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+ <title>The Penny Magazine, June 16, 1832 | Project Gutenberg</title>
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+ <body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76818 ***</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>
+ <h1 class='c000' title='The Penny Magazine, June 16, 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'>June</span> 16, 1832</div>
+<div class="masthead-left">13.]</div>
+<div class="masthead-centre">PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY.</div>
+<hr class="full">
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <h2 class='c002'>THE NATURAL BRIDGE OF VIRGINIA.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='illo-wide'>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<a href='images/the-natural-bridge-full.jpg'><img src='images/the-natural-bridge-inline.png' alt='A rock formation in the form of a natural stone bridge, with a stream running underneath it.' class='ig001'></a>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c003'>Virginia, the largest state in the American Union, is
+intersected by a chain of mountains called the Blue
+Ridge, which, running in their general direction parallel
+to the Atlantic coast, divide the state into two parts not
+differing very considerably in extent. The portion immediately
+to the west of the Blue Ridge is an extensive
+and fertile valley of limestone formation. It is principally
+watered by one stream, the Shenandoah, which
+unites with another, the Potomac, at a place called
+Harper’s Ferry. At their point of junction, on the <em>west</em>
+side of the Blue Ridge, the spectator, as he takes his
+stand on the high ground above the small town of
+Harper’s Ferry, sees before him a wide opening in the
+mountain chain through which the united current finds
+its way. On each side the mountains rise in some parts
+very abruptly, and their rugged faces and the shattered
+appearance of the whole of this magnificent natural
+canal show evident traces of a violent disruption.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>This passage at Harper’s Ferry has been often described
+by different travellers, but never, as far as we
+have seen, in a way calculated to give an accurate conception
+of what it really is. Nor do we intend to
+attempt this description, but only to notice briefly
+another natural phenomenon of the Valley of Shenandoah,
+which, though less talked of and visited than Harper’s
+Ferry, is for beauty and grandeur perhaps unrivalled.
+We allude to the Natural Bridge, or Rock-Bridge,
+as it is familiarly called by the people who live
+near it, which is situated a few miles on the west side of
+the Blue Ridge, on a small stream in the upper part of
+the great valley, and in the county of Rock-Bridge.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>From a small and uncomfortable tavern in the
+neighbourhood, kept by a Mr. Galbraith, (we wish
+this could meet his eye and make him mend his fare,)
+we pass for about two miles over uneven ground, and
+after ascending a small hill, we find a piece of rough
+stony road with a few stunted firs and scrub oaks on the
+right hand and on the left. A traveller might proceed
+without making any other observation, as the common
+road runs right over the bridge, and it is said that some
+people have actually passed over without being aware
+of it. But though this is certainly a possible occurrence
+if a person should be in a closed carriage, it can hardly
+have happened to a man on foot or on horseback, who is
+accustomed to keep his eyes open when he is travelling.
+On the right and left he will perceive that the slope of
+the hill is interrupted by a deep and sudden descent;
+and on going nearer to the right side of the road, he finds
+himself on the edge of a tremendous precipice. At the
+bottom a small stream is seen making its way amidst
+broken rocks. Going to the opposite side of the road
+and looking down there, he will observe the little
+river continuing its course in a deep channel down a
+narrow valley. The traveller is now on the Natural
+Bridge; he is standing on a stupendous natural arch
+of limestone; and though he may form some conjecture
+of his situation by looking down from the edge of
+the precipice, he can have no adequate conception
+without viewing it from below. The arch is best
+seen from the bed of the rivulet, and from a point
+just under it. On looking up you behold a noble arch
+of one solid mass of stone hanging over your head,
+somewhat curved in its highest part, and almost like the
+work of man. The same native rock forms, on each
+side, the supports of this enormous arch, which is said
+to be about 80 feet wide near the top; at the level
+of the water the width is only about forty. The whole
+height from the outer top of the arch to the water is
+about 210 feet, as ascertained by measurement with a
+string and a stone at the end. This is greater than
+the height of the London monument. The vertical
+thickness of the arch is probably about 30 feet. Like
+many other great works both of nature and art it is
+not the first sight that produces the deepest impression.
+On a second visit we found that we had learned to form
+more accurate conceptions of this wonderful bridge,
+beneath which a man might sit and gaze for hours with
+still increasing astonishment at the majestic arch which
+nature constructed before man began his work, and which
+seems likely to outlive the most durable of his monuments.
+Whatever may have been the origin of this bridge, it
+seems pretty certain, from an inspection of it, that it has
+not been produced by any sudden and violent cause.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>The stream that runs beneath, called Cedar Creek,
+though inconsiderable, adds to the general effect. When
+we visited the place, drops of water, filtered through
+the limestone, were falling in quick succession from the
+arch, and by the time occupied in their descent, their
+increasing velocity, and their full bright appearance,
+served to give a measure of the height from which they
+fell, and to increase the beauty of the scene. There is
+another natural bridge in Virginia, in Scot county,
+which is said to be above 340 feet high, but is inferior
+to that of Cedar Creek in form and completeness.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>The Prebischthor, in the Saxon Switzerland, has sometimes
+been compared with this Virginia Bridge, but it is
+a very different kind of thing.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>The accompanying view, taken from the N.W. side,
+at the level of the water, has hardly any pretensions
+beyond showing the general shape of the arch and the
+view through it, which is very confined and altogether
+devoid of interest.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>The chain<a id='r1'></a><a href='#f1' class='c005'><sup>[1]</sup></a> of the Andes in South America presents
+most striking natural phenomena in the immense
+clefts, or <i>crevasses</i> as they are sometimes called, which
+separate two contiguous masses of mountain, and
+in some instances are near 5000 feet deep. If Mount
+Vesuvius were plunged into one of these frightful
+abysses, its summit would not reach to the peaks of the
+highest rocks on each side; while the bottom of the
+cleft would be only one-fourth less elevated above the
+level of the sea than the passes of St. Gothard and
+Mont Cenis in the Alps.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>The valley of Icononzo is less remarkable for its dimensions
+than for the extraordinary form of its rocks,
+which seem as if they had been cut by the hand of man.
+Their naked and arid summits form a most picturesque
+contrast with the tufts of trees and herbaceous plants
+which cover the borders of the <i>crevasse</i>. A little torrent
+has made itself a way through the valley, and lies
+sunk in a channel, which is so difficult of approach, that
+the river would hardly be passable if nature herself
+had not formed two bridges of rock, which are justly
+regarded as the greatest curiosity in that country.
+Humboldt and Bonpland crossed these natural bridges
+in 1801, on their route from Santa Fé de Bogota to
+Popayan and Quito.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>In the valley of Icononzo the <i>grès</i> or sandstone is
+composed of two distinct kinds of rock—one very compact
+and quartzose without any marks of fissure
+or stratification—the other a fine-grained sandstone,
+formed of an infinite number of thin and almost horizontal
+layers. We may imagine that the compact
+material resisted the force which rent the mountains
+asunder, and that it is the unbroken mass of this rock
+which forms the bridge by which the traveller now
+crosses from one side of the valley to the other. This
+natural arch is about 47½ feet long, 41½ wide, and
+about 8 feet thick at the centre. By very careful experiments
+made on falling bodies, with the assistance of
+a good chronometer, combined with the measurement
+obtained by a plummet, it appears that the height of
+the upper of the two natural bridges, above the level of
+the torrent, is about 313 feet.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>Sixty feet below the first natural bridge there is
+another formed by three enormous masses of rock,
+which have fallen in such a way as to support one
+another. The centre rock forms the key of the arch.</p>
+
+<hr class='c006'>
+<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
+<p class='c004'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. Humboldt, Vue des Cordillères, &#38;c. 8vo. Paris.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class='c007'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+<div>
+ <h2 class='c002'>STATISTICAL NOTES.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='subtitle'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c007'>
+ <div>ENGLAND AND WALES (CONTINUED)</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c004'>(20.) Of the state of English agriculture in early ages
+some notion may be formed from the fact of the prohibition
+for many years, and subsequently the taxation, of
+the exportation of corn. It was not till the reign of
+Charles II that the export of corn was exempted from
+a tax; and it is from 1689 that may be dated that
+fundamental change in our corn-laws which encouraged
+exportation by a bounty. Since that period the fluctuations
+in the price of corn have been remarkable. The
+price of wheat which in the beginning of the last century
+was 50<i>s.</i> the quarter, became reduced in the ten years
+between 1740 and 1750 to 24<i>s.</i> the quarter. The
+culture of corn thus received a check, and a large proportion
+of arable land was transferred from tillage to
+grazing. The effect of this conversion and of an
+increasing population raised the price of corn in the ten
+years from 1750 to 1760 to an average of 42<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> per
+quarter, and soon changed the scale from export to
+import, which has continued ever since. From 1764 to
+1790 the average price of wheat varied from 42<i>s.</i> to 50<i>s.</i>;
+our annual imports from 200,000 to 500,000 quarters of
+corn. But since 1792 our annual imports, under differently
+regulated systems of law, have been from half a
+million to above two million quarters of corn of all kinds;
+and the average prices of wheat have varied from 2<i>l.</i> to
+6<i>l.</i> per quarter. In 1792 the price of wheat was
+2<i>l.</i> 2<i>s.</i> 11<i>d.</i>; in 1800, 5<i>l.</i> 13<i>s.</i> 7<i>d.</i>; in 1812, 6<i>l.</i> 5<i>s.</i> 5<i>d.</i>;
+in 1822, 2<i>l.</i> 4<i>s.</i> 1<i>d.</i>; and in 1831, 3<i>l.</i> 10<i>s.</i> 3<i>d</i>. The
+annual consumption of wheat in the United Kingdom
+has been estimated at 12,000,000 quarters; and that of
+other grain at 36,000,000 quarters, making together
+48,000,000, of which not one-twentieth part has during
+any year been imported, and, in general, a far less proportionate
+quantity. The daily consumption of wheat
+in the United Kingdom may be taken at 36,000, and
+of all other grain at 108,000 quarters, making together
+144,000 quarters a day.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>(21.) During the last century, upwards of five
+millions of acres in England and Wales have been
+enclosed under Acts of Parliament, the average extent of
+each enclosure being 1200 acres, and the outlay about 10<i>l.</i>
+per acre. From 1719 to 1759, the average number of
+enclosure Acts passed was 8 a year; 1780 to 1794, it
+was 30; 1797 to 1803, it was 83; in 1811 it was 134,
+(the highest number known); in 1814, 119; in 1816,
+49; in 1827, 21; in 1829, 24; and in 1831, only 10.
+The great extent to which the enclosure system thus
+appears to have already been carried, now necessarily
+diminishes the progress of enclosures every year.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>(22.) Among the various causes of the superiority
+of English husbandry over that of the Continent, is that
+of the medium size of our farms, which differ both from
+such large unmanageable tracts as those held by Polish
+noblemen, and from such diminutive occupancies as
+those which have prevailed in France since the first
+Revolution, in consequence of the abolition of the law of
+primogeniture. The size of English farms is the greatest
+in the best cultivated districts; such as Kent, Essex,
+Suffolk, Norfolk, and Northumberland. In these counties
+the engagements of the farmers are very large,
+and frequently amount to 1000<i>l.</i> a year and upwards.
+In more retired districts, as in Cumberland, Westmorland,
+and Wales, the occupancies are, in general, small,
+and an average of all the farms in England and Wales
+would, perhaps, not exceed 150<i>l.</i> a year. Leases are,
+for the most part, granted for seven years only, and
+farms are occasionally let from year to year upon written
+agreements, with specified covenants subjecting the
+tenants to fines in the event of deviation from them.
+The tenants of great landholders, particularly of the old
+nobility, often hold at will, without leases, upon the
+understanding of conformity to the rules laid down by
+the lord for the observance of all his tenants; and such
+tenants are found to occupy from father to son for many
+generations. Upon the whole, the tenure of leasehold
+property in England is considered to be too short to
+admit of the improvements that tenants might otherwise
+be expected to make in our system of agriculture.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>(23.) The expense of cultivation of land in England
+has much increased of late years, as appears by the
+returns to the Board of Agriculture, which state that the
+average expenses of cultivating one hundred acres of
+land was in 1790, 411<i>l.</i>; in 1803, 547<i>l.</i>; and in 1813,
+771<i>l.</i> Since the latter year there have been reductions
+in labour and taxes, and also, to a considerable extent,
+in rent. Surveyors calculate that highly cultivated land
+ought to produce a threefold return, viz.: one-third of the
+gross produce to the landlord for rent, another for the
+expenses, and the remainder for the farmer’s profit; the
+rent of inferior land being only a fourth, or even a
+fifth of the gross produce, by reason of the additional
+expense of cultivation.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>(24.) A century ago, our cattle, from the inferiority
+of their feed, <a id='tn-third'></a>were not one-half, sometimes even not
+one-third, of their present weight. It is computed that
+England and Wales now contain, at least, five million
+oxen, and a million and a half of horses, of which about
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>a million are used in husbandry, 200,000 for pleasure,
+and 300,000 are colts and breeding mares. The number
+of sheep is about twenty millions, and eight million
+lambs. The number of long-wooled sheep is about five
+millions, their fleeces averaging 7 or 8 lbs.; and of short-wooled
+sheep fifteen millions, the weight of fleece averaging
+from 3 to 3½ lbs. The whole quantity of wool
+annually shorn in England is from eighty to eighty-five
+million of pounds. The Merino were introduced about
+the beginning of the present century, and were imported
+in large numbers after our alliance with Spain in 1809.
+The great pasturage counties are Leicester, Northampton,
+Lincoln, and Somerset; and for butter and cheese,
+Cheshire, Gloucestershire, and Wiltshire. The import
+of butter and cheese from foreign countries is checked
+by duties, but these are important articles of Irish commerce
+with England.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>(25) The annual amount of profit from farming is
+not very susceptible of exact calculation, but was estimated
+some fifteen years since at thirty millions sterling,
+being a sum equivalent to the rental of England and
+Wales. The probable amount of the farming capital of
+the country was estimated at from two hundred and fifty
+to three hundred millions sterling. In regard to the
+value of the total annual produce of the land, this is
+necessarily subject to the fluctuations of seasons, but
+taking wheat at the medium of 80<i>s.</i> and other corn in
+proportion, we shall find an average produce of more
+than sixty millions sterling in corn, to which adding a
+similar value in pasturage, and a further allowance for
+hops, fruit, and vegetables, we have a total of from 130
+to 140 millions. In Scotland the rent bears a higher
+proportion to the gross produce, being, in general, not
+less than one-third. Our chief superiority over the
+Continent consists in machinery and live stock. Much
+valuable information on the state of agriculture on the
+Continent is to be found in the Reports to the Government
+of Mr. Jacob, who travelled a few years since with
+a view of ascertaining the effect that would be produced
+by the modification of our corn-laws. From these
+Reports it seems that the difficulties of transport in the
+corn countries, and other impediments to production, are
+such as to render the probable extent of importation
+under a more free system much less than is commonly
+imagined. There are many improvements of which
+English agriculture is susceptible, such as in the size of
+farms in many counties, the length of leases, the course
+of husbandry, the construction of ploughs, and the
+misapplication of animal strength in labour. With
+attention to these points and the application of further
+capital, not to wastes, but to fertile land already under
+culture, there is every hope that our agriculture may
+be yet considerably advanced in productiveness and in
+national value.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>[To be continued.]</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='c007'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+
+<p class='c003'>An officer in the forty-fourth regiment, who had occasion,
+when in Paris, to pass one of the bridges across the Seine,
+had his boots, which had been previously well-polished,
+dirted by a poodle-dog rubbing against them. He, in consequence,
+went to a man who was stationed on the bridge,
+and had them cleaned. The same circumstance having
+occurred more than once, his curiosity was excited, and he
+watched the dog. He saw him roll himself in the mud of
+the river, and then watch for a person with well-polished
+boots, against which he contrived to rub himself. Finding
+that the shoe-black was the owner of the dog, he taxed him
+with the artifice; and after a little hesitation, he confessed
+that he had taught the dog the trick in order to procure
+customers for himself. The officer being much struck with
+the dog’s sagacity, purchased him at a high price, and
+brought him to England. He kept him tied up in London
+some time, and then released him. The dog remained with
+him a day or two, and then made his escape. A fortnight
+afterwards he was found with his former master, pursuing
+his old trade on the bridge.—<cite>Jesse’s Gleanings of Natural
+History</cite></p>
+
+<div class='c007'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+<div>
+ <h2 class='c002'>THE MAHOGANY TABLE.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c003'>Milton, who was at once the most sublime and the
+most practical of writers, has said,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in12'>⸻ “To know</div>
+ <div class='line'>That which before us lies in daily life,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Is the prime wisdom.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>The poet more especially had in view that knowledge to
+which all other knowledge is secondary—we mean the
+knowledge of ourselves. But we may not improperly
+adopt his forcible expressions as a motto to <a id='tn-seriesof'></a>a series of
+articles which we shall occasionally publish, which will
+have for their object to collect some of the most striking
+facts belonging to the commonest things by which we
+are surrounded in our every-day life, particularly those
+comforts and conveniences which the humblest man
+possesses in a state of advanced civilization. The history
+of a knife, or a button, or a coat, or a watch, or an
+earthen pan, or a candle, or a lump of coal, or a mahogany
+table, or a Penny Magazine, suggests to our
+minds more precise and satisfactory notions of the progress
+of society, and therefore of the real history of the
+people of these kingdoms, than all the details of wars
+and treaties and state intrigues, of which history is in
+general made up. In the execution of such a purpose
+it is not important to pursue any systematic plan. The
+most material consideration will be to select those things
+of ordinary use which are so common, that it would be
+difficult to find a single reader who is not more or less
+indebted to them for some of his enjoyments.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>We will begin with a Mahogany Table. If we had
+been speaking about a mahogany table, or any other
+article of mahogany, thirty or forty years ago, we should
+have expected only to have interested the rich in the description
+of this important material of English furniture.
+Now, what tradesman, or mechanic, or even cottager,
+does not possess some article of mahogany—if it be
+only a tea-caddy? The universal employment of mahogany
+for articles of furniture, whose price does not
+operate as a prohibition against their use in general
+society, has been produced by the large application of
+capital to the commercial speculation of bringing mahogany
+logs to this country from the West Indies,—and,
+further, by the invention of machinery for cutting
+those logs into thin layers, called veneers, by which
+operation the finest wood is brought within a reasonable
+cost. Now observe what commercial enterprise and
+mechanical ingenuity will accomplish in a comparatively
+small period. Some piece of mahogany furniture is
+now, probably, found in every house in England;—a
+hundred and eight years ago the wood was unknown
+here. A physician of the name of Gibbons, who resided
+in London, received in 1724 a present of some
+mahogany planks from his brother, a West-India captain.
+Dr. Gibbons was then building a house in King-street,
+Covent-garden, and he desired his carpenter to
+work up the wood. The carpenter had no tool hard
+enough to touch it; so the planks were laid aside.
+The doctor’s wife, after the house was finished, wanted
+a candle-box, and the mahogany was again thought of.
+A cabinet-maker of the name of Wollaston was applied
+to; and he also complained that his tools were too soft.
+But he persevered, and the candle-box was at length
+completed—after a rude fashion no doubt. The candle-box
+was so much admired, that the physician resolved
+to have a mahogany bureau; and when the
+bureau was finished, all the people of fashion came to
+see it. The cabinet-maker procured more planks, and
+made a fortune by the numerous customers he obtained.
+From that time the use of mahogany furniture went
+forward amongst the luxurious;—and the drawers and
+bureaus of walnut-tree and pear-tree were gradually
+superseded in the houses of the rich. To show the
+present extensive use of mahogany in this country it
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>may be sufficient to mention that in 1829 the importation
+of this wood amounted to 19,335 tons.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>The common mahogany (called by botanists <span lang="la"><i>Swietenia
+mahagoni</i></span>) is one of the most majestic trees of the
+whole world. There are trees of greater height than
+the mahogany;—but in Cuba and Honduras this tree,
+during a growth of two centuries, expands to such a
+gigantic trunk, throws out such massive arms, and
+spreads the shade of its shining green leaves over such
+a vast surface, that even the proudest oaks of our forests
+appear insignificant in comparison with it. A single
+log, such as is brought to this country from Honduras,
+not unfrequently weighs six or seven tons.</p>
+
+<div class='illo-wide'>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<a href='images/the-mahogany-table-1-full.jpg'><img src='images/the-mahogany-table-1-inline.png' alt='' class='ig001'></a>
+<div class='ic002'>
+<p>[Mahogany Tree.]</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c004'>When we consider the enormous size of a trunk of
+mahogany, and further learn that the most valuable
+timber grows in the most inaccessible situations, it
+must be evident that a great portion of the price of this
+timber must be made up of the cost of the labour required
+for transporting it from its native forests to the
+place of its embarkation for England. The mode in
+which this difficult work is accomplished is highly interesting;
+and we have, fortunately, the means of
+giving an account of the process (which, we believe,
+has never before been described in any English publication,)
+from some statements printed in a Honduras
+Almanac, which has been kindly put into our hands for
+this purpose.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>The season for cutting the mahogany usually commences
+about the month of August. The gangs of
+labourers employed in this work consist of from twenty
+to fifty each, but few exceed the latter number. They
+are composed of slaves and free persons, without any
+comparative distinction of rank, and it very frequently
+occurs that the conductor of such work, here styled the
+Captain, is a slave. Each gang has also one person
+belonging to it termed the Huntsman. He is generally
+selected from the most intelligent of his fellows, and his
+chief occupation is to search the woods, or, as it is
+called, <i>the bush</i>, to find labour for the whole. Accordingly,
+about the beginning of August, the huntsman
+is despatched on his important mission. He cuts
+his way through the thickest of the woods to some elevated
+situation, and climbs the tallest tree he finds,
+from which he minutely surveys the surrounding country.
+At this season the leaves of the mahogany tree are invariably
+of a yellow reddish hue, and an eye accustomed to
+this kind of exercise, can, at a great distance, discern
+the places where the wood is most abundant. He now
+descends, and to such places his steps are directed;
+and, without compass, or other guide than what observation
+has imprinted on his recollection, he never fails
+to reach the exact point at which he aims. On some
+occasions no ordinary stratagem is necessary to be
+resorted to, by the huntsman, to prevent others from
+availing themselves of the advantage of his discoveries;
+for, if his steps be traced by those who may be engaged
+in the same pursuit, which is a very common thing, all
+his ingenuity must be exerted to beguile them from the
+true scent. In this, however, he is not always successful,
+being followed by those who are entirely aware of
+all the arts he may use, and whose eyes are so quick
+that the lightest turn of a leaf, or the faintest impression
+of the foot, is unerringly perceived. The treasure being,
+however, reached by one party or another, the next
+operation is the felling of a sufficient number of trees to
+employ the gang during the season. The mahogany
+tree is commonly cut about ten or twelve feet from the
+ground, a stage being erected for the axe-man employed
+in levelling it. The trunk of the tree, from the
+dimensions of the wood it furnishes, is deemed the most
+valuable; but, for ornamental purposes, the limbs, or
+branches, are generally preferred.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>A sufficient number of trees being felled to occupy
+the gang during the season, they commence cutting the
+roads upon which they are to be transported. This
+may fairly be estimated at two-thirds of the labour and
+expense of mahogany cutting. Each mahogany work
+forms in itself a small village on the bank of a river,—the
+choice of situation being always regulated by the
+proximity of such river to the mahogany intended as
+the object of future operations.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>After completing the establishment of a sufficient
+number of huts for the accommodation of the workmen,
+a main road is opened from the settlement, in a direction
+as near as possible to the centre of the body of
+trees so felled, into which branch-roads are afterwards
+introduced, the ground through which the roads are to
+run being yet a mass of dense forest, both of high trees
+and underwood. The labourers commence by clearing
+away the underwood with cutlasses. This labour is
+usually performed by task-work, of one hundred yards,
+each man, per day. The underwood being removed,
+the larger trees are then cut down by the axe, as even
+with the ground as possible, the task being also at
+this work one hundred yards per day to each labourer.
+The hard woods growing here, on failure of the axe, are
+removed by the application of fire. The trunks of these
+trees, although many of them are valuable, such as bullet-tree,
+ironwood, redwood, and sapodilla, are thrown
+away as useless, unless they happen to be adjacent to some
+creek or small river, which may intersect the road. In
+that case they are applied to the construction of bridges,
+which are frequently of considerable size, and require
+great labour to make them of sufficient strength to bear
+such immense loads as are brought over them.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>If the mahogany trees are much dispersed or scattered,
+the labour and extent of road-cutting is, of course,
+greatly increased. It not unfrequently occurs that miles
+of road and many bridges are made to a single tree,
+that may ultimately yield but one log. When roads are
+cleared of brush-wood, they still require the labour of
+hoes, pick-axes, and sledge hammers to level down the
+hillocks, to break the rocks, and to cut such of the remaining
+stumps as might impede the wheels that are
+hereafter to pass over them.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>The roads being now in a state of readiness, which
+may generally be effected by the month of December,
+the cross cutting, as it is technically called, commences.
+This is merely dividing crosswise, by means of saws,
+each mahogany tree into logs, according to their length;
+and it often occurs, that while some are but long enough
+for one log, others, on the contrary, will admit of four or
+five being cut from the same trunk or stem. The chief
+guide for dividing the trees into logs is the necessity for
+equalizing the loads the cattle have to draw. Consequently,
+as the tree increases in thickness, the logs are
+reduced in length. This, however, does not altogether
+obviate the irregularity of the loads, and a supply of
+oxen are constantly kept in readiness to add to the usual
+number, according to the weight of the log. This becomes
+unavoidable, from the very great difference of
+size of the mahogany trees, the logs taken from one
+tree being about 300 cubic feet, while those from the
+next may be as many thousand. The largest log ever
+cut in Honduras was of the following dimensions:—Length,
+17 feet; breadth, 57 inches; depth, 64 inches;
+measuring 5,168 superficial feet, or 15 tons weight.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>The sawing being now completed, the logs are reduced,
+by means of the axe, from the round or natural
+form, into the square. The month of March is now
+reached, when all the preparation before described is, or
+ought to be, completed; when the dry season, or time
+of drawing down the logs from the place of their growth,
+commences. This process can only be carried on in the
+months of April and May; the ground, during all the
+rest of the year, being too soft to admit of a heavily
+laden truck to pass over it without sinking. It is now
+necessary that not a moment should be lost in drawing
+out the wood to the river.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>A gang of forty men is generally capable of working
+six trucks. Each truck requires seven pair of oxen and
+two drivers; sixteen to cut food for the cattle, and
+twelve to load or put the logs on the carriages. From
+the intense heat of the sun, the cattle, especially, would
+be unable to work during its influence; and, consequently,
+the loading and carriage of the timber is performed
+in the night. The logs are placed upon the
+trucks by means of a temporary platform laid from the
+edge of the truck to a sufficient distance upon the ground,
+so as to make an inclined plane, upon which the log is
+gradually pushed up by bodily labour, without any
+further mechanical aid.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>The operations of loading and carrying are thus
+principally performed during the hours of darkness.
+The torches employed are pieces of wood split from the
+trunk of the pitch-pine. The river-side is generally
+reached by the wearied drivers and cattle before the sun
+is at its highest power; and the logs, marked with the
+owner’s initials, are thrown into the river.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>About the end of May the periodical rains again
+commence; the torrents of water discharged from the
+clouds are so great as to render the roads impassable
+in the course of a few hours, when all trucking ceases.
+About the middle of June the rivers are swollen to an
+immense height. The logs then float down a distance
+of two hundred miles, being followed by the gang in
+pitpans (a kind of flat-bottomed canoe), to disengage
+them from the branches of the overhanging trees, until
+they are stopped by a boom placed in some situation
+convenient to the mouth of the river. Each gang then
+separates its own cutting, by the marks on the ends of
+the logs, and forms them into large rafts; in which state
+they are brought down to the wharves of the proprietors,
+where they are taken out of the water, and
+undergo a second process of the axe, to make the surface
+smooth. The ends, which frequently get split and
+rent by being dashed against rocks in the river by the
+force of the current, are also sawed off. They are now
+ready for shipping.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>The ships clearing out from Belize, <a id='tn-principal'></a>the principal
+port of Honduras, with their valuable freight of mahogany,
+either come direct to England, or take their
+cargo to some free warehousing port of the British
+possessions in the West Indies or America.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>We must describe the beautiful process of cutting
+mahogany logs into veneers, before we have reached
+the point when the skill of the cabinet-maker is employed
+to produce a mahogany table. This shall be
+done in an early number.</p>
+
+<div class='illo-wide'>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<a href='images/the-mahogany-table-2-full.jpg'><img src='images/the-mahogany-table-2-inline.png' alt='' class='ig001'></a>
+<div class='ic002'>
+<p>[Trucking Mahogany.]</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='c007'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+<div>
+ <h2 class='c002'>WHAT IS EDUCATION?</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c003'>This may seem a very simple question, and very easily
+answered; but many who think so, would really be very
+much at a loss to answer it correctly. Every man, in a
+free country, wants three sorts of education:—one, to
+fit him for his own particular trade or calling,—this is
+professional education;—another, to teach him his duties
+as a man and a citizen,—this is moral and political
+education;—and a third, to fit him for his higher relations,
+as God’s creature, designed for immortality,—this
+is religious education. Now, in point of fact, that
+is most useful to a man which tends most to his happiness;
+a thing so plain, that it seems foolish to state it.
+Yet people constantly take the word “useful” in another
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>sense, and mean by it, not what tends most to a man’s
+happiness, but what tends most to get money for him;
+and therefore they call professional education a very
+useful thing: but the time which is spent in general
+education, whether moral or religious, they are apt to
+grudge as thrown away, especially if it interferes with
+the other education, to which they confine the name of
+“useful;” that is, the education which enables a man
+to gain his livelihood. Yet we might all be excellent
+in our several trades and professions, and still
+be very ignorant, very miserable, and very wicked.
+We might do pretty well just while we were at work
+on our business; but no man is at work always.
+There is a time which we spend with our families;
+a time which we spend with our friends and neighbours;
+and a very important time which we spend
+with ourselves. If we know not how to pass these
+times well, we are very contemptible and worthless <em>men</em>,
+though we may be very excellent lawyers, surgeons,
+chemists, engineers, mechanics, labourers, or whatever
+else may be our particular employment. Now, what
+enables us to pass these times well, and our times of
+business also, is not our <em>professional</em> education, but our
+<em>general</em> one. It is the education which all need equally—namely,
+that which teaches a man, in the first place,
+his duty to God and his neighbour; which trains him
+to good principles and good temper; to think of others,
+and not only of himself. It is that education which
+teaches him, in the next place, his duties as a citizen—to
+obey the laws always, but to try to get them made as
+perfect as possible; to understand that a good and just
+government cannot consult the interests of one particular
+class of calling, in preference to another, but must see
+what is for the good of the whole; that every interest,
+and every order of men, must give and take; and that if
+each were to insist upon having everything its own way,
+there would be nothing but the wildest confusion, or the
+merest tyranny. And because a great part of all that
+goes wrong in public or private life arises from ignorance
+and bad reasoning, all that teaches us, in the third
+place, to reason justly, and puts us on our guard against
+the common tricks of unfair writers and talkers, or the
+confusions of such as are puzzle-headed, is a most valuable
+part of a man’s education, and one of which he
+will find the benefit whenever he has occasion to open
+his mouth to speak, or his ears to hear. And, finally,
+all that makes a man’s mind more active, and the ideas
+which enter it nobler and more beautiful, is a great
+addition to his happiness whenever he is alone, and to
+the pleasure which others derive from his company
+when he is in society. Therefore it is most <em>useful</em> to
+learn to love and understand what is <em>beautiful</em>, whether
+in the works of God, or in those of man; whether in the
+flowers and fields, and rocks and woods, and rivers, and
+sea and sky; or in fine buildings, or fine pictures, or
+fine music; and in the noble thoughts and glorious
+images of poetry. This is the education which will
+make a man and a people good, and wise, and happy.
+Give this,—and the ends of professional education can
+never be altogether lost; for good sense and good principle
+will ensure a man’s knowing his particular business;
+but knowledge of his business, on the other hand,
+will not ensure <em>them</em>; and not only are sense and goodness
+the rarest and most profitable qualities with which
+any man can enter upon life now, but they are articles
+of which there never can be a glut: no competition or
+over-production will lessen their value; but the more of
+them that we can succeed in manufacturing, so much
+the higher will be their price, because there will be more
+to understand and to love them.</p>
+
+<div class='c007'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+
+<p class='c003'><i>Honesty is the best Policy.</i>—Irritated one day at the bad faith of
+Madame Jay, Mirabeau said to her in my presence, “Madam Jay, if
+probity did not exist, we ought to invent it, as the best means of
+getting rich.”—<cite>Dumont</cite></p>
+
+<div class='c007'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+<div>
+ <h2 class='c002'>THE WEEK.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='illo-wide'>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<a href='images/the-week-full.jpg'><img src='images/the-week-inline.png' alt='' class='ig001'></a>
+<div class='ic002'>
+<p>[The Rev. John Wesley.]</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c003'>June 17.—The birth-day of <span class='sc'>John Wesley</span>, the celebrated
+founder of the more numerous division of the English
+Methodists. He was the second son of the Rev. Samuel
+Wesley, Rector of Epworth, in Lincolnshire, where he
+was born in the year 1703. Although his father was a
+man of considerable literary attainments, being known
+to the public as the author of various works in verse, it
+was to his mother, a woman of a much more zealous
+and active character than her husband, that Wesley was
+chiefly indebted for his early education, and probably
+also for the seeds of many of his distinguished mental
+habits.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>After receiving a very systematic elementary tuition
+from his mother, <a id='tn-charterhouse'></a>John Wesley was sent to the Charterhouse,
+from whence he removed at the usual time to
+Christ-church College, Oxford. Here he distinguished
+himself greatly by his diligence and success as a student,
+showing from the first, in the distribution of his time,
+the same punctual and persevering regard to method
+by means of which he mainly achieved all the greater
+objects of his life. The reading of some religious works,
+and especially of ‘Law’s Serious Call,’ awakened in
+him a strong spirit of religious fervour; and he formed
+that association with a number of his college acquaintances
+of similar views and feelings, to which, from
+the punctilious regularity of the members in their devotions
+and general demeanour, the epithet of “methodists”
+was given as a name of reproach by the wags
+of the university. As has happened in other cases,
+the objects of the intended satire were much too earnest
+in the views they had adopted to feel or to regard any
+point of ridicule which it might be supposed to possess,
+and frankly adopted the nick-name thus bestowed upon
+them by their opponents, as their proper designation.
+Among their number, besides Wesley, was the afterwards
+equally celebrated George Whitfield.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>We cannot here attempt to pursue minutely the remainder
+of the course of Wesley’s busy life, or to trace
+the rise of that extensive fabric of ecclesiastical policy
+of which he was the founder. Suffice it to say, that
+having commenced his public labours as a religious
+teacher in the newly-formed colony of Georgia, in
+America, in the year 1735, he pursued from this time
+a course of almost constant journeying, preaching, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>writing, till within a week of his death, on the 2d of
+March, 1791, in the eighty-eighth year of his age.
+During the greater part of this long period he rarely
+preached less than twice, and often four or five times
+a day; while, besides presiding with the most minute
+superintendence over all the public affairs of the large
+and rapidly growing community which acknowledged
+him as its head, and transacting a great deal of private
+business, he found time to send to the press a succession
+of works, which, in the collected edition, amount to
+between thirty and forty volumes. Mr. Southey, who
+has made the life of this extraordinary man one of the
+most interesting books in the language, has given us
+the following account of the manner in which he contrived
+to get through all this occupation. “Leisure and
+I,” said Wesley, “have taken leave of one another. I
+propose to be busy as long as I live, if my health is so
+long indulged to me.” This resolution was made in
+the prime of life, and never was resolution more punctually
+observed. “Lord, let me not live to be useless!”
+was the prayer which he uttered after seeing one whom
+he had long known as an active and useful magistrate,
+reduced by age to be “a picture of human nature in disgrace,
+feeble in body and mind, slow of speech and
+understanding.” He was favoured with a constitution
+vigorous beyond that of ordinary men, and with an activity
+of spirit which is even rarer than his singular
+felicity of health and strength. Ten thousand cares of
+various kinds, he said, were no more weight or burthen
+to his mind than ten thousand hairs were to his head.…
+His manner of life was the most favourable that could
+have been devised for longevity. He rose early, and lay
+down at night with nothing to keep him waking, or
+trouble him in sleep. His mind was always in a pleasurable
+and wholesome state of activity; he was temperate
+in his diet, and lived in perpetual locomotion.
+And frequent change of air is, perhaps, of all things,
+that which most conduces to joyous health and long life.
+The time which Mr. Wesley spent in travelling was not
+lost. “History, poetry, and philosophy,” said he, “I
+commonly read on horseback, having other employment
+at other times.” He used to throw the reins on his
+horse’s neck, and in this way he rode, in the course of
+his life, above a hundred thousand miles, without any
+accident of sufficient magnitude to make him sensible of
+the danger which he incurred.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>June 21.—<i>The Longest Day.</i>—On this day there is an
+interval of sixteen hours and thirty-four minutes between
+the rising and the setting of the sun, which interval
+is longer than on any other day in the year. Up to
+this point, from the 21st December (the shortest day),
+the days have steadily increased in length; from this
+point they will steadily decrease. We may more properly,
+at some future time, explain in a series of papers
+some of the more remarkable phenomena of the changes
+of seasons. At present we shall call our reader’s
+attention to the moral reflections which the recurrence
+of “The Longest Day” suggests, by re-printing
+a few stanzas of a poem by Mr. Wordsworth on this
+subject:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Summer ebbs;—each day that follows</div>
+ <div class='line'>Is a reflux from on high,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Tending to the darksome hollows</div>
+ <div class='line'>Where the frosts of winter lie.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>He who governs the creation,</div>
+ <div class='line'>In his providence assign’d</div>
+ <div class='line'>Such a gradual declination</div>
+ <div class='line'>To the life of human kind.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Yet we mark it not;—fruits redden,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Fresh flowers blow, as flowers have blown,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And the heart is loth to deaden</div>
+ <div class='line'>Hopes that she so long hath known.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Be thou wiser, youthful Maiden!</div>
+ <div class='line'>And when thy decline shall come,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Let not flowers, or boughs fruit-laden,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Hide the knowledge of thy doom.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Now, even now, ere wrapp’d in slumber.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Fix thine eyes upon the sea</div>
+ <div class='line'>That absorbs time, space, and number;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Look towards eternity!</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Follow thou the flowing river,</div>
+ <div class='line'>On whose breast are thither borne</div>
+ <div class='line'>All deceived, and each deceiver,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Through the gates of night and morn;</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Through the year’s successive portals;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Through the bounds which many a star</div>
+ <div class='line'>Marks, not mindless of frail mortals,</div>
+ <div class='line'>When his light returns from far.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Thus when Thou with Time hast travell’d</div>
+ <div class='line'>Tow’rds the mighty gulf of things,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And the mazy stream unravell’d</div>
+ <div class='line'>With thy best imaginings;</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Think, if thou on beauty leanest,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Think how pitiful that stay,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Did not virtue give the meanest</div>
+ <div class='line'>Charms superior to decay.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Duty, like a strict preceptor,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Sometimes frowns, or seems to frown;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Choose her thistle for thy sceptre,</div>
+ <div class='line'>While thy brow youth’s roses crown.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='c007'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+<div>
+ <h2 class='c002'>GENIUS AND INDUSTRY.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c003'>Whilst we believe that education is the greatest gift
+that can be conferred on a human creature, we are
+not sanguine enough to expect that its more general
+diffusion will increase the number of men of genius.
+There is a perversity in human nature which makes us
+relax our efforts at the moment when they might be
+rewarded with the most splendid success. It does not
+follow that a shepherd-boy, who passes his long day on
+the side of a hill, and who acquires the principles of
+mechanics, or forms for himself a plan of the stars,
+shall make proportionate advancement if full opportunity
+of study be afforded to him.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>Nor does it follow that a young man who teaches himself
+to read by the light of a shop window in the street,
+shall become a learned man when admitted to libraries
+and encouraged by applause.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>We do not think the illustration a correct one, which
+represents the scholar as like the weary traveller who
+plods on contentedly through woods and over irregular
+ground which conceal the prospect, and who faints when
+he has ascended to the top of the hill and sees the whole
+extent of the road before him.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>The truth seems rather to be, that energy of mind,
+like strength of body, must be acquired by exercise, and
+that the consciousness of desert in encountering difficulties,
+must be felt to enable us to accomplish any
+great work. Sir Joshua Reynolds has happily expressed
+this:—</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>“It is not uncommon to see young artists, whilst
+they are struggling with every obstacle in their way,
+exert themselves with such success as to outstrip competitors
+possessed of every means of improvement. The
+promising expectation which was formed on so much
+being done with so little means, has recommended them
+to a patron, who has supplied them with every convenience
+of study; from that time their industry and
+eagerness of pursuit have forsaken them; they stand
+still and see others rush on before them.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>“Such men are like certain animals, who will feed only
+where there is little provender, and that got at with difficulty
+through the bars of a rack, but refuse to touch
+it where there is an abundance before them<a id='r2'></a><a href='#f2' class='c005'><sup>[2]</sup></a>.”</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>From this it appears to be essential to success that
+a young man should study to acquire confidence in his
+own powers. This is a condition of mind entirely different
+from conceit; it exhibits itself in no vain boasting,
+but essentially consists in a secret resolution to make
+great efforts by persevering industry, to gain the object
+of his ambition.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>We believe that young men would entertain these
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>notions oftener, if they were not deterred by an erroneous
+fancy of what belongs to genius. They think that
+such exertions as we recommend belong only to a plodding
+fellow, whilst the man of genius does every thing
+by a sudden act which costs him nothing.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>This is an unhappy mistake. All our eminent men
+have been distinguished by fixing upon some great
+object, and possessing themselves with such a lively conception
+of it that it has led them on through years of
+toil.</p>
+
+<hr class='c006'>
+<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
+<p class='c004'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. Sir J. Reynolds’ Works, vol. ii. p. 80.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class='c007'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+<div>
+ <h2 class='c002'>HOW TO UNDERSTAND GEOGRAPHY.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c003'>Every one says that geography is one of the most
+useful things that can be learnt; yet nothing is learnt
+so ill, because nothing is taught so ill. Look into any
+of the elementary books of geography, and read what is
+said about England. First, we are told that it is divided
+into forty counties; then, perhaps, follows an account
+of the several law circuits; and then, after some short
+notices about religion, government, produce, and manufactures,
+there are given lists of the chief towns, mountains,
+rivers, and lakes. But all these things are given
+without any connexion with each other, and it is a mere
+matter of memory to recollect what is no more than a
+string of names. And if a man does recollect them,
+still he is not much the wiser for them; he has got no
+clear and instructive notions about the country, but has
+merely learnt his map, and knows where to find certain
+names and lines upon it.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>If we wish to know geography really, we must set
+about it in a very different manner. Take one of the
+skeleton maps published by the Useful Knowledge
+Society; there is not a single name upon them, nothing
+is given but the hills and the rivers. These are the true
+alphabet of geography. The hills are the bones of a
+country, and determine its form, just as the bones of an
+animal do. For according to the direction of the hills
+must be the course of the rivers: if the hills come very
+near the sea, it makes the rivers very short and their
+course very rapid; if they are a long way from the sea,
+it makes the rivers long and gentle. But rivers of this
+latter sort are generally navigable, and become so large
+near the sea as to be capable of receiving ships of large
+size. Here then towns will be built, and these towns
+will become rich and populous, and so will acquire political
+importance. Again, on the nature of the hills
+depend the mineral riches of a country; if they are composed
+of granite or slate, they may contain gold, silver,
+tin, and copper; if they are composed of the limestone
+of Derbyshire or Durham, they are very likely
+to have lead mines; if of the sand or gritstone of
+Northumberland, Lancashire, and Yorkshire, it is probable
+that there will be coal at no great distance. On
+the contrary, if they are made up of the yellow limestone
+of Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire, and Northamptonshire,
+or of chalk like the hills in Wiltshire, Berkshire,
+and Hampshire, or of clay like those about London, it
+is quite certain that they will contain neither coal, nor
+lead, nor any valuable mineral whatsoever. But on the
+mineral wealth of a country, and particularly on its having
+coal or not having it, depends the nature of the employment
+of its inhabitants. Manufactories are sure to
+follow coal mines; whereas, in all those districts of England
+where there is no coal, that is, in all the counties
+to the south-east of a line drawn from the Wash in Lincolnshire
+to Plymouth, there are, generally speaking, no
+manufactories; but the great bulk of the people are employed
+in agriculture.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>Thus then on the direction and composition of the
+hills of a country depend, first of all, the size and character
+of its rivers. On the character of its rivers
+depend the situation and importance of its towns, and
+its greater or less facilities for internal communication
+and foreign trade. And again, on the composition of
+the hills depend the employment of the people, their
+numbers on a given space, and in a great degree their
+state of morals, intelligence, and political independence.
+And here we have a reason for things, and see them
+connected with one another in a manner at once easier
+to remember, and much more satisfactory to understand
+when we do remember it. Some instances of this, given
+in detail, may appear in one of our future numbers.</p>
+
+<div class='c007'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+
+<p class='c003'><i>The Flower Garden</i> (June).—It will now be time for you to
+take up those bulbs, of which the leaves are nearly decayed.
+I can fix no particular day for this operation; because, as the
+bulbs flower at different seasons, so the leaves will decay in
+like manner; but the general rule is, to take them up carefully
+as soon as the leaves have turned yellow, and to lay
+them under a south wall to dry and ripen; taking care to
+cover them with fine, dry, sandy earth, in layers, so that
+they may not touch each other. When the leaves are quite
+decayed, the bulbs must be removed, and spread again to
+dry under shelter of a green-house, or in a room; and,
+finally, after cleaning them from the dirt, take off their old
+coats, or skins, and put them away in bags, or drawers, in
+a cool dry place, till they are wanted for replanting in the
+autumn. I must here explain why bulbs are taken up
+every year: the great object is in this, as in all other operations
+of gardening, to imitate Nature; to make the existence
+of foreign plants as near as it can be to what they
+enjoy in their native place. Tulips, hyacinths, and most of
+those bulbs which are taken up, come from countries where
+the whole summer is dry, and in winter the ground is
+covered with snow; the spring rains alone call them into
+life and flower. Travellers describe whole regions in Persia
+as being covered in the spring with enamelled carpets of
+scilla (hyacinths), tulips, and other bulbous plants: long
+drought succeeds the rains of spring, the leaves die away,
+and the plant rests again under the dry earth till the following
+spring. As in our country they can have no dry earth
+naturally to rest in during the summer, the best imitation
+of it is to take up the bulb, which would otherwise be rotted
+by the summer rains, or caused to grow in the autumn; in
+which latter case, the plant would not flower in the spring,
+as the flower-stalks would be killed by the wet and cold of
+winter, before it came to the surface.</p>
+<p class='c009'>⁂ From ‘The Garden,’ a very agreeable and instructive book for
+children, forming one of the volumes of a series called ‘The Little
+Library.’</p>
+
+<div class='c007'></div>
+<hr class="divider">
+
+<p class='c003'>“<i>A little Learning is a dangerous Thing.</i>”—Then make
+it greater. No learning at all is surely the most dangerous
+thing in the world; and it is fortunate that, in this country
+at least, it is a danger which cannot possibly exist. After
+all, learning is acquired knowledge, and nothing else. A
+man who can read his Bible has a little learning; a man who
+can only plough or dig, has less; a man who can only break
+stones on the road, less still, but he has some. The savages
+in one of the islands in the South Sea, stood with great
+reverence round a sailor who had lighted a fire to boil some
+water in a saucepan, but as soon as the water began to
+boil, they ran away in an agony of terror. Compared with
+the savages, there is no boy in Europe, of the age of ten
+years, who may not be called learned. He has acquired a
+certain quantity of practical knowledge in physics; and, as
+this knowledge is more than instinct, it is learning; learning
+which differs in degree only from that which enables a
+chemist to separate the simple metals from soda or potash.</p>
+
+<p class='c004'>The geographer Malte Brun remarks, that in many cities
+of the United States, that which is called a mob scarcely
+exists. Now it will be found that in these Cities education
+has been unstintedly bestowed upon all classes, down to the
+very lowest.</p>
+
+<hr class='c010'>
+<div class='colophon'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c011'>
+ <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>, Panyer Alley, Paternoster Row.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Bath</i>, <span class='sc'>Simms</span>.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Birmingham</i>, <span class='sc'>Drake</span>.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Bristol</i>, <span class='sc'>Westley</span> and Co.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Carlisle</i>, <span class='sc'>Thurnam</span>.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Derby</i>, <span class='sc'>Wilkins</span> and <span class='sc'>Son</span>.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Falmouth</i>, <span class='sc'>Philip</span>.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Hull</i>, <span class='sc'>Stephenson</span>.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Leeds</i>, <span class='sc'>Baines</span> and <span class='sc'>Newsome</span>.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Lincoln</i>, <span class='sc'>Brooke</span> and <span class='sc'>Son</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>Liverpool</i>, <span class='sc'>Willmer</span> and <span class='sc'>Smith</span>.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Manchester</i>, <span class='sc'>Robinson</span>; and <span class='sc'>Webb</span> and <span class='sc'>Simms</span>.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Newcastle-upon-Tyne</i>, <span class='sc'>Charnley</span>.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Norwich</i>, <span class='sc'>Jerrold</span> and <span class='sc'>Son</span>.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Nottingham</i>, <span class='sc'>Wright</span>.</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Sheffield</i>, <span class='sc'>Ridge</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>, Stamford Street.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div>
+
+<p class='c012'></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='c013'>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-third'>p. 106</a>: Added faint or unprinted dash to “one-third” in phrase “were not
+ one-half, sometimes even not one-third, of their present weight.”
+ </li>
+ <li><a href='#tn-seriesof'>p. 107</a>: Replaced “o” with “of” in phrase “a series of articles which we
+ shall occasionally publish.”
+ </li>
+ <li><a href='#tn-principal'>p. 109</a>: Supplied missing “l” in “principal” in phrase “the principal
+ port of Honduras.”
+ </li>
+ <li><a href='#tn-charterhouse'>p. 109</a>: Replaced “Charter house” with “Charterhouse” in phrase
+ “John Wesley was sent to the Charterhouse.”
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76818 ***</div>
+ </body>
+ <!-- created with ppgen.py 3.57e (with regex) on 2025-09-04 16:02:54 GMT -->
+</html>
+
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