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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76590 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE PENNY MAGAZINE
+
+ OF THE
+
+ Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ 2.] PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY. [April 7, 1832
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ POMPEII.
+
+ [Illustration: Restored View of Pompeii.]
+
+ ⁂ The volume on ‘Pompeii,’ lately published in the Library of
+ Entertaining Knowledge, contains every authentic detail of the
+ destruction of that city by an eruption of Mount Vesuvius, A.D. 79;
+ and the second volume, which will be shortly published, will
+ complete the description of the remains of public and private
+ buildings, and of articles of domestic use, which have been
+ discovered in the ruins. The following observations on this
+ interesting subject are from an intelligent correspondent, who has
+ had the advantage of visiting the spot.
+
+It is certainly surprising, that this most interesting city should have
+remained undiscovered until so late a period, and that antiquaries and
+learned men should have so long and materially erred about its
+situation. In many places masses of ruins, portions of the buried
+theatres, temples, and houses were not two feet below the surface of the
+soil; the country people were continually digging up pieces of worked
+marble, and other antique objects; in several spots they had even laid
+open the outer walls of the town; and yet men did not find out _what it
+was_, that peculiar, isolated mound of cinders and ashes, earth and
+pumice-stone, covered. There is another circumstance which increases the
+wonder of Pompeii remaining so long concealed. A subterranean canal, cut
+from the river Sarno, traverses the city, and is seen darkly and
+silently gliding on under the temple of Isis. This is said to have been
+cut towards the middle of the fifteenth century, to supply the
+contiguous town of the Torre dell’ Annunziata with fresh water; it
+probably ran anciently in the same channel. But, cutting it, or clearing
+it, workmen must have crossed under Pompeii from one side to the other.
+
+As you walk round the walls of the city, and see how the volcanic matter
+is piled upon it in one heap, it looks as though the hand of man had
+purposely buried it, by carrying and throwing over it the volcanic
+matter. This matter does not spread in any direction beyond the town,
+over the fine plain which gently declines towards the bay of Naples. The
+volcanic eruption was so confined in its course or its fall, as to bury
+Pompeii, and only Pompeii: for the shower of ashes and pumice-stone
+which descended in the immediate neighbourhood certainly made but a
+slight difference in the elevation of the plain.
+
+Where a town has been buried by lava, like Herculaneum, the process is
+easily traced. You can follow the black, hardened lava from the cone of
+the mountain to the sea, whose waters it invaded for “many a rood,” and
+those who have seen the lava in its liquid state, when it flows on like
+a river of molten iron, can conceive at once how it would bury every
+thing it found in its way. There is often a confusion of ideas, among
+those who have not had the advantages of visiting these interesting
+places, as to the matter which covers Pompeii and Herculaneum: they
+fancy they were both buried by lava. Herculaneum was so, and the work of
+excavating there, was like digging in a quarry of very hard stone. The
+descent into the places cleared is like the descent into a quarry or
+mine, and you are always under ground, lighted by torches.
+
+But Pompeii was covered by loose mud, pumice-stone, and ashes, over
+which, in the course of centuries, there collected vegetable soil.
+Beneath this shallow soil, the whole is very crumbly and easy to dig, in
+few spots more difficult than one of our common gravel-pits. The matter
+excavated is carried off in carts, and thrown outside of the town; and
+in times when the labour is carried on with activity, as cart after cart
+withdraws with the earth that covered them, you see houses entire,
+except their roofs, which have nearly always fallen in, make their
+appearance, and, by degrees, a whole street opens to the sun-shine or
+the shower, just like the streets of any inhabited neighbouring town. It
+is curious to observe, as the volcanic matter is removed, that the
+houses are principally built of lava, the more ancient product of the
+same Vesuvius, whose later results buried and concealed Pompeii for so
+many ages.
+
+ [Illustration: Implements of building found at Pompeii.]
+
+In the autumn of 1822 I saw Pompeii under very interesting
+circumstances. It was a few days after an eruption of Vesuvius, which I
+had witnessed, and which was considered by far the grandest eruption of
+recent times. From Portici, our road was coated with lapilla or
+pumice-stone, and a fine impalpable powder, of a palish grey hue, that
+had been discharged from the mountain, round whose base we were winding.
+In many places this coating was more than a foot deep, but it was pretty
+equally spread, not accumulating in any particular spot. As we drove
+into Pompeii our carriage wheels crushed this matter, which contained
+the principal components of what had buried the city: it was lodged on
+the edges of the houses’ walls, and on their roofs, (where the
+Neapolitan government had furnished them with any); it lay inches thick
+on the tops of the pillars and truncated columns of the ancient temples;
+it covered all the floors or the houses that had no roofs, and concealed
+the mosaics. In the amphitheatre, where we sat down to refresh
+ourselves, we were obliged to make the guides clear it away with
+shovels--it was everywhere. Looking from the upper walls of the
+amphitheatre, we saw the whole country covered with it--trees and all
+were coated with the pale-grey plaster, nor did it disappear for many
+months after.
+
+Some ignorant fellows at Naples pretended the fine ashes, or powder,
+contained gold! Neapolitans began to collect it. They found no gold, but
+it turned out to be an excellent thing for cleaning and polishing plate.
+
+This dust continued to be blown from the mountain many days after the
+eruption had ceased. It once made a pretty figure of me! I was riding up
+the Posilippo road when it came on to rain; the rain brought down and
+gave consistency to the dust, which adhered to my black coat and
+pantaloons, until I looked as if I had been rolled in plaster of Paris.
+
+But it travelled farther than Posilippo, for a friend of mine, an
+officer in the navy, assured me it had fallen with rain on the deck of
+his ship, when between three and four hundred miles from Naples and
+Mount Vesuvius. There is an old story, that during one of the great
+eruptions of this mountain, or Etna, cinders were thrown as far as
+Constantinople: by substituting the fine powder I have alluded to, for
+cinders, the story becomes not improbable.
+
+
+ ---------------------
+
+
+ VAN DIEMEN’S LAND.
+
+ [Concluded from our last.]
+
+The island of Van Diemen’s Land lies immediately to the south of the
+vast continent of New Holland, from which it is separated by the narrow
+channel called Bass’s Strait. If New Holland be regarded as a great full
+bag or sack, Bass’s Strait will represent the neck, where it is drawn
+together and tied close, and Van Diemen’s Land the small bunch or
+gathering made beyond the string by the mere lip of the sack. While New
+Holland is rather more than half as large as all Europe, the extent of
+Van Diemen’s Land is only about twenty-three thousand square miles,
+which is not much more than two-thirds of the size of Ireland, or a
+fourth part of that of the island of Great Britain. The one, in fact, is
+about eighty times as large as the other.
+
+One of the papers in the Van Diemen’s Land Almanac presents us with a
+very full geographical description of the island. It was divided soon
+after its settlement into two great counties, Buckinghamshire, embracing
+the southern, and Cornwall, the northern portion of it. But the division
+which is now chiefly recognised, is that made in 1827 into eight Police
+districts, each under the charge of a paid magistrate. In the first of
+these, occupying the south-west corner of the island, stands Hobart
+Town, the capital, on the river Derwent, and about twenty miles from its
+mouth. The river, however, is, even at this distance from the sea, of
+considerable width, and the water is quite salt. The town stands upon a
+gently rising ground, and covers rather more than a square mile. Its
+streets are wide, and intersect each other at right angles. It contains
+several government buildings, a parish church, and other places of
+worship; a government school for the poor, and several Sunday schools;
+two public banks; and several libraries. Among its manufactories Hobart
+Town possesses a distillery, several breweries and tanneries, two timber
+mills, several flour mills worked by steam and water, and two or three
+soap and candle works. The population of the town and suburbs, including
+the convicts and the military, is above seven thousand. This, we
+believe, is about half the amount of the whole population of the island.
+
+The other towns already founded in Van Diemen’s Land, are, Launceston,
+on the river Tamar, about a hundred and twenty miles north from the
+capital, containing about a thousand inhabitants; New Norfolk, or
+Elizabeth Town, a place of considerable traffic, and also the centre of
+a rich agricultural district, standing on the Derwent, about twenty-two
+miles higher up than Hobart Town; Richmond, fourteen miles from the
+capital; Sorell Town, or Pitt Water, and Brighton, two other townships
+in the same vicinity; Bothwell, Oatlands, Campbell Town, Ross, Perth,
+and George Town, all considerably advanced settlements. Many other
+stations, however, have been marked out for towns, although scarcely yet
+begun to be built upon. Numerous farm-houses, also, and other detached
+residences, many of them standing in the midst of enclosed fields,
+gardens, and orchards, have been built in all directions. A single
+agricultural association, called the Van Diemen’s Land Company, possess
+a continuous tract of above three hundred thousand acres, in the
+north-west part of the island. About four hundred and fifty persons
+reside on this property. There are two government settlements for
+persons convicted of crimes in the colony, Macquarie Harbour on the west
+coast, and Maria Island on the east.
+
+The face of the country, though extremely diversified, is mountainous on
+the whole, and, especially as seen from the south, presents a prospect
+of singular sublimity; hills covered to the ridge with trees,
+occasionally intermingled with a bare rocky eminence, appearing to rise
+behind each other in endless succession. Some of the mountains on the
+south coast are five thousand feet in height, and during a great part of
+the year are covered with snow. Mount Wellington, or the Table Mountain,
+a few miles to the west of Hobart Town, rises to the height of four
+thousand feet above the level of the sea. The interior, however,
+contains many extensive plains quite unencumbered with wood. Even the
+western coast, where the scenery in general is bold and desolate,
+presents many protected and fertile spots. The bays and harbours around
+the coast are numerous and excellent. In this respect Hobart Town
+especially is most favourably situated. The principal rivers are the
+Derwent, the Huon, and the Tamar, all navigable. The Derwent, even at
+New Norfolk, above forty miles from the sea, is as wide as the Thames at
+Battersea. The scenery on both sides of this noble stream is described
+as being of the richest beauty. The second-rate and inferior rivers are
+numerous, fertilizing every part of the country, and falling into the
+sea along the whole extent of the coast. In the heart of the island are
+several lakes, from which many of the rivers take their rise.
+
+Much of the native timber of Van Diemen’s Land is excellent for all
+building purposes; and others of the woods are esteemed for ornamental
+cabinet-work. All the trees are evergreens. The shrubs are of great
+variety and beauty; but present as yet an almost unexamined field to the
+botanist. As to fruits, none of any value have been found native to this
+island; but on the other hand, every sort of fruit, herb, or vegetable,
+that grows in England, grows still better here.
+
+In respect of climate, Van Diemen’s Land enjoys the happiest medium
+between the extremes of heat and cold, the thermometer rarely falling
+below 40 degrees in winter, or rising above 70 degrees in summer. During
+the winter months of June, July, and August, the frosts are sometimes
+severe, and occasionally a good deal of snow falls; but it is seldom
+that snow lies on the ground a whole day.
+
+Coal has been found in various places; iron-stone is believed to be
+abundant; lime-stone also exists in great plenty; and it is highly
+probable that the earth is enriched with various other mineral
+treasures. Of the native animals, the most formidable is the hyena, by
+which many of the sheep are destroyed. Wild dogs and cats of different
+species are also found in the woods. The kangaroo is now fast
+disappearing, having, although a perfectly harmless animal, been much
+hunted by the settlers for sport, or for the sake of its flesh and skin.
+There are numerous species of birds, many of them of beautiful plumage.
+Various descriptions of fish also abound in the bays and creeks; but,
+except eels, the lakes and rivers supply very few that are valuable as
+food. Of the reptiles found in the island, the principal are snakes,
+some of which are extremely venomous.
+
+Such is an abstract of what is most important in the paper before us,
+which is followed by a more minute description of the parts of the
+island that have been brought into cultivation, in the form of an
+itinerary. We will now add a very few facts, selected from another
+paper, on the agriculture and horticulture of the colony.
+
+The first cattle were brought to Van Diemen’s Land in 1807. They were “a
+coarse buffalo sort of animal:” but, about nine or ten years ago,
+superior breeds began to be imported from England, and the colony now
+possesses pure Devons, Herefords, Durhams, Holdernesses, Fifeshires, &c.
+Horses were at first brought from New Holland; but, “in the same manner
+as with neat cattle,” says this account, “they have since had the
+benefit of very superior crosses of English importations, and the colony
+can now boast as fine horses as even England itself. It has every sort,
+perhaps, that is known in the mother-country, from the heavy dray-horse
+to the diminutive pony, and including, what should by no means be passed
+in silence, blood and bone upon which thousands have been depending at
+Newmarket and other English race-courses.” Sheep, for which both the
+climate and natural herbage of the country are well adapted, are now
+numerous and rapidly improving in quality. Pigs and poultry, of every
+description, thrive admirably. Most sorts of grain that are common in
+England, grow at least as well here. The wheat is of excellent quality,
+seldom weighing less than from sixty-two to sixty-four pounds per
+bushel. Barley and oats produce well upon good land; but will not answer
+on inferior soils. The average return yielded by the potato is not equal
+to what it yields in England; but the cultivation of this root is yet in
+its infancy. Turnips and mangel-wurzel are both found to do extremely
+well. The same may be said of English grasses and pulses of all sorts.
+
+The export trade from this colony has, as yet, been confined to the more
+useful articles. Corn is sent to New South Wales, and to Swan River.
+Wool is already exported in considerable quantities, and is likely to
+become every year more and more the staple production of the island.
+Whale-fishing and the manufacture of oil are rapidly becoming trades of
+considerable importance. A good deal of mimosa bark, for tanning, is
+also sent to England; and salt meats, hides, and dairy produce will
+probably soon be added to the list of exported commodities.
+
+The regulations at present in force for the disposal of land, by grant
+or sale, were issued in 1828. The main principle upon which they are
+grounded is, that “settlers should not receive a greater extent of land
+than they are capable of improving, and that grants should not be made
+to persons who are desirous only of disposing of them.” Lands are
+accordingly granted in square miles, in the proportion of one square
+mile, or 640 acres, for every £500 sterling of capital which the
+applicant can immediately command. Of this capital, however, a portion
+may consist of live stock and instruments of husbandry. Upon the land
+thus granted a quit-rent is imposed at the rate of £5 per cent. on the
+estimated value of the land, the payment to commence at the expiration
+of seven years from the date of the grant, when the settler will also
+receive his title-deeds. The smallest quantity of land granted in this
+way to an individual is 320 acres, and the largest, 2560 acres, or four
+square miles. Lands may also be obtained by purchase, being advertised
+for that purpose, and sold to the person making the highest tender.
+
+We will, in conclusion, mention a few of the more interesting
+particulars, supplied by the various lists in the little volume before
+us; these are indicative of the rapid progress of civilization. In
+addition to the three banks in Hobart Town we find a fourth, called the
+Cornwall bank, established at Launceston. There is at Hobart Town a
+Mechanics’ Institute, of which the Governor is patron, and the Chief
+Justice, president. Among the religious and philanthropic institutions
+of this capital are, a Bible Society, of which the Governor is
+president; a Presbyterian Missionary Society; a Wesleyan Missionary
+Society; a Benevolent and Strangers’ Friend Society; and a Sunday School
+Union, having four schools in its connexion, containing in all about 250
+children. Besides the Government Gazette, there are three other weekly
+newspapers published in Hobart Town, and a fourth at Launceston. The
+Almanac closes with a Directory for Hobart Town; in which, besides
+merchants, general dealers, official, clerical, and other professional
+characters, we find the names of civil engineers, livery-stable keepers,
+watchmakers, midwives, shoemakers, bricklayers, milliners, portrait
+painters, and engravers, chemists and druggists, pastry-cooks,
+confectioners, glaziers, plumbers, house and sign painters, hatters,
+upholsterers, cabinet-makers and undertakers, coopers, boat-builders,
+auctioneers, goldsmiths, and working-jewellers, music teachers, tailors,
+butchers, brewers, hosiers and glovers, ironmongers, brass and iron
+founders, tinmen and blacksmiths, printers, saddlers, bakers,
+hair-dressers. It would be curious to compare this list with the
+population of an English town of seven thousand people three centuries
+ago!
+
+
+ ---------------------
+
+
+ LOST CAMEL.
+
+A dervise was journeying alone in the desert, when two merchants
+suddenly met him: “You have lost a camel,” said he to the merchants.
+“Indeed we have,” they replied. “Was he not blind in his right eye, and
+lame in his left leg?” said the dervise. “He was,” replied the
+merchants. “Had he lost a front tooth?” said the dervise. “He had,”
+rejoined the merchants. “And was he not loaded with honey on one side,
+and wheat on the other?” “Most certainly he was,” they replied; “and as
+you have seen him so lately, and marked him so particularly, you can, in
+all probability, conduct us unto him.” “My friends,” said the dervise,
+“I have never seen your camel, nor ever heard of him, but from you.” “A
+pretty story, truly!” said the merchants, “but where are the jewels,
+which formed a part of his cargo?” “I have neither seen your camel nor
+your jewels,” repeated the dervise. On this, they seized his person, and
+forthwith hurried him before the Cadi, where, on the strictest search,
+nothing could be found upon him, nor could any evidence whatever be
+adduced to convict him, either of falsehood or of theft. They were then
+about to proceed against him as a sorcerer, when the dervise, with great
+calmness, thus addressed the Court: “I have been much amused with your
+surprise, and own that there has been some ground for your suspicions;
+but I have lived long, and alone; and I can find ample scope for
+observation, even in a desert. I knew that I had crossed the track of a
+camel that had strayed from its owner, because I saw no mark of any
+human footstep on the same route; I knew that the animal was blind in
+one eye, because it had cropped the herbage only on one side of its
+path; and I perceived that it was lame in one leg, from the faint
+impression which that particular foot had produced upon the sand; I
+concluded that the animal had lost one tooth, because wherever it had
+grazed, a small tuft of herbage was left uninjured in the centre of its
+bite. As to that which formed the burden of the beast, the busy ants
+informed me that it was corn on the one side, and the clustering flies
+that it was honey on the other.”
+
+
+ ---------------------
+
+
+_Science preceding Art._--When the principles of any science are become
+common to all the world, these principles lead to inventions, nearly, if
+not altogether similar, by different persons having no communication
+with each other. A remarkable instance of this is given by Judge Story,
+in his address to the Boston Mechanics’ Institute:--
+
+“A beautiful improvement had been made in the double-speeder of the
+cotton-spinning machine by one of our ingenious countrymen. The
+originality of the invention was established by the most satisfactory
+evidence. The defendant, however, called an Englishman as a witness, who
+had been but a short time in the country, and who testified most
+explicitly to the existence of a like invention in the improved
+machinery in England. Against such positive proof there was much
+difficulty in proceeding. The testimony, though doubted, could not be
+discredited; and the trial was postponed to another term, for the
+purpose of procuring evidence to rebut it. An agent was despatched to
+England for this and other objects; and, upon his return, the plaintiff
+was content to become nonsuited. There was no doubt that the invention
+here was without any suspicion of its existence elsewhere; but the
+genius of each country, almost at the same moment, accomplished,
+independently, the same achievement.”
+
+
+ ---------------------
+
+
+ BRITISH ANIMALS.
+
+ [Illustration: A dormouse sitting on a tree stump.]
+
+ THE DORMOUSE
+
+The little dormouse has now awakened from his fitful sleep. When the
+winds of March sweep away the lingering fogs of winter,--when the tender
+buds are first seen on the trees, and the primrose first shows its head
+in the green banks--before the swallow comes to our shores, or the rook
+has finished her nest--the dormouse rouses up from the bed where he has
+slept for several months. His sleep, however, is not constant through
+the cold season, like that of some other animals; for he wakes, at
+times, to eat of the store of nuts and beech-mast which he has provided
+for his sustenance in the autumn. The marmot, a quadruped inhabiting
+some mountainous parts of Europe, makes no provision of this kind in his
+subterranean galleries. He sleeps completely.
+
+M. Mangili, an Italian naturalist, made some curious experiments upon
+the dormouse and other animals which sleep during the cold weather. He
+kept the dormouse in a cupboard in his study. On the 24th December, when
+the thermometer was about 40°, that is 8° above the freezing point, the
+dormouse curled himself up amongst a heap of papers and went to sleep.
+On the 27th December, when the thermometer was several degrees lower, M.
+Mangili ascertained that the animal breathed, and suspended his
+respiration at regular intervals;--that is, that after four minutes of
+perfect repose, in which he appeared as if dead, he breathed about
+twenty-four times in the space of a minute and a half, and that then his
+breathing was again completely suspended, and again renewed. As the
+thermometer became higher, that is, as the weather became less cold, the
+intervals of repose were reduced to three minutes. On the contrary, when
+the thermometer fell nearly to the freezing point, the intervals were
+then six minutes. Within ten days from its beginning to sleep (the
+weather then being very cold), the dormouse woke and ate a little. He
+then went to sleep again; and continued to sleep for some days, and then
+to awaken, throughout the winter; but as the season advanced, the
+intervals of perfect repose, when no breathing could be perceived, were
+much longer, sometimes more than twenty minutes. The effects of
+confinement upon this individual animal caused him to sleep much longer
+than in a state of nature.
+
+When a dormouse is discovered asleep, in his natural retreat, he is cold
+to the touch, his eyes are shut, and his respiration is slow and
+interrupted, as just described. Torpid animals, in general, when thus
+found, may be shaken, or rolled, or even struck, without a possibility
+of arousing them. But as the fine weather advances, the heat of their
+bodies increases, as it decreases at the approaches of winter; till at
+length they shake off their drowsiness, and are again the busy and happy
+inhabitants of the fields and gardens, active in the search of food to
+gratify their appetite, which is now as keen as it was dull in the cold
+months. These movements of course depend upon the states of the
+atmosphere, and are different in individuals of the same species.
+
+
+ THE SWALLOW.
+
+The swallow, and other birds of passage--that is, birds who fly from one
+country to another, as the weather becomes unsuited to their
+natures--now begin to return to us. The swallow is a general favourite.
+He comes to us when nature is putting on her most smiling aspect, and he
+stays with us through the months of sunshine and gladness. “The
+swallow,” says Sir H. Davy, “is one of my favourite birds, and a rival
+of the nightingale; for he glads my sense of seeing, as much as the
+other does my sense of hearing. He is the joyous prophet of the year,
+the harbinger of the best season, he lives a life of enjoyment amongst
+the loveliest forms of nature; winter is unknown to him, and he leaves
+the green meadows of England in autumn, for the myrtle and orange groves
+of Italy, and for the palms of Africa.”
+
+Mr. White, a clergyman of Hampshire, who delighted to observe all the
+works of the creation around him, has thus accurately described the
+window swallow’s or martin’s mode of building:--
+
+“About the middle of May, if the weather be fine, the martin begins to
+think in earnest of providing a mansion for its family. The crust or
+shell of this nest seems to be formed of such dirt or loam as comes most
+readily to hand, and is tempered and wrought together with little bits
+of broken straws to render it tough and tenacious. As this bird often
+builds against a perpendicular wall without any projecting ledge under,
+it requires its utmost efforts to get the first foundation firmly fixed,
+so that it may safely carry the superstructure. On this occasion, the
+bird not only clings with its claws, but partly supports itself by
+strongly inclining its tail against the wall, making that a fulcrum; and
+thus steadied, it works and plasters the materials into the face of the
+brick or stone. But then, that this work may not, while it is soft and
+green, pull itself down by its own weight, the provident architect has
+prudence and forbearance enough not to advance her work too fast; but by
+building only in the morning, and by dedicating the rest of the day to
+food and amusement, gives it sufficient time to dry and harden. About
+half an inch seems to be a sufficient layer for a day. Thus careful
+workmen, when they build mud-walls (informed at first perhaps by this
+little bird), raise but a moderate layer at a time and then desist, lest
+the work should become top-heavy, and so be ruined by its own weight. By
+this method, in about ten or twelve days, is formed a hemispheric nest
+with a small aperture towards the top, strong, compact, and warm, and
+perfectly fitted for all the purposes for which it was intended.
+
+“The shell or crust of the nest is a sort of rustic-work, full of knobs
+and protuberances on the outside: nor is the inside of those that I have
+examined smoothed with any exactness at all; but is rendered soft and
+warm, and fit for incubation, by a lining of small straws, grasses and
+feathers, and sometimes by a bedding of moss interwoven with wool. They
+are often capricious in fixing on a nesting-place, beginning many
+edifices and leaving them unfinished; but when once a nest is completed
+in a sheltered place, after so much labour is bestowed in erecting a
+mansion, as nature seldom works in vain, the same nest serves for
+several seasons. Those which breed in a ready finished house, get the
+start in hatching of those that build new by ten days or a fortnight.
+These industrious artificers are at their labours in the long days
+before four in the morning; when they fix their materials, they plaster
+them on with their chins, moving their heads with a quick, rotatory
+motion.”
+
+ [Illustration: A swallow perched outside its nest.]
+
+
+ ---------------------
+
+
+ THE WEEK.
+
+April 7.--The day of the birth, and also that of the death, of Raffaello
+Sanzio da Urbino, whom the universal voice of posterity has recognized
+as the Prince of modern Painters, and designated by the enthusiastic
+appellation of “the divine Raphael.” No rival, at least, has ever been
+placed beside Raphael except Michael Angelo. Of the two illustrious
+contemporaries the former may perhaps be appropriately styled the
+Shakspeare, the latter the Milton of Painting. Dignity and imposing
+grandeur of design are the reigning characteristics of Michael Angelo;
+the highest dramatic power which has ever been displayed by the pencil,
+and the representation of passion with all the force of life, are the
+qualities that chiefly give their wonderful fascination to the works of
+Raphael. Raphael was born at Urbino in 1483. By the time he had reached
+the age of twenty-five he had so greatly distinguished himself that he
+was invited by Pope Julius II. to paint in fresco the chambers of the
+Vatican. From this time till his death, in 1520, at the early age of
+thirty-seven, he was employed in the execution of a succession of great
+works, chiefly for that pontiff and his successor, Leo X. His most
+famous performances are, his picture of the School of Athens in the
+Vatican, the Transfiguration, and his Cartoons on subjects taken from
+the Gospels and the Acts of the Apostles, which were brought to this
+country by Charles I., and are now to be seen at Hampton Court, upon the
+payment of a shilling for each party. Like Michael Angelo, Raphael was
+an architect as well as a painter, and, among other buildings,
+superintended the erection of part of the cathedral of St. Peter’s. But
+his untimely death interrupted his prosecution of this and other great
+works on which he was engaged; leaving him, however, although with a
+glory gathered in comparative youth, with no living superior, and
+followed by no equal in succeeding times.
+
+April 10.--This is the birth-day of the celebrated Dutch writer, Hugh de
+Groot, better known by his Latin name of Grotius, who was born at Delfft
+in 1583. Grotius was a prodigy of youthful talent and acquirement. When
+only fourteen he prepared an edition of a Latin author, Martianus
+Capella, in which he showed extensive classical and historical
+erudition. At the age of sixteen, having already made a journey to
+France, and been presented to Henry IV., who honoured him with the gift
+of his picture and a gold chain, he entered upon the profession of an
+advocate at Delfft. From this time he continued till his death to take
+an active part in political transactions; but still found leisure to
+write a vast number of books, most of them distinguished for their
+learning and ability. The book by which he is now principally known is
+his famous treatise on the law of nations, entitled, ‘On the right of
+Peace and War.’ It was first published at Paris in 1625. Another of his
+productions, which is still very popular, is his treatise ‘On the Truth
+of the Christian Religion,’ written, like the former, in Latin, but
+which has been translated into every language of Europe. Grotius wrote a
+great part of this work while confined by a rival political faction in
+the castle of Louvestein, from which, however, after nearly two years’
+detention, his wife contrived to get him conveyed away in a chest, which
+she pretended was full of books. Grotius died in his sixty-third year,
+on the 28th of August, 1645.
+
+April 11.--The birth-day of the late Right Honourable George Canning,
+who was born in London, in the year 1771. His father, an Irish gentleman
+of good family, died the same year in which his son was born. At the
+usual age young Canning was sent to Eton, where he soon distinguished
+himself by the brilliancy of his talents. While there he made the first
+public trial of his literary powers in ‘The Microcosm,’ a very clever
+periodical work, which he carried on in conjunction with some of his
+schoolfellows, and of which he was the projector and the editor. In 1787
+he removed to Christ Church, Oxford, intending to adopt the profession
+of the law. But while yet at the University, his reputation for ability
+obtained for him the notice of Mr. Pitt, who brought him into Parliament
+in 1793. Mr. Canning’s official career belongs to the history of his
+country, and especially that period of it during which he was Secretary
+of State for Foreign Affairs. The system of foreign policy with which
+his name is associated has caused his memory to be held in honour; and
+although he opposed Parliamentary Reform, as well as other popular
+measures, yet his steadfast support of Catholic Emancipation for a long
+series of years, and the protection he afforded to the cause of freedom
+on the Continent, and in South America, are proofs of his attachment to
+his celebrated toast of “_Civil and Religious Liberty all over the
+World!_” In April, 1827, he was appointed Prime Minister by George the
+Fourth, and continued to hold the offices of First Lord of the Treasury
+and Chancellor of the Exchequer till his death, on the 8th of August in
+the same year, at the Duke of Devonshire’s villa at Chiswick, after a
+short illness. His death at so early a period after his accession to
+power called forth a deep feeling of grief in his own country, and,
+perhaps, a still stronger and more general feeling on the Continent,
+where medals were struck in memory of the British Minister.
+
+
+ ---------------------
+
+
+ THE BRITISH MUSEUM.
+
+“The characteristic of the English populace,--perhaps we ought to say
+people, for it extends to the middle classes,--is their propensity to
+mischief. The people of most other countries may safely be admitted into
+parks, gardens, public buildings, and galleries of pictures and statues;
+but in England it is necessary to exclude them, as much as possible,
+from all such places.”
+
+This is a sentence from the last published number of the ‘Quarterly
+Review.’ Severe as it is, there is much truth in it. The fault is not
+entirely on the side of the people (we will not use the offensive term
+populace); but still they are in fault. The writer adds, speaking of
+this love of mischief, which he calls “a disgraceful part of the English
+character,” that “anything tends to correct it that contributes to give
+the people a taste for intellectual pleasures,--anything that
+contributes to their innocent enjoyment,--anything that excites them to
+wholesome and pleasurable activity of body and mind.” This is quite
+true. We hope to do something, speaking generally, to excite and gratify
+a taste for intellectual pleasure; but we wish to do more in this
+particular case. We wish to point out many unexpensive pleasures, of the
+very highest order, which all those who reside in London have within
+their reach; and how the education of themselves and of their children
+may be advanced by using their opportunities of enjoying some of the
+purest gratifications which an instructed mind is capable of receiving.
+Having learnt to enjoy them, they will naturally feel an honest pride in
+the possession, by the Nation, of many of the most valuable treasures of
+Art and of Science; and they will hold that person a baby in mind--a
+spoiled, wilful, mischievous baby--who dares to attempt the slightest
+injury to the public property, which has been collected together, at an
+immense expense, for the public advantage.
+
+Well, then, that we may waste no time in general discussion, let us
+begin with the BRITISH MUSEUM. We will suppose ourselves addressing an
+artisan or tradesman, who can sometimes afford to take a holiday, and
+who knows there are better modes of spending a working day, which he
+some half-dozen times a year devotes to pleasure, than amidst the smoke
+of a taproom, or the din of a skittle-ground. He is a family man; he
+enjoys a pleasure doubly if it is shared by his wife and children. Well,
+then, in Great Russell-street, Bloomsbury, is the British Museum; and
+here, from ten o’clock till four, on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays,
+he may see many of the choicest productions of ancient art--Egyptian,
+Grecian, and Roman monuments; and what will probably please the young
+people most, in the first instance, a splendid collection of natural
+history--quadrupeds, birds, insects, shells--all classed and beautifully
+disposed in an immense gallery, lately built by the Government for the
+more convenient exhibition of these curiosities. “But hold,” says the
+working man, “I have passed by the British Museum: there are two
+sentinels at the gateway, and the large gates are always closed. Will
+they let me in? Is there nothing to pay?” That is a very natural
+question about the payment; for there is too much of paying in England
+by the people for admission to what they ought to see for nothing. But
+_here_ there _is_ nothing to pay. Knock boldly at the gate; the porter
+will open it. You are in a large square court-yard, with an
+old-fashioned house occupying three sides. A flight of steps leads up to
+the principal entrance. Go on. Do not fear any surly looks or
+impertinent glances from any person in attendance. You are upon safe
+ground here. You are come to see your own property. You have as much
+right to see it, and you are as welcome therefore to see it, as the
+highest in the land. There is no favour in showing it you. You assist in
+paying for the purchase, and the maintenance of it; and one of the very
+best effects that could result from that expense would be to teach every
+Englishman to set a proper value upon the enjoyments which such public
+property is capable of affording. Go boldly forward, then. The officers
+of the Museum, who are obliging to all strangers, will be glad to see
+you. Your garb is homely, you think, as you see gaily-dressed persons
+going in and out. No matter; you and your wife, and your children, are
+clean, if not smart. By the way, it will be well to mention that very
+young children (those under eight years old) are not admitted; and that
+for a very sufficient reason: in most cases they would disturb the other
+visitors.
+
+You are now in the great Hall--a lofty room, with a fine staircase. In
+an adjoining room a book is presented to you, in which one of a party
+has to write his name and address, with the number of persons
+accompanying him. That is the only form you have to go through; and it
+is a necessary form, if it were only to preserve a record of the number
+of persons admitted. In each year this number amounts to about seventy
+thousand: so you see that the British Museum has afforded pleasure and
+improvement to a great many people. We hope the number of visitors will
+be doubled and trebled; for exhibitions such as these do a very great
+deal for the advance of a people in knowledge and virtue. What
+reasonable man would abandon himself to low gratifications--to drinking
+or gambling--when he may, whenever he pleases, and as often as he
+pleases at no cost but that of his time, enjoy the sight of some of the
+most curious and valuable things in the world, with as much ease as a
+prince walking about in his own private gallery. But that he may enjoy
+these treasures, and that every body else may enjoy them at the same
+time, it will be necessary to observe a few simple rules.
+
+1st. _Touch nothing_. The statues, and other curious things, which are
+in the Museum, are to be seen, not to be handled. If visitors were to be
+allowed to touch them, to try whether they were hard or soft, to scratch
+them, to write upon them with their pencils, they would be soon worth
+very little. You will see some mutilated remains of two or three of the
+finest figures that ever were executed in the world: they form part of
+the collection called the Elgin Marbles, and were brought from the
+Temple of Minerva, at Athens, which city at the time of the sculpture of
+these statues, about two thousand three hundred years ago, was one of
+the cities of Greece most renowned for art and learning. Time has, of
+course, greatly worn these statues: but it is said that the Turkish
+soldiers, who kept the modern Greeks under subjection, used to take a
+brutal pleasure in the injury of these remains of ancient art; as if
+they were glad to destroy what their ignorance made them incapable of
+valuing. Is it not as great ignorance for a stupid fellow of our own day
+slily to write his own paltry name upon one of these glorious monuments?
+Is not such an act the most severe reproach upon the writer? Is it not,
+as if the scribbler should say, “Here am I, in the presence of some of
+the great masterpieces of art, whose antiquity ought to produce
+reverence, if I cannot comprehend their beauty; and I derive a pleasure
+from putting my own obscure, perishable name upon works whose fame will
+endure for ever.” What a satire upon such vanity. Doubtless, these
+fellows, who are so pleased with their own weak selves, as to poke their
+names into every face, are nothing but grown babies, and want a fool’s
+cap most exceedingly.
+
+2dly. _Do not talk loud._ Talk, of course, you must; or you would lose
+much of the enjoyment we wish you to have--for pleasure is only half
+pleasure, unless it be shared with those we love. But do not disturb
+others with your talk. Do not call loudly from one end of a long gallery
+to the other, or you will distract the attention of those who derive
+great enjoyment from an undisturbed contemplation of the wonders in
+these rooms. You will excuse this hint.
+
+3rdly. _Be not obtrusive._ You will see many things in the Museum that
+you do not understand. It will be well to make a memorandum of these, to
+be inquired into at your leisure; and in these inquiries we shall
+endeavour to assist you from time to time. But do not trouble other
+visitors with your questions; and, above all, do not trouble the young
+artists, some of whom you will see making drawings for their
+improvement. Their time is precious to them; and it is a real
+inconvenience to be obliged to give their attention to anything but
+their work, or to have their attention disturbed by an over-curious
+person peeping at what they are doing. If you want to make any inquiry,
+go to one of the attendants, who walks about in each room. He will
+answer you as far as he knows. You must not expect to understand what
+you see all at once: you must go again and again if you wish to obtain
+real knowledge, beyond the gratification of passing curiosity.
+
+In future numbers we shall briefly mention what is most worthy your
+attention in this National Collection.
+
+
+ ---------------------
+
+
+ POESIE.
+
+ [George Wither, born 1588, died 1677.]
+
+ Though I miss the flowery fields,
+ With those sweets the spring-tide yields;
+ Though I may not see those groves,
+ Where the shepherds chaunt their loves,
+ And the lasses more excel,
+ Then the sweet-voiced Philomel;
+ Though of all those pleasures past,
+ Nothing now remains at last,
+ But remembrance (poor relief)
+ That more makes, then mends my grief;
+ She’s my mind’s companion still,
+ Maugre Envy’s evil will.
+ She doth tell me where to borrow
+ Comfort in the midst of sorrow;
+ Makes the desolated place
+ To her presence be a grace;
+ And the blackest discontents
+ Be her fairest ornaments.
+ In my former days of bliss,
+ Her divine skill taught me this,
+ That from every thing I saw,
+ I could some invention draw;
+ And raise pleasure to her height,
+ Through the meanest object’s sight.
+ By the murmur of a spring,
+ Or the least bough’s rustling;
+ By a daisy whose leaves spread,
+ Shut when Titan goes to bed,
+ Or a shady bush or tree,
+ She could more infuse in me,
+ Then all nature’s beauties can,
+ In some other wiser man.
+ By her help I also now
+ Make this churlish place allow
+ Some things that may sweeten gladness
+ In the very gall of sadness.
+ The dull loneness, the black shade,
+ That those hanging vaults have made,
+ The strange music of the waves
+ Beating on these hollow caves,
+ This black den which rocks emboss,
+ Overgrown with eldest moss,
+ The rude portals that give light,
+ More to terror than delight,--
+ This my chamber of neglect,
+ Walled about with disrespect,
+ From all these, and this dull air,
+ A fit object for despair,
+ She hath taught me by her might
+ To draw comfort and delight.
+ Therefore, thou best earthly bliss,
+ I will cherish thee for this.
+ Poesie, thou sweet’st content,
+ That e’er Heaven to mortals lent;
+ Though they as a trifle leave thee,
+ Whose dull thoughts cannot conceive thee;
+ Though thou be to them a scorn,
+ That to nought but earth are born;
+ Let my life no longer be,
+ Than I am in love with thee.
+
+George Wither, the author of the above lines, was several times
+subjected to long and severe imprisonment for his political opinions.
+While in the Marshalsea prison in 1613, he wrote his ‘Shepherd’s
+Hunting,’ a pastoral poem, from which this is an extract. The verses are
+not only beautiful in themselves, but they point out how a vigorous mind
+will secure happiness under the most unfavourable circumstances. The
+imagination of Wither was delighted to repose upon the most common
+natural objects;--and in the same way, the man who possesses the least
+of the outward gifts of fortune, if his faculties be awake to the
+beauties which nature has so plenteously scattered around his path, may
+possess in himself a source of pleasure of the purest kind. The rapture
+which Wither expresses for ‘Poesie,’ may to some appear overstrained;
+but let it not be thought that the poet attributed this power of
+imparting delight to his faculty alone of _making verses_. The exercise
+of his fancy, by which he could “raise pleasure to her height,”
+consisted in presenting to his “mind’s eye” the infinite beauties of the
+creation. The “daisy,” whose remembrance gladdened even his
+prison-walls, brought to him images of the quiet and purity of the
+“flowery fields.” Such images every body may enjoy, and may gradually
+learn to associate the commonest appearances of nature with a high moral
+feeling. We have many instances of this power of association in our
+finest poets; let us take as an example the following lines by a writer
+of our own day:--
+
+ TO A DAISY.
+
+ Bright flower, whose home is every where
+ A pilgrim bold in Nature’s care,
+ And oft, the long year through, the heir
+ Of joy or sorrow.
+
+ Methinks that there abides in thee
+ Some concord with humanity,
+ Given to no other flower I see
+ The forest thorough!
+
+ And wherefore? Man is soon deprest;
+ A thoughtless thing! who, once unblest,
+ Does little on his memory rest,
+ Or on his reason.
+
+ But thou would’st teach him how to find
+ A shelter under every wind;
+ A hope for times that are unkind,
+ And every season.
+
+ WORDSWORTH.
+
+
+ ---------------------
+
+
+ ON THE CHOICE OF A LABOURING MAN’S DWELLING.
+
+It seems, on the first view, somewhat odd to talk about choice of
+dwelling to a labouring man. It may occur to such a person, that as he
+has seldom more than two or three shillings per week to allow for rent,
+he must be contented with the humble accommodations that can be afforded
+for that sum. This is, to a certain extent, true; but it is not
+therefore to be concluded that the exercise of a little prudence may not
+put him in possession of some advantages with his two or three
+shillings, which the want of that quality would exclude him from. There
+are some dwellings so badly situated, in such ill repair, and altogether
+so miserable, that a man exposes himself and his family to disease and
+every other inconvenience by inhabiting them. Such hovels are usually
+tenanted by people who are behind-hand in paying their rent, and so
+cannot leave them; or who, being “steeped to the very lips in poverty,”
+are indifferent to cleanliness and all other comforts. It is possible
+that an industrious and careful family may, for some time, be obliged to
+live in a wretched house; but it is their own fault if they continue in
+it. In this country the poor are better lodged than in any other in
+Europe; and within the last twenty years the increase of population and
+of productive labour has caused a demand for cottages, which has covered
+every parish, and particularly the neighbourhood of large towns, with an
+amazing number of snug little houses, in which provision is generally
+made for the comfort of those who inhabit them. Now while there is such
+a _choice_ of dwellings, it is very much a labouring man’s fault if he
+does not have a commodious one; and if he continue to be the tenant of a
+damp, or ruinous, or badly ventilated hut, while the snug brick and
+tiled tenement remains vacant, we should say that he is a blind and
+stupid observer of an old proverb (which, however, has much sense in it)
+that “three removes are as bad as a fire.”
+
+We wish to offer a few plain hints to assist our readers in the choice
+of a dwelling. And, first, of situation.
+
+Whoever rambles through our villages must often see a pretty little
+cottage, that realizes all that benevolence could wish for a labouring
+man’s dwelling. We have seen many such; and the remembrance often occurs
+to us, when we observe rich men unhappy, in large mansions, and amongst
+splendid furniture. We then think of the contrast which the simplicity
+and content of the “peasant’s nest” offers. Who has not looked upon the
+whitened walls, half covered with roses and jessamine, and the neat
+garden, where ornament is blended with utility,
+
+ And said, if there’s peace to be found in the world,
+ A heart that is humble may hope for it here!
+
+But an agreeable dwelling is not always to be commanded; nor is the
+_best_ situation always to be found. If a cottager have a house with a
+northern aspect, he must pay a little more attention to his gooseberry
+and apple trees, to make them bear as plentifully as those which are
+trained in a southern sun. We are only desirous to caution him against a
+house that is truly uncomfortable, and that cannot be easily rendered
+otherwise.
+
+We would first say, avoid, if it be possible, a low and marshy
+situation. There are many dangerous fevers which are produced by the
+vicinity of stagnant waters: and houses which from their site are
+constantly damp expose those who inhabit them to rheumatism, croup,
+ague, and other painful disorders. The same effects are produced by
+dwelling-houses which are subject to occasional inundations of rivers.
+To be driven in cold weather from the accustomed fire-side to shiver in
+bedrooms which have probably no grate; to have two or three feet of
+water running through the lower part of the house, destroying many
+things and injuring more; and at last, when the inundations cease, to
+find the whole dwelling damp and miserable for several weeks: this is a
+visitation which no one would willingly seek. If a cottager has
+therefore the choice of being on a hill-side, or by the bank of a river,
+we think, if he were a sensible man, he would prefer the elevated
+situation.
+
+On the _construction_ of a dwelling, we have not much to observe. The
+great requisite is the free admission of _light_ and _air_. _Dark_ rooms
+are an inconvenience to the industrious housewife which we need not
+describe; and rooms not properly _ventilated_ are more injurious to
+health than may readily be conceived. Every sleeping-room should have a
+chimney. In England, no sitting-room is, we apprehend, without one. But
+in Ireland, the peasantry have neither window nor chimney to their
+wretched hovels. The smoke of the turf which burns upon their hearth
+forces its way out by the door; and the family sit and sleep in this
+dark and dirty condition. This would be intolerable amongst the more
+cleanly and richer peasantry of this country.
+
+Of the appendages to a house, a good supply of water is one of the most
+necessary conveniences. If the pitcher is to be carried a dozen times a
+day to a spring or a well a quarter of a mile off, it is almost the
+labour of one person to procure this supply; and that labour would
+contribute as much to the family earnings as, in twelve months, would
+dig a well. No cottager should be without a garden. A rood of land,
+properly cultivated, will half maintain a careful family.
+
+Of the _fixtures_ of a house we cannot be expected to say much. A
+_copper_ and an _oven_ will enable the female to labour most profitably
+for the general good. A cottager that can grow his own potatoes, keep
+his pig, brew his beer, and bake his bread, has not many necessaries to
+purchase of the shopkeeper, and is therefore, to a certain extent,
+independent in the best sense of the word.
+
+As to furniture, we would say, avoid _furnished lodgings_. The bed and
+table, and two or three chairs, of these places, seldom cost more than
+5_l._, the interest of which is only 5_s._ a year. The money annually
+paid for the use of such things is almost as much as their prime cost.
+There is a satisfaction, too, in knowing that what is about us is our
+own. It is better to sit upon an old box or a block of wood than to pay
+enormously for the hire of a chair; and we may sleep as soundly upon a
+straw mattress as upon an expensive feather-bed. One secret, to be happy
+in every situation of life, is this,--not to sacrifice real comfort and
+solid independence to make a show. When the cottager has got ten pounds
+in the Savings Bank, he may afford his wife a mahogany tea-table. An
+American writer has given some judicious remarks upon this subject,
+which apply to all classes:--
+
+“If you are about to furnish a house, do not spend all your money, be it
+much or little. Do not let the beauty of this thing, and the cheapness
+of that, tempt you to buy unnecessary articles. Doctor Franklin’s maxim
+was a wise one, ‘Nothing is cheap that we do not want.’ Buy merely
+enough to get along with at first. It is only by experience that you can
+tell what will be the wants of your family. If you spend all your money,
+you will find you have purchased many things you do not want, and have
+no means left to get many things which you do want. If you have enough,
+and more than enough, to get every thing suitable to your situation, do
+not think you must spend it all, merely because you happen to have it.
+Begin humbly. As riches increase, it is easy and pleasant to increase in
+comforts; but it is always painful and inconvenient to decrease. After
+all, these things are viewed in their proper light by the truly
+judicious and respectable. Neatness, tastefulness, and good sense may be
+shown in the management of a small household, and the arrangement of a
+little furniture, as well as upon a larger scale; and these qualities
+are always praised, and always treated with respect and attention. The
+consideration which many purchase by living beyond their income, and of
+course living upon others, is not worth the trouble it costs. The glare
+there is about this false and wicked parade is deceptive; it does not in
+fact procure a man valuable friends, or extensive influence.”
+
+
+ ---------------------
+
+
+However small may be a man’s income, there is one very certain way of
+increasing it--that is _Frugality_. A frugal expenditure will enable
+almost every body to _save_ something; and as there are now established
+throughout this country _Banks_, where the industrious may safely
+deposit their savings, however little they may be, and receive the same
+sort of advantage which the rich derive from their money, that is,
+_interest_, there is every inducement to make _an effort to save_. Dr.
+Franklin observes, in his usual forcible way, that “six pounds a-year is
+but a groat a-day. For this little sum which may be daily wasted, either
+in time or expense, unperceived, a man of credit may, on his own
+security, have the constant possession and use of a hundred and twenty
+pounds.” Many humble men in England have risen to wealth by such small
+beginnings; but many more continue to expend the groat a-day
+unnecessarily, and never cease to be poor.
+
+
+ ---------------------
+
+
+A certain pope, who had been raised from an obscure situation to the
+apostolic chair, was immediately waited upon by a deputation sent from a
+small district, in which he had formerly officiated as _cure_: it seems
+that he had promised the inhabitants that he would do something for
+them, if it should ever be in his power; and some of them now appeared
+before him, to remind him of his promise, and also to request that he
+would fulfil it, by granting them _two harvests in every year_! He
+acceded to their _modest_ request, on condition that they should go home
+immediately, and so adjust the Almanac of _their_ own particular
+district, as to make every year of _their_ Register consist of
+twenty-four calendar months.
+
+
+ ---------------------
+
+
+Sir George Staunton visited a man in India who had committed a murder,
+and, in order not only to save his life, but what was of much more
+consequence, his _caste_, he submitted to the penalty imposed; this was,
+that he should sleep for seven years on a bedstead, without any
+mattress, the whole surface of which was studded with points of iron,
+resembling nails, but not so sharp as to penetrate the flesh. Sir George
+saw him in the fifth year of his probation, and his skin was then like
+the hide of a rhinoceros, but more callous; at that time, however, he
+could sleep comfortably on his “_bed of thorns_,” and remarked, that at
+the expiration of the term of his sentence, he should most probably
+continue that system from choice, which he had been obliged to adopt
+from necessity.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ LONDON:--CHARLES KNIGHT, PALL-MALL EAST.
+
+ _Shopkeepers and Hawkers may be supplied Wholesale by the following
+ Booksellers:_--
+
+ _London_, GROOMBRIDGE, Panyer Alley, Paternoster-Row.
+ _Birmingham_, DRAKE.
+ _Leeds_, BAINES and Co.
+ _Liverpool_, WILLMER and SMITH.
+ _Manchester_, ROBINSON.
+ _Dublin_, WAKEMAN.
+ _Edinburgh_, OLIVER and BOYD.
+ _Glasgow_, ATKINSON and Co.
+
+ Printed by WILLIAM CLOWES, Duke Street, Lambeth.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber’s Notes
+
+
+This file uses _underscores_ to indicate italic text. New original cover
+art included with this eBook is granted to the public domain. Itemized
+changes from the original text:
+
+ • p. 11: Added missing closing quotation mark to title “On the Truth of
+ the Christian Religion.”
+ • p. 12: replaced single with double closing quotation mark after
+ phrase “pleasurable activity of body and mind.”
+ • p. 13: Added missing letter “l” in phrase “intending to adopt the
+ profession of the law.”
+ • p. 13: Added missing period after phrase “an undisturbed
+ contemplation of the wonders in these rooms.”
+ • p. 16: Added missing commas and final letter “t” in passage beginning
+ “the same sort of advantage which the rich derive from their money.”
+ • p. 16: Removed apparent hyphen from address “Panyer Alley” to match
+ other issues.
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76590 ***
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+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76590 ***</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>
+ <h1 class='c000' title='The Penny Magazine, March 31, 1832'>THE PENNY MAGAZINE</h1>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div><span class='small'>OF THE</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div><span class='large'>Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="full">
+<div class="masthead">
+<div class="masthead-right">[<span class='sc'>April</span> 7, 1832</div>
+<div class="masthead-left">2.]</div>
+<div class="masthead-centre">PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY.</div>
+<hr class="full">
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <h2 class='c002'>POMPEII.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='illo-wide'>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<a href='images/pompeii-1-full.jpg'><img src='images/pompeii-1-inline.png' alt='' class='ig001'></a>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p>[Restored View of Pompeii.]</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='shrink'>
+
+<p class='c003'>⁂ The volume on ‘Pompeii,’ lately published in the Library of
+Entertaining Knowledge, contains every authentic detail of the
+destruction of that city by an eruption of Mount Vesuvius, <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 79;
+and the second volume, which will be shortly published, will complete
+the description of the remains of public and private buildings,
+and of articles of domestic use, which have been discovered
+in the ruins. The following observations on this interesting subject
+are from an intelligent correspondent, who has had the advantage
+of visiting the spot.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c004'>It is certainly surprising, that this most interesting city
+should have remained undiscovered until so late a period,
+and that antiquaries and learned men should have so
+long and materially erred about its situation. In many
+places masses of ruins, portions of the buried theatres,
+temples, and houses were not two feet below the surface
+of the soil; the country people were continually
+digging up pieces of worked marble, and other antique
+objects; in several spots they had even laid open the
+outer walls of the town; and yet men did not find out
+<em>what it was</em>, that peculiar, isolated mound of cinders
+and ashes, earth and pumice-stone, covered. There is
+another circumstance which increases the wonder of
+Pompeii remaining so long concealed. A subterranean
+canal, cut from the river Sarno, traverses the city, and is
+seen darkly and silently gliding on under the temple of
+Isis. This is said to have been cut towards the middle
+of the fifteenth century, to supply the contiguous town of
+the Torre dell’ Annunziata with fresh water; it probably
+ran anciently in the same channel. But, cutting it, or
+clearing it, workmen must have crossed under Pompeii
+from one side to the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>As you walk round the walls of the city, and see how
+the volcanic matter is piled upon it in one heap, it looks
+as though the hand of man had purposely buried it, by
+carrying and throwing over it the volcanic matter. This
+matter does not spread in any direction beyond the
+town, over the fine plain which gently declines towards
+the bay of Naples. The volcanic eruption was so confined
+in its course or its fall, as to bury Pompeii, and
+only Pompeii: for the shower of ashes and pumice-stone
+which descended in the immediate neighbourhood certainly
+made but a slight difference in the elevation of
+the plain.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>Where a town has been buried by lava, like Herculaneum,
+the process is easily traced. You can follow the
+black, hardened lava from the cone of the mountain to
+the sea, whose waters it invaded for “many a rood,” and
+those who have seen the lava in its liquid state, when it
+flows on like a river of molten iron, can conceive at once
+how it would bury every thing it found in its way.
+There is often a confusion of ideas, among those who
+have not had the advantages of visiting these interesting
+places, as to the matter which covers Pompeii and Herculaneum:
+they fancy they were both buried by lava.
+Herculaneum was so, and the work of excavating there,
+was like digging in a quarry of very hard stone. The
+descent into the places cleared is like the descent into a
+quarry or mine, and you are always under ground,
+lighted by torches.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>But Pompeii was covered by loose mud, pumice-stone,
+and ashes, over which, in the course of centuries, there
+collected vegetable soil. Beneath this shallow soil, the
+whole is very crumbly and easy to dig, in few spots more
+difficult than one of our common gravel-pits. The matter
+excavated is carried off in carts, and thrown outside
+of the town; and in times when the labour is carried on
+with activity, as cart after cart withdraws with the earth
+that covered them, you see houses entire, except their
+roofs, which have nearly always fallen in, make their
+appearance, and, by degrees, a whole street opens to the
+sun-shine or the shower, just like the streets of any inhabited
+neighbouring town. It is curious to observe,
+as the volcanic matter is removed, that the houses are
+principally built of lava, the more ancient product of the
+same Vesuvius, whose later results buried and concealed
+Pompeii for so many ages.</p>
+
+<div class='illo-wide'>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<a href='images/pompeii-2-full.jpg'><img src='images/pompeii-2-inline.png' alt='' class='ig001'></a>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p>[Implements of building found at Pompeii.]</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c004'>In the autumn of 1822 I saw Pompeii under very
+interesting circumstances. It was a few days after an
+eruption of Vesuvius, which I had witnessed, and which
+was considered by far the grandest eruption of recent
+times. From Portici, our road was coated with lapilla
+or pumice-stone, and a fine impalpable powder, of a
+palish grey hue, that had been discharged from the
+mountain, round whose base we were winding. In many
+places this coating was more than a foot deep, but it was
+pretty equally spread, not accumulating in any particular
+spot. As we drove into Pompeii our carriage wheels
+crushed this matter, which contained the principal components
+of what had buried the city: it was lodged on
+the edges of the houses’ walls, and on their roofs, (where
+the Neapolitan government had furnished them with
+any); it lay inches thick on the tops of the pillars and
+truncated columns of the ancient temples; it covered all
+the floors or the houses that had no roofs, and concealed
+the mosaics. In the amphitheatre, where we sat down
+to refresh ourselves, we were obliged to make the guides
+clear it away with shovels—it was everywhere. Looking
+from the upper walls of the amphitheatre, we saw the
+whole country covered with it—trees and all were coated
+with the pale-grey plaster, nor did it disappear for many
+months after.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>Some ignorant fellows at Naples pretended the fine
+ashes, or powder, contained gold! Neapolitans began
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>to collect it. They found no gold, but it turned out to
+be an excellent thing for cleaning and polishing plate.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>This dust continued to be blown from the mountain
+many days after the eruption had ceased. It once made
+a pretty figure of me! I was riding up the Posilippo road
+when it came on to rain; the rain brought down and
+gave consistency to the dust, which adhered to my black
+coat and pantaloons, until I looked as if I had been
+rolled in plaster of Paris.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>But it travelled farther than Posilippo, for a friend of
+mine, an officer in the navy, assured me it had fallen
+with rain on the deck of his ship, when between three
+and four hundred miles from Naples and Mount Vesuvius.
+There is an old story, that during one of the great
+eruptions of this mountain, or Etna, cinders were thrown
+as far as Constantinople: by substituting the fine powder
+I have alluded to, for cinders, the story becomes not improbable.</p>
+
+<div class='c005'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+<div>
+ <h2 class='c002'>VAN DIEMEN’S LAND.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='subtitle'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c005'>
+ <div>[Concluded from our last.]</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c004'>The island of Van Diemen’s Land lies immediately to
+the south of the vast continent of New Holland, from
+which it is separated by the narrow channel called Bass’s
+Strait. If New Holland be regarded as a great full bag
+or sack, Bass’s Strait will represent the neck, where it is
+drawn together and tied close, and Van Diemen’s Land
+the small bunch or gathering made beyond the string
+by the mere lip of the sack. While New Holland is
+rather more than half as large as all Europe, the extent
+of Van Diemen’s Land is only about twenty-three thousand
+square miles, which is not much more than two-thirds
+of the size of Ireland, or a fourth part of that of
+the island of Great Britain. The one, in fact, is about
+eighty times as large as the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>One of the papers in the Van Diemen’s Land Almanac
+presents us with a very full geographical description
+of the island. It was divided soon after its settlement
+into two great counties, Buckinghamshire, embracing the
+southern, and Cornwall, the northern portion of it. But
+the division which is now chiefly recognised, is that made
+in 1827 into eight Police districts, each under the charge
+of a paid magistrate. In the first of these, occupying
+the south-west corner of the island, stands Hobart Town,
+the capital, on the river Derwent, and about twenty miles
+from its mouth. The river, however, is, even at this distance
+from the sea, of considerable width, and the water
+is quite salt. The town stands upon a gently rising
+ground, and covers rather more than a square mile. Its
+streets are wide, and intersect each other at right angles.
+It contains several government buildings, a parish
+church, and other places of worship; a government
+school for the poor, and several Sunday schools; two
+public banks; and several libraries. Among its manufactories
+Hobart Town possesses a distillery, several
+breweries and tanneries, two timber mills, several flour
+mills worked by steam and water, and two or three soap
+and candle works. The population of the town and
+suburbs, including the convicts and the military, is above
+seven thousand. This, we believe, is about half the
+amount of the whole population of the island.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>The other towns already founded in Van Diemen’s
+Land, are, Launceston, on the river Tamar, about a
+hundred and twenty miles north from the capital, containing
+about a thousand inhabitants; New Norfolk, or
+Elizabeth Town, a place of considerable traffic, and also
+the centre of a rich agricultural district, standing on the
+Derwent, about twenty-two miles higher up than Hobart
+Town; Richmond, fourteen miles from the capital;
+Sorell Town, or Pitt Water, and Brighton, two other
+townships in the same vicinity; Bothwell, Oatlands,
+Campbell Town, Ross, Perth, and George Town, all
+considerably advanced settlements. Many other stations,
+however, have been marked out for towns, although
+scarcely yet begun to be built upon. Numerous farm-houses,
+also, and other detached residences, many of
+them standing in the midst of enclosed fields, gardens,
+and orchards, have been built in all directions. A single
+agricultural association, called the Van Diemen’s Land
+Company, possess a continuous tract of above three hundred
+thousand acres, in the north-west part of the island.
+About four hundred and fifty persons reside on this property.
+There are two government settlements for persons
+convicted of crimes in the colony, Macquarie Harbour on
+the west coast, and Maria Island on the east.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>The face of the country, though extremely diversified,
+is mountainous on the whole, and, especially as seen
+from the south, presents a prospect of singular sublimity;
+hills covered to the ridge with trees, occasionally intermingled
+with a bare rocky eminence, appearing to rise
+behind each other in endless succession. Some of the
+mountains on the south coast are five thousand feet in
+height, and during a great part of the year are covered
+with snow. Mount Wellington, or the Table Mountain,
+a few miles to the west of Hobart Town, rises to the
+height of four thousand feet above the level of the sea.
+The interior, however, contains many extensive plains
+quite unencumbered with wood. Even the western
+coast, where the scenery in general is bold and desolate,
+presents many protected and fertile spots. The bays
+and harbours around the coast are numerous and excellent.
+In this respect Hobart Town especially is most
+favourably situated. The principal rivers are the Derwent,
+the Huon, and the Tamar, all navigable. The Derwent,
+even at New Norfolk, above forty miles from the sea, is
+as wide as the Thames at Battersea. The scenery on
+both sides of this noble stream is described as being of
+the richest beauty. The second-rate and inferior rivers
+are numerous, fertilizing every part of the country, and
+falling into the sea along the whole extent of the coast.
+In the heart of the island are several lakes, from which
+many of the rivers take their rise.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>Much of the native timber of Van Diemen’s Land is
+excellent for all building purposes; and others of the
+woods are esteemed for ornamental cabinet-work. All
+the trees are evergreens. The shrubs are of great variety
+and beauty; but present as yet an almost unexamined
+field to the botanist. As to fruits, none of any value
+have been found native to this island; but on the other
+hand, every sort of fruit, herb, or vegetable, that grows
+in England, grows still better here.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>In respect of climate, Van Diemen’s Land enjoys the
+happiest medium between the extremes of heat and cold,
+the thermometer rarely falling below 40 degrees in winter,
+or rising above 70 degrees in summer. During the winter
+months of June, July, and August, the frosts are sometimes
+severe, and occasionally a good deal of snow falls;
+but it is seldom that snow lies on the ground a whole day.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>Coal has been found in various places; iron-stone is
+believed to be abundant; lime-stone also exists in great
+plenty; and it is highly probable that the earth is enriched
+with various other mineral treasures. Of the
+native animals, the most formidable is the hyena, by
+which many of the sheep are destroyed. Wild dogs and
+cats of different species are also found in the woods. The
+kangaroo is now fast disappearing, having, although a
+perfectly harmless animal, been much hunted by the settlers
+for sport, or for the sake of its flesh and skin.
+There are numerous species of birds, many of them of
+beautiful plumage. Various descriptions of fish also
+abound in the bays and creeks; but, except eels, the
+lakes and rivers supply very few that are valuable as
+food. Of the reptiles found in the island, the principal
+are snakes, some of which are extremely venomous.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>Such is an abstract of what is most important in the
+paper before us, which is followed by a more minute
+description of the parts of the island that have been
+brought into cultivation, in the form of an itinerary.
+We will now add a very few facts, selected from another
+paper, on the agriculture and horticulture of the colony.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>The first cattle were brought to Van Diemen’s Land
+in 1807. They were “a coarse buffalo sort of animal:”
+but, about nine or ten years ago, superior breeds began
+to be imported from England, and the colony now possesses
+pure Devons, Herefords, Durhams, Holdernesses,
+Fifeshires, &#38;c. Horses were at first brought from New
+Holland; but, “in the same manner as with neat cattle,”
+says this account, “they have since had the benefit of
+very superior crosses of English importations, and the
+colony can now boast as fine horses as even England
+itself. It has every sort, perhaps, that is known in the
+mother-country, from the heavy dray-horse to the diminutive
+pony, and including, what should by no means
+be passed in silence, blood and bone upon which thousands
+have been depending at Newmarket and other
+English race-courses.” Sheep, for which both the climate
+and natural herbage of the country are well
+adapted, are now numerous and rapidly improving in
+quality. Pigs and poultry, of every description, thrive
+admirably. Most sorts of grain that are common in
+England, grow at least as well here. The wheat is of
+excellent quality, seldom weighing less than from sixty-two
+to sixty-four pounds per bushel. Barley and oats produce
+well upon good land; but will not answer on inferior
+soils. The average return yielded by the potato is not
+equal to what it yields in England; but the cultivation
+of this root is yet in its infancy. Turnips and mangel-wurzel
+are both found to do extremely well. The same
+may be said of English grasses and pulses of all sorts.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>The export trade from this colony has, as yet, been
+confined to the more useful articles. Corn is sent to
+New South Wales, and to Swan River. Wool is already
+exported in considerable quantities, and is likely to become
+every year more and more the staple production of
+the island. Whale-fishing and the manufacture of oil are
+rapidly becoming trades of considerable importance. A
+good deal of mimosa bark, for tanning, is also sent to England;
+and salt meats, hides, and dairy produce will probably
+soon be added to the list of exported commodities.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>The regulations at present in force for the disposal of
+land, by grant or sale, were issued in 1828. The main
+principle upon which they are grounded is, that “settlers
+should not receive a greater extent of land than they are
+capable of improving, and that grants should not be
+made to persons who are desirous only of disposing of
+them.” Lands are accordingly granted in square miles,
+in the proportion of one square mile, or 640 acres, for
+every £500 sterling of capital which the applicant can
+immediately command. Of this capital, however, a portion
+may consist of live stock and instruments of husbandry.
+Upon the land thus granted a quit-rent is
+imposed at the rate of £5 per cent. on the estimated
+value of the land, the payment to commence at the expiration
+of seven years from the date of the grant, when
+the settler will also receive his title-deeds. The smallest
+quantity of land granted in this way to an individual is
+320 acres, and the largest, 2560 acres, or four square
+miles. Lands may also be obtained by purchase, being
+advertised for that purpose, and sold to the person
+making the highest tender.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>We will, in conclusion, mention a few of the more interesting
+particulars, supplied by the various lists in the
+little volume before us; these are indicative of the rapid
+progress of civilization. In addition to the three banks
+in Hobart Town we find a fourth, called the Cornwall
+bank, established at Launceston. There is at Hobart
+Town a Mechanics’ Institute, of which the Governor is
+patron, and the Chief Justice, president. Among the
+religious and philanthropic institutions of this capital are,
+a Bible Society, of which the Governor is president; a
+Presbyterian Missionary Society; a Wesleyan Missionary
+Society; a Benevolent and Strangers’ Friend Society;
+and a Sunday School Union, having four schools in its
+connexion, containing in all about 250 children. Besides
+the Government Gazette, there are three other
+weekly newspapers published in Hobart Town, and a
+fourth at Launceston. The Almanac closes with a
+Directory for Hobart Town; in which, besides merchants,
+general dealers, official, clerical, and other professional
+characters, we find the names of civil engineers,
+livery-stable keepers, watchmakers, midwives, shoemakers,
+bricklayers, milliners, portrait painters, and
+engravers, chemists and druggists, pastry-cooks, confectioners,
+glaziers, plumbers, house and sign painters,
+hatters, upholsterers, cabinet-makers and undertakers,
+coopers, boat-builders, auctioneers, goldsmiths, and working-jewellers,
+music teachers, tailors, butchers, brewers,
+hosiers and glovers, ironmongers, brass and iron founders,
+tinmen and blacksmiths, printers, saddlers, bakers,
+hair-dressers. It would be curious to compare this list
+with the population of an English town of seven thousand
+people three centuries ago!</p>
+
+<div class='c005'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+<div>
+ <h2 class='c002'>LOST CAMEL.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>A dervise was journeying alone in the desert, when two
+merchants suddenly met him: “You have lost a camel,”
+said he to the merchants. “Indeed we have,” they replied.
+“Was he not blind in his right eye, and lame in his left leg?”
+said the dervise. “He was,” replied the merchants. “Had
+he lost a front tooth?” said the dervise. “He had,” rejoined
+the merchants. “And was he not loaded with honey on one
+side, and wheat on the other?” “Most certainly he was,”
+they replied; “and as you have seen him so lately, and
+marked him so particularly, you can, in all probability, conduct
+us unto him.” “My friends,” said the dervise, “I have
+never seen your camel, nor ever heard of him, but from you.”
+“A pretty story, truly!” said the merchants, “but where are
+the jewels, which formed a part of his cargo?” “I have
+neither seen your camel nor your jewels,” repeated the dervise.
+On this, they seized his person, and forthwith hurried
+him before the Cadi, where, on the strictest search, nothing
+could be found upon him, nor could any evidence whatever
+be adduced to convict him, either of falsehood or of theft.
+They were then about to proceed against him as a sorcerer,
+when the dervise, with great calmness, thus addressed the
+Court: “I have been much amused with your surprise, and
+own that there has been some ground for your suspicions;
+but I have lived long, and alone; and I can find ample scope
+for observation, even in a desert. I knew that I had crossed
+the track of a camel that had strayed from its owner, because
+I saw no mark of any human footstep on the same route;
+I knew that the animal was blind in one eye, because it had
+cropped the herbage only on one side of its path; and I perceived
+that it was lame in one leg, from the faint impression
+which that particular foot had produced upon the sand; I
+concluded that the animal had lost one tooth, because wherever
+it had grazed, a small tuft of herbage was left uninjured
+in the centre of its bite. As to that which formed the burden
+of the beast, the busy ants informed me that it was corn on
+the one side, and the clustering flies that it was honey on
+the other.”</p>
+
+<div class='c005'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+
+<p class='c006'><i>Science preceding Art.</i>—When the principles of any
+science are become common to all the world, these principles
+lead to inventions, nearly, if not altogether similar,
+by different persons having no communication with each
+other. A remarkable instance of this is given by Judge
+Story, in his address to the Boston Mechanics’ Institute:—</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>“A beautiful improvement had been made in the double-speeder
+of the cotton-spinning machine by one of our ingenious
+countrymen. The originality of the invention was
+established by the most satisfactory evidence. The defendant,
+however, called an Englishman as a witness, who had
+been but a short time in the country, and who testified most
+explicitly to the existence of a like invention in the improved
+machinery in England. Against such positive proof there
+was much difficulty in proceeding. The testimony, though
+doubted, could not be discredited; and the trial was postponed
+to another term, for the purpose of procuring evidence
+to rebut it. An agent was despatched to England
+for this and other objects; and, upon his return, the plaintiff
+was content to become nonsuited. There was no doubt
+that the invention here was without any suspicion of its
+existence elsewhere; but the genius of each country, almost
+at the same moment, accomplished, independently, the same
+achievement.”</p>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span></div>
+<div class='c005'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+<div>
+ <h2 class='c002'>BRITISH ANIMALS.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='illo-wide'>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<a href='images/british-animals-1-full.jpg'><img src='images/british-animals-1-inline.png' alt='A dormouse sitting on a tree stump.' class='ig001'></a>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='subtitle'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c005'>
+ <div>THE DORMOUSE</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c004'>The little dormouse has now awakened from his fitful
+sleep. When the winds of March sweep away the lingering
+fogs of winter,—when the tender buds are first seen
+on the trees, and the primrose first shows its head in the
+green banks—before the swallow comes to our shores, or
+the rook has finished her nest—the dormouse rouses up
+from the bed where he has slept for several months.
+His sleep, however, is not constant through the cold
+season, like that of some other animals; for he wakes, at
+times, to eat of the store of nuts and beech-mast which he
+has provided for his sustenance in the autumn. The
+marmot, a quadruped inhabiting some mountainous parts
+of Europe, makes no provision of this kind in his subterranean
+galleries. He sleeps completely.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>M. Mangili, an Italian naturalist, made some curious
+experiments upon the dormouse and other animals which
+sleep during the cold weather. He kept the dormouse
+in a cupboard in his study. On the 24th December,
+when the thermometer was about 40°, that is 8° above
+the freezing point, the dormouse curled himself up
+amongst a heap of papers and went to sleep. On the
+27th December, when the thermometer was several
+degrees lower, M. Mangili ascertained that the animal
+breathed, and suspended his respiration at regular intervals;—that
+is, that after four minutes of perfect repose,
+in which he appeared as if dead, he breathed about
+twenty-four times in the space of a minute and a half,
+and that then his breathing was again completely
+suspended, and again renewed. As the thermometer
+became higher, that is, as the weather became less cold,
+the intervals of repose were reduced to three minutes.
+On the contrary, when the thermometer fell nearly to the
+freezing point, the intervals were then six minutes.
+Within ten days from its beginning to sleep (the weather
+then being very cold), the dormouse woke and ate a
+little. He then went to sleep again; and continued to
+sleep for some days, and then to awaken, throughout
+the winter; but as the season advanced, the intervals of
+perfect repose, when no breathing could be perceived,
+were much longer, sometimes more than twenty minutes.
+The effects of confinement upon this individual animal
+caused him to sleep much longer than in a state of
+nature.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>When a dormouse is discovered asleep, in his natural
+retreat, he is cold to the touch, his eyes are shut, and his
+respiration is slow and interrupted, as just described.
+Torpid animals, in general, when thus found, may be
+shaken, or rolled, or even struck, without a possibility of
+arousing them. But as the fine weather advances, the
+heat of their bodies increases, as it decreases at the
+approaches of winter; till at length they shake off their
+drowsiness, and are again the busy and happy inhabitants
+of the fields and gardens, active in the search of food to
+gratify their appetite, which is now as keen as it was dull
+in the cold months. These movements of course depend
+upon the states of the atmosphere, and are different in
+individuals of the same species.</p>
+
+<div class='subtitle'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c005'>
+ <div>THE SWALLOW.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c004'>The swallow, and other birds of passage—that is,
+birds who fly from one country to another, as the weather
+becomes unsuited to their natures—now begin to return
+to us. The swallow is a general favourite. He comes
+to us when nature is putting on her most smiling aspect,
+and he stays with us through the months of sunshine
+and gladness. “The swallow,” says Sir H. Davy, “is
+one of my favourite birds, and a rival of the nightingale;
+for he glads my sense of seeing, as much as the
+other does my sense of hearing. He is the joyous
+prophet of the year, the harbinger of the best season,
+he lives a life of enjoyment amongst the loveliest forms
+of nature; winter is unknown to him, and he leaves
+the green meadows of England in autumn, for the
+myrtle and orange groves of Italy, and for the palms of
+Africa.”</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>Mr. White, a clergyman of Hampshire, who delighted
+to observe all the works of the creation around him,
+has thus accurately described the window swallow’s or
+martin’s mode of building:—</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>“About the middle of May, if the weather be fine,
+the martin begins to think in earnest of providing a
+mansion for its family. The crust or shell of this nest
+seems to be formed of such dirt or loam as comes most
+readily to hand, and is tempered and wrought together
+with little bits of broken straws to render it tough and
+tenacious. As this bird often builds against a perpendicular
+wall without any projecting ledge under, it
+requires its utmost efforts to get the first foundation
+firmly fixed, so that it may safely carry the superstructure.
+On this occasion, the bird not only clings with
+its claws, but partly supports itself by strongly inclining
+its tail against the wall, making that a fulcrum; and
+thus steadied, it works and plasters the materials into
+the face of the brick or stone. But then, that this work
+may not, while it is soft and green, pull itself down by
+its own weight, the provident architect has prudence and
+forbearance enough not to advance her work too fast;
+but by building only in the morning, and by dedicating
+the rest of the day to food and amusement, gives it sufficient
+time to dry and harden. About half an inch seems
+to be a sufficient layer for a day. Thus careful workmen,
+when they build mud-walls (informed at first perhaps
+by this little bird), raise but a moderate layer at a time
+and then desist, lest the work should become top-heavy,
+and so be ruined by its own weight. By this method,
+in about ten or twelve days, is formed a hemispheric
+nest with a small aperture towards the top, strong, compact,
+and warm, and perfectly fitted for all the purposes
+for which it was intended.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>“The shell or crust of the nest is a sort of rustic-work,
+full of knobs and protuberances on the outside:
+nor is the inside of those that I have examined smoothed
+with any exactness at all; but is rendered soft and
+warm, and fit for incubation, by a lining of small straws,
+grasses and feathers, and sometimes by a bedding of
+moss interwoven with wool. They are often capricious
+in fixing on a nesting-place, beginning many edifices
+and leaving them unfinished; but when once a nest is
+completed in a sheltered place, after so much labour is
+bestowed in erecting a mansion, as nature seldom works
+in vain, the same nest serves for several seasons. Those
+which breed in a ready finished house, get the start in
+hatching of those that build new by ten days or a fortnight.
+These industrious artificers are at their labours
+in the long days before four in the morning; when they
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>fix their materials, they plaster them on with their chins,
+moving their heads with a quick, rotatory motion.”</p>
+
+<div class='illo-wide'>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<a href='images/british-animals-2-full.jpg'><img src='images/british-animals-2-inline.png' alt='A swallow perched outside its nest.' class='ig001'></a>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='c005'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+<div>
+ <h2 class='c002'>THE WEEK.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>April 7.—The day of the birth, and also that of the
+death, of Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino, whom the universal
+voice of posterity has recognized as the Prince of
+modern Painters, and designated by the enthusiastic
+appellation of “the divine Raphael.” No rival, at least,
+has ever been placed beside Raphael except Michael
+Angelo. Of the two illustrious contemporaries the
+former may perhaps be appropriately styled the Shakspeare,
+the latter the Milton of Painting. Dignity and
+imposing grandeur of design are the reigning characteristics
+of Michael Angelo; the highest dramatic power
+which has ever been displayed by the pencil, and the
+representation of passion with all the force of life, are
+the qualities that chiefly give their wonderful fascination
+to the works of Raphael. Raphael was born at Urbino
+in 1483. By the time he had reached the age of twenty-five
+he had so greatly distinguished himself that he was
+invited by Pope Julius II. to paint in fresco the chambers
+of the Vatican. From this time till his death, in
+1520, at the early age of thirty-seven, he was employed
+in the execution of a succession of great works, chiefly
+for that pontiff and his successor, Leo X. His most
+famous performances are, his picture of the School of
+Athens in the Vatican, the Transfiguration, and his
+Cartoons on subjects taken from the Gospels and the
+Acts of the Apostles, which were brought to this country
+by Charles I., and are now to be seen at Hampton
+Court, upon the payment of a shilling for each party.
+Like Michael Angelo, Raphael was an architect as well
+as a painter, and, among other buildings, superintended
+the erection of part of the cathedral of St. Peter’s.
+But his untimely death interrupted his prosecution of
+this and other great works on which he was engaged;
+leaving him, however, although with a glory gathered in
+comparative youth, with no living superior, and followed
+by no equal in succeeding times.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>April 10.—This is the birth-day of the celebrated
+Dutch writer, Hugh de Groot, better known by his
+Latin name of Grotius, who was born at Delfft in 1583.
+Grotius was a prodigy of youthful talent and acquirement.
+When only fourteen he prepared an edition of a
+Latin author, Martianus Capella, in which he showed
+extensive classical and historical erudition. At the age
+of sixteen, having already made a journey to France,
+and been presented to Henry IV., who honoured him
+with the gift of his picture and a gold chain, he entered
+upon the profession of an advocate at Delfft. From
+this time he continued till his death to take an active
+part in political transactions; but still found leisure to
+write a vast number of books, most of them distinguished
+for their learning and ability. The book by
+which he is now principally known is his famous treatise
+on the law of nations, entitled, ‘On the right of Peace
+and War.’ It was first published at Paris in 1625.
+Another of his productions, which is still very popular, is
+his treatise <a id='tn-truthof'></a>‘On the Truth of the Christian Religion,’
+written, like the former, in Latin, but which has been
+translated into every language of Europe. Grotius
+wrote a great part of this work while confined by a rival
+political faction in the castle of Louvestein, from which,
+however, after nearly two years’ detention, his wife contrived
+to get him conveyed away in a chest, which she
+pretended was full of books. Grotius died in his sixty-third
+year, on the 28th of August, 1645.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>April 11.—The birth-day of the late Right Honourable
+George Canning, who was born in London, in the
+year 1771. His father, an Irish gentleman of good
+family, died the same year in which his son was born.
+At the usual age young Canning was sent to Eton,
+where he soon distinguished himself by the brilliancy of
+his talents. While there he made the first public trial
+of his literary powers in ‘The Microcosm,’ a very clever
+periodical work, which he carried on in conjunction with
+some of his schoolfellows, and of which he was the projector
+and the editor. In 1787 he removed to Christ
+Church, Oxford, <a id='tn-law'></a>intending to adopt the profession of the
+law. But while yet at the University, his reputation for
+ability obtained for him the notice of Mr. Pitt, who
+brought him into Parliament in 1793. Mr. Canning’s
+official career belongs to the history of his country, and
+especially that period of it during which he was Secretary
+of State for Foreign Affairs. The system of foreign
+policy with which his name is associated has caused his
+memory to be held in honour; and although he opposed
+Parliamentary Reform, as well as other popular measures,
+yet his steadfast support of Catholic Emancipation
+for a long series of years, and the protection he afforded
+to the cause of freedom on the Continent, and in South
+America, are proofs of his attachment to his celebrated
+toast of “<em>Civil and Religious Liberty all over the
+World!</em>” In April, 1827, he was appointed Prime
+Minister by George the Fourth, and continued to hold
+the offices of First Lord of the Treasury and Chancellor
+of the Exchequer till his death, on the 8th of August
+in the same year, at the Duke of Devonshire’s villa at
+Chiswick, after a short illness. His death at so early a
+period after his accession to power called forth a deep
+feeling of grief in his own country, and, perhaps, a still
+stronger and more general feeling on the Continent,
+where medals were struck in memory of the British
+Minister.</p>
+
+<div class='c005'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+<div>
+ <h2 class='c002'>THE BRITISH MUSEUM.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>“The characteristic of the English populace,—perhaps
+we ought to say people, for it extends to the middle
+classes,—is their propensity to mischief. The people of
+most other countries may safely be admitted into parks,
+gardens, public buildings, and galleries of pictures and
+statues; but in England it is necessary to exclude them,
+as much as possible, from all such places.”</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>This is a sentence from the last published number of
+the ‘Quarterly Review.’ Severe as it is, there is much
+truth in it. The fault is not entirely on the side
+of the people (we will not use the offensive term populace);
+but still they are in fault. The writer adds,
+speaking of this love of mischief, which he calls “a
+disgraceful part of the English character,” that “anything
+tends to correct it that contributes to give the
+people a taste for intellectual pleasures,—anything that
+contributes to their innocent enjoyment,—anything that
+excites them to wholesome and <a id='tn-bodyandmind'></a>pleasurable activity of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>body and mind.” This is quite true. We hope to do
+something, speaking generally, to excite and gratify a
+taste for intellectual pleasure; but we wish to do more
+in this particular case. We wish to point out many
+unexpensive pleasures, of the very highest order, which
+all those who reside in London have within their reach;
+and how the education of themselves and of their children
+may be advanced by using their opportunities of
+enjoying some of the purest gratifications which an
+instructed mind is capable of receiving. Having learnt
+to enjoy them, they will naturally feel an honest pride
+in the possession, by the Nation, of many of the most
+valuable treasures of Art and of Science; and they will
+hold that person a baby in mind—a spoiled, wilful, mischievous
+baby—who dares to attempt the slightest injury
+to the public property, which has been collected together,
+at an immense expense, for the public advantage.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>Well, then, that we may waste no time in general
+discussion, let us begin with the <span class='sc'>British Museum</span>.
+We will suppose ourselves addressing an artisan or
+tradesman, who can sometimes afford to take a holiday,
+and who knows there are better modes of spending a
+working day, which he some half-dozen times a year
+devotes to pleasure, than amidst the smoke of a taproom,
+or the din of a skittle-ground. He is a family
+man; he enjoys a pleasure doubly if it is shared by his
+wife and children. Well, then, in Great Russell-street,
+Bloomsbury, is the British Museum; and here, from ten
+o’clock till four, on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays,
+he may see many of the choicest productions of ancient
+art—Egyptian, Grecian, and Roman monuments; and
+what will probably please the young people most, in the
+first instance, a splendid collection of natural history—quadrupeds,
+birds, insects, shells—all classed and beautifully
+disposed in an immense gallery, lately built by
+the Government for the more convenient exhibition of
+these curiosities. “But hold,” says the working man,
+“I have passed by the British Museum: there are two
+sentinels at the gateway, and the large gates are always
+closed. Will they let me in? Is there nothing to pay?”
+That is a very natural question about the payment; for
+there is too much of paying in England by the people
+for admission to what they ought to see for nothing.
+But <em>here</em> there <em>is</em> nothing to pay. Knock boldly at the
+gate; the porter will open it. You are in a large square
+court-yard, with an old-fashioned house occupying three
+sides. A flight of steps leads up to the principal entrance.
+Go on. Do not fear any surly looks or impertinent
+glances from any person in attendance. You are
+upon safe ground here. You are come to see your own
+property. You have as much right to see it, and you
+are as welcome therefore to see it, as the highest in the
+land. There is no favour in showing it you. You
+assist in paying for the purchase, and the maintenance
+of it; and one of the very best effects that could result
+from that expense would be to teach every Englishman
+to set a proper value upon the enjoyments which such
+public property is capable of affording. Go boldly
+forward, then. The officers of the Museum, who are
+obliging to all strangers, will be glad to see you. Your
+garb is homely, you think, as you see gaily-dressed
+persons going in and out. No matter; you and your
+wife, and your children, are clean, if not smart. By the
+way, it will be well to mention that very young children
+(those under eight years old) are not admitted; and
+that for a very sufficient reason: in most cases they
+would disturb the other visitors.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>You are now in the great Hall—a lofty room, with a
+fine staircase. In an adjoining room a book is presented
+to you, in which one of a party has to write his
+name and address, with the number of persons accompanying
+him. That is the only form you have to go
+through; and it is a necessary form, if it were only to
+preserve a record of the number of persons admitted.
+In each year this number amounts to about seventy
+thousand: so you see that the British Museum has
+afforded pleasure and improvement to a great many
+people. We hope the number of visitors will be doubled
+and trebled; for exhibitions such as these do a very
+great deal for the advance of a people in knowledge and
+virtue. What reasonable man would abandon himself
+to low gratifications—to drinking or gambling—when
+he may, whenever he pleases, and as often as he pleases
+at no cost but that of his time, enjoy the sight of some
+of the most curious and valuable things in the world,
+with as much ease as a prince walking about in his own
+private gallery. But that he may enjoy these treasures,
+and that every body else may enjoy them at the same
+time, it will be necessary to observe a few simple rules.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>1st. <i>Touch nothing</i>. The statues, and other curious
+things, which are in the Museum, are to be seen, not
+to be handled. If visitors were to be allowed to touch
+them, to try whether they were hard or soft, to scratch
+them, to write upon them with their pencils, they would
+be soon worth very little. You will see some mutilated
+remains of two or three of the finest figures that ever
+were executed in the world: they form part of the collection
+called the Elgin Marbles, and were brought from
+the Temple of Minerva, at Athens, which city at the
+time of the sculpture of these statues, about two thousand
+three hundred years ago, was one of the cities of Greece
+most renowned for art and learning. Time has, of
+course, greatly worn these statues: but it is said that
+the Turkish soldiers, who kept the modern Greeks under
+subjection, used to take a brutal pleasure in the injury
+of these remains of ancient art; as if they were glad to
+destroy what their ignorance made them incapable of
+valuing. Is it not as great ignorance for a stupid fellow
+of our own day slily to write his own paltry name upon
+one of these glorious monuments? Is not such an act
+the most severe reproach upon the writer? Is it not,
+as if the scribbler should say, “Here am I, in the presence
+of some of the great masterpieces of art, whose
+antiquity ought to produce reverence, if I cannot comprehend
+their beauty; and I derive a pleasure from
+putting my own obscure, perishable name upon works
+whose fame will endure for ever.” What a satire upon
+such vanity. Doubtless, these fellows, who are so
+pleased with their own weak selves, as to poke their
+names into every face, are nothing but grown babies,
+and want a fool’s cap most exceedingly.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>2dly. <i>Do not talk loud.</i> Talk, of course, you must;
+or you would lose much of the enjoyment we wish you
+to have—for pleasure is only half pleasure, unless it be
+shared with those we love. But do not disturb others
+with your talk. Do not call loudly from one end of a
+long gallery to the other, or you will distract the attention
+of those who derive great enjoyment from <a id='tn-theserooms'></a>an undisturbed
+contemplation of the wonders in these rooms.
+You will excuse this hint.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>3rdly. <i>Be not obtrusive.</i> You will see many things
+in the Museum that you do not understand. It will be
+well to make a memorandum of these, to be inquired
+into at your leisure; and in these inquiries we shall
+endeavour to assist you from time to time. But do not
+trouble other visitors with your questions; and, above
+all, do not trouble the young artists, some of whom you
+will see making drawings for their improvement. Their
+time is precious to them; and it is a real inconvenience
+to be obliged to give their attention to anything but their
+work, or to have their attention disturbed by an over-curious
+person peeping at what they are doing. If you
+want to make any inquiry, go to one of the attendants,
+who walks about in each room. He will answer you as
+far as he knows. You must not expect to understand
+what you see all at once: you must go again and again
+if you wish to obtain real knowledge, beyond the gratification
+of passing curiosity.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>In future numbers we shall briefly mention what is
+most worthy your attention in this National Collection.</p>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span></div>
+<div class='c005'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+<div>
+ <h2 class='c002'>POESIE.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='subtitle'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c005'>
+ <div>[George Wither, born 1588, died 1677.]</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Though I miss the flowery fields,</div>
+ <div class='line'>With those sweets the spring-tide yields;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Though I may not see those groves,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Where the shepherds chaunt their loves,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And the lasses more excel,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Then the sweet-voiced Philomel;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Though of all those pleasures past,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Nothing now remains at last,</div>
+ <div class='line'>But remembrance (poor relief)</div>
+ <div class='line'>That more makes, then mends my grief;</div>
+ <div class='line'>She’s my mind’s companion still,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Maugre Envy’s evil will.</div>
+ <div class='line'>She doth tell me where to borrow</div>
+ <div class='line'>Comfort in the midst of sorrow;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Makes the desolated place</div>
+ <div class='line'>To her presence be a grace;</div>
+ <div class='line'>And the blackest discontents</div>
+ <div class='line'>Be her fairest ornaments.</div>
+ <div class='line'>In my former days of bliss,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Her divine skill taught me this,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That from every thing I saw,</div>
+ <div class='line'>I could some invention draw;</div>
+ <div class='line'>And raise pleasure to her height,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Through the meanest object’s sight.</div>
+ <div class='line'>By the murmur of a spring,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Or the least bough’s rustling;</div>
+ <div class='line'>By a daisy whose leaves spread,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Shut when Titan goes to bed,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Or a shady bush or tree,</div>
+ <div class='line'>She could more infuse in me,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Then all nature’s beauties can,</div>
+ <div class='line'>In some other wiser man.</div>
+ <div class='line'>By her help I also now</div>
+ <div class='line'>Make this churlish place allow</div>
+ <div class='line'>Some things that may sweeten gladness</div>
+ <div class='line'>In the very gall of sadness.</div>
+ <div class='line'>The dull loneness, the black shade,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That those hanging vaults have made,</div>
+ <div class='line'>The strange music of the waves</div>
+ <div class='line'>Beating on these hollow caves,</div>
+ <div class='line'>This black den which rocks emboss,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Overgrown with eldest moss,</div>
+ <div class='line'>The rude portals that give light,</div>
+ <div class='line'>More to terror than delight,—</div>
+ <div class='line'>This my chamber of neglect,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Walled about with disrespect,</div>
+ <div class='line'>From all these, and this dull air,</div>
+ <div class='line'>A fit object for despair,</div>
+ <div class='line'>She hath taught me by her might</div>
+ <div class='line'>To draw comfort and delight.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Therefore, thou best earthly bliss,</div>
+ <div class='line'>I will cherish thee for this.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Poesie, thou sweet’st content,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That e’er Heaven to mortals lent;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Though they as a trifle leave thee,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Whose dull thoughts cannot conceive thee;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Though thou be to them a scorn,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That to nought but earth are born;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Let my life no longer be,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Than I am in love with thee.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>George Wither, the author of the above lines, was
+several times subjected to long and severe imprisonment
+for his political opinions. While in the Marshalsea
+prison in 1613, he wrote his ‘Shepherd’s Hunting,’ a
+pastoral poem, from which this is an extract. The verses
+are not only beautiful in themselves, but they point out
+how a vigorous mind will secure happiness under the
+most unfavourable circumstances. The imagination of
+Wither was delighted to repose upon the most common
+natural objects;—and in the same way, the man who
+possesses the least of the outward gifts of fortune, if his
+faculties be awake to the beauties which nature has so
+plenteously scattered around his path, may possess in
+himself a source of pleasure of the purest kind. The
+rapture which Wither expresses for ‘Poesie,’ may to
+some appear overstrained; but let it not be thought that
+the poet attributed this power of imparting delight to
+his faculty alone of <em>making verses</em>. The exercise of his
+fancy, by which he could “raise pleasure to her height,”
+consisted in presenting to his “mind’s eye” the infinite
+beauties of the creation. The “daisy,” whose remembrance
+gladdened even his prison-walls, brought to him
+images of the quiet and purity of the “flowery fields.”
+Such images every body may enjoy, and may gradually
+learn to associate the commonest appearances of nature
+with a high moral feeling. We have many instances
+of this power of association in our finest poets; let us
+take as an example the following lines by a writer of
+our own day:—</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TO A DAISY.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Bright flower, whose home is every where</div>
+ <div class='line'>A pilgrim bold in Nature’s care,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And oft, the long year through, the heir</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Of joy or sorrow.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Methinks that there abides in thee</div>
+ <div class='line'>Some concord with humanity,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Given to no other flower I see</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>The forest thorough!</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>And wherefore? Man is soon deprest;</div>
+ <div class='line'>A thoughtless thing! who, once unblest,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Does little on his memory rest,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Or on his reason.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>But thou would’st teach him how to find</div>
+ <div class='line'>A shelter under every wind;</div>
+ <div class='line'>A hope for times that are unkind,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>And every season.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='c008'><span class='sc'>Wordsworth</span>.</div>
+
+<div class='c005'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+<div>
+ <h2 class='c002'>ON THE CHOICE OF A LABOURING MAN’S DWELLING.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>It seems, on the first view, somewhat odd to talk about
+choice of dwelling to a labouring man. It may occur to
+such a person, that as he has seldom more than two or
+three shillings per week to allow for rent, he must be
+contented with the humble accommodations that can be
+afforded for that sum. This is, to a certain extent, true;
+but it is not therefore to be concluded that the exercise of
+a little prudence may not put him in possession of some
+advantages with his two or three shillings, which the
+want of that quality would exclude him from. There are
+some dwellings so badly situated, in such ill repair, and
+altogether so miserable, that a man exposes himself and
+his family to disease and every other inconvenience by
+inhabiting them. Such hovels are usually tenanted by
+people who are behind-hand in paying their rent, and so
+cannot leave them; or who, being “steeped to the very
+lips in poverty,” are indifferent to cleanliness and all
+other comforts. It is possible that an industrious and
+careful family may, for some time, be obliged to live in a
+wretched house; but it is their own fault if they continue
+in it. In this country the poor are better lodged than in
+any other in Europe; and within the last twenty years
+the increase of population and of productive labour has
+caused a demand for cottages, which has covered every
+parish, and particularly the neighbourhood of large
+towns, with an amazing number of snug little houses, in
+which provision is generally made for the comfort of those
+who inhabit them. Now while there is such a <em>choice</em> of
+dwellings, it is very much a labouring man’s fault if he
+does not have a commodious one; and if he continue to
+be the tenant of a damp, or ruinous, or badly ventilated
+hut, while the snug brick and tiled tenement remains
+vacant, we should say that he is a blind and stupid
+observer of an old proverb (which, however, has much
+sense in it) that “three removes are as bad as a fire.”</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>We wish to offer a few plain hints to assist our readers
+in the choice of a dwelling. And, first, of situation.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>Whoever rambles through our villages must often see
+a pretty little cottage, that realizes all that benevolence
+could wish for a labouring man’s dwelling. We have
+seen many such; and the remembrance often occurs
+to us, when we observe rich men unhappy, in large
+mansions, and amongst splendid furniture. We then
+think of the contrast which the simplicity and content
+of the “peasant’s nest” offers. Who has not looked
+upon the whitened walls, half covered with roses and
+jessamine, and the neat garden, where ornament is
+blended with utility,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>And said, if there’s peace to be found in the world,</div>
+ <div class='line'>A heart that is humble may hope for it here!</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>But an agreeable dwelling is not always to be commanded;
+nor is the <em>best</em> situation always to be found.
+If a cottager have a house with a northern aspect, he
+must pay a little more attention to his gooseberry and
+apple trees, to make them bear as plentifully as those
+which are trained in a southern sun. We are only
+desirous to caution him against a house that is truly
+uncomfortable, and that cannot be easily rendered
+otherwise.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>We would first say, avoid, if it be possible, a low and
+marshy situation. There are many dangerous fevers
+which are produced by the vicinity of stagnant waters:
+and houses which from their site are constantly damp
+expose those who inhabit them to rheumatism, croup,
+ague, and other painful disorders. The same effects
+are produced by dwelling-houses which are subject to
+occasional inundations of rivers. To be driven in cold
+weather from the accustomed fire-side to shiver in bedrooms
+which have probably no grate; to have two or
+three feet of water running through the lower part of the
+house, destroying many things and injuring more; and
+at last, when the inundations cease, to find the whole
+dwelling damp and miserable for several weeks: this is
+a visitation which no one would willingly seek. If a
+cottager has therefore the choice of being on a hill-side,
+or by the bank of a river, we think, if he were a sensible
+man, he would prefer the elevated situation.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>On the <em>construction</em> of a dwelling, we have not much
+to observe. The great requisite is the free admission of
+<em>light</em> and <em>air</em>. <em>Dark</em> rooms are an inconvenience to the
+industrious housewife which we need not describe; and
+rooms not properly <em>ventilated</em> are more injurious to
+health than may readily be conceived. Every sleeping-room
+should have a chimney. In England, no sitting-room
+is, we apprehend, without one. But in Ireland,
+the peasantry have neither window nor chimney to their
+wretched hovels. The smoke of the turf which burns
+upon their hearth forces its way out by the door; and
+the family sit and sleep in this dark and dirty condition.
+This would be intolerable amongst the more cleanly and
+richer peasantry of this country.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>Of the appendages to a house, a good supply of
+water is one of the most necessary conveniences. If the
+pitcher is to be carried a dozen times a day to a spring
+or a well a quarter of a mile off, it is almost the labour
+of one person to procure this supply; and that labour
+would contribute as much to the family earnings as, in
+twelve months, would dig a well. No cottager should
+be without a garden. A rood of land, properly cultivated,
+will half maintain a careful family.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>Of the <em>fixtures</em> of a house we cannot be expected to
+say much. A <em>copper</em> and an <em>oven</em> will enable the female
+to labour most profitably for the general good. A cottager
+that can grow his own potatoes, keep his pig,
+brew his beer, and bake his bread, has not many
+necessaries to purchase of the shopkeeper, and is therefore,
+to a certain extent, independent in the best sense
+of the word.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>As to furniture, we would say, avoid <em>furnished lodgings</em>.
+The bed and table, and two or three chairs, of
+these places, seldom cost more than 5<i>l.</i>, the interest of
+which is only 5<i>s.</i> a year. The money annually paid for
+the use of such things is almost as much as their prime
+cost. There is a satisfaction, too, in knowing that what
+is about us is our own. It is better to sit upon an old
+box or a block of wood than to pay enormously for the
+hire of a chair; and we may sleep as soundly upon a
+straw mattress as upon an expensive feather-bed. One
+secret, to be happy in every situation of life, is this,—not
+to sacrifice real comfort and solid independence
+to make a show. When the cottager has got ten
+pounds in the Savings Bank, he may afford his wife a
+mahogany tea-table. An American writer has given
+some judicious remarks upon this subject, which apply
+to all classes:—</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>“If you are about to furnish a house, do not spend all
+your money, be it much or little. Do not let the beauty of
+this thing, and the cheapness of that, tempt you to buy unnecessary
+articles. Doctor Franklin’s maxim was a wise
+one, ‘Nothing is cheap that we do not want.’ Buy merely
+enough to get along with at first. It is only by experience
+that you can tell what will be the wants of your family. If
+you spend all your money, you will find you have purchased
+many things you do not want, and have no means left to get
+many things which you do want. If you have enough, and
+more than enough, to get every thing suitable to your situation,
+do not think you must spend it all, merely because you
+happen to have it. Begin humbly. As riches increase, it is
+easy and pleasant to increase in comforts; but it is always
+painful and inconvenient to decrease. After all, these things
+are viewed in their proper light by the truly judicious and
+respectable. Neatness, tastefulness, and good sense may
+be shown in the management of a small household, and the
+arrangement of a little furniture, as well as upon a larger
+scale; and these qualities are always praised, and always
+treated with respect and attention. The consideration which
+many purchase by living beyond their income, and of course
+living upon others, is not worth the trouble it costs. The
+glare there is about this false and wicked parade is deceptive;
+it does not in fact procure a man valuable friends, or
+extensive influence.”</p>
+
+<div class='c005'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+
+<p class='c006'>However small may be a man’s income, there is one very
+certain way of increasing it—that is <em>Frugality</em>. A frugal
+expenditure will enable almost every body to <em>save</em> something;
+and as there are now established throughout this country
+<em>Banks</em>, where the industrious may safely deposit their
+savings, however little they may be, and receive <a id='tn-commas'></a>the same
+sort of advantage which the rich derive from their money,
+that is, <em>interest</em>, there is every inducement to make <em>an effort
+to save</em>. Dr. Franklin observes, in his usual forcible way,
+that “six pounds a-year is but a groat a-day. For this little
+sum which may be daily wasted, either in time or expense,
+unperceived, a man of credit may, on his own security,
+have the constant possession and use of a hundred and
+twenty pounds.” Many humble men in England have risen
+to wealth by such small beginnings; but many more continue
+to expend the groat a-day unnecessarily, and never
+cease to be poor.</p>
+
+<div class='c005'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+
+<p class='c006'>A certain pope, who had been raised from an obscure
+situation to the apostolic chair, was immediately waited upon
+by a deputation sent from a small district, in which he had
+formerly officiated as <em>cure</em>: it seems that he had promised
+the inhabitants that he would do something for them, if it
+should ever be in his power; and some of them now appeared
+before him, to remind him of his promise, and also to request
+that he would fulfil it, by granting them <em>two harvests in
+every year</em>! He acceded to their <em>modest</em> request, on condition
+that they should go home immediately, and so adjust
+the Almanac of <em>their</em> own particular district, as to make
+every year of <em>their</em> Register consist of twenty-four calendar
+months.</p>
+
+<div class='c005'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+
+<p class='c006'>Sir George Staunton visited a man in India who had
+committed a murder, and, in order not only to save his life,
+but what was of much more consequence, his <em>caste</em>, he submitted
+to the penalty imposed; this was, that he should sleep
+for seven years on a bedstead, without any mattress, the
+whole surface of which was studded with points of iron,
+resembling nails, but not so sharp as to penetrate the flesh.
+Sir George saw him in the fifth year of his probation, and
+his skin was then like the hide of a rhinoceros, but more
+callous; at that time, however, he could sleep comfortably
+on his “<em>bed of thorns</em>,” and remarked, that at the expiration
+of the term of his sentence, he should most probably continue
+that system from choice, which he had been obliged to
+adopt from necessity.</p>
+
+<hr class='c009'>
+<div class='colophon'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c010'>
+ <div>LONDON:—CHARLES KNIGHT, PALL-MALL EAST.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>Shopkeepers and Hawkers may be supplied Wholesale by the following Booksellers:</i>—</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='colophon-left'>
+
+<div class='lg-container-l'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>London</i>, <span class='sc'>Groombridge</span>, <a id='tn-panyer'></a>Panyer Alley, Paternoster-Row.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Birmingham</i>, <span class='sc'>Drake</span>.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Leeds</i>, <span class='sc'>Baines</span> and Co.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Liverpool</i>, <span class='sc'>Willmer</span> and <span class='sc'>Smith</span>.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+<div class='colophon-right'>
+
+<div class='lg-container-l'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Manchester</i>, <span class='sc'>Robinson</span>.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Dublin</i>, <span class='sc'>Wakeman</span>.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Edinburgh</i>, <span class='sc'>Oliver</span> and <span class='sc'>Boyd</span>.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Glasgow</i>, <span class='sc'>Atkinson</span> and Co.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+<div class='clear'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>Printed by <span class='sc'>William Clowes</span>, Duke Street, Lambeth.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div>
+
+<p class='c011'></p>
+
+</div>
+<div class='transcribers-notes'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><span class='xlarge'>Transcriber’s Notes</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the public domain. Itemized changes from the original text:</p>
+ <ul class='ul_1'>
+
+ <li><a href='#tn-truthof'>p. 11</a>: Added missing closing quotation mark to title “On the Truth of
+ the Christian Religion.”
+ </li>
+ <li><a href='#tn-bodyandmind'>p. 12</a>: replaced single with double closing quotation mark after
+ phrase “pleasurable activity of body and mind.”
+ </li>
+ <li><a href='#tn-law'>p. 13</a>: Added missing letter “l” in phrase “intending to adopt the profession
+ of the law.”
+ </li>
+ <li><a href='#tn-theserooms'>p. 13</a>: Added missing period after phrase “an undisturbed
+ contemplation of the wonders in these rooms.”
+ </li>
+ <li><a href='#tn-commas'>p. 16</a>: Added missing commas and final letter “t” in passage beginning
+ “the same sort of advantage which the rich derive from their money.”
+ </li>
+ <li><a href='#tn-panyer'>p. 16</a>: Removed apparent hyphen from address “Panyer Alley” to match other
+ issues.
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76590 ***</div>
+ </body>
+ <!-- created with ppgen.py 3.57e (with regex) on 2025-07-29 18:46:44 GMT -->
+</html>
+
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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.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
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+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook #76590
+(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/76590)