, we made fast to an
-iceberg off Upernavik, to await the breaking up of the ice in Melville
-Bay. When we were in these latitudes the previous year, all things
-living were migrating southward, but now constant flights of sea-birds
-streamed northward, night and day, towards their breeding-places and
-feeding-grounds, and by sitting on the rocky points, and shooting them
-as they passed, we could generally make a fair bag. We were now almost
-subsisting on eider ducks and looms.
-
-On June the 6th, we commenced our ice-struggles in Melville Bay,
-endeavouring, according to the usual mode of navigation, to push up,
-between the main pack and the ice still attached to the land, on all
-occasions when the winds moved the pack out, and left a space or lane
-of water. While thus following up the coast, on the 7th, we ran upon a
-reef of sunken and unknown rocks, and, on the tide falling, we lay over
-in such a manner as to threaten to fill upon the water again rising. We
-succeeded, however, in heaving off without damage.
-
-After many escapes from being squeezed by the ice closing upon the
-land, and after three weeks of intense labour, we reached Cape York
-on June 26th. We there communicated with the natives who had so much
-assisted Dr. Kane, when he wintered in Smith Sound. These poor
-creatures live upon the flesh of the bear, seal, and walrus, which they
-kill upon the ice with bone spears. They are, perhaps, the only people
-in the world living upon a sea-coast without boats of any kind, and are
-so completely isolated, that, previous to their being first visited in
-1818, they considered themselves to be the only people in the world.
-Dr. Kane left among them a Greenland Esquimaux, “Hans,” with his canoe.
-They told us that Hans was married, and was well, but that they had
-eaten the boat, besides many of their dogs, when hungry, during the
-last winter. We invited them on board, and they saw all our treasures
-of wood and iron; but they appeared to covet more than all, our dogs,
-and a few light pieces of wood, fit for spear-handles. We sent them
-away rejoicing over a few presents of long knives and needles, and they
-continued to dance and brandish the knives over their heads until we
-were out of sight.
-
-Passing Cape Dudley Diggs, we landed at a breeding-place of rotges
-(little auks); the birds were sitting in myriads upon the ledges of the
-cliffs, and we shot a great many; but our time was too precious to wait
-long, even for fresh food, and so we bore away. We were considerably
-baffled with ice-floes in crossing over towards Lancaster Sound, and we
-did not reach that side until July 12.
-
-Near Cape Horsburgh we found a small and enterprising family of
-natives, who had crossed over to this barren land from Pond’s Bay,
-two years previously, in search of better hunting ground. These poor
-people could give us no information of the missing ships; so we merely
-stopped to give them a few presents; we then steered for Pond’s Bay,
-from whence we had heard rumours of wrecks and wreck-wood being in
-the possession of the natives. In crossing Lancaster Sound, we were
-completely beset in the pack, and were even threatened with another
-drift out to sea like that of last year; we fortunately escaped,
-however, from the grip of the ice, after being carried for seven days
-in a helpless state, and as far as Cape Bathurst, before we could
-regain command over our ship.
-
-At the entrance to Pond’s Bay, we found an old woman and a boy living
-in a skin tent, their tribe being some twenty-five miles up the inlet,
-at a village on the north side. This village, called Kapawroktolik,
-could not be reached by land, on account of the precipitous cliffs
-facing the sea. The inlet was, however, yet full of ice, and Captain
-M‘Clintock endeavoured to reach the natives by sledge. In the meantime,
-we on board were employed in collecting sea-birds from the neighbouring
-breeding cliffs of Cape Grahame Moore. We also frequently visited the
-land to collect cochlearia, or scurvy-grass, which grew luxuriantly
-about the old Esquimaux encampments. A trade was commenced with the
-old lady on shore; for we found that, concealed among the stones, she
-had a number of narwhales’ horns, teeth, and blades of whalebone, of
-which she would only produce one at a time, by way of enhancing the
-value by its apparent scarcity. Around her tent were snares set in all
-directions for catching birds, and she had a large quantity of putrid
-blubber lying _en cache_, which was her principal food and fuel. The
-boy brought us a hare, which he had shot with his bow and arrow.
-Captain M‘Clintock having failed to reach the village, owing to the ice
-being all adrift in the inlet, he determined to take the ship there if
-possible, and to take the old woman as pilot.
-
-We ran alongside her tent, which she soon packed up with all her
-worldly riches, and came on board thoroughly drenched with the rain,
-which had poured in torrents all day. Our people managed to rig her out
-in some dry clothes; the poor boy was made snug in the engine room,
-and the old lady voluntarily took her station as pilot upon the deck
-throughout the night, and was very anxious to point out the beauties of
-her country, and the “pleasant sleeping places.”
-
-We could only get within eight miles of the village, owing to there
-being fast ice in the inlet; so, securing the ship to it, the Captain
-and Hobson started over the ice. On board the ship we hoped to have a
-quiet Sunday, but a number of right-whales playing round the vessel,
-and pushing their backs under the ice, constantly broke away the rotten
-edge to which we lay. We were thus kept constantly beating up again to
-it; and in the evening, about six or seven miles of the ice coming away
-in one floe, and turning round upon us, we were forced upon the south
-shore of the inlet, and momentarily expected being driven upon the
-rocks; but after blasting the ice with gunpowder for nearly two hours,
-in order to gain every inch, we got clear just as we were touching the
-ground.
-
-The next morning (August 2) the Captain and party returned. They had
-a most interesting trip, and described the village as situated in a
-most romantic spot, close upon the shore, at the foot of a deep valley
-filled with a glacier, which completely overhung the settlement, and
-threw jets of water almost to the tents. The natives were delighted
-to see them, and, in answer to the inquiries through the interpreter
-(Mr. Petersen), they said that two old wrecks were lying four days’
-journey southward of Cape Bowen--probably in Scot’s Inlet. These two
-ships came on shore together many years ago. They also confirmed an
-account from our lady pilot of an old wreck lying to the northward in
-Lancaster Sound, one day’s journey from Cape Hay, or, as they call it,
-Appak (breeding-place of birds). The wood in their possession was now
-accounted for, as also their great anxiety to procure saws, which they
-always asked for in barter. These wrecks were not those we sought, and
-we had no occasion to delay our voyage by looking at them. The natives
-drew a rough chart of the interior of this unknown country. They
-especially pointed out the salmon rivers, and the hunting and sleeping
-places, and gave a few general ideas of the profile of the land, and
-the main directions of the different channels which intersect it;
-describing North Devon as an island, and showing a water communication
-with Igloolik, where Parry wintered. We had now set at rest all rumours
-of Franklin’s ships being in the neighbourhood of Pond’s Bay; and
-having made a few observations for the survey of the place, we departed
-for Beechey Island, regretting that the whaleships had not been with us
-to profit by the number of fish we had seen. As we entered Lancaster
-Sound, five huge bears sat watching a dead whale; they sat upon
-different pieces of ice, apparently taking turns to feed, and evidently
-afraid of each other. We shot a couple of them, but one escaped over
-the ice after a long chase, although desperately wounded.
-
-The next morning (August 7) the wind increased to a perfect storm from
-the eastward; the fog was, as seamen say, as thick as pease-soup; we
-could see nothing; and compasses being here useless, we had to trust to
-our luck rather than good guidance for keeping in the fairway. We saw
-very little ice, but the sea ran so high upon the 8th, that we thought
-it prudent to lie-to for some hours. On the 10th, a herd of walrus
-was seen off Cape Felfoot, upon a piece of sailing ice, and lying so
-close as to completely cover it. The ship was run close alongside, and
-several were shot, but we did not succeed in getting one; for, unless
-instantaneously killed, they always wriggle off the ice and sink.
-The only practical method of getting a walrus is with a gun-harpoon
-from a boat; as yet we had shot only one during our voyage. Steering
-round Cape Hurd in a thick fog, we struck on an unknown shoal, but
-soon backed off again, and let go the anchor, as we could not see our
-position. About midnight the fog lifted, and we proceeded. A large
-bear was seen swimming round a point, and was shot; and shortly after,
-one of the men fell overboard: he was picked up rather exhausted with
-his cold bath, and perhaps a little alarmed at bathing in company
-with polar bears. We anchored next day off Cape Riley, where the
-_Bredalbane_ was lost, after Captain Inglefield had landed some of her
-stores and coals. We found that the bears had been amusing themselves
-with the provisions, and had eaten out the bilges between the hoops of
-many of the casks. They evidently had a particular relish for chocolate
-and salt pork (we hoped they liked it), and had taken the greatest
-trouble to throw everything about. We visited the stores at Beechey;
-they had been stored and housed with extreme care. A violent gale had
-passed over the place, for the door of the house was blown in and the
-entrance full of snow, but nothing was damaged excepting some biscuit.
-We also visited the graves, so often described, yet ever interesting,
-of the poor fellows who died in Franklin’s first winter quarters, and
-whose comrades we were now seeking.
-
-Our coaling from Cape Riley was completed by the 15th, and we were glad
-to leave that exposed and dangerous place. We had been considerably
-troubled with drift ice, and on the 13th we drove half across the bay,
-with both anchors down, and had to moor to a piece of ice grounded
-close to the ship. We crossed to the house at Beechey, and there landed
-a handsome tombstone (sent out by Lady Franklin), in memorial of Sir
-John Franklin and his companions. It was placed close to the monument
-erected by their shipmates to the memory of poor Bellot and those who
-had died in the previous searching expeditions. Taking in such stores
-as were actually necessary, and having repaired the house, we crossed
-over to Cape Hotham for a boat (left there by Penny), to replace one of
-ours which had been crushed by the ice. Wellington Channel appeared to
-be clear of ice, and a jumping sea, from the southward, gave us promise
-of clear water in that direction. On the 17th, we were sailing down
-Peel Sound with a fresh wind, and carrying every rag of canvas. Passing
-Limestone Island and Cape Granite, we began to think that we should go
-right through, for as yet no ice could be seen ahead; but the southern
-sky looked bright and icy, while, in contrast, a dark gloom hung over
-the waters we had left in the northward. Still we sailed on merrily,
-and were already talking of passing the winter near the Fish River, and
-returning the following year by Behring’s Straits, when “Ice ahead!”
-was reported from the crow’s-nest; and there it certainly was, a long
-low white barrier, of that peculiar concave form always indicating
-fast-ice. The Straits had not broken up this season, and we could not
-pass that way. We were bitterly disappointed, but not disheartened,
-for we had yet another chance of getting to our longed-for destination
-by way of Bellot Straits. Not an hour was to be lost; the season was
-passing away; and thither our captain determined to go at once. We
-reluctantly ran out of this promising channel, and sailed close along
-the north shores of Somerset, without seeing any ice of consequence.
-The night of the 18th set in dark and squally, but in the absence of
-ice we were quite at our ease. We steamed close under the magnificent
-castellated cliffs of Cape Clarence, and entered Leopold Harbour to
-land a boat, in the event of our having to abandon our ship and fall
-back this way.
-
-We found Regent’s Inlet clear, excepting a few streams of loose ice,
-through which we easily sailed. We passed Elwin and Batty Bays, and
-everything, as an old quartermaster expressed it, looked “werry
-prosperious.” Poor fellow! he knew that every mile sailed in the right
-direction would save him a hard pull at the sledge ropes.
-
-On the 20th, we passed close to Fury Beach, where the _Fury_ was lost
-in 1825; but the pace was too good to stop to visit even this most
-interesting spot. We came on with a fair wind and clear water to the
-latitude of Bellot Straits. Our excitement now became intense. The
-existence of the strait had been disputed, and upon it depended all
-our hopes. Running into Brentford Bay, we thought we saw ice streaming
-out, as if through some channel from the westward, but as yet we could
-see no opening; and being unable to get farther that night, we anchored
-in a little nook discovered on the north side of the bay. A look-out
-was set upon the highest hill, to watch the movements of the ice, and
-on the next day we made our first attempt to sail through. We started
-with a strong western tide, and under both steam and canvas, and,
-after proceeding about three miles, we were delighted to find that
-a passage really existed; but we had not got half way through when,
-the tide changing, a furious current came from the westward, bringing
-down upon us such masses of ice that we were carried helplessly away,
-and were nearly dashed upon huge pieces of grounded ice and reefs of
-rocks, over which the floes were running, and would have immediately
-capsized the little _Fox_ had she touched. This current ran at least
-seven knots an hour, and was more like a bore in the Hooghly than any
-ordinary tide. Struggling clear, after some considerable anxiety, and
-carried out of the straits, we reluctantly went back to the anchorage
-we had left. Night and day we now earnestly watched Bellot Straits, but
-they remained choked with the ice, which apparently drove backwards and
-forwards with the stream. We made another desperate attempt on the 25th
-August, and hung on, at imminent risk, in a small indentation about
-two-thirds through, and close under the precipitous cliffs. We were
-soon driven out of this again by the ice; yet so determined was our
-Captain to get through, that he then thought of pushing the ship into
-the pack, and driving with it into the western sea. We found, however,
-that the western entrance must be blocked, for the ice did not move
-fast in that direction. We could now do nothing but wait a change; and
-to employ the time, we sailed down the east coast of Boothia for some
-forty miles, to land a depôt of provisions, in case we should require,
-in the following winter, to communicate with the natives about Port
-Elizabeth. Navigation was now very cold and dreary work: we struggled
-back to Bellot Straits against strong north winds, sleet, and snow, and
-without compass, chart, or celestial objects to guide us. The Captain
-next went away in a boat, determining, when stopped, to travel over
-land to the western sea to examine the actual state of things there;
-and Young was sent to the southward for five days with boat and sledge,
-to ascertain if another passage existed where a promising break in the
-land had been seen.
-
-The Captain returned to the ship on the 31st, bringing with him a fine
-fat buck; he had reached Cape Bird by water and land, and brought us
-a favourable report of Victoria Straits. Our hopes of getting through
-were again raised. Young returned unsuccessful from the south; no other
-strait existed, but only an inlet, extending some six miles in, and a
-chain of lakes thence into the interior to the south-westward. Young
-saw only one deer, but many bears were roaming about the coast.
-
-On the 6th September we made another dash at the straits, and this time
-succeeded in reaching a rocky islet, two miles outside the western
-entrance; but a barrier of fast ice, over which we could see a dark
-_water-sky_, here stopped us. Moored to the ice, we employed ourselves
-in killing seals, hunting for bears, and making preparations for
-travelling. Young was sent to an island eight miles to the south-west,
-to look around; and on ascending the land, he was astonished to see
-water as far as the visible horizon to the southward in Victoria
-Straits. While sitting down, taking some angles with the sextant, he
-luckily turned round just in time to see a large bear crawling up the
-rocks to give him a pat on the head. He seized his rifle and shot him
-through the body, but the beast struggled down and died out of reach,
-in the water, and thus a good depôt of beef was lost. Hobson, who, for
-some days, had been employed carrying provisions on to this island,
-started on the 25th with a party of seven men and two dog-sledges to
-carry depôts as far as possible to the southward, and the Captain
-placed a boat on the islet close to the ship, in case we should have to
-leave for winter quarters before Hobson’s return.
-
-The winter now set in rapidly, new ice was fast increasing, and the
-weather very severe; all navigation was at an end, and the barrier
-outside of us had never moved. We had now no hopes of getting further,
-and as no harbour existed where we were, we had nothing for it but to
-seek our winter home in Bellot Straits, and finish our work in the
-following winter and spring. So leaving Hobson to find his way to
-us, we ran back through Bellot Straits towards a harbour that we had
-discovered and named Port Kennedy. The straits were already covered
-with scum, and almost unnavigable, but we reached the harbour at
-midnight on the 27th, and ran the ship as far as possible into the
-new ice which now filled it. The _Fox_ had done her work until the
-following summer. No opportunity was now lost of procuring fresh food.
-The deer were migrating southward and a few were shot as they passed.
-But the hunting was very precarious; the deer were travelling, and did
-not stop much to feed; there was no cover whatever, and stalking over
-the rugged hills and snow-filled valleys was most laborious. A few
-ptarmigan and hares were also shot, but we were altogether disappointed
-in the resources of the country. We had, however, a fair stock of bear
-and seal flesh for our dogs and ourselves to begin upon.
-
-On the 6th October Hobson returned, having reached some fifty miles
-down the west coast of Boothia, but was there stopped by the yet
-broken-up state of the ice. Finding that we had left Cape Bird, and
-that Bellot Straits were impassable for the boat, he travelled back to
-the ship over the mountains. The people were now clearing out the ship,
-landing all superfluous stores, and building magnetic observatories of
-snow and ice, besides hunting for the pot. We once more buried the ship
-with snow.
-
-On the 24th, Hobson again started for the south-westward, to follow
-up his last track, and to endeavour to push his depôts further on. He
-returned to the ship on November 6, having experienced most severe
-weather, and great dangers from the unquiet state of the ice. When
-encamped near the shore, in latitude 70° 21′, the ice broke suddenly
-away from the land and drifted out to sea before the gale, carrying
-them off with it. They were perched upon a small floe piece, and a wide
-crack separated the two tents. Dense snow-drift heightened the darkness
-of the night, and they could not possibly tell in which direction they
-were driving. The next morning they found themselves fifteen miles from
-where they had pitched the previous evening. By the mercy of Providence
-a calm succeeded, and they escaped to the land over the ice which
-immediately formed. So thin was this new ice, that they momentarily
-expected to break through. By great exertion Hobson saved the depôt;
-and finding it impossible to do any more, he landed the provisions
-and returned to the ship. Our autumn travelling was now brought to a
-close. A depôt of provisions was to have been carried by Young across
-Victoria Straits, but this was given up as evidently impracticable.
-We sat down for the winter, praying that we might be spared to finish
-our work in the spring. The whole ship’s company marched in funeral
-procession to the shore on the 10th November, bearing upon a sledge
-the mortal remains of poor Mr. Bland (our chief engineer), who was
-found dead in his bed on the 7th. The burial service having been read,
-he was deposited in his frozen tomb, on which the wild flowers will
-never grow, and over which his relations can never mourn. We were all
-on board almost as one family, and any one taken from us was missed
-as one from the fireside at home. It was long before this sorrowful
-feeling throughout the ship could be shaken off. On the 14th the sun
-disappeared, and we were left in darkness; our skylights had long
-been covered over with snow, and by the light of our solitary dip we
-tried to pass the weary hours by reading, sleeping, and smoking. We
-were frozen in, in a fine harbour, surrounded by lofty granite hills,
-and on these were occasionally found a few ptarmigan, hares, and wild
-foxes; whenever the weather permitted, or we could at all see our
-way, we wandered over these dreary hills in search of a fresh mess.
-We varied our exercise with excursions on the ice in search of bears.
-But although exercise was so necessary for our existence, yet from the
-winds drawing through the straits and down our harbour as through a
-funnel, there were many days, and even weeks, when we could scarcely
-leave the ship. The men set fox-traps in all directions, and Mr.
-Petersen set seal-nets under the ice. The nets were not successful, but
-the traps gave an object for a walk. Magnetic observations were carried
-on throughout the winter;--the reading of one instrument, placed in a
-snow-house some 200 yards from the ship, being registered every hour
-night and day. On some of the wild winter nights, there was some risk
-in going even that distance from the ship. Christmas and New Year’s
-days were spent with such rejoicing as in our situation we could make,
-and we entered upon the year 1859 with good health and spirits. Our
-dogs, upon which so much depended, were also in first-rate condition,
-and not one of them had died.
-
-The sun returned to us on January 26th; the daylight soon began to
-increase; and by February 10th, we were all ready to start upon our
-first winter journey. Bad weather detained us until the 17th, when
-Captain M‘Clintock and Young both left the ship; the Captain, with only
-two companions, Mr. Petersen (interpreter) and Thompson as dog-driver,
-to travel down the west coast of Boothia, to endeavour to obtain
-information, preparatory to the long spring journeys, from some natives
-supposed to live near the magnetic pole. Young was to cross Victoria
-Straits with a depôt of provisions, to enable him in the spring to
-search the coast of Prince of Wales Land, wherever it might trend. He
-returned on March 5.
-
-The Captain’s party hove in sight on the 14th, and we all ran out to
-meet him. He had found a tribe of natives at Cape Victoria, near the
-magnetic pole, and from them he learnt that some years ago a large ship
-was crushed by the ice, off the north-west coast of King William Land;
-that the people had come to the land, and had travelled down that coast
-to the estuary of the Great Fish River where they had died upon an
-island (Montreal Island); the natives had spears, bows and arrows, and
-other implements made of wood, besides a quantity of silver spoons and
-forks, which they said they had procured on the island (more probably
-by barter from other tribes). It was now evident that we were on the
-right track, and with this important information Captain M‘Clintock
-returned to the ship.
-
-Our winter travelling was thus ended, fortunately without any mishap.
-
-Those only who know what it is to be exposed to a temperature of frozen
-mercury accompanied with wind, can form any idea of the discomforts of
-dragging a sledge over the ice, upon an unknown track, day after day,
-and for eight or ten consecutive hours, without a meal or drink, the
-hands and face constantly frostbitten, and your very boots full of ice;
-to be attacked with snow blindness; to encamp and start in the dark,
-and spend sixteen hours upon the snow, in a brown-holland tent, or the
-hastily erected snow-house, listening to the wind, the snow-drift, and
-the howling of the dogs outside, and trying to wrap the frozen blanket
-closer round the shivering frame. The exhaustion to the system is so
-great, and the thirst so intense, that the evening pannikin of tea and
-the allowanced pound of pemmican would not be given up were it possible
-to receive the whole world in exchange; and woe to the unlucky cook if
-he capsized the kettle!
-
-On the 18th March, Young again started for Fury Beach, distant
-seventy-five miles, to get some of the sugar left there by Parry in
-1825, and now considered necessary for the health of our men by the
-surgeon. This journey occupied until the 28th, one sledge having broken
-down, and the whole weight--about 1200 lbs.--having to be worked back
-piecemeal with one sledge, by a sort of fox-and-goose calculation. Dr.
-Walker, who had also volunteered to go down for the provisions left
-on the east coast in the autumn, and now not required there, returned
-about the same time. With the information already obtained, and which
-only accounted for one ship, Captain M‘Clintock saw no reason for
-changing the original plan of search, viz., that he should trace the
-Montreal Island and round King William Land; that Hobson should cross
-from the magnetic pole to Collinson’s farthest on Victoria Land, and
-follow up that coast; and that Young should cross Victoria Straits
-and connect the coast of Prince of Wales Land with either Collinson’s
-farthest on Victoria Island or Osborne’s farthest on the west coast of
-Prince of Wales Land, according as he might discover the land to trend.
-Young was also to connect the coast with Browne’s farthest in Peel
-Sound, and explore the coast of North Somerset from Sir James Ross’s
-farthest (Four River Bay) to Bellot Straits. This would complete the
-examination of the whole unexplored country.
-
-The travelling parties were each to consist of four men drawing one
-sledge, and six dogs with a second sledge, besides the officer in
-charge, and the dog-driver. By the aid of depôts, already carried out,
-and from the extreme care with which Captain M‘Clintock had prepared
-the travelling equipment, and had reduced every ounce of unnecessary
-weight, we expected to be able to be absent from the ship, and without
-any other resource, for periods of from seventy to eighty days, and if
-necessary even longer. The Captain and Hobson both started on the 2nd
-April, and Young got away upon the 7th. The _Fox_ was left in charge
-of Dr. Walker (surgeon), and three or four invalids, who were unfit for
-the fatigues of travelling.
-
-Although we all felt much excited at the real commencement of our
-active work, and interested in these departures, this was perhaps the
-most painful period of our voyage. We had hitherto acted in concert,
-and all the dangers of our voyage had been shared together. We were now
-to be separated, and for three months to travel in detached parties
-over the ice, without an opportunity of hearing of each other until
-our return. It was like the breaking up of a happy family, and our
-only consolation lay in the hope that when we again met it would be
-to rejoice over the discovery of the lost ships. Nothing of interest
-occurred on board during our absence; but one of the invalids, poor
-Blackwell, had been getting gradually worse, and died of scurvy on June
-14, the very day on which Hobson returned.
-
-The Captain and Hobson travelled together as far as Cape Victoria.
-There they learnt the additional news that another ship had drifted
-on shore on the west coast of King William Land in the autumn of the
-same year in which the first ship was crushed. Captain M‘Clintock, now
-knowing that both ships had been seen off that coast, and that on it
-the traces must be found, most generously resigned to Hobson the first
-opportunity of searching there, instead of crossing to Victoria Land,
-as originally intended. Captain M‘Clintock then went down the east side
-towards the Fish River. Near Cape Norton, he found a tribe of some
-thirty or forty natives, who appeared much pleased to meet the strange
-white people. They answered readily any inquiries, and concealed
-nothing. They produced silver spoons and forks, and other relics from
-the lost ships, and readily bartered them for knives or needles. They
-were acquainted with the wreck, which they said was over the land
-(on the south-west coast), and for years they had collected wood and
-valuables from it, but they had not visited it for a long time. They
-had seen Franklin’s people on their march southward, but had not
-molested them. They said that they had seen one human skeleton in the
-ship. Proceeding on his route, Captain M‘Clintock next found a native
-family at Point Booth, near the south-east extreme of King William
-Land; these natives gave him the additional information that the
-remains of some of the lost people would be found on Montreal Island.
-Having searched Montreal Island and main land in the neighbourhood
-without finding other traces than a few pieces of copper and iron, and
-now having connected the search from the north with Anderson’s from the
-south, Captain M‘Clintock proceeded to examine the shores of Dease and
-Simpson Straits, and the southern shore of King William Land.
-
-Near Cape Herschel, the Captain’s party found a human skeleton upon the
-beach as the man had fallen down and died, with his face to the ground;
-and a pocket-book, containing letters in German which have not yet been
-deciphered, was found close by.
-
-The large cairn, originally built by Simpson, at Cape Herschel, had
-been pulled down, probably by the natives, and if any record or
-document had ever been placed therein by Franklin’s people, they were
-now lost, for none could be found within or around the cairn. Passing
-Cape Herschel, Captain M‘Clintock travelled along the hitherto unknown
-shore, and discovered it to extend out as far as the meridian of 100°
-West. There all traces of the natives ceased,[31] and it appeared as
-if they had not for many years lived or hunted beyond that point which
-was named Cape Crozier (after Captain Crozier, Franklin’s second in
-command).
-
-The land then trended to the north-eastward, and about twenty miles
-from Cape Crozier, M‘Clintock found a boat, which had only a few
-days previously been examined by Hobson from the north, and in it a
-note left by Hobson to say that he had discovered the records of the
-_Erebus_ and _Terror_, and after travelling nearly to Cape Herschel
-without finding further traces, had returned towards the _Fox_. Captain
-M‘Clintock, from the south, had now connected his discoveries with
-those of Lieutenant Hobson, to whose very successful journey we will
-now turn.
-
-Parting from the Captain at Cape Victoria, Hobson crossed to Cape
-Felix, and near that point he found a cairn, around which were
-quantities of clothing, blankets, and other indications of Franklin’s
-people having visited that spot, and probably formed a depôt there, in
-the event of their abandoning their ships. Anxiously searching among
-these interesting relics without finding any record, Hobson continued
-along the shore to Cape Victoria, where, on May 6, he discovered a
-large cairn, and in it the first authentic account ever obtained of the
-history of the lost expedition. It was to the following effect:--That
-the _Erebus_ and _Terror_ had ascended Wellington Channel to latitude
-77° north, and had returned west of Cornwallis Island to Beechey
-Island, where they spent their first winter, 1845-46. Sailing thence
-in the following season, they were beset, on September 12, 1846, in
-latitude 70° 5′ north, longitude 98° 23′ west. _Sir John Franklin died
-on June 11, 1847_; and on the 22nd of April, 1848, having, up to that
-date, lost by death nine officers and fifteen men, both ships were
-abandoned in the ice, five leagues north north-west of Point Victory.
-The survivors, 106 in number, had landed, under the command of Captain
-Crozier, on the 25th April, at Point Victory, and would start on the
-morrow (April 26) for the Great Fish River. Another record was also
-found, stating that previously, on the 24th May, 1847, Lieutenant
-Grahame Gore and Mr. Charles DesVœux, mate, had landed from the ship,
-with a party of six men. The record did not state for what reason they
-had landed; but from the number who finally abandoned the ships, this
-party must have returned on board, and it is probable that they merely
-landed to examine the coast.
-
-Quantities of clothing, cooking, and working implements were scattered
-about near Point Victory, and a sextant, on which was engraved the
-name of Frederick Hornby, was found among the _débris_. Collecting a
-few of the most interesting of these relics to take with him upon his
-return, Hobson then pushed on to the southward, and when near Cape
-Crozier he discovered the boat above mentioned, by a small stanchion
-just showing up above the snow. Clearing away the snow, he found in
-the bottom of the boat two human skeletons, one of which was under a
-heap of clothing. There were also watches, chronometers, silver spoons,
-money, &c., besides a number of Bibles, prayer and other religious
-books; and although one of the Bibles was underlined in almost every
-verse, yet not a single writing was found to throw further light upon
-the history of the retreating parties. There were two guns, one barrel
-of each being loaded and cocked, as if these poor fellows had been
-anxiously longing for a passing bear or fox to save them from starving;
-for nothing edible was found, save some chocolate and tea, neither of
-which could support life in such a climate. Lieutenant Hobson, having
-searched the coast beyond Cape Crozier, returned to the ship on June
-14, in a very exhausted state. He had been suffering severely from
-scurvy, and was so reduced in strength that he could not stand. He had
-been for more than forty days upon his sledge, carried in and out of
-the tent by his brave companions, and his sufferings must have been
-beyond description. Throughout his journey he had only killed one bear
-and a few ptarmigan.
-
-Captain M‘Clintock returned on board the _Fox_ on June 19, having been
-absent eighty days. He brought with him a number of relics, and had
-minutely examined every cairn and the whole coast of King William.
-He supposes that the wreck of the ship, unless upon some off-lying
-island, has been run over by the ice, and has disappeared; as he saw
-nothing of it. He made most valuable discoveries in geography, and
-surveyed the coast from Bellot Straits to the magnetic pole, besides
-having travelled completely round King William Island, and filled up
-its unknown coasts. Besides his other instruments, he carried with him
-a dip circle, weighing 40 lbs., with which he also made most valuable
-observations.
-
-Young had crossed Victoria Straits (now Franklin Straits), discovered
-M‘Clintock Channel, and proved Prince of Wales Land to be an island;
-having reached the point which Captain Sherard Osborn came to from the
-north. Owing to the very heavy character of the ice, he had failed
-in crossing M‘Clintock Channel, and returned to the ship on June 8,
-for a day or two’s rest. He had again started, on June 10, to recross
-Victoria Straits, and to complete the search to the northward upon
-Prince of Wales Land, and the unknown land of North Somerset, and was
-now absent; and although the ice was fast breaking up, and the floes
-already knee-deep with water, Captain M‘Clintock, notwithstanding
-his late severe journey, fearing that something might be wrong, most
-kindly started immediately, with only one man and a dog-sledge, to
-look for him. He found Young perched up out of the water upon the
-top of the islet, off Cape Bird, and they returned together to the
-ship on June 28. We were now all on board, and once more together. We
-were in fair health, although some of us were a little touched with
-scurvy. We passed our time in shooting, eating, and sleeping, and then
-eating again: our craving for fresh food, or, as the sailors call it,
-blood-meat, was excessive; seal and bear flesh, foxes, gulls, or
-ducks, went indiscriminately into the pot. We rejoiced whenever we got
-a fresh mess of any sort.
-
-The summer burst upon us; water was pouring down all the ravines,
-and flooding the ice in the harbour, and with extreme satisfaction
-we saw the snow houses and ice hummocks fast melting away in the now
-never-setting sun. A joyous feeling existed throughout the ship, for
-our work was done, and we had only to look forward to an early release,
-and a return to our families and homes.
-
-Over and over again we told our adventures, and we never tired of
-listening to the one all-absorbing, though melancholy subject, of the
-discovery of the fate of Sir John Franklin and his companions.
-
-We had been prepared by the report brought from the Esquimaux in
-February to find that all hopes of survivors were at an end, and that
-the expedition had met with some fatal and overwhelming casualty; but
-we were scarcely prepared to know, nor could we even have realized the
-manner, in which they spent their last days upon earth, so fearful a
-sojourn must it have been. Beset and surrounded with wastes of snow
-and ice, they passed two more terrible winters drifting slowly to the
-southward at the rate of one mile in the month, hoping each summer
-that the ice would open, and determined not to abandon their ships
-until every hope was gone. In nineteen months they had only moved some
-eighteen miles, their provisions daily lessening, and their strength
-fast failing. They had at last left their ships for the Fish River at
-least two months before the river could break up and allow them to
-proceed, and in the then imperfect knowledge of ice travelling they
-could not have carried with them more than forty days’ provisions.
-Exhausted by scurvy and starvation, “they dropped as they walked
-along,”[32] and those few who reached Montreal Island must all have
-perished there; and but for their having travelled over the frozen sea
-we should have found the remains of these gallant men as they fell by
-the way, and but for the land being covered deeply with snow, more
-relics of those who had struggled to the beach to die would have been
-seen. They all perished, and, in dying in the cause of their country,
-their dearest consolation must have been to feel that Englishmen would
-not rest until they had followed up their footsteps, and had given to
-the world what they could not then give--the grand result of their
-dreadful voyage--_their Discovery of the North-West Passage_. They had
-sailed down Peel and Victoria Straits, now appropriately named Franklin
-Straits, and the poor human skeletons lying upon the shores of the
-waters in which Dease and Simpson had sailed from the westward bore
-melancholy evidence of their success.
-
- * * * * *
-
-By the middle of July the dark blue stream rolled again through Bellot
-Straits, but yet not a drop of water could be seen in Regent Inlet. Our
-ship was refitted, the stores all on board, and we were quite prepared
-for sea. Our engineers were both lost to us, but the Captain soon got
-the engines into working order, and determined to drive them himself,
-for without steam we could reckon upon nothing.
-
-[Illustration:
- A CHART
- showing the
- TRACKS OF THE YACHT FOX
- despatched by Lady Franklin
- under the command of
- CAPT’N. M‘CLINTOCK, R.N.
- in search of
- H.M. SHIPS EREBUS & TERROR
- 1857 to 1859.
-]
-
-July passed away, and during the first week in August we could still
-see one unbroken surface of ice in Regent Inlet; from the highest
-hill not a spoonful of water could be made out. We were getting
-rather anxious, for had we been detained another winter, we must have
-abandoned the ship in the following spring and trusted to our fortunes
-over the ice. However, a gale of wind on the 7th and 8th of August
-caused some disruption in the inlet, for on the morning of the 9th a
-report came down from the hills that a lead of water was seen under the
-land to the northward. Steam was immediately made, and pushing close
-past the islands, we were enabled to work up the coast in a narrow lane
-of water between it and the pack.
-
-We reached the north side of Creswell Bay on the following day, but,
-the wind changing, we saw the pack setting rapidly in upon the land,
-and it had already closed upon Fury Beach. Our only chance was now
-to seek a grounded mass of ice, and to hang on to it. We were indeed
-glad to get a little rest, and especially for our captain, who had not
-left the engines for twenty-four hours. But we lay in a most exposed
-position on an open coast without an indentation, the pack closing in
-rapidly before the wind and threatening us with the same fate as befell
-the _Fury_ when she was driven on the shore about seven miles from our
-present position. Hanging on to this piece of ice with every hawser,
-we saw it gradually melting and breaking away, and at spring tides it
-began to float. On the 15th the gale shifted to the westward, and blew
-off the land; we watched the ice gradually easing off, and directly
-that we had room, we cast off under storm-sails, and succeeded in
-getting out of Regent Inlet and into Lancaster Sound on the following
-day. We entered Godhavn, in Greenland, on the night of August 26, and
-not having heard from our friends for more than two years, we did
-not even wait for daylight for our expected letters. The authorities
-on shore kindly sent all they had for us at once to the ship, and I
-suppose that letters from home were never opened with more anxiety.
-
-Having a few repairs to do, especially to our rudder, which, with
-the spare one, had been smashed by the ice, we remained a day or two
-to patch it up for the passage home. Then leaving Godhavn on the 1st
-September, although the nights were extremely dark, and the weather
-stormy, with many bergs drifting about, we passed down Davis Strait
-without incident, and, rounding Cape Farewell on the 13th, we ran
-across the Atlantic with strong, fair winds. Captain M‘Clintock landed
-at the Isle of Wight on the 20th, and on the 23rd the _Fox_ entered the
-docks at Blackwall.
-
-Our happy cruise was at an end, and by the mercy of Providence we were
-permitted to land again in England.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[31] The wanderings of the Esquimaux may be traced by the circles of
-stones by which they keep down their skin summer tents.
-
-[32] Esquimaux report.
-
-
-
-
- The First Morning of 1860.
-
-
- One evening mid the summer flown
- Has stamp’d my memory more than any;
- It pass’d us by among the many,
- And yet it stands there, all alone.
-
- We sate without our open’d room,
- While fell the eve’s transparent shade;
- The out-door world, all warmth and bloom,
- To us a summer parlour made.
-
- The garden’s cultivated grace,
- The luxury of neatness round,
- The careless amplitude of space,
- The silence, and the casual sound,
-
- Told of a state thro’ many years
- Serenely safe in doing well;
- And while we sate, there struck our ears
- The summons of the evening bell.
-
- It call’d to food, it call’d to rest,
- The many whom the rich man’s dome
- Had gathered in its ample breast,
- To them and him alike a home.
-
- That very hour, was thund’ring o’er
- A neighbouring land, the tramp of War,
- Which stalked along the lovely shore,
- Its shapes to blast, its sounds to mar.
-
- And ’gainst our own, the reflux wave
- Had pushed its harsh in-flooding swell:
- The clouds which there a tempest gave,
- In shadow on our own land fell.
-
- The pang my bosom rudely beat--
- What if that fate our own had been?
- What if or victory or defeat
- Had wrapp’d us in its woe, and sin?
-
- What if it still our fate should be?
- And the safe hours, enjoy’d like this,
- Amid our home-scenes safe and free,
- Should be the passing year of bliss?
-
- The new one on the lecturn lies,
- Its leaves the turning hand await;
- Those fresh unopen’d leaves comprise
- Th’ unread, but written words of Fate.
-
- O God! what are they? if they be
- The bloody words of ruffian war,
- Grant us success!--but rather far
- Avert the scourge of victory!
-
- Too dear the price! Ah! human forms
- Of guardian husbands, cherish’d sons
- Once children, hid from smallest harms
- Of mind and body, cherish’d ones!
-
- Shall ye stand up, the gallant mark
- Of the brute shot, and iron rod,
- And man’s frame, exquisite in work,
- Be treated like earth’s common clod?
-
- Shall England’s polish’d glory, pure
- In freedom, wisdom, high estate,
- Her open Bible, and her poor
- Becoming one with rich and great,--
-
- Shall these high things be but the aim
- Of envious men, in rough affray,
- To try against the noble frame
- Their brutal skill to rob and slay?
-
- Forbid it Thou, who to the strong,
- And wise, hast might and counsel lent;
- And lead’st them danger’s path along,
- Audacious, firm, and confident.
-
- Forbid it, Thou, who to the weak
- Permittest to be strong in pray’r;
- From Whom we wives and mothers seek
- Peace to endow the new-born year.
-
- V.
-
-
-
-
- Roundabout Papers.--No. I.
-
-
- ON A LAZY IDLE BOY.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-I had occasion to pass a week in the autumn in the little old town of
-Coire or Chur, in the Grisons, where lies buried that very ancient
-British king, saint, and martyr, Lucius,[33] who founded the Church of
-St. Peter, which stands opposite the house No. 65, Cornhill. Few people
-note the church now-a-days, and fewer ever heard of the saint. In the
-cathedral at Chur, his statue appears surrounded by other sainted
-persons of his family. With tight red breeches, a Roman habit, a curly
-brown beard, and a neat little gilt crown and sceptre, he stands, a
-very comely and cheerful image: and, from what I may call his peculiar
-position with regard to No. 65, Cornhill, I beheld this figure of St.
-Lucius with more interest than I should have bestowed upon personages
-who, hierarchically, are, I daresay, his superiors.
-
-The pretty little city stands, so to speak, at the end of the world--of
-the world of to-day, the world of rapid motion, and rushing railways,
-and the commerce and intercourse of men. From the northern gate, the
-iron road stretches away to Zürich, to Basel, to Paris, to home. From
-the old southern barriers, before which a little river rushes, and
-around which stretch the crumbling battlements of the ancient town,
-the road bears the slow diligence or lagging vetturino by the shallow
-Rhine, through the awful gorges of the Via Mala, and presently over the
-Splügen to the shores of Como.
-
-I have seldom seen a place more quaint, pretty, calm, and pastoral,
-than this remote little Chur. What need have the inhabitants for walls
-and ramparts, except to build summer-houses, to trail vines, and hang
-clothes to dry? No enemies approach the great mouldering gates: only
-at morn and even, the cows come lowing past them, the village maidens
-chatter merrily round the fountains, and babble like the ever-voluble
-stream that flows under the old walls. The schoolboys, with book and
-satchel, in smart uniforms, march up to the gymnasium, and return
-thence at their stated time. There is one coffee-house in the town, and
-I see one old gentleman goes to it. There are shops with no customers
-seemingly, and the lazy tradesmen look out of their little windows at
-the single stranger sauntering by. There is a stall with baskets of
-queer little black grapes and apples, and a pretty brisk trade with
-half a dozen urchins standing round. But, beyond this, there is scarce
-any talk or movement in the street. There’s nobody at the book-shop.
-“If you will have the goodness to come again in an hour,” says the
-banker, with his mouthful of dinner at one o’clock, “you can have the
-money.” There is nobody at the hotel, save the good landlady, the kind
-waiters, the brisk young cook who ministers to you. Nobody is in the
-Protestant church--(oh! strange sight, the two confessions are here
-at peace!)--nobody in the Catholic church: until the sacristan, from
-his snug abode in the cathedral close, espies the traveller eyeing
-the monsters and pillars before the old shark-toothed arch of his
-cathedral, and comes out (with a view to remuneration possibly) and
-opens the gate, and shows you the venerable church, and the queer old
-relics in the sacristy, and the ancient vestments (a black velvet cope,
-amongst other robes, as fresh as yesterday, and presented by that
-notorious “pervert,” Henry of Navarre and France), and the statue of
-St. Lucius, who built St. Peter’s Church, opposite No. 65, Cornhill.
-
-What a quiet, kind, quaint, pleasant, pretty old town! Has it been
-asleep these hundreds and hundreds of years, and is the brisk young
-Prince of the Sidereal Realms in his screaming car drawn by his
-snorting steel elephant coming to waken it? Time was when there must
-have been life and bustle and commerce here. Those vast, venerable
-walls were not made to keep out cows, but men-at-arms led by fierce
-captains, who prowled about the gates, and robbed the traders us they
-passed in and out with their bales, their goods, their pack-horses, and
-their wains. Is the place so dead that even the clergy of the different
-denominations can’t quarrel? Why, seven or eight, or a dozen, or
-fifteen hundred years ago (they haven’t the register, over the way, up
-to that remote period. I daresay it was burnt in the fire of London)--a
-dozen hundred years ago, when there was some life in the town, St.
-Lucius was stoned here on account of theological differences, after
-founding our church in Cornhill.
-
-There was a sweet pretty river walk we used to take in the evening,
-and mark the mountains round glooming with a deeper purple; the shades
-creeping up the golden walls; the river brawling, the cattle calling,
-the maids and chatterboxes round the fountains babbling and bawling;
-and several times in the course of our sober walks, we overtook a lazy
-slouching boy, or hobbledehoy, with a rusty coat, and trousers not
-too long, and big feet trailing lazily one after the other, and large
-lazy hands dawdling from out the tight sleeves, and in the lazy hands
-a little book, which my lad held up to his face, and which I daresay
-so charmed and ravished him, that he was blind to the beautiful sights
-around him; unmindful, I would venture to lay any wager, of the lessons
-he had to learn for to-morrow; forgetful of mother waiting supper, and
-father preparing a scolding;--absorbed utterly and entirely in his book.
-
-What was it that so fascinated the young student, as he stood by the
-river shore? Not the _Pons Asinorum_. What book so delighted him, and
-blinded him to all the rest of the world, so that he did not care to
-see the apple-woman with her fruit, or (more tempting still to sons of
-Eve) the pretty girls with their apple cheeks, who laughed and prattled
-round the fountain? What was the book? Do you suppose it was Livy, or
-the Greek grammar? No; it was a NOVEL that you were reading, you lazy,
-not very clean, good-for-nothing, sensible boy! It was D’Artagnan
-locking up General Monk in a box, or almost succeeding in keeping
-Charles the First’s head on. It was the prisoner of the Château d’If
-cutting himself out of the sack fifty feet under water (I mention the
-novels I like best myself--novels without love or talking, or any of
-that sort of nonsense, but containing plenty of fighting, escaping,
-robbery, and rescuing)--cutting himself out of the sack, and swimming
-to the Island of Montecristo. O Dumas! O thou brave, kind, gallant
-old Alexandre! I hereby offer thee homage, and give thee thanks for
-many pleasant hours. I have read thee (being sick in bed) for thirteen
-hours of a happy day, and had the ladies of the house fighting for the
-volumes. Be assured that lazy boy was reading Dumas (or I will go so
-far as to let the reader here pronounce the eulogium, or insert the
-name of his favourite author); and as for the anger, or it may be, the
-reverberations of his schoolmaster, or the remonstrances of his father,
-or the tender pleadings of his mother that he should not let the supper
-grow cold--I don’t believe the scapegrace cared one fig. No! Figs are
-sweet, but fictions are sweeter.
-
-Have you ever seen a score of white-bearded, white-robed warriors, or
-grave seniors of the city, seated at the gate of Jaffa or Beyrout,
-and listening to the story-teller reciting his marvels out of _Antar_
-or the _Arabian Nights_? I was once present when a young gentleman at
-table put a tart away from him, and said to his neighbour, the Younger
-Son (with rather a fatuous air), “I never eat sweets.”
-
-“Not eat sweets! and do you know why?” says T.
-
-“Because I am past that kind of thing,” says the young gentleman.
-
-“Because you are a glutton and a sot!” cries the elder (and Juvenis
-winces a little). “All people who have natural, healthy appetites,
-love sweets; all children, all women, all Eastern people, whose tastes
-are not corrupted by gluttony and strong drink.” And a plateful of
-raspberries and cream disappeared before the philosopher.
-
-You take the allegory? Novels are sweets. All people with healthy
-literary appetites love them--almost all women;--a vast number of
-clever, hard-headed men. Why, one of the most learned physicians in
-England said to me only yesterday, “I have just read _So-and-So_ for
-the second time” (naming one of Jones’s exquisite fictions). Judges,
-bishops, chancellors, mathematicians are notorious novel readers; as
-well as young boys and sweet girls, and their kind, tender mothers. Who
-has not read about Eldon, and how he cried over novels every night when
-he was not at whist?
-
-As for that lazy naughty boy at Chur, I doubt whether _he_ will like
-novels when he is thirty years of age. He is taking too great a glut
-of them now. He is eating jelly until he will be sick. He will know
-most plots by the time he is twenty, so that _he_ will never be
-surprised when the Stranger turns out to be the rightful earl,--when
-the old waterman, throwing off his beggarly gabardine, shows his
-stars and the collars of his various orders, and clasping Antonia to
-his bosom, proves himself to be the prince, her long-lost father. He
-will recognize the novelists’ same characters, though they appear in
-red-heeled pumps and _ailes-de-pigeon_, or the garb of the nineteenth
-century. He will get weary of sweets, as boys of private schools grow
-(or used to grow, for I have done growing some little time myself, and
-the practice may have ended too)--as private schoolboys used to grow
-tired of the pudding before their mutton at dinner.
-
-And pray what is the moral of this apologue? The moral I take to be
-this: the appetite for novels extending to the end of the world;--far
-away in the frozen deep, the sailors reading them to one another during
-the endless night;--far away under the Syrian stars, the solemn sheikhs
-and elders hearkening to the poet as he recites his tales;--far away
-in the Indian camps, where the soldiers listen to ----’s tales, or
-----’s, after the hot day’s march;--far away in little Chur yonder,
-where the lazy boy pores over the fond volume, and drinks it in with
-all his eyes;--the demand being what we know it is, the merchant
-must supply it, as he will supply saddles and pale ale for Bombay or
-Calcutta.
-
-But as surely as the cadet drinks too much pale ale, it will disagree
-with him; and so surely, dear youth, will too much novels cloy on
-thee. I wonder, do novel writers themselves read many novels? If you
-go into Gunter’s, you don’t see those charming young ladies (to whom
-I present my most respectful compliments) eating tarts and ices, but
-at the proper evening-tide they have good plain wholesome tea and
-bread-and-butter. Can anybody tell me does the author of the _Tale
-of two Cities_ read novels? does the author of the _Tower of London_
-devour romances? does the dashing _Harry Lorrequer_ delight in _Plain
-or Ringlets_ or _Sponge’s Sporting Tour_? Does the veteran, from
-whose flowing pen we had the books which delighted our young days,
-_Darnley_, and _Richelieu_, and _Delorme_[34] relish the works of
-Alexandre the Great, and thrill over the _Three Musqueteers_? Does
-the accomplished author of the _Caxtons_ read the other tales in
-_Blackwood_? (For example, that ghost-story printed last August, and
-which for my part, though I read it in the public reading-room at the
-Pavilion Hotel at Folkestone, I protest frightened me so that I scarce
-dared look over my shoulder.) Does _Uncle Tom_ admire _Adam Bede_; and
-does the author of the _Vicar of Wrexhill_ laugh over the _Warden_ and
-the _Three Clerks_? Dear youth of ingenuous countenance and ingenuous
-pudor! I make no doubt that the eminent parties above named all partake
-of novels in moderation--eat jellies--but mainly nourish themselves
-upon wholesome roast and boiled.
-
-Here, dear youth aforesaid! our CORNHILL MAGAZINE owners strive to
-provide thee with facts as well as fiction; and though it does not
-become them to brag of their Ordinary, at least they invite thee to a
-table where thou shall sit in good company. That story of the _Fox_ was
-written by one of the gallant seamen who sought for poor Franklin under
-the awful Arctic Night: that account of China is told by the man of all
-the empire most likely to know of what he speaks: those pages regarding
-Volunteers come from an honoured hand that has borne the sword in a
-hundred famous fields, and pointed the British guns in the greatest
-siege in the world.
-
-Shall we point out others? We are fellow-travellers, and shall make
-acquaintance as the voyage proceeds. In the Atlantic steamers, on the
-first day out (and on high and holidays subsequently), the jellies
-set down on table are richly ornamented; _medioque in fonte leporum_
-rise the American and British flags nobly emblazoned in tin. As the
-passengers remark this pleasing phenomenon, the Captain no doubt
-improves the occasion by expressing a hope, to his right and left,
-that the flag of Mr. Bull and his younger Brother may always float
-side by side in friendly emulation. Novels having been previously
-compared to jellies--here are two (one perhaps not entirely saccharine,
-and flavoured with an _amari aliquid_ very distasteful to some
-palates)--two novels under two flags, the one that ancient ensign
-which has hung before the well-known booth of _Vanity Fair_; the other
-that fresh and handsome standard which has lately been hoisted on
-_Barchester Towers_. Pray, sir, or madam, to which dish will you be
-helped?
-
-So have I seen my friends Captain Lang and Captain Comstock press their
-guests to partake of the fare on that memorable “First day out,” when
-there is no man, I think, who sits down but asks a blessing on his
-voyage, and the good ship dips over the bar, and bounds away into the
-blue water.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[33] Stow quotes the inscription, still extant, “from the table fast
-chained in St. Peter’s Church, Cornhill;” and says “he was after
-some chronicle buried at London, and after some chronicle buried at
-Glowcester”--but oh! these incorrect chroniclers! when Alban Butler, in
-the _Lives of the Saints_, v. xii., and Murray’s _Handbook_, and the
-Sacristan at Chur, all say Lucius was killed there, and I saw his tomb
-with my own eyes!
-
-[34] By the way, what a strange fate is that which has befallen the
-veteran novelist! He is her Majesty’s Consul-General in Venice, the
-only city in Europe where the famous “Two Cavaliers” cannot by any
-possibility be seen riding together.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes
-
-The following changes have been made:
-
- A table of contents has been added for the convenience of the reader.
-
- Some illustrations have been moved outside the enclosing paragraphs.
-
- Changed +dorekie+ to +dovekie+ in “saw a solitary dovekie in winter
- plumage” on page 105.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CORNHILL MAGAZINE, VOL. I,
-JANUARY 1860 ***
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Cornhill Magazine, Vol. I, January 1860, by Various</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. 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.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Cornhill Magazine, Vol. I, January 1860</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Various</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: August 17, 2021 [eBook #66075]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: hekula03, Ian Crann and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CORNHILL MAGAZINE, VOL. I, JANUARY 1860 ***</div>
-
-<h1><span class="smaller">THE</span><br />
-CORNHILL MAGAZINE.</h1>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-<p class="center"><b>JANUARY, 1860.</b></p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="toc" summary="Table of Contents">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Framley Parsonage.</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Framley_Parsonage">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">The Chinese and the “Outer Barbarians.”</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#The_Chinese_and_the_Outer_Barbarians">26</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Lovel the Widower.</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Lovel_the_Widower">44</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Studies in Animal Life.</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Studies_in_Animal_Life">61</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Father Prout’s Inaugurative Ode</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Father_Prouts_Inaugurative_Ode">75</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Our Volunteers.</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Our_Volunteers">77</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">A Man of Letters of the Last Generation.</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#A_Man_of_Letters_of_the_Last_Generation">85</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">The Search for Sir John Franklin.</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#The_Search_for_Sir_John_Franklin">96</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">The First Morning of 1860.</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#The_First_Morning_of_1860">122</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Roundabout Papers.&mdash;No. I.</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Roundabout_Papers_No_I">124</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak oe" id="Framley_Parsonage">Framley Parsonage.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<h3>CHAPTER I.</h3>
-
-<p class="motto">“<span class="smcap" lang="la" xml:lang="la">Omnes omnia bona dicere.</span>”</p>
-
-<p>When young Mark Robarts was leaving college, his father might well
-declare that all men began to say all good things to him, and to extol
-his fortune in that he had a son blessed with so excellent a disposition.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">This father was a physician living at Exeter. He was a gentleman
-possessed of no private means, but enjoying a lucrative practice, which
-had enabled him to maintain and educate a family with all the advantages
-which money can give in this country. Mark was his eldest son and
-second child; and the first page or two of this narrative must be consumed
-in giving a catalogue of the good things which chance and conduct together
-had heaped upon this young man’s head.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">His first step forward in life had arisen from his having been sent,
-while still very young, as a private pupil to the house of a clergyman,
-who was an old friend and intimate friend of his father’s. This clergyman
-had one other, and only one other, pupil&mdash;the young Lord Lufton, and,
-between the two boys, there had sprung up a close alliance.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">While they were both so placed, Lady Lufton had visited her son, and
-then invited young Robarts to pass his next holidays at Framley Court.
-This visit was made; and it ended in Mark going back to Exeter with a
-letter full of praise from the widowed peeress. She had been delighted,
-she said, in having such a companion for her son, and expressed a hope
-that the boys might remain together during the course of their education.
-Dr. Robarts was a man who thought much of the breath of peers and
-peeresses, and was by no means inclined to throw away any advantage
-which might arise to his child from such a friendship. When, therefore,
-the young lord was sent to Harrow, Mark Robarts went there also.</p>
-
-<p class="pt"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[Pg 2]</span></p>
-
-<p class="pt">That the lord and his friend often quarrelled, and occasionally fought,&mdash;the
-fact even that for one period of three months they never spoke to
-each other&mdash;by no means interfered with the doctor’s hopes. Mark again
-and again stayed a fortnight at Framley Court, and Lady Lufton always
-wrote about him in the highest terms.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And then the lads went together to Oxford, and here Mark’s good
-fortune followed him, consisting rather in the highly respectable manner in
-which he lived, than in any wonderful career of collegiate success. His
-family was proud of him, and the doctor was always ready to talk of him
-to his patients; not because he was a prizeman, and had gotten medals and
-scholarships, but on account of the excellence of his general conduct. He
-lived with the best set&mdash;he incurred no debts&mdash;he was fond of society, but
-able to avoid low society&mdash;liked his glass of wine, but was never known to
-be drunk; and, above all things, was one of the most popular men in the
-university.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Then came the question of a profession for this young Hyperion, and
-on this subject, Dr. Robarts was invited himself to go over to Framley
-Court to discuss the matter with Lady Lufton. Dr. Robarts returned with
-a very strong conception that the Church was the profession best suited to
-his son.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Lady Lufton had not sent for Dr. Robarts all the way from Exeter for
-nothing. The living of Framley was in the gift of the Lufton family, and
-the next presentation would be in Lady Lufton’s hands, if it should fall
-vacant before the young lord was twenty-five years of age, and in the
-young lord’s hands if it should fall afterwards. But the mother and the
-heir consented to give a joint promise to Dr. Robarts. Now, as the
-present incumbent was over seventy, and as the living was worth 900<i>l</i>.
-a year, there could be no doubt as to the eligibility of the clerical
-profession.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And I must further say, that the dowager and the doctor were justified
-in their choice by the life and principles of the young man&mdash;as far as any
-father can be justified in choosing such a profession for his son, and as far
-as any lay impropriator can be justified in making such a promise. Had
-Lady Lufton had a second son, that second son would probably have had
-the living, and no one would have thought it wrong;&mdash;certainly not if that
-second son had been such a one as Mark Robarts.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Lady Lufton herself was a woman who thought much on religious
-matters, and would by no means have been disposed to place any one in
-a living, merely because such a one had been her son’s friend. Her tendencies
-were High Church, and she was enabled to perceive that those of
-young Mark Robarts ran in the same direction. She was very desirous that
-her son should make an associate of his clergyman, and by this step she would
-insure, at any rate, that. She was anxious that the parish vicar should be
-one with whom she could herself fully co-operate, and was perhaps unconsciously
-wishful that he might in some measure be subject to her influence.
-Should she appoint an older man, this might probably not be the case to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[Pg 3]</span>
-the same extent; and should her son have the gift, it might probably not
-be the case at all.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And therefore it was resolved that the living should be given to young
-Robarts.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">He took his degree&mdash;not with any brilliancy, but quite in the manner
-that his father desired; he then travelled for eight or ten months with Lord
-Lufton and a college don, and almost immediately after his return home was
-ordained.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The living of Framley is in the diocese of Barchester; and, seeing what
-were Mark’s hopes with reference to that diocese, it was by no means
-difficult to get him a curacy within it. But this curacy he was not allowed
-long to fill. He had not been in it above a twelvemonth, when poor old
-Dr. Stopford, the then vicar of Framley, was gathered to his fathers, and
-the full fruition of his rich hopes fell upon his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">But even yet more must be told of his good fortune before we can come
-to the actual incidents of our story. Lady Lufton, who, as I have said,
-thought much of clerical matters, did not carry her High Church principles
-so far as to advocate celibacy for the clergy. On the contrary,
-she had an idea that a man could not be a good parish parson without a
-wife. So, having given to her favourite a position in the world, and an
-income sufficient for a gentleman’s wants, she set herself to work to find
-him a partner in those blessings.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And here also, as in other matters, he fell in with the views of his
-patroness&mdash;not, however, that they were declared to him in that marked
-manner in which the affair of the living had been broached. Lady Lufton
-was much too highly gifted with woman’s craft for that. She never told
-the young vicar that Miss Monsell accompanied her ladyship’s married
-daughter to Framley Court expressly that he, Mark, might fall in love with
-her; but such was in truth the case.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Lady Lufton had but two children. The eldest, a daughter, had been
-married some four or five years to Sir George Meredith, and this Miss
-Monsell was a dear friend of hers. And now looms before me the novelist’s
-great difficulty. Miss Monsell,&mdash;or, rather, Mrs. Mark Robarts,&mdash;must be
-described. As Miss Monsell, our tale will have to take no prolonged note
-of her. And yet we will call her Fanny Monsell, when we declare that she
-was one of the pleasantest companions that could be brought near to a man,
-as the future partner of his home, and owner of his heart. And if high
-principles without asperity, female gentleness without weakness, a love of
-laughter without malice, and a true loving heart, can qualify a woman
-to be a parson’s wife, then was Fanny Monsell qualified to fill that
-station.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">In person she was somewhat larger than common. Her face would
-have been beautiful but that her mouth was large. Her hair, which was
-copious, was of a bright brown; her eyes also were brown, and, being so,
-were the distinctive feature of her face, for brown eyes are not common.
-They were liquid, large, and full either of tenderness or of mirth. Mark<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[Pg 4]</span>
-Robarts still had his accustomed luck, when such a girl as this was
-brought to Framley for his wooing.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And he did woo her&mdash;and won her. For Mark himself was a handsome
-fellow. At this time the vicar was about twenty-five years of age, and the
-future Mrs. Robarts was two or three years younger. Nor did she come
-quite empty-handed to the vicarage. It cannot be said that Fanny Monsell
-was an heiress, but she had been left with a provision of some few
-thousand pounds. This was so settled, that the interest of his wife’s money
-paid the heavy insurance on his life which young Robarts effected, and
-there was left to him, over and above, sufficient to furnish his parsonage
-in the very best style of clerical comfort,&mdash;and to start him on the road of
-life rejoicing.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">So much did Lady Lufton do for her <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">protégé</span></i>, and it may well be
-imagined that the Devonshire physician, sitting meditative over his parlour
-fire, looking back, as men will look back on the upshot of their life, was
-well contented with that upshot, as regarded his eldest offshoot, the Rev.
-Mark Robarts, the vicar of Framley.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">But little has as yet been said, personally, as to our hero himself, and
-perhaps it may not be necessary to say much. Let us hope that by degrees
-he may come forth upon the canvas, showing to the beholder the nature of
-the man inwardly and outwardly. Here it may suffice to say that he was
-no born heaven’s cherub, neither was he a born fallen devil’s spirit. Such
-as his training made him, such he was. He had large capabilities for good&mdash;and
-aptitudes also for evil, quite enough: quite enough to make it
-needful that he should repel temptation as temptation only can be repelled.
-Much had been done to spoil him, but in the ordinary acceptation of the
-word he was not spoiled. He had too much tact, too much common sense,
-to believe himself to be the paragon which his mother thought him. Self-conceit
-was not, perhaps, his greatest danger. Had he possessed more of
-it, he might have been a less agreeable man, but his course before him might
-on that account have been the safer.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">In person he was manly, tall, and fair-haired, with a square forehead,
-denoting intelligence rather than thought, with clear white hands, filbert
-nails, and a power of dressing himself in such a manner that no one should
-ever observe of him that his clothes were either good or bad, shabby or
-smart.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Such was Mark Robarts when at the age of twenty-five, or a little
-more, he married Fanny Monsell. The marriage was celebrated in his
-own church, for Miss Monsell had no home of her own, and had been
-staying for the last three months at Framley Court. She was given away
-by Sir George Meredith, and Lady Lufton herself saw that the wedding
-was what it should be, with almost as much care as she had bestowed on
-that of her own daughter. The deed of marrying, the absolute tying of
-the knot, was performed by the Very Reverend the Dean of Barchester, an
-esteemed friend of Lady Lufton’s. And Mrs. Arabin, the Dean’s wife, was
-of the party, though the distance from Barchester to Framley is long, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[Pg 5]</span>
-the roads deep, and no railway lends its assistance. And Lord Lufton was
-there of course; and people protested that he would surely fall in love with
-one of the four beautiful bridesmaids, of whom Blanche Robarts, the
-vicar’s second sister, was by common acknowledgment by far the most
-beautiful.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And there was there another and a younger sister of Mark’s&mdash;who did
-not officiate at the ceremony, though she was present&mdash;and of whom no
-prediction was made, seeing that she was then only sixteen, but of whom
-mention is made here, as it will come to pass that my readers will know
-her hereafter. Her name was Lucy Robarts.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And then the vicar and his wife went off on their wedding tour, the
-old curate taking care of the Framley souls the while.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And in due time they returned; and after a further interval, in due
-course, a child was born to them; and then another; and after that came
-the period at which we will begin our story. But before doing so, may
-not assert that all men were right in saying all manner of good things to
-the Devonshire physician, and in praising his luck in having such a son?</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“You were up at the house to-day, I suppose?” said Mark to his
-wife, as he sat stretching himself in an easy chair in the drawing-room,
-before the fire, previously to his dressing for dinner. It was a November
-evening, and he had been out all day, and on such occasions the aptitude
-for delay in dressing is very powerful. A strong-minded man goes direct
-from the hall-door to his chamber without encountering the temptation
-of the drawing-room fire.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“No; but Lady Lufton was down here.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Full of arguments in favour of Sarah Thompson?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Exactly so, Mark.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“And what did you say about Sarah Thompson?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Very little as coming from myself; but I did hint that you thought,
-or that I thought that you thought, that one of the regular trained schoolmistresses
-would be better.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“But her ladyship did not agree?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Well, I won’t exactly say that;&mdash;though I think that perhaps she
-did not.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I am sure she did not. When she has a point to carry, she is very
-fond of carrying it.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“But then, Mark, her points are generally so good.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“But, you see, in this affair of the school she is thinking more of her
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">protégée</span></i> than she does of the children.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Tell her that, and I am sure she will give way.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And then again they were both silent. And the vicar having thoroughly
-warmed himself, as far as this might be done by facing the fire, turned
-round and began the operation <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">à tergo</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Come, Mark, it is twenty minutes past six. Will you go and dress?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I’ll tell you what, Fanny: she must have her way about Sarah
-Thompson. You can see her to-morrow and tell her so.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[Pg 6]</span></p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I am sure, Mark, I would not give way, if I thought it wrong. Nor
-would she expect it.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“If I persist this time, I shall certainly have to yield the next; and
-then the next may probably be more important.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“But if it’s wrong, Mark?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I didn’t say it was wrong. Besides, if it is wrong, wrong in some
-infinitesimal degree, one must put up with it. Sarah Thompson is very
-respectable; the only question is whether she can teach.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The young wife, though she did not say so, had some idea that her
-husband was in error. It is true that one must put up with wrong, with
-a great deal of wrong. But no one need put up with wrong that he can
-remedy. Why should he, the vicar, consent to receive an incompetent
-teacher for the parish children, when he was able to procure one that was
-competent? In such a case,&mdash;so thought Mrs. Robarts to herself,&mdash;she
-would have fought the matter out with Lady Lufton.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">On the next morning, however, she did as she was bid, and signified
-to the dowager that all objection to Sarah Thompson would be withdrawn.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Ah! I was sure he would agree with me,” said her ladyship, “when he
-learned what sort of person she is. I know I had only to explain;”&mdash;and
-then she plumed her feathers, and was very gracious; for, to tell the truth,
-Lady Lufton did not like to be opposed in things which concerned the
-parish nearly.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“And, Fanny,” said Lady Lufton, in her kindest manner, “you are not
-going anywhere on Saturday, are you?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“No, I think not.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Then you must come to us. Justinia is to be here, you know”&mdash;Lady
-Meredith was named Justinia&mdash;“and you and Mr. Robarts had
-better stay with us till Monday. He can have the little book-room all to
-himself on Sunday. The Merediths go on Monday; and Justinia won’t
-be happy if you are not with her.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">It would be unjust to say that Lady Lufton had determined not to invite
-the Robarts’s if she were not allowed to have her own way about Sarah
-Thompson. But such would have been the result. As it was, however,
-she was all kindness; and when Mrs. Robarts made some little excuse,
-saying that she was afraid she must return home in the evening, because
-of the children, Lady Lufton declared that there was room enough at
-Framley Court for baby and nurse, and so settled the matter in her own
-way, with a couple of nods and three taps of her umbrella.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">This was on a Tuesday morning, and on the same evening, before dinner,
-the vicar again seated himself in the same chair before the drawing-room
-fire, as soon as he had seen his horse led into the stable.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Mark,” said his wife, “the Merediths are to be at Framley on Saturday
-and Sunday; and I have promised that we will go up and stay over
-till Monday.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“You don’t mean it! Goodness gracious, how provoking!”</p>
-
-<p class="pt"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[Pg 7]</span></p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Why? I thought you wouldn’t mind it. And Justinia would think
-it unkind if I were not there.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“You can go, my dear, and of course will go. But as for me, it is
-impossible.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“But why, love?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Why? Just now, at the school-house, I answered a letter that was
-brought to me from Chaldicotes. Sowerby insists on my going over there
-for a week or so; and I have said that I would.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Go to Chaldicotes for a week, Mark?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I believe I have even consented to ten days.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“And be away two Sundays?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“No, Fanny, only one. Don’t be so censorious.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Don’t call me censorious, Mark; you know I am not so. But I am
-so sorry. It is just what Lady Lufton won’t like. Besides, you were
-away in Scotland two Sundays last month.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“In September, Fanny. And that is being censorious.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Oh, but, Mark, dear Mark! don’t say so. You know I don’t mean
-it. But Lady Lufton does not like those Chaldicotes people. You know
-Lord Lufton was with you the last time you were there; and how annoyed
-she was!”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Lord Lufton won’t be with me now, for he is still in Scotland. And
-the reason why I am going is this: Harold Smith and his wife will be
-there, and I am very anxious to know more of them. I have no doubt
-that Harold Smith will be in the government some day, and I cannot afford
-to neglect such a man’s acquaintance.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“But, Mark, what do you want of any government?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Well, Fanny, of course I am bound to say that I want nothing;
-neither in one sense do I; but nevertheless, I shall go and meet the
-Harold Smiths.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Could you not be back before Sunday?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I have promised to preach at Chaldicotes. Harold Smith is going
-to lecture at Barchester, about the Australasian archipelago, and I am to
-preach a charity sermon on the same subject. They want to send out
-more missionaries.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“A charity sermon at Chaldicotes!”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“And why not? The house will be quite full, you know; and I dare
-say the Arabins will be there.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I think not; Mrs. Arabin may get on with Mrs. Harold Smith,
-though I doubt that; but I’m sure she’s not fond of Mrs. Smith’s brother.
-I don’t think she would stay at Chaldicotes.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“And the bishop will probably be there for a day or two.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“That is much more likely, Mark. If the pleasure of meeting
-Mrs. Proudie is taking you to Chaldicotes, I have not a word more to
-say.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I am not a bit more fond of Mrs. Proudie, than you are, Fanny,”
-said the vicar, with something like vexation in the tone of his voice, for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[Pg 8]</span>
-he thought that his wife was hard upon him. “But it is generally thought
-that a parish clergyman does well to meet his bishop now and then. And
-as I was invited there, especially to preach while all these people are staying
-at the place, I could not well refuse.” And then he got up, and taking
-his candlestick, escaped to his dressing-room.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“But what am I to say to Lady Lufton?” his wife said to him, in the
-course of the evening.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Just write her a note, and tell her that you find I had promised to
-preach at Chaldicotes next Sunday. You’ll go, of course?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Yes: but I know she’ll be annoyed. You were away the last time
-she had people there.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“It can’t be helped. She must put it down against Sarah Thompson.
-She ought not to expect to win always.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I should not have minded it, if she had lost, as you call it, about
-Sarah Thompson. That was a case in which you ought to have had your
-own way.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“And this other is a case in which I shall have it. It’s a pity that
-there should be such a difference; isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Then the wife perceived that, vexed as she was, it would be better that
-she should say nothing further; and before she went to bed, she wrote the
-note to Lady Lufton, as her husband recommended.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER II.</h3>
-
-<p class="motto"><span class="smcap">The Framley Set, and the Chaldicotes Set.</span></p>
-
-<p>It will be necessary that I should say a word or two of some of the
-people named in the few preceding pages, and also of the localities in which
-they lived.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Of Lady Lufton herself enough, perhaps, has been written to introduce
-her to my readers. The Framley property belonged to her son; but as
-Lufton Park&mdash;an ancient ramshackle place in another county&mdash;had heretofore
-been the family residence of the Lufton family, Framley Court had
-been apportioned to her for her residence for life. Lord Lufton himself
-was still unmarried; and as he had no establishment at Lufton Park&mdash;which
-indeed had not been inhabited since his grandfather died&mdash;he lived
-with his mother when it suited him to live anywhere in that neighbourhood.
-The widow would fain have seen more of him than he allowed her
-to do. He had a shooting-lodge in Scotland, and apartments in London,
-and a string of horses in Leicestershire&mdash;much to the disgust of the county
-gentry around him, who held that their own hunting was as good as any
-that England could afford. His lordship, however, paid his subscription
-to the East Barsetshire pack, and then thought himself at liberty to follow
-his own pleasure as to his own amusement.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Framley itself was a pleasant country place, having about it nothing of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[Pg 9]</span>
-seignorial dignity or grandeur, but possessing everything necessary for the
-comfort of country life. The house was a low building of two stories,
-built at different periods, and devoid of all pretensions to any style of
-architecture; but the rooms, though not lofty, were warm and comfortable,
-and the gardens were trim and neat beyond all others in the county.
-Indeed, it was for its gardens only that Framley Court was celebrated.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Village there was none, properly speaking. The high road went winding
-about through the Framley paddocks, shrubberies, and wood-skirted
-home fields, for a mile and a half, not two hundred yards of which ran in
-a straight line; and there was a cross-road which passed down through the
-domain, whereby there came to be a locality called Framley Cross. Here
-stood the “Lufton Arms,” and here, at Framley Cross, the hounds occasionally
-would meet; for the Framley woods were drawn in spite of the
-young lord’s truant disposition; and then, at the Cross also, lived the shoemaker,
-who kept the post-office.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Framley church was distant from this just a quarter of a mile, and stood
-immediately opposite to the chief entrance to Framley Court. It was but
-a mean, ugly building, having been erected about a hundred years since,
-when all churches then built were made to be mean and ugly; nor was
-it large enough for the congregation, some of whom were thus driven to
-the dissenting chapels, the Sions and Ebenezers, which had got themselves
-established on each side of the parish, in putting down which Lady Lufton
-thought that her pet parson was hardly as energetic as he might be. It
-was, therefore, a matter near to Lady Lufton’s heart to see a new church
-built, and she was urgent in her eloquence, both with her son and with the
-vicar, to have this good work commenced.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Beyond the church, but close to it, were the boys’ school and girls’
-school, two distinct buildings, which owed their erection to Lady Lufton’s
-energy; then came a neat little grocer’s shop, the neat grocer being the
-clerk and sexton, and the neat grocer’s wife, the pew-opener in the church.
-Podgens was their name, and they were great favourites with her ladyship,
-both having been servants up at the house.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And here the road took a sudden turn to the left, turning, as it were,
-away from Framley Court; and just beyond the turn was the vicarage, so
-that there was a little garden path running from the back of the vicarage
-grounds into the churchyard, cutting the Podgens’s off into an isolated
-corner of their own;&mdash;from whence, to tell the truth, the vicar would have
-been glad to banish them and their cabbages, could he have had the power
-to do so. For has not the small vineyard of Naboth been always an eyesore
-to neighbouring potentates?</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The potentate in this case had as little excuse as Ahab, for nothing in
-the parsonage way could be more perfect than his parsonage. It had all
-the details requisite for the house of a moderate gentleman with moderate
-means, and none of those expensive superfluities which immoderate gentlemen
-demand, or which themselves demand&mdash;immoderate means. And then
-the gardens and paddocks were exactly suited to it; and everything was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[Pg 10]</span>
-in good order;&mdash;not exactly new, so as to be raw and uncovered, and
-redolent of workmen; but just at that era of their existence in which
-newness gives way to comfortable homeliness.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Other village at Framley there was none. At the back of the Court,
-up one of those cross-roads, there was another small shop or two, and there
-was a very neat cottage residence, in which lived the widow of a former
-curate, another <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">protégé</span></i> of Lady Lufton’s; and there was a big, staring
-brick house, in which the present curate lived; but this was a full mile
-distant from the church, and farther from Framley Court, standing on
-that cross-road which runs from Framley Cross in a direction away from
-the mansion. This gentleman, the Rev. Evan Jones, might, from his age,
-have been the vicar’s father; but he had been for many years curate of
-Framley; and though he was personally disliked by Lady Lufton, as being
-low church in his principles, and unsightly in his appearance, nevertheless,
-she would not urge his removal. He had two or three pupils in that large
-brick house, and if turned out from these and from his curacy, might find
-it difficult to establish himself elsewhere. On this account, mercy was
-extended to the Rev. E. Jones, and, in spite of his red face and awkward
-big feet, he was invited to dine at Framley Court, with his plain daughter,
-once in every three months.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Over and above these, there was hardly a house in the parish of
-Framley, outside the bounds of Framley Court, except those of farmers
-and farm labourers; and yet the parish was of large extent.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Framley is in the eastern division of the county of Barsetshire, which,
-as all the world knows, is, politically speaking, as true blue a county as
-any in England. There have been backslidings even here, it is true; but
-then, in what county have there not been such backslidings? Where, in
-these pinchbeck days, can we hope to find the old agricultural virtue in all
-its purity? But, among those backsliders, I regret to say, that men now
-reckon Lord Lufton. Not that he is a violent Whig, or perhaps that he is
-a Whig at all. But he jeers and sneers at the old county doings; declares,
-when solicited on the subject, that, as far as he is concerned, Mr. Bright
-may sit for the county, if he pleases; and alleges, that being unfortunately
-a peer, he has no right even to interest himself in the question. All this
-is deeply regretted, for, in the old days, there was no portion of the county
-more decidedly true blue than that Framley district; and, indeed, up to the
-present day, the dowager is able to give an occasional helping hand.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Chaldicotes is the seat of Nathaniel Sowerby, Esq., who, at the moment
-supposed to be now present, is one of the members for the Western
-Division of Barsetshire. But this Western Division can boast none of the
-fine political attributes which grace its twin brother. It is decidedly Whig,
-and is almost governed in its politics by one or two great Whig families.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">It has been said that Mark Robarts was about to pay a visit to Chaldicotes,
-and it has been hinted that his wife would have been as well
-pleased had this not been the case. Such was certainly the fact; for she,
-dear, prudent, excellent wife as she was, knew that Mr. Sowerby was not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[Pg 11]</span>
-the most eligible friend in the world for a young clergyman, and knew, also,
-that there was but one other house in the whole county, the name of which
-was so distasteful to Lady Lufton. The reasons for this were, I may say,
-manifold. In the first place, Mr. Sowerby was a Whig, and was seated in
-Parliament mainly by the interest of that great Whig autocrat the Duke
-of Omnium, whose residence was more dangerous even than that of Mr.
-Sowerby, and whom Lady Lufton regarded as an impersonation of Lucifer
-upon earth. Mr. Sowerby, too, was unmarried&mdash;as indeed, also, was Lord
-Lufton, much to his mother’s grief. Mr. Sowerby, it is true, was fifty,
-whereas the young lord was as yet only twenty-six, but, nevertheless, her
-ladyship was becoming anxious on the subject. In her mind, every man was
-bound to marry as soon as he could maintain a wife; and she held an idea&mdash;a
-quite private tenet, of which she was herself but imperfectly conscious&mdash;that
-men in general were inclined to neglect this duty for their own selfish
-gratifications, that the wicked ones encouraged the more innocent in this
-neglect, and that many would not marry at all, were not an unseen coercion
-exercised against them by the other sex. The Duke of Omnium was the
-very head of all such sinners, and Lady Lufton greatly feared that her son
-might be made subject to the baneful Omnium influence, by means of Mr.
-Sowerby and Chaldicotes.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And then Mr. Sowerby was known to be a very poor man, with a very
-large estate. He had wasted, men said, much on electioneering, and more
-in gambling. A considerable portion of his property had already gone
-into the hands of the Duke, who, as a rule, bought up everything around
-him that was to be purchased. Indeed it was said of him by his enemies,
-that so covetous was he of Barsetshire property, that he would lead a
-young neighbour on to his ruin, in order that he might get his land.
-What&mdash;oh! what if he should come to be possessed in this way of any of
-the fair acres of Framley Court? What if he should become possessed of
-them all? It can hardly be wondered at that Lady Lufton should not like
-Chaldicotes.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The Chaldicotes set, as Lady Lufton called them, were in every way
-opposed to what a set should be according to her ideas. She liked cheerful,
-quiet, well-to-do people, who loved their Church, their country, and their
-Queen, and who were not too anxious to make a noise in the world. She
-desired that all the farmers round her should be able to pay their rents
-without trouble, that all the old women should have warm flannel petticoats,
-that the working men should be saved from rheumatism by healthy
-food and dry houses, that they should all be obedient to their pastors
-and masters&mdash;temporal as well as spiritual. That was her idea of loving
-her country. She desired also that the copses should be full of pheasants,
-the stubble-field of partridges, and the gorse covers of foxes;&mdash;in that way,
-also, she loved her country. She had ardently longed, during that Crimean
-war, that the Russians might be beaten&mdash;but not by the French, to the
-exclusion of the English, as had seemed to her to be too much the case;
-and hardly by the English under the dictatorship of Lord Palmerston.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[Pg 12]</span>
-Indeed, she had had but little faith in that war after Lord Aberdeen had
-been expelled. If, indeed, Lord Derby could have come in!</p>
-
-<p class="pt">But now as to this Chaldicotes set. After all, there was nothing so very
-dangerous about them; for it was in London, not in the country, that Mr.
-Sowerby indulged, if he did indulge, his bachelor mal-practices. Speaking
-of them as a set, the chief offender was Mr. Harold Smith, or perhaps his
-wife. He also was a member of Parliament, and, as many thought, a rising
-man. His father had been for many years a debater in the House, and had
-held high office. Harold, in early life, had intended himself for the
-cabinet; and if working hard at his trade could ensure success, he ought
-to obtain it sooner or later. He had already filled more than one subordinate
-station, had been at the Treasury, and for a month or two at the
-Admiralty, astonishing official mankind by his diligence. Those last-named
-few months had been under Lord Aberdeen, with whom he had
-been forced to retire. He was a younger son, and not possessed of any
-large fortune. Politics as a profession was therefore of importance to him.
-He had in early life married a sister of Mr. Sowerby; and as the lady was
-some six or seven years older than himself, and had brought with her but
-a scanty dowry, people thought that in this matter Mr. Harold Smith had
-not been perspicacious. Mr. Harold Smith was not personally a popular
-man with any party, though some judged him to be eminently useful. He
-was laborious, well-informed, and, on the whole, honest; but he was conceited,
-long-winded, and pompous.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Mrs. Harold Smith was the very opposite of her lord. She was a clever,
-bright woman, good-looking for her time of life&mdash;and she was now over
-forty&mdash;with a keen sense of the value of all worldly things, and a keen relish
-for all the world’s pleasures. She was neither laborious, nor well-informed,
-nor perhaps altogether honest&mdash;what woman ever understood the necessity
-or recognized the advantage of political honesty? but then she was neither
-dull nor pompous, and if she was conceited, she did not show it. She was
-a disappointed woman, as regards her husband; seeing that she had
-married him on the speculation that he would at once become politically
-important; and as yet Mr. Smith had not quite fulfilled the prophecies of
-his early life.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And Lady Lufton, when she spoke of the Chaldicotes set, distinctly
-included, in her own mind, the Bishop of Barchester, and his wife and
-daughter. Seeing that Bishop Proudie was, of course, a man much
-addicted to religion and to religious thinking, and that Mr. Sowerby himself
-had no peculiar religious sentiments whatever, there would not at first
-sight appear to be ground for much intercourse, and perhaps there was not
-much of such intercourse; but Mrs. Proudie and Mrs. Harold Smith were
-firm friends of four or five years’ standing&mdash;ever since the Proudies came
-into the diocese; and therefore the bishop was usually taken to Chaldicotes
-whenever Mrs. Smith paid her brother a visit. Now Bishop Proudie was
-by no means a High Church dignitary, and Lady Lufton had never forgiven
-him for coming into that diocese. She had, instinctively, a high respect<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[Pg 13]</span>
-for the episcopal office; but of Bishop Proudie himself she hardly thought
-better than she did of Mr. Sowerby, or of that fabricator of evil, the Duke
-of Omnium. Whenever Mr. Robarts would plead that in going anywhere
-he would have the benefit of meeting the bishop, Lady Lufton would
-slightly curl her upper lip. She could not say in words, that Bishop
-Proudie&mdash;bishop as he certainly must be called&mdash;was no better than he
-ought to be; but by that curl of her lip she did explain to those who
-knew her that such was the inner feeling of her heart.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And then it was understood&mdash;Mark Robarts, at least, had so heard, and
-the information soon reached Framley Court&mdash;that Mr. Supplehouse was
-to make one of the Chaldicotes party. Now Mr. Supplehouse was a worse
-companion for a gentlemanlike, young, High Church, conservative county
-parson than even Harold Smith. He also was in Parliament, and had
-been extolled during the early days of that Russian war by some portion
-of the metropolitan daily press, as the only man who could save the
-country. Let him be in the ministry, the <i>Jupiter</i> had said, and there
-would be some hope of reform, some chance that England’s ancient glory
-would not be allowed in these perilous times to go headlong to oblivion.
-And upon this the ministry, not anticipating much salvation from Mr.
-Supplehouse, but willing, as they usually are, to have the <i>Jupiter</i> at their
-back, did send for that gentleman, and gave him some footing among
-them. But how can a man born to save a nation, and to lead a people, be
-content to fill the chair of an under-secretary? Supplehouse was not
-content, and soon gave it to be understood that his place was much higher
-than any yet tendered to him. The seals of high office, or war to the
-knife, was the alternative which he offered to a much-belaboured Head of
-Affairs&mdash;nothing doubting that the Head of Affairs would recognize the
-claimant’s value, and would have before his eyes a wholesome fear of the
-<i>Jupiter</i>. But the Head of Affairs, much belaboured as he was, knew that
-he might pay too high even for Mr. Supplehouse and the <i>Jupiter</i>; and the
-saviour of the nation was told that he might swing his tomahawk. Since
-that time he had been swinging his tomahawk, but not with so much effect
-as had been anticipated. He also was very intimate with Mr. Sowerby, and
-was decidedly one of the Chaldicotes set.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And there were many others included in the stigma whose sins were
-political or religious rather than moral. But they were gall and wormwood
-to Lady Lufton, who regarded them as children of the Lost One, and
-who grieved with a mother’s grief when she knew that her son was among
-them, and felt all a patron’s anger when she heard that her clerical <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">protégé</span></i>
-was about to seek such society. Mrs. Robarts might well say that Lady
-Lufton would be annoyed.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“You won’t call at the house before you go, will you?” the wife asked
-on the following morning. He was to start after lunch on that day, driving
-himself in his own gig, so as to reach Chaldicotes, some twenty-four miles
-distant, before dinner.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“No, I think not. What good should I do?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[Pg 14]</span></p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Well, I can’t explain; but I think I should call: partly, perhaps,
-to show her that as I had determined to go, I was not afraid of telling
-her so.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Afraid! That’s nonsense, Fanny. I’m not afraid of her. But I don’t
-see why I should bring down upon myself the disagreeable things she will
-say. Besides, I have not time. I must walk up and see Jones about the
-duties; and then, what with getting ready, I shall have enough to do to
-get off in time.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">He paid his visit to Mr. Jones, the curate, feeling no qualms of conscience
-there, as he rather boasted of all the members of Parliament he was
-going to meet, and of the bishop who would be with them. Mr. Evan
-Jones was only his curate, and in speaking to him on the matter he could
-talk as though it were quite the proper thing for a vicar to meet his bishop
-at the house of a county member. And one would be inclined to say that
-it was proper: only why could he not talk of it in the same tone to Lady
-Lufton? And then, having kissed his wife and children, he drove off, well
-pleased with his prospect for the coming ten days, but already anticipating
-some discomfort on his return.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">On the three following days, Mrs. Robarts did not meet her ladyship.
-She did not exactly take any steps to avoid such a meeting, but she did
-not purposely go up to the big house. She went to her school as usual,
-and made one or two calls among the farmers’ wives, but put no foot within
-the Framley Court grounds. She was braver than her husband, but even
-she did not wish to anticipate the evil day.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">On the Saturday, just before it began to get dusk, when she was thinking
-of preparing for the fatal plunge, her friend, Lady Meredith, came
-to her.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“So, Fanny, we shall again be so unfortunate as to miss Mr. Robarts,”
-said her ladyship.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Yes. Did you ever know anything so unlucky? But he had promised
-Mr. Sowerby before he heard that you were coming. Pray do not
-think that he would have gone away had he known it.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“We should have been sorry to keep him from so much more
-amusing a party.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Now, Justinia, you are unfair. You intend to imply that he has
-gone to Chaldicotes, because he likes it better than Framley Court; but
-that is not the case. I hope Lady Lufton does not think that it is.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Lady Meredith laughed as she put her arm round her friend’s waist.
-“Don’t lose your eloquence in defending him to me,” she said. “You’ll
-want all that for my mother.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“But is your mother angry?” asked Mrs. Robarts, showing by
-her countenance, how eager she was for true tidings on the subject.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Well, Fanny, you know her ladyship as well as I do. She thinks so
-very highly of the vicar of Framley, that she does begrudge him to those
-politicians at Chaldicotes.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“But, Justinia, the bishop is to be there, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[Pg 15]</span></p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I don’t think that that consideration will at all reconcile my mother
-to the gentleman’s absence. He ought to be very proud, I know, to find
-that he is so much thought of. But come, Fanny, I want you to walk back
-with me, and you can dress at the house. And now we’ll go and look
-at the children.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">After that, as they walked together to Framley Court, Mrs. Robarts
-made her friend promise that she would stand by her if any serious attack
-were made on the absent clergyman.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Are you going up to your room at once?” said the vicar’s wife, as
-soon as they were inside the porch leading into the hall. Lady Meredith
-immediately knew what her friend meant, and decided that the evil day
-should not be postponed. “We had better go in, and have it over,” she
-said, “and then we shall be comfortable for the evening.” So the drawing-room
-door was opened, and there was Lady Lufton alone upon the sofa.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Now, mamma,” said the daughter, “you mustn’t scold Fanny much
-about Mr. Robarts. He has gone to preach a charity sermon before the
-bishop, and under those circumstances, perhaps, he could not refuse.”
-This was a stretch on the part of Lady Meredith&mdash;put in with much good
-nature, no doubt; but still a stretch; for no one had supposed that the
-bishop would remain at Chaldicotes for the Sunday.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“How do you do, Fanny?” said Lady Lufton, getting up. “I am
-not going to scold her; and I don’t know how you can talk such nonsense,
-Justinia. Of course, we are very sorry not to have Mr. Robarts; more
-especially as he was not here the last Sunday that Sir George was with us.
-I do like to see Mr. Robarts in his own church, certainly; and I don’t like
-any other clergyman there as well. If Fanny takes that for scolding,
-why&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Oh! no, Lady Lufton; and it’s so kind of you to say so. But Mr.
-Robarts was so sorry that he had accepted this invitation to Chaldicotes,
-before he heard that Sir George was coming, and&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Oh, I know that Chaldicotes has great attractions which we cannot
-offer,” said Lady Lufton.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Indeed, it was not that. But he was asked to preach, you know;
-and Mr. Harold Smith&mdash;&mdash;” Poor Fanny was only making it worse.
-Had she been worldly wise, she would have accepted the little compliment
-implied in Lady Lufton’s first rebuke, and then have held her
-peace.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Oh, yes; the Harold Smiths! They are irresistible, I know. How
-could any man refuse to join a party, graced both by Mrs. Harold Smith
-and Mrs. Proudie&mdash;even though his duty should require him to stay
-away?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Now, mamma&mdash;” said Justinia.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Well, my dear, what am I to say? You would not wish me to tell
-a fib. I don’t like Mrs. Harold Smith&mdash;at least, what I hear of her; for
-it has not been my fortune to meet her since her marriage. It may be
-conceited; but to own the truth, I think that Mr. Robarts would be better<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[Pg 16]</span>
-off with us at Framley than with the Harold Smiths at Chaldicotes,&mdash;even
-though Mrs. Proudie be thrown into the bargain.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">It was nearly dark, and therefore the rising colour in the face of
-Mrs. Robarts could not be seen. She, however, was too good a wife to
-hear these things said without some anger within her bosom. She could
-blame her husband in her own mind; but it was intolerable to her that
-others should blame him in her hearing.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“He would undoubtedly be better off,” she said; “but then, Lady
-Lufton, people can’t always go exactly where they will be best off. Gentlemen
-sometimes must&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Well&mdash;well, my dear, that will do. He has not taken you, at any
-rate; and so we will forgive him.” And Lady Lufton kissed her. “As it
-is,”&mdash;and she affected a low whisper between the two young wives&mdash;“as
-it is, we must e’en put up with poor old Evan Jones. He is to be here to-night,
-and we must go and dress to receive him.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And so they went off. Lady Lufton was quite good enough at heart
-to like Mrs. Robarts all the better for standing up for her absent lord.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER III.</h3>
-
-<p class="motto"><span class="smcap">Chaldicotes.</span></p>
-
-<p>Chaldicotes is a house of much more pretension than Framley Court.
-Indeed, if one looks at the ancient marks about it, rather than at those of
-the present day, it is a place of very considerable pretension. There is an
-old forest, not altogether belonging to the property, but attached to it,
-called the Chase of Chaldicotes. A portion of this forest comes up close
-behind the mansion, and of itself gives a character and celebrity to the
-place. The Chase of Chaldicotes&mdash;the greater part of it, at least&mdash;is, as
-all the world knows, Crown property, and now, in these utilitarian days, is
-to be disforested. In former times it was a great forest, stretching half
-across the country, almost as far as Silverbridge; and there are bits of it,
-here and there, still to be seen at intervals throughout the whole distance;
-but the larger remaining portion, consisting of aged hollow oaks, centuries
-old, and wide-spreading withered beeches, stands in the two parishes of
-Chaldicotes and Uffley. People still come from afar to see the oaks
-of Chaldicotes, and to hear their feet rustle among the thick autumn
-leaves. But they will soon come no longer. The giants of past ages are
-to give way to wheat and turnips; a ruthless Chancellor of the Exchequer,
-disregarding old associations and rural beauty, requires money returns
-from the lands; and the Chase of Chaldicotes is to vanish from the earth’s
-surface.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Some part of it, however, is the private property of Mr. Sowerby, who
-hitherto, through all his pecuniary distresses, has managed to save from the
-axe and the auction-mart that portion of his paternal heritage. The house<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[Pg 17]</span>
-of Chaldicotes is a large stone building, probably of the time of Charles
-the Second. It is approached on both fronts by a heavy double flight of
-stone steps. In the front of the house a long, solemn, straight avenue
-through a double row of lime-trees, leads away to lodge-gates, which
-stand in the centre of the village of Chaldicotes; but to the rear the windows
-open upon four different vistas, which run down through the forest:
-four open green rides, which all converge together at a large iron gateway,
-the barrier which divides the private grounds from the Chase. The
-Sowerbys, for many generations, have been rangers of the Chase of Chaldicotes,
-thus having almost as wide an authority over the Crown forest as over
-their own. But now all this is to cease, for the forest will be disforested.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">It was nearly dark as Mark Robarts drove up through the avenue of
-lime-trees to the hall-door; but it was easy to see that the house, which
-was dead and silent as the grave through nine months of the year, was now
-alive in all its parts. There were lights in many of the windows, and a
-noise of voices came from the stables, and servants were moving about,
-and dogs barked, and the dark gravel before the front steps was cut up
-with many a coach-wheel.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Oh, be that you, sir, Mr. Robarts?” said a groom, taking the parson’s
-horse by the head, and touching his own hat. “I hope I see your reverence
-well.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Quite well, Bob, thank you. All well at Chaldicotes?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Pretty bobbish, Mr. Robarts. Deal of life going on here now, sir.
-The bishop and his lady came this morning.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Oh&mdash;ah&mdash;yes! I understood they were to be here. Any of the
-young ladies?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“One young lady. Miss Olivia, I think they call her, your reverence.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“And how’s Mr. Sowerby?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Very well, your reverence. He, and Mr. Harold Smith, and
-Mr. Fothergill&mdash;that’s the duke’s man of business, you know&mdash;is getting
-off their horses now in the stable-yard there.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Home from hunting&mdash;eh, Bob?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Yes, sir, just home, this minute.” And then Mr. Robarts walked
-into the house, his portmanteau following on a footboy’s shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">It will be seen that our young vicar was very intimate at Chaldicotes;
-so much so that the groom knew him, and talked to him about the people
-in the house. Yes; he was intimate there: much more than he had given,
-the Framley people to understand. Not that he had wilfully and overtly
-deceived any one; not that he had ever spoken a false word about Chaldicotes.
-But he had never boasted at home that he and Sowerby were near
-allies. Neither had he told them there how often Mr. Sowerby and Lord
-Lufton were together in London. Why trouble women with such matters?
-Why annoy so excellent a woman as Lady Lufton?</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And then Mr. Sowerby was one whose intimacy few young men would
-wish to reject. He was fifty, and had lived, perhaps, not the most salutary
-life; but he dressed young, and usually looked well. He was bald, with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[Pg 18]</span>
-a good forehead, and sparkling moist eyes. He was a clever man, and a
-pleasant companion, and always good-humoured when it so suited him.
-He was a gentleman, too, of high breeding and good birth, whose ancestors
-had been known in that county&mdash;longer, the farmers around
-would boast, than those of any other landowner in it, unless it be the
-Thornes of Ullathorne, or perhaps the Greshams of Greshamsbury&mdash;much
-longer than the De Courcys at Courcy Castle. As for the Duke of
-Omnium, he, comparatively speaking, was a new man.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And then he was a member of Parliament, a friend of some men in
-power, and of others who might be there; a man who could talk about
-the world as one knowing the matter of which he talked. And moreover,
-whatever might be his ways of life at other times, when in the presence of
-a clergyman he rarely made himself offensive to clerical tastes. He neither
-swore, nor brought his vices on the carpet, nor sneered at the faith of the
-church. If he was no churchman himself, he at least knew how to live
-with those who were.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">How was it possible that such a one as our vicar should not relish the
-intimacy of Mr. Sowerby? It might be very well, he would say to himself,
-for a woman like Lady Lufton to turn up her nose at him&mdash;for Lady
-Lufton, who spent ten months of the year at Framley Court, and who
-during those ten months, and for the matter of that, during the two months
-also which she spent in London, saw no one out of her own set. Women
-did not understand such things, the vicar said to himself; even his own
-wife&mdash;good, and nice, and sensible, and intelligent as she was&mdash;even she
-did not understand that a man in the world must meet all sorts of men;
-and that in these days it did not do for a clergyman to be a hermit.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">’Twas thus that Mark Robarts argued when he found himself called
-upon to defend himself before the bar of his own conscience for going
-to Chaldicotes and increasing his intimacy with Mr. Sowerby. He did
-know that Mr. Sowerby was a dangerous man; he was aware that he
-was over head and ears in debt, and that he had already entangled young
-Lord Lufton in some pecuniary embarrassment; his conscience did tell
-him that it would be well for him, as one of Christ’s soldiers, to look out
-for companions of a different stamp. But nevertheless he went to Chaldicotes,
-not satisfied with himself indeed, but repeating to himself a great
-many arguments why he should be so satisfied.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">He was shown into the drawing-room at once, and there he found
-Mrs. Harold Smith, with Mrs. and Miss Proudie, and a lady whom he had
-never before seen, and whose name he did not at first hear mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Is that Mr. Robarts?” said Mrs. Harold Smith, getting up to greet
-him, and screening her pretended ignorance under the veil of the darkness.
-“And have you really driven over four-and-twenty miles of Barsetshire
-roads on such a day as this to assist us in our little difficulties? Well, we
-can promise you gratitude at any rate.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And then the vicar shook hands with Mrs. Proudie, in that deferential
-manner which is due from a vicar to his bishop’s wife; and Mrs. Proudie<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[Pg 19]</span>
-returned the greeting with all that smiling condescension which a bishop’s
-wife should show to a vicar. Miss Proudie was not quite so civil. Had
-Mr. Robarts been still unmarried, she also could have smiled sweetly;
-but she had been exercising smiles on clergymen too long to waste them
-now on a married parish parson.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“And what are the difficulties, Mrs. Smith, in which I am to assist
-you?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“We have six or seven gentlemen here, Mr. Robarts, and they always
-go out hunting before breakfast, and they never come back&mdash;I was going
-to say&mdash;till after dinner. I wish it were so, for then we should not have to
-wait for them.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Excepting Mr. Supplehouse, you know,” said the unknown lady,
-in a loud voice.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“And he is generally shut up in the library, writing articles.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“He’d be better employed if he were trying to break his neck like the
-others,” said the unknown lady.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Only he would never succeed,” said Mrs. Harold Smith. “But
-perhaps, Mr. Robarts, you are as bad as the rest; perhaps you, too, will
-be hunting to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“My dear Mrs. Smith!” said Mrs. Proudie, in a tone denoting slight
-reproach, and modified horror.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Oh! I forgot. No, of course, you won’t be hunting, Mr. Robarts;
-you’ll only be wishing that you could.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Why can’t he?” said the lady with the loud voice.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“My dear Miss Dunstable! a clergyman hunt, while he is staying in
-the same house with the bishop? Think of the proprieties!”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Oh&mdash;ah! The bishop wouldn’t like it&mdash;wouldn’t he? Now, do tell
-me, sir, what would the bishop do to you if you did hunt?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“It would depend upon his mood at the time, madam,” said Mr. Robarts.
-“If that were very stern, he might perhaps have me beheaded before the
-palace gates.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Mrs. Proudie drew herself up in her chair, showing that she did not
-like the tone of the conversation; and Miss Proudie fixed her eyes
-vehemently on her book, showing that Miss Dunstable and her conversation
-were both beneath her notice.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“If these gentlemen do not mean to break their necks to-night,” said
-Mrs. Harold Smith, “I wish they’d let us know it. It’s half-past six
-already.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And then Mr. Robarts gave them to understand that no such catastrophe
-could be looked for that day, as Mr. Sowerby and the other sportsmen
-were within the stable-yard when he entered the door.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Then, ladies, we may as well dress,” said Mrs. Harold Smith. But
-as she moved towards the door, it opened, and a short gentleman, with
-a slow, quiet step, entered the room; but was not yet to be distinguished
-through the dusk by the eyes of Mr. Robarts. “Oh! bishop, is that you?”
-said Mrs. Smith. “Here is one of the luminaries of your diocese.” And<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[Pg 20]</span>
-then the bishop, feeling through the dark, made his way up to the vicar
-and shook him cordially by the hand. “He was delighted to meet
-Mr. Robarts at Chaldicotes,” he said&mdash;“quite delighted. Was he not going
-to preach on behalf of the Papuan Mission next Sunday? Ah! so he, the
-bishop, had heard. It was a good work, an excellent work.” And then
-Dr. Proudie expressed himself as much grieved that he could not remain
-at Chaldicotes, and hear the sermon. It was plain that his bishop thought
-no ill of him on account of his intimacy with Mr. Sowerby. But then
-he felt in his own heart that he did not much regard his bishop’s
-opinion.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Ah, Robarts, I’m delighted to see you,” said Mr. Sowerby, when
-they met on the drawing-room rug before dinner. “You know Harold
-Smith? Yes, of course you do. Well, who else is there? Oh! Supplehouse.
-Mr. Supplehouse, allow me to introduce to you my friend
-Mr. Robarts. It is he who will extract the five-pound note out of your
-pocket next Sunday for these poor Papuans whom we are going to Christianize.
-That is, if Harold Smith does not finish the work out of hand at
-his Saturday lecture. And, Robarts, you have seen the bishop, of course:”
-this he said in a whisper. “A fine thing to be a bishop, isn’t it? I wish
-I had half your chance. But, my dear fellow, I’ve made such a mistake;
-I haven’t got a bachelor parson for Miss Proudie. You must help me out,
-and take her in to dinner.” And then the great gong sounded, and off they
-went in pairs.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">At dinner Mark found himself seated between Miss Proudie and the
-lady whom he had heard named as Miss Dunstable. Of the former he was
-not very fond, and, in spite of his host’s petition, was not inclined to play
-bachelor parson for her benefit. With the other lady he would willingly
-have chatted during the dinner, only that everybody else at table seemed to
-be intent on doing the same thing. She was neither young, nor beautiful,
-nor peculiarly ladylike; yet she seemed to enjoy a popularity which must
-have excited the envy of Mr. Supplehouse, and which certainly was not
-altogether to the taste of Mrs. Proudie&mdash;who, however, fêted her as much
-as did the others. So that our clergyman found himself unable to obtain
-more than an inconsiderable share of the lady’s attention.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Bishop,” said she, speaking across the table, “we have missed you so
-all day! we have had no one on earth to say a word to us.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“My dear Miss Dunstable, had I known that&mdash;&mdash;But I really was
-engaged on business of some importance.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I don’t believe in business of importance; do you, Mrs. Smith?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Do I not?” said Mrs. Smith. “If you were married to Mr. Harold
-Smith for one week, you’d believe in it.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Should I, now? What a pity that I can’t have that chance of improving
-my faith. But you are a man of business, also, Mr. Supplehouse; so
-they tell me.” And she turned to her neighbour on her right hand.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I cannot compare myself to Harold Smith,” said he. “But perhaps I
-may equal the bishop.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[Pg 21]</span></p>
-
-<p class="pt">“What does a man do, now, when he sets himself down to business?
-How does he set about it? What are his tools? A quire of blotting
-paper, I suppose, to begin with?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“That depends, I should say, on his trade. A shoemaker begins by
-waxing his thread.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“And Mr. Harold Smith&mdash;&mdash;?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“By counting up his yesterday’s figures, generally, I should say; or
-else by unrolling a ball of red tape. Well-docketed papers and statistical
-facts are his forte.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“And what does a bishop do? Can you tell me that?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“He sends forth to his clergy either blessings or blowings-up, according
-to the state of his digestive organs. But Mrs. Proudie can explain all that
-to you with the greatest accuracy.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Can she, now? I understand what you mean, but I don’t believe a
-word of it. The bishop manages his own affairs himself, quite as much as
-you do, or Mr. Harold Smith.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I, Miss Dunstable?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Yes, you.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“But I, unluckily, have not a wife to manage them for me.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Then you should not laugh at those who have, for you don’t know
-what you may come to yourself, when you’re married.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Mr. Supplehouse began to make a pretty speech, saying that he would
-be delighted to incur any danger in that respect to which he might be
-subjected by the companionship of Miss Dunstable. But before he was
-half through it, she had turned her back upon him, and began a conversation
-with Mark Robarts.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Have you much work in your parish, Mr. Robarts?” she asked.
-Now, Mark was not aware that she knew his name, or the fact of his
-having a parish, and was rather surprised by the question. And he had
-not quite liked the tone in which she had seemed to speak of the bishop
-and his work. His desire for her further acquaintance was therefore
-somewhat moderated, and he was not prepared to answer her question
-with much zeal.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“All parish clergymen have plenty of work, if they choose to do it.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Ah, that is it; is it not, Mr. Robarts? If they choose to do it? A
-great many do&mdash;many that I know, do; and see what a result they have.
-But many neglect it&mdash;and see what a result <i>they</i> have. I think it ought
-to be the happiest life that a man can lead, that of a parish clergyman,
-with a wife and family, and a sufficient income.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I think it is,” said Mark Robarts, asking himself whether the contentment
-accruing to him from such blessings had made him satisfied at all
-points. He had all these things of which Miss Dunstable spoke, and yet
-he had told his wife, the other day, that he could not afford to neglect the
-acquaintance of a rising politician like Harold Smith.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“What I find fault with is this,” continued Miss Dunstable, “that
-we expect clergymen to do their duty, and don’t give them a sufficient<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[Pg 22]</span>
-income&mdash;give them hardly any income at all. Is it not a scandal, that
-an educated gentleman with a family should be made to work half his
-life, and perhaps the whole, for a pittance of seventy pounds a year?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Mark said that it was a scandal, and thought of Mr. Evan Jones and
-his daughter;&mdash;and thought also of his own worth, and his own house, and
-his own nine hundred a year.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“And yet you clergymen are so proud&mdash;aristocratic would be the
-genteel word, I know&mdash;that you won’t take the money of common, ordinary
-poor people. You must be paid from land and endowments, from tithe and
-church property. You can’t bring yourself to work for what you earn, as
-lawyers and doctors do. It is better that curates should starve than
-undergo such ignominy as that.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“It is a long subject, Miss Dunstable.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“A very long one; and that means that I am not to say any more
-about it.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I did not mean that exactly.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Oh! but you did though, Mr. Robarts. And I can take a hint of that
-kind when I get it. You clergymen like to keep those long subjects for
-your sermons, when no one can answer you. Now if I have a longing
-heart’s desire for anything at all in this world, it is to be able to get up
-into a pulpit, and preach a sermon.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“You can’t conceive how soon that appetite would pall upon you, after
-its first indulgence.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“That would depend upon whether I could get people to listen to me.
-It does not pall upon Mr. Spurgeon, I suppose.” Then her attention was
-called away by some question from Mr. Sowerby, and Mark Robarts found
-himself bound to address his conversation to Miss Proudie. Miss Proudie,
-however, was not thankful, and gave him little but monosyllables for his
-pains.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Of course you know Harold Smith is going to give us a lecture about
-these islanders,” Mr. Sowerby said to him, as they sat round the fire
-over their wine after dinner. Mark said that he had been so informed, and
-should be delighted to be one of the listeners.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“You are bound to do that, as he is going to listen to you the day
-afterwards&mdash;or, at any rate, to pretend to do so, which is as much as you
-will do for him. It’ll be a terrible bore&mdash;the lecture I mean, not the
-sermon.” And he spoke very low into his friend’s ear. “Fancy having to
-drive ten miles after dusk, and ten miles back, to hear Harold Smith talk
-for two hours about Borneo! One must do it, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I daresay it will be very interesting.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“My dear fellow, you haven’t undergone so many of these things as
-I have. But he’s right to do it. It’s his line of life; and when a man
-begins a thing he ought to go on with it. Where’s Lufton all this
-time?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“In Scotland, when I last heard from him; but he’s probably at Melton
-now.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[Pg 23]</span></p>
-
-<p class="pt">“It’s deuced shabby of him, not hunting here in his own county.
-He escapes all the bore of going to lectures, and giving feeds to the neighbours;
-that’s why he treats us so. He has no idea of his duty, has he?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Lady Lufton does all that, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I wish I’d a Mrs. Sowerby <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mère</span></i> to do it for me. But then Lufton
-has no constituents to look after&mdash;lucky dog! By-the-by, has he spoken
-to you about selling that outlying bit of land of his in Oxfordshire? It
-belongs to the Lufton property, and yet it doesn’t. In my mind it gives
-more trouble than it’s worth.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Lord Lufton had spoken to Mark about this sale, and had explained to
-him that such a sacrifice was absolutely necessary, in consequence of certain
-pecuniary transactions between him, Lord Lufton, and Mr. Sowerby. But
-it was found impracticable to complete the business without Lady Lufton’s
-knowledge, and her son had commissioned Mr. Robarts not only to inform
-her ladyship, but to talk her over, and to appease her wrath. This commission
-he had not yet attempted to execute, and it was probable that this
-visit to Chaldicotes would not do much to facilitate the business.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“They are the most magnificent islands under the sun,” said Harold
-Smith to the bishop.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Are they, indeed?” said the bishop, opening his eyes wide, and
-assuming a look of intense interest.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“And the most intelligent people.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Dear me!” said the bishop.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“All they want is guidance, encouragement, instruction&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“And Christianity,” suggested the bishop.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“And Christianity, of course,” said Mr. Smith, remembering that he
-was speaking to a dignitary of the Church. It was well to humour such
-people, Mr. Smith thought. But the Christianity was to be done in the
-Sunday sermon, and was not part of his work.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“And how do you intend to begin with them?” asked Mr. Supplehouse,
-the business of whose life it had been to suggest difficulties.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Begin with them&mdash;oh&mdash;why&mdash;it’s very easy to begin with them.
-The difficulty is to go on with them, after the money is all spent. We’ll
-begin by explaining to them the benefits of civilization.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Capital plan!” said Mr. Supplehouse. “But how do you set about it,
-Smith?”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“How do we set about it? How did we set about it with Australia
-and America? It is very easy to criticize; but in such matters the great
-thing is to put one’s shoulder to the wheel.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“We sent our felons to Australia,” said Supplehouse, “and they began
-the work for us. And as to America, we exterminated the people instead
-of civilizing them.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“We did not exterminate the inhabitants of India,” said Harold Smith,
-angrily.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Nor have we attempted to Christianize them, as the bishop so properly
-wishes to do with your islanders.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[Pg 24]</span></p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Supplehouse, you are not fair,” said Mr. Sowerby, “neither to
-Harold Smith nor to us;&mdash;you are making him rehearse his lecture,
-which is bad for him; and making us hear the rehearsal, which is bad
-for us.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Supplehouse belongs to a clique which monopolizes the wisdom of
-England,” said Harold Smith; “or, at any rate, thinks that it does.
-But the worst of them is that they are given to talk leading articles.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Better that, than talk articles which are not leading,” said Mr.
-Supplehouse. “Some first-class official men do that.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Shall I meet you at the duke’s next week, Mr. Robarts,” said the
-bishop to him, soon after they had gone into the drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Meet him at the duke’s!&mdash;the established enemy of Barsetshire mankind,
-as Lady Lufton regarded his grace! No idea of going to the duke’s
-had ever entered our hero’s mind; nor had he been aware that the duke
-was about to entertain any one.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“No, my lord; I think not. Indeed, I have no acquaintance with
-his grace.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Oh&mdash;ah! I did not know. Because Mr. Sowerby is going; and so
-are the Harold Smiths, and, I think, Mr. Supplehouse. An excellent man
-is the duke;&mdash;that is, as regards all the county interests,” added the bishop,
-remembering that the moral character of his bachelor grace was not the
-very best in the world.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And then his lordship began to ask some questions about the church
-affairs of Framley, in which a little interest as to Framley Court was also
-mixed up, when he was interrupted by a rather sharp voice, to which he
-instantly attended.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Bishop,” said the rather sharp voice; and the bishop trotted across
-the room to the back of the sofa, on which his wife was sitting.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Miss Dunstable thinks that she will be able to come to us for a couple
-of days, after we leave the duke’s.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I shall be delighted above all things,” said the bishop, bowing low
-to the dominant lady of the day. For be it known to all men, that Miss
-Dunstable was the great heiress of that name.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Mrs. Proudie is so very kind as to say that she will take me in, with
-my poodle, parrot, and pet old woman.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I tell Miss Dunstable, that we shall have quite room for any of her
-suite,” said Mrs. Proudie. “And that it will give us no trouble.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“‘The labour we delight in physics pain,’” said the gallant bishop,
-bowing low, and putting his hand upon his heart.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">In the meantime, Mr. Fothergill had got hold of Mark Robarts. Mr.
-Fothergill was a gentleman, and a magistrate of the county, but he occupied
-the position of managing man on the Duke of Omnium’s estates. He was
-not exactly his agent; that is to say, he did not receive his rents; but he
-“managed” for him, saw people, went about the county, wrote letters,
-supported the electioneering interest, did popularity when it was too much
-trouble for the duke to do it himself, and was, in fact, invaluable. People<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[Pg 25]</span>
-in West Barsetshire would often say that they did not know what <i>on earth</i>
-the duke would do, if it were not for Mr. Fothergill. Indeed, Mr. Fothergill
-was useful to the duke.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Mr. Robarts,” he said, “I am very happy to have the pleasure of
-meeting you&mdash;very happy, indeed. I have often heard of you from our
-friend Sowerby.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Mark bowed, and said that he was delighted to have the honour of
-making Mr. Fothergill’s acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I am commissioned by the Duke of Omnium,” continued Mr. Fothergill,
-“to say how glad he will be if you will join his grace’s party at
-Gatherum Castle, next week. The bishop will be there, and indeed nearly
-the whole set who are here now. The duke would have written when he
-heard that you were to be at Chaldicotes; but things were hardly quite
-arranged then, so his grace has left it for me to tell you how happy he
-will be to make your acquaintance in his own house. I have spoken to
-Sowerby,” continued Mr. Fothergill, “and he very much hopes that you
-will be able to join us.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Mark felt that his face became red when this proposition was made to
-him. The party in the county to which he properly belonged&mdash;he and his
-wife, and all that made him happy and respectable&mdash;looked upon the Duke
-of Omnium with horror and amazement; and now he had absolutely
-received an invitation to the duke’s house! A proposition was made to
-him that he should be numbered among the duke’s friends!</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And though in one sense he was sorry that the proposition was made to
-him, yet in another he was proud of it. It is not every young man, let his
-profession be what it may, who can receive overtures of friendship from
-dukes without some elation. Mark, too, had risen in the world, as far as
-he had yet risen, by knowing great people; and he certainly had an ambition
-to rise higher. I will not degrade him by calling him a tuft-hunter;
-but he undoubtedly had a feeling that the paths most pleasant for a
-clergyman’s feet were those which were trodden by the great ones of
-the earth.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Nevertheless, at the moment he declined the duke’s invitation. He was
-very much flattered, he said, but the duties of his parish would require him
-to return direct from Chaldicotes to Framley.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“You need not give me an answer to-night, you know,” said Mr. Fothergill.
-“Before the week is past, we will talk it over with Sowerby and
-the bishop. It will be a thousand pities, Mr. Robarts, if you will allow
-me to say so, that you should neglect such an opportunity of knowing his
-grace.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">When Mark went to bed, his mind was still set against going to the
-duke’s; but, nevertheless, he did feel that it was a pity that he should not
-do so. After all, was it necessary that he should obey Lady Lufton in all
-things?</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak oe" id="The_Chinese_and_the_Outer_Barbarians">The Chinese and the “Outer Barbarians.”</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>China, and questions of Chinese policy&mdash;which only two years ago were
-the battle-field of fierce political contention, the subject of debates which
-menaced a Ministry with downfall, dissolved a Parliament, violently
-agitated the whole community at home, and engaged the controversies of
-the whole civilized world&mdash;seemed again to have been delivered over to
-that neglect and oblivion with which remote countries and their concerns
-are ordinarily regarded; but after the lull and the slumber, come again the
-rousing and the excitement, and China occupies anew the columns of
-the periodical press, and awakens fresh interest in the public mind.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The startling events which have taken place on the <i>Tien-tsin</i> river
-in China&mdash;popularly, but erroneously, known by the name of the Pei-Ho<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>&mdash;have
-re-kindled such an amount of attention and inquiry, that we
-feel warranted in devoting some of our earliest pages to the consideration
-of a topic involving our relations with a people constituting more than one-third
-of the whole human family, and commercial interests even now of
-vast extent, and likely to become in their future development more important
-than those which connect us with any other nation or region of the
-world. A brief recapitulation of the events preceding this last manifestation
-of Chinese duplicity will enable the reader to understand the character
-and objects of the Chinese government in their dealings with other nations.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">A series of successful military and naval operations led to the treaties
-with China of 1842. The arts and appliances of modern warfare&mdash;the
-civilization of a powerful western nation&mdash;were directed against armies
-and defenses which represented the unimproved strategy of the middle
-ages,<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> and against regions pacific in their social organization, yet disordered,
-and even dislocated by internecine dissensions, which the enfeebled
-imperial authority was wholly incompetent to subdue or to control. The
-reigning dynasty was little able to resist a shock so overwhelming to its
-stolid pride, and so unexpected to its ignorant shortsightedness. Its hold
-upon the people being rather that of traditional prestige than of physical
-domination, the humiliation felt was all the more intolerable because
-inflicted by those “barbarians,” who, according to Chinese estimate,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[Pg 27]</span>are beyond “heaven’s canopy.” It is currently believed in China
-that our earlier intercourse with the “central land” had only been
-allowed by the gracious and pitying condescension of the “son of
-heaven” to supplications that China might be permitted, from her
-abounding superfluities, to provide for the urgent necessities of the
-“outer races,” which could not otherwise be supplied. “How,” said
-the benevolent councillors of the Great Bright Dynasty, “how, without
-the rhubarb of the Celestial dominions, can the diseases of the red-haired
-races be cured? how can their existence be supported without
-our fragrant tea? how can their persons be adorned, unless your sacred
-Majesty will allow their traders to purchase and to convey to them our
-beautiful silk? Think how far they come&mdash;how patiently they wait&mdash;how
-humbly they supplicate for a single ray from the lustrous presence.
-Let not their hearts be made disconsolate by being sent empty away.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Even after the severe lessons which the Chinese received in the war,
-and the sad exhibitions of their utter inability to offer any effectual resistance
-to our forces, the reports made by Keying, the negotiator of our first
-treaty, as to the proper manner of dealing with “barbarians,” are equally
-amusing and characteristic. These reports were honoured with the autograph
-approval of the emperor Taou-Kwang, written with “the vermilion
-pencil,”<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> and were found at Canton among the papers of Commissioner Yeh,
-to whom they had been sent for his guidance and instruction. In the end
-they proved fatal to the venerable diplomatist; for he having been sent down
-from the capital to Tien-tsin in order to meet the foreign ambassadors,
-and there to give practical evidence that he knew how to “manage and
-pacify” the Western barbarians, the documents which proved his own
-earlier treacheries were produced; he was put to open shame, and the
-poor old man, though a member of the Imperial family, was condemned to be
-publicly executed: a sentence which the emperor, in consideration for his
-high rank and extreme age, commuted into a permission, or rather a mandate,
-that he should commit suicide. Keying gratefully accepted this last favour
-from his sovereign, and so terminated his long and most memorable career.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">It is withal not the less true that these reports represent the concentrated
-wisdom of the sages of China, and are fair and reasonable commentaries
-upon the teachings of the ancient books in reference to the proper
-mode of subduing or taming the “outside nations;” and as they throw
-much light upon the course of the mandarins, and give us the key by
-which their policy may be generally interpreted, some account of them
-will be neither superfluous nor uninstructive.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[Pg 28]</span></p>
-<p class="pt">After stating that the English “barbarians” had been “pacified” in 1842,
-and the American and French “barbarians” in 1844, Keying goes on to
-report that it had been necessary to “shift ground,” and change the
-measures by which they were to be “tethered.” “Of course,” he says,
-they must be dealt with “justly,” and their “feelings consulted;” but
-they cannot be restrained without “stratagems”&mdash;and thus he explains his
-“stratagems.” Sometimes they must be “ordered” (to obey), and “no
-reason given;” sometimes there must be “demonstrations” to disarm
-their “restlessness” and “suspicions;” sometimes they must be placed on
-a footing of “equality,” to make them “pleased” and “grateful;” their
-“falsehoods must be blinked,” and their “facts” not too closely examined.
-Being “born beyond” (heaven’s canopy), the barbarians “cannot perfectly
-understand the administration of the Celestial dynasty,” nor the promulgation
-of the “silken sounds” (imperial decrees) by the “Great Council.”
-Keying excuses himself for having, in order “to gain their good-will,”
-eaten and drunk with “the barbarians in their residences and ships;”
-but he was most embarrassed by the consideration shown by the barbarians
-towards “their women,”<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> whom they constantly introduced; but he did
-not deem it becoming “to break out in rebuke,” which would “not clear
-their barbarian dulness.” He urges, however, the increasing necessity of
-“keeping them off, and shutting them out.” He takes great credit for
-refusing the “barbarians’ gifts,” the receipt of which might, he says, have
-exposed him to the penalties of the law. He did accept some trifles; but,
-giving effect to the Confucian maxim of “receiving little and returning
-much,” he gave the barbarians in return “snuff-bottles, purses,” and a
-“copy of his insignificant portrait.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">He says the “barbarians” have “filched Chinese titles for their rulers:”
-thus “assuming the airs of great authority,” which he acknowledges to be
-“no concern of ours;” but they will not accept any designation denoting dependency,
-nor adopt the lunar calendar, nor acknowledge patents of royalty
-from the “son of heaven.” They are so “uncivilized,” so “blindly ignorant”
-of propriety, that to require them to recognize becoming “inferiority” and
-“superiority,” would “lead to fierce altercation;” and after all, he recommends
-disregarding these “minor details,” in order to carry out “an important
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[Pg 29]</span>policy.” He presents to the “sacred intelligence” this hasty outline
-of the “rough settlement of the barbarian business.”<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> On the general character
-of the official papers seized in Yeh’s yamun, Mr. Wade reports:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="pt">“The foreigner is represented as inferior in civilization, unreasonable, crafty, violent,
-and in consequence dangerous. The instructions of the court are accordingly to
-lecture him fraternally or magisterially, and by this means it is hoped to keep in hand
-his perpetual tendency to encroach and intrude. A stern tone is to be adopted on
-occasion, but always with due regard to the avoidance of an open rupture.”</p></div>
-
-<p class="pt">There were grave omissions in Sir Henry Pottinger’s treaty of 1842. It
-left the shipping and commercial relations of the British colony of Hong Kong
-in a very unsatisfactory state, encumbering them with regulations to which
-it was found impossible to give effect; and the trade emancipated itself by its
-own irresistible energies to the common advantage of China and Great Britain.
-The treaty contained no clause declaring the British text to be the true
-reading, and the consequence was, various and embarrassing interpretations
-of the intentions of the negotiators; the Chinese naturally enough contending
-for the accuracy of their version, while, quite as naturally, our
-merchants would abide only by the English reading.<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> There is no condition
-providing for the revision of the treaty, and it is only under “the most
-favoured nation” clause, which concedes to us everything conceded to other
-powers, that we have a claim to a revision; but we cannot demand such
-revision, unless and until it is granted to the French or the Americans.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">But the most fatal mistake of all was that which fixed on Canton as the
-seat of our diplomatic relations with China. It removed our influence
-from the capital to the remotest part of the empire&mdash;to a province always
-looked upon with apprehension and distrust by the supreme authorities at
-Peking, and among a population remarkable alike for their unruly disposition
-and their intense and openly proclaimed hatred to foreigners. It
-had been Keying’s calculation (and his assurances were most welcome to
-the court) that the emperor would thus get rid of all annoyance from Western
-“barbarians,” who would be kept in order by the indomitable spirit of the
-Cantonese. No provision was made for personal access to the high commissioner
-charged with the conduct of “barbarian affairs,” still less for
-communication, even by correspondence, with the capital. This was the
-first great triumph of Chinese policy, and has been fertile in producing
-fruits of mischief and misery.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Sir Henry Pottinger never visited Canton; he never examined the
-ground on which he placed the future representatives of Great Britain;
-he listened to the declarations of Keying, that the difficulties in the way of
-a becoming reception there were then insuperable; that they would be removed
-by time, which might render the turbulent Cantonese population more
-reasonable; he relied on the assurance that everything would be done to
-prepare the way for a happier state of things. No doubt there were difficulties;
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[Pg 30]</span>but they were not invincible: they ought, then and there, to have been
-surmounted. Pottinger little knew with what a faithless element he had
-to deal, and little dreamed that delay would be taken advantage of, not to
-lessen, but increase the resistance; that it would be employed not to facilitate,
-but to thwart our object&mdash;not to soothe, but to exasperate the people.
-Pottinger deemed his treaty a bridge to aid&mdash;Keying meant it to be a barrier
-to resist&mdash;our entrance into China. But Sir Henry, before his death, acknowledged
-his error, and deeply lamented that his confidence had been misplaced.
-Abundant evidence has since been furnished that the treaty was
-signed, not with the purpose of honestly giving effect to its conditions, but
-to get rid of the “barbarian” pressure, and to bide the time, when the treaty
-obligations could be got rid of altogether.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Proofs were not wanting of this dishonest purpose, and, in consequence,
-after some hesitation, it was deemed necessary by the British Government
-to remind the Chinese that their obligation to admit her Majesty’s
-subjects into Canton had not been fulfilled; and they were advised
-that the Island of Chusan, which we held as a guarantee, would
-not be surrendered until security was given for the compliance with
-the treaty stipulation. A short delay was asked by the Chinese,
-and the assurance, under the authority of the “vermilion pencil,”
-was renewed, that arrangements would be made for our having access to
-the city. Chusan was in consequence given up to the Chinese authorities;
-but no steps were taken to prepare the “public mind” to receive us as
-friends and allies within the walls of Canton. On the contrary, incendiary
-placards, breathing the utmost enmity to foreigners, continued to be promulgated
-and pasted on the walls. In 1847, Sir John Davis, naturally
-impatient at Keying’s procrastination and subterfuges, determined to capture
-the Bogue forts, to move with military forces upon Canton, and to threaten
-the city into compliance with obligations so long trifled with and disregarded.
-Keying asked for time, and entered into a formal written
-engagement that the city should be opened in April, 1849. When the
-time was at hand, Sir George Bonham, who had succeeded to the governorship
-of Hong Kong, sought an interview with Seu, who had replaced Keying
-as imperial commissioner. Seu did not hesitate to say that the ministers
-had been engaged in a common purpose of deception&mdash;that the Chinese
-and British were both aware the gates were not to be opened&mdash;that each
-had avoided the responsibility of bringing the matter to issue, and had left
-it to their successors. Seu said he would refer the question to the emperor.
-The emperor’s reply was the stereotyped instruction to all mandarins, who
-have any relations with foreigners: “Keep the barbarians at a distance if
-you can&mdash;but above all things keep the peace.” Now, though we had a large
-fleet at Hong Kong, the imperial commissioner had undoubtedly obtained information,
-from some quarter or other, that the fleet would not be employed
-hostilely, and that he might “resist the barbarian” without compromising
-the public tranquillity. So he negatived the demands of the British.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">That our forbearance was a grievous mistake there can be little<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[Pg 31]</span>
-hesitation in affirming. But the importance of the concession then
-made was little understood, except by the Chinese, and to it may be
-attributed the embarrassments which have since entangled our negotiations
-with China. As the British Government determined to leave the
-Canton question in a state of abeyance, Sir George Bonham prohibited the
-Queen’s subjects from attempting to enter the city&mdash;a prohibition which
-was taken immediate advantage of by the mandarins, who proclaimed that
-our right to enter the city had been finally and for ever withdrawn. By
-the orders of the emperor, who wrote to the high commissioner that he
-had read “with tears of joy” the report, which showed with what
-sagacity and courage he had, without the employment of force, thwarted
-“the seditious demands of the barbarians,” six triumphal arches were
-erected at the various entrances of the city of Canton, to celebrate the
-wisdom and valour of the authorities; and the names of all the distinguished
-Cantonese who had contributed to so glorious a consummation were ordered
-to be inscribed upon the monuments for immortal commemoration, while
-dignities and honours were showered down upon the principal actors. A
-grand religious ceremonial, in which all the high authorities took part,
-was also ordered to be celebrated in the Temple of Potoo, which is dedicated
-to a foreign deified idol, who is supposed to control the affairs of “Western
-barbarians.” These triumphal arches&mdash;magnificently built of granite&mdash;were
-blown up by the Allies after the capture of the city.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">It had indeed been long evident that it was the fixed purpose of the
-Chinese authorities to escape from treaty obligations as soon as they fancied
-that they were menaced by nothing more than a remote and uncertain
-danger; the bow returned to its original bent as the tightness of the string
-was relaxed. It was only while the pressure of our presence was felt that
-any disposition was shown to respect imperial engagements. The consuls
-of the United States and of France had at first been received becomingly
-in Canton, by the viceroy; but, in 1849, on the arrival of Consul Bowring,
-very subordinate mandarins were appointed to visit him: the imperial
-commissioner altogether refused any interview at any place. No official
-reception was therefore given by the high mandarins to the British consular
-authorities, who were utterly excluded from personal intercourse with them.
-The stipulation of the treaty that the mandarins should, in conjunction with
-the foreign authorities, assist in the arrangement of differences between
-Chinese and British subjects, was absolutely a dead letter; and the obligation
-on the part of the mandarins to aid officially in the recovery of
-debts due to foreigners was utterly disregarded, when the Chinese debtor
-was in a condition to bribe the native functionaries.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The alienation and repulsion which had become the system and the
-rule of the Chinese authorities, had been productive of consequences most
-detrimental to their amicable relations with foreigners. Personal intercourse
-affords the greatest facilities for the arrangement of difficulties; and,
-even had the correspondence with the mandarins been of the most frank
-and friendly character, the settlement of all questions would have been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[Pg 32]</span>
-greatly aided by frequent interviews. But these were always avoided, and
-often on pleas the most untenable: sometimes it was said that the weight
-of administrative business prevented the granting an audience&mdash;sometimes
-that the viceroy was preparing to attack the rebels, and might be visiting
-the interior&mdash;sometimes that an auspicious day must be waited for. Replies
-were sometimes long delayed; sometimes never given; and it was seldom
-that an answer was otherwise than evasive or unsatisfactory. There were
-many occasions on which the cabinets of the treaty powers directed their
-representatives to make communications, through the imperial commissioner,
-to the court of Peking; but only one instance occurred of any attention
-being paid to such communications: it was that connected with our entrance
-into the city, and the imperial reply was such as to encourage the viceroy
-in his perverse and perilous policy. The impossibility of obtaining personal
-access to the imperial commissioner was, in fact, not only a great grievance
-in itself, but it was the cause of the non-redress of every other grievance. It
-is not in the field of diplomatic controversy that European functionaries can
-have any fair chance with those who, preserving all the forms of courtesy,
-will deny facts, or invent falsehoods to suit the purposes of the moment.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">So great had been the disposition of the Chinese authorities to bring
-back matters to their position anterior to the treaties of 1812, that in Foochow
-Foo, the only other provincial city to which we had a right of access,
-and in which a viceregal government exists, the high authorities had
-refused all personal intercourse with the representatives of Great Britain,
-though the consular offices are established within the city walls. The
-superior officers of the great provincial cities have the right of direct
-intercourse with the court of Peking and with the emperor himself,&mdash;a
-right not possessed by any of the functionaries in the ports of Shanghae,
-Ningpo, or Amoy, but confined to those of Canton and Foochow, the one
-being the capital of the province of Kwantung, the other of the province
-of Fookien. The importance of our being in direct communication with
-those through whom alone we can communicate with the ministers, or
-the sovereign, at Peking, can hardly be over-estimated. Sir John Bowring
-visited Foochow, in 1853, in a ship of war, and after much resistance from
-the viceroy, was finally and officially received by him with every mark of
-distinction; and the result of that friendly reception was the amicable and
-satisfactory arrangement of every question&mdash;and there were many&mdash;then
-pending between British and Chinese subjects in the Fookien province.
-It is true that on more than one occasion the viceroy of Canton offered to
-receive the British plenipotentiary, not in his official yamun, but in a
-“packhouse” belonging to Howqua; and there were those who held that
-Sir John Bowring should have been satisfied with such condescension on
-the part of the Chinese commissioner. It should be remembered that
-in all the treaties with foreigners, the emperor has engaged that the
-same attentions shall be shown to foreign functionaries which can be claimed
-and are invariably shown to mandarins of similar rank. It was always a
-part of the policy of the Chinese to maintain in the eyes of the people that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[Pg 33]</span>
-superiority of position which national pride and vanity had for ages rendered
-habitual; and the recognition of the right of foreign authorities to be elevated
-to the same height was one of the most important of the treaty concessions.
-But it was a treaty concession, and ought never to be allowed to become a
-dead letter. In our relations with Oriental governments, the only security
-for the observance of treaty engagements, is to be found in their rigid, but
-quiet and determined enforcement. To be considerate as to what you exact,
-is the dictate alike of prudence and of policy; but the attempt to disregard
-or violate any formal treaty stipulation should be resisted at its very earliest
-demonstration.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Whatever grounds of complaint the British authorities might have
-against the Chinese, nothing was left undone to conciliate the good opinion
-of the mandarins. In 1854 an application was made by Yeh to this
-effect: he feared a rupture of the public peace, and feeling himself too
-weak to protect Canton from the invasion of the rebels, he asked
-for the assistance of the naval forces of the treaty powers. Sir John
-Bowring accompanied the admiral and the British fleet to the neighbourhood
-of that city, and in co-operation with the Americans, took such
-effectual measures for its security, that the intended attack was abandoned,
-and general tranquillity remained uninterrupted. This intervention was
-gratefully acknowledged by the people of Canton; but there is every reason
-to believe that the commissioner represented our amicable intervention
-as an act of vassalage, and the assistance rendered as having been in
-obedience to orders issued by imperial authority. Notwithstanding this and
-many other evidences of friendly sentiment and useful aid on our part, Yeh
-did not hesitate to represent to the court that the rebels and Western
-“barbarians” were acting in union, and he expressed his conviction that
-his policy would lead to the extermination of both.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">No one, in fact, who had attended to the progress of public events,
-could be unaware of the insecure position of our relations with the
-Chinese. Lord Palmerston said, in 1854:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="pt">“So far from our proceedings in China having had a tendency to disturb the peaceful
-relations between the British government and the Chinese empire, and to lead to
-encroachments upon their territory, we had, on the contrary, acted with the greatest
-forbearance. Ever since the conclusion of the treaty of Nanking the conduct of the
-Chinese authorities had been such as would have justified a rupture with that government.
-They had violated the engagements into which they had entered; and if any
-desire existed on the part of the British government to proceed against them, abundant
-cause had existed, almost since the termination of the last war. They had refused, on
-divers pretences, to admit us to parts of Canton to which we ought to have access,
-avoided their engagements with respect to the Hongs, and nullified their stipulations in
-regard to the Tariff. In point of fact, there was scarcely a single engagement they had
-not broken.”<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p></div>
-
-<p class="pt">Wearied with so many evasions, difficulties and delays, the ministers
-of the treaty powers, in 1854, determined to approach the capital, in order
-to represent to the court the unsatisfactory state of foreign relations with
-the imperial commissioner at Canton, and the necessity of redressing the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[Pg 34]</span>
-many grievances of which they had to complain, and thus putting an end
-to a policy essentially unfriendly, which could not but lead to a fatal
-crisis, and which imperilled alike the interests of China and of all the
-nations who came into contact with her. It was hoped that the strong
-and united representations of the three ministers might alarm the emperor,
-or at all events obtain his serious attention to the dangers with which
-he was menaced. The attempt failed.<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> It could not but fail, through the
-incredible misrepresentations made to the Chinese court by the commissioners
-who were sent down by the emperor to meet the foreign envoys.
-As regards the outward forms of courtesy, the latter had perhaps no special
-ground of complaint. Tents were erected for their reception in the neighbourhood
-of the Takoo forts; and they were invited to a repast, in which, it
-may be worth notice, there was a display of ancient European steel knives
-and forks, with handsome porcelain handles, apparently of the age of
-Louis XIV. They were met on terms of equality, and the posts of honour
-were graciously conceded to them. But the urbane manners of the mandarins
-did not mislead the foreign ministers, who left them with the declaration that
-they were insuring for their country days of future sorrow. On the subject
-of their reports to the court of Peking, Mr. Reed says: “They illustrate
-the habitual faithlessness of Chinese officials.... They were certainly
-the most painful revelations of the mendacity and treacherous habits of the
-high officials of this empire ever given to the world. They cannot be read
-without contemptuous resentment.”<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p>
-
-<p class="pt">There was only one possible termination to a state of things so obviously
-unsatisfactory, menacing, and untenable. Everything that could be said or
-done, in the shape of friendly counsel, had been exhausted. The American
-commissioner, Mr. M‘Lane, reports to his government,<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> that on leaving
-China, he addressed to Keih,<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> the governor of Kiangsoo, the following
-memorable warning:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="pt">“Now, as my parting words, I say to you, if something is not done, our relations will
-become bad, our amity be disturbed. I believe that but for the officers of both governments
-there now might have been a state of things that might have led to a war; but
-we have exerted ourselves to prevent it.” [Governor Keih&mdash;“Yes.”] “I have done
-well, and on the eve of my departure am most <i>disinterested</i> in what I say. I do not
-think it is in the power of either officers of either government long to preserve the
-peace. If the emperor does not listen, and appoint a commissioner to adjust the foreign
-relations, so sure as there is a God in the heavens, amity cannot be preserved. I say it
-in sincerity, as my parting words.”</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[Pg 35]</span></p>
-
-<p class="pt">The personal character of Yeh tended greatly to complicate every
-international question. He represented the pride, presumption, and ignorance
-of a high mandarin, without the restraints which fear of imperial
-displeasure generally places upon Chinese functionaries. He was the
-instrument, and for some time the successful instrument, for carrying out
-the imperial policy as regarded foreign nations. He had a great reputation
-for learning, had won the most eminent literary grades, was a distinguished
-member of the highest college (the Hanlin), and the guardian of the heir
-apparent&mdash;indeed, on one occasion he called himself the fourth personage
-of the empire. Moreover, his despatches were much admired for their
-perspicuity and purity of language. He was strangely unacquainted with
-the geography, institutions, and policy of remote nations, and even made his
-ignorance a ground for self-congratulation. When questions of commercial
-interest were brought before him, he treated them as altogether below his
-notice, and on one occasion abruptly terminated a conversation by saying,
-“You speak to me as if I were a merchant, and not a mandarin.” He devoted
-himself to the study of necromancy, and relied on his “fortunate star;”
-believing that the city of Canton was impregnable, he made no serious
-arrangements for its defence.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">What Ke-ying preached, Yeh-ming practised; but Ke was a man of a
-gentle, Yeh of a ferocious nature; and the cautious cunning which often
-marked the course of the one was wholly wanting to the other. Yeh,
-armed as he was with powers of life and death, exercised them with a
-recklessness of which there is no equal example in history. He turned the
-execution-ground at Canton into a huge lake of blood; hundreds of rebels
-were beheaded daily. When he was asked whether he had really caused
-seventy thousand men to be decapitated, he boastingly replied that the
-number exceeded a hundred thousand; and to an inquiry whether he had
-inflicted upon women the horrible punishment called the cutting into
-ten thousand pieces, he answered, “Ay! they were worse than the
-men.”<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p>
-
-<p class="pt">It was the affair of the <i>Arrow</i> which brought about the inevitable
-crisis. The question of Sir John Bowring’s action on that occasion was
-entangled with the party politics of the day, and little more need now be
-said than that the verdict of the country reversed the condemnatory
-decision of the House of Commons. Certain it is that the very build of
-a <i><span lang="pt" xml:lang="pt">lorcha</span></i>, so altogether unlike any Chinese junk in its external appearance,
-ought to have led the local authorities in Canton to be very cautious in
-their interference with her crew; and that the fact of her papers being in
-the hands of the British consul, and not of the Chinese custom-house, was
-<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">primâ facie</span></i> evidence of her nationality. Since the brutal character of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[Pg 36]</span>
-ex-Commissioner Yeh has been better understood, even those most
-forward to censure Sir John Bowring, for refusing to deliver over to
-that savage and sanguinary personage men who at all events believed
-themselves to be entitled to the protection of British authority,<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> cannot
-but have felt that they ought to have been more indulgent to his
-hesitation. That he carried with him the sympathy of the representatives
-of the treaty powers,&mdash;that Yeh’s policy was condemned by his
-colleagues and by the people in general,<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a>&mdash;and that Yeh himself was
-finally degraded and disgraced by his own sovereign for his proceedings,
-are matters of historical record. Yeh, there is little doubt, would have
-been publicly executed, had he returned to China, notwithstanding the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[Pg 37]</span>
-efforts of his father, who betook himself to Peking with a very large sum
-of money, hoping to be able&mdash;but failing&mdash;to propitiate the court.<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></p>
-
-<p class="pt">The war was carried on by the Chinese according to their usual mode
-of dealing with foreign nations.<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> They had no chance of success in open
-combat, so they had recourse to the ordinary stratagems adopted by
-uncivilized races. An “anti-barbarian committee” was formed among
-them, under the auspices of the mandarins. They offered premiums from
-100 up to 100,000 ounces of silver for assassinations of “the barbarians,”
-according to the gradation of rank, and similar graduated rewards for the
-capture of vessels, for acts of incendiarism, for denouncing those who sent
-provisions to Hong Kong. Intercourse was prohibited under pain of death;
-and provision was promised to be made for the families of those who might
-perish in any desperate enterprise against the “foreign devils.” But so<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[Pg 38]</span>
-well was the government of Hong Kong served, that only one of many
-attempts to injure the colony had any success. In this, however, 360
-persons of all nations were poisoned; but, happily, from the excess of
-arsenic employed, which led to an immediate perception of the danger,
-very few lost their lives. No less than 25,000 of the inhabitants fled to the
-mainland in consequence of the menaces of the mandarins; yet, though
-there were not 400 effective men in the garrison, such was the efficiency of
-the naval department, so active the police, and so well-disposed the mass of
-the Chinese population, that scarcely any damage was inflicted on the colony.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Canton was taken on the 29th of December. The resistance was
-ridiculous.<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> The walls were scaled by a handful of men, and Yeh, who
-had concealed himself, was captured. Why British authority, which
-would have been welcomed by the respectable part of the population,
-was not established under military law, and the whole administration of
-the public revenues taken into our hands, it is very difficult to explain.
-But at the meeting in which the English and French ambassadors informed
-the high Chinese authorities that the city had been captured and was held
-by the allied forces, both the governor of Kwang-tung and the Tartar
-general were allowed to be seated on the same elevation with the foreign
-ambassadors, and above the positions occupied by the naval and military
-commanders-in-chief who were left in charge of the city. Subordinate to
-these, an hermaphrodite government was created, called “the Allied Commissioners,”
-who were to be consulted on all occasions by the mandarins
-charged to carry on the administration of public affairs.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">A grand opportunity was thus lost of exhibiting to the Cantonese the
-benefits of a just and honest, however severe, administration: they could
-not but have been struck with the difference between the humane and
-equitable laws of foreigners, as contrasted with the corrupt and cruel
-dealings of the mandarins. The <i>Elgin Papers</i> throw little light upon the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[Pg 39]</span>
-atrocities which were perpetrated by the Chinese, long after our possession of
-the city. The prisons continued to be scenes of horrible tortures. It was
-thought necessary to destroy whole streets, in order to convey terror into districts
-where assassinations of the subjects of allied powers had taken place:
-all the eastern suburb of the city was razed to the ground, and not a respectable
-inhabitant was left amidst the desolation. There can be no doubt
-that Governor Pehkwei considered himself invested with supreme authority
-over Chinese subjects. He complains bitterly, in a despatch to Lord
-Elgin, of 31st January, 1858, of Consul Parkes’ interference&mdash;of his “overbearing”
-and unreasonably oppressive “conduct in disposing of Chinamen
-confined in the gaols of Canton. I ask, whether Chinese officers would be
-tolerated in their interference with British subjects confined in British
-gaols?” Lord Elgin does not, in his reply, assert British jurisdiction over
-the prisons in Canton; but says, Pehkwei will be required to release all
-prisoners entitled to the benefits of the amnesty; and in another despatch
-(p. 178), distinctly throws upon Pehkwei the responsibility of preserving
-the public peace. This anomalous state of matters awakened the attention
-of our Government at home: a despatch of Lord Malmesbury (14th June,
-1858), says: “It will be a disgrace to the allied powers if they do not
-prevent such enormities as are practised in the prisons of Canton.” ...
-The “British name must be relieved from the disgrace and guilt of
-having connived at a state of things so monstrous and revolting.”
-As to the mixed authority of native mandarins and allied commissioners,
-Lord Malmesbury says: “It is wholly inefficient for all objects of
-administration and policy, and should be replaced by a military government
-acting under the rules of martial law.” He recommended that the allies
-should take possession of the custom-house revenues, and hold the balance
-after the payment of the local expenses. It is much to be regretted that these
-measures were not adopted. Undoubtedly, Lord Elgin exercised a sound
-discretion in not proceeding to Peking until “a lesson” had been given to
-Yeh’s obstinacy. Had he gone to the North it would have been deemed a
-confession that he had been foiled in the South, and compelled to appeal to
-the emperor, in order to relieve himself from the difficulties in which Yeh
-had placed him; for Yeh&mdash;who had chosen to represent the English
-“barbarians” as making common cause with the rebels, and in fact, being
-themselves in a state of rebellion against imperial authority&mdash;gave the
-court the assurance that, as he had been so successful in breaking up the
-native insurrection, so he would not fail “to drive the foreign ‘barbarians’
-into the sea.” In short, there could be little doubt, that had his calculations
-proved correct, a hostile policy would have pursued us in all the other parts
-of China, and our immense interests there have been placed in jeopardy.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">For some time the court ventured to dream that by Yeh’s indomitable
-bravery China might be wholly rid of the presence of the intrusive
-strangers.<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> It is known that the emperor was much displeased with a
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[Pg 40]</span>mandarin, who, having lived in Canton, and being acquainted with the
-power of the English, ventured to express doubts as to the trustworthiness
-of Yeh’s representations that he could bridle and extirpate the English
-barbarians;<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> and nothing less than the taking the Takoo forts by the allied
-forces, and an advance upon the capital (even after Yeh’s capture and
-humiliation) was likely to bring the court of Peking to a sense of its
-own weakness, and the necessity of listening to our representations and
-remonstrances.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Every effort had been made to obstruct the progress of the allied
-ambassadors towards Peking; but they wisely determined not to delay their
-voyage to the Gulf of Pecheli, and, on the 24th April, they announced
-to the Chinese prime minister their arrival, at the mouth of the Tien-tsin
-river. The usual evasions were brought into play; and it was soon discovered
-that the commissioners sent down had no sufficient powers. On
-the 18th May, therefore, after consultation with the admirals, it was determined
-to “take the forts,” and to “proceed pacifically up the river;” on
-the 19th, notice was given to the Chinese, and on the 20th, the forts were
-in the hands of the Allies. On the 29th, the ambassadors reached Tien-tsin.
-On the same day they were advised that “the chief secretary of state,”
-and the president of one of the imperial boards, were ordered to proceed
-without delay “to investigate and despatch business.” After many discussions
-the Treaty was signed on the 26th June.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The progress and the result of these negotiations only demonstrate that
-where our policy has failed, and where it will always fail in China, is in
-placing confidence in the Chinese. Our distrust must be the groundwork:
-it is the only sound foundation of our security. When the four
-ambassadors were at Tien-tsin, and had extorted from the fears of the
-Chinese treaties more or less humiliating to Chinese pride, according to the
-amount of pressure employed, it should have been foreseen that on the
-removal of that pressure the Chinese mind would resume its natural
-obstinacy. A treaty with China will always be waste paper, unless some
-security is obtained for giving it due effect. It is, therefore, greatly to be
-regretted that the ambassadors should have left the most difficult of questions,
-one most wounding to Chinese pride&mdash;the reception of foreign
-ministers at Peking, and the initiation of their constant residence at court&mdash;to
-be settled by their successors, who had neither the same high
-diplomatic position, nor the same large naval and military forces at their
-disposal. It may, indeed, be a question whether it was desirable to force
-upon the Chinese the recognition of our right to have an ambassador
-permanently fixed at the capital; but if we thought fit to insist on such<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[Pg 41]</span>
-recognition, there should certainly have been no vacillation&mdash;no disposition
-shown to surrender in any shape or on any terms the right which had been
-conceded. We could not plead want of experience, for we had abundant
-evidence of the determination of the Chinese to repudiate and deny every
-concession, the enjoyment of which was either rediscussed or deferred. We
-should have avoided, above all things, the transfer of the Canton question to
-Peking. Our right to enter Canton was incontestable. Shufflings and
-subterfuges on the part of the Chinese, hesitation and an erroneous estimate
-of the importance of the question on the part of the British Government
-and the British functionaries in China, led to one delay after another,
-and ended by an absolute denial of our treaty right, and an arming of
-the Chinese population to enforce that denial, accompanied at the same
-time by a Chinese proclamation mendaciously averring that we had withdrawn
-our claims. A similar course has been pursued at Peking. The
-Chinese, who have no notion&mdash;what Oriental has?&mdash;of privileges possessed
-and not exercised, saw in the willingness to give way to their representations,
-not, as we might have supposed, a consideration for their repugnancy,
-and a magnanimity in refraining from the enjoyment of a privilege
-distasteful to them, but an infirmity of purpose&mdash;a confession that we had
-asked for something we did not want, and which they felt to be a
-degradation needlessly and gratuitously imposed upon them. There is, in
-fact, neither safety nor dignity in any course but the stern, steady persistence
-in the assertion and enforcement of whatever conditions are the subject of
-imperial engagements.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Lord Elgin returned to England, and Mr. Bruce was appointed his
-successor. It was at first announced that he had been furnished with
-ambassadorial powers, but as such powers would have entitled him to
-demand a personal reception by the emperor, it was, on reconsideration, very
-judiciously thought better to avoid a question which might lead to great
-embarrassments, and he was accredited as Minister Plenipotentiary to the
-Peking court. To our judgment it appears the instructions of Lord
-Malmesbury were too peremptory as to the course Mr. Bruce was to
-pursue; and if that course was to be insisted on, most inadequate means
-were provided.<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> It is but another example of those in the distance
-imagining they see more clearly than those who are near, and assuming
-an acquaintance with local circumstances&mdash;subject every hour to change&mdash;which,
-without the attributes of omnipresence and omniscience, it is impossible
-they should possess. Whatever may have been the views of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[Pg 42]</span>
-Cabinet at home, it is obvious that the forces which accompanied Mr. Bruce
-were as superfluous for peace as they were insufficient for war, and that he
-was placed in the embarrassing dilemma either of disobeying his orders, or
-of incurring great risk in the attempt to execute them. That the Admiral
-singularly overrated his own force, and under-estimated that of the Chinese,
-admits now of no controversy. But an indulgent judgment should be
-awarded to one so personally brave and self-sacrificing, and who was entitled
-to confide in the indomitable bravery of those he commanded; whose
-experience, too, of the general character of Chinese warfare was not
-likely to teach them prudence or caution.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The first and the most natural inquiry is, what is likely to be the
-result of these disastrous events? If negotiations are wisely conducted,
-the probability is that the emperor will throw the blame on the local
-authorities, attribute to the misrepresentations which have been made any
-approval he may have given to those who attacked the Allies, and repudiate
-any intended complicity in the mismanagement of foreign relations. For
-it has hitherto been the invariable policy of the Chinese government to
-localize every quarrel, and to avoid any general war. There is no scruple
-about sacrificing any mandarin whose proceedings, though lauded and
-recompensed at first, have in the sequel proved injudicious or injurious.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We cannot look forward, however, without apprehension&mdash;apprehension
-not from the possible defeat of our arms&mdash;they will be too strong, too efficient
-for defeat by any Chinese forces&mdash;but from their successful advance and
-overthrow of all resistance. Nothing can arrest their course to Peking,
-nor prevent the capture of that vast capital; but its possession may prove
-our great embarrassment. If the emperor, accompanied by his court, should
-retreat into Manchuria&mdash;if Peking be deserted, as Canton was, by all that is
-respectable and opulent&mdash;the Allies may find themselves amidst vacant
-streets, abandoned houses, a wandering, a starving population, too poor to
-migrate with their betters. Winter will come&mdash;the cruel, bitter winter of
-northern China; the rivers will be frozen, communications cut off; and
-with no war-ship in the Gulf of Pecheli, supplies must be inaccessible.
-Peking may even prove another Moscow to its conquerors.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The condition of the French and Spanish expedition in Cochin China
-is full of present instruction. They are acting against a miserable and
-despised enemy. They have been for more than a year in possession of
-Turon, the principal harbour of the country; but they have not ventured
-to attack the adjacent capital. Disease has thinned their ranks; victories
-have brought no results, but ever new disappointment: every calculation
-of success having been thwarted by a patient but stubborn “no surrender.”
-It is a resistance that cannot be reached by strength of arms, nor dealt with
-by the cunning of diplomacy. May it serve as a warning in that wider
-field upon which we are entering in China!</p>
-
-<p class="pt">How is the social edifice to be constructed out of crumbling ruins?
-To overthrow the existing dynasty of China may be easy enough;
-indeed, the difficulty, as with that of Turkey, is its maintenance and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[Pg 43]</span>
-preservation: its very feebleness cries to us for pity and mercy. It may
-yet totter on for generations, if not harshly shaken; but if it&mdash;fall&mdash;fall
-amidst its wrecked institutions&mdash;China, inviting as it is to foreign
-ambition and the lust of conquest, may become the battle-field of contending
-interests. Russia, moving steadily and stealthily forward in
-its march of territorial aggression; France, charged with what she fancies
-herself specially called upon to represent&mdash;the missionary propagand, with
-the Catholic world behind her; England, with those vast concerns which
-involve about one-ninth of the imperial and Indian revenues, and an
-invested capital exceeding forty millions sterling; and the United States,
-whose commerce may be deemed about one-third of that of Great Britain,
-to say nothing of Holland and Spain, who are not a little concerned, through
-their eastern colonies, in the well-being of China;&mdash;will then be engaged
-in a struggle for power, if not territory, the result of which cannot be
-anticipated; indeed we scarcely venture to contemplate such portentous
-complications.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">No thoughtful man will deny the necessity of teaching the Chinese
-that treaties must be respected, and perfidy punished. Duty and interest
-alike require this at our hands; but this is but one of many duties&mdash;one
-of many interests; and we would most emphatically say, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Respice finem</span></i>&mdash;look
-beyond&mdash;look to the end. The destruction of hundreds of thousands
-of Chinese, the ravaging of their great cities, may fail to accomplish the
-object we have in view. They have been but too much accustomed to
-such calamities, and their influences soon pass away from a nation so reckless
-of life. But it may be possible to exact penalties in a shape which will
-be more sensible to them, and more beneficial to us: for example, the
-administration of their custom-house revenues in Shanghae and Canton,
-and the payment out of these of all the expenses of the war.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">But is there nothing to hope from the Taiping movement? Nothing.
-It has become little better than dacoity: its progress has been everywhere
-marked by wreck and ruin; it destroys cities, but builds none;
-consumes wealth, and produces none; supersedes one despotism by another
-more crushing and grievous; subverts a rude religion by the introduction
-of another full of the vilest frauds and the boldest blasphemies. It has
-cast off none of the proud, insolent, and ignorant formulas of imperial
-rule; but, claiming to be a divine revelation, exacts the same homage
-and demands the same tribute from Western nations, to which the government
-of Peking pretended in the days of its highest and most widely
-recognized authority.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We cannot afford to overthrow the government of China. Bad as
-it is, anarchy will track its downfall, and the few elements of order
-which yet remain will be whelmed in a convulsive desolation.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> Peiho, in Chinese, means a north or northern river, but no river in particular.
-No Chinaman applies the word to the locality which now bears the name on our charts.
-In Bristol, the Mersey would be deemed entitled to the name of the Peiho; in London,
-the Humber, the Tyne, or the Tweed.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> The matchlock is still used in China, where even the flint has not been introduced.
-The late emperor, Taou-Kwang, had heard of “improvements in musketry,” and specimens
-of “percussion locks” were sent to Peking, but they were rejected; and the
-military examinations to this hour consist of feats of individual strength, the exercise
-of the bow and arrow, the spear and the shield. In the use of artillery there have
-been some improvements. The Chinese have purchased cannon for their fortifications
-and war-junks, both in Hong Kong and Macao, and of late from the Russians, for their
-forts of Takoo.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> The emperor’s words are: “This was the only proper arrangement to be made
-(for the settlement of the treaties). We understand the whole question.” In 1854,
-when the foreign Ministers visited Tien-tsin, the imperial orders were conveyed to the
-mandarins in the following words:&mdash;“At your interview, you must snap short their
-deceit and arrogance, and foil their malicious sophistry.” Another imperial decree
-says:&mdash;“The barbarians study nothing but gain. Their hurrying backwards and
-forwards only means [more] trade and [lower] tariffs. When a trifle is granted on
-this score they naturally acquiesce and hold their tongues.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> Nothing is less intelligible to a high-bred mandarin than the desire of foreign
-females to be introduced to him. At Hong Kong, when English ladies were brought to
-see the ex-commissioner Yeh, he turned away, and refused to look at them, and on
-their departure, expressed his annoyance and disgust. He was invited at Calcutta to a
-ball given by the Governor of Bengal. Inquiring what was meant, he was told by his
-Chinese secretary, that a ball was a sport in which “men turned themselves round,
-holding the waists and turning round the wives of other men;” on which, he asked
-whether the invitation was meant for an insult? There was an amusing scene at Canton,
-when Chinese ladies were for the first time introduced to some of our British fair. The
-Chinese kept for some minutes tremblingly in the distance, afraid to approach, when one
-was heard to say to another, “They do not look so <i>very</i> barbarous, after all;” and they
-moved a little forward to meet their guests; another whisper was heard, “Surely they
-have learnt how to behave themselves. Is it not wonderful?” and a third voice replied,
-“Yes! but you know they have been for some time in Canton!”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> <i>Elgin Papers</i>, p. 175.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> In the French treaty the discrepancies between the French and Chinese text are
-yet more striking. The Chinese text places Chinese subjects claimed by the authorities
-under conditions far less favourable than those provided by the French version.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> <i>Debate</i>, July.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[8]</a> In the <i>Elgin Papers</i> many pages are occupied with the details of the correspondence
-between the commissioners who came to the mouth of the Tien-tsin river and
-the court of Peking, and which were found in Yeh’s archives at Canton.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[9]</a> Speech at Philadelphia, quoted in <i>North American Review</i>, No. CLXXXV. p. 503.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[10]</a> <i>American Papers</i>, p. 417: <i>Despatch</i> dated 27th November, 1857.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[11]</a> Keih was one of the most intelligent and honest of the high mandarins of China.
-He was killed in an action with the rebels soon after his last interview with the foreign
-ministers. He openly blamed the perversity of Yeh, whom he hoped to succeed in the
-office of high commissioner. Had his life been spared, and his counsels prevailed, he
-would have initiated a policy of conciliation and amity.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[12]</a> We give one of Yeh’s characteristic proclamations, issued during the siege of
-Canton:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-“Yeh, governor-general of the two Kwang provinces, member of the cabinet, and
-baron of the empire, hereby proclaims for the general information:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-“These are the contumacious English barbarians, who are akin to dogs and hogs, and
-like wolves and jackals in disposition, who make no distinction in the human relations,
-and are destitute of propriety or manners * * * * *
-who act as they list, have the tempers of wild beasts, and go here and there in wild
-recklessness, regardless of human rights or order.
-</p>
-<p>
-“These are they who have presumed, like flocks of ravens issuing from out their
-coverts, to cast contemptuous looks on celestial awe-inspiring dignity, and seeing that
-our troops were unprepared, suddenly have taken possession of our forts, and following
-the bent of their lawless wickedness have burned the shops and dwellings of our people.
-Gods and men are indignant, heaven and earth can no longer endure them, and well
-will it be for your people if you unite in particular, and with vigorous arm exterminate
-them altogether. Let soldiers and gentry exhibit their loyalty, and with the braves,
-known to be in every place, swear, as they exhibit a force and union like the driving
-tempest, that they will revenge the honour of their country. Let full obedience be given
-to his majesty’s rescript, and with firm purpose and stout arm sweep them off without
-remainder, burning their lairs, and exterminating their whole kith and kin.
-</p>
-<p>
-“Then the memorial of your merit will be seen in the palace, while the state stands
-secure in the greatness of its people, as in the golden days of Shun, and the elements
-genially combine to produce plenty, through the good rule universal in the land, as was
-seen in the halcyon days of Tsin.
-</p>
-<p>
-“The other nations of the West must all reverently obey our heavenly dynasty,
-according to their laws and their administrators, for they will be amerced in the same
-crimes (as the English) if they venture to copy their conduct.
-</p>
-<p>
-“Those native traitors who are serving these several tribes, by aiding their purposes,
-must be strictly watched after and judged, the worst of them by the extermination of
-their kindred, the lesser by the destruction of their own families.
-</p>
-<p>
-“Those who are employed as servants to any of the foreigners are allowed twenty
-days to return to their own patrimonies, there to pursue their several occupations. If
-they linger along in the hope of gain, they will be treated and punished as traitors.
-</p>
-<p>
-“Each one must tremblingly obey these orders without opposition.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[13]</a> The words of the treaty are: “If it shall be ascertained or suspected that lawless
-natives of China, having committed crimes or offences against their own government,
-have fled, a communication shall be made to the proper English officer, in order that
-the said criminals and offenders may be rigidly searched for, seized, and, on proof or
-admission of their guilt, delivered up” to the Chinese authorities.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[14]</a> A thoroughly well-informed American gentleman, then on the spot, declares that
-the Cantonese prayed that some English ball might “make hit the Viceroy; he all
-same devil,” they said. “Yeh had no supporters among his own countrymen, except
-his immediate followers, natives of other provinces, and having no local interest. He
-ruled simply by terror, and all would have been glad to have seen him destroyed.”&mdash;<i>A
-Foreigner’s Evidence on the China Question</i>, p. 14.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[15]</a> Yeh died in Calcutta. So great was the quantity of gas emitted by his body
-after death, that the leaden coffin burst twice. On its arrival at Canton the Chinese
-would not allow the body to be brought into the city.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[16]</a> The following is the protest of the United States Commissioner, addressed to High
-Commissioner Yeh:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="right">
-“<i>Legation of the U.S., Macao, Jan. 16, 1857.</i><br />
-</p>
-<p>
-“The undersigned Commissioner and Minister Plenipotentiary of the United States
-of America in China is again compelled to address your Excellency, demonstrating and
-protesting against the violation of our treaty of amity, the laws of civilized nations, and
-the rules of justifiable war.
-</p>
-<p>
-“The United States Consul, who arrived from Hong Kong last evening, has appeared
-before the undersigned in person, and represented that a most diabolical deed
-has been perpetrated by Chinese subjects, who had administered poison in the bread
-supplied to the public in that colony and on board vessels in the harbour, to multitudes
-of men, women, and children, without distinction of nation; that he himself had
-partaken of the poison, from which he is still suffering, and that other citizens of the
-United States are rendered dangerously ill by the poisoned bread.
-</p>
-<p>
-“The undersigned, as in duty bound, solemnly protests against this unjustifiable
-mode of warfare. ‘The use of poison as a means of war is prohibited by the
-unanimous concurrence of all the public jurists of the present age. The custom of
-civilized nations has exempted the persons of the sovereign and his family, the
-members of the civil government, women and children, cultivators of the earth,
-artisans, labourers, merchants, men of science and letters, and generally all other
-public or private individuals engaged in the ordinary civil pursuits of life, from the
-effects of military operations, unless actually taken in arms, or guilty of some
-misconduct in violation of the usages of war, by which they forfeit this immunity.’
-Now, by the manner in which the poison has been administered in Hong Kong, not
-only the innocent women and children, and all artisans, labourers, merchants, and men
-of science, belonging to the English nation, had their lives exposed, but the citizens
-and subjects of other nations who are on friendly relations with China. Americans,
-French, Russians, Portuguese, and Spaniards have all received the deadly poison; and
-that some may yet die, remains to be known.
-</p>
-<p>
-“The undersigned, therefore, on behalf of the Government of the United States, on
-the part of humanity, and (reverently) in the name of God, protests against this most
-barbarous deed; and as on former occasions when protesting against the offering of
-pecuniary rewards to perfidy and assassination of foreigners, must hold the imperial
-government of China responsible for all the consequences, both to individual and
-national interests.
-</p>
-<div>
-<p class="floatl">“His Excellency Yeh.”</p>
-<p class="floatr">“<span class="smcap">Peter Parker.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">[17]</a> One man appeared during the Canton conflict who is entitled to be mentioned
-with respect and honour&mdash;Wang, the Chinese admiral. He was well acquainted with
-the power of the British; and on one occasion had given evidence of great coolness and
-courage when accompanying H.M.S. <i>Columbine</i> on an expedition against the pirates.
-He did his best to persuade Yeh from engaging in a quarrel which could not but be
-disastrous to the Chinese, but he failed, as everybody failed. “You may as well reason
-with a stone,” was the language of a deputation that sought the British officials.
-Wang received peremptory orders from Yeh to attack and destroy the British fleet in
-the Canton river. He answered that it was impossible: that an encounter must be fatal
-to the imperial war junks. The orders were renewed; and he said he would do his best&mdash;as
-he did in the affair at Fashan, when considerable damage was done to our boats, and
-many of our men lost their lives. Wang’s junk was captured; and the imperial
-warrant, on yellow silk, was found, recording a series of adventurous and valorous
-deeds; but Wang was ordered to be decapitated by Yeh, because he had not beaten the
-British. He fled, and was concealed for some time in a village on the banks of the river.
-He applied to the Governor of Hong Kong, asking to be allowed an asylum there, which
-was cordially offered; but severe illness prevented his removal. Yeh afterwards
-repented of his precipitation; recalled Wang to the public service; who stipulated that
-he should not be employed against Western nations.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">[18]</a> The influence of Yeh at Peking was considerably strengthened by the support
-he received from Iliang, who obtained the credit of persuading the United States
-Commissioner, Mr. Marshall, not to proceed to the capital. Iliang, in one of his
-despatches to the emperor, says: “Whatever the barbarian chief may insinuate against
-Yeh-ming-chen, it is he whom they fear.”&mdash;<i>Elgin Papers</i>, p. 280.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">[19]</a> When in the former war Commissioner Keshen humbly represented to the emperor
-Taou-Kwang, that it was impossible to resist the English, he was ordered to be
-executed for his mendacity. His life was saved by powerful friends at court.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">[20]</a> “Her Majesty’s Government are prepared to expect that all the arts at which the
-Chinese are such adepts will be put in practice to dissuade you from repairing to the
-capital, even for the purpose of exchanging the ratifications of the treaty, but it will be
-your duty firmly, but temperately, to resist any propositions to that effect, and <i>to admit
-of no excuses</i>.
-</p>
-<p>
-“The Admiral in command of H.M.’s naval forces in China, has been directed to
-send up with you to the mouth of the Peiho a sufficient naval force.
-</p>
-<p>
-“<i>You will insist</i> on your being received at Peking, and will refuse to exchange
-ratifications at any other place.”&mdash;<i>Despatch of Lord Malmesbury, 1st March, 1859.</i></p></div></div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak oe" id="Lovel_the_Widower">Lovel the Widower.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<h3>CHAPTER I.</h3>
-
-<p class="motto"><span class="smcap">The Bachelor of Beak Street.</span></p>
-
-
-<div class="hidescreen">
-<img class="center img50h" src="images/i_044.jpg" alt="W" />
-</div>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap-w img50" src="images/i_044.jpg" alt="W" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-cap-w">Who shall be the hero of this tale?
-Not I who write it. I am but
-the Chorus of the Play. I make
-remarks on the conduct of the
-characters: I narrate their simple
-story. There is love and marriage
-in it: there is grief and
-disappointment: the scene is in
-the parlour, and the region beneath
-the parlour. No: it may
-be the parlour and kitchen, in
-this instance, are on the same
-level. There is no high life,
-unless, to be sure, you call a
-baronet’s widow a lady in high
-life; and some ladies may be,
-while some certainly are not. I
-don’t think there’s a villain in
-the whole performance. There is
-an abominable selfish old woman,
-certainly: an old highway robber; an old sponger on other people’s kindness;
-an old haunter of Bath and Cheltenham boarding-houses (about which
-how can I know anything, never having been in a boarding-house at Bath or
-Cheltenham in my life?); an old swindler of tradesmen, tyrant of servants,
-bully of the poor&mdash;who, to be sure, might do duty for a villain, but she
-considers herself as virtuous a woman as ever was born. The heroine is
-not faultless (ah! that will be a great relief to some folks, for many
-writers’ good women are, you know, so <i>very</i> insipid). The principal
-personage you may very likely think to be no better than a muff. But
-is many a respectable man of our acquaintance much better? and do
-muffs know that they are what they are, or, knowing it, are they unhappy?
-Do girls decline to marry one if he is rich? Do we refuse to
-dine with one? I listened to one at Church last Sunday, with all the
-women crying and sobbing; and, oh, dear me! how finely he preached!
-Don’t we give him great credit for wisdom and eloquence in the House of
-Commons? Don’t we give him important commands in the army? Can
-you, or can you not, point out one who has been made a peer? Doesn’t
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[Pg 45]</span>your wife call one in the moment any of the children are ill? Don’t we
-read his dear poems, or even novels? Yes; perhaps even this one is read
-and written by&mdash;Well? <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Quid rides?</span></i> Do you mean that I am painting
-a portrait which hangs before me every morning in the looking-glass when
-I am shaving? <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Après?</span></i> Do you suppose that I suppose that I have not
-infirmities like my neighbours? Am I weak? It is notorious to all my
-friends there is a certain dish I can’t resist; no, not if I have already
-eaten twice too much at dinner. So, dear sir, or madam, have <i>you</i> your
-weakness&mdash;<i>your</i> irresistible dish of temptation? (or if you don’t know it,
-your friends do). No, dear friend, the chances are that you and I are not
-people of the highest intellect, of the largest fortune, of the most ancient
-family, of the most consummate virtue, of the most faultless beauty in
-face and figure. We are no heroes nor angels; neither are we fiends from
-abodes unmentionable, black assassins, treacherous Iagos, familiar with
-stabbing and poison&mdash;murder our amusement, daggers our playthings,
-arsenic our daily bread, lies our conversation, and forgery our common
-handwriting. No, we are not monsters of crime, or angels walking the
-earth&mdash;at least I know <i>one</i> of us who isn’t, as can be shown any day
-at home if the knife won’t cut or the mutton comes up raw. But we are
-not altogether brutal and unkind, and a few folks like us. Our poetry is
-not as good as Alfred Tennyson’s, but we can turn a couplet for Miss
-Fanny’s album: our jokes are not always first-rate, but Mary and her
-mother smile very kindly when papa tells his story or makes his pun. We
-have many weaknesses, but we are not ruffians of crime. No more was
-my friend Lovel. On the contrary, he was as harmless and kindly a
-fellow as ever lived when I first knew him. At present, with his changed
-position, he is, perhaps, rather <i>fine</i> (and certainly I am not asked to his
-<i>best</i> dinner-parties as I used to be, where you hardly see a commoner&mdash;but
-stay! I am advancing matters). At the time when this story begins,
-I say, Lovel had his faults&mdash;which of us has not? He had buried his
-wife, having notoriously been henpecked by her. How many men and
-brethren are like him! He had a good fortune&mdash;I wish I had as much&mdash;though
-I daresay many people are ten times as rich. He was a good-looking
-fellow enough; though that depends, ladies, upon whether you
-like a fair man or a dark one. He had a country house, but it was only
-at Putney. In fact, he was in business in the city, and being a hospitable
-man, and having three or four spare bed-rooms, some of his friends were
-always welcome at Shrublands, especially after Mrs. Lovel’s death, who
-liked me pretty well at the period of her early marriage with my friend,
-but got to dislike me at last and to show me the cold shoulder. That is a
-joint I never could like (though I have known fellows who persist in
-dining off it year after year, who cling hold of it, and refuse to be
-separated from it). I say, when Lovel’s wife began to show me that she
-was tired of my company, I made myself scarce: used to pretend to be
-engaged when Fred faintly asked me to Shrublands; to accept his meek
-apologies, proposals to dine <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en garçon</span></i> at Greenwich, the club, and so<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[Pg 46]</span>
-forth; and never visit upon him my wrath at his wife’s indifference&mdash;for
-after all, he had been my friend at many a pinch: he never stinted at
-Hart’s or Lovegrove’s, and always made a point of having the wine I liked,
-never mind what the price was. As for his wife, there was, assuredly, no
-love lost between us&mdash;I thought her a lean, scraggy, lackadaisical, egotistical,
-consequential, insipid creature: and as for his mother-in-law, who
-stayed at Fred’s as long and as often as her daughter would endure her,
-has anyone who ever knew that notorious old Lady Baker at Bath, at
-Cheltenham, at Brighton,&mdash;wherever trumps and frumps were found together;
-wherever scandal was cackled; wherever fly-blown reputations
-were assembled, and dowagers with damaged titles trod over each other
-for the pas;&mdash;who, I say, ever had a good word for that old woman?
-What party was not bored where she appeared? What tradesman was
-not done with whom she dealt? I wish with all my heart I was about to
-narrate a story with a good mother-in-law for a character; but then you
-know, my dear madam, all good women in novels are insipid. This woman
-certainly was not. She was not only not insipid, but exceedingly bad tasted.
-She had a foul, loud tongue, a stupid head, a bad temper, an immense
-pride and arrogance, an extravagant son, and very little money. Can I
-say much more of a woman than this? Aha! my good Lady Baker! I
-was a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mauvais sujèt</span></i>, was I?&mdash;I was leading Fred into smoking, drinking,
-and low bachelor habits, was I? I, his old friend, who have borrowed
-money from him any time these twenty years, was not fit company for you
-and your precious daughter? Indeed! <i>I</i> paid the money I borrowed
-from him like a man; but did <i>you</i> ever pay him, I should like to know?
-When Mrs. Lovel was in the first column of <i>The Times</i>, <i>then</i> Fred and I
-used to go off to Greenwich and Blackwall, as I said; then his kind old
-heart was allowed to feel for his friend; <i>then</i> we could have the other
-bottle of claret without the appearance of Bedford and the coffee, which
-in Mrs. L.’s time used to be sent in to us before we could ring for a
-second bottle, although she and Lady Baker had had three glasses each
-out of the first. Three full glasses each, I give you my word! No,
-madam, it was your turn to bully me once&mdash;now it is mine, and I use it.
-No, you old Catamaran, though you pretend you never read novels, some
-of your confounded good-natured friends will let you know of <i>this</i> one.
-Here you are, do you hear? Here you shall be shown up. And so I
-intend to show up <i>other</i> women and <i>other</i> men who have offended me. Is
-one to be subject to slights and scorn, and not have revenge? Kindnesses
-are easily forgotten; but injuries!&mdash;what worthy man does not keep <i>those</i>
-in mind?</p>
-
-<p><img class="img100" src="images/i_044a.jpg" alt="I AM REFERRED TO CECILIA." /></p>
-
-<p class="pt">Before entering upon the present narrative, may I take leave to inform
-a candid public, that though it is all true, there is not a word of truth
-in it; that though Lovel is alive and prosperous, and you very likely
-have met him, yet I defy you to point him out; that his wife (for he is
-Lovel the Widower no more) is not the lady you imagine her to be, when
-you say (as you will persist in doing), “Oh, that character is intended for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[Pg 47]</span>
-Mrs. Thingamy, or was notoriously drawn from Lady So-and-so.” No.
-You are utterly mistaken. Why, even the advertising-puffers have almost
-given up that stale stratagem of announcing “<span class="smcap">Revelations from High
-Life</span>.&mdash;The <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">beau monde</span></i> will be startled at recognizing the portraits of some
-of its brilliant leaders in Miss Wiggins’s forthcoming <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Roman de Société</span></i>.”
-Or, “We suspect a certain ducal house will be puzzled to guess how the
-pitiless author of <i>May Fair Mysteries</i> has become acquainted with (and
-exposed with a fearless hand) <i>certain family secrets</i> which were thought
-only to be known to a few of the very highest members of the aristocracy.”
-No, I say; these silly baits to catch an unsuspecting public shall not be our
-arts. If you choose to occupy yourself with trying to ascertain if a certain
-cap fits one amongst ever so many thousand heads, you <i>may</i> possibly pop it
-on the right one: but the cap-maker will perish before he tells you;
-unless, of course, he has some private pique to avenge, or malice to wreak,
-upon some individual who can’t by any possibility hit again;&mdash;<i>then</i>,
-indeed, he will come boldly forward and seize upon his victim&mdash;(a bishop,
-say, or a woman without coarse, quarrelsome male relatives, will be best)&mdash;and
-clap on him, or her, such a cap, with such ears, that all the world shall
-laugh at the poor wretch, shuddering, and blushing beet-root red, and
-whimpering deserved tears of rage and vexation at being made the common
-butt of society. Besides, I dine at Lovel’s still; his company and cuisine
-are amongst the best in London. If they suspected I was taking them off,
-he and his wife would leave off inviting me. Would any man of a generous
-disposition lose such a valued friend for a joke, or be so foolish as to show
-him up in a story? All persons with a decent knowledge of the world
-will at once banish the thought, as not merely base, but absurd. I am
-invited to his house one day next week: <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">vous concevez</span></i> I can’t mention the
-very day, for then he would find me out&mdash;and of course there would be no
-more cards for his old friend. He would not like appearing, as it must be
-owned he does in this memoir, as a man of not very strong mind. He
-believes himself to be a most determined, resolute person. He is quick in
-speech, wears a fierce beard, speaks with asperity to his servants (who liken
-him to a&mdash;to that before-named sable or ermine contrivance, in which ladies
-insert their hands in winter), and takes his wife to task so smartly, that I
-believe she believes he believes he is the master of the house. “Elizabeth,
-my love, he must mean A, or B, or D,” I fancy I hear Lovel say; and she
-says, “Yes; oh! it is certainly D&mdash;his very image!” “D to a T,” says
-Lovel (who is a neat wit). <i>She</i> may know that I mean to depict her
-husband in the above unpretending lines: but she will never let me know
-of her knowledge except by a little extra courtesy; except (may I make this
-pleasing exception?) by a few more invitations; except by a look of those
-unfathomable eyes (gracious goodness! to think she wore spectacles ever
-so long, and put a lid over them as it were!), into which, when you gaze
-sometimes, you may gaze so deep, and deep, and deep, that I defy you to
-plumb half-way down into their mystery.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">When I was a young man, I had lodgings in Beak Street, Regent Street<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[Pg 48]</span>
-(I no more have lived in Beak Street than in Belgrave Square: but I
-choose to say so, and no gentleman will be so rude as to contradict another)&mdash;I
-had lodgings, I say, in Beak Street, Regent Street. Mrs. Prior was the
-landlady’s name. She had seen better days&mdash;landladies frequently have.
-Her husband&mdash;he could not be called the landlord, for Mrs. P. was manager
-of the place,&mdash;had been, in happier times, captain or lieutenant in the
-militia; then of Diss, in Norfolk, of no profession; then of Norwich Castle,
-a prisoner for debt; then of Southampton Buildings, London, law-writer;
-then of the Bom-Retiro Cacadores, in the service of H. M. the Queen
-of Portugal, lieutenant and paymaster; then of Melina Place, St. George’s
-Fields, &amp;c.&mdash;I forbear to give the particulars of an existence which a legal
-biographer has traced step by step, and which has more than once been the
-subject of judicial investigation by certain commissioners in Lincoln’s-inn
-Fields. Well, Prior, at this time, swimming out of a hundred shipwrecks,
-had clambered on to a lighter, as it were, and was clerk to a coal-merchant,
-by the river-side. “You conceive, sir,” he would say, “my employment
-is only temporary&mdash;the fortune of war, the fortune of war!” He smattered
-words in not a few foreign languages. His person was profusely scented
-with tobacco. Bearded individuals, padding the muddy hoof in the neighbouring
-Regent Street, would call sometimes of an evening, and ask for
-“the captain.” He was known at many neighbouring billiard-tables, and,
-I imagine, not respected. You will not see enough of Captain Prior to be
-very weary of him and his coarse swagger, to be disgusted by his repeated
-requests for small money-loans, or to deplore his loss, which you will please
-to suppose has happened before the curtain of our present drama draws up.
-I think two people in the world were sorry for him: his wife, who
-still loved the memory of the handsome young man who had wooed and
-won her; his daughter Elizabeth, whom for the last few months of his life,
-and up to his fatal illness, he every evening conducted to what he called
-her “academy.” You are right. Elizabeth is the principal character in
-this story. When I knew her, a thin, freckled girl of fifteen, with a lean
-frock, and hair of a reddish hue, she used to borrow my books, and play
-on the First Floor’s piano, when he was from home&mdash;Slumley his name was.
-He was editor of the <i>Swell</i>, a newspaper then published; author of a great
-number of popular songs, a friend of several music-selling houses; and it
-was by Mr. Slumley’s interest that Elizabeth was received as a pupil at
-what the family called “the academy.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Captain Prior then used to conduct his girl to the Academy, but
-she often had to conduct him home again. Having to wait about the
-premises for two, or three, or five hours sometimes, whilst Elizabeth was
-doing her lessons, he would naturally desire to shelter himself from the
-cold at some neighbouring house of entertainment. Every Friday, a
-prize of a golden medal, nay, I believe sometimes of twenty-five silver
-medals, was awarded to Miss Bellenden and other young ladies for their
-good conduct and assiduity at this academy. Miss Bellenden gave her
-gold medal to her mother, only keeping five shillings for herself, with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[Pg 49]</span>
-which the poor child bought gloves, shoes, and her humble articles of
-millinery.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Once or twice the captain succeeded in intercepting that piece of gold,
-and I daresay treated some of his whiskered friends, the clinking trampers
-of the Quadrant pavement. He was a free-handed fellow when he had
-anybody’s money in his pocket. It was owing to differences regarding the
-settlement of accounts that he quarrelled with the coal-merchant, his very
-last employer. Bessy, after yielding once or twice to his importunity, and
-trying to believe his solemn promises of repayment, had strength of mind
-to refuse her father the pound which he would have taken. Her five
-shillings&mdash;her poor little slender pocket-money, the representative of her
-charities and kindnesses to the little brothers and sisters, of her little
-toilette ornaments, nay necessities; of those well-mended gloves, of those
-oft-darned stockings, of those poor boots, which had to walk many a weary
-mile after midnight; of those little knicknacks, in the shape of brooch or
-bracelet, with which the poor child adorned her homely robe or sleeve&mdash;her
-poor five shillings, out of which Mary sometimes found a pair of shoes,
-or Tommy a flannel jacket, and little Bill a coach and horse&mdash;this wretched
-sum, this mite, which Bessy administered among so many poor&mdash;I very
-much fear her father sometimes confiscated. I charged the child with
-the fact, and she could not deny me. I vowed a tremendous vow,
-that if ever I heard of her giving Prior money again, I would quit the
-lodgings, and never give those children lolly-pop, nor peg-top, nor
-sixpence; nor the pungent marmalade, nor the biting gingerbread-nut,
-nor the theatre-characters, nor the paint-box to illuminate the same;
-nor the discarded clothes, which became smaller clothes upon the
-persons of little Tommy and little Bill, for whom Mrs. Prior, and Bessy,
-and the little maid, cut, clipped, altered, ironed, darned, mangled, with
-the greatest ingenuity. I say, considering what had passed between me
-and the Priors&mdash;considering those money transactions, and those clothes,
-and my kindness to the children&mdash;it was rather hard that my jam-pots
-were poached, and my brandy-bottles leaked. And then to frighten
-her brother with the story of the inexorable creditor&mdash;oh, Mrs. Prior!&mdash;oh,
-fie, Mrs. P.!</p>
-
-<p class="pt">So Bessy went to her school in a shabby shawl, a faded bonnet,
-and a poor little lean dress flounced with the mud and dust of all
-weathers, whereas there were some other young ladies, fellow-pupils
-of hers, who laid out their gold medals to much greater advantage.
-Miss Delamere, with her eighteen shillings a week (calling them
-“<i>silver medals</i>,” was only my wit, you see), had twenty new bonnets,
-silk and satin dresses for all seasons, feathers in abundance, swansdown
-muffs and tippets, lovely pocket handkerchiefs and trinkets, and many and
-many a half-crown mould of jelly, bottle of sherry, blanket, or what not,
-for a poor fellow-pupil in distress; and as for Miss Montanville, who had
-exactly the same sal&mdash;well, who had a scholarship of exactly the same
-value, viz. about fifty pounds yearly&mdash;she kept an elegant little cottage in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[Pg 50]</span>
-the Regent’s Park, a brougham with a horse all over brass harness, and a
-groom with a prodigious gold lace hat-band, who was treated with frightful
-contumely at the neighbouring cab-stand: an aunt or a mother, I don’t
-know which (I hope it was only an aunt), always comfortably dressed, and
-who looked after Montanville: and she herself had bracelets, brooches, and
-velvet pelisses of the very richest description. But then Miss Montanville
-was a good economist. <i>She</i> was never known to help a poor friend in
-distress, or give a fainting brother and sister a crust or a glass of wine. She
-allowed ten shillings a week to her father, whose name was Boskinson, said
-to be clerk to a chapel in Paddington; but she would never see him&mdash;no,
-not when he was in hospital, where he was so ill; and though she certainly
-lent Miss Wilder thirteen pounds, she had Wilder arrested upon her
-promissory note for twenty-four, and sold up every stick of Wilder’s furniture,
-so that the whole academy cried shame! Well, an accident occurred to
-Miss Montanville, for which those may be sorry who choose. On the evening
-of the 26th of December, Eighteen hundred and something, when the
-conductors of the academy were giving their grand annual Christmas Pant&mdash;I
-should say examination of the Academy pupils before their numerous
-friends&mdash;Montanville, who happened to be present, not in her brougham
-this time, but in an aërial chariot of splendour drawn by doves, fell off a
-rainbow, and through the roof of the Revolving Shrine of the Amaranthine
-Queen, thereby very nearly damaging Bellenden, who was occupying the
-shrine, attired in a light-blue spangled dress, waving a wand, and uttering
-some idiotic verses composed for her by the Professor of Literature attached
-to the academy. As for Montanville, let her go shrieking down that trap-door,
-break her leg, be taken home, and never more be character of ours.
-She never could speak. Her voice was as hoarse as a fishwoman’s. Can
-that immense stout old box-keeper at the &mdash;&mdash; theatre, who limps up to
-ladies on the first tier, and offers that horrible footstool, which everybody
-stumbles over, and makes a clumsy curtsey, and looks so knowing and hard,
-as if she recognized an acquaintance in the splendid lady who enters the
-box&mdash;can that old female be the once brilliant Emily Montanville? I am
-told there are <i>no</i> lady box-keepers in the English theatres. This, I submit,
-is a proof of my consummate care and artifice in rescuing from a prurient
-curiosity the individual personages from whom the characters of the present
-story are taken. Montanville is <i>not</i> a box-opener. She <i>may</i>, under
-another name, keep a trinket-shop in the Burlington Arcade, for what
-you know: but this secret no torture shall induce me to divulge. Life
-has its rises and its downfalls, and you have had yours, you hobbling old
-creature. Montanville, indeed! Go thy ways! Here is a shilling for thee.
-(Thank you, sir.) Take away that confounded footstool, and never let us
-see thee more!</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Now the fairy Amarantha was like a certain dear young lady of whom
-we have read in early youth. Up to twelve o’clock, attired in sparkling
-raiment, she leads the dance with the prince (Gradini, known as Grady in
-his days of banishment at the T. R. Dublin). At supper, she takes her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[Pg 51]</span>
-place by the prince’s royal father (who is alive now, and still reigns occasionally,
-so that we will not mention his revered name). She makes believe
-to drink from the gilded pasteboard, and to eat of the mighty pudding. She
-smiles as the good old irascible monarch knocks the prime minister and the
-cooks about: she blazes in splendour: she beams with a thousand jewels, in
-comparison with which the Koh-i-noor is a wretched lustreless little pebble:
-she disappears in a chariot, such as a Lord Mayor never rode in:&mdash;and at
-midnight, who is that young woman tripping homeward through the wet
-streets in a battered bonnet, a cotton shawl, and a lean frock fringed with
-the dreary winter flounces?</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Our Cinderella is up early in the morning: she does no little portion of
-the house-work: she dresses her sisters and brothers: she prepares papa’s
-breakfast. On days when she has not to go to morning lessons at her
-academy, she helps with the dinner. Heaven help us! She has often
-brought mine when I have dined at home, and owns to having made that
-famous mutton-broth when I had a cold. Foreigners come to the house&mdash;professional
-gentlemen&mdash;to see Slumley on the first floor; exiled captains of
-Spain and Portugal, companions of the warrior her father. It is surprising
-how she has learned their accents, and has picked up French and Italian,
-too. And she played the piano in Mr. Slumley’s room sometimes, as I have
-said; but refrained from that presently, and from visiting him altogether.
-I suspect he was not a man of principle. His Paper used to make direful
-attacks upon individual reputations; and you would find theatre and opera
-people most curiously praised and assaulted in the <i>Swell</i>. I recollect
-meeting him, several years after, in the lobby of the opera, in a very noisy
-frame of mind, when he heard a certain lady’s carriage called, and cried
-out with exceeding strong language, which need not be accurately reported,
-“Look at that woman! Confound her! I made her, sir! Got her an
-engagement when the family was starving, sir! Did you see her, sir!
-She wouldn’t even look at me!” Nor indeed was Mr. S. at that moment
-a very agreeable object to behold.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Then I remembered that there had been some quarrel with this man,
-when we lodged in Beak Street together. If difficulty there was, it was
-solved <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ambulando</span></i>. He quitted the lodgings, leaving an excellent and
-costly piano as security for a heavy bill which he owed to Mrs. Prior, and
-the instrument was presently fetched away by the music-sellers, its owners.
-But regarding Mr. S.’s valuable biography, let us speak very gently. You
-see it is “an insult to literature” to say that there are disreputable and dishonest
-persons who write in newspapers.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Nothing, dear friend, escapes your penetration: if a joke is made in
-your company, you are down upon it instanter, and your smile rewards the
-wag who amuses you: so you knew at once, whilst I was talking of
-Elizabeth and her academy, that a theatre was meant, where the poor
-child danced for a guinea, or five-and-twenty shillings per week. Nay, she
-must have had not a little skill and merit to advance to the quarter of a
-hundred; for she was not pretty at this time, only a rough, tawny-haired<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[Pg 52]</span>
-filly of a girl, with great eyes. Dolphin, the manager, did not think much
-of her, and she passed before him in his regiment of Sea-nymphs, or
-Bayadères, or Fairies, or Mazurka maidens (with their fluttering lances
-and little scarlet slyboots!) scarcely more noticed than private Jones
-standing under arms in his company when his Royal Highness the Field-marshal
-gallops by. There were no dramatic triumphs for Miss Bellenden:
-no bouquets were flung at her feet: no cunning Mephistopheles&mdash;the
-emissary of some philandering Faustus outside&mdash;corrupted her duenna,
-or brought her caskets of diamonds. Had there been any such admirer
-for Bellenden, Dolphin would not only not have been shocked, but he
-would very likely have raised her salary. As it was, though himself,
-I fear, a person of loose morals, he respected better things. “That
-Bellenden’s a good hhonest gurl,” he said to the present writer: “works
-hard: gives her money to her family: father a shy old cove. Very good
-family, I hear they are!” and he passes on to some other of the innumerable
-subjects which engage a manager.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Now, why should a poor lodging-house keeper make such a mighty
-secret of having a daughter earning an honest guinea by dancing at a
-theatre? Why persist in calling the theatre an academy? Why did Mrs.
-Prior speak of it as such, to me who knew what the truth was, and to
-whom Elizabeth herself made no mystery of her calling?</p>
-
-<p class="pt">There are actions and events in its life over which decent Poverty often
-chooses to cast a veil that is not unbecoming wear. We can all, if we are
-minded, peer through this poor flimsy screen: often there is no shame
-behind it:&mdash;only empty platters, poor scraps, and other threadbare evidence
-of want and cold. And who is called on to show his rags to the public,
-and cry out his hunger in the street? At this time (her character has
-developed itself not so amiably since), Mrs. Prior was outwardly respectable;
-and yet, as I have said, my groceries were consumed with remarkable
-rapidity; my wine and brandy bottles were all leaky, until they were
-excluded from air under a patent lock;&mdash;my Morel’s raspberry jam, of
-which I was passionately fond, if exposed on the table for a few hours,
-was always eaten by the cat, or that wonderful little wretch of a maid-of-all-work,
-so active, yet so patient, so kind, so dirty, so obliging. Was it
-<i>the maid</i> who took those groceries? I have seen the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Gazza Ladra</span></i>, and
-know that poor little maids are sometimes wrongfully accused; and
-besides, in my particular case, I own I don’t care who the culprit was.
-At the year’s end, a single man is not much poorer for this house-tax
-which he pays. One Sunday evening, being confined with a cold, and
-partaking of that mutton broth which Elizabeth made so well, and which
-she brought me, I entreated her to bring from the cupboard, of which I
-gave her the key, a certain brandy-bottle. She saw my face when I
-looked at her: there was no mistaking its agony. There was scarce any
-brandy left: it had all leaked away: and it was Sunday, and no good
-brandy was to be bought that evening.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Elizabeth, I say, saw my grief. She put down the bottle, and she<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[Pg 53]</span>
-cried: she tried to prevent herself from doing so at first, but she fairly
-burst into tears.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“My dear&mdash;dear child,” says I, seizing her hand, “you don’t suppose I
-fancy you&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“No&mdash;no!” she says, drawing the large hand over her eyes. “No&mdash;no!
-but I saw it when you and Mr. Warrington last ’ad some. Oh! do have
-a patting lock!”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“A patent lock, my dear?” I remarked. “How odd that you, who have
-learned to pronounce Italian and French words so well, should make such
-strange slips in English? Your mother speaks well enough.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“She was born a lady. She was not sent to be a milliner’s girl, as
-I was, and then among those noisy girls at that&mdash;oh! that <i>place</i>!” cries
-Bessy, in a sort of desperation clenching her hand.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Here the bells of St. Beak’s began to ring quite cheerily for evening
-service. I heard “Elizabeth!” cried out from lower regions by Mrs. Prior’s
-cracked voice. And the maiden went her way to Church, which she and
-her mother never missed of a Sunday; and I daresay I slept just as well
-without the brandy-and-water.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Slumley being gone, Mrs. Prior came to me rather wistfully one day,
-and wanted to know whether I would object to Madame Bentivoglio, the
-opera-singer, having the first floor? This was too much, indeed! How
-was my work to go on with that woman practising all day and roaring
-underneath me? But after sending away so good a customer, I could not
-refuse to lend the Priors a little more money; and Prior insisted upon
-treating me to a new stamp, and making out a new and handsome bill for
-an amount nearly twice as great as the last: which he had no doubt under
-heaven, and which he pledged his honour as an officer and a gentleman
-that he would meet. Let me see: That was how many years ago?&mdash;Thirteen,
-fourteen, twenty? Never mind. My fair Elizabeth, I think if you saw
-your poor old father’s signature now, you would pay it. I came upon it
-lately in an old box I haven’t opened these fifteen years, along with some
-letters written&mdash;never mind by whom&mdash;and an old glove that I used to set
-an absurd value by; and that emerald-green tabinet waistcoat which kind
-old Mrs. Macmanus gave me, and which I wore at the L&mdash;d L&mdash;t&mdash;nt’s
-ball, Ph-n-x Park, Dublin, once, when I danced with <i>her</i> there! Lord!&mdash;Lord!
-It would no more meet round my waist now than round Daniel
-Lambert’s. How we outgrow things!</p>
-
-<p class="pt">But as I never presented this united bill of 43<i>l.</i> odd (the first portion
-of 23<i>l.</i>, &amp;c. was advanced by me in order to pay an execution out of the
-house),&mdash;as I never expected to have it paid any more than I did to be
-Lord Mayor of London,&mdash;I say it was a little hard that Mrs. Prior should
-write off to her brother (she writes a capital letter), blessing Providence
-that had given him a noble income, promising him the benefit of her
-prayers, in order that he should long live to enjoy his large salary, and
-informing him that an obdurate creditor, who shall be nameless (meaning
-me), who had Captain Prior <i>in his power</i> (as if being in possession of that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[Pg 54]</span>
-dingy scrawl, I should have known what to do with it), who held Mr. Prior’s
-acceptance for 43<i>l.</i> 14<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> due on the 3rd July (my bill), would infallibly
-bring their family to <span class="allsmcap">RUIN</span>, unless a part of the money was paid up.
-When I went up to my old college, and called on Sargent, at Boniface
-Lodge, he treated me as civilly as if I had been an undergraduate; scarcely
-spoke to me in hall, where, of course, I dined at the Fellows’ table; and
-only asked me to one of Mrs. Sargent’s confounded tea-parties during the
-whole time of my stay. Now it was by this man’s entreaty that I went to
-lodge at Prior’s; he talked to me after dinner one day, he hummed, he
-ha’d, he blushed, he prated in his pompous way, about an unfortunate
-sister in London&mdash;fatal early marriage&mdash;husband, Captain Prior, Knight of
-the Swan with two Necks of Portugal, most distinguished officer, but
-imprudent speculator&mdash;advantageous lodgings in the centre of London,
-quiet, though near the Clubs&mdash;if I was ill (I am a confirmed invalid),
-Mrs. Prior, his sister, would nurse me like a mother. So, in a word, I
-went to Prior’s: I took the rooms: I was attracted by some children:
-Amelia Jane (that little dirty maid before mentioned) dragging a go-cart,
-containing a little dirty pair; another marching by them, carrying a fourth
-well nigh as big as himself. These little folks, having threaded the mighty
-flood of Regent Street, debouched into the quiet creek of Beak Street, just
-as I happened to follow them. And the door at which the small caravan
-halted,&mdash;the very door I was in search of,&mdash;was opened by Elizabeth, then
-only just emerging from childhood, with tawny hair falling into her solemn
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The aspect of these little people, which would have deterred many,
-happened to attract me. I am a lonely man. I may have been ill-treated
-by some one once, but that is neither here nor there. If I had had children
-of my own, I think I should have been good to them. I thought Prior a
-dreadful vulgar wretch, and his wife a scheming, greedy little woman.
-But the children amused me: and I took the rooms, liking to hear overhead
-in the morning the patter of their little feet. The person I mean has
-several;&mdash;husband, judge in the West Indies. <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Allons</span></i>! now you know
-how I came to live at Mrs. Prior’s.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Though I am now a steady, a <i>confirmed</i> old bachelor (I shall call myself
-Mr. Batchelor, if you please, in this story; and there is some one far&mdash;far
-away who knows why I will <span class="allsmcap">NEVER</span> take another title), I was a gay young
-fellow enough once. I was not above the pleasures of youth: in fact, I
-learned quadrilles on purpose to dance with her that long vacation when I
-went to read with my young friend Lord Viscount Poldoody at Dub&mdash;psha!
-Be still, thou foolish heart! Perhaps I mis-spent my time as
-an undergraduate. Perhaps I read too many novels, occupied myself too
-much with “elegant literature” (that used to be our phrase), and spoke
-too often at the Union, where I had a considerable reputation. But those
-fine words got me no college prizes: I missed my fellowship: was rather
-in disgrace with my relations afterwards, but had a small independence of
-my own, which I eked out by taking a few pupils for little goes and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[Pg 55]</span>
-common degree. At length, a relation dying, and leaving me a farther
-small income, I left the university, and came to reside in London.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Now, in my third year at college, there came to St. Boniface a young
-gentleman, who was one of the few gentlemen-pensioners of our society.
-His popularity speedily was great. A kindly and simple youth, he would
-have been liked, I daresay, even though he had been no richer than the
-rest of us; but this is certain, that flattery, worldliness, mammon-worship,
-are vices as well known to young as to old boys; and a rich lad at school
-or college has his followers, tuft-hunters, led-captains, little courts, just as
-much as any elderly millionary of Pall-Mall, who gazes round his club to
-see whom he shall take home to dinner, while humble trencher-men wait
-anxiously, thinking&mdash;Ah! will he take me this time? or will he ask that
-abominable sneak and toady Henchman again? Well&mdash;well! this is an old
-story about parasites and flatterers. My dear good sir, I am not for a moment
-going to say that <i>you</i> ever were one; and I daresay it was very base and
-mean of us to like a man chiefly on account of his money. “I know”&mdash;Tom
-Lovel used to say&mdash;“I know fellows come to my rooms because I have a
-large allowance, and plenty of my poor old governor’s wine, and give good
-dinners: I am not deceived; but, at least, it is pleasanter to come to me
-and have good dinners, and good wine, than to go to Jack Highson’s dreary
-tea and turnout, or to Ned Roper’s abominable Oxbridge port.” And so I
-admit at once that Lovel’s parties <i>were</i> more agreeable than most men’s in
-the college. Perhaps the goodness of the fare, by pleasing the guests,
-made them more pleasant. A dinner in hall, and a pewter-plate is all
-very well, and I can say grace before it with all my heart; but a dinner
-with fish from London, game, and two or three nice little <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">entrées</span></i>, is better&mdash;and
-there was no better cook in the university than ours at St. Boniface,
-and ah, me! there were appetites then, and digestions which rendered the
-good dinner doubly good.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Between me and young Lovel a friendship sprang up, which, I
-trust, even the publication of this story will not diminish. There is a
-period, immediately after the taking of his bachelor’s degree, when many a
-university-man finds himself embarrassed. The tradesmen rather rudely
-press for a settlement of their accounts. Those prints we ordered <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">calidi
-juventâ</span></i>; those shirt-studs and pins which the jewellers would persist in
-thrusting into our artless bosoms; those fine coats we would insist on
-having for our books, as well as ourselves; all these have to be paid for
-by the graduate. And my father, who was then alive, refusing to meet
-these demands, under the&mdash;I own&mdash;just plea, that my allowance had been
-ample, and that my half-sisters ought not to be mulcted of their slender
-portions, in consequence of my extravagance, I should have been subject
-to very serious inconvenience&mdash;nay, possibly, to personal incarceration,
-had not Lovel, at the risk of rustication, rushed up to London to his mother
-(who then had <i>especial reasons</i> for being very gracious with her son),
-obtained a supply of money from her, and brought it to me at Mr.
-Shackell’s horrible hotel, where I was lodged. He had tears in his kind eyes;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[Pg 56]</span>
-he grasped my hand a hundred and hundred times as he flung the notes
-into my lap; and the recording tutor (Sargent was only tutor then) who
-was going to bring him up before the Master for breach of discipline,
-dashed away a drop from his own lid, when, with a moving eloquence, I
-told what had happened, and blotted out the transaction with some particular
-old 1811 Port, of which we freely partook in his private rooms
-that evening. By laborious instalments, I had the happiness to pay
-Lovel back. I took pupils, as I said; I engaged in literary pursuits: I
-became connected with a literary periodical, and I am ashamed to say, I
-imposed myself upon the public as a good classical scholar. I was not
-thought the less learned, when my relative dying, I found myself in
-possession of a small independency; and my <i>Translations from the
-Greek</i>, my <i>Poems by Beta</i>, and my articles in the paper of which I
-was part proprietor for several years, have had their little success in
-their day.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Indeed at Oxbridge, if I did not obtain university honours, at
-least I showed literary tastes. I got the prize essay one year at
-Boniface, and plead guilty to having written essays, poems, and a
-tragedy. My college friends had a joke at my expense (a very small joke
-serves to amuse those port-wine-bibbing fogies, and keeps them laughing
-for ever so long a time)&mdash;they are welcome, I say, to make merry at my
-charges&mdash;in respect of a certain bargain which I made on coming to London,
-and in which, had I been Moses Primrose purchasing green spectacles, I
-could scarcely have been more taken in. <i>My</i> Jenkinson was an old
-college acquaintance, whom I was idiot enough to imagine a respectable
-man: the fellow had a very smooth tongue, and sleek, sanctified exterior.
-He was rather a popular preacher, and used to cry a good deal in the
-pulpit. He, and a queer wine-merchant and bill-discounter, Sherrick by
-name, had somehow got possession of that neat little literary paper, the
-<i>Museum</i>, which, perhaps, you remember; and this eligible literary
-property my friend Honeyman, with his wheedling tongue, induced me to
-purchase. I bear no malice: the fellow is in India now, where I trust he
-pays his butcher and baker. He was in dreadful straits for money when
-he sold me the <i>Museum</i>. He began crying when I told him some
-short time afterwards that he was a swindler, and from behind his pocket-handkerchief
-sobbed a prayer that I should one day think better of him;
-whereas my remarks to the same effect produced an exactly contrary
-impression upon his accomplice, Sherrick, who burst out laughing in my
-face, and said, “The more fool you.” Mr. Sherrick was right. He was
-a fool, without mistake, who had any money-dealing with him; and poor
-Honeyman was right, too; I don’t think so badly of him as I did. A
-fellow so hardly pinched for money could not resist the temptation of
-extracting it from such a greenhorn. I daresay I gave myself airs as
-editor of that confounded <i>Museum</i>, and proposed to educate the public
-taste, to diffuse morality and sound literature throughout the nation, and
-to pocket a liberal salary in return for my services. I daresay I printed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[Pg 57]</span>
-my own sonnets, my own tragedy, my own verses (to a Being who shall
-be nameless, but whose conduct has caused a faithful heart to bleed not a
-little). I daresay I wrote satirical articles, in which I piqued myself upon
-the fineness of my wit, and criticisms, got up for the nonce, out of encyclopædias
-and biographical dictionaries; so that I would be actually astounded
-at my own knowledge. I daresay I made a gaby of myself to the world:
-pray, my good friend, hast thou never done likewise? If thou hast never
-been a fool, be sure thou wilt never be a wise man.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">I think it was my brilliant <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">confrère</span></i> on the first floor (he had pecuniary
-transactions with Sherrick, and visited two or three of her Majesty’s metropolitan
-prisons at that gentleman’s suit) who first showed me how grievously
-I had been cheated in the newspaper matter. Slumley wrote for a paper
-printed at our office. The same boy often brought proofs to both of us&mdash;a
-little bit of a puny bright-eyed chap, who looked scarce twelve years old,
-when he was sixteen; who in wit was a man, when in stature he was a
-child,&mdash;like many other children of the poor.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">This little Dick Bedford used to sit many hours asleep on my landing-place
-or Slumley’s, whilst we were preparing our invaluable compositions
-within our respective apartments. S. was a good-natured reprobate, and
-gave the child of his meat and his drink. I used to like to help the little man
-from my breakfast, and see him enjoy the meal. As he sate, with his bag
-on his knees, his head sunk in sleep, his little high-lows scarce reaching
-the floor, Dick made a touching little picture. The whole house was fond
-of him. The tipsy captain nodded him a welcome as he swaggered down
-stairs, stock, and coat, and waistcoat in hand, to his worship’s toilette in
-the back kitchen. The children and Dick were good friends; and
-Elizabeth patronized him, and talked with him now and again, in her
-grave way. You know Clancy, the composer?&mdash;know him better, perhaps,
-under his name of Friedrich Donner? Donner used to write music to
-Slumley’s words, or <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">vice versâ</span></i>; and would come now and again to Beak
-Street, where he and his poet would try their joint work at the piano. At
-the sound of that music, little Dick’s eyes used to kindle. “Oh, it’s prime!”
-said the young enthusiast. And I will say, that good-natured miscreant of
-a Slumley not only gave the child pence, but tickets for the play, concerts,
-and so forth. Dick had a neat little suit of clothes at home; his mother
-made him a very nice little waistcoat out of my undergraduate’s gown; and
-he and she, a decent woman, when in their best raiment, looked respectable
-enough for any theatre-pit in England.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Amongst other places of public amusement which he attended, Mr.
-Dick frequented the academy where Miss Bellenden danced, and whence
-poor Elizabeth Prior issued forth after midnight in her shabby frock. And
-once, the captain, Elizabeth’s father and protector, being unable to walk
-very accurately, and noisy and incoherent in his speech, so that the
-attention of Messieurs of the police was directed towards him, Dick came
-up, placed Elizabeth and her father in a cab, paid the fare with his
-own money, and brought the whole party home in triumph, himself sitting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[Pg 58]</span>
-on the box of the vehicle. I chanced to be coming home myself (from
-one of Mrs. Wateringham’s elegant tea <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">soirées</span></i>, in Dorset Square), and
-reached my door just at the arrival of Dick and his caravan. “Here,
-cabby!” says Dick, handing out the fare, and looking with his brightest
-eyes. It is pleasanter to look at that beaming little face, than at the
-captain yonder, reeling into his house, supported by his daughter. Dick
-cried, Elizabeth told me, when, a week afterwards, she wanted to
-pay him back his shilling; and she said he was a strange child, that
-he was.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">I revert to my friend Lovel. I was coaching Lovel for his degree
-(which, between ourselves, I think he never would have attained), when
-he suddenly announced to me, from Weymouth, where he was passing
-the vacation, his intention to quit the university, and to travel abroad.
-“Events have happened, dear friend,” he wrote, “which will make my
-mother’s home miserable to me (I little knew when I went to town about
-your business, what caused her <i>wonderful complaisance</i> to me). She would
-have broken my heart, Charles (my Christian name is Charles), but its
-wounds have found a <i>consoler</i>!”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Now, in this little chapter, there are some little mysteries propounded,
-upon which, were I not above any such artifice, I might easily leave the
-reader to ponder for a month.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">1. Why did Mrs. Prior, at the lodgings, persist in calling the theatre at
-which her daughter danced the Academy?</p>
-
-<p class="pt">2. What were the special reasons why Mrs. Lovel should be very
-gracious with her son, and give him 150<i>l.</i> as soon as he asked for the
-money?</p>
-
-<p class="pt">3. Why was Fred Lovel’s heart nearly broken? and 4. Who was his
-consoler?</p>
-
-<p class="pt">I answer these at once, and without the slightest attempt at delay or
-circumlocution. 1. Mrs. Prior, who had repeatedly received money from
-her brother, John Erasmus Sargent, D.D., Master of St. Boniface College,
-knew perfectly well that if the Master (whom she already pestered out
-of his life) heard that she had sent a niece of his on the stage, he would
-never give her another shilling.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">2. The reason why Emma, widow of the late Adolphus Loeffel, of
-Whitechapel Road, sugar-baker, was so particularly gracious to her son,
-Adolphus Frederic Lovel, Esq., of St. Boniface College, Oxbridge, and
-principal partner in the house of Loeffel aforesaid, an infant, was that she,
-Emma, was about to contract a second marriage with the Rev. Samuel
-Bonnington.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">3. Fred Lovel’s heart was so very much broken by this intelligence,
-that he gave himself airs of Hamlet, dressed in black, wore his long fair
-hair over his eyes, and exhibited a hundred signs of grief and desperation:
-until&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="pt">4. Louisa (widow of the late Sir Popham Baker, of Bakerstown,
-Co. Kilkenny, Baronet,) induced Mr. Lovel to take a trip on the Rhine<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[Pg 59]</span>
-with her and Cecilia, fourth and only unmarried daughter of the aforesaid
-Sir Popham Baker, deceased.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">My opinion of Cecilia I have candidly given in a previous page. I
-adhere to that opinion. I shall not repeat it. The subject is disagreeable
-to me, as the woman herself was in life. What Fred found in her to
-admire, I cannot tell: lucky for us all that tastes, men, women, vary.
-You will never see her alive in this history. That is her picture, painted
-by the late Mr. Gandish. She stands fingering that harp with which
-she has often driven me half mad with her <i>Tara’s Halls</i> and her <i>Poor
-Marianne</i>. She used to bully Fred so, and be so rude to his guests, that
-in order to pacify her, he would meanly say, “Do, my love, let us have a
-little music!” and thrumpty&mdash;thrumpty, off would go her gloves, and
-<i>Tara’s Halls</i> would begin. “The harp that <i>once</i>” indeed! the accursed
-catgut scarce knew any other music, and “once” was a hundred times at
-least in <i>my</i> hearing. Then came the period when I was treated to the cold
-joint which I have mentioned; and, not liking it, I gave up going to
-Shrublands.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">So, too, did my Lady Baker, but not of <i>her own free will</i>, mind you.
-<i>She</i> did not quit the premises because her reception was too cold, but
-because the house was made a great deal too hot for her. I remember
-Fred coming to me in high spirits, and describing to me, with no little
-humour, a great battle between Cecilia and Lady Baker, and her ladyship’s
-defeat and flight. She fled, however, only as far as Putney village, where
-she formed again, as it were, and fortified herself in a lodging. Next day
-she made a desperate and feeble attack, presenting herself at Shrublands
-lodge-gate, and threatening that she and sorrow would sit down before it;
-and that all the world should know how a daughter treated her mother.
-But the gate was locked, and Barnet, the gardener, appeared behind it,
-saying, “Since you <i>are</i> come, my lady, perhaps you will pay my missis
-the four-and-twenty shillings you borrowed of her.” And he grinned at
-her through the bars, until she fled before him, cowering. Lovel paid the
-little forgotten account; the best four-and-twenty shillings he had ever laid
-out, he said.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Eight years passed away; during the last four of which I scarce saw my
-old friend, except at clubs and taverns, where we met privily, and renewed,
-not old warmth and hilarity, but old kindness. One winter he took
-his family abroad; Cecilia’s health was delicate, Lovel told me, and the
-doctor had advised that she should spend a winter in the south. He
-did not stay with them: he had pressing affairs at home; he had embarked
-in many businesses besides the paternal sugar-bakery; was concerned
-in companies, a director of a joint-stock bank, a man in whose fire were
-many irons. A faithful governess was with the children; a faithful
-man and maid were in attendance on the invalid; and Lovel, adoring
-his wife, as he certainly did, yet supported her absence with great
-equanimity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[Pg 60]</span></p>
-
-<p class="pt">In the spring I was not a little scared to read amongst the deaths in
-the newspaper:&mdash;“At Naples, of scarlet fever, on the 25th ult., Cecilia,
-wife of Frederick Lovel Esq., and daughter of the late Sir Popham Baker,
-Bart.” I knew what my friend’s grief would be. He had hurried abroad
-at the news of her illness; he did not reach Naples in time to receive the
-last words of his poor Cecilia.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Some months after the catastrophe, I had a note from Shrublands.
-Lovel wrote quite in the old affectionate tone. He begged his dear old
-friend to go to him, and console him in his solitude. Would I come to
-dinner that evening?</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Of course I went off to him straightway. I found him in deep sables
-in the drawing-room with his children, and I confess I was not astonished
-to see my Lady Baker once more in that room.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“You seem surprised to see me here, Mr. Batchelor!” says her
-ladyship, with that grace and good breeding which she generally exhibited;
-for if she accepted benefits, she took care to insult those from whom she
-received them.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Indeed, no,” said I, looking at Lovel, who piteously hung down his
-head. He had his little Cecy at his knee: he was sitting under the
-portrait of the defunct musician, whose harp, now muffled in leather, stood
-dimly in the corner of the room.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I am here not at my own wish, but from a feeling of duty towards
-that&mdash;departed&mdash;angel!” says Lady Baker, pointing to the picture.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“I am sure when mamma was here, you were always quarrelling,” says
-little Popham, with a scowl.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“This is the way those innocent children have been taught to regard
-me,” cries grandmamma.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Silence Pop!” says papa, “and don’t be a rude boy.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Isn’t Pop a rude boy?” echoes Cecy.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Silence, Pop,” continues papa, “or you must go up to Miss Prior.”</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak oe" id="Studies_in_Animal_Life">Studies in Animal Life.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Authentic tidings of invisible things;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of ebb and flow, and ever-during power,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And central peace subsisting at the heart</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of endless agitation.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Excursion.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<h3>CHAPTER I.</h3>
-
-<p class="contents">Omnipresence of Life&mdash;The Microscope&mdash;An Opalina and its wonders&mdash;The uses of
-Cilia&mdash;How our lungs are protected from dust and filings&mdash;Feeding without a mouth
-or stomach&mdash;What is an organ?&mdash;How a complex organism arises&mdash;Early stages
-of a frog and a philosopher&mdash;How the plants feed&mdash;Parasites of the frog&mdash;Metamorphoses
-and migrations of Parasites&mdash;Life within life&mdash;The budding of animals&mdash;A
-steady bore&mdash;Philosophy of the infinitely little.</p>
-
-<p class="pb0">Come with me, and lovingly study Nature, as she breathes, palpitates, and
-works under myriad forms of Life&mdash;forms unseen, unsuspected, or unheeded
-by the mass of ordinary men. Our course may be through park and
-meadow, garden and lane, over the swelling hills and spacious heaths,
-beside the running and sequestered streams, along the tawny coast, out on
-the dark and dangerous reefs, or under dripping caves and slippery ledges.
-It matters little where we go: everywhere&mdash;in the air above, the earth
-beneath, and waters under the earth&mdash;we are surrounded with Life. Avert
-your eyes awhile from our human world, with its ceaseless anxieties, its
-noble sorrow, poignant, yet sublime, of conscious imperfection aspiring to
-higher states, and contemplate the calmer activities of that other world
-with which we are so mysteriously related. I hear you exclaim,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center pa0 pb0">“The proper study of mankind is man;”</p>
-
-<p class="pa0 pb0">nor will I pretend, as some enthusiastic students seem to think, that</p>
-
-<p class="center pa0 pb0">“The proper study of mankind is <i>cells</i>;”</p>
-
-<p class="pa0">but agreeing with you, that man is the noblest study, I would suggest
-that under the noblest there are other problems which we must not neglect.
-Man himself is imperfectly known, because the laws of universal Life are
-imperfectly known. His Life forms but one grand illustration of Biology&mdash;the
-science of Life,<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> as he forms but the apex of the animal world.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Our studies here will be of Life, and chiefly of those minuter, or
-obscurer forms, which seldom attract attention. In the air we breathe, in
-the water we drink, in the earth we tread on, Life is everywhere. Nature
-<i>lives</i>: every pore is bursting with Life; every death is only a new birth,
-every grave a cradle. And of this we know so little, think so little!
-Around us, above us, beneath us, that great mystic drama of creation is
-being enacted, and we will not even consent to be spectators! Unless<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[Pg 62]</span>
-animals are obviously useful, or obviously hurtful to us, we disregard
-them. Yet they are not alien, but akin. The Life that stirs within us,
-stirs within them. We are all “parts of one transcendent whole.” The
-scales fall from our eyes when we think of this; it is as if a new sense had
-been vouchsafed to us; and we learn to look at Nature with a more intimate
-and personal love.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Life everywhere! The air is crowded with birds&mdash;beautiful, tender,
-intelligent birds, to whom life is a song and a thrilling anxiety, the anxiety
-of love. The air is swarming with insects&mdash;those little animated miracles.
-The waters are peopled with innumerable forms, from the animalcule, so
-small that one hundred and fifty millions of them would not weigh a grain,
-to the whale, so large that it seems an island as it sleeps upon the waves.
-The bed of the seas is alive with polypes, crabs, star-fishes, and with sand-numerous
-shell-animalcules. The rugged face of rocks is scarred by the
-silent boring of soft creatures; and blackened with countless mussels,
-barnacles, and limpets.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Life everywhere! on the earth, in the earth, crawling, creeping, burrowing,
-boring, leaping, running. If the sequestered coolness of the wood
-tempt us to saunter into its chequered shade, we are saluted by the
-murmurous din of insects, the twitter of birds, the scrambling of squirrels,
-the startled rush of unseen beasts, all telling how populous is this seeming
-solitude. If we pause before a tree, or shrub, or plant, our cursory and
-half-abstracted glance detects a colony of various inhabitants. We pluck
-a flower, and in its bosom we see many a charming insect busy at its
-appointed labour. We pick up a fallen leaf, and if nothing is visible on it,
-there is probably the trace of an insect larva hidden in its tissue, and
-awaiting there development. The drop of dew upon this leaf will probably
-contain its animals, visible under the microscope. This same microscope
-reveals that the <i>blood-rain</i> suddenly appearing on bread, and awakening
-superstitious terrors, is nothing but a collection of minute animals (<i>Monas
-prodigiosa</i>); and that the vast tracts of snow which are reddened in a
-single night, owe their colour to the marvellous rapidity in reproduction of
-a minute plant (<i>Protococcus nivalis</i>). The very mould which covers our
-cheese, our bread, our jam, or our ink, and disfigures our damp walls; is
-nothing but a collection of plants. The many-coloured fire which sparkles
-on the surface of a summer sea at night, as the vessel ploughs her way, or
-which drips from the oars in lines of jewelled light, is produced by millions
-of minute animals.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Nor does the vast procession end here. Our very mother-earth is
-formed of the débris of life. Plants and animals which have been, build up
-its solid fabric.<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> We dig downwards, thousands of feet below the surface,
-and discover with surprise the skeletons of strange, uncouth animals, which
-roamed the fens and struggled through the woods before man was. Our<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[Pg 63]</span>
-surprise is heightened when we learn that the very quarry itself is mainly
-composed of the skeletons of microscopic animals; the flints which grate
-beneath our carriage wheels are but the remains of countless skeletons.
-The Apennines and Cordilleras, the chalk cliffs so dear to homeward-nearing
-eyes&mdash;these are the pyramids of bygone generations of atomies.
-Ages ago, these tiny architects secreted the tiny shells, which were their
-palaces; from the ruins of these palaces we build our Parthenons, our St.
-Peters, and our Louvres. So revolves the luminous orb of Life! Generations
-follow generations; and the Present becomes the matrix of the
-Future, as the Past was of the Present: the Life of one epoch forming the
-prelude to a higher Life.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">When we have thus ranged air, earth, and water, finding everywhere a
-prodigality of living forms, visible and invisible, it might seem as if the
-survey were complete. And yet it is not so. Life cradles within Life.
-The bodies of animals are little worlds, having their own animals and
-plants. A celebrated Frenchman has published a thick octavo volume
-devoted to the classification and description of “The Plants which grow on
-Men and Animals;”<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> and many Germans have described the immense
-variety of animals which grow on and in men and animals; so that science
-can now boast of a parasitic Flora and Fauna. In the fluids and tissues,
-in the eye, in the liver, in the stomach, in the brain, in the muscles,
-parasites are found; and these parasites have often <i>their</i> parasites living in
-them!</p>
-
-<p class="pt pb0">We have thus taken a bird’s-eye view of the field in which we may
-labour. It is truly inexhaustible. We may begin where we please, we
-shall never come to an end; our curiosity will never slacken.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent14">“And whosoe’er in youth</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Has thro’ ambition of his soul given way</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To such desires, and grasp’d at such delights,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Shall feel congenial stirrings, late and long.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="pa0">As a beginning, get a microscope. If you cannot borrow, boldly buy one.
-Few purchases will yield you so much pleasure; and while you are about
-it, do, if possible, get a good one. Spend as little money as you can on
-accessory apparatus and expensive fittings, but get a good stand and good
-glasses. Having got your instrument, bear in mind these two important
-trifles&mdash;work by daylight, seldom or never by lamplight; and keep the
-unoccupied eye <i>open</i>. With these precautions you may work daily for
-hours without serious fatigue to the eye.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">
-Now where shall we begin? Anywhere will do. This dead frog, for
-example, that has already been made the subject of experiments, and is
-<img class="left10m x-ebookmaker-drop" src="images/i_064_1.jpg" alt="Fig. 1: OPALINA RANARUM" />
-now awaiting the removal of its spinal cord, will serve us as a text from
-which profitable lessons may be drawn. We snip out a portion of its
-digestive tube, which from its emptiness seems to promise little; but a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[Pg 64]</span>
-drop of the liquid we find in it is placed on a glass slide, covered with a
-small piece of very thin glass, and brought under the microscope. Now
-look. There are several things which might
-occupy your attention; but disregard them now
-to watch that animalcule which you observe
-swimming about. What is it? It is one of the
-largest of the Infusoria, and is named <i>Opalina</i>.
-When I call this an Infusorium I am using the
-language of text-books; but there seems to be a
-growing belief among zoologists that the Opalina
-is not an Infusorium, but the infantile condition
-of some worm (<i>Distoma</i>?). However, it will
-not grow into a mature worm as long as it
-inhabits the frog; it waits till some pike, or
-bird, has devoured the frog, and then, in the
-stomach of its new captor, it will develop into
-its mature form: then, and not till then. This
-surprises you? And well it may; but thereby
-hangs a tale, which to unfold&mdash;for the present,
-however, it must be postponed, because the
-Opalina itself needs all our notice.</p>
-
-<div class="center hidescreen">
-<img class="img40" src="images/i_064_1.jpg" alt="Fig. 1: OPALINA RANARUM" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pt">Observe how transparent it is, and with what easy, undulating grace it
-swims about; yet this swimmer has no arms, no legs, no tail, no backbone
-to serve as a fulcrum to moving muscles: nay, it has no muscles to
-move with. ’Tis a creature of the most absolute abnegations: sans eyes,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[Pg 65]</span>sans teeth, sans everything;&mdash;no, not sans everything, for as we look
-attentively we see certain currents produced in the liquid, and on applying
-a higher magnifying power we detect how these currents are produced.
-All over the surface of the Opalina there are delicate hairs, in incessant
-vibration: these are the <i>cilia</i>.<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> They lash the water, and the animal is
-propelled by their strokes, as a galley by its hundred oars. This is your
-first sight of that ciliary action of which you have so often read, and
-which you will henceforth find performing some important service in
-almost every animal you examine. Sometimes the cilia act as instruments
-of locomotion; sometimes as instruments of respiration, by continually
-renewing the current of water; sometimes as the means of drawing in
-food&mdash;for which purpose they surround the mouth, and by their incessant
-action produce a small whirlpool into which the food is sucked. An
-example of this is seen in the Vorticella (Fig. 2).</p>
-
-<div class="center img60 hidescreen">
-<img class="center img90" src="images/i_064_2.jpg" alt="Fig. 2: GROUP OF VORTICELLA NEBULIFERA, on a Stem of Weed, Magnified" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="center img35m x-ebookmaker-drop">
-<img class="center img90" src="images/i_064_2.jpg" alt="Fig. 2: GROUP OF VORTICELLA NEBULIFERA, on a Stem of Weed, Magnified" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pt">Having studied the action of these cilia in microscopic animals, you
-will be prepared to understand their office in your own organism. The
-lining membrane of your air-passages is covered with cilia; which may
-be observed by following the directions of Professor Sharpey, to whom
-science is indebted for a very exhaustive description of these organs. “To
-see them in motion, a portion of the ciliated mucous membrane may be
-taken from a recently-killed quadruped. The piece of membrane is to be
-folded with its free, or ciliated, surface outwards, placed on a slip of glass,
-with a little water or serum of blood, and covered with thin glass or mica.
-When it is now viewed with a power of 200 diameters, or upwards, a
-very obvious agitation will be perceived on the edge of the fold, and this
-appearance is caused by the moving cilia with which the surface of the
-membrane is covered. Being set close together, and moving simultaneously
-or in quick succession, the cilia, when in brisk action, give rise to
-the appearance of a bright transparent fringe along the fold of the membrane,
-agitated by such a rapid and incessant motion that the single
-threads which compose it cannot be perceived. The motion here meant
-is that of the cilia themselves; but they also set in motion the adjoining
-fluid, driving it along the ciliated surface, as is indicated by the agitation
-of any little particles that may accidentally float in it. The fact of the
-conveyance of fluids and other matters along the ciliated surface, as well
-as the direction in which they are impelled, may also be made manifest by
-immersing the membrane in fluid, and dropping on it some finely-pulverized
-substance (such as charcoal in fine powder), which will be slowly
-but steadily carried along in a constant and determinate direction.”<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a></p>
-
-<p class="pt">It is an interesting fact, that while the direction in which the cilia
-propel fluids and particles is generally towards the interior of the organism,
-it is sometimes <i>reversed</i>; and, instead of beating the particles inwards, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[Pg 66]</span>
-cilia energetically beat them back, if they attempt to enter. Fatal results
-would ensue if this were not so. Our air-passages would no longer protect
-the lungs from particles of sand, coal-dust, and filings, flying about the
-atmosphere; on the contrary, the lashing hairs which cover the surface of
-these passages would catch up every particle, and drive it onwards into
-the lungs. Fortunately for us, the direction of the cilia is reversed, and
-they act as vigilant janitors, driving back all vagrant particles with a stern
-“No admittance&mdash;<i>even</i> on business!” In vain does the whirlwind dash a
-column of dust in our faces&mdash;in vain does the air, darkened with coal-dust,
-impetuously rush up the nostrils: the air is allowed to pass on, but the dust
-is inexorably driven back. Were it not so, how could miners, millers,
-iron-workers, and all the modern Tubal Cains contrive to live in their
-loaded atmospheres? In a week, their lungs would be choked up.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Perhaps, you will tell me that this <i>is</i> the case: that manufacturers of
-iron and steel are very subject to consumption; and that there is a peculiar
-discoloration of the lungs which has often been observed in coal miners,
-examined after death.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Not being a physician, and not intending to trouble you with medical
-questions, I must still place before you three considerations, which will
-show how untenable this notion is. First, although consumption may be
-frequent among the Sheffield workmen, the cause is not to be sought in
-their breathing filings, but in the sedentary and unwholesome confinement
-incidental to their occupation. Miners and coal-heavers are not troubled
-with consumption. Moreover, if the filings were the cause, all the artisans
-would suffer, when all breathe the same atmosphere. Secondly, while
-it is true that discoloured lungs have been observed in some miners,
-it has not been observed in all, or in many; whereas, it has been observed
-in men not miners, not exposed to any unusual amount of coal-dust.
-Thirdly, and most conclusively, experiment has shown that the coal-dust
-<i>cannot</i> penetrate to the lungs. Claude Bernard, the brilliant experimenter,
-tied a bladder, containing a quantity of powdered charcoal, to the muzzle
-of a rabbit. Whenever the animal breathed, the powder within the
-bladder was seen to be agitated. Except during feeding time, the bladder
-was kept constantly on, so that the animal breathed only this dusty air.
-If the powder <i>could</i> have escaped the vigilance of the cilia, and got into
-the lungs, this was a good occasion. But when the rabbit was killed and
-opened, many days afterwards, no powder whatever was found in the
-lungs, or bronchial tubes; several patches were collected about the nostrils
-and throat; but the cilia had acted as a strainer, keeping all particles from
-the air-tubes.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The swimming apparatus of the Opalina has led us far away from the
-little animal, who has been feeding while we have been lecturing. At
-the mention of feeding, you naturally look for the food that is eaten, the
-mouth and stomach that eat. But I hinted just now that this ethereal
-creature dispenses with a stomach, as too gross for its nature; and of course,
-by a similar refinement, dispenses with a mouth. Indeed, it has no<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[Pg 67]</span>
-organs whatever, except the cilia just spoken of. The same is true of
-several of the Infusoria; for you must know that naturalists no longer
-recognize the complex organization which Ehrenberg fancied he had
-detected in these microscopic beings. If it pains you to relinquish the
-piquant notion of a microscopic animalcule having a structure equal in
-complexity to that of the elephant, there will be ample compensation in the
-notion which replaces it, the notion of an ascending series of animal organisms,
-rising from the structureless <i>amœba</i> to the complex frame of a
-mammal. On a future occasion we shall see that, great as Ehrenberg’s services
-have been, his <i>interpretations</i> of what he saw have one by one been
-replaced by truer notions. His immense class of Infusoria has been, and
-is constantly being, diminished; many of his animals turn out to be plants;
-many of them embryos of worms; and some of them belong to the same
-divisions of the animal kingdom as the oyster and the shrimp: that is to say,
-they range with the Molluscs and Crustaceans. In these, of course, there
-is a complex organization; but in the Infusoria, as now understood, the
-organization is extremely simple. No one now believes the clear spaces
-visible in their substance to be stomachs, as Ehrenberg believed; and the
-idea of the <i>Polygastrica</i>, or many-stomached Infusoria, is abandoned. No
-one believes the coloured specs to be eyes; because, not to mention the
-difficulty of conceiving eyes where there is no nervous system, it has been
-found that even the spores of some plants have these coloured specs; and
-they are assuredly not eyes. If, then, we exclude the highly-organized
-<i>Rotifera</i>, or “Wheel Animalcules,” which are genuine Crustacea, we may
-say that all Infusoria, whether they be the young of worms or not, are of
-very simple organization.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And this leads us to consider what biologists mean by an <i>organ</i>: it is
-a particular portion of the body set apart for the performance of some
-particular function. The whole process of development is this setting
-apart for special purposes. The starting-point of Life is a single cell&mdash;that
-is to say, a microscopic sac, filled with liquid and granules, and having
-within it a nucleus, or smaller sac. Paley has somewhere remarked, that
-in the early stages, there is no difference discernible between a frog and a
-philosopher. It is very true; truer than he conceived. In the earliest
-stage of all, both the Batrachian and the Philosopher are nothing but
-single cells; although the one cell will develop into an Aristotle or a
-Newton, and the other will get no higher than the cold, damp, croaking
-animal which boys will pelt, anatomists dissect, and Frenchmen eat. From
-the starting-point of a single cell, this is the course taken: the cell divides
-itself into two, the two become four, the four eight, and so on, till a mass
-of cells is formed, not unlike the shape of a mulberry. This mulberry-mass
-then becomes a sac, with double envelopes, or walls: the inner wall,
-turned towards the yelk, or food, becomes the <i>assimilating</i> surface for the
-whole; the outer wall, turned towards the surrounding medium, becomes
-the surface which is to bring frog and philosopher into contact and relation
-with the external world&mdash;the Non-Ego, as the philosopher, in after life, will<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[Pg 68]</span>
-call it. Here we perceive the first grand “setting apart,” or <i>differentiation</i>,
-has taken place: the embryo having an assimilating surface, which has
-little to do with the external world; and a sensitive, contractile surface,
-which has little to do with the preparation and transport of food. The
-embryo is no longer a mass of similar cells; it is already become dissimilar,
-<i>different</i>, as respects its inner and outer envelope. But these envelopes are
-at present uniform; one part of each is exactly like the rest. Let us,
-therefore, follow the history of Development, and we shall find that the
-inner wall gradually becomes unlike itself in various parts; and that
-certain organs, constituting a very complex apparatus of Digestion, Secretion,
-and Excretion, are all one by one wrought out of it, by a series of
-metamorphoses, or <i>differentiations</i>. The inner wall thus passes from a
-simple assimilating surface to a complex apparatus serving the functions of
-vegetative life.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Now glance at the outer wall: from it also various organs have
-gradually been wrought: it has developed into muscles, nerves, bones,
-organs of sense, and brain: all these from a simple homogeneous
-membrane!</p>
-
-<p class="pt pb0">With this bird’s-eye view of the course of Development, you will be
-able to appreciate the grand law first clearly enunciated by Goethe and
-Von Baer, as the law of animal life, namely, that Development is always
-from the general to the special, from the simple to the complex, from the
-homogeneous to the heterogeneous; and this by a gradual series of
-<i>differentiations</i>.<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> Or to put it into the music of our deeply meditative
-Tennyson:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“All nature widens upward. Evermore</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The simpler essence lower lies:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">More complex is more perfect&mdash;owning more</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Discourse, more widely wise.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="pt">You are now familiarized with the words “differentiation” and “development,”
-so often met with in modern writers; and have gained a distinct
-idea of what an “organ” is; so that on hearing of an animal without
-organs, you will at once conclude that in such an animal there has been no
-setting apart of any portion of the body for special purposes, but that all
-parts serve all purposes indiscriminately. Here is our Opalina, for
-example, without mouth, or stomach, or any other organ. It is an
-assimilating surface in every part; in every part a breathing, sensitive
-surface. Living on liquid food, it does not need a mouth to seize, or a
-stomach to digest, such food. The liquid, or gas, passes through the
-Opalina’s delicate skin, by a process which is called <i>endosmosis</i>; it there
-serves as food; and the refuse passes out again by a similar process, called
-<i>exosmosis</i>. This is the way in which many animals and all plants are
-nourished. The cell at the end of a rootlet, which the plant sends
-burrowing through the earth, has no mouth to seize, no open pores to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[Pg 69]</span>
-admit the liquid that it needs; nevertheless the liquid passes into the cell,
-through its delicate cell-wall, and passes from this cell to <i>other</i> cells,
-upwards from the rootlet to the bud. It is in this way, also, that the
-Opalina feeds: it is all-mouth, no-mouth; all-stomach, no-stomach. Every
-part of its body performs the functions which in more complex animals
-are performed by organs specially set apart. It feeds without mouth,
-breathes without lungs, and moves without muscles.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">
-The Opalina, as I said, is a parasite. It may be found in various
-animals, and almost always in the frog. You will, perhaps, ask why it
-<img class="right10m x-ebookmaker-drop" src="images/i_069.jpg" alt="Fig. 3: POLYSTOMUM INTEGERRIMUM, Magnified" />
-should be considered a parasite; why may it not have been swallowed by
-the frog in a gulp of water? Certainly, nothing would have been easier.
-But to remove your doubts, I open the skull of this frog, and carefully
-remove a drop of the liquid found inside, which, on being brought under
-the microscope, we shall most probably find containing some animalcules,
-especially those named <i>Monads</i>. These were not swallowed. They live
-in the cerebro-spinal fluid, as the Opalina lives in the digestive tube. Nay,
-if we extend our researches, we shall find that various organs have their
-various parasites. Here, for instance, is a parasitic worm from the frog’s
-bladder. Place it under the microscope, with a high power, and behold!
-It is called <i>Polystomum</i>&mdash;many-mouthed, or,
-more properly, many-suckered. You are looking
-at the under side, and will observe six large
-suckers with their starlike clasps (<i>e</i>), and the
-horny instrument (<i>f</i>), with which the animal
-bores its way. At <i>a</i> there is another sucker,
-which serves also as a mouth; at <i>b</i> you perceive
-the rudiment of a gullet, and at <i>d</i> the
-reproductive organs. But pay attention to the
-pretty branchings of the digestive tube (<i>c</i>)
-which ramifies through the body like a blood-vessel.</p>
-
-<div class="center hidescreen">
-<img class="img40" src="images/i_069.jpg" alt="Fig. 3: POLYSTOMUM INTEGERRIMUM, Magnified" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pt">This arrangement of the digestive tube is
-found in many animals, and is often mistaken
-for a system of blood-vessels. In one sense
-this is correct; for these branching tubes are
-carriers of nutriment, and the only circulating
-vessels such animals possess; but the nutriment
-is <i>chyme</i>, not blood: these simple animals
-have not arrived at the dignity of blood, which
-is a higher elaboration of the food, fitted for
-higher organisms.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Thus may our frog, besides its own marvels, afford us many “authentic
-tidings of invisible things,” and is itself a little colony of Life. Nature is
-economic as well as prodigal of space. She fills the illimitable heavens
-with planetary and starry grandeurs, and the tiny atoms moving over the
-crust of earth she makes the homes of the infinitely little. Far as the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[Pg 70]</span>
-mightiest telescope can reach, it detects worlds in clusters, like pebbles on
-the shore of Infinitude; deep as the microscope can penetrate, it detects
-Life within Life, generation within generation; as if the very Universe itself
-were not vast enough for the energies of Life!</p>
-
-<p class="pt">That phrase, generation within generation, was not a careless phrase; it
-is exact. Take the tiny insect (<i>Aphis</i>) which, with its companions, crowds
-your rose-tree; open it, in a solution of sugar-water, under your microscope,
-and you will find in it a young insect nearly formed; open that
-young insect with care, and you will find in it, also, another young one,
-less advanced in its development, but perfectly recognizable to the experienced
-eye; and beside this embryo you will find many eggs, which
-would in time become insects!</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Or take that lazy water-snail (<i>Paludina vivipara</i>), first made known to
-science by the great Swammerdamm, the incarnation of patience and
-exactness, and you will find, as he found, forty or fifty young snails, in
-various stages of development; and you will also find, as he found, some
-tiny worms, which, if you cut them open, will suffer three or four infusoria
-to escape from the opening.<a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> In your astonishment you will ask, Where
-is this to end?</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The observation recorded by Swammerdamm, like so many others of
-this noble worker, fell into neglect; but modern investigators have made it
-the starting-point of a very curious inquiry. The worms he found within
-the snail are now called <i>Cercaria-sacs</i>, because they contain the <i>Cercariæ</i>,
-once classed as Infusoria, and which are now known to be the early forms
-of parasitic worms inhabiting the digestive tube, and other cavities, of
-higher animals. These <i>Cercariæ</i> have vigorous tails, with which they
-swim through the water like tadpoles, and like tadpoles, they lose their
-tails in after life. But how, think you, did these sacs containing <i>Cercariæ</i>
-get into the water-snails? “By spontaneous generation,” formerly said the
-upholders of that hypothesis; and those who condemned the hypothesis
-were forced to admit they had no better explanation. It was a mystery,
-which they preferred leaving unexplained, rather than fly to spontaneous
-generation. And they were right. The mystery has at length been
-cleared up.<a id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> I will endeavour to bring together the scattered details, and
-narrate the curious story.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Under the eyelids of geese and ducks may be constantly found a parasitic
-worm (of the <i>Trematode</i> order), which naturalists have christened <i>Monostomum
-mutabile</i>&mdash;Single-mouth, Changeable. This worm brings forth
-living young, in the likeness of active Infusoria, which, being covered with
-cilia, swim about in the water, as we saw the Opalina swim. Here is a
-portrait of one. (Fig. 4.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[Pg 71]</span></p>
-
-<p class="pt">
-Each of these animalcules develops a sac in its interior. The sac you
-may notice in the engraving. Having managed to get into the body of the
-<img class="right15m x-ebookmaker-drop" src="images/i_071_1.jpg" alt="Fig. 4: A - EMBRYO OF MONOSTOMUM MUTABILE; B - Cercaria sac, just set free" />
-water-snail, the animalcule’s part in
-the drama is at an end. It dies, and
-in dying liberates the sac, which is
-very comfortably housed and fed by
-the snail. If you examine this sac
-(Fig. 5), you will observe that it has
-a mouth and digestive tube, and is,
-therefore, very far from being, what
-its name imports, a mere receptacle;
-it is an independent animal, and
-lives an independent life. It feeds
-generously on the juices of the snail,
-and having fed, thinks generously of
-the coming generations. It was born
-inside the animalcule; why should it not in turn give birth to children of
-its own? To found a dynasty, to scatter progeny over the bounteous earth,
-is a worthy ambition. The mysterious agency of Reproduction
-begins in this sac-animal; and in a short while
-a brood of <i>Cercariæ</i> move within it. The sac bursts,
-and the brood escapes. But how is this? The children
-are by no means the “very image” of their parent.
-They are not sacs, nor in the least resembling sacs, as
-you see. (Fig. 6.)</p>
-
-<div class="hidescreen center">
-<img class="img50" src="images/i_071_1.jpg" alt="Fig. 4: A - EMBRYO OF MONOSTOMUM MUTABILE; B - Cercaria sac, just set free" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pt pc">
-They have tails, and suckers, and sharp boring instruments,
-with other organs which their parent was
-<img class="right8m x-ebookmaker-drop" src="images/i_071_2.jpg" alt="Fig. 5: CERCARIA SAC" />
-without. To look at them you would as soon suspect
-a shrimp to be the progeny of an oyster, as these to be
-the progeny of the sac-animal. And what makes the
-paradox more paradoxical is, that not only are the
-<i>Cercariæ</i> unlike their parent, but their parent was
-equally unlike its parent the embryo of <i>Monostomum</i> (compare fig. 4).
-However, if we pursue this family history, we shall
-find the genealogy rights itself at last, and that this
-Cercaria will develop in the body of some bird into
-a <i>Monostomum mutabile</i> like its ancestor. Thus the
-worm produces an animalcule, which produces a sac-animal,
-which produces a Cercaria, which becomes a
-worm exactly resembling its great-grandfather.</p>
-
-<div class="hidescreen center">
-<img class="img30" src="images/i_071_2.jpg" alt="Fig. 5: CERCARIA SAC" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="hidescreen center">
-<img class="img30" src="images/i_071_3.jpg" alt="Fig. 6: CERCARICA DEVELOPED" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pt pc">
-One peculiarity in this history is that while the
-<i>Monostomum</i> produces its young in the usual way,
-the two <i>intermediate</i> forms are produced by a process
-<img class="right8m x-ebookmaker-drop" src="images/i_071_3.jpg" alt="Fig. 6: CERCARICA DEVELOPED" />
-of budding, analogous to that observed in plants.
-Plants, as you know, are reproduced in two ways,
-from the seed, and from the bud. For seed-reproduction,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[Pg 72]</span>
-peculiar organs are necessary; for bud-reproduction, there is
-no such differentiation needed: it is simply an out-growth. The same
-is true of many animals: they also bud like plants, and produce seeds
-(eggs) like plants. I have elsewhere argued that the two processes are
-essentially identical; and that both are but special forms of growth.<a id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a>
-Not, however, to discuss so abstruse a question here, let us merely note
-that the Monostomum, into which the Cercaria will develop, produces eggs,
-from which young will issue; the second generation is not produced from
-eggs, but by internal budding; the third generation is likewise budded internally;
-but it, on acquiring maturity, will produce eggs. For this maturity,
-it is indispensable that the Cercaria should be swallowed by some bird or
-animal; only in the digestive tube can it acquire its egg-producing condition.
-How is it to get there? The ways are many; let us witness one:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="pt">In this watchglass of water we have several <i>Cercariæ</i> swimming about.
-To them we add three or four of those darting, twittering insects which
-you have seen in every vase of pond-water, and have learned to be the
-larvæ, or early forms, of the <i>Ephemeron</i>. The <i>Cercariæ</i> cease flapping the
-water with their impatient tails, and commence a severe scrutiny of the
-strangers. When Odry, in the riotous farce, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Saltimbanques</span></i>, finds a
-portmanteau, he exclaims, “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Une malle! ce doit être à moi!</span></i>” (“Surely this
-<i>must</i> belong to me!”) This seems to be the theory of property adopted by
-the Cercaria: “An insect! surely this belongs to me!” Accordingly every
-one begins creeping over the bodies of the Ephemera, giving an interrogatory
-poke with the spine, which will pierce the first soft place it can
-detect. Between the segments of the insect’s armour a soft and pierceable
-spot is found; and now, lads, to work! Onwards they bore, never relaxing
-in their efforts till a hole is made large enough for them to slip in by
-elongating their bodies. Once in, they dismiss their tails as useless appendages;
-and begin what is called the process of <i>encysting</i>&mdash;that is, of rolling
-themselves up into a ball, and secreting a mucus from their surface, which
-hardens round them like a shell. Thus they remain snugly ensconced in
-the body of the insect, which in time develops into a fly, hovers over the
-pond, and is swallowed by some bird. The fly is digested, and the liberated
-Cercaria finds itself in comfortable quarters, its shell is broken, and its
-progress to maturity is rapid.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Von Siebold’s description of another form of emigration he has observed
-in parasites will be read with interest. “For a long time,” he
-says, “the origin of the threadworm, known as <i>Filaria insectorum</i>, that
-lives in the cavity of the bodies of adult and larval insects, could not be
-accounted for. Shut up within the abdominal cavity of caterpillars, grasshoppers,
-beetles, and other insects, these parasites were supposed to originate
-by spontaneous generation, under the influence of wet weather or from
-decayed food. Helminthologists (students of parasitic worms) were obliged
-to content themselves with this explanation, since they were unable to find<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[Pg 73]</span>
-a better. Those who dissected these threadworms and submitted them to
-a careful inspection, could not deny the probability, since it was clear that
-they contained no trace of sexual organs. But on directing my attention
-to these entozoa, I became aware of the fact that they were not true
-<i>Filariæ</i> at all, but belonged to a peculiar family of threadworms, embracing
-the genera of <i>Gordius</i> and <i>Mermis</i>. Furthermore, I convinced
-myself that these parasites wander away when full-grown, boring their
-way from within through any soft place in the body of their host, and
-creeping out through the opening. These parasites do not emigrate because
-they are uneasy, or because the caterpillar is sickly; but from that same
-internal necessity which constrains the horsefly to leave the stomach of
-the horse where he has been reared, or which moves the gadfly to work
-its way out through the skin of the oxen. The larvæ of both these insects
-creep forth in order to become chrysalises, and thence to proceed to their
-higher and perfect condition. I have demonstrated that the perfect, full-grown,
-but <i>sexless</i> threadworms of insects are in like manner moved by
-their desire to wander out of their previous homes, in order to enter upon
-a new period of their lives, which ends in the development of their sex.
-As they leave the bodies of their hosts they fall to the ground, and crawl
-away into the deeper and moister parts of the soil. Threadworms found
-in the damp earth, in digging up gardens and cutting ditches, have often
-been brought to me, which presented no external distinctions from the
-threadworms of insects. This suggested to me that the wandering
-threadworms of insects might instinctively bury themselves in damp
-ground, and I therefore instituted a series of experiments by placing the
-newly-emigrated worms in flower-pots filled with damp earth. To my
-delight I soon perceived that they began to bore with their heads into the
-earth, and by degrees drew themselves entirely in. For many months I
-kept the earth in the flower-pots moderately moist, and on examining the
-worms from time to time I found they had gradually attained their sex-development,
-and eggs were deposited in hundreds. Towards the conclusion
-of winter I could succeed in detecting the commencing development
-of the embryos in these eggs. By the end of spring they were fully formed,
-and many of them having left their shells were to be seen creeping about
-the earth. I now conjectured that these young worms would be impelled
-by their instincts to pursue a parasitic existence, and to seek out an animal
-to inhabit and to grow to maturity in; and it seemed not improbable that
-the brood I had reared would, like their parents, thrive best in the caterpillar.
-In order, therefore, to induce my young brood to immigrate, I
-procured a number of very small caterpillars which the first spring sunshine
-had just called into life. For the purpose of my experiment I filled
-a watch-glass with damp earth, taking it from amongst the flower-pots
-where the threadworms had wintered. Upon this I placed several of the
-young caterpillars.” The result was as he expected; the caterpillars were
-soon bored into by the worms, and served them at once as food and home.<a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[Pg 74]</span></p>
-<p class="pt">Frogs and parasites, worms and infusoria&mdash;are these worth the attention
-of a serious man? They have a less imposing appearance than planets
-and asteroids, I admit, but they are nearer to us, and admit of being more
-intimately known; and because they are thus accessible, they become more
-important to us. The life that stirs within us is also the life within them.
-It is for this reason, as I said at the outset, that although man’s noblest
-study must always be man, there are other studies less noble, yet not
-therefore ignoble, which must be pursued, even if only with a view to the
-perfection of the noblest. Many men, and those not always the ignorant,
-whose scorn of what they do not understand is always ready, despise the
-labours which do not obviously and directly tend to moral or political
-advancement. Others there are, who, fascinated by the grandeur of
-Astronomy and Geology, or by the immediate practical results of Physics
-and Chemistry, disregard all microscopic research as little better than
-dilettante curiosity. But I cannot think any serious study is without its
-serious value to the human race; and I know that the great problem of
-Life can never be solved while we are in ignorance of its simpler forms.
-Nor can anything be more unwise than the attempt to limit the sphere of
-human inquiry, especially by applying the test of immediate utility. All
-truths are related; and however remote from our daily needs some
-particular truth may seem, the time will surely come when its value will
-be felt. To the majority of our countrymen during the Revolution, when
-the conduct of James seemed of incalculable importance, there would have
-seemed something ludicrously absurd in the assertion that the newly-discovered
-differential calculus was infinitely more important to England and to
-Europe than the fate of all the dynasties; and few things could have seemed
-more remote from any useful end than this product of mathematical genius;
-yet it is now clear to every one that the conduct of James was supremely
-insignificant in comparison with this discovery. I do not say that men
-were unwise to throw themselves body and soul into the Revolution; I
-only say they would have been unwise to condemn the researches of
-mathematicians.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Let all who have a longing to study Nature in any of her manifold
-aspects, do so without regard to the sneers or objections of men whose tastes
-and faculties are directed elsewhere. From the illumination of many
-minds on many points, Truth must finally emerge. Man is, in Bacon’s
-noble phrase, the minister and interpreter of Nature; let him be careful
-lest he suffer this ministry to sink into a priesthood, and this interpretation
-to degenerate into an immovable dogma. The suggestions of apathy, and
-the prejudices of ignorance, have at all times inspired the wish to close the
-temple against new comers. Let us be vigilant against such suggestions,
-and keep the door of the temple ever open.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">[21]</a> The needful term Biology (from <i>Bios</i>, life, and <i>logos</i>, discourse) is now
-becoming generally adopted in England, as in Germany. It embraces all the separate
-sciences of Botany, Zoology, Comparative Anatomy, and Physiology.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">[22]</a> See <span class="smcap">Ehrenberg</span>: <i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Microgeologie: das Erden und Felsen schaffende Wirken des
-unsichtbar kleinen selbstständigen Lebens auf der Erde</span></i>. 1854.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">[23]</a> <span class="smcap">Charles Robin</span>: <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Histoire Naturelle des Végétaux Parasites qui croissent sur
-l’Homme et sur les Animaux Vivants</span></i>. 1853.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">[24]</a> From <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">cilium</span></i>, a hair.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="label">[25]</a> <i>Quain’s Anatomy.</i> By <span class="smcap">Sharpey and Ellis</span>. Sixth edition. I., p. lxxiii. See
-also <span class="smcap">Sharpey’s</span> article, <i>Cilia</i>, in the <i>Cyclopædia of Anatomy and Physiology</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="label">[26]</a> <span class="smcap">Goethe</span>: <i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Zur Morphologie</span></i>, 1807. <span class="smcap">Von Baer</span>: <i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Zur Entwickelungsgeschichte</span></i>,
-1828. Part I., p. 158.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_27" href="#FNanchor_27" class="label">[27]</a> <span class="smcap">Swammerdamm</span>. <i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bibel der Natur</span></i>, pp. 75-77.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_28" href="#FNanchor_28" class="label">[28]</a> By <span class="smcap">Von Siebold</span>. See his interesting work, <i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Ueber die Band-und-Blasenwürmer</span></i>.
-It has been translated by <span class="smcap">Huxley</span>, and appended to the translation of <span class="smcap">Kuechenmeister</span>
-<i>on Parasites</i>, published by the Sydenham Society.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_29" href="#FNanchor_29" class="label">[29]</a> <i>Seaside Studies</i>, pp. 308, <i>sq.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_30" href="#FNanchor_30" class="label">[30]</a> <span class="smcap">Von Siebold</span>: <i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Ueber Band-und-Blasenwürmer</span></i>. Translated by <span class="smcap">Huxley</span>.</p></div></div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak oe" id="Father_Prouts_Inaugurative_Ode">Father Prout’s Inaugurative Ode</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="motto">TO THE AUTHOR OF “VANITY FAIR.”</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p class="center">I.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent4">Ours is a faster, quicker age:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Yet erst at <span class="smcap">Goldsmith’s</span> homely Wakefield Vicarage,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">While Lady <span class="smcap">Blarney</span> from the West End glozes</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Mid the <span class="smcap">Primroses</span>,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Fudge! cries Squire <span class="smcap">Thornhill</span>,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Much to the wonder of young greenhorn <span class="smcap">Moses</span>.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Such word of scorn ill</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Matches the “Wisdom Fair” thy whim proposes</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">To hold on <span class="smcap">Cornhill</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="center">II.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">With Fudge, or Blarney, or the “Thames on Fire!”</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Treat not thy buyer;</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">But proffer good material&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">A genuine Cereal,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Value for twelvepence, and not dear at twenty.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Such wit replenishes thy Horn of Plenty!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="center">III.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent4">Nor wit alone dispense,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">But sense:</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">And with thy sparkling Xerez</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Let us have Ceres.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Of loaf thou hast no lack,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Nor set, like <span class="smcap">Shakespeare’s</span> zany, forth,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">With lots of sack,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Of bread one pennyworth.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="center">IV.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent6">Sprightly, and yet sagacious,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Funny, yet farinaceous,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Dashing, and yet methodical&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">So may thy periodical,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">On this auspicious morn,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Exalt its horn,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Thron’d on the <span class="smcap">Hill of Corn</span>!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="center">V.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Of aught that smacks of sect, surplice, or synod,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Be thy grain winnow’d!</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Nor deign to win our laugh</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">With empty chaff.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Shun aught o’er which dullard or bigot gloats;</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Nor seek our siller</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">With meal from <span class="smcap">Titus Oates</span></div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Or flour of <span class="smcap">Joseph Miller</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[Pg 76]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">VI.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">There’s corn in Egypt still</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">(Pilgrim from Cairo to Cornhill!)</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Give each his fill.</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">But all comers among</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Treat best the young;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Fill the big brothers’ knapsacks from thy bins,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But slip the Cup of Love in <span class="smcap">Benjamin’s</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="center">VII.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent4">Next as to those</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Who bring their lumbering verse or ponderous prose</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">To where good <span class="smcap">Smith and Elder</span></div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Have so long held their</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Well-garnish’d Cornhill storehouse&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Bid them not bore us.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Tell them instead</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">To take their load next street, the <span class="smcap">Hall of Lead</span>!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="center">VIII.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent2">Only one word besides&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">As he who tanneth hides</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Stocketh with proper implements his tannery:</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">So thou, Friend! do not fail</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">To store a stout corn flail,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ready for use, within thy Cornhill granary.</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Of old there walked abroad,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Prompt to right wrongs, Caliph <span class="smcap">Haroun al Rashid</span>:</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Deal thus with Fraud,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Or Job or Humbug&mdash;thrash it!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="center">IX.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Courage, old Friend! long found</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Firm at thy task, nor in fixt purpose fickle:</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Up! choose thy ground,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Put forth thy shining sickle;&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Shun the dense underwood</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Of Dunce or Dunderhood:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But reap North, South, East, Far West,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">The world-wide Harvest!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak oe" id="Our_Volunteers">Our Volunteers.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>The French nation has indisputably the most warlike propensities of any
-in the world. Other countries make warlike preparations in self-defence,
-for the maintenance of their own rights and possessions, and to prevent any
-other power, or combination of powers, obtaining a position menacing to
-their safety, or injurious to their liberties. Their governments, when there
-are valid grounds for alarm, instil these apprehensions into the minds of
-the people, who are soon roused to meet the threatened danger. But the
-unremitting pursuit of the French nation is military glory: no government
-of that country can exist without ministering to it. France is
-now armed to the teeth, and ready to do battle for any cause&mdash;even “for
-an idea.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">England is the nation which, perhaps sooner than any other, may be
-called upon to check her in the indulgence of this propensity; and this
-country also offers more points against which aggressive operations can be
-carried out. Hence it is natural that the preparations of France should be
-made chiefly with reference to a contest with Great Britain; and these
-preparations have now arrived at such formidable proportions that it would
-be infatuation in us to neglect the means of resistance.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The strongest evidence in support of this hypothesis is to be found in
-the fact that the most extraordinary preparations which have been gradually
-but rapidly made by the French Government, at a vast expense&mdash;namely,
-its naval and coast armaments&mdash;can be directed against no other power
-but England. It does not necessarily follow that any aggressive measures
-are positively contemplated; but it is not the less essential for us to maintain
-a corresponding force, available not only against invasion, should it be
-attempted, but strong enough to protect our commerce by securing the
-freedom of the seas, and thus preventing this country from being reduced
-to a subordinate power.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">British statesmen know and declare, and the nation feels, that it is
-essential to the maintenance of our possessions, our commerce, and our
-influence, that we should have a preponderating naval force. Other
-governments may demur to this, and may even be disposed to dispute the
-point, as France appears to be now preparing to do. It then becomes a
-question of national power and resources. This is an unfortunate alternative,
-but it is one which will not admit of compromise or arbitration: <i>we</i>
-consider an absolute superiority on the seas essential to the safety of our
-shores, the prosperity of our commerce, and the security of our colonies;
-<i>they</i> manifest a determination to contest our maritime supremacy, and to
-create a force which shall give them even a preponderating influence.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Let us put the case in what may be deemed the legitimate view, repudiating
-altogether any feeling of national animosity or prejudice. Whatever<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[Pg 78]</span>
-may be the result of the impending struggle for naval superiority&mdash;which
-does not altogether depend upon numerical force, but may be greatly
-influenced by the proficiency of either side in employing the newly-invented
-implements and modes of warfare&mdash;it must be conceded that we
-cannot expect our superiority will be so absolute as to enable us to trust
-entirely to our “wooden walls,” or to defensive armaments afloat: we
-must have an ample array of land forces to protect our homes, if menaced
-by the vast armies of France, which are constantly maintained in a state of
-full equipment and readiness.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Large armaments maintained during times of peace are repugnant to
-the feelings and good sense of the English nation; and yet if other nations,
-less strongly animated by industrial impulses and the principles of political
-economy, will accumulate immense powers of aggression, we must, in self-defence,
-maintain efficient means of resisting them. Patriotic feeling and
-high spirit in the population, even though aided by abundance of arms and
-ammunition, will not now, as in olden times, suffice. Soldiership is become
-a scientific profession; and an apprenticeship to the art of war, with skill
-and experience in every branch of it, are absolutely necessary to oppose
-with success a well-trained and disciplined force.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Our difficulties in the way of self-preservation are materially increased
-by the nature of our institutions and our feelings of personal independence.
-All other great nations in Europe have a power of compulsory enlistment;
-we have not: if we had, our standing forces for army and navy might be
-more moderate,&mdash;if we only retained efficacious means of rapid organization
-and equipment. According to our system, however, it is so long before
-we can procure the necessary number of men for the war establishment,
-that our only safety must consist in a much greater amount of permanent
-forces. In short, our purse must pay for our pride.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The volunteer system, however, tends, in some degree, to remedy this
-disadvantage, and will become more and more valuable in proportion as it
-shall conform itself gradually to such arrangements as will make our volunteers
-efficient for acting with our regular forces.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The first and prevalent idea from which the volunteer system sprang
-was of a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">levée en masse</span></i>; that every man animated by British pluck and
-spirit (and they would number hundreds of thousands) should be well
-practised in the use of the rifle, and, in case of invasion, should turn out to
-oppose the enemy, to line the hedges, hang upon the flank and rear of the
-invading force, and cut it to pieces.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">That our volunteers, who have nobly come forward spontaneously,
-without any prompting from government, would be ready to devote their
-lives, as they are devoting their time and energies, to the defence of their
-country against invasion, no one who appreciates the English character will
-doubt; but that such a heterogeneous body of men, if opposed to a highly-trained
-and disciplined force of veteran soldiers, would be able to repel the
-attack of an army, is now generally admitted to be a fallacy; and it would
-be doing injustice to the intelligence and good sense of Englishmen to blink<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[Pg 79]</span>
-the truth, which must be obvious to every soldier who has had experience
-of actual warfare.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Bodies of civilians, however courageous and well drilled, would be ill
-calculated to bear the hardships and fatigues of a soldier’s life; nor could
-they be relied upon, even as a matter of numbers: a rainy night or two in
-the open fields, and occasional short supplies of food, would thin their ranks
-prodigiously. It cannot be supposed that men of any class or nation,
-however brave, suddenly leaving comfortable homes and in-door pursuits,
-could endure that exposure and privation which is required of soldiers&mdash;men
-selected for their hardy constitutions and well-knit frames, and trained
-to implicit obedience, and habituated to act together. Composed of men of
-different descriptions and habits, without military discipline and organization,
-they would be wanting in cohesion and unity of action; or if each
-man or small party acted on individual impulse, their efforts would be
-unavailing to arrest the progress of an army advancing in solid masses, like
-some vast and complex machine animated by life and motion. Panics
-would be rife amongst them, and but few of the bravest even would stand
-when they heard the action gaining on their flanks and rear. Moreover,
-no general would know how to deal with numbers of them under his
-command, for fear of his dispositions being deranged by their proceedings;
-nor could any commissariat or other department be prepared to provide for
-so uncertain and fluctuating a body.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">A confidence in the efficiency of an armed population to resist the
-invasion of their country by regular armies has been created by reference
-to history; and the examples of the United States, of the Tyrol, of Spain,
-and others, have been triumphantly quoted; but an investigation into the
-circumstances of each case will show how greatly they all differ from such
-circumstances as would attend an attack upon England. In the cases cited,
-either the country was wild and mountainous, without communications and
-resources, the invading army small, or the contest greatly prolonged:
-rarely, if ever, has the invader been thoroughly checked <i>in his first progress</i>;
-but when forced to break into detachments and to act in small bodies, he
-has, by a spirited and energetic population, been harassed beyond his
-strength, and thus <i>eventually</i> forced to abandon the attempt.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">It being evident, then, that a mere rising in mass of the population
-would be unavailing, and even mischievous, leading to a lamentable waste
-of life, and encouraging the invaders in proportion as the defenders were
-discomfited, we have now to consider the best means of utilizing the present
-volunteer movement, which assumes for its basis some degree of organization
-and training.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Government prudently abstained from any interference with the movement,
-or from involving itself in any undertaking to organize the volunteers;
-for that would have led, not only to great and indefinite expenses, but to
-the abstracting of available resources from the established forces of the
-country, and also to other inconveniences, without, as yet, any reliable and
-adequate advantages in prospect. The movement being thus left to its own<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[Pg 80]</span>
-impulses, a large number of gentlemen, and others in sufficiently easy circumstances,
-determined to enrol themselves, in different localities, into self-supporting
-corps of riflemen. Their determination was most spirited and
-praiseworthy, and government, without pledging itself to any fixed or
-great amount of support, now affords, in many ways, aid and direction to
-the movement, without too minute an interference in its essentially
-voluntary arrangements.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Thus we have already many thousands of stout hearts, constituting an
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">impromptu</span></i> armed force, at little cost to government, advancing in organization
-and exercises, having arms and accoutrements, and above all, making
-preparation for thoroughly practising with the rifle&mdash;their strongest desire
-being to become first-rate shots. Here is a mass of most superb material;
-but we would earnestly impress upon the volunteers, and upon the country,
-not to rely too much upon stout hearts and good shots: much else is
-needful. It is quite a mistake to suppose that mere perfection in firing at
-a mark will make a good rifleman for the field. Volunteers, to be efficient
-in action, must form a component part of an army. Every part of an
-army in the field must be well in hand of the generals in command&mdash;light
-infantry and riflemen must be equal to all movements, in compact as well
-as dispersed order, and in the several combinations of the two. By this
-alone will they be really formidable, and by this alone will they acquire a
-confidence and steadiness which mere innate courage can never give.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">In order to act as riflemen and light infantry conjointly with regular
-troops, volunteers will require the highest possible training as soldiers.
-Ordinary infantry are put together and kept together, and&mdash;unlike those
-who must act more independently and with greater skill&mdash;are always under
-the eye and hand of the officer who directs the movement. In the confusion
-of action, and amidst inequalities of ground and varying circumstances,
-light troops are very much at a loss, until, by practice, they
-acquire a steadiness which is the result of a thorough knowledge of the
-business and of active exercise in it. By the term “acting as light infantry
-and riflemen” is not meant a system of irregular or guerilla warfare, for
-which it may be readily conceived that a volunteer force of citizens is
-entirely unfit.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">It is to be hoped that our volunteers will not listen to their flatterers
-who would persuade them that they will make efficient irregulars. No one
-who considers the composition of these bodies, and the habits and pursuits
-of the classes from which they spring, can seriously suppose that they
-would make anything of the kind. Neither the nature of this country, nor
-the occupations of its inhabitants, are favourable for an irregular system
-of warfare; nor would the rapid field operations consequent upon an
-invasion afford much opportunity for bringing irregular forces into play,
-even if we possessed the best in the world.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">In opposition to these views, it will be said that the universal employment
-of the rifle has effected a revolution in warfare, and that our riflemen,
-sheltered at a distance behind hedges and trees, would annihilate the enemy’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[Pg 81]</span>
-artillery and paralyze his operations. To this it may be answered that
-the enemy will employ riflemen for the same purpose, who will cover his
-artillery and produce an equal effect upon our own; that new systems of
-warfare are met with new systems of tactics, and that the advantage is
-always left with the highest-trained troops. In whatever order numbers
-of men may be brought into action, success will always attend that party
-which, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">cæteris paribus</span></i>, brings the greatest number to bear upon a given
-point; and this can be effected only by the organization and discipline of
-regular troops.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Let us hope, then, that the volunteers will earnestly practise those more
-complicated exercises which render light infantry the highest-trained body
-in an army. For this purpose they should, after being pretty well grounded
-in their business, give themselves up for a few weeks’ consecutive service
-at one of the great camps; this would give them a much better insight
-into the nature of the service, by which men of their intelligence would
-greatly profit. It is probable that many individuals in each corps would
-not be able to attend for such a long period; still, if there were a large
-party present, a tone of information on the real duties of a campaign
-would be instilled into the body as a whole, which would be most
-serviceable.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Another advantage which would attend this occasional service of the
-volunteers at the camps would consist in their gradually habituating themselves
-to long marches, and to carrying a knapsack; both of which are
-matters of deep importance for rendering efficient service in the field: for,
-as Marshal Saxe truly remarks, the success of an army depends more upon
-the judicious use made of the legs than of the arms of the soldiers.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Apprehensions have been entertained that our volunteers, composed, as
-they will be, of men accustomed to the comforts and conveniences of life,
-would, however animated by daring for fight, be disgusted not merely with
-the hardships, but (as compared with their usual habits) the indignities of a
-common soldier’s life, such as the hard fare, the necessary but menial
-occupations of cooking, the care and cleaning of their clothes and arms,
-and the discomfort of being huddled together in masses in tents, or houses,
-if they have the good fortune to obtain either. But they will, it is to be
-hoped, have well considered that such disagreeables are inevitable, and have
-made up their minds to bear with what will be, probably, the hardest task
-for them; considering, also, that it would hardly be for any long duration.
-They will recollect that on many parts of the Continent, young men of the
-easiest circumstances, and of rank and station in society, serve an apprenticeship
-in the regular army as privates, and submit to many of the discomforts
-of a private soldier’s life, even without the excitement of a state
-of warfare. There is more danger of the volunteers failing through want
-of physical hardihood to endure the fatigue of long marches, exposure to
-the weather, and the casualties of service in the field; and, therefore, preparatory
-service in a camp would be needful, not only to make them good
-soldiers, but to test their powers of endurance: for it should be borne in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[Pg 82]</span>
-mind that a robust frame and strong constitution are essential to the efficiency
-of the soldier; and wanting these physical requisites, the best shot
-would soon become incapacitated, and consequently an incumbrance to the
-service.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">In some districts, the subscriptions raised for the general expenses of
-the volunteer corps are allowed to extend to aid the equipment of men of
-insufficient means to provide for themselves. This will have a most beneficial
-effect; for such men will mostly be of a hardy class and accustomed
-to muscular activity or out-door occupations; they will be selected because
-they possess the proper qualifications; and many of them subsequently,
-with all their military acquirements, may join the established army. In
-proportion as this system shall be extended, will the advantages resulting
-from the volunteer system be increased.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Another very beneficial effect might be produced&mdash;and will probably
-arise out of the spirit of the rifle corps&mdash;in the establishment of rifle clubs
-for the practice of rifle-shooting as a recreation, with other out-door sports
-and games; more especially if these can be encouraged, so as to become
-general among that class of young men from which recruits are obtained
-for the army. Whatever may have been said against too much faith being
-placed in good marksmen, as the <i>only</i> essential attribute for our defenders,
-most indisputably that army which, equally well regulated in other points,
-shall be much superior generally in the art of rifle-shooting, will have an
-enormous advantage over its opponent; and even in a greater degree than
-is usually supposed.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">There is one class of volunteers, the formation of which will be attended
-with unexceptionable advantages; and that is localized bodies on the coast
-for service near their own homes. These may be either artillery or
-infantry, or better still, both combined: that is, infantry accustomed to
-exercise in the service of guns in battery. They will be always at their
-homes, and at their habitual occupations, till the period of action shall arrive;
-and a very few hours of occasional evening exercise will be sufficient,
-particularly during peace time, to afford a basis of organization for
-bodies which may be then rapidly made very efficient during war. As
-their service will be chiefly in batteries, or in fortified posts&mdash;or if in
-the open field, only in greatly superior numbers, and within confined
-limits, to oppose desultory landings&mdash;they will not need the field equipment,
-nor that refined knowledge and practice so necessary in every
-part of an army in a campaign. Their dress may be of a plain description,
-such as an artisan’s or gamekeeper’s jacket, and a foraging cap, which,
-though of some uniform pattern, may be suitable for ordinary wear. By
-such means, our coasts may be powerfully protected from any but very
-formidable efforts against them, at the smallest expense and waste of
-resources; and at the same time, these bodies will supply the place of
-regular troops, for which they will form an efficient substitute.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">In advocating the expediency of rendering the volunteer system attractive
-among the labouring classes, as, generally speaking, the most robust<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[Pg 83]</span>
-and hardy portion of the population, we must not be considered as implying
-any doubt of their thorough good feeling in the cause; it is absolutely
-necessary to stimulate, by some substantial recompence or boon, the
-exertions of those who are living, as it were, from hand to mouth, and
-on the smallest means. The inducement may be very moderate; still
-it should be such as to make the service in some degree popular and
-advantageous, and cause men who may be rejected or discharged to feel
-it as a punishment or misfortune.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Whatever may be said in the way of general considerations affecting
-the volunteer system, will admit of exceptions. Thus many of the difficulties
-in the way of the efficiency of volunteer corps for service in the
-field will be greatly lessened in the case of those which may be chiefly
-composed of young men of active habits, and not yet settled in life:
-such as university corps, who would, without doubt, display a degree of
-hardihood, spirit, and intelligence not to be surpassed by any troops.
-And so with regard to the local bodies. Such corps as the dockyard
-volunteers, at all those great establishments, public and private, should be
-replaced on an improved system;&mdash;a system which should avoid expense
-and encroachment on a valuable part of their time, which were the failings
-of their original organization, and occasioned their being broken up.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The noble spirit which originated the volunteer movement is one of
-which the nation may justly feel proud; it exhibits and fosters a patriotic
-and military spirit in the country, which will render us more fit than any
-other people to cope with a powerful enemy. The moral effect of this
-national movement will influence other countries; it will dissipate the
-erroneous idea that the English are only a trading, and not a warlike
-people, and make them more cautious of attacking us.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">In actual service, the volunteers will be valuable behind works; thus
-releasing a corresponding number of the regular troops from garrison
-service: but it cannot be too strongly impressed upon them, that unless
-they will submit to the necessary training as soldiers, and are complete in
-organization as infantry, no general in the world will have any confidence
-in them as a field force. The occasional embodiment of our volunteers at
-some of the great camps, as before recommended, would appear the most
-available means of training them for general service. It would also
-have another good effect, by demonstrating to many who are now carried
-away by their enthusiasm, how far they may be really calculated or
-prepared for the necessary trials and sacrifices incidental upon taking the
-field in the emergency. It will then be perceived by many that their
-age, want of physical stamina, or inability to dispense with habitual
-comforts which may be absolutely necessary to them, would render them
-totally unequal to the task they would willingly undertake. It would be
-far better that these should be weeded from the field corps of volunteers,
-and not remain to give a false appearance of their strength for actual
-service.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Lastly, there may be some who, on reflection, must be aware that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[Pg 84]</span>
-certain family ties, or private concerns, may imperatively forbid their
-joining the service at the last moment, and it would be far better that
-they should withdraw betimes from the engagement. For it should be
-borne in mind that these bodies are <i>volunteers</i>, in the strictest sense of the
-term; their presence or continuance in the field cannot be constrained.
-The effort to bear all the trials and hardships of a campaign requires a
-patience and endurance which will yield, even where there is thorough
-ardour in the cause, and great personal courage, unless supported by
-physical strength. The Volunteer Corps is a service in which the country
-must trust entirely to the honour of the individuals composing it; and
-certainly, those who shall stand the test will be peculiarly entitled to the
-gratitude of the nation.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">But while deprecating the employment in the field of any volunteers
-who are not hardy and trained soldiers, or who have households to protect
-and business to attend to, we must not be supposed to recommend the
-withdrawal from the ranks of all who are not available for actual service
-with regular troops: far from it. There is not a man who has been
-drilled as a volunteer but may be serviceable to the community in a
-variety of ways at home, by supplying the place of regular soldiers in
-mounting guard as sentries, acting as “orderlies” for transmitting orders
-between the government officers and head-quarters, as assistants in the
-hospital service, as extra clerks in the commissariat and other departments,
-and in serving as a military police. Indeed good service might
-be rendered to the country by gentlemen of character, ability, and intelligence,
-sufficiently <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">au fait</span></i> to the business of a soldier to execute with
-military precision and promptitude such duties as would not involve any
-greater amount of fatigue and exposure than a man of average health
-and strength could sustain without injury: they would form a bodyguard,
-composed of fathers of families and the younger and less robust of
-the volunteers, for the protection of their homes and maintaining the
-peace of cities and towns; and competent to fill offices of trust in connection
-with the military and civil authorities. The country would thus derive the
-full benefit of the services of every volunteer in the kingdom; and no man
-who had entered the ranks but would have the satisfaction of knowing that
-he was serving his Queen and Country in the most effective way.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak oe" id="A_Man_of_Letters_of_the_Last_Generation">A Man of Letters of the Last Generation.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>There are fashions in books, as there are in the cut of clothes, or the
-building of houses; and if from the great library of our race we take down
-the representative volumes, we shall find that successive ages differ almost as
-much as the several countries of the world. The one half of the century
-scarcely knows what the other half has done, save through its lasting works,
-among which books alone possess the gift of speech. Yet the guild of literature
-properly knows no bounds of space or time. If the tricks of craft like
-those of society belong to the passing day, literature has been, beyond all
-other human influences, enduring and continuous in the main current of its
-spirit; and each period has been the stronger if it has recognized so much
-of its possessions as was inherited from its predecessor, including the
-power to conquer more. A powerful sense of brotherhood clings to all the
-veritable members of the fraternity, whose highest diploma is posthumous;
-and we cannot see the lingering representatives of a past day depart,
-without feeling that one of the great family has gone. A writer whom we
-have lost in the year just closed peculiarly associated past and present, by
-his own hopeful work for “progress” towards the future, and his affectionate
-lingering with the past, and above all by the strong personal feeling which
-he brought to his work. <span class="smcap">Leigh Hunt</span> belonged essentially to the earlier
-portion of the nineteenth century; but, born in the year when Samuel
-Johnson died, living among the old poets, and labouring to draw forth the
-spirit which the first half has breathed into the latter half of the century,
-he may be said to have been one of those true servitors of the library who
-unite all ages with the one we live in. The representative man of a school
-gone by, in his history we read the introduction to our own.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Isaac, the father of Leigh Hunt, was the descendant of one of the oldest
-settlers in luxurious Barbadoes. He was sent to develop better fortunes
-by studying at college in Philadelphia, where he <i>un</i>settled in life; for,
-having obtained some repute as an advocate, and married the daughter of
-the stern merchant, Stephen Shewell, against her father’s pleasure, Isaac
-contumaciously opposed the sovereign people by espousing the side of
-royalty, and fled with broken fortunes to England. Here he found not
-much royal gratitude, much popularity as a preacher in holy orders&mdash;taken
-as a refuge from want,&mdash;but no preferment. With tutorships, and help
-from relatives, he managed to rub on; he sent Leigh, the first of his sons
-born in England, to the school of Christ Hospital, and he lived long
-enough to see him an established writer. Isaac was a man rather under
-than above the middle stature, fair in complexion, smoothly handsome,
-so engaging in address as to be readily and undeservedly suspected of
-insincerity, and in most things utterly unlike his son. His wife, Mary
-Shewell, a tall, slender woman, with Quaker breeding, a dark thoughtful
-complexion, a heart tender beyond the wont of the world, and a conscience<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[Pg 86]</span>
-tenderer still, contributed more than the father to mould the habits and
-feelings of the son. School and books did the rest. His earlier days, save
-during the long semi-monastic confinement of the Blue-coat School, were
-passed in uncertain alternations between the care-stricken home and the
-more luxurious houses of wealthier relatives and friends. In his time
-Christ Hospital was the very nursery for a scholarly scholar. It was
-divided into the commercial, the nautical, and the grammar schools; in all,
-the scholars had hard fare, and much church service; and in the grammar
-school plenty of Greek and Latin. Leigh’s antecedents and school training
-destined him for the church; a habit of stammering, which disappeared as
-he grew up, was among the adverse accidents which reserved him for the
-vocation to which he was born&mdash;Literature. But before he left the unsettled
-roof of his parents, the youth had been to other schools besides
-Christ Hospital. His father had been a royalist flying from infuriated
-republicans, and doomed to learn in the metropolitan country the common
-mistrust of kings. He left America a lawyer, to become a clergyman here;
-and entered the pulpit a Church of England-man, to become, after the mild
-example of his wife, a Universalist. Born after his mother had suffered
-from the terrors of the revolution, and a severe attack of jaundice, Leigh
-inherited an anxious, speculative temperament; to be the sport of unimaginative
-brothers, who terrified him by personating the hideous “Mantichora,”
-about which he had tremblingly read and talked, and of schoolfellows,
-with their ghostly traditions and rough, summary, practical satire.
-He had been made acquainted with poverty, yet familiarized to the sight
-of ease and refined luxury. His father, if “socially” inclined, yet read
-eloquently and critically; his mother read earnestly, piously, and charitably;
-reading was the business of his school, reading was his recreation;
-and at the age of fifteen, he threw off his blue coat, a tall stripling, with
-West Indian blood, a Quaker conscience, and a fancy excited rather than
-disciplined by his scholastic studies, to put on the lax costume of the day,
-and be tried in the dubious ordeal of its laxer customs.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">His severest trial arose from the vanities, rather than the vices to
-which such a youth would be exposed. He had already been sufficiently
-“in love,”&mdash;now with the anonymous sister of a schoolfellow, next
-with his fair cousin Fanny, then with the enchanting Almeria,&mdash;to be
-shielded from the worst seductions that can beset a youth; and he was
-early engaged to the lady whom he married in 1809. But the vanities
-beset him in a shape of unwonted power. The stripling, whose essays the
-terrible Boyer, of the Blue-coat School, had crumpled up, became the
-popular young author of published poems, and not much later the stern
-critic of the <i>News</i>, whose castigations made actors wince and playwrights
-launch prologues at him. Thenceforward the vicissitudes of his life, save
-in the inevitable vicissitudes of mortality, were professional rather than
-personal; though he always threw his personality into his profession. He
-tried a clerkship under his brother Stephen, an attorney; and a clerkship
-in the War Office, under the patronage of the dignified Mr. Addington;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[Pg 87]</span>
-but finally he left the desk, legal or official, for the desk literary, to devote
-himself to the <i>Examiner</i>, set up in 1808 with his brother John. He went
-to prison for two years in 1813, rather than forfeit his consistency as a
-political writer. It was as a vindicator of liberal principles in politics,
-sociology (word then unused), and art, that he attracted the friendship of
-Byron and Shelley; it was to accomplish the literary speculation of the
-<i>Liberal</i> that he set out for Italy in 1821; it was to study Italy and the
-Italians, with a view to “improve” that and other “subjects,” that he
-stopped in Italy till the autumn of 1825. He returned to England to try
-his fortune with books in prose and verse, in periodicals of his own or
-others’; and it was in the midst of unrelinquished work that he placidly
-laid himself down to sleep in August, 1859,&mdash;his last words of anxiety
-being for Italy and her enlarging hopes, his latest breath uttering inquiries
-and messages of affection. This is essentially a literary life; but it is
-given to a literature in which there <i>is</i> life,&mdash;for Leigh Hunt, although he
-dwelled and passed his days in the library, was no “book-worm,” divorced
-from human existence, its natural instincts and affections. On the contrary,
-he carried into his study a large heart and a strong pulse; to him the books
-spoke in the voice of his fellow-men, audible from the earliest ages, and
-he loved to be followed into his retreat by friends from the outer world.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Leigh Hunt certainly was not driven to this little-broken retirement
-by the want of qualities which are attractive in society, or by the tastes
-that render society attractive; but under the force of remarkable contradictions
-in his character, he was often fain to waive what he desired and
-could easily have&mdash;“letting <i>I would not</i> wait upon <i>I may</i>,” with an
-apparent caprice most exasperating to the bystander. He professed readiness
-for “whatever is going forward,” seemed eager to meet any approaching
-pleasure; and then hung back with a coy, reluctant, anxious delay, that
-forbore its own satisfaction altogether. Probably this apparent contradiction
-may be traced to his origin and nurture. According to all
-evidence respecting his immediate progenitors, he was little of a Hunt,
-save in his gaiety and avowed love of “the pleasurable.” His natural
-energy, which showed itself in a robust frame, a powerful voice, a great
-capacity for endurance, and a strong will, seems to have been inherited
-from Stephen Shewell, the stern, headstrong, and implacable. From the
-Bickleys, possibly&mdash;the gallant Knight Banneret of King William’s Irish
-wars will pardon the doubt&mdash;his mother transmitted her own material tendency
-to an over-conscientious, reflective, hesitating temperament, which
-drew back from any action not manifestly and imperatively dictated by duty.
-The son showed all these contradictory traits even in his aspect and bearing.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">He was tall rather than otherwise,&mdash;five feet ten inches and a half
-when measured for the St. James’s Volunteers; though, in common with
-men whose length is in the body rather than the legs, his height diminished
-as he advanced in life. He was remarkably straight and upright in his
-carriage, with a short, firm step, and a cheerful, almost dashing approach,&mdash;smiling,
-breathing, and making his voice heard in little inarticulate ejaculations<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[Pg 88]</span>
-as he met a friend, in an irrepressible satisfaction at the encounter
-that not unfrequently conveyed high gratification to the arriver who was
-thus greeted. He had straight black hair, which he wore parted in the
-centre; a dark but not pale complexion; features compounded between
-length and a certain irregularity of outline, characteristic of the American
-mould; black eyebrows, firmly marking the edge of a brow, over which
-was a singularly upright, flat, white forehead, and under which beamed a
-pair of eyes dark, brilliant, reflecting, gay, and kind, with a certain look of
-observant humour, that suggested an idea of what is called slyness when it
-is applied to children or girls; for he had <i>not</i> the aspect given to him in
-one of his portraits, of which he said that “the fellow looked as if he had
-stolen a tankard.” He had a head massive and tall, and larger than most
-men’s,&mdash;Byron, Shelley, and Keats wore hats which he could not put on;
-but it was not out of proportion to the figure, its outlines being peculiarly
-smooth and devoid of “bumps.” His upper lip was long, his mouth large
-and hard in the flesh; his chin retreating and gentle like a woman’s. His
-sloping shoulders, not very wide, almost concealed the ample proportions
-of his chest; though that was of a compass which not every pair of arms
-could span. He looked like a man cut out for action,&mdash;a soldier; but he
-shrank from physical contest, telling you that his sight was short, and that
-he was “timid.” We shall understand that mistaken candour better when
-we have examined his character a little further. Yet he did shrink from
-using his vigorous faculties, even in many ways. Nature had gifted
-him with an intense dramatic perception, an exquisite ear for music, and
-a voice of extraordinary compass, power, flexibility, and beauty. It extended
-from the C below the line to the F sharp above: there were no
-“passages” that he could not execute; the quality was sweet, clear, and
-ringing: he would equally have sung the music of <i>Don Giovanni</i> or
-<i>Sarastro</i>, of <i>Oroveso</i> or <i>Maometto Secondo</i>. Yet nature had not endowed
-him with some of the qualities needed for the practical musician,&mdash;he had
-no aptitude for mechanical contrivance, but faint enjoyment of power for its
-own sake. He dabbled on the pianoforte; delighted to repeat airs pleasing
-or plaintive; and if he would occasionally fling himself into the audacious
-revels of <i>Don Giovanni</i>, he preferred to be <i>Lindoro</i> or <i>Don Ottavio</i>; and
-still more, by the help of his falsetto, to dally with the tender treble of the
-<i>Countess</i> in <i>Figaro</i>, or <i>Polly</i> in <i>Beggars’ Opera</i>. This waiving of the potential,
-this preference for the lightsome and tender, ran through all his character,&mdash;save
-when duty bade him draw upon his sterner resources; and then
-out came the inflexibility of the Shewell and the unyielding determination
-of the Hunts. But as soon as the occasion passed, the manner passed with
-it; and the man whose solemn, clear-voiced indignation had made the very
-floor and walls vibrate was seen tenderly and blandly extenuating the
-error of his persecutor and gaily confessing to a community of mistake.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">While he was yet at school, Hunt was pronounced by one of his schoolfellows
-a “fool for refining”&mdash;that is, one who was a fool in his judgment
-through a hair-splitting anxiety to be precise. A boy all his life, this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[Pg 89]</span>
-leading foible of his boyhood attended him throughout. He has been
-likened to Hamlet,&mdash;only it was a Hamlet who was not a prince, but a
-hard-working man. The defect was increased in Leigh Hunt, as it
-evidently was in the prince, by a certain imperfection in understanding,
-appreciating, or thoroughly mastering the material, tangible, physical part
-of nature. This, again, is inconsistent with his own account of himself,
-but it will be confirmed by a close critical scrutiny of his writings. Over-sensitive,
-he was exquisitely conscious of such physical perceptions as he
-had. He was passionately fond of music, which he took to as we have seen.
-He was keenly impressed by painting and by colours,&mdash;which he defined
-with uncertainty, unless they were, what he liked them to be, very intense.
-He revelled in the aspect of the country,&mdash;but needed literary, poetic, or
-personal association, or habit, to help the appreciation of the landscape.
-His animation, his striking appearance, his manly voice, its sweetness and
-flexibility, the exhaustless fancy to which it gave utterance, his almost
-breathlessly tender manner in saying tender things, his eyes deep, bright,
-and genial, with a dash of cunning, his delicate yet emphatic homage,&mdash;all
-made him a “dangerous” man among women;&mdash;and he shrank back
-from the danger, the quickest to take alarm; confessing that “to err is
-human,” as if he <i>had</i> erred in any but the most theoretical or imaginative
-sense! Remind him of his practical virtue, and, to disprove your too
-favourable construction, he would give you a sermon on the sins of the
-fancy, hallowed by quotations from the Bible&mdash;of which he was as much
-master as any clergyman&mdash;and illustrated by endless quotations from the
-poets in all languages, with innumerable biographical anecdotes of the
-said poets, to prove the fearful peril of the first step; and <i>also</i> to prove
-that, though men, they were not bad men;&mdash;that it is not for us to cast
-the first stone, and that, probably, if they had been different, their poetry
-would have suffered, to the grievous loss of the library and mankind.</p>
-
-<p class="pt pb0">He inculcated the study of minor pleasures with so much industry,
-that his writings have caused him to be taken for a minor voluptuary.
-His special apparatus for the luxury consisted in some old cloak to put about
-his shoulders when cold&mdash;which he allowed to slip off while reading or
-writing; in a fire&mdash;“to toast his feet”&mdash;which he let out many times in
-the day, with as many apologies to the servant for the trouble; and in a
-bill of fare, which he preposterously restricted for a fancied delicacy of
-stomach, and a fancied poison in everything agreeable, and which he could
-scarcely taste for a natural dulness of palate. Unable to perceive the
-smell of flowers, he habitually strove to imagine it. The Epicurean in
-theory was something like a Stoic in practice; and he would break off an
-“article” on the pleasures of feasting to ease his hunger, literally, with a
-supper of bread; turning round to enjoy by proxy, on report, the daintier
-food which he had provided for others. Eyeing the meat in another’s plate,
-he would quote Peter Pindar&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“On my life, I could turn glutton,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On such pretty-looking mutton;”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[Pg 90]</span></p>
-<p class="pa0">but would still, with the relish of Lazarillo de Tormes, stick to his own
-“staff of life,” and quaff his water, jovially repeating after Armstrong,
-“Nought like the simple element dilutes.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Now, most excellent reader, are you in something of a condition to
-understand the man’s account of his own failings&mdash;his “improvidence”
-and his “timidity.” He had no grasp of things material; but exaggerating
-his own defects, he so hesitated at any arithmetical effort, that he could
-scarcely count. He has been seen unable to find 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> in a drawer full of
-half-crowns and shillings, since he could not see the “sixpence.” Hence his
-stewardship was all performed by others. He laboured enormously,&mdash;making
-fresh work out of everything he did; for he would not mention
-anything, however parenthetically, without “verifying” it. Hence it is
-true that he had scarcely time for stewardship, unless he had neglected
-his work and wages as a master-workman. He saw nothing until it had
-presented itself to him in a sort of literary, theoretical aspect, and hence
-endowed his friends, all round, with fictitious characters founded on fact.
-One was the thrifty housewife, another the steady man of business, a third
-the poetic enthusiast&mdash;and so on. And he <i>acted</i> on these estimates, until
-sometimes he found out his mistake, and confessed that he “had been
-deceived.” The discovery was sometimes as imaginary as the original
-estimate, and friends, whose sterling qualities he could not overrate, have
-seen him, for the discovery of his mistake in regard to some fancied grace,
-avert his eye in cold “disappointment.” He made the same supposititious
-discoveries and estimates with himself. His mother had the jaundice
-before he was born; he had unquestionably a tendency to bilious affections;
-in the Greek poet’s account of Hercules and the Serpents, the more
-timid, because mortal, child, who is aghast at the horrid visitors sent by
-the relentless Juno, is called, as Leigh Hunt translated the oft-repeated
-quotation, “the extremely bilious Iphiclus;” and being bilious, Leigh
-Hunt set himself down as “timid.” He had probably felt his heart beat
-at the approach of danger, been startled by a sudden noise, or hesitated
-“to snuff a candle with his fingers,” which Charles the Fifth said would
-make any man know fear. Yet he had braved persecution in the refusal
-to fag at school; was an undaunted though not skilful rider; a swimmer
-not unacquainted with drowning risks; undismayed, except for others,
-when passing the roaring torrent at the broad ford,&mdash;when braving shipwreck
-in the British Channel, or the thunder-hurricane in the Mediterranean;
-he instantly confronted the rustic boors who challenged him on
-the Thames, or in the Apennines, and stood unmoved to face the sentence
-of a criminal court, though the sentence was to be the punishment he
-most dreaded&mdash;the prison.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Such was the character of the man who came from school to be the
-critic, first of the drama, then of literature and politics; and then to be a
-workman in the schools where he had criticized. He brought to his
-labours great powers, often left latent, and used only in their superficial
-action; a defective perception of the tangible part of the subject; an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[Pg 91]</span>
-imagination active, but overrating its own share in the business; an impulsive
-will, checked by an over-scrupulous, over-conscientious habit of
-“refining;” a nice taste, and an overwhelming sympathy with every form
-and aspect of human enjoyment, suffering, or aspiration. His public conduct,
-his devotion to “truth,” whether in politics or art, won him admiration
-and illustrious friendships. In a society of many severed circles he formed
-one centre, around which were gathered Lamb, Ollier, Barnes, Mitchell,
-Shelley, Keats, Byron, Hazlitt, Blanchard, Forster, Carlyle, and many more,
-departed or still living; some of them centres of circles in which Leigh
-Hunt was a wanderer, but all of them, in one degree or other, attesting
-their substantial value for his character. They influenced him, he influenced
-them, and through them the literature and politics of the century,
-more largely, perhaps, than any one of them alone. Let us see, then,
-what it was that he did.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Even in the <i>News</i> of 1805, when he was barely of age, and when he
-wrote with the dashing confidence of a youth wielding the combined ideas
-of Sam Johnson and Voltaire, the “damned boy,” as Kemble called him,
-established a repute for cultivation, consistency, taste, and independence;
-and he originated a style of contemporary criticism unknown to the newspaper
-press. In other words, he brought the standards of criticism which
-had before been confined to the lecture of academies or the library, into
-the daily literature which aids in shaping men’s judgments as they rise.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We have seen how, under a name borrowed from the Tory party, the
-<i>Examiner</i> was established, with little premeditation, a literary ambition, and
-the hope of realizing a modest wage for the work done. It found literature,
-poetry especially, sunk to the feeblest, tamest, and most artificial of graces,&mdash;the
-reaction upon the long-felt influence left by the debauchery of
-the Stuarts and the vulgarer coarseness of the early Georges. It found
-English monarchs and statesmen again forgetting the great lessons of the
-British constitution, with the press slavishly acquiescing. In 1808, an
-Irish Major had a “case” against the Horse Guards, of most corrupt and
-illicit favouritism: the <i>Examiner</i> published the case, and sustained it. In
-1809, a change of ministry was announced: the <i>Examiner</i> hailed “the
-crowd of blessings that might be involved in such a change;” adding, “Of
-all monarchs, indeed, since the Revolution, the successor of George the
-Third will have the finest opportunity of becoming nobly popular.” In
-1812, on St. Patrick’s day, a loyal band of guests significantly abstained
-from paying the usual courtesy to the toast of the Prince Regent, and
-coughed down Mr. Sheridan, who tried to speak up for his royal and
-forgetful friend. A writer in a morning paper supplied the omitted homage
-in a poem more ludicrous for its wretched verse than for the fulsome strain
-in which it called the Prince the “Protector of the Arts,” the “Mæcenas
-of the Age,” the “Glory of the People,” a “Great Prince,” attended by
-Pleasure, Honour, Virtue, Truth, and other illustrious vassals. The
-<i>Examiner</i> showed up this folly by simply turning it into English, and in
-plain language describing the position and popular estimate of the Prince.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[Pg 92]</span>
-For all these various acts the <i>Examiner</i> was prosecuted, with various
-fortunes; but in the last case it was fined 1,000<i>l.</i>, and its editor and
-publisher, the brothers Leigh and John Hunt, were sentenced to two
-years’ imprisonment. The <i>Examiner</i> was no extravagant or violent
-paper; its writing was pretty nearly of the standard that would be required
-now for style, tone, and sentiment; but what would now be a matter
-of course in cultivated style, elevated tone, and independent sentiment,
-was then supposed to be not open to writers unprotected by privilege
-of Parliament. Not that the paper stood alone. Other writers, both in
-town and country, vied with it in independence; it excelled chiefly,
-perhaps, in the literary finish which Leigh Hunt imparted to journalism;
-but it was the more conspicuous for that finish. Its boldness won it high
-esteem. Offers came from “distinguished” quarters, on the one side, to bribe
-its silence for the Royal Horse Guards and its peccadilloes; on the other, to
-supply the proprietors with subscription, support, and retaliatory evidence.
-The <i>Examiner</i> equally declined all encroachments on its complete independence,
-which was carried to a pitch of exclusiveness. This conduct
-told. The journal was thought dangerous to the régime&mdash;it was prosecuted,
-and its success was only the greater. The Court ceased to be what
-it had been, and the political system changed: the press of England
-became generally what the <i>Examiner</i> was.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The <i>Reflector</i> was a quarterly journal, based on the <i>Examiner</i> and its
-corps. Its more literary portion in its turn laid the basis for the <i>Indicator</i>,
-in which Leigh Hunt designed, with due deference, to revive the essays of the
-old <i>Spectator</i> and <i>Tatler</i>. The grand distinction was, that in lieu of mere
-literary recreation, like the illustrious work of Addison, Steele, and Swift,
-it more directly proposed to <i>indicate</i> the sources of pleasurable association
-and æsthetical improvement. In the <i>Reflector</i>, the <i>Indicator</i>, <i>Tatler</i>, and
-subsequent works of the same class, Leigh Hunt was assisted by Lamb,
-Barnes [afterwards editor of the <i>Times</i>], Aikin, Mitchell [Aristophanes],
-Keats, Shelley, Hazlitt, and Egerton Webbe,&mdash;the last cut short in a career
-rendered certain by his accomplishments, his music, his wit, and his extraordinary
-command of language as an instrument of thought. As in Robin
-Hood’s band, each man could beat his master at some one art, or perhaps
-more; but none excelled him in telling short stories, with a simplicity, a
-pathos, and a force that had their prototype less in the tales of Steele and
-Addison, than in the romantic poets of Italy. Few essayists have equalled,
-or approached, Leigh Hunt in the combined versatility, invention,
-and finish of his miscellaneous prose writings; and few, indeed, have
-brought such varied sympathies to call forth the sympathies of the
-reader&mdash;and always to good purpose,&mdash;in favour of kindness, of reflection,
-of natural pleasures, of culture, and of using the available resources of
-life. He used to boast that the <i>Indicator</i> laid the foundation for the “two-penny
-trash” which assumed a more practical and widely popular form
-under Charles Knight’s enterprise. It has had a host of imitators, but is
-still special, and keeps its place in the library.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[Pg 93]</span></p>
-
-<p class="pt">Of his one novel, <i>Sir Ralph Esher</i>, suffice it to say, that he had desired
-to make it a sort of historical literary essay,&mdash;a species of unconcealed
-forgery, after the manner of a more cultivated and critical Pepys; and that
-the bookseller persuaded him to make it a novel:&mdash;of his dramatic works,&mdash;although
-he had an ambition to be counted among British dramatists, and
-had a discriminating dramatic taste,&mdash;that he combined, with the imperfect
-grasp of the tangible, a positive indifference to dramatic literature. The
-dramatic work which is reputed to be the most interesting of his compositions
-in this style, the <i>Prince’s Marriage</i>, is still unacted and unpublished.</p>
-
-<p class="pt pb0">But in regard to the veritable British Parnassus, he had solid work to
-do, and he did it. Poetry amongst us had sunk to the lowest grade. Leigh
-Hunt found the mild Hayley, and the mechanical Darwin, occupying the
-field, Pope the accredited model, and he revolted against the copybook
-versification, the complacent subserviency and mean moralities of the
-muse in possession. He had read earnestly and extensively in the classics,
-ancient and English; he carried with him to prison the <i>Parnaso Italiano</i>,
-a fine collection of Italian poetical writers, in fifty-two volumes; and he
-was deeply imbued with the spirit which he found common to the poetical
-republic of all ages. He selected the episode of Paolo and Francesca,
-whom Dante places in the <i>Inferno</i>, and whose history was diligently hunted
-up to tell in the <i>Story of Rimini</i>. In it Leigh Hunt insisted on breaking
-the set cadence for which Pope was the professed authority, as he broke
-through the set morals which had followed in reaction upon the licence of
-many reigns. He shocked the world with colloquialisms in the heroic
-measure, and with extenuations of the fault committed by the two lovers
-against the law matrimonial. The offence, too, was perpetrated by a writer
-condemned to prison for bearding the constituted authorities. The poem
-and its fate were characteristic of the man and his position in poetical
-literature. The work was designed as a picture of Italy, and a tale of the
-natural affections rebelling against a tyranny more corrupt than the licence
-which it claimed to check. But when he wrote it, the poet had not been
-in Italy; and afterwards, with habitual anxiety to be “right,” he corrected
-many mistakes in the scenery&mdash;such as “the smoke goes dancing from the
-cottage trees,” where there are no such cottages as he imagined, and smoke
-is no feature in the landscape. He also restored the true historical conclusion,
-and instead of a gentlemanly duel, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">comme il faut</span></i>, made the tale
-end in the fierce double murder by the husband. In its original shape,
-the <i>Story of Rimini</i> touched many a heart, and created more sensation for
-its bolder verse and nature than others which followed it; in its amended
-form it gained in truth to art and fact, and in force of verse and colouring.
-Leigh Hunt had not the sustained melody and pulpit morals of the Lake
-School; but he gave the example and encouragement to writers of still
-greater force and beauty. He vindicated human right against official
-wrong, and suffered imprisonment, and denunciation more bitter than that
-poured on Shelley, whose political vindications burst forth with such a
-torrent of eloquence and imagination in the <i>Revolt of Islam</i>. Leigh Hunt<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[Pg 94]</span>
-asserted the beauty of natural passion,&mdash;but he did it tenderly and
-obliquely, himself returning from the slightest taste of passion to “the
-domesticities,” half begging pardon for his hardihood, and thus by implication
-confessing his naughtiness; and all the while hinting at the delicate
-subject of his tale by circumstance, rather than following it to its full
-inspirations. The greater part of the <i>Story of Rimini</i> is scene-painting, as
-if it were told by some bystander in the street, or some topographical
-visitor of the place. In the scene where the lovers so dangerously and
-fatally fall to reading “Launcelot of the Lake,”&mdash;“<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">quel giorno non legemmo
-più avanti</span></i>”&mdash;the larger portion of the canto is devoted to a description of
-the garden. Leigh Hunt does not, as Keats did, describe the sickening
-passion that gave the <i>Lamia</i> so ghastly a sense of her own hated form,&mdash;nor
-does he, as in the <i>Lamia</i>, pursue the couple to the place where Love</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Hover’d and buzz’d his wings with fearful roar</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Above the lintel of their chamber door.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="pa0">If pharisaical critics discovered objectionable “tendencies” in passages&mdash;almost
-in the <i>omitted</i> passages of his writings&mdash;they could find no such impetuous
-and sublime argument as that to which the <i>Revolt of Islam</i> rises
-in the canto where “the meteor to its far morass returned;” nor such
-lines as show that a fair authoress, whose book has been “the rage” at
-Mudie’s, had been among the myriads of Shelley’s readers. But although
-hesitating himself to plunge into the impetuous torrent of passion, like
-the fowl mistrustful of its own fitness for so stormy waters, Leigh Hunt
-was the friend, instigator, and encourager of that rebellion of letters which
-in the earlier half of our age produced Keats and Shelley, and the poetical
-literature of the latter half of the nineteenth century.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Others improved upon the example, no doubt, and bore away the
-“<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">honores</span></i>.” At a late day, Lord John Russell obtained for Leigh Hunt a
-royal pension of £200 a year&mdash;a most welcome and gratefully acknowledged
-compensation of time and money torn from him in early years.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Leigh Hunt’s miscellaneous poems extend over a great variety of
-subjects, from the classic legend of <i>Hero and Leander</i>, to the mediæval
-fabliau of the <i>Gentle Armour</i>, and the satirical critique of the <i>Feast of the
-Poets</i>. This last was published early in the author’s maturer career; it is
-“in his second manner,” and he afterwards revised many of the dicta on
-contemporary writers which he placed in the mouth of the chairman on
-that festive occasion, Apollo. But it helped to loosen the trammels of
-conventionalism in verse. The <i>Gentle Armour</i>, although true to a modern
-refinement, is also true to the spirit of the days of chivalry; it relates, in
-straightforward language, how a knight who had refused the bidding of
-his mistress to defend a falsehood&mdash;not her own&mdash;is punished by receiving
-the most feminine of garments as his cognizance at a tournament; and
-how, wearing that <i>alone</i>, he takes in his own person a bloody and
-reproving vengeance for the slight, in the end winning both fight and lady.
-The subject was thought “indelicate” by some who were less refined than
-the author&mdash;some descendants, perchance, of the proverbial Peeping Tom.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[Pg 95]</span>
-The <i>Hero and Leander</i> is a flowing and vivid recital of the ancient tale.
-The three works form good specimens of the spirit as well as execution of
-Leigh Hunt’s poetical writings. Of some of his smaller pieces it may be
-said that they had become classic in his lifetime&mdash;such as the reverential
-sonnet “On the Lock of Milton’s Hair” which he possessed; the exquisite
-parental tenderness of the lines “To T. L. H., in Sickness;” and the
-grandly Christian exaltation of charity in his <i>Abou-ben-Adhem</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">As few men brought their personality more thoroughly into their
-writings, so few men, out of the bookworm pale aforesaid, were more
-thoroughly saturated with literature. He saw everything through books,
-or saw it dimly. Speaking of his return from Italy, he writes:&mdash;“I
-seemed more at home in England, even with Arcadian idealisms, than I
-had been in the land nearer their birthplace; for it was in England I first
-found them in books, and with England even my Italian books were more
-associated than with Italy itself.” And speaking of the <i>Parnaso Italiano</i>,
-he goes on:&mdash;“This book aided Spenser himself in filling my English
-walks with visions of gods and nymphs,&mdash;of enchantresses and magicians;
-for the reader might be surprised to know to what a literal extent such
-was the case.” He used to “envy” the “household waggon that one
-meets with in sequestered lanes” for its wanderings, but was daunted at
-the bare imagination of “parish objections” and raffish society; and so
-he ever recurred to “the stationary domesticities.” He failed in practical
-life, because he was not guided in it by literature. He could only
-apprehend so much of it as he found in the cyclopædia. On the other
-hand, he could render all that literature could give. His memory was
-marvellous; and to try him in history, biography, bibliography, or topography,
-was to draw forth an oral “article” on the topic in question.
-Ask him where was the Ouse, and he would tell you of all the rivers so
-called; what were the books on a given subject, and you had the list;
-“who was Colonel O’Kelly?” and you had a sketch of the colonel, of the
-horse “Eclipse,” of Epsom, and of horse-racing in general, as distinguished
-from the racing of the ancients or the modern riderless races of Italy&mdash;where,
-as in Florence, may still be seen a specimen of the biga sweeping
-round the meta “<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">fervidis evitata rotis</span></i>.” His conversation was an
-exhaustless <i>Curiosities of Literature</i>. The delighted visitor <i>read</i> his host,&mdash;but
-it was from a talking book, with cordial voice naturally pitched to
-every change of subject, animated gesture, sparkling eyes, and overflowing
-sympathy. In society Leigh Hunt was ever the perfect gentleman, not in
-the fashion, but always the scholar and the noble-minded man. But his
-diffidence was disguised, rather than removed, by his desire to agree with
-those around him, and to fall in with the humour of the hour. He was
-better known to his reader, either in his books, or, best of all, in his home,
-where familiarity tested his unfailing courtesy, daily intercourse brought
-forth the persevering goodness of his heart and conscience, and poverty did
-but fetch out the thorough-going generosity that not only “<i>would</i> share,”
-but did share the last crust.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak oe" id="The_Search_for_Sir_John_Franklin">The Search for Sir John Franklin.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="motto">(FROM THE PRIVATE JOURNAL OF AN OFFICER OF THE “FOX”)</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>The last of the Government expeditions in search of Franklin returned in
-1854, without bringing further intelligence than had been previously
-ascertained, namely, that the missing ships had spent their first winter,
-1845-46, at Beechey Island, and had departed thence without leaving a
-single record to say whence they came or in what direction they intended
-to explore in the following season.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The war with Russia engrossed the public attention, and the Admiralty
-determined that nothing more could be done for our missing sailors.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Franklin and his companions were pronounced to be dead, and the
-search to be closed. But many Arctic officers and private persons
-thought otherwise. By the extraordinary exertions of the previous expeditions
-the country to be searched had been reduced to a limited area in
-which the ships must be, if above water, and through which the crews
-must have travelled when they left their ships. Every other retreat from
-the Arctic Seas had been explored, and the Great Fish River alone
-remained unexamined.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Later in the same year (1854), Dr. Rae, the celebrated traveller for
-the Hudson Bay Company, who was endeavouring to ascertain the northern
-extreme of America, brought home intelligence, which he had obtained
-from the Esquimaux of Boothia, of forty white people having been seen
-upon the west coast of King William Land in the spring of 1850: that
-they were travelling southward, and that later in the same year it was
-supposed they had all died in the estuary of a large river, which Dr. Rae
-conjectured to be the Great Fish River.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">In 1855, the Hudson Bay Company, at the request of the Admiralty,
-sent an expedition, conducted by Mr. Anderson, to explore the Fish
-River. Mr. Anderson returned, having ascertained that a portion of the
-missing crews had been on Montreal Island, in the mouth of that river;
-but Mr. Anderson, without an interpreter, or the means of going beyond
-the island, could only gather the most meagre information by signs from
-the Esquimaux, and by a few relics found upon the land. Where the
-ships had been left, or what had become of the people, seemed as great a
-mystery as ever.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">It was then that Lady Franklin (who had already sent out three expeditions)
-urged again that the search should be continued, and that our
-countrymen should not thus be left to their fate; but although her appeal
-was backed by the most competent officers, the season of 1856 passed
-away without endeavours to clear up the mystery; and determining
-that another year should not be lost in vain entreaties, Lady Franklin once
-more undertook the responsibilities and the expenses of a final effort to
-rescue our long-lost sailors from their perhaps living death among the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[Pg 97]</span>Esquimaux, or to follow up their footsteps in their last journey upon earth,
-and to give to the world the scientific results of the expedition for which
-those gallant men had given up their lives.</p>
-
-<div class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
-<a rel="nofollow" href="images/i_096a2_b.jpg">
-<img class="img100" src="images/i_096a2.jpg" alt="DEPARTURE OF EXPLORING PARTIES FROM PORT KENNEDY" />
-</a>
-</div>
-
-<div class="hidescreen">
-<img class="img100" src="images/i_096a2.jpg" alt="DEPARTURE OF EXPLORING PARTIES FROM PORT KENNEDY" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pt">In the spring of 1857 Lady Franklin commenced preparations for the
-contemplated expedition. She was supported by some of the most distinguished
-Arctic officers and scientific men, and the friends of Sir John
-Franklin, among whom were Sir Roderick Murchison, General Sabine,
-Captain Collinson, and many others.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">To Captain M‘Clintock was offered the command; and he who had
-served in three previous expeditions, and to whom are principally due the
-results of the extraordinary journeys over the ice that have been made
-during the search for Franklin, cheerfully accepted the appointment, as,
-in his own words, being the post of honour.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The next thing was to seek a suitable vessel, and fortunately the <i>Fox</i>
-was in the market. Built for a yacht of some 180 tons register, with
-auxiliary steam-power applied to a lifting screw, the <i>Fox</i> appeared in
-every way adapted for the service. She was at once purchased, and
-the necessary alterations and fortifying commenced; and such was the
-feeling of confidence in Captain M‘Clintock’s sincerity of purpose, his
-daring and determination, combined with eminent talent, and every qualification
-for command, that numbers sought the honour of serving with
-him. The few who were so fortunate as to be selected were soon appointed
-in their different capacities, and by the exertions of Lady Franklin and
-Captain M‘Clintock everything that could possibly conduce to the comfort
-or recreation of the ship’s company was supplied, and the <i>Fox</i> was ready
-for sea by the end of June.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We intended first to touch at some of the Danish settlements in Greenland,
-to purchase sledge-dogs; then to proceed to Beechey Island, and
-there to fill up stores from the depôt left by Sir E. Belcher. We were
-next to endeavour to sail down Peel Sound (supposed to be a strait), but
-failing by that channel, to try down Regent’s Inlet, and by the supposed
-Bellot Straits to reach the neighbourhood of the Great Fish River; and
-having in the summer of 1857 and following spring searched the adjacent
-country, we should return home either westward by Behring’s Straits, or
-by our outward route, according to circumstances. If we failed to reach
-King William Land or the Fish River, it was our intention to winter as
-near the desired position as possible, and by means of sledge journeys over
-the ice, to complete the search in the following spring. We hoped to
-finish the work in one year; but in this we were to be disappointed, as
-the narrative will show.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We left Aberdeen on July 1, 1857; and after a favourable run across
-the Atlantic, we made our first acquaintance with the Arctic Seas when
-near the meridian of Cape Farewell, by falling in with the drift-wood
-annually brought from Arctic Asia by the great current known as the
-Spitzbergen current&mdash;the shattered and mangled state of these pine logs
-bearing evidence of their long water-and-ice-borne drift. This great<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[Pg 98]</span>
-Arctic current brings masses of ice from the Spitzbergen seas, at seasons
-completely filling up the fiords, harbours, and indentations on the south
-coast of Greenland, and often in a pack extending for 100 miles southward
-of Cape Farewell. A whole fleet of whale ships were, in June, 1777,
-beset in lat. 76° north, and nearly in the meridian of Spitzbergen, and were
-drifted southward by the current, until one by one they were crushed.
-The last and only surviving ship arrived in October, in latitude 61°, in
-Davis’ Straits, and the crew escaped to the land near Cape Farewell, 116
-in number, out of 450 men, who only a few short months before were
-looking forward to a happy return to their homes.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Late in the summer, the weather mild and the nights short, and with
-steam-power at command, we had no occasion for much anxiety about this
-ice, but determined to push direct for Frederickshaab, and with a fair wind
-we steered to pass within sight of Cape Farewell. On the night of the
-13th July, we were becalmed, and on the following day we steamed
-slowly to the north-westward, amidst countless numbers of sea-birds. At
-daylight the coast of Greenland showed out in all its wild magnificence.
-Cape Farewell bore north 45° east, distant twenty-five miles; but from
-the peculiar formation of the adjacent land the actual cape is difficult to
-distinguish. Hitherto we had not seen the Spitzbergen ice; and we hoped
-that we might follow the coast round to Frederickshaab without obstruction;
-but in the course of the forenoon a sudden fall in the temperature of the sea,
-with a haziness in the atmosphere to the northward, indicated our approach
-to ice. Straggling and water-washed pieces were soon met with, and in
-the evening the distant murmur of the sea, as it broke upon the edge of
-ice-floes, warned us of our being near to a pack.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We made but little progress during the two following days, the winds
-being from the northward, and a dense ice-fog rolling down from the pack.
-On the 17th, Frederickshaab bearing N. 28° E., distant fifty miles, we determined
-upon endeavouring to push through the pack; and after being at
-times completely beset, and with a constant thick fog, we escaped into the
-inshore water, with a few slight rubs, having been carried by the drifting
-body of ice nearly thirty miles northward of our port. We sounded upon
-the Tallert bank; and on the fog lifting, the great glacier of Frederickshaab
-was revealed to us, and we bore away for the harbour, which we reached
-on the 19th. We had a little difficulty at first in making out the entrance
-to Frederickshaab; but a native kyack coming out to meet us, we were
-soon escorted in by a fleet of these small canoes.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We found the natives busily breaking up the wreck of an abandoned
-timber ship, which had drifted to their harbour, with a few of the lower
-tiers of cargo still in her; and another wreck was said to be lying upon
-the Tallert bank&mdash;the same wreck, it is said, which Prince Napoleon had
-boarded on his homeward passage in the <i>Atlantic</i> the previous year, and had
-left a record on her to prove the currents round Cape Farewell.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The Danish authorities, ever ready to assist vessels entering the Greenland
-ports, supplied us with everything in their power, and after purchasing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[Pg 99]</span>
-some cod-fish from the natives, we proceeded on our voyage. On
-leaving Frederickshaab, we experienced strong north winds, and had to
-beat up between the pack and the land, until off the settlement of Fiskernaas,
-on July 23rd. The temperature of the sea then rose from 35°
-to 46° Fahrenheit; and seeing no ice, we considered that we were past
-the limits of the Spitzbergen stream. Finding that our foretop masthead
-was sprung, we ran into Fiskernaas, to repair it. We purchased
-more cod-fish at Fiskernaas, at an almost nominal price. These fish are very
-plentiful, and the Danish authorities annually collect about 30,000 from
-the Esquimaux, to be dried, and again served out to them in the winter,
-the habits of the natives being so improvident, that they will not make
-this provision for themselves. Having made a few magnetic and other
-observations, we sailed for Godhaab to procure a passage home for one of
-our seamen, who, it was feared, was too ill in health to stand the rigours
-of an Arctic winter. We met the Danish schooner coming out, and the
-captain kindly received our invalid on board, and took our letters for
-home. Outside Godhaab lie the Koku Islands, upon which Egede first
-landed in 1721, and commenced recolonizing Greenland. The mainland
-here is divided into four fiords, the largest being Godhaab Fiord (or Baal’s
-River on old charts), which extends up to the inland ice, and upon the
-shores of which are still to be seen many ruins of the ancient Scandinavians.
-Upon the Koku Islands we were near leaving the <i>Fox</i>, for in
-coming out, the wind fell suddenly calm, and the steam being down, we
-were drifting with a strong tide fast upon the rocks, and we only just
-towed the ship clear with all our boats. We now steered for Diskoe,
-and after passing some magnificent icebergs, one of which we found by
-measurement to be 270 feet above the sea, we saw the precipitous cliffs
-of the island, entered the harbour of Godhavn at night, and sailed on the
-following day for the beautiful fiord of Diskoe, where a smart young
-Esquimaux, Christian, by name, was received on board, as dog-driver to
-the expedition. We had not time to examine this fine fiord, which has
-never been explored, and which is thought to be of great extent; nor had
-we time to visit the Salmon River; but our guide brought us a few fish,
-and with salmon-trout and ptarmigan for breakfast, and a bouquet of
-flowers from the ladies of Godhavn upon the gun-room table, we had no
-cause to complain of the Arctic regions so far.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We next steered for the Waigat Straits, intending to take in coals
-from the mines there. As we passed Godhavn, the Esquimaux guide seated
-himself in his kyack on the deck, and, notwithstanding a rough sea, he
-was launched out of the gangway at his own request; a feat wonderful to
-us, but evidently not strange to him, as he paddled away to the shore
-without further notice. The native kyack is so small and crank, that the
-natives cannot get in or out of it alongside a ship; but are generally pulled
-up or lowered with it in the bight of two ropes’ ends.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">As we approached the Waigat, thousands of eider ducks covered the
-water, and we shot many of the younger ones, but the old birds were too<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[Pg 100]</span>
-crafty for us, and kept out of range. We now never lost an opportunity
-of adding to our stock of fresh provisions, which already began to make
-a show in the rigging, where we could feast our eyes upon salmon, eider
-ducks, looms, cod-fish, ptarmigan, and seal beef, besides two old goats,
-that we had purchased at Frederickshaab. We entered the Waigat on
-August 3rd, on a beautiful day; and for wild and desolate grandeur, I
-suppose these straits have no equal&mdash;lofty, rugged mountains here abruptly
-facing the sea, or there presenting a sloping moss-covered declivity&mdash;mountain
-torrents, and the small streams, which, leaping over the very
-summits, at an elevation of 3,000 to 4,000 feet, appear from beneath like
-threads of spun glass. In some places may be seen the foot of a glacier
-high up a ravine, as if there arrested in its course, or not yet grown sufficiently
-to fill up the valley, and bring its blight down to the sea; in
-other places beautiful valleys, green and grass-clothed, where the hare
-and ptarmigan love to pass their short summer with their young broods.
-The sea itself is scarcely less picturesque than the land; for thousands
-of icebergs, of every size and fantastic form, cast off from the ice-streams
-of the mainland, sail continually in these beautiful straits.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We found the coal mine without difficulty, the seams of coal cropping
-out of the cliffs under which we anchored. It was a very exposed position,
-and the ground hard; the only safe way to lie would be by making fast to
-a piece of grounded ice, if one can be found, as anchors will not hold.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">In the early spring the ice-foot forms a natural wharf, and the coals may
-be collected, and at high water the boats can go alongside to receive the
-sacks. Now that steam has been introduced into the whale fishery, these
-coal mines must sooner or later become much frequented, and it is to be
-hoped that so valuable a resource will be taken advantage of. If moorings
-could be laid down, and natives from the opposite settlement of Atenadluk
-employed to collect coals in readiness for embarkation, a ship might readily
-fill up in a few hours.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We had scarcely completed our coaling, when the weather began to
-threaten, the barometer fell, and shortly after noon it blew almost a gale
-from the southward. Our anchors soon began to jump over the ground,
-and the drift ice to set in. Steam was immediately got ready, and we
-ran through the straits to the north-westward. Passing the magnificent
-headland of Swarten Huk, we touched at the settlement of Proven to
-purchase dogs and seal-beef, and then bore away for Upernavik, steering
-close along the coast, and intending to attack the breeding-place of looms,
-at Saunderson’s Hope; but a strong south-west wind and high sea prevented
-our sending in the boats. Arrived off Upernavik, we obtained
-more dogs, and having left our last letters for home, we bore away, on
-the afternoon of August 6, to try to cross Baffin’s Bay.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We were now fairly away from the civilized world, and all that we
-could look forward to, or hope for, was a speedy passage through the
-middle pack of Baffin’s Bay, a satisfactory finish of the work before us on
-the other side, and a return the following year to England. We had a fine<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[Pg 101]</span>
-ship and a fine crew, all eager to commence the more active duties of
-sledge travelling; and, indeed, on looking at our thirty large and ravenous
-dogs that crowded our decks, we could not but think that our sledge parties
-would solve, in the following spring, the extraordinary mystery of Franklin’s
-fate. How these hopes were to be disappointed that year the sequel
-will show. It is well for us that we cannot know what the morrow may
-bring forth. During August 7 and 8, we steered out due west from
-Upernavik to try to cross in that parallel of latitude; but on the evening of
-the latter day, the keenness of the air, the ice-blink ahead, and the fast
-increasing number of bergs, prepared us for seeing the Middle Pack. In
-the evening and during that night we passed streams of loose sailing ice,
-and on the morning of the 8th further progress was stopped by impenetrable
-floes. This was in lat. 72° 40′ north, long. 59° 50′ west.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Getting clear of the loose ice in the pack edge, we steered to the northward,
-to look for an opening in any place where we could attempt a passage.
-The ice, however, presented an impenetrable line, and having reached, on
-August 12, latitude 75° 10′ north, longitude 58° west, we made fast to an
-iceberg aground under the glacier. It was a lovely evening; the sky
-bright and clear, and the thermometer standing at 36° in the shade. Seals
-were playing about the ship, and we added to our stock of beef. But a
-dreary prospect rather damped our pleasure. The ice extended in one
-unbroken mass right into the land, and pressed hard upon the very coast;
-not a drop of water could be seen from the masthead, in the direction in
-which we desired to go. The southerly winds, before which we had been
-running, appeared to have driven the whole pack into the head of Melville
-Bay. The season was passing away, and without an early change to wind
-and a continuance of it from the northward, we were almost without a hope.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">In the evening we visited the glacier, but the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">débris</span></i> of shattered ice,
-and the innumerable bergs and floe pieces, prevented our getting close to
-its base. It was a beautifully calm night; not a sound to be heard, save
-the crashing of some enormous mass rent from the face of the glacier, or
-distant rumbling of the vast inland ice, as it moved slowly down towards
-the sea. Far away over the continent, nothing but the surface of glacier
-could be seen, excepting here or there a mountain peak, showing up through
-the ice; and the bright glare of the ice-blink shot up into the sky, giving
-a yellow tinge to the otherwise deep blue vault of heaven. Flights of ducks
-winged their way to the southward, reminding us that it was the season
-when those desolate regions were deserted, and that we should be left alone.
-Our distant ship was lying so surrounded with huge and lofty bergs, that
-only her masthead could be seen through an opening; and a low melancholy
-howling (such as an Esquimaux dog alone knows how to make)
-occasionally broke upon the ear&mdash;for our dogs had all gone up to the very
-top of a lofty berg, and were thus expressing their home-sick longings,
-and, perhaps, a foreboding of the unhappy fate that awaited many of them.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We lay secured to the iceberg until the 16th August, when the wind
-changed to the north-eastward, and the floes began to move off the land<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[Pg 102]</span>
-and to separate. Now or never were we to get through; for to lose this
-opportunity would have shut us out from crossing that year, and have
-left us no other resource than to return to Greenland for the winter.
-M‘Clintock was not the man to turn back from his work, but would rather
-risk everything than leave a chance of our thus passing an inactive winter.
-The <i>Fox</i> was therefore steered into a promising lead or lane of water, and
-all sail made to the breeze. We were in high spirits, and talked of
-getting into the west water on the morrow. But at night a dense fog came
-on, the wind shifted to the southward, and the floes again began to close
-upon and around us. There was no help for us&mdash;we were beset, and it
-appeared hopelessly so; for the season was fast passing away, and the new
-ice beginning to form. On the 17th the wind increased, and the weather
-was dark and dreary. We struggled on for a few ship’s lengths by the
-power of steam and canvas, and at night we unshipped the rudder, and
-lifted the screw, in anticipation of a squeeze.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">During the three weeks following we lay in this position, endeavouring,
-by every means, to move the ship towards any visible pool or lane of water.
-Once only did our hopes revive. On September 7, the wind had again been
-from the north-westward; the ice had slackened, and we made a final and
-desperate attempt to reach some water seen to the northward of us. We
-were blasting with gunpowder, heaving, and warping during the whole
-day, but at night the floes again closed. We had not now even a retreat;
-the tinker had come round, as the seamen say, and soldered us in;
-and from that time until the 17th of April, 1858, we never moved,
-excepting at the mercy of the ice, and drifted by the winds and
-currents. We had lost all command over the ship, and were freezing in
-the moving pack.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Preparations for the winter were now made in earnest. We had thirty
-large dogs to feed besides ourselves, and we lost no opportunity of shooting
-seals. The sea-birds had all left for the southward; and the bears, which
-occasionally came to look at the ship, we could not chase, from the yet
-broken state of the ice. Provisions were got up upon deck, sledges and
-travelling equipages prepared, boats’ crews told off, and every arrangement
-made by the Captain in the event of our being turned out of the ship. As the
-winter advanced, the ship was housed over with canvas, and covered with
-snow; and we had made up our minds for a winter in the pack and a drift&mdash;whither?
-This we could not tell, but we argued from the known constant
-set to the southward, out of Baffin’s Sea and Davis’ Straits, that if our
-little ship survived through the winter, we should be released in the
-southern part of Davis’ Straits during the following summer.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We were then in latitude 75° 24′ north, longitude 64° 31′ west, and
-westward of us could be seen a formidable line of grounded bergs, towards
-which, by our observations, we were driving. Our next eight months were
-passed in a manner that would be neither interesting to read nor to relate;
-but a few extracts from a private journal will show our mode of life.</p>
-
-<p class="pt"><i>Sept. 16.</i>&mdash;We passed the grounded bergs last night, after considerable<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[Pg 103]</span>
-anxiety, for we feared we might be driven against them. We saw the floes
-opening and tearing up as sod before the plough; and had we come in
-contact with them, the ship must have been instantly destroyed. We are
-out all day long, by the sides of the water-pools, with our rifles, and shoot
-the seals in the head when they come up to breathe; they are now getting
-fat, and do not sink so readily as in the summer.</p>
-
-<p class="pt"><i>Oct. 17.</i>&mdash;We obtained good observations, and found that we have
-drifted north-west 65 miles, since the 15th inst. It has been blowing
-hard from the south-eastward, and we consider that we have thus been
-carried helplessly along by the effect of a single gale.</p>
-
-<p class="pt"><i>Nov. 2.</i>&mdash;A bear came to look at the ship at night, and our dogs soon
-chased him on to some thin ice, through which he broke. All hands
-turned out to see the sport, and notwithstanding the intense cold many of
-the people did not wait to put on their extra clothes. The bear was
-dispatched with our rifles, after making some resistance, and maiming
-several of the dogs. We have not seen the sun to-day; he has now
-taken his final departure from these latitudes. It is getting almost too
-dark to shoot seals, and we employ ourselves with such astronomical observations
-as are necessary to fix our position, and to calculate our drift, with
-observations upon the thermometer, barometer, and meteorology generally.</p>
-
-<p class="pt"><i>Nov. 28.</i>&mdash;After a zigzag drift out to the westward, until the 24th inst.,
-into latitude 75° 1′ N., longitude 70° W., we have commenced a southern
-drift, and we trust now to progress gradually out of the straits, until
-released in the spring. We have had considerable commotion and ruptures
-in the ice-floes lately, but fortunately the nips have not come too close to
-us. We ascend the masthead, to the crow’s-nest, every morning, to look
-out for water, for our dogs are getting ravenous, and we want food for them.</p>
-
-<p class="pt"><i>December 4.</i>&mdash;Poor Scott died last night, and was buried through the
-floe this evening, all hands drawing his earthly remains upon a sledge,
-and the officers walking by the side. It was a bitterly cold night, the
-temperature 35° below zero, with a fresh wind, and the beautiful paraselene
-(ominous of a coming gale) lighting us on our way. The ice has been more
-quiet lately, and we are becoming more reconciled to our imprisonment.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">A reading, writing, and navigation school has commenced, and our
-Captain loses no opportunity of attending to the amusement and recreation
-of the men, so necessary in this dreary life. Besides the ordinary duties of
-cleaning the ship, the men are exercised in building snow houses, and preparing
-travelling equipage.</p>
-
-<p class="pt"><i>December 21.</i>&mdash;The winter solstice. We have about half an hour’s
-partial daylight, by which the type of <i>The Times</i> newspaper may be just
-distinguished on a board facing the south, where, near noon, a slight
-glimmer of light is refracted above the horizon, while in the zenith and
-northward the stars are shining brilliantly. In the absence of <i>light and
-shade</i> we cannot see to walk over the ice, for the hummocks can scarcely
-be distinguished from the floe; all presents a uniform level surface, and,
-in walking, one constantly falls into the fissures, or runs full butt against<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[Pg 104]</span>
-the blocks of ice. We must now, therefore, be content with an hour or
-two’s tramp alongside, or on our snow-covered deck under housing; and,
-during the remainder of the day, we sit below in our little cabin, which has
-now crystallized by the breath condensing and freezing on the bulkheads,
-and we endeavour to read and talk away the time. But our subjects of
-conversation are miserably worn out; our stories are old and oft-repeated;
-we start impossible theories, and we bet upon the results of our new
-observations as to our progress, as we unconsciously drift and drift before
-the gale. At night we retire to our beds, thankful that another day has
-passed; a deathlike stillness reigns around, broken only by the ravings of
-some sleep-talker, the tramp of the watch upon deck, a passing bear
-causing a general rousing of our dogs, or a simultaneous rush of these poor
-ravenous creatures at our cherished stores of seal-beef in the shrouds; and,
-as we listen to the distant groaning and sighing of the ice, we thank God
-that we have still a home in these terrible wastes.</p>
-
-<p class="pt"><i>December 28.</i>&mdash;During Divine service yesterday, the wind increased,
-and towards the afternoon we had a gale from the north-westward, attended
-with an unusual rise of temperature; to-day the gale continues, with a
-warm wind from the N.N.W.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“The Danish settlers at Upernavik, in North Greenland, are at times
-startled by a similar sudden rise of temperature. During the depth of
-winter, when all nature has been long frozen, and the sound of falling water
-almost forgotten, rain will fall in torrents; and as rain in such a climate is
-attended with every discomfort, this is looked upon as a most unwelcome
-phenomenon. It is called the <i>Warm South-east Wind</i>. Now, if the
-Greenlanders at Upernavik are astonished at a warm <i>South-east Wind</i>,
-how much rather must the seamen, frozen up in the pack, be astonished at a
-warm <i>North-west Wind</i>. Various theories have been started to account
-for this phenomenon; but it appears most probable that a rotatory gale
-passes over the place, and that the rise in temperature is due to the
-direction from which the whole <i>mass of air</i> may come, viz. from the
-southward, and not to the direction of <i>wind</i> at the time.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Let us now return to the narrative, for our days were now becoming
-mere repetitions of each other. We saw no change, nor did we hope for
-any until the spring. Gale followed gale; and an occasional alarm of a
-disruption in the ice, a bear or seal hunt, formed our only excitement;
-indeed, we sometimes hoped for some crisis, were it only to break the
-dreadful monotony of our lives. Our walks abroad afforded us no recreation;
-on the contrary, it was really a trying task to spin out the time necessary
-for exercise. Talk of a dull turnpike-road at home! Are not the
-larks singing and the farm boys whistling? But with us what a contrast!
-Our walks were without an object; one had literally nothing to see or hear;
-turn north, south, east, or west, still snow and hummocks. You see a little
-black mark waving in the air: walk to it&mdash;it is a crack in a hummock.
-You think a berg is close to you; go to it&mdash;still a hummock, refracted
-through the gloom. The only thing to do is to walk to windward, so as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[Pg 105]</span>
-to be certain of returning safe and not frostbitten, to pick out a smooth
-place, and form imaginary patterns with your footprints. Philosophers
-would bid us think and reflect; but if philosophers were shut up with us
-amid the silence and darkness of an Arctic winter, they would probably
-do as we did&mdash;endeavour to get away from their thoughts.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">By the 29th of January, we had drifted into latitude 72° 46′ north,
-longitude 62° west, and by the aid of refraction we saw the sun for the
-first time since November 2. We ought indeed to have greeted him
-on a meridian far westward of our present position, but it had been
-out of power to do more this year, and we could only hope for more
-success in the next. The weather had now become intensely cold, the
-mercury was frozen, and the spirit thermometer registered 46° below zero.
-We had great difficulty in clearing our bed-places of ice, and our blankets
-froze nightly to the ship’s side; but we had the sun to shine upon us, and
-that made amends for all. What a different world was now before our
-eyes! Even in those dreary regions where nothing moves, and no sounds
-are heard save the rustling of the snowdrift, the effects of the bright sun
-are so exhilarating that a walk was now quite enjoyable. If any one doubt
-how necessary light is for our existence, just let him shut himself up for
-three months in the coal-cellar, with an underground passage into the ice-house,
-where he may go for a change of air, and see if he will be in as
-good health and spirits at the end of the experiment as before. At all
-events, he will have obtained the best idea one can form at home of an Arctic
-winter in a small vessel, save that the temperature of the Arctic ice-house
-is -40°, instead of +32°, as at home; only 72° difference!</p>
-
-<p class="pt">On the 14th of February some of us walked out to where the ice was
-opening to the northward, and saw a solitary <a id="TN105A" name="TN105A"></a>dovekie in winter plumage.
-These beautiful little birds appear to winter on the ice. The water,
-appearing deep black from the long absence of any relief from the eternal
-snow, was rippled by a strong wind, and the little waves, so small as to be
-compared to those of the Serpentine at home, sending forth to us a new,
-and, consequently, joyous sound, induced us to linger long by the side of
-the small lake&mdash;so long, that we were only reminded, by our faces beginning
-to freeze, that we were at least three miles from the ship, a gale blowing
-with thick snow-drift&mdash;besides no chance of getting anything for the pot.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">A memorable day was the 26th of February, when we opened the
-skylight and let in daylight below, where we had been living for four
-months by the light of our solitary dips. The change was indeed
-wonderful, and at first uncomfortable, for it exposed the manner in which
-we had been content to live. With proper clothing you may laugh at the
-climate, if not exposed too long without food. It is not the cold outside
-that is to be feared, but the damp, and plague-engendering state of things
-below. This can only be guarded against by having good fires and plenty
-of light.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Towards the latter end of March, the ice was getting very unquiet,
-and we had frequent disruptions close to the ship. On the night of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[Pg 106]</span>
-25th of March, a wide fissure, which had been opening and closing during
-the previous fortnight, closed with such force as to pile up tons and tons
-of ice within forty yards of the ship, and shattered our old floe in a line
-with our deck. The nipping continued, and on the following night a huge
-block was hurled within thirty yards from us. Another such a night and
-the little <i>Fox</i> would have been knocked into lucifer matches, and we should
-have been turned out upon the floe.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">April was ushered in with a continuance of heavy northerly gales; we
-were constantly struggling with the ice. We were three times adrift, and expecting
-to see our ship destroyed; and on the night of the 5th, the floes
-opened, and as their edges again came together, they threatened to tear
-everything up. We were on deck throughout the night; our boats and
-dogs were cut off from us, but with great exertion we managed to save the
-dogs, although we nearly lost some of our men who went in search of them.
-We that night secured the ship by the bower chains, and we afterwards
-had a few days’ quiet. On the 10th we saw the mountain peaks about
-Cape Dyer, on the west side of Davis’ Straits, the first land seen since
-the previous October. We had drifted into lat. 66° 5′ N., and long.
-58° 41′ W.; and we hoped that after passing Cape Walsingham, the pack
-would open out.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">On April 17, in a heavy storm, a general breaking-up of the ice took
-place, and we were turned completely out of our winter dock, and into an
-apparently open sea. A scene of wild confusion ensued; the floes were
-driving against each other in all directions, and the whole ocean of ice
-appeared in commotion, while a blinding snow-drift distorted and magnified
-every surrounding object. Our first care was to save our dogs;
-but as an Esquimaux dog always expects either a thrashing or to be put
-in harness when approached by a man, and the poor creatures were terror-stricken
-with the storm, they ran wildly about over the ice, and many of
-them were obliged to be abandoned to their fate, after sharing the perils
-of the winter with us. On board the ship, preparations were made to
-get her under command; for we were driving down upon the lee, and
-into loose ice, where our men could not have rejoined us with the boats.
-We shipped the rudder, and soon got some canvas upon the vessel, and
-having got the men and boats safely on board, we steered to the eastward,
-and really thought that we were released. A dark water-sky hung over
-the eastern horizon, and we thought that we were not far from the open
-ocean. But we had not proceeded more than some seventeen miles, when
-at midnight we came to a stoppage. It was fearfully dark and cold, and
-with the greatest difficulty we cleared the masses of ice. The water space
-in which we worked the ship became gradually less and less; we flew from
-side to side of this fast decreasing lake, until at last we had not room to
-stay the vessel. By 4 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> we were again beset.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We now commenced a second drift with the pack, which took us down
-to latitude 64° north, and longitude 57° west, on the 25th April, when,
-towards midnight, a swell entered into the pack, and gradually increased,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[Pg 107]</span>
-until the ice commenced churning up around the vessel, and dashing
-against her sides. These violent shocks continued throughout the morning,
-and really seemed as if they would soon destroy the ship. However, by
-the power of steam, we got the vessel’s head towards the swell, and with a
-strong fair wind, we commenced pushing out. After many narrow escapes
-from contact with the icebergs, we were by night in comparatively open
-water. We were free! and steered a course for the settlement of Holsteinborg,
-in Greenland, to recruit, and to prepare for another attempt.
-What a change on the following morning! Not a piece of ice could
-be seen, save a few distant bergs. We once more had our little vessel
-dancing under us upon the waters, innumerable sea-birds flew around us,
-and the very sea, in contrast to its late frozen surface, appeared alive with
-seals and whales. All nature seemed alive, and we felt as if we had risen
-from the dead! In the evening, the snow-covered peaks of Sukkertoppen
-were seen, and on the 28th of April, we moored in Holsteinborg harbour.
-Our anchors had not been down, nor had our feet touched the land since
-the 3rd of August. Ice-bound and imprisoned, we had drifted upwards of
-1,200 miles. Need it be added how thankful we were to that kind Providence
-who had watched over us, and under Him to our gallant Captain,
-to whose unremitting attentions to our comforts and safety we owed our
-health and deliverance!</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The winter in Greenland had been very severe, and the country was
-still snow-covered, and without an indication of spring. The natives were
-scarcely aroused from their winter’s sleep, and all our expectations of
-venison and ptarmigan feasts soon vanished. Very few reindeer had yet
-been taken, the season not commencing before July, when the hunters go
-up the fiords and kill them by thousands for the sake of their skins alone,
-leaving their carcasses to be devoured by the wolves.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Our men, however, were bent upon enjoying themselves, and as Jack’s
-wants are few, with the aid of a couple of fiddlers and some bottles of grog,
-they kept up one continuous ball&mdash;patronized by all the fair Esquimaux
-damsels&mdash;in the dance-house on shore. The whole population had turned
-out to meet us. We were entertained by the kind-hearted dames upon
-stockfish and seal-beef, and such luxuries as they could afford, with a
-hearty welcome to their neat and cleanly houses; and we in our turn
-endeavoured to do the hospitalities on board the <i>Fox</i> with pickled pork
-and preserved cabbage. It was new life to us, who had been confined so
-long in our little den, thus to mingle with these friendly people. Never
-was sympathy more needed. We arrived hungry and unshaven, our faces
-begrimed with oil-smoke, our clothes in tatters; the good women of Holsteinborg
-worked and washed for us, repaired our sadly disreputable
-wardrobes, danced for us, sang to us, and parted from us with tears and
-a few little presents by way of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">souvenirs</span></i>, as if we could ever forget them.
-We wrote a few hasty letters, hoping that they would reach home in the
-autumn, and sailed once more upon our voyage.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We wished to call at Godhavn for another Esquimaux and some more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[Pg 108]</span>
-dogs, besides a few stores, of which we stood in need; so, sailing up the
-coast, we arrived off the harbour on the night of May 10, but an impenetrable
-stream of loose ice blockaded the entrance. It was a wild
-night, and snowing heavily; sea, air, ice islands and icebergs seemed all
-mingled in one common haze. We endeavoured to haul off the land,
-and near midnight we narrowly escaped destruction upon an island,
-which, seen suddenly on the lee-beam, was at first taken for a berg.
-We all thought our ship must be dashed upon the rocks, and we were
-only saved by the presence of mind and seamanship of our Captain, who
-never left the deck, and wore the ship within a few yards of the shore.
-We anchored next day at the Whale-fish Islands, and fell in there with
-the <i>Jane</i> and <i>Heroine</i> whalers, whose captains gave us a true Scotch
-welcome, and ransacked their ships to find some little comforts for us.
-We again tasted the roast beef of old England. From the islands, we
-crossed to Godhavn, where finding the harbour still full of ice, we hauled
-into a rocky creek outside, a perfect little dock just capable of holding
-the ship, but exposed to southerly winds.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">By the 25th of May we were prepared for another and final attempt to
-accomplish our mission, and to try our fortunes in the ice. We were
-certainly sobered down considerably by our late severe lesson; but
-although less confident in our own powers, a steady determination to do
-our best prevailed throughout the ship. Passing again through the Waigat,
-we stopped at the coal-deposits to fill up with fuel, and we shot a few
-ptarmigan while thus detained. We next stopped at Saunderson’s Hope,
-“the Cape where the fowls do breed,” but it was yet too early for eggs,
-and as the looms had no young to protect, they flew away in thousands
-at every discharge of a gun; we got but few of these, in our opinion,
-delicious birds. On the 31st, we made fast to an iceberg off Upernavik,
-to await the breaking up of the ice in Melville Bay. When we were
-in these latitudes the previous year, all things living were migrating southward,
-but now constant flights of sea-birds streamed northward, night
-and day, towards their breeding-places and feeding-grounds, and by sitting
-on the rocky points, and shooting them as they passed, we could generally
-make a fair bag. We were now almost subsisting on eider ducks and looms.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">On June the 6th, we commenced our ice-struggles in Melville Bay,
-endeavouring, according to the usual mode of navigation, to push up,
-between the main pack and the ice still attached to the land, on all
-occasions when the winds moved the pack out, and left a space or lane of
-water. While thus following up the coast, on the 7th, we ran upon a reef
-of sunken and unknown rocks, and, on the tide falling, we lay over in such
-a manner as to threaten to fill upon the water again rising. We succeeded,
-however, in heaving off without damage.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">After many escapes from being squeezed by the ice closing upon the
-land, and after three weeks of intense labour, we reached Cape York on
-June 26th. We there communicated with the natives who had so much
-assisted Dr. Kane, when he wintered in Smith Sound. These poor<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[Pg 109]</span>
-creatures live upon the flesh of the bear, seal, and walrus, which they kill
-upon the ice with bone spears. They are, perhaps, the only people in the
-world living upon a sea-coast without boats of any kind, and are so completely
-isolated, that, previous to their being first visited in 1818, they
-considered themselves to be the only people in the world. Dr. Kane left
-among them a Greenland Esquimaux, “Hans,” with his canoe. They
-told us that Hans was married, and was well, but that they had eaten the
-boat, besides many of their dogs, when hungry, during the last winter. We
-invited them on board, and they saw all our treasures of wood and iron;
-but they appeared to covet more than all, our dogs, and a few light pieces
-of wood, fit for spear-handles. We sent them away rejoicing over a few
-presents of long knives and needles, and they continued to dance and
-brandish the knives over their heads until we were out of sight.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Passing Cape Dudley Diggs, we landed at a breeding-place of rotges
-(little auks); the birds were sitting in myriads upon the ledges of the
-cliffs, and we shot a great many; but our time was too precious to wait
-long, even for fresh food, and so we bore away. We were considerably
-baffled with ice-floes in crossing over towards Lancaster Sound, and we did
-not reach that side until July 12.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Near Cape Horsburgh we found a small and enterprising family of
-natives, who had crossed over to this barren land from Pond’s Bay, two
-years previously, in search of better hunting ground. These poor people
-could give us no information of the missing ships; so we merely stopped to
-give them a few presents; we then steered for Pond’s Bay, from whence
-we had heard rumours of wrecks and wreck-wood being in the possession
-of the natives. In crossing Lancaster Sound, we were completely beset in
-the pack, and were even threatened with another drift out to sea like that
-of last year; we fortunately escaped, however, from the grip of the ice,
-after being carried for seven days in a helpless state, and as far as Cape
-Bathurst, before we could regain command over our ship.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">At the entrance to Pond’s Bay, we found an old woman and a boy
-living in a skin tent, their tribe being some twenty-five miles up the inlet,
-at a village on the north side. This village, called Kapawroktolik, could
-not be reached by land, on account of the precipitous cliffs facing the sea.
-The inlet was, however, yet full of ice, and Captain M‘Clintock endeavoured
-to reach the natives by sledge. In the meantime, we on board were
-employed in collecting sea-birds from the neighbouring breeding cliffs of
-Cape Grahame Moore. We also frequently visited the land to collect
-cochlearia, or scurvy-grass, which grew luxuriantly about the old
-Esquimaux encampments. A trade was commenced with the old lady on
-shore; for we found that, concealed among the stones, she had a number
-of narwhales’ horns, teeth, and blades of whalebone, of which she would
-only produce one at a time, by way of enhancing the value by its apparent
-scarcity. Around her tent were snares set in all directions for catching
-birds, and she had a large quantity of putrid blubber lying <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en cache</span></i>, which
-was her principal food and fuel. The boy brought us a hare, which he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[Pg 110]</span>
-had shot with his bow and arrow. Captain M‘Clintock having failed to
-reach the village, owing to the ice being all adrift in the inlet, he determined
-to take the ship there if possible, and to take the old woman as pilot.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We ran alongside her tent, which she soon packed up with all her
-worldly riches, and came on board thoroughly drenched with the rain,
-which had poured in torrents all day. Our people managed to rig her out
-in some dry clothes; the poor boy was made snug in the engine room,
-and the old lady voluntarily took her station as pilot upon the deck
-throughout the night, and was very anxious to point out the beauties of
-her country, and the “pleasant sleeping places.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We could only get within eight miles of the village, owing to there being
-fast ice in the inlet; so, securing the ship to it, the Captain and Hobson
-started over the ice. On board the ship we hoped to have a quiet Sunday,
-but a number of right-whales playing round the vessel, and pushing their
-backs under the ice, constantly broke away the rotten edge to which we
-lay. We were thus kept constantly beating up again to it; and in the
-evening, about six or seven miles of the ice coming away in one floe, and
-turning round upon us, we were forced upon the south shore of the inlet,
-and momentarily expected being driven upon the rocks; but after blasting
-the ice with gunpowder for nearly two hours, in order to gain every inch,
-we got clear just as we were touching the ground.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The next morning (August 2) the Captain and party returned. They
-had a most interesting trip, and described the village as situated in a most
-romantic spot, close upon the shore, at the foot of a deep valley filled with
-a glacier, which completely overhung the settlement, and threw jets of
-water almost to the tents. The natives were delighted to see them, and,
-in answer to the inquiries through the interpreter (Mr. Petersen), they
-said that two old wrecks were lying four days’ journey southward of Cape
-Bowen&mdash;probably in Scot’s Inlet. These two ships came on shore together
-many years ago. They also confirmed an account from our lady pilot of
-an old wreck lying to the northward in Lancaster Sound, one day’s journey
-from Cape Hay, or, as they call it, Appak (breeding-place of birds). The
-wood in their possession was now accounted for, as also their great anxiety
-to procure saws, which they always asked for in barter. These wrecks
-were not those we sought, and we had no occasion to delay our voyage
-by looking at them. The natives drew a rough chart of the interior of
-this unknown country. They especially pointed out the salmon rivers, and
-the hunting and sleeping places, and gave a few general ideas of the profile
-of the land, and the main directions of the different channels which
-intersect it; describing North Devon as an island, and showing a water
-communication with Igloolik, where Parry wintered. We had now set
-at rest all rumours of Franklin’s ships being in the neighbourhood of
-Pond’s Bay; and having made a few observations for the survey of the
-place, we departed for Beechey Island, regretting that the whaleships
-had not been with us to profit by the number of fish we had seen. As
-we entered Lancaster Sound, five huge bears sat watching a dead whale;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[Pg 111]</span>
-they sat upon different pieces of ice, apparently taking turns to feed, and
-evidently afraid of each other. We shot a couple of them, but one escaped
-over the ice after a long chase, although desperately wounded.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The next morning (August 7) the wind increased to a perfect storm
-from the eastward; the fog was, as seamen say, as thick as pease-soup; we
-could see nothing; and compasses being here useless, we had to trust to our
-luck rather than good guidance for keeping in the fairway. We saw very
-little ice, but the sea ran so high upon the 8th, that we thought it prudent
-to lie-to for some hours. On the 10th, a herd of walrus was seen off Cape
-Felfoot, upon a piece of sailing ice, and lying so close as to completely
-cover it. The ship was run close alongside, and several were shot, but
-we did not succeed in getting one; for, unless instantaneously killed,
-they always wriggle off the ice and sink. The only practical method of
-getting a walrus is with a gun-harpoon from a boat; as yet we had shot
-only one during our voyage. Steering round Cape Hurd in a thick fog,
-we struck on an unknown shoal, but soon backed off again, and let
-go the anchor, as we could not see our position. About midnight the
-fog lifted, and we proceeded. A large bear was seen swimming round a
-point, and was shot; and shortly after, one of the men fell overboard: he
-was picked up rather exhausted with his cold bath, and perhaps a little
-alarmed at bathing in company with polar bears. We anchored next day
-off Cape Riley, where the <i>Bredalbane</i> was lost, after Captain Inglefield
-had landed some of her stores and coals. We found that the bears had
-been amusing themselves with the provisions, and had eaten out the bilges
-between the hoops of many of the casks. They evidently had a particular
-relish for chocolate and salt pork (we hoped they liked it), and had taken
-the greatest trouble to throw everything about. We visited the stores at
-Beechey; they had been stored and housed with extreme care. A violent
-gale had passed over the place, for the door of the house was blown in
-and the entrance full of snow, but nothing was damaged excepting some
-biscuit. We also visited the graves, so often described, yet ever interesting,
-of the poor fellows who died in Franklin’s first winter quarters, and
-whose comrades we were now seeking.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Our coaling from Cape Riley was completed by the 15th, and we were
-glad to leave that exposed and dangerous place. We had been considerably
-troubled with drift ice, and on the 13th we drove half across the bay, with
-both anchors down, and had to moor to a piece of ice grounded close to the
-ship. We crossed to the house at Beechey, and there landed a handsome
-tombstone (sent out by Lady Franklin), in memorial of Sir John Franklin
-and his companions. It was placed close to the monument erected by their
-shipmates to the memory of poor Bellot and those who had died in the
-previous searching expeditions. Taking in such stores as were actually
-necessary, and having repaired the house, we crossed over to Cape Hotham
-for a boat (left there by Penny), to replace one of ours which had been
-crushed by the ice. Wellington Channel appeared to be clear of ice, and
-a jumping sea, from the southward, gave us promise of clear water in that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[Pg 112]</span>
-direction. On the 17th, we were sailing down Peel Sound with a fresh
-wind, and carrying every rag of canvas. Passing Limestone Island and
-Cape Granite, we began to think that we should go right through, for as
-yet no ice could be seen ahead; but the southern sky looked bright and
-icy, while, in contrast, a dark gloom hung over the waters we had left
-in the northward. Still we sailed on merrily, and were already talking of
-passing the winter near the Fish River, and returning the following year
-by Behring’s Straits, when “Ice ahead!” was reported from the crow’s-nest;
-and there it certainly was, a long low white barrier, of that peculiar
-concave form always indicating fast-ice. The Straits had not broken up this
-season, and we could not pass that way. We were bitterly disappointed,
-but not disheartened, for we had yet another chance of getting to our
-longed-for destination by way of Bellot Straits. Not an hour was to be
-lost; the season was passing away; and thither our captain determined
-to go at once. We reluctantly ran out of this promising channel, and
-sailed close along the north shores of Somerset, without seeing any ice of
-consequence. The night of the 18th set in dark and squally, but in the
-absence of ice we were quite at our ease. We steamed close under the
-magnificent castellated cliffs of Cape Clarence, and entered Leopold Harbour
-to land a boat, in the event of our having to abandon our ship and fall back
-this way.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We found Regent’s Inlet clear, excepting a few streams of loose ice,
-through which we easily sailed. We passed Elwin and Batty Bays, and
-everything, as an old quartermaster expressed it, looked “werry prosperious.”
-Poor fellow! he knew that every mile sailed in the right direction
-would save him a hard pull at the sledge ropes.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">On the 20th, we passed close to Fury Beach, where the <i>Fury</i> was
-lost in 1825; but the pace was too good to stop to visit even this most
-interesting spot. We came on with a fair wind and clear water to the
-latitude of Bellot Straits. Our excitement now became intense. The
-existence of the strait had been disputed, and upon it depended all our
-hopes. Running into Brentford Bay, we thought we saw ice streaming out,
-as if through some channel from the westward, but as yet we could see no
-opening; and being unable to get farther that night, we anchored in a
-little nook discovered on the north side of the bay. A look-out was set
-upon the highest hill, to watch the movements of the ice, and on the next
-day we made our first attempt to sail through. We started with a strong
-western tide, and under both steam and canvas, and, after proceeding
-about three miles, we were delighted to find that a passage really
-existed; but we had not got half way through when, the tide changing, a
-furious current came from the westward, bringing down upon us such
-masses of ice that we were carried helplessly away, and were nearly dashed
-upon huge pieces of grounded ice and reefs of rocks, over which the floes
-were running, and would have immediately capsized the little <i>Fox</i> had she
-touched. This current ran at least seven knots an hour, and was more like
-a bore in the Hooghly than any ordinary tide. Struggling clear, after<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[Pg 113]</span>
-some considerable anxiety, and carried out of the straits, we reluctantly
-went back to the anchorage we had left. Night and day we now earnestly
-watched Bellot Straits, but they remained choked with the ice, which
-apparently drove backwards and forwards with the stream. We made
-another desperate attempt on the 25th August, and hung on, at imminent
-risk, in a small indentation about two-thirds through, and close under
-the precipitous cliffs. We were soon driven out of this again by the ice;
-yet so determined was our Captain to get through, that he then thought
-of pushing the ship into the pack, and driving with it into the western
-sea. We found, however, that the western entrance must be blocked, for
-the ice did not move fast in that direction. We could now do nothing but
-wait a change; and to employ the time, we sailed down the east coast
-of Boothia for some forty miles, to land a depôt of provisions, in case we
-should require, in the following winter, to communicate with the natives
-about Port Elizabeth. Navigation was now very cold and dreary work:
-we struggled back to Bellot Straits against strong north winds, sleet,
-and snow, and without compass, chart, or celestial objects to guide us.
-The Captain next went away in a boat, determining, when stopped, to
-travel over land to the western sea to examine the actual state of things
-there; and Young was sent to the southward for five days with boat and
-sledge, to ascertain if another passage existed where a promising break in
-the land had been seen.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The Captain returned to the ship on the 31st, bringing with him a fine
-fat buck; he had reached Cape Bird by water and land, and brought us a
-favourable report of Victoria Straits. Our hopes of getting through were
-again raised. Young returned unsuccessful from the south; no other
-strait existed, but only an inlet, extending some six miles in, and a chain of
-lakes thence into the interior to the south-westward. Young saw only one
-deer, but many bears were roaming about the coast.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">On the 6th September we made another dash at the straits, and this time
-succeeded in reaching a rocky islet, two miles outside the western entrance;
-but a barrier of fast ice, over which we could see a dark <i>water-sky</i>, here
-stopped us. Moored to the ice, we employed ourselves in killing seals,
-hunting for bears, and making preparations for travelling. Young was
-sent to an island eight miles to the south-west, to look around; and on
-ascending the land, he was astonished to see water as far as the visible
-horizon to the southward in Victoria Straits. While sitting down, taking
-some angles with the sextant, he luckily turned round just in time to see
-a large bear crawling up the rocks to give him a pat on the head. He
-seized his rifle and shot him through the body, but the beast struggled
-down and died out of reach, in the water, and thus a good depôt of beef was
-lost. Hobson, who, for some days, had been employed carrying provisions
-on to this island, started on the 25th with a party of seven men and two
-dog-sledges to carry depôts as far as possible to the southward, and the
-Captain placed a boat on the islet close to the ship, in case we should have
-to leave for winter quarters before Hobson’s return.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[Pg 114]</span></p>
-
-<p class="pt">The winter now set in rapidly, new ice was fast increasing, and the
-weather very severe; all navigation was at an end, and the barrier outside
-of us had never moved. We had now no hopes of getting further, and as
-no harbour existed where we were, we had nothing for it but to seek our
-winter home in Bellot Straits, and finish our work in the following winter and
-spring. So leaving Hobson to find his way to us, we ran back through
-Bellot Straits towards a harbour that we had discovered and named Port
-Kennedy. The straits were already covered with scum, and almost unnavigable,
-but we reached the harbour at midnight on the 27th, and ran the
-ship as far as possible into the new ice which now filled it. The <i>Fox</i>
-had done her work until the following summer. No opportunity was now
-lost of procuring fresh food. The deer were migrating southward and a
-few were shot as they passed. But the hunting was very precarious; the
-deer were travelling, and did not stop much to feed; there was no cover
-whatever, and stalking over the rugged hills and snow-filled valleys was
-most laborious. A few ptarmigan and hares were also shot, but we
-were altogether disappointed in the resources of the country. We had,
-however, a fair stock of bear and seal flesh for our dogs and ourselves to
-begin upon.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">On the 6th October Hobson returned, having reached some fifty miles
-down the west coast of Boothia, but was there stopped by the yet broken-up
-state of the ice. Finding that we had left Cape Bird, and that Bellot
-Straits were impassable for the boat, he travelled back to the ship over the
-mountains. The people were now clearing out the ship, landing all superfluous
-stores, and building magnetic observatories of snow and ice, besides
-hunting for the pot. We once more buried the ship with snow.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">On the 24th, Hobson again started for the south-westward, to follow
-up his last track, and to endeavour to push his depôts further on. He
-returned to the ship on November 6, having experienced most severe
-weather, and great dangers from the unquiet state of the ice. When
-encamped near the shore, in latitude 70° 21′, the ice broke suddenly away
-from the land and drifted out to sea before the gale, carrying them off with
-it. They were perched upon a small floe piece, and a wide crack separated
-the two tents. Dense snow-drift heightened the darkness of the night,
-and they could not possibly tell in which direction they were driving.
-The next morning they found themselves fifteen miles from where they
-had pitched the previous evening. By the mercy of Providence a calm
-succeeded, and they escaped to the land over the ice which immediately
-formed. So thin was this new ice, that they momentarily expected to
-break through. By great exertion Hobson saved the depôt; and finding
-it impossible to do any more, he landed the provisions and returned to the
-ship. Our autumn travelling was now brought to a close. A depôt of
-provisions was to have been carried by Young across Victoria Straits, but
-this was given up as evidently impracticable. We sat down for the winter,
-praying that we might be spared to finish our work in the spring.
-The whole ship’s company marched in funeral procession to the shore<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[Pg 115]</span>
-on the 10th November, bearing upon a sledge the mortal remains of poor
-Mr. Bland (our chief engineer), who was found dead in his bed on the 7th.
-The burial service having been read, he was deposited in his frozen tomb,
-on which the wild flowers will never grow, and over which his relations
-can never mourn. We were all on board almost as one family, and any one
-taken from us was missed as one from the fireside at home. It was long
-before this sorrowful feeling throughout the ship could be shaken off.
-On the 14th the sun disappeared, and we were left in darkness; our
-skylights had long been covered over with snow, and by the light of
-our solitary dip we tried to pass the weary hours by reading, sleeping,
-and smoking. We were frozen in, in a fine harbour, surrounded by
-lofty granite hills, and on these were occasionally found a few ptarmigan,
-hares, and wild foxes; whenever the weather permitted, or we could at all
-see our way, we wandered over these dreary hills in search of a fresh mess.
-We varied our exercise with excursions on the ice in search of bears.
-But although exercise was so necessary for our existence, yet from the winds
-drawing through the straits and down our harbour as through a funnel,
-there were many days, and even weeks, when we could scarcely leave the
-ship. The men set fox-traps in all directions, and Mr. Petersen set seal-nets
-under the ice. The nets were not successful, but the traps gave an object for
-a walk. Magnetic observations were carried on throughout the winter;&mdash;the
-reading of one instrument, placed in a snow-house some 200 yards from
-the ship, being registered every hour night and day. On some of the wild
-winter nights, there was some risk in going even that distance from the ship.
-Christmas and New Year’s days were spent with such rejoicing as in
-our situation we could make, and we entered upon the year 1859 with good
-health and spirits. Our dogs, upon which so much depended, were also in
-first-rate condition, and not one of them had died.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The sun returned to us on January 26th; the daylight soon began to
-increase; and by February 10th, we were all ready to start upon our first
-winter journey. Bad weather detained us until the 17th, when Captain
-M‘Clintock and Young both left the ship; the Captain, with only two
-companions, Mr. Petersen (interpreter) and Thompson as dog-driver, to
-travel down the west coast of Boothia, to endeavour to obtain information,
-preparatory to the long spring journeys, from some natives supposed to live
-near the magnetic pole. Young was to cross Victoria Straits with a depôt
-of provisions, to enable him in the spring to search the coast of Prince of
-Wales Land, wherever it might trend. He returned on March 5.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The Captain’s party hove in sight on the 14th, and we all ran
-out to meet him. He had found a tribe of natives at Cape Victoria, near
-the magnetic pole, and from them he learnt that some years ago a large
-ship was crushed by the ice, off the north-west coast of King William
-Land; that the people had come to the land, and had travelled down that
-coast to the estuary of the Great Fish River where they had died upon
-an island (Montreal Island); the natives had spears, bows and arrows,
-and other implements made of wood, besides a quantity of silver spoons<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[Pg 116]</span>
-and forks, which they said they had procured on the island (more probably
-by barter from other tribes). It was now evident that we were on the
-right track, and with this important information Captain M‘Clintock
-returned to the ship.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Our winter travelling was thus ended, fortunately without any mishap.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Those only who know what it is to be exposed to a temperature of
-frozen mercury accompanied with wind, can form any idea of the discomforts
-of dragging a sledge over the ice, upon an unknown track, day
-after day, and for eight or ten consecutive hours, without a meal or drink,
-the hands and face constantly frostbitten, and your very boots full of ice;
-to be attacked with snow blindness; to encamp and start in the dark, and
-spend sixteen hours upon the snow, in a brown-holland tent, or the hastily
-erected snow-house, listening to the wind, the snow-drift, and the howling
-of the dogs outside, and trying to wrap the frozen blanket closer round the
-shivering frame. The exhaustion to the system is so great, and the thirst
-so intense, that the evening pannikin of tea and the allowanced pound of
-pemmican would not be given up were it possible to receive the whole
-world in exchange; and woe to the unlucky cook if he capsized the kettle!</p>
-
-<p class="pt">On the 18th March, Young again started for Fury Beach, distant
-seventy-five miles, to get some of the sugar left there by Parry in 1825,
-and now considered necessary for the health of our men by the surgeon.
-This journey occupied until the 28th, one sledge having broken down, and
-the whole weight&mdash;about 1200 lbs.&mdash;having to be worked back piecemeal
-with one sledge, by a sort of fox-and-goose calculation. Dr. Walker,
-who had also volunteered to go down for the provisions left on the east
-coast in the autumn, and now not required there, returned about the same
-time. With the information already obtained, and which only accounted
-for one ship, Captain M‘Clintock saw no reason for changing the original
-plan of search, viz., that he should trace the Montreal Island and round
-King William Land; that Hobson should cross from the magnetic pole
-to Collinson’s farthest on Victoria Land, and follow up that coast; and that
-Young should cross Victoria Straits and connect the coast of Prince of
-Wales Land with either Collinson’s farthest on Victoria Island or Osborne’s
-farthest on the west coast of Prince of Wales Land, according as he might
-discover the land to trend. Young was also to connect the coast with
-Browne’s farthest in Peel Sound, and explore the coast of North Somerset
-from Sir James Ross’s farthest (Four River Bay) to Bellot Straits. This
-would complete the examination of the whole unexplored country.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The travelling parties were each to consist of four men drawing one
-sledge, and six dogs with a second sledge, besides the officer in charge, and
-the dog-driver. By the aid of depôts, already carried out, and from the
-extreme care with which Captain M‘Clintock had prepared the travelling
-equipment, and had reduced every ounce of unnecessary weight, we expected
-to be able to be absent from the ship, and without any other
-resource, for periods of from seventy to eighty days, and if necessary even
-longer. The Captain and Hobson both started on the 2nd April, and Young<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[Pg 117]</span>
-got away upon the 7th. The <i>Fox</i> was left in charge of Dr. Walker (surgeon),
-and three or four invalids, who were unfit for the fatigues of travelling.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Although we all felt much excited at the real commencement of our
-active work, and interested in these departures, this was perhaps the most
-painful period of our voyage. We had hitherto acted in concert, and all
-the dangers of our voyage had been shared together. We were now to be
-separated, and for three months to travel in detached parties over the ice,
-without an opportunity of hearing of each other until our return. It was
-like the breaking up of a happy family, and our only consolation lay in the
-hope that when we again met it would be to rejoice over the discovery of
-the lost ships. Nothing of interest occurred on board during our absence;
-but one of the invalids, poor Blackwell, had been getting gradually worse,
-and died of scurvy on June 14, the very day on which Hobson returned.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The Captain and Hobson travelled together as far as Cape Victoria.
-There they learnt the additional news that another ship had drifted on
-shore on the west coast of King William Land in the autumn of the same
-year in which the first ship was crushed. Captain M‘Clintock, now
-knowing that both ships had been seen off that coast, and that on it the
-traces must be found, most generously resigned to Hobson the first opportunity
-of searching there, instead of crossing to Victoria Land, as originally
-intended. Captain M‘Clintock then went down the east side towards
-the Fish River. Near Cape Norton, he found a tribe of some thirty or
-forty natives, who appeared much pleased to meet the strange white people.
-They answered readily any inquiries, and concealed nothing. They produced
-silver spoons and forks, and other relics from the lost ships, and
-readily bartered them for knives or needles. They were acquainted with
-the wreck, which they said was over the land (on the south-west coast), and
-for years they had collected wood and valuables from it, but they had not
-visited it for a long time. They had seen Franklin’s people on their march
-southward, but had not molested them. They said that they had seen one
-human skeleton in the ship. Proceeding on his route, Captain M‘Clintock
-next found a native family at Point Booth, near the south-east extreme
-of King William Land; these natives gave him the additional information
-that the remains of some of the lost people would be found on Montreal
-Island. Having searched Montreal Island and main land in the neighbourhood
-without finding other traces than a few pieces of copper and iron,
-and now having connected the search from the north with Anderson’s
-from the south, Captain M‘Clintock proceeded to examine the shores of
-Dease and Simpson Straits, and the southern shore of King William Land.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Near Cape Herschel, the Captain’s party found a human skeleton upon
-the beach as the man had fallen down and died, with his face to the
-ground; and a pocket-book, containing letters in German which have not
-yet been deciphered, was found close by.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The large cairn, originally built by Simpson, at Cape Herschel, had
-been pulled down, probably by the natives, and if any record or document
-had ever been placed therein by Franklin’s people, they were now lost, for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[Pg 118]</span>
-none could be found within or around the cairn. Passing Cape Herschel,
-Captain M‘Clintock travelled along the hitherto unknown shore, and discovered
-it to extend out as far as the meridian of 100° West. There all
-traces of the natives ceased,<a id="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> and it appeared as if they had not for many
-years lived or hunted beyond that point which was named Cape Crozier
-(after Captain Crozier, Franklin’s second in command).</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The land then trended to the north-eastward, and about twenty miles
-from Cape Crozier, M‘Clintock found a boat, which had only a few days
-previously been examined by Hobson from the north, and in it a note
-left by Hobson to say that he had discovered the records of the <i>Erebus</i>
-and <i>Terror</i>, and after travelling nearly to Cape Herschel without finding
-further traces, had returned towards the <i>Fox</i>. Captain M‘Clintock, from
-the south, had now connected his discoveries with those of Lieutenant
-Hobson, to whose very successful journey we will now turn.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Parting from the Captain at Cape Victoria, Hobson crossed to Cape
-Felix, and near that point he found a cairn, around which were quantities
-of clothing, blankets, and other indications of Franklin’s people having
-visited that spot, and probably formed a depôt there, in the event of their
-abandoning their ships. Anxiously searching among these interesting
-relics without finding any record, Hobson continued along the shore to
-Cape Victoria, where, on May 6, he discovered a large cairn, and in it
-the first authentic account ever obtained of the history of the lost expedition.
-It was to the following effect:&mdash;That the <i>Erebus</i> and <i>Terror</i> had ascended
-Wellington Channel to latitude 77° north, and had returned west of
-Cornwallis Island to Beechey Island, where they spent their first winter,
-1845-46. Sailing thence in the following season, they were beset, on
-September 12, 1846, in latitude 70° 5′ north, longitude 98° 23′ west.
-<i>Sir John Franklin died on June 11, 1847</i>; and on the 22nd of April,
-1848, having, up to that date, lost by death nine officers and fifteen
-men, both ships were abandoned in the ice, five leagues north north-west
-of Point Victory. The survivors, 106 in number, had landed, under
-the command of Captain Crozier, on the 25th April, at Point Victory,
-and would start on the morrow (April 26) for the Great Fish River.
-Another record was also found, stating that previously, on the 24th
-May, 1847, Lieutenant Grahame Gore and Mr. Charles DesVœux, mate,
-had landed from the ship, with a party of six men. The record did not
-state for what reason they had landed; but from the number who finally
-abandoned the ships, this party must have returned on board, and it is
-probable that they merely landed to examine the coast.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Quantities of clothing, cooking, and working implements were scattered
-about near Point Victory, and a sextant, on which was engraved the name
-of Frederick Hornby, was found among the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">débris</span></i>. Collecting a few of the
-most interesting of these relics to take with him upon his return, Hobson
-then pushed on to the southward, and when near Cape Crozier he discovered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[Pg 119]</span>
-the boat above mentioned, by a small stanchion just showing up above
-the snow. Clearing away the snow, he found in the bottom of the boat
-two human skeletons, one of which was under a heap of clothing. There
-were also watches, chronometers, silver spoons, money, &amp;c., besides a
-number of Bibles, prayer and other religious books; and although one of
-the Bibles was underlined in almost every verse, yet not a single writing
-was found to throw further light upon the history of the retreating parties.
-There were two guns, one barrel of each being loaded and cocked, as if
-these poor fellows had been anxiously longing for a passing bear or fox to
-save them from starving; for nothing edible was found, save some chocolate
-and tea, neither of which could support life in such a climate. Lieutenant
-Hobson, having searched the coast beyond Cape Crozier, returned to the
-ship on June 14, in a very exhausted state. He had been suffering
-severely from scurvy, and was so reduced in strength that he could not
-stand. He had been for more than forty days upon his sledge, carried in
-and out of the tent by his brave companions, and his sufferings must have
-been beyond description. Throughout his journey he had only killed one
-bear and a few ptarmigan.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Captain M‘Clintock returned on board the <i>Fox</i> on June 19, having
-been absent eighty days. He brought with him a number of relics, and
-had minutely examined every cairn and the whole coast of King William.
-He supposes that the wreck of the ship, unless upon some off-lying island,
-has been run over by the ice, and has disappeared; as he saw nothing of
-it. He made most valuable discoveries in geography, and surveyed the
-coast from Bellot Straits to the magnetic pole, besides having travelled
-completely round King William Island, and filled up its unknown coasts.
-Besides his other instruments, he carried with him a dip circle, weighing
-40 lbs., with which he also made most valuable observations.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Young had crossed Victoria Straits (now Franklin Straits), discovered
-M‘Clintock Channel, and proved Prince of Wales Land to be an island;
-having reached the point which Captain Sherard Osborn came to from the
-north. Owing to the very heavy character of the ice, he had failed in
-crossing M‘Clintock Channel, and returned to the ship on June 8, for a
-day or two’s rest. He had again started, on June 10, to recross Victoria
-Straits, and to complete the search to the northward upon Prince of Wales
-Land, and the unknown land of North Somerset, and was now absent; and
-although the ice was fast breaking up, and the floes already knee-deep with
-water, Captain M‘Clintock, notwithstanding his late severe journey, fearing
-that something might be wrong, most kindly started immediately, with
-only one man and a dog-sledge, to look for him. He found Young perched
-up out of the water upon the top of the islet, off Cape Bird, and they
-returned together to the ship on June 28. We were now all on board,
-and once more together. We were in fair health, although some of us were
-a little touched with scurvy. We passed our time in shooting, eating, and
-sleeping, and then eating again: our craving for fresh food, or, as the
-sailors call it, blood-meat, was excessive; seal and bear flesh, foxes, gulls,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[Pg 120]</span>
-or ducks, went indiscriminately into the pot. We rejoiced whenever we
-got a fresh mess of any sort.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The summer burst upon us; water was pouring down all the ravines,
-and flooding the ice in the harbour, and with extreme satisfaction we saw
-the snow houses and ice hummocks fast melting away in the now never-setting
-sun. A joyous feeling existed throughout the ship, for our work
-was done, and we had only to look forward to an early release, and a
-return to our families and homes.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Over and over again we told our adventures, and we never tired of
-listening to the one all-absorbing, though melancholy subject, of the discovery
-of the fate of Sir John Franklin and his companions.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We had been prepared by the report brought from the Esquimaux in
-February to find that all hopes of survivors were at an end, and that the
-expedition had met with some fatal and overwhelming casualty; but we
-were scarcely prepared to know, nor could we even have realized the manner,
-in which they spent their last days upon earth, so fearful a sojourn must it
-have been. Beset and surrounded with wastes of snow and ice, they
-passed two more terrible winters drifting slowly to the southward at the
-rate of one mile in the month, hoping each summer that the ice would open,
-and determined not to abandon their ships until every hope was gone. In
-nineteen months they had only moved some eighteen miles, their provisions
-daily lessening, and their strength fast failing. They had at last left their
-ships for the Fish River at least two months before the river could break up
-and allow them to proceed, and in the then imperfect knowledge of ice
-travelling they could not have carried with them more than forty days’
-provisions. Exhausted by scurvy and starvation, “they dropped as they
-walked along,”<a id="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> and those few who reached Montreal Island must all have
-perished there; and but for their having travelled over the frozen sea we
-should have found the remains of these gallant men as they fell by the
-way, and but for the land being covered deeply with snow, more relics
-of those who had struggled to the beach to die would have been seen.
-They all perished, and, in dying in the cause of their country, their dearest
-consolation must have been to feel that Englishmen would not rest until
-they had followed up their footsteps, and had given to the world what
-they could not then give&mdash;the grand result of their dreadful voyage&mdash;<i>their
-Discovery of the North-West Passage</i>. They had sailed down Peel
-and Victoria Straits, now appropriately named Franklin Straits, and the
-poor human skeletons lying upon the shores of the waters in which Dease
-and Simpson had sailed from the westward bore melancholy evidence of
-their success.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="pt">By the middle of July the dark blue stream rolled again through
-Bellot Straits, but yet not a drop of water could be seen in Regent Inlet.
-Our ship was refitted, the stores all on board, and we were quite prepared
-for sea. Our engineers were both lost to us, but the Captain soon got
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[Pg 121]</span>the engines into working order, and determined to drive them himself, for
-without steam we could reckon upon nothing.</p>
-
-<div class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
-<a rel="nofollow" href="images/i_120a_b.jpg">
-<img class="img100" src="images/i_120a.jpg" alt="A CHART showing the TRACKS OF THE YACHT FOX despatched by Lady Franklin under the command of CAPT’N. M‘CLINTOCK, R.N. in search of H.M. SHIPS EREBUS &amp; TERROR 1857 to 1859" />
-</a>
-</div>
-
-<div class="hidescreen">
-<img class="img100" src="images/i_120a.jpg" alt="A CHART showing the TRACKS OF THE YACHT FOX despatched by Lady Franklin under the command of CAPT’N. M‘CLINTOCK, R.N. in search of H.M. SHIPS EREBUS &amp; TERROR 1857 to 1859" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pt">July passed away, and during the first week in August we could still
-see one unbroken surface of ice in Regent Inlet; from the highest hill not
-a spoonful of water could be made out. We were getting rather anxious,
-for had we been detained another winter, we must have abandoned the ship
-in the following spring and trusted to our fortunes over the ice. However,
-a gale of wind on the 7th and 8th of August caused some disruption in the
-inlet, for on the morning of the 9th a report came down from the hills that
-a lead of water was seen under the land to the northward. Steam was
-immediately made, and pushing close past the islands, we were enabled to
-work up the coast in a narrow lane of water between it and the pack.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">We reached the north side of Creswell Bay on the following day, but,
-the wind changing, we saw the pack setting rapidly in upon the land, and
-it had already closed upon Fury Beach. Our only chance was now to seek
-a grounded mass of ice, and to hang on to it. We were indeed glad to get
-a little rest, and especially for our captain, who had not left the engines for
-twenty-four hours. But we lay in a most exposed position on an open
-coast without an indentation, the pack closing in rapidly before the wind
-and threatening us with the same fate as befell the <i>Fury</i> when she was
-driven on the shore about seven miles from our present position. Hanging
-on to this piece of ice with every hawser, we saw it gradually melting
-and breaking away, and at spring tides it began to float. On the 15th the
-gale shifted to the westward, and blew off the land; we watched the ice
-gradually easing off, and directly that we had room, we cast off under
-storm-sails, and succeeded in getting out of Regent Inlet and into Lancaster
-Sound on the following day. We entered Godhavn, in Greenland, on the
-night of August 26, and not having heard from our friends for more
-than two years, we did not even wait for daylight for our expected letters.
-The authorities on shore kindly sent all they had for us at once to the
-ship, and I suppose that letters from home were never opened with more
-anxiety.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Having a few repairs to do, especially to our rudder, which, with the
-spare one, had been smashed by the ice, we remained a day or two to
-patch it up for the passage home. Then leaving Godhavn on the 1st
-September, although the nights were extremely dark, and the weather
-stormy, with many bergs drifting about, we passed down Davis Strait
-without incident, and, rounding Cape Farewell on the 13th, we ran across
-the Atlantic with strong, fair winds. Captain M‘Clintock landed at the
-Isle of Wight on the 20th, and on the 23rd the <i>Fox</i> entered the docks at
-Blackwall.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Our happy cruise was at an end, and by the mercy of Providence we
-were permitted to land again in England.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_31" href="#FNanchor_31" class="label">[31]</a> The wanderings of the Esquimaux may be traced by the circles of stones by
-which they keep down their skin summer tents.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_32" href="#FNanchor_32" class="label">[32]</a> Esquimaux report.</p></div></div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak oe" id="The_First_Morning_of_1860">The First Morning of 1860.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">One evening mid the summer flown</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Has stamp’d my memory more than any;</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">It pass’d us by among the many,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And yet it stands there, all alone.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">We sate without our open’d room,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">While fell the eve’s transparent shade;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The out-door world, all warmth and bloom,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">To us a summer parlour made.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The garden’s cultivated grace,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">The luxury of neatness round,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The careless amplitude of space,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">The silence, and the casual sound,</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Told of a state thro’ many years</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Serenely safe in doing well;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And while we sate, there struck our ears</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">The summons of the evening bell.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">It call’d to food, it call’d to rest,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">The many whom the rich man’s dome</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Had gathered in its ample breast,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">To them and him alike a home.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">That very hour, was thund’ring o’er</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">A neighbouring land, the tramp of War,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Which stalked along the lovely shore,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Its shapes to blast, its sounds to mar.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">And ’gainst our own, the reflux wave</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Had pushed its harsh in-flooding swell:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The clouds which there a tempest gave,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">In shadow on our own land fell.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The pang my bosom rudely beat&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">What if that fate our own had been?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">What if or victory or defeat</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Had wrapp’d us in its woe, and sin?</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[Pg 123]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">What if it still our fate should be?</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">And the safe hours, enjoy’d like this,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Amid our home-scenes safe and free,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Should be the passing year of bliss?</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The new one on the lecturn lies,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Its leaves the turning hand await;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Those fresh unopen’d leaves comprise</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Th’ unread, but written words of Fate.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">O God! what are they? if they be</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">The bloody words of ruffian war,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Grant us success!&mdash;but rather far</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Avert the scourge of victory!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Too dear the price! Ah! human forms</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Of guardian husbands, cherish’d sons</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Once children, hid from smallest harms</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Of mind and body, cherish’d ones!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Shall ye stand up, the gallant mark</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Of the brute shot, and iron rod,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And man’s frame, exquisite in work,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Be treated like earth’s common clod?</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Shall England’s polish’d glory, pure</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">In freedom, wisdom, high estate,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Her open Bible, and her poor</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Becoming one with rich and great,&mdash;</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Shall these high things be but the aim</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Of envious men, in rough affray,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To try against the noble frame</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Their brutal skill to rob and slay?</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Forbid it Thou, who to the strong,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">And wise, hast might and counsel lent;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And lead’st them danger’s path along,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Audacious, firm, and confident.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Forbid it, Thou, who to the weak</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Permittest to be strong in pray’r;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From Whom we wives and mothers seek</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Peace to endow the new-born year.</div>
- </div>
-<div class="right">V.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak oe" id="Roundabout_Papers_No_I">Roundabout Papers.&mdash;No. I.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p class="motto">ON A LAZY IDLE BOY.</p>
-
-<div class="hidescreen">
-<img class="center img50h" src="images/i_124.jpg" alt="I" />
-</div>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap-i img50" src="images/i_124.jpg" alt="I" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-cap-i">I had occasion to pass a
-week in the autumn in
-the little old town of
-Coire or Chur, in the
-Grisons, where lies buried
-that very ancient British
-king, saint, and martyr,
-Lucius,<a id="FNanchor_33" href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> who founded
-the Church of St. Peter,
-which stands opposite the
-house No. 65, Cornhill.
-Few people note the
-church now-a-days, and
-fewer ever heard of the
-saint. In the cathedral
-at Chur, his statue
-appears surrounded by
-other sainted persons of
-his family. With tight
-red breeches, a Roman
-habit, a curly brown
-beard, and a neat little
-gilt crown and sceptre,
-he stands, a very comely
-and cheerful image: and,
-from what I may call his
-peculiar position with regard
-to No. 65, Cornhill,
-I beheld this figure of St.
-Lucius with more interest
-than I should have bestowed upon personages who, hierarchically, are, I
-daresay, his superiors.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">The pretty little city stands, so to speak, at the end of the world&mdash;of
-the world of to-day, the world of rapid motion, and rushing railways, and
-the commerce and intercourse of men. From the northern gate, the iron
-road stretches away to Zürich, to Basel, to Paris, to home. From the old
-southern barriers, before which a little river rushes, and around which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[Pg 125]</span>
-stretch the crumbling battlements of the ancient town, the road bears the slow
-diligence or lagging vetturino by the shallow Rhine, through the awful
-gorges of the Via Mala, and presently over the Splügen to the shores
-of Como.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">I have seldom seen a place more quaint, pretty, calm, and pastoral,
-than this remote little Chur. What need have the inhabitants for walls
-and ramparts, except to build summer-houses, to trail vines, and hang
-clothes to dry? No enemies approach the great mouldering gates: only
-at morn and even, the cows come lowing past them, the village maidens
-chatter merrily round the fountains, and babble like the ever-voluble
-stream that flows under the old walls. The schoolboys, with book and
-satchel, in smart uniforms, march up to the gymnasium, and return thence
-at their stated time. There is one coffee-house in the town, and I see one
-old gentleman goes to it. There are shops with no customers seemingly,
-and the lazy tradesmen look out of their little windows at the single
-stranger sauntering by. There is a stall with baskets of queer little black
-grapes and apples, and a pretty brisk trade with half a dozen urchins
-standing round. But, beyond this, there is scarce any talk or movement
-in the street. There’s nobody at the book-shop. “If you will have the
-goodness to come again in an hour,” says the banker, with his mouthful of
-dinner at one o’clock, “you can have the money.” There is nobody at the
-hotel, save the good landlady, the kind waiters, the brisk young cook who
-ministers to you. Nobody is in the Protestant church&mdash;(oh! strange sight,
-the two confessions are here at peace!)&mdash;nobody in the Catholic church:
-until the sacristan, from his snug abode in the cathedral close, espies the
-traveller eyeing the monsters and pillars before the old shark-toothed arch
-of his cathedral, and comes out (with a view to remuneration possibly)
-and opens the gate, and shows you the venerable church, and the queer old
-relics in the sacristy, and the ancient vestments (a black velvet cope,
-amongst other robes, as fresh as yesterday, and presented by that notorious
-“pervert,” Henry of Navarre and France), and the statue of St. Lucius,
-who built St. Peter’s Church, opposite No. 65, Cornhill.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">What a quiet, kind, quaint, pleasant, pretty old town! Has it been
-asleep these hundreds and hundreds of years, and is the brisk young Prince
-of the Sidereal Realms in his screaming car drawn by his snorting steel
-elephant coming to waken it? Time was when there must have been life
-and bustle and commerce here. Those vast, venerable walls were not
-made to keep out cows, but men-at-arms led by fierce captains, who
-prowled about the gates, and robbed the traders us they passed in and
-out with their bales, their goods, their pack-horses, and their wains. Is
-the place so dead that even the clergy of the different denominations can’t
-quarrel? Why, seven or eight, or a dozen, or fifteen hundred years
-ago (they haven’t the register, over the way, up to that remote period.
-I daresay it was burnt in the fire of London)&mdash;a dozen hundred years ago,
-when there was some life in the town, St. Lucius was stoned here on
-account of theological differences, after founding our church in Cornhill.</p>
-
-<p class="pt"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[Pg 126]</span></p>
-
-<p class="pt">There was a sweet pretty river walk we used to take in the evening,
-and mark the mountains round glooming with a deeper purple; the
-shades creeping up the golden walls; the river brawling, the cattle calling,
-the maids and chatterboxes round the fountains babbling and bawling;
-and several times in the course of our sober walks, we overtook a lazy
-slouching boy, or hobbledehoy, with a rusty coat, and trousers not too long,
-and big feet trailing lazily one after the other, and large lazy hands
-dawdling from out the tight sleeves, and in the lazy hands a little book,
-which my lad held up to his face, and which I daresay so charmed and
-ravished him, that he was blind to the beautiful sights around him;
-unmindful, I would venture to lay any wager, of the lessons he had to
-learn for to-morrow; forgetful of mother waiting supper, and father preparing
-a scolding;&mdash;absorbed utterly and entirely in his book.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">What was it that so fascinated the young student, as he stood by the
-river shore? Not the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Pons Asinorum</span></i>. What book so delighted him,
-and blinded him to all the rest of the world, so that he did not care to see
-the apple-woman with her fruit, or (more tempting still to sons of Eve) the
-pretty girls with their apple cheeks, who laughed and prattled round the
-fountain? What was the book? Do you suppose it was Livy, or the
-Greek grammar? No; it was a <span class="smcap">Novel</span> that you were reading, you lazy,
-not very clean, good-for-nothing, sensible boy! It was D’Artagnan
-locking up General Monk in a box, or almost succeeding in keeping
-Charles the First’s head on. It was the prisoner of the Château d’If
-cutting himself out of the sack fifty feet under water (I mention the novels
-I like best myself&mdash;novels without love or talking, or any of that sort of nonsense,
-but containing plenty of fighting, escaping, robbery, and rescuing)&mdash;cutting
-himself out of the sack, and swimming to the Island of Montecristo.
-O Dumas! O thou brave, kind, gallant old Alexandre! I hereby offer
-thee homage, and give thee thanks for many pleasant hours. I have read
-thee (being sick in bed) for thirteen hours of a happy day, and had the
-ladies of the house fighting for the volumes. Be assured that lazy boy
-was reading Dumas (or I will go so far as to let the reader here pronounce
-the eulogium, or insert the name of his favourite author); and as for the
-anger, or it may be, the reverberations of his schoolmaster, or the remonstrances
-of his father, or the tender pleadings of his mother that he should
-not let the supper grow cold&mdash;I don’t believe the scapegrace cared one fig.
-No! Figs are sweet, but fictions are sweeter.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Have you ever seen a score of white-bearded, white-robed warriors, or
-grave seniors of the city, seated at the gate of Jaffa or Beyrout, and
-listening to the story-teller reciting his marvels out of <i>Antar</i> or the
-<i>Arabian Nights</i>? I was once present when a young gentleman at table
-put a tart away from him, and said to his neighbour, the Younger Son (with
-rather a fatuous air), “I never eat sweets.”</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Not eat sweets! and do you know why?” says T.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Because I am past that kind of thing,” says the young gentleman.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">“Because you are a glutton and a sot!” cries the elder (and Juvenis<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[Pg 127]</span>
-winces a little). “All people who have natural, healthy appetites, love
-sweets; all children, all women, all Eastern people, whose tastes are not
-corrupted by gluttony and strong drink.” And a plateful of raspberries
-and cream disappeared before the philosopher.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">You take the allegory? Novels are sweets. All people with healthy
-literary appetites love them&mdash;almost all women;&mdash;a vast number of
-clever, hard-headed men. Why, one of the most learned physicians in
-England said to me only yesterday, “I have just read <i>So-and-So</i> for
-the second time” (naming one of Jones’s exquisite fictions). Judges,
-bishops, chancellors, mathematicians are notorious novel readers; as well
-as young boys and sweet girls, and their kind, tender mothers. Who
-has not read about Eldon, and how he cried over novels every night when
-he was not at whist?</p>
-
-<p class="pt">As for that lazy naughty boy at Chur, I doubt whether <i>he</i> will like
-novels when he is thirty years of age. He is taking too great a glut of
-them now. He is eating jelly until he will be sick. He will know most
-plots by the time he is twenty, so that <i>he</i> will never be surprised when
-the Stranger turns out to be the rightful earl,&mdash;when the old waterman,
-throwing off his beggarly gabardine, shows his stars and the collars of his
-various orders, and clasping Antonia to his bosom, proves himself to be
-the prince, her long-lost father. He will recognize the novelists’ same
-characters, though they appear in red-heeled pumps and <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ailes-de-pigeon</span></i>, or
-the garb of the nineteenth century. He will get weary of sweets, as boys
-of private schools grow (or used to grow, for I have done growing some
-little time myself, and the practice may have ended too)&mdash;as private schoolboys
-used to grow tired of the pudding before their mutton at dinner.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">And pray what is the moral of this apologue? The moral I take to be
-this: the appetite for novels extending to the end of the world;&mdash;far
-away in the frozen deep, the sailors reading them to one another during
-the endless night;&mdash;far away under the Syrian stars, the solemn sheikhs
-and elders hearkening to the poet as he recites his tales;&mdash;far away in the
-Indian camps, where the soldiers listen to &mdash;&mdash;’s tales, or &mdash;&mdash;’s, after the
-hot day’s march;&mdash;far away in little Chur yonder, where the lazy boy
-pores over the fond volume, and drinks it in with all his eyes;&mdash;the demand
-being what we know it is, the merchant must supply it, as he will supply
-saddles and pale ale for Bombay or Calcutta.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">But as surely as the cadet drinks too much pale ale, it will disagree
-with him; and so surely, dear youth, will too much novels cloy on thee.
-I wonder, do novel writers themselves read many novels? If you go into
-Gunter’s, you don’t see those charming young ladies (to whom I present
-my most respectful compliments) eating tarts and ices, but at the proper
-evening-tide they have good plain wholesome tea and bread-and-butter.
-Can anybody tell me does the author of the <i>Tale of two Cities</i> read novels?
-does the author of the <i>Tower of London</i> devour romances? does the
-dashing <i>Harry Lorrequer</i> delight in <i>Plain or Ringlets</i> or <i>Sponge’s Sporting
-Tour</i>? Does the veteran, from whose flowing pen we had the books which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[Pg 128]</span>
-delighted our young days, <i>Darnley</i>, and <i>Richelieu</i>, and <i>Delorme</i><a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> relish the
-works of Alexandre the Great, and thrill over the <i>Three Musqueteers</i>?
-Does the accomplished author of the <i>Caxtons</i> read the other tales in <i>Blackwood</i>?
-(For example, that ghost-story printed last August, and which for
-my part, though I read it in the public reading-room at the Pavilion Hotel
-at Folkestone, I protest frightened me so that I scarce dared look over my
-shoulder.) Does <i>Uncle Tom</i> admire <i>Adam Bede</i>; and does the author of
-the <i>Vicar of Wrexhill</i> laugh over the <i>Warden</i> and the <i>Three Clerks</i>?
-Dear youth of ingenuous countenance and ingenuous pudor! I make no
-doubt that the eminent parties above named all partake of novels in
-moderation&mdash;eat jellies&mdash;but mainly nourish themselves upon wholesome
-roast and boiled.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Here, dear youth aforesaid! our <span class="smcap">Cornhill Magazine</span> owners strive
-to provide thee with facts as well as fiction; and though it does not
-become them to brag of their Ordinary, at least they invite thee to a
-table where thou shall sit in good company. That story of the <i>Fox</i> was
-written by one of the gallant seamen who sought for poor Franklin under
-the awful Arctic Night: that account of China is told by the man of all
-the empire most likely to know of what he speaks: those pages regarding
-Volunteers come from an honoured hand that has borne the sword in a
-hundred famous fields, and pointed the British guns in the greatest siege in
-the world.</p>
-
-<p class="pt">Shall we point out others? We are fellow-travellers, and shall make
-acquaintance as the voyage proceeds. In the Atlantic steamers, on the
-first day out (and on high and holidays subsequently), the jellies set
-down on table are richly ornamented; <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">medioque in fonte leporum</span></i> rise the
-American and British flags nobly emblazoned in tin. As the passengers
-remark this pleasing phenomenon, the Captain no doubt improves the
-occasion by expressing a hope, to his right and left, that the flag of Mr. Bull
-and his younger Brother may always float side by side in friendly emulation.
-Novels having been previously compared to jellies&mdash;here are two (one
-perhaps not entirely saccharine, and flavoured with an <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">amari aliquid</span></i> very
-distasteful to some palates)&mdash;two novels under two flags, the one that ancient
-ensign which has hung before the well-known booth of <i>Vanity Fair</i>; the
-other that fresh and handsome standard which has lately been hoisted on
-<i>Barchester Towers</i>. Pray, sir, or madam, to which dish will you be helped?</p>
-
-<p class="pt">So have I seen my friends Captain Lang and Captain Comstock press
-their guests to partake of the fare on that memorable “First day out,”
-when there is no man, I think, who sits down but asks a blessing on his
-voyage, and the good ship dips over the bar, and bounds away into the
-blue water.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_33" href="#FNanchor_33" class="label">[33]</a> Stow quotes the inscription, still extant, “from the table fast chained in St. Peter’s
-Church, Cornhill;” and says “he was after some chronicle buried at London, and after
-some chronicle buried at Glowcester”&mdash;but oh! these incorrect chroniclers! when Alban
-Butler, in the <i>Lives of the Saints</i>, v. xii., and Murray’s <i>Handbook</i>, and the Sacristan at
-Chur, all say Lucius was killed there, and I saw his tomb with my own eyes!</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_34" href="#FNanchor_34" class="label">[34]</a> By the way, what a strange fate is that which has befallen the veteran novelist!
-He is her Majesty’s Consul-General in Venice, the only city in Europe where the
-famous “Two Cavaliers” cannot by any possibility be seen riding together.</p></div></div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="chapter transnote">
-
-<h2>Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
-
-<p>The following changes have been made:</p>
-
-<p class="tn">A table of contents has been added for the convenience of the reader.</p>
-
-<p class="tn">Some illustrations have been moved outside the enclosing paragraphs.</p>
-
-<p class="tn">Changed <b>dorekie</b> to <b>dovekie</b> in
-“saw a solitary dovekie in winter plumage”
-on page <a href="#TN105A">105</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CORNHILL MAGAZINE, VOL. I, JANUARY 1860 ***</div>
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