summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/76973-h
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to '76973-h')
-rw-r--r--76973-h/76973-h.htm17229
-rw-r--r--76973-h/images/cover.jpgbin0 -> 376859 bytes
2 files changed, 17229 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/76973-h/76973-h.htm b/76973-h/76973-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f8aba96
--- /dev/null
+++ b/76973-h/76973-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,17229 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html>
+<html lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <meta charset="UTF-8">
+ <title>Blackwood 454 - 1853.08 | Project Gutenberg</title>
+ <link rel="icon" href="images/cover.jpg" type="image/x-cover">
+ <style>
+ body { margin-left: 8%; margin-right: 10%; }
+ h1 { text-align: center; font-weight: bold; font-size: xx-large; }
+ h2 { text-align: center; font-weight: bold; font-size: x-large; }
+ h3 { text-align: center; font-weight: bold; font-size: large; }
+ .pageno { right: 1%; font-size: x-small; background-color: inherit; color: silver;
+ text-indent: 0em; text-align: right; position: absolute;
+ border: thin solid silver; padding: .1em .2em; font-style: normal;
+ font-variant: normal; font-weight: normal; text-decoration: none; }
+ p { text-indent: 0; margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; text-align: justify; }
+ sup { vertical-align: top; font-size: 0.6em; }
+ .fss { font-size: 75%; }
+ .sc { font-variant: small-caps; }
+ .large { font-size: large; }
+ .xlarge { font-size: x-large; }
+ .lg-container-b { text-align: center; }
+ .x-ebookmaker .lg-container-b { clear: both; }
+ .linegroup { display: inline-block; text-align: justify; }
+ .x-ebookmaker .linegroup { display: block; margin-left: 1.5em; }
+ .linegroup .group { margin: 1em auto; }
+ .linegroup .line { text-indent: -3em; padding-left: 3em; }
+ div.linegroup > :first-child { margin-top: 0; }
+ .linegroup .in10 { padding-left: 8.0em; }
+ .linegroup .in12 { padding-left: 9.0em; }
+ .linegroup .in13 { padding-left: 9.5em; }
+ .linegroup .in14 { padding-left: 10.0em; }
+ .linegroup .in16 { padding-left: 11.0em; }
+ .linegroup .in18 { padding-left: 12.0em; }
+ .linegroup .in26 { padding-left: 16.0em; }
+ .linegroup .in8 { padding-left: 7.0em; }
+ .linegroup .in9 { padding-left: 7.5em; }
+ .ul_1 li {padding-left: 1em; text-indent: -1em; }
+ ul.ul_1 {padding-left: 0; margin-left: 2.78%; margin-top: .5em;
+ margin-bottom: .5em; list-style-type: disc; }
+ div.footnote > :first-child { margin-top: 1em; }
+ div.footnote p { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: 0.25em; margin-bottom: 0.25em; }
+ div.pbb { page-break-before: always; }
+ hr.pb { border: none; border-bottom: thin solid; margin-bottom: 1em; }
+ .x-ebookmaker hr.pb { display: none; }
+ .chapter { clear: both; page-break-before: always; }
+ .table0 { margin: auto; margin-top: 2em; }
+ .table1 { margin: auto; }
+ .nf-center { text-align: center; }
+ .nf-center-c0 { text-align: justify; margin: 0.5em 0; }
+ .c000 { margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
+ .c001 { page-break-before: always; margin-top: 4em; }
+ .c002 { page-break-before:auto; margin-top: 4em; }
+ .c003 { vertical-align: top; text-align: justify; text-indent: -1em;
+ padding-left: 1em; padding-right: 1em; }
+ .c004 { vertical-align: top; text-align: right; }
+ .c005 { margin-top: 1em; }
+ .c006 { margin-top: 4em; }
+ .c007 { text-decoration: none; }
+ .c008 { margin-top: 2em; text-indent: 1em; margin-bottom: 0.25em; }
+ .c009 { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: 0.25em; margin-bottom: 0.25em; }
+ .c010 { vertical-align: top; text-align: center; padding-right: 1em; }
+ .c011 { vertical-align: top; text-align: center; }
+ .c012 { text-indent: 0; margin-top: 0.25em; margin-bottom: 0.25em; }
+ .c013 { margin-top: 1em; font-size: .9em; }
+ .c014 { font-size: .9em; text-indent: 1em; margin-top: 0.25em;
+ margin-bottom: 0.25em; }
+ .c015 { page-break-before: auto; margin-top: 2em; }
+ .c016 { margin-top: 1em; text-indent: 1em; margin-bottom: 0.25em; }
+ .c017 { page-break-before: always; margin-top: 2em; }
+ .c018 { margin-top: 2em; }
+ .c019 { border: none; border-bottom: thin solid; width: 10%; margin-left: 0;
+ margin-top: 1em; text-align: justify; }
+ div.tnotes { padding-left:1em;padding-right:1em;background-color:#E3E4FA;
+ border:thin solid silver; margin:2em 10% 0 10%; font-family: Georgia, serif;
+ clear: both; }
+ .covernote { visibility: hidden; display: none; }
+ div.tnotes p { text-align: justify; }
+ .x-ebookmaker .covernote { visibility: visible; display: block; }
+ h1 {line-height: 150%; }
+ .footnote {font-size: .9em; }
+ div.footnote p {text-indent: 2em; margin-bottom: .5em; }
+ .chapter { clear: both; page-break-before: always; }
+ body {font-family: Garamond, Georgia, serif; text-align: justify; }
+ table {font-size: .9em; padding: 1.5em .5em 1em; page-break-inside: avoid;
+ clear: both; }
+ div.titlepage {text-align: center; page-break-before: always;
+ page-break-after: always; }
+ div.titlepage p {text-align: center; text-indent: 0em; font-weight: bold;
+ line-height: 1.5; margin-top: 3em; }
+ .ph1 { text-indent: 0em; font-weight: bold; font-size: xx-large;
+ margin: .67em auto; page-break-before: always; }
+ .ph2 { text-indent: 0em; font-weight: bold; font-size: x-large; margin: .75em auto;
+ page-break-before: always; }
+ .x-ebookmaker p.dropcap:first-letter { float: left; }
+ </style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76973 ***</div>
+
+<div class='tnotes covernote'>
+
+<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber’s Note:</strong></p>
+
+<p class='c000'>New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the public domain.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='titlepage'>
+
+<div>
+ <h1 class='c001'>BLACKWOOD’S<br> EDINBURGH MAGAZINE.<br> <span class='xlarge'><span class='sc'>No.</span> CCCCLIV.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; AUGUST, 1853.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; <span class='sc'>Vol.</span> LXXIV.</span></h1>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <h2 class='c002'>CONTENTS.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table0'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>The Narcotics we indulge in</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_129'>129</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>South American Travel and Adventure</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_140'>140</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>Napoleon and Sir Hudson Lowe</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_159'>159</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>New Readings in Shakespeare</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_181'>181</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>The Insurrection in China</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_203'>203</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>Lady Lee’s Widowhood—Part VIII.</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_220'>220</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>The Marquis de Larochejaquelein—France in 1853</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_245'>245</a></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><span class='large'>EDINBURGH:</span></div>
+ <div>WILLIAM BLACKWOOD &#38; SONS, 45 GEORGE STREET;</div>
+ <div>AND 37 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON.</div>
+ <div class='c005'><i>To whom all communications (post paid) must be addressed.</i></div>
+ <div class='c005'>SOLD BY ALL THE BOOKSELLERS IN THE UNITED KINGDOM.</div>
+ <div class='c005'>PRINTED BY WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS, EDINBURGH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span></div>
+<div class='chapter ph1'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c006'>
+ <div>BLACKWOOD’S</div>
+ <div class='c005'>EDINBURGH MAGAZINE.</div>
+ <div class='c005'><span class='xlarge'><span class='sc'>No.</span> CCCCLIV.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; AUGUST, 1853.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; <span class='sc'>Vol.</span> LXXIV.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <h2 class='c002'>THE NARCOTICS WE INDULGE IN.<a id='r1'></a><a href='#f1' class='c007'><sup>[1]</sup></a><a id='r2'></a><a href='#f2' class='c007'><sup>[2]</sup></a></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>When a distinguished man sinks
+into his grave, from the midst of
+many rivals in a common race, the
+strife of opinions in reference to him
+is instantaneously allayed; personal
+feelings, if not quenched, are repressed
+and hushed; and, like the heroism of
+the triumphant warrior, when he is
+caught by the anxious eye emerging unscathed
+from the battle and the smoke,
+his merits appear now unclouded and
+confessed. Such, we believe, is the
+general feeling among the members of
+his own profession in regard to the
+author of the valuable work now before
+us. Snatched suddenly from the
+midst of his labours, before the third
+edition of his <cite>Materia Medica</cite> was
+completed, there are few in any way
+familiar with the subject who will
+not regret the sudden extinction of so
+much learning, and, apart from all
+private considerations, that the world
+should have so prematurely lost the
+benefits of his ripening judgment and
+experience, and the results of his
+extended reading and research. Yet
+how many precious cabinets of collected
+knowledge do we see thus
+hurriedly sealed up for ever! How
+often, when a man appears to have
+reached that condition of mental culture
+and accumulated information, in
+which he is fitted to do the most for
+the advancement of learning, or for
+promoting the material comfort of his
+fellows, how often does the cold hand
+suddenly and mysteriously paralyse
+and stop him! He has been permitted
+to add only a small burden of
+earth to the rising mound of intellectual
+elevation, scarcely enough to
+signify to after-comers that <i>his</i> hand has
+laboured at the work. Nevertheless,
+he may have shown a new way of
+advancing, in some sense, so that to
+others the toil is easier and the progress
+faster, because he has gone before.
+The more, however, the true-hearted
+worker in the cause of progressive
+science becomes familiar with its
+actual condition and its great future,
+the more he becomes satisfied also of
+the vanity of attempting to associate
+with an individual name the merit of
+this or that advance—the more earnestly
+he trains himself to find the
+best reward for individual attempts in
+the growing conquests and dimensions
+of the field he cultivates, and in the
+consciousness that he has not been
+unhelpful in widening its domain.
+Such a consciousness Dr Pereira
+might well entertain, and we trust he
+found in it something to alleviate the
+regrets the best of us naturally feel,
+when compelled to leave a favourite
+task unfinished.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>We should be forsaking widely the
+field we usually occupy, were we to
+attempt to lay before our readers any
+analysis of a work so elaborate and
+so purely professional as this of Dr
+Pereira. We propose, however, to
+take it as our text-book, in considering
+a subject of great general interest—one
+scarcely of more importance to
+the professional physician than it is to
+the physiologist, the psychologist, and
+the economical statist. The book is replete
+with scattered information on the
+subject of the <cite>Narcotics we Indulge in</cite>,
+and some of this we propose to bring
+together in the present article. And
+among other sources from which we
+mean to draw the materials necessary
+to our purpose, are the <cite>Confessions of
+an English Opium-Eater</cite>, long, long
+ago noticed in our pages, but, to us
+who have been reading it to-day, as
+fresh and new as ever—as full of interest,
+as suggestive of profound reflection.
+We who are ourselves somewhat
+scientific, can scarce restrain a
+selfish sigh when we think how fresh
+and new, how sure of human sympathy
+this actual burning experience
+of a living man will continue to be
+when the heavy and toilsome tomes
+of Pereira shall have become mere records
+of the progress of science, and
+be turned up only to illustrate the ignorance
+of the most learned or trusted
+in their professions about the middle
+of the nineteenth century.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In ministering fully to his natural
+wants, man passes through three successive
+stages. First, the necessities
+of his material existence are provided
+for; next, his cares are assuaged and
+for the time banished; and lastly, his
+enjoyments, intellectual and animal, are
+multiplied and for the time exalted.
+Beef and bread represent the means
+by which, in every country, the first
+end is attained; fermented liquors help
+us to the second; and the third we
+reach by the aid of narcotics.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>When we examine, in a chemical
+sense, the animal and vegetable productions
+which in a thousand varied
+forms, among various nations, take the
+place of the beef and pudding of the
+Englishman in supplying the first necessities
+of our nature, we are struck
+with the remarkable general similarity
+which prevails among them naturally,
+or which they are made to assume by
+the artifices of cookery, before they
+are conveyed into the stomach. And
+we exclaim, in irrepressible wonder,
+“by what universal instinct is it that,
+under so many varied conditions of
+climate and of natural vegetation, the
+experience of man has led him everywhere
+so nicely to adjust the chemical
+constitution of the staple forms of his
+diet to the chemical wants of his living
+body?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Nor is the lightening of care less
+widely and extensively attained.
+Savage and civilised tribes, near and
+remote—the houseless barbarian wanderer,
+the settled peasant, and the
+skilled citizen—all have found, without
+intercommunion, through some common
+and instinctive process, the art
+of preparing fermented drinks, and of
+procuring for themselves the enjoyments
+and miseries of intoxication.
+The juice of the cocoa-nut tree yields
+its <i>toddy</i> wherever this valuable palm
+can be made to grow. Another palm
+affords a fermented wine on the Andean
+slopes of Chili—the sugar palm
+intoxicates in the Indian Archipelago,
+and among the Moluccas and Philippines—while
+the best palm wine of all
+is prepared from the sap of the oilpalms
+of the African coast. In Mexico
+the American aloe (<i>Agave Americana</i>)
+gave its much-loved <i>pulque</i>, and probably
+also its ardent brandy, long
+before Cortez invaded the ancient
+monarchy of the Aztecs. Fruits supply
+the cider, the perry and the wine,
+of many civilised regions—barley and
+the cereal grains the beer and brandy
+of others; while the milk of their
+breeding mares supplies at will to
+the wandering Tartar, either a mild
+exhilarating drink, or an ardently intoxicating
+spirit. And to our wonder
+at the wide prevalence of this taste,
+and our surprise at the success with
+which, in so many different ways,
+mankind has been able to gratify it,
+the chemist adds a new wonder and
+surprise when he tells us, that as in
+the case of his food, so in preparing
+his intoxicating drinks, man has
+everywhere come to the same result.
+His fermented liquors, wherever and
+from whatever substances prepared,
+all contain the same exciting alcohol,
+producing everywhere, upon every
+human being, the same exhilarating
+effects!</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>It is somewhat different as regards
+the next stage of human wants—the
+exalted stage which we arrive at by
+the aid of narcotics. Of these narcotics,
+it is remarkable that almost every
+country or tribe has its own—either
+aboriginal or imported—so that the
+universal instinct has led somehow or
+other to the universal supply of this
+want also.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The aborigines of Central America
+rolled up the tobacco leaf, and dreamed
+away their lives in smoky reveries,
+ages before Columbus was born, or
+the colonists of Sir Walter Raleigh
+brought it within the chaste precincts
+of the Elizabethan court. The coca
+leaf, now the comfort and strength of
+the Peruvian muletero, was chewed
+as <i>he</i> does it, in far remote times,
+and among the same mountains, by
+the Indian natives whose blood he
+inherits. The use of opium and hemp,
+and the betel nut, among eastern
+Asiatics, mounts up to the times of
+most fabulous antiquity, as probably
+does that of the pepper tribe in the
+South Sea Islands and the Indian
+archipelago; while in northern Europe
+the hop, and in Tartary the
+narcotic fungus, have been in use
+from time immemorial. In all these
+countries the wished-for end has been
+attained, as in the case of intoxicating
+drinks, by different means; but
+the precise effect upon the system, by
+the use of each substance, has not,
+in this case, been the same. On
+the contrary, tobacco, and coca, and
+opium, and hemp, and the hop, and
+<i>Cocculus indicus</i>, and the toadstool,
+each exercise an influence upon the
+human frame, which is peculiar to itself,
+and which in many respects is
+full of interest, and deserving of profound
+study. These differences we
+so far know to arise from the active
+substances they severally contain being
+chemically different.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>I. <span class='sc'>Tobacco.</span>—Of all the narcotics
+we have mentioned, tobacco is in use
+over the largest area, and by the
+greatest number of people. Opium
+comes next to it; and the hemp plant
+occupies the third place.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The tobacco plant is indigenous to
+tropical America, whence it was introduced
+into Spain and France in the
+beginning of the sixteenth century by
+the Spaniards, and into England half
+a century later (1586) by Sir Francis
+Drake. Since that time, both the use
+and the cultivation of the plant have
+spread over a large portion of the
+globe. Besides the different parts of
+America, including Canada, New
+Brunswick, the United States, Mexico,
+the Western coast, the Spanish
+main, Brazil, Cuba, St Domingo, Trinidad,
+&#38;c., it has spread in the East
+into Turkey, Persia, India, China,
+Australia, the Philippine Islands, and
+Japan. It has been raised with success
+also in nearly every country of
+Europe; while in Africa it is cultivated
+in Egypt, Algeria, in the Canaries,
+on the Western coast, and at
+the Cape of Good Hope. It is, indeed,
+among narcotics, what the potato is
+among food-plants—the most extensively
+cultivated, the most hardy, and
+the most tolerant of changes in temperature,
+altitude, and general climate.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>We need scarcely remark, that the
+use of the plant has become not less
+universal than its cultivation. In
+America it is met with everywhere,
+and the consumption is enormous. In
+Europe, from the plains of sunny Castile
+to the frozen Archangel, the pipe
+and the cigar are a common solace
+among all ranks and conditions. In
+vain was the use of it prohibited in
+Russia, and the knout threatened for
+the first offence, and death for the
+second. In vain Pope Urban VIII.
+thundered out his bull against it. In
+vain our own James I. wrote his
+“Counterblaste to Tobacco.” Opposition
+only excited more general attention
+to the plant, awakened curiosity
+regarding it, and promoted its consumption.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>So in the East—the priests and sultans
+of Turkey and Persia declared
+smoking a sin against their holy religion,
+yet nevertheless the Turks and
+Persians became the greatest smokers
+in the world. In Turkey the pipe is
+perpetually in the mouth; in India
+all classes and both sexes smoke; in
+China the practice is so universal
+that “every female, from the age of
+eight or nine years, wears as an appendage
+to her dress a small silken
+pocket, to hold tobacco and a pipe.”
+It is even argued by Pallas that the
+extensive prevalence of the practice
+in Asia, and especially in China,
+proves the use of tobacco for smoking
+to be more ancient than the discovery
+of the New World. “Amongst the
+Chinese,” he says, “and amongst the
+Mongol tribes who had the most intercourse
+with them, the custom of
+smoking is so general, so frequent,
+and has become so indispensable a
+luxury; the tobacco purse affixed to
+their belt so necessary an article of
+dress; the form of the pipes, from
+which the Dutch seem to have taken
+the model of theirs, so original; and,
+lastly, the preparation of the yellow
+leaves, which are merely rubbed to
+pieces and then put into the pipe, so
+peculiar—that they could not possibly
+derive all this from America by way
+of Europe, especially as India, where
+the practice of smoking is not so general,
+intervenes between Persia and
+China.”<a id='r3'></a><a href='#f3' class='c007'><sup>[3]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Leaving this question of its origin,
+the reader will not be surprised, when
+he considers how widely the practice
+of smoking prevails, that the total
+produce of tobacco grown on the face
+of the globe has been calculated by
+Mr Crawford to amount to the enormous
+quantity of two millions of tons.
+The comparative magnitude of this
+quantity will strike the reader more
+forcibly, when we state that the whole
+of the wheat consumed by the inhabitants
+of Great Britain—estimating it
+at a quarter a-head, or in round numbers
+at twenty millions of quarters—weighs
+only four and one-third millions
+of tons; so that the tobacco
+yearly raised for the gratification of
+this one form of the narcotic appetite
+weighs as much as the wheat consumed
+by ten millions of Englishmen.
+And reckoning it at only double the
+market value of wheat, or twopence
+and a fraction per pound, it is worth
+in money as much as all the wheat
+eaten in Great Britain.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The largest producers, and probably
+the largest consumers, of tobacco,
+are the United States of America.
+The annual production, at the
+last two decennial periods of their census
+returns, was estimated at</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'>1840,</td>
+ <td class='c010'>219,163,319</td>
+ <td class='c011'>lb.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'>1850,</td>
+ <td class='c010'>199,752,646</td>
+ <td class='c011'>„</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c012'>being about one-twentieth part of the
+whole supposed produce of the globe.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>One of the remarkable circumstances
+connected with the history of
+tobacco is, the rapidity with which
+its growth and consumption have increased,
+in almost every country,
+since the discovery of America. In
+1662, the quantity raised in Virginia—the
+chief producer of tobacco on
+the American shores of the Atlantic—was
+only 60,000 lb.; and the quantity
+exported from that colony in
+1689, only 120,000 lb. In two hundred
+and thirty years, the produce
+has risen to nearly twice as many
+millions. And the extension of its use
+in our own country may be inferred
+from the facts that, in the above year
+of 1689, the total importation was
+120,000 lb. of Virginian tobacco, part
+of which was probably re-exported;
+while, in 1852, the quantity entered
+for home consumption amounted to</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>28,558,753 lb.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>being something over a pound per
+head of the whole population; and to
+this must be added the large quantity
+of contraband tobacco, which the
+heavy duty of 3s. per lb. tempts the
+smuggler to introduce. The whole
+duty levied on the above quantity in
+1852, was £4,560,741, which is equal
+to a poll-tax of 3s. a head.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Tobacco, as every child among us
+now knows, is used for smoking, for
+chewing, and for snuffing. The second
+of these practices is, in many
+respects, the most disgusting, and is
+now rarely seen in this country, except
+among seafaring men. On shipboard,
+smoking is always dangerous,
+and often forbidden; while snuffing is
+expensive and inconvenient; so that,
+if the weed must be used, the practice
+of chewing it can alone be resorted
+to.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>For the smoker and chewer it is
+prepared in various forms, and sold
+under different names. The dried
+leaves, coarsely broken, are sold as
+canaster or knaster. When moistened,
+compressed, and cut into fine
+threads, they form cut or shag tobacco.
+Moistened with molasses or
+with syrup, and pressed into cakes,
+they are called cavendish and negrohead,
+and are used indifferently either
+for chewing or smoking. Moistened
+in the same way, and beaten until
+they are soft, and then twisted into a
+thick string, they form the pigtail or
+twist of the chewer. Cigars are
+formed of the dried leaves, deprived
+of their midribs, and rolled up into a
+short spindle. When cut straight, or
+truncated at each end, as is the custom
+at Manilla, they are distinguished
+as <i>cheroots</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>For the snuff-taker, the dried leaves
+are sprinkled with water, laid in
+heaps, and allowed to ferment. They
+are then dried again, reduced to powder,
+and baked or roasted. The dry
+snuffs, like the Scotch and Irish, are
+usually prepared from the midribs—the
+rappees, or moist snuffs, from the
+soft part of the leaves. The latter
+are also variously scented, to suit the
+taste of the customer.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Extensively as it is used, it is surprising
+how very few can state distinctly
+the effects which tobacco produces—can
+explain the kind of pleasure
+the use of it gives them—why
+they began, and for what reason they
+continue the indulgence. In truth,
+few have thought of these points—have
+cared to analyse their sensations
+when under the narcotic influence of
+tobacco—or, if they have analysed
+them, would care to tell truly what
+kind of relief it is which they seek in
+the use of it. “In habitual smokers,”
+says Dr Pereira, “the practice, when
+employed moderately, provokes thirst,
+increases the secretion of saliva, and
+produces a remarkably soothing and
+tranquillising effect on the mind,
+which has made it so much admired
+and adopted by all classes of society,
+and by all nations, civilised and barbarous.”
+Taken in excess in any
+form, and especially by persons unaccustomed
+to it, it produces nausea,
+vomiting, in some cases purging, universal
+trembling, staggering, convulsive
+movements, paralysis, torpor,
+and death. Cases are on record of
+persons killing themselves by smoking
+seventeen or eighteen pipes at a
+sitting. With some constitutions it
+never agrees; but both our author
+and Dr Christison of Edinburgh agree
+that “no well-ascertained ill effects
+have been shown to result from the
+habitual practice of smoking.” The
+effects of chewing are of a similar
+kind. Those of snuffing are only less
+in degree; and the influence which tobacco
+exercises in the mouth, in promoting
+the flow of saliva, &#38;c., manifests
+itself when used as snuff in
+producing sneezing, and in increasing
+the discharge of mucus from the nose.
+The excessive use of snuff, however,
+blunts the sense of smell, alters the
+tone of voice, and occasionally produces
+dyspepsia and loss of appetite.
+In rarer cases it ultimately induces
+apoplexy and delirium.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>But it is the soothing and tranquillising
+effect it has on the mind for
+which tobacco is chiefly indulged in.
+And amid the teasing paltry cares, as
+well as the more poignant griefs of
+life, what a blessing that a mere material
+soother and tranquilliser can be
+found, accessible alike to all—to the
+desolate and the outcast, equally with
+him who is rich in a happy home and
+the felicity of sympathising friends!
+Is there any one so sunk in happiness
+himself, as to wonder that millions of
+the world-chafed should flee to it for
+solace? Yet the question still remains
+which is to bring out the peculiar
+characteristic of tobacco. We
+may take for granted that it acts in
+some way upon the nervous system;
+but what is the special effect of tobacco
+on the brain and nerves, to
+which the pleasing reverie it produces
+is to be ascribed? “The pleasure of
+the reverie consequent on the indulgence
+of the pipe consists,” according
+to Dr Madden, “in a temporary annihilation
+of thought. People really
+cease to think when they have been
+long smoking. I have asked Turks
+repeatedly what they have been thinking
+of during their long smoking reveries,
+and they replied, ‘Of nothing.’
+I could not remind them of a single
+idea having occupied their minds;
+and in the consideration of the Turkish
+character there is no more curious
+circumstance connected with their
+moral condition. The opinion of
+Locke, that the soul of a waking man
+is never without thought, because it
+is the condition of being awake, is, in
+my mind, contradicted by the waking
+somnambulism, if I may so express myself,
+of a Moslem.”<a id='r4'></a><a href='#f4' class='c007'><sup>[4]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c009'>We concede that Dr Madden might
+find in England, in Germany, and in
+Holland, many good smokers, who
+would make excellent Moslems in his
+sense, and who at the close of long
+tobacco reveries are utterly unconscious
+and innocent of a single thought.
+Yet we restrict our faith in his opinion
+to the simple belief, that tobacco,
+with a haze such as its smoke creates,
+tends to soften down and assuage the
+intensity of all inner thoughts or external
+impressions which affect the
+feelings, and thus to create a still and
+peaceful repose—such a quiet rest as
+one fancies might be found in the
+hazy distance of Turner’s landscapes.
+We deny that, in Europeans in general,
+smoking puts an end to intellectual
+exertion. In moderation, our
+own experience is, that it sharpens
+and strengthens it; and we doubt
+very much if those learned Teutonic
+Professors, who smoke all day, whose
+studies are perpetually obscured by
+the fumes of the weed, and who are
+even said to smoke during sleep,
+would willingly, or with good temper,
+concede that the heavy tomes which
+in yearly thousands appear at the
+Leipsic book fair, have all been written
+after their authors had “really ceased
+to think.” Still it is probably true,
+and may be received as the characteristic
+of tobacco among narcotics, that
+its major and first effect is to assuage,
+and allay, and soothe the system in
+general; its minor, and second, or
+after effect, to excite and invigorate,
+and, at the same time, give steadiness
+and fixity to the powers of thought.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The active substances, or chemical
+ingredients of tobacco or tobacco
+smoke, by which these effects upon
+the system are produced, are three in
+number. The <i>first</i> is a volatile oil,
+of which about two grains can be obtained
+from a pound of leaves, by distilling
+them with water. This oil or
+fat “is solid, has the odour of tobacco,
+and a bitter taste. It excites in the
+tongue and throat a sensation similar
+to that of tobacco smoke; and, when
+swallowed, gives rise to giddiness,
+nausea, and an inclination to vomit.”
+Small as the quantity is, therefore,
+which is present in the leaf, this substance
+must be regarded as one of the
+ingredients upon which the effects of
+tobacco depend.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The <i>second</i> is a volatile <i>alkali</i>, as it
+is called by chemists, which is also
+obtained by a form of distillation.
+The substance is liquid, has the odour
+of tobacco, an acrid burning taste,
+and is possessed of narcotic and highly
+poisonous qualities. In this latter
+quality it is scarcely inferior to Prussic
+acid. The proportion of this substance
+contained in the leaf varies
+from 3 to 8 per cent, so that he who
+smokes a hundred grains of tobacco
+<i>may</i> draw into his mouth from three
+to eight grains of one of the most
+subtle of all known poisons. It will
+not be doubted, therefore, that some
+of the effects of tobacco are to be ascribed
+to this peculiar substance.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The third is an oil—an empyreumatic
+oil, it is called—which does not
+exist ready formed in the natural leaf,
+but is produced along with other substances
+during the burning. This is
+supposed to be “the juice of cursed
+hebenon,” described by Shakspeare as
+a <i>distilment</i>.<a id='r5'></a><a href='#f5' class='c007'><sup>[5]</sup></a> It is acrid, disagreeable
+to the taste, narcotic, and so poisonous
+that a single drop on the tongue
+of a cat causes immediate convulsions,
+and in two minutes death.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Of these three active ingredients
+contained in tobacco smoke, the Turkish
+and Indian pipes, in which the
+smoke is made to pass slowly through
+water, arrest a large proportion, and
+therefore convey the air to the mouth
+in a milder form. The reservoir of the
+German meerschaums retains the
+grosser portions of the oils, &#38;c., produced
+by burning; and the long stem
+of the Russian pipe has a similar effect.
+The Dutch and English pipes
+retain less; while the cigar, especially
+when smoked to the end, discharges
+everything into the mouth of the
+smoker, and, when he retains the saliva,
+gives him the benefit of the united
+action of all the three narcotic substances
+together. It is not surprising,
+therefore, that those who have been
+accustomed to smoke cigars, especially
+such as are made of strong tobacco,
+should find any other pipe both tame
+and tasteless, except the short black
+<i>cutty</i>, which has lately come into favour
+again among inveterate smokers.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The chewer of tobacco, it will be
+understood from the above description
+of its active ingredients, is not exposed
+to the effects of the oil which is produced
+during the burning. The
+natural oil and the volatile alkali are
+the substances which act upon him.
+The taker of snuff is in the same condition.
+But <i>his</i> drug is still milder
+than that of the chewer, inasmuch as
+the artificial drying or roasting to
+which the tobacco is subjected in the
+preparation of snuff, drives off a portion
+of the natural volatile oil, and a
+large part of the volatile alkali, and
+thus renders it considerably less active
+than the natural leaf.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In all the properties by which tobacco
+is characterised, the produce of
+different countries and districts is
+found to exhibit very sensible differences.
+At least eight or ten species,
+and numerous varieties, of the plant
+are cultivated; and the leaf of each
+of these, even where they are all grown
+in the same locality, is found to exhibit
+sensible peculiarities. To these
+climate and soil add each its special
+effects; while the period of growth at
+which the leaves are gathered, and the
+way in which they are dried or cured,
+exercise a well-known influence on the
+quality of the crop. To these causes
+of diversity is owing, for the most
+part, the unlike estimation in which
+Virginian, Cuban, Brazilian, Peruvian,
+East Indian, Persian, and Turkish
+tobaccos are held in the market.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The chemist explains all the known
+and well-marked diversities of quality
+and flavour in the unadulterated leaf,
+by showing that each recognised variety
+of tobacco contains the active
+ingredients of the leaf in a peculiar
+form or proportion; and it is interesting
+to find science in his hands first
+rendering satisfactory reasons for the
+decisions of taste. Thus, he has shown
+that the natural volatile oil does not
+exist in the green leaf, but is formed
+during the drying, and hence the reason
+why the mode of curing affects the
+strength and quality of the dried leaf.
+He has also shown that the proportion
+of the poisonous alkali (nicotin)
+is smallest (2 per cent) in the best
+Havannah, and largest (7 per cent)
+in the Virginian tobacco, and hence a
+natural and sound reason for the preference
+given to the former by the
+smokers of cigars.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>As to the lesser niceties of flavour,
+this probably depends upon other
+odoriferous ingredients not so active
+in their nature, or so essential to the
+leaf as those already mentioned. The
+leaves of plants, in this respect, are
+easily affected by a variety of circumstances,
+and especially by the nature
+of the soil they grow in, and of the
+manure applied to them. Even to the
+grosser senses of us Europeans, it is
+known, for example, that pigs’ dung
+carries its <i>gout</i> into the tobacco raised
+by its means. But the more refined
+organs of the Druses and Maronites
+of Mount Lebanon readily recognise,
+by the flavour of their tobacco, the
+kind of manure employed in its cultivation,
+and esteem, above all others,
+that which has been aided in its
+growth by the droppings of the goat.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>But in countries where high duties
+upon tobacco hold out a temptation
+to fraud, artificial flavours are given
+by various forms of adulteration.
+“Saccharine matter (molasses, sugar,
+honey, &#38;c.), which is the principal
+adulterating ingredient, is said to be
+used both for the purpose of adding
+to the weight of the tobacco, and of
+rendering it more agreeable. Vegetable
+leaves (as those of rhubarb and
+the beech), mosses, bran, the sproutings
+of malt, beet-root dregs, liquorice,
+terra japonica, rosin, yellow ochre,
+fullers’ earth, sand, saltpetre, common
+salt, sal-ammoniac”<a id='r6'></a><a href='#f6' class='c007'><sup>[6]</sup></a>—such is a
+list of the substances which have been
+detected in adulterated tobacco. How
+many more may be in daily use for
+the purpose, who can tell? Is it surprising,
+therefore, that we should
+meet with manufactured tobacco possessing
+a thousand different flavours
+for which the chemistry of the natural
+leaf can in no way account?</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>There are two other circumstances
+in connection with the history of tobacco,
+which, because of their economical
+and social bearings, are possessed
+of much interest.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>First</i>, Every smoker must have observed
+the quantity of ash he has occasion
+to empty out of his pipe, or the
+large nozzle he knocks off from time
+to time from the burning end of his
+cigar. This incombustible part is
+equal to one-fourth or one-fifth of the
+whole weight of the dried leaf, and
+consists of earthy or mineral matter
+which the tobacco plant has drawn
+from the soil on which it has grown.
+Every ton, when dried, of the tobacco
+leaf which is gathered, carries off,
+therefore, from four to five hundredweight
+of this mineral matter from the
+soil. And as the substances of which
+the mineral matter consists are among
+those which are at once most necessary
+to vegetation, and least abundant even
+in fertile soils, it will readily be understood
+that the frequent growth and
+removal of tobacco from the same field
+must gradually affect its fertility, and
+sooner or later exhaust it.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>It has been, and still is, to a great
+extent, the misfortune of many tobacco-growing
+regions, that this simple
+deduction was unknown and unheeded.
+The culture has been continued
+year after year upon virgin
+soils, till the best and richest were
+at last wearied and worn out, and
+patches of deserted wilderness are at
+length seen where tobacco plantations
+formerly extended and flourished.
+Upon the Atlantic borders
+of the United States of America, the
+best known modern instances of such
+exhausting culture are to be found.
+It is one of the triumphs of the
+chemistry of this century, that it has
+ascertained what the land loses by
+such imprudent treatment—what is
+the cause, therefore, of the barrenness
+that befalls it, and by what new
+management its ancient fertility may
+be again restored.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Second</i>, It is melancholy to think
+that the gratification of this narcotic
+instinct of man should in some countries—and
+especially in North America,
+Cuba, and Brazil—have become
+a source of human misery in its most
+aggravated forms. It was long ago
+remarked of the tobacco culture by
+President Jefferson, in his <cite>Notes on
+Virginia</cite>, that “it is a culture productive
+of infinite wretchedness. Those
+employed in it are in a continued state
+of exertion beyond the powers of
+nature to support. Little food of any
+kind is raised by them, so that the
+men and animals on these farms are
+badly fed, and the earth is rapidly impoverished.”<a id='r7'></a><a href='#f7' class='c007'><sup>[7]</sup></a>
+But these words do
+not convey to the English reader a
+complete idea of the misery they allude
+to. The men employed in the culture,
+who suffer the “infinite wretchedness,”
+are the slaves on the plantations.
+And it is melancholy, as we
+have said, to think that the gratification
+of the passion for tobacco should
+not only have been an early stimulus
+to the extension of slavery in the
+United States, but should continue
+still to be one of the props by which
+it is sustained. The exports of tobacco
+from the United States in the year
+ending June 1850, were valued at ten
+millions of dollars. This sum European
+smokers pay for the maintenance
+of slavery in these states, besides what
+they contribute for the same purpose
+to Cuba and Brazil. The practice of
+smoking is in itself, we believe, neither
+a moral nor a social evil; it is merely
+the gratification of a natural and universal,
+as it is an innocent instinct.
+Pity that such evils should be permitted
+to flow from what is in itself
+so harmless!</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>II. The <span class='sc'>Hop</span>, which may now
+be called the <i>English narcotic</i>, was
+brought from the Low Countries, and
+is not known to have been used in
+malt liquor in this country till after
+the year 1524, in the reign of Henry
+VIII. In 1850 the quantity of hops
+grown in England was 21,668 tons,
+paying a duty of £270,000. This is
+supposed to be a larger quantity than
+is grown in all the world besides.
+Only 98 tons were exported in that
+year; while, on the other hand, 320
+tons were imported, so that the home
+consumption amounted to 21,886
+tons, or 49 millions of pounds; being
+two-thirds more than the weight of
+the tobacco which we yearly consume.
+It is the narcotic substance, therefore,
+of which England not only grows
+more and consumes more than all the
+world besides, but of which Englishmen
+consume more than they do of
+any other substance of the same
+class.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>And who that has visited the hop
+grounds of Kent and Surrey in the
+flowering season, will ever forget the
+beauty and grace of this charming
+plant? Climbing the tall poles, and
+circling them with its clasping tendrils,
+it hides the formality and stiffness of
+the tree that supports it among the
+exuberant profusion of its clustering
+flowers. Waving and drooping in
+easy motion with every tiny breath
+that stirs them, and hanging in curved
+wreaths from pole to pole, the hopbines
+dance and glitter beneath the
+bright English sun—the picture of a
+true English vineyard, which neither
+the Rhine nor the Rhone can equal,
+and only Italy, where her vines climb
+the freest, can surpass.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The hop “joyeth in a fat and fruitful
+ground,” as old Gerard hath it
+(1596). “It prospereth the better by
+manuring.” And few spots surpass,
+either in natural fertility or in artificial
+richness, the hop lands of Surrey,
+which lie along the out-crop of the
+green sand measures in the neighbourhood
+of Farnham. Naturally rich to
+an extraordinary degree in the mineral
+food of plants, the soils in this locality
+have been famed for centuries
+for the growth of hops; and with a
+view to this culture alone, at the present
+day, the best portions sell as high
+as £500 an acre. And the <i>highest</i>
+Scotch farmer—the most liberal of
+manure—will find himself outdone by
+the hop-growers of Kent and Surrey.
+An average of ten pounds an acre for
+manure over a hundred acres of hops,
+makes this branch of farming the most
+liberal, the most remarkable, and the
+most expensive of any in England.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>This mode of managing the hop,
+and the peculiar value and rarity of
+hop land, were known very early.
+They form parts of its history which
+were probably imported with the plant
+itself. Tusser, who lived in Henry
+VIII.’s time, and in the reigns of his
+three children, in his <cite>Points of Husbandry</cite>
+thus speaks of the hop:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Choose soil for the hop of the rottenest mould,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Well-doonged and wrought as a garden-plot should:</div>
+ <div class='line'>Not far from the water (but not overfloune),</div>
+ <div class='line'>This lesson well noted, is meet to be knowne.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>The sun in the south, or else southlie and west,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Is joy to the hop as welcommed ghest;</div>
+ <div class='line'>But wind in the north, or else northerly east,</div>
+ <div class='line'>To hop is as ill as fray in a feast.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Meet plot for a hop-yard, once found as is told,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Make thereof account, as of jewel of gold;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Now dig it and leave it, the sun for to burne,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And afterwards fense it, to serve for that turne.</div>
+ <div class='line'>The hop for his profit, I thus do exalt:</div>
+ <div class='line'>It strengthened drink, and favoureth malt;</div>
+ <div class='line'>And being well brewed, long kep it will last,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And drawing abide, if ye draw not too fast.”<a id='r8'></a><a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The hops of commerce consist of the
+female flowers and seeds of the <i>humulus
+lupulus</i>, or common hop plant.
+Their principal consumption is in the
+manufacture of beer, to which they
+give a pleasant, bitter, aromatic flavour,
+and tonic properties. Part of the
+soporific quality of beer also is ascribed
+to the hops, and they are supposed by
+their chemical properties to check the
+tendency to become sour. The active
+principles in the hop consist of a volatile
+oil, and a peculiar bitter principle
+to which the name of <i>lupulin</i> is given.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>When the hop flowers are distilled
+with water, they yield as much as
+eight per cent of their weight of a
+volatile oil, which has a brownish
+yellow colour, a strong smell of hops,
+and a slightly bitter taste. In this
+“oil of hops” it has hitherto been
+supposed that a portion of the narcotic
+influence of the flowers resided, but
+recent experiments render this opinion
+doubtful. It is probable that in the
+case both of tobacco and of the hop, a
+volatile substance distils over in small
+quantity along with the oil, which
+has not hitherto been examined separately,
+and in which the narcotic virtue
+resides. This is rendered probable by
+the fact that the rectified hop oil is
+not possessed of narcotic properties.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The hop has long been celebrated
+for its sleep-giving qualities. To the
+weary and wakeful, the hop-pillow
+has often given refreshing rest, when
+every other sleep-producer had failed.
+It is to the escape, in minute quantity,
+of the volatile narcotic substance we
+have spoken of, that this soporific
+effect of the flowers is most probably
+to be ascribed.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Besides the oil and other volatile
+matter which distil from them, the hop
+flowers, and especially the fine powdery
+grains or dust which, by rubbing,
+can be separated from them, yield to
+alcohol a bitter principle (lupulin)
+and a resinous substance, both in considerable
+proportion. In a common
+tincture of hops these substances are
+contained. They are aromatic and
+tonic, and impart their own qualities
+to our beer. They are also soothing,
+tranquillising, and in a slight degree
+sedative and soporific, in which properties
+well-hopped beer also resembles
+them. It is certain that hops
+possess a narcotic virtue which beer
+derives from them;<a id='r9'></a><a href='#f9' class='c007'><sup>[9]</sup></a> but in what part
+of the female flower, or in what peculiar
+chemical compound this narcotic
+property chiefly resides, is still a matter
+of doubt.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>To the general reader it may appear
+remarkable, that the chemistry of a
+vegetable production, in such extensive
+use as the hop, should still be so
+imperfect—our knowledge of its nature
+and composition so unsatisfactory.
+But the well-read chemist, who knows
+how wide the field of chemical research
+is, and how rapidly our knowledge
+of it, as a whole, is progressing,
+will feel no surprise. He may wish
+to see all such obscurities and difficulties
+cleared away, but he will feel
+inclined rather to thank and praise
+the many ardent and devoted men,
+now labouring in this department, for
+what they are doing, than to blame
+them for being obliged to leave a part
+of the extensive field for the present
+uncultivated.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Among largely used narcotics, therefore,
+especially in England, the hop is
+to be placed. It differs, however, from
+all the others we have mentioned, in
+being rarely employed alone except
+medicinally. It is added to infusions
+like that of malt, to impart flavour,
+taste, and narcotic virtues. Used in
+this way, it is unquestionably one of
+the sources of that pleasing excitement,
+gentle intoxication, and healthy tonic
+action, which well-hopped beer is
+known to produce upon those who
+drink it. Other common vegetable
+productions will give the bitter flavour
+to malt liquor. Horehound and wormwood,
+and gentian and quassia and
+strychnia, and the grains of paradise,
+and chicory, and various other plants,
+have been used to replace or supplant
+the hop. But none are known to approach
+it in imparting those peculiar
+qualities which have given the bitter
+beer of the present day so well-merited
+a reputation.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Among our working classes, it is
+true, in the porters and humbler beers
+they consume and prefer, the <i>Cocculus
+indicus</i> finds a degree of favour which
+has caused it, to a considerable degree,
+to take the place of the hop. This
+singular berry possesses an intoxicating
+property, and not only replaces
+the hop by its bitterness, but to a
+certain extent also supplies the deficiency
+of malt. To weak extracts of
+malt it gives a richness and <i>fulness in
+the mouth</i>, which usually imply the
+presence of much malt, with a bitterness
+which enables the brewer to
+withhold one-third of his hops, and a
+colour which aids him in the darkening
+of his porter. The middle classes
+in England prefer the thin wine-like
+bitter beer. The skilled labourers in
+the manufacturing districts prefer
+what is rich, full, and substantial in
+the mouth. With a view to their
+taste, it is too often drugged with
+the <i>Cocculus indicus</i> by disreputable
+brewers; and much of the very
+beastly intoxication which the consumption
+of malt liquor in England
+produces, is probably due to this pernicious
+admixture. So powerful is
+the effect of this berry on the apparent
+richness of beer, that a single pound
+produces an equal effect with a bag
+of malt. The temptation to use it,
+therefore, is very strong. The quantity
+imported in 1850 was 2359 cwt.,
+equal to a hundred and twelve times
+as many bags of malt; and although
+we cannot strictly class it among the
+narcotics we voluntarily indulge in, it
+may certainly be described as one
+in which thousands of the humbler
+classes are compelled to indulge.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>It is interesting to observe how men
+carry with them their early tastes to
+whatever new climate or region they
+go. The love of beer and hops has
+been planted by Englishmen in America.
+It has accompanied them to
+their new empires in Australia, New
+Zealand, and the Cape. In the hot
+East their home taste remains unquenched,
+and the pale ale of England
+follows them to remotest India. Who
+can tell to what extent the use of the hop
+may become naturalised, through their
+means, in these far-off regions? Who
+can predict that, inoculated into its
+milder influence, the devotees of opium
+and the intoxicating hemp may not
+hereafter be induced to abandon their
+hereditary drugs, and to substitute the
+foreign hop in their place? From such
+a change in one article of consumption,
+how great a change in the character
+of the people might we not anticipate?</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>This leads us to remark, that we
+cannot as yet very well explain in
+what way and to what extent the use
+of prevailing narcotics is connected,
+as cause or effect, with peculiarities in
+national character. But there can
+no longer be any doubt that the soothers
+and exciters we indulge in, in
+some measure as the luxuries of life,
+though sought for at first merely to
+gratify a natural craving, do afterwards
+gradually but sensibly modify
+the individual character. And where
+the use is general and extended, the
+influence of course affects in time the
+whole people. It is a problem of interest
+to the legislator, not less than
+to the physiologist and psychologist,
+to ascertain how far and in what direction
+such a reaction can go—how
+much of the actual tastes, habits, and
+character of existing nations has been
+created by the prolonged consumption
+of the fashionable and prevailing forms
+of narcotics in use among them respectively,
+and how far tastes and habits
+have been modified by the changes in
+these forms which have been introduced
+and adopted within historic times. The
+reader will readily perceive that this
+inquiry has in it a valid importance
+quite distinct from that which attaches
+itself to the supposed influence of the
+different varieties of intoxicating fermented
+drinks in use in different countries.
+The latter, as we have said,
+all contain the same intoxicating principle,
+and so far, therefore, exercise a
+common influence upon all who consume
+them. But the narcotics now in
+use owe their effects to substances
+which in each, so far as is known, are
+chemically different from those which
+are contained in every one of the
+others. They must exercise, therefore,
+each a different physiological effect
+upon the system, and, if their influence,
+as we suppose, extend so far,
+must each in a special way modify also
+the constitution, the habits, and the
+character.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Our space does not permit us, in
+the present Number, to speak of the use
+of opium and hemp; we shall return
+to these extensively consumed drugs
+on a future occasion.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'>SOUTH AMERICAN TRAVEL AND ADVENTURE.<a id='r10'></a><a href='#f10' class='c007'><sup>[10]</sup></a></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>We here associate two books which
+have little in common beyond their
+relation to the same region and races
+of men; the one is chiefly scientific
+and statistical, the other deals largely
+in the characteristic and romantic.
+Dr Weddell, physician and naturalist,
+and member of various scientific societies
+and commissions, who had
+previously travelled in and written
+of certain districts in South America,
+was induced, two years ago, once
+more to cross the Line, bound for
+Bolivia. His former journey had had
+a purely botanical object: he had
+gone to make acquaintance with the
+trees which produce the Peruvian
+bark. His researches were crowned
+with success; but he was attacked with
+fever and dysentery, and quitted the
+unwholesome shores, vowing never
+to revisit them. A handful of sand
+which he carried away with him
+caused him to break through his resolution.
+Deposited in the Museum of
+Natural History at Paris, it attracted
+attention by the beauty of the golden
+spangles it contained. Dr Weddell
+again sailed for America, this time
+with a double mission. The administrators
+of the Garden of Plants confided
+to him certain scientific researches;
+and a number of persons,
+whose objects were more material,
+commissioned him to examine and
+obtain concessions of tracts of land
+upon the Tipuani—a stream which,
+rising amongst the snows of the Cordilleras,
+flows over golden sands to
+its junction with one of the chief tributaries
+of the mighty Amazon.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Mr Theodore Pavie has been a
+great traveller. In the volume before
+us we find him alternately in India,
+Africa, America, on the banks of the
+Nile, on the Coromandel coast, in the
+forests that fringe the Sabine. His
+book includes even a Chinese legend;
+but that he confesses to have derived
+from a missionary, the companion of
+one of his voyages. His most interesting
+chapters are a series of South
+American sketches—in the Pampas,
+Chili, and Peru. He makes half an
+apology for having mingled fiction
+with facts he himself witnessed. The
+system he has pursued is perfectly
+allowable, and has been adopted by
+many travellers of wider fame. We
+may instance Sealsfield, Ruxton, and
+a host of other precedents. Like
+them, he has brought home from his
+distant wanderings a portfolio of
+rough sketches, which he has filled
+up, coloured, and completed by his
+own fireside. The landscape, the
+character, the figures, even some of
+the incidents, are true to nature; but
+he has thrown in a little artificial
+action, rendering the picture more
+attractive.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>From the Peruvian port of Arica,
+which he reached, <i>viâ</i> Southampton
+and Panama, in the spring of 1851,
+Dr Weddell started at once for the
+Bolivian town of La Paz. After
+passing Tacna, where they were detained
+for some days by purchase of
+mules and travelling stores, the doctor
+and his two companions, Mr Borniche
+and Mr Herrypon (the latter a civil
+engineer), soon found themselves in
+the mountains, and suffering from the
+painful sensations produced by the
+great rarefaction of the air. This
+effect of the sensible diminution of
+the atmospheric pressure upon the
+circulation and respiration is there
+called the <i>soroche</i>, and is ignorantly
+attributed by the natives to metallic
+emanations from the soil. At the
+height of about 12,000 feet above the
+level of the sea, the travellers came
+to the first <i>apacheta</i>. In former days
+the Peruvian Indians, upon attaining,
+with a burden, the summit of a mountain,
+were accustomed to offer to their
+god Pachacamac the first object that
+met their view. The custom was not
+costly, for the object was usually a
+stone. They accompanied the offering
+by several repetitions of the word
+<i>apachecta</i>, which was a sort of prayer.
+In time, this word, slightly altered,
+was applied to the heaps of stones
+which the superstition accumulated,
+and then to the mountain-peaks which
+these heaps surmounted. Apachetas
+are found upon all elevated points of
+Peruvian roads. Around one of them,
+at the summit of the Pass of Gualillos—estimated
+by Dr Weddell, and by
+the English traveller Pentland, to be
+nearly 15,000 feet above the sea—were
+numerous skeletons of asses,
+mules, and lamas, which had perished
+of fatigue on attaining that prodigious
+elevation. The three Frenchmen
+felt almost as much inclined to lay
+their own bones beside those of the defunct
+brutes as to push on further; but
+they managed to continue their route
+over one of those vast mountain platforms
+known as <i>puñas</i>, of which the
+German doctor Tschudi has given so
+striking an account. They passed the
+night in the village of Tacora, and had
+regained their wonted courage and activity
+when aroused next morning by
+their muleteer with intelligence that
+four vicuñas were grazing close at
+hand. Stealing up to them under
+cover of a wall, Dr Weddell and Mr
+Herrypon got within fair shot, fired,
+and missed. Three of the animals
+took to flight; the fourth stood its
+ground, and gazed boldly at its enemies.
+The doctor, supposing that a
+wound was the cause of its immobility,
+quitted his cover and approached
+the vicuña. When he got
+within a certain distance, the animal
+ran. It was too late. The doctor
+fired his second barrel, and the ball
+broke its spine. It was not, as Dr
+Weddell had supposed, a wound that
+had delayed its flight. “When a
+herd of vicuñas is pursued,” he says,
+“the most vigorous of the males,
+who act as chiefs, invariably remain
+the last upon the place of danger, as
+if to cover the retreat of the others.
+This is a fact of which we were more
+than once witnesses during our journey,
+and hence it is much easier to
+obtain male than female vicuñas. I
+have been twenty times within shot
+of males, but not once of females.
+The vicuña (<i>Camelus vicogna</i> Gmel.)
+is the most numerous species (it and
+the <i>guanaco</i>) of the camel tribe in the
+New World. It is met with in all
+the elevated regions of the Andes,
+from the equator to Magellan’s Straits.
+The places it best loves to haunt are
+those where man and the condor alone
+can follow it. The condor, that
+mighty bird of prey, which is to the
+Andes what the eagle is to the Alps,
+prefers carrion to a living prey, and
+seldom makes war upon it; and man,
+until our own days, has rather encouraged
+its multiplication than aided
+in its destruction. This explains the
+abundance of the vicuña at the period
+of the conquest of Peru.” The old
+Spanish chroniclers relate that the
+vicuñas, although wild, were regarded
+as the exclusive property of the
+Incas, and any who hunted them incurred
+severe penalties. At fixed
+seasons—about once a-year—a general
+hunt took place, under the personal
+superintendence of the Inca and his
+chief officers; but only once in every
+four years was this monster <i>battue</i>
+allowed in the same district. The
+chase was on a prodigious scale. Fifty
+or sixty thousand hunters—even
+more, if some writers are to be believed—armed
+themselves with poles
+and lances, traced an immense circle,
+and drove to a common centre all the
+animals it enclosed. A selection then
+took place. Roebuck, guanacos, and
+other inferior animals, were killed,
+especially the males; their skins
+were used for various purposes, and
+their flesh was divided amongst the
+hunters. This meat, cut in thin
+slices and dried, was called charqui,
+and composed the sole animal food of
+the lower classes of Peruvians. The
+vicuñas, of which thirty or forty thousand
+were often thus collected, were
+more gently treated. They were
+carefully shorn, and then set at liberty.
+The wool was stored in the
+royal warehouses, and issued as required—the
+inferior qualities to the
+people, the better ones to the nobles,
+who alone had a right to wear fine
+cloth. The tissues then manufactured
+from the best vicuña wool are
+said to have been as brilliant as the
+finest silks, and to have excited, by
+the delicacy of their tints, the envy of
+European manufacturers. At the
+present day, no salutary law protects
+the graceful and useful vicuñas; they
+lose their life with their fleece, and
+have greatly diminished in numbers.
+The Indians drive them into enclosures,
+knock them on the head with
+cudgels, or break their necks across
+their knees, strip off the skin, and
+sell it for half a dollar. The wool
+sells as high as a dollar a pound upon
+the coast of Peru. It is chiefly consumed
+in the country, to make hats
+and gloves. Only two or three thousand
+dollars’ worth is annually exported
+from Peru.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Dr Weddell makes numerous interesting
+zoological observations during
+his journey up the country. Whilst
+traversing the frozen puña, he was
+greatly surprised to find a ruin—in
+which his party slept, with snow
+for a counterpane—infested with
+mice, whose sole nourishment, in
+that barren and inhospitable district,
+must have been grass. The next
+halt was at the farm of Chulunguiani,
+the highest point upon the
+road from Tacna to La Paz. Here
+the party slept under a roof, and
+found a <i>pulperia</i> or little shop, where
+they were able to obtain sardines in
+oil, sheep’s-milk cheese, and bad Bordeaux
+wine. A day was passed here
+in duck-shooting, and in hunting the
+<i>viscacha</i>, a small animal of the chinchilla
+tribe, having a dark grey fur,
+very soft, but less esteemed by furriers
+than that of the chinchilla. It is
+about the size of a rabbit, burrows
+amongst rocks, and is found only at
+a very great elevation, equal to that
+habitually preferred by the vicuña.
+Dr Weddell and his host shot two
+specimens. When the doctor went
+indoors to skin them, he found that the
+animals had lost the tips of their tails.
+The farm-steward, who had carried
+them in, explained that he had thus
+docked them to preserve them from
+decomposition, the extremity of the
+tail having the singular property of
+producing the corruption of the whole
+animal, if not cut off almost immediately
+after death. Dr Weddell was
+not very well satisfied with this explanation,
+but, to his astonishment,
+he afterwards found it everywhere the
+custom to sever the end of the viscacha’s
+tail.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Whilst at the farm (it was a sheep-farm—oxen
+live but do not thrive at
+that altitude) Dr Weddell did his
+utmost to get an alpaca, knowing that
+there were some in the neighbourhood.
+He was unsuccessful; and as to buying
+one, it is a most difficult matter
+in that country, where the Indians
+have an extraordinary dislike to parting
+with their domesticated animals,
+except sheep. During his stay in
+Bolivia, he repeatedly offered five or
+six times its value for an alpaca, and
+was refused. The alpaca wool, which
+constitutes one of the most important
+branches of Peruvian commerce, and
+is consumed chiefly in England, varies
+greatly in price, the pure white selling
+for thirty or thirty-five dollars a hundredweight;
+other colours at an average
+of twenty-two dollars. The
+weight of the fleeces ranges from three
+to seven pounds. “I have seen some
+of these animals,” says Dr Weddell,
+“whose virgin fleece almost swept
+the earth; when they attain that
+state, their faces are hidden in the
+wool that surrounds them.” From a
+priest, who afforded hospitality to the
+travellers at their second halt after
+they quitted the farm, they obtained
+some instructive details concerning the
+country, and a most marvellous story
+of a natural phenomenon observed by
+him during his rambles in the province
+of Yungas. “This was nothing
+less than a bird-plant—that is to say,
+a bird which, having alighted upon
+the ground, had there taken root.
+More than a hundred persons, the
+<i>cura</i> said, had seen this wonder, and
+verified its reality. The person who
+had discovered the bird, unfortunately
+forgot one day to take it food, and it
+died. We were not informed how it
+had lived before it found a master.”
+It is odd to be able to trace a coincidence
+between the wild tale of the
+Peruvian puña and a tradition of
+Asiatic-Russian steppes. Edward
+Jerrmann, in his <i>Pictures from St
+Petersburg</i>,<a id='r11'></a><a href='#f11' class='c007'><sup>[11]</sup></a> tells of the <i>baranken</i>
+or sheep-plant, supposed to produce
+the fine silky fleece that was in reality
+obtained by ripping unborn lambs
+from the mother’s belly.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>At La Paz, which the little caravan
+reached after much fatigue, some
+severe hardship, and a few misadventures,
+but without serious disaster,
+one of the first things the travellers
+did was to avail of a letter of introduction
+from the Bolivian minister at
+Paris, to obtain an audience of the
+president of the republic, General
+Belzu, who had just recovered from
+wounds inflicted by assassins. One
+ball had struck him full in the face,
+and his visitors looked curiously for
+the trace. A scarcely perceptible
+scar, at the angle of the nose, was all
+they could discern. The bullet remained
+in the head, but occasioned
+no inconvenience; and the general
+said that his health was even better
+than before the occurrence. Some
+time afterwards he consulted Dr
+Weddell about his wounds, and the
+doctor learned, from the best source,
+the particulars of the attempt upon
+his life, which he briefly recapitulates.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Raised to the presidency after the
+battle of Yamparaës, in which he discomfited
+the adherents of Velasco,
+General Belzu had not only to struggle
+against the remains of that party, but
+to defend himself against the secret
+and much more formidable attacks of
+General Ballivian, Velasco’s predecessor.
+It is said to have been at
+the instigation of Ballivian that the
+plot I have spoken of was formed;
+and, in support of this assertion, the
+remarkable fact is adduced that, upon
+the very day on which the crime was
+committed at Chuquisaca, Ballivian
+and one of his intimates quitted Copiapo
+(in Chili), where they were staying,
+and rode in great haste towards
+the frontiers of Bolivia.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The day selected for the crime
+was the 6th September 1850. In
+the afternoon the president left his
+palace, accompanied by an aide-de-camp,
+and by Colonel Laguna, one
+of the principal members of the senate,
+and betook himself to the public walk.
+Scarcely had he reached it, when four
+men assailed him. He stood upon
+his defence, but at that moment a
+bullet struck him in the face, and he
+fell to the ground. The shot had been
+fired so near that his beard was
+burnt, and his cheeks were speckled
+with grains of powder. A second
+shot was fired, but without effect.
+When the assassins saw him stretched
+upon the earth, they fired three other
+shots at him, but, strange to relate,
+each time the weapons flashed in the
+pan. The chief of the brigands—a
+mulatto named Moralès, who was
+mounted—then tried to trample him
+under his horse’s feet, but without
+success. After several efforts, he at
+last urged his horse close up to his
+victim, and, leaning over him, put a
+pistol to his head and fired a last shot.
+‘The tyrant is dead!’ he cried, and,
+spurring his horse, he galloped through
+the streets to the barracks, to excite
+the garrison to revolt. Meanwhile
+Laguna, the senator, stood by with
+folded arms, and when the crime
+seemed fully consummated, he walked
+away with its perpetrators, thus affording
+good grounds for suspicion of his
+complicity. He was shot a few days
+afterwards.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“As to the president, whose existence,
+with two bullets in his head,
+seemed almost impossible, he had not
+even, he himself assured me, lost consciousness
+for a moment; and when
+Moralès and his band left him, he
+got up unaided, and reached, bathed
+in his blood, a neighbouring hut, inhabited
+by a poor Indian. The news
+quickly spread that the chief of the
+state still lived, and the projected
+revolution was stifled in its birth.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The preservation of the president’s
+life was little short of a miracle. One
+of the bullets had glanced off the skull
+without doing material damage beyond
+occasioning complete loss of
+hearing with the left ear; but the
+other had gone so deep into the head
+that it could not be extracted. Dr
+Weddell probed the wound, and satisfied
+himself of the course and position
+of the ball. A few hairs’-breadths
+farther, or a copper bullet instead of
+a leaden one, and all was over with
+General Belzu.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The travellers made some stay at
+La Paz, where they soon became acquainted
+with the principal people in
+the place. They passed their time in
+paying visits, in seeking useful information
+relative to the objects of their
+expedition, and in getting dreadfully
+out of breath by the ascent of steep
+streets in an atmosphere so rarified
+that a newly-arrived European can
+hardly take ten steps without a pause.
+English housewives will read with interest
+Dr Weddell’s account of Bolivian
+edibles, with disgust his sketch
+of the filthy horrors of a Bolivian
+kitchen, with wonderment and incredulity
+the recipes he gives for the
+manufacture of certain Bolivian dishes
+and delicacies. The mode of using
+potatoes is very original. As it freezes
+nearly every night of the year in the
+upper regions of the Andes, and the
+people have no means of preserving
+potatoes from frost, they anticipate
+its action, in order to regulate it.
+“They spread the potatoes on a thin
+layer of straw in the open air; they
+water them slightly, and expose them
+to the frost for three successive nights.
+When the vegetables subsequently
+thaw in the sun, they acquire a
+spongy consistency; in that state they
+are trodden under naked feet, in order
+to get rid of the skin and squeeze out
+the juice; then they are left in the
+air until perfectly dry.” This delectable
+preparation is known as the
+black <i>chuño</i>; and when wanted for
+food, requires soaking in water for six
+or eight days. White <i>chuño</i> is prepared
+in another way, but one description
+of the sort will probably
+satisfy everybody of the untempting
+nature of the diet. Besides the animal
+and vegetable kingdoms, the
+mineral reign contributes to the gratification
+of South American epicures.
+An important section of the market
+at La Paz is occupied by sellers of a
+species of light-grey clay, very greasy
+to the touch, and called <i>pahsa</i>. The
+Indians alone consume it, mixing it
+with water to the consistency of thin
+gruel, and eating it with salt. At
+Chuquisaca, Dr Weddell was informed,
+a sort of earth called <i>chaco</i>,
+similar to the <i>pahsa</i> of La Paz, was
+sold and eaten in little cups, like
+custard or chocolate; and he heard of
+a <i>señorita</i> who thus ate dirt till she
+killed herself. The moderate use of
+this queer article of food is not injurious,
+but neither does it afford the
+slightest nourishment.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The beefsteak was long in making
+its appearance one day at Don Adolfo’s
+<i>gargotte</i>, where Dr Weddell and his
+companions usually took their meals,
+and an impatient Frenchman started
+from his seat to visit the kitchen and
+inquire into the delay. “Do not so!”
+cried a more experienced customer;
+“if you see how it is done, you will
+not eat for a week.” Dr Weddell had
+opportunity of inspecting more than
+one <i>Pazeña</i> kitchen. Besides the
+cooks—which we take to be something
+indescribably abominable, since he
+describes them merely as a degree or
+two more disgusting than the scene of
+their operations—those kitchens contain
+three things,—shapeless earthen
+pots, black and greasy; heaps of dried
+lama-dung, used as fuel; guinea-pigs
+<i>ad libitum</i>. Guinea-pigs are the
+rabbits of Bolivia, where European
+rabbits are curiosities, called Castilian
+conies, and kept in cages like some
+outlandish monkey. The guinea-pig
+has the run of the kitchen, where he
+thrives and fattens, and is ultimately
+slaughtered and cooked.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Dr Weddell went to a ball, given
+in celebration of the birthday of a
+young and amiable Peruvian lady, recently
+allied with one of the best
+families of La Paz. His account of
+it gives a curious notion of the degree
+of civilisation of the best Bolivian society.
+No illuminated portals, liveried
+lackeys, or crowd of carriages indicated
+to the doctor (who had not yet
+been at the house) the scene of the
+festival, when he issued forth, at eight
+in the evening, white-waistcoated, and
+draped in his cloak. The street was
+dark and deserted. By inquiring at
+shops, he at last found the door he
+sought; it stood open. A little
+Indian girl, whom he encountered in
+the court, pointed to the staircase, up
+which he groped his way. At the
+end of a passage, upon the first floor,
+he discovered a faint light. Following
+this beacon, and passing through
+two doors that stood ajar, he reached
+a small room, where several of the
+guests were smoking cigars round a
+table, on which stood half-emptied
+cups and glasses. In a corner two
+<i>señoras</i> were squatted, making ice;
+and a little farther off an old negress
+was putting sugar into a caldron of
+punch. The ice-makers were the
+mother and sister of the heroine of
+the day; the master of the house was
+amongst the smokers. Dr Weddell
+paid his respects, got rid of his cloak,
+and passed on into antechamber No.
+2. This was in darkness, save for the
+glimmering rays of light that shot in
+from the adjacent rooms; and the
+doctor, seeing nothing, and advancing
+quickly, ran up against a soft substance,
+which he presently made out
+to be another <i>señora</i>, enveloped, even
+to the crown of her head, in a vast
+shawl. The room was half full of
+shawled ladies, seated on either side
+of the passage left open for the guests,
+some on chairs, others on trunks, and
+two or three upon a bed. These
+<i>señoras</i>, the doctor learned, were
+mothers, friends, or relatives of the
+guests. Not being sufficiently smart
+to show themselves in the foreground
+of the festival, they yet would have a
+view of it. They came as <i>mosqueteras</i>.
+Antechamber No. 2 contained what is
+called, in that country, the <i>mosqueteria</i>.<a id='r12'></a><a href='#f12' class='c007'><sup>[12]</sup></a>
+Another step took the doctor
+into the ball-room. Thence shawls
+and cigars were banished, and replaced
+by silks and lace, white gloves and
+black patent leather. Dr Weddell
+looked down with some shame at his
+boots, which he had himself blacked
+before leaving home. Silence reigned
+in the saloon. The ladies were on
+one side, the men upon the other,
+waiting for the military band, which
+was behind time. The first tap of the
+drum electrified the mute assemblage.
+Smiles and animation beamed upon
+every face. At the same time were
+distributed the fragrant contents of
+the caldron which the black Hecate
+had brewed in anteroom No. 1. Cups
+of punch circulated, and were not disdained
+by the ladies. Dancing began.
+The doctor, who, whilst climbing
+mountains, three days previously, in
+quest of flowers and simples, had suffered
+terribly from the <i>soroche</i>, and
+had counted a hundred and sixty
+throbs of his pulse in a minute, was
+feverish and ill at ease, and did not
+intend to dance. But he was borne
+away by the torrent. After the
+quadrille came another distribution of
+punch, and a proportionate rise in the
+ladies’ spirits; then came the ices
+which mamma and sister had so industriously
+manufactured, and which
+were, of course, pronounced excellent;
+then (Bolivia seems a very thirsty
+country) bottles of champagne and
+sherry made their appearance, every
+gentleman seized as many glasses as
+he could carry, and challenged the
+<i>señoritas</i>, who were not allowed to
+refuse. The fun now grew fast and
+furious. A new phase of the ball
+commenced. For formal quadrilles
+were substituted national dances.
+These, Dr Weddell acutely remarks,
+have little merit unless danced as soup
+is eaten—hot. The military orchestra
+played the airs of the <i>bailesitos</i> with
+infinite spirit, one of the musicians
+accompanying them with words, in
+which there was some license and
+much wit. The <i>zapateado</i> was danced
+amidst vehement applause. The good-humour
+of the evening was at its
+height. Farther they could not go,
+thought Dr Weddell. He was mistaken.
+In an interval of the dancing,
+it was decided that a colonel there
+present, who, in the doctor’s opinion,
+was abundantly gay, was not sufficiently
+so, and he was condemned to
+be shot. The sentence was forthwith
+carried into execution. The victim
+was placed upon a chair in the middle
+of the room, the band played a funeral
+march, and the unhappy (or happy)
+colonel was compelled to swallow, one
+after the other, as many glasses of
+champagne or sherry as there were
+young ladies present. This done, the
+dead-march ceased, and the culprit
+was released. The German students
+have a custom somewhat similar to
+this, <i><span lang="de">Der Fürst der Thoren</span></i>, when one
+sits astride upon a barrel, and imbibes
+all the beer, <i>schnaps</i>, and Rhenish
+presented to him by his boon-companions.
+But with the exception of
+Lola Montes, who smoked her cigar
+and drank her <i>chopine</i> in a Heidelberg
+<i>studenten-kneipe</i>, the fair sex in
+Europe do not generally mingle in
+orgies of this kind. After a substantial
+supper, Dr Weddell was condemned
+to be shot, and shot accordingly.
+Other executions followed,
+and the jollity reached its climax by
+the men voting the execution <i>en masse</i>
+of the whole of the ladies—a sentence
+which was resisted, but at last carried
+out. The Bolivian <i>señoritas</i> must
+have strong heads, for we read that
+dancing recommenced and continued
+vigorously until five in the morning,
+when the band and the majority of
+the guests beat a retreat. A guitar
+was then procured, and the lady of
+the house and two or three of her
+friends, with half-a-dozen of the most
+active of the <i>caballeros</i>, danced on, and
+kept up the ball until one in the afternoon!
+After which, all we have to
+say is, Brava, Bolivia!</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Dr Weddell, who had been unwell
+before the ball, was very ill after it,
+and lay in bed for six weeks. When
+his strength returned, he made an excursion
+to La Lancha, a point about
+four leagues from La Paz. The steps
+he and his companions had taken to
+obtain concessions of land on the
+Tipuani had not led to the results
+they anticipated; so they temporarily
+directed their attention to the
+river Chuquiaguillo, upon which La
+Lancha is situated. In the opinion of
+the natives, this place is <i>un pozo de
+oro</i>—a well of gold. Early one morning
+in May the three Frenchmen set
+out for it, upon mule-back, passing
+along a road enlivened, during its
+early portion, with various kinds of
+shrubs, bearing flowers of brilliant
+colours. At this part of the doctor’s
+book we come to a good deal of scientific
+detail, accompanied by woodcuts,
+all very interesting to miners and intending
+gold-seekers, but on which we
+shall not dwell. The gold of the
+Chuquiaguillo is found in the form of
+<i>pépites</i>, or nuggets, very various in
+shape and size. One of them, sent
+to Spain by the Conde de Moncloa,
+is said to have weighed more than
+twenty kilogrammes—forty-four English
+pounds. At various periods, and
+much more recently, nuggets of several
+pounds’ weight have been found.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“During the presidency of General
+Ballivian, an Indian came from time
+to time to La Paz, to sell pieces of
+gold, which had the appearance of
+being cut with a chisel from a considerable
+mass of the metal, and many
+persons judged, from the colour, that
+the mass in question must proceed
+from the river Chuquiaguillo. No
+bribe or promise could induce the Indian
+to reveal his secret. The affair
+got to the ears of the president, who
+expected to obtain without difficulty
+the information refused to others; but
+the Indian held out, and would say
+nothing. Finding gentle means ineffectual,
+the general tried threats,
+imprisonment, &#38;c., but all in vain.
+Finally, the poor man was condemned
+to life-long service in the army, as
+guilty of disobedience and disrespect
+to the chief of the state! From that
+day forward nothing more was heard
+either of him or of his treasure. Some
+persons in La Paz told me that he
+perished under the lash.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>La Lancha (the word signifies a
+boat) is neither town nor village, but
+a marsh. On approaching it, up a
+ravine, the travellers came to an immense
+dike or barrier of rock, through
+one extremity of which the river had
+wrought itself a narrow passage. This
+dike had evidently long been an immense
+obstacle to the waters that
+flowed down the ravine of Chuquiaguillo,
+and it was a rational enough
+conclusion that, since those waters
+washed down gold, a good deal of the
+metal must still remain behind that
+natural barrier. But it seemed more
+probable that the river gathered its
+gold <i>after</i> than <i>before</i> passing the
+rocky wall. It struck Dr Weddell as
+pretty certain that Count Moncloa’s
+nugget would have remained behind
+the dike instead of being washed over
+it. The conclusion was reasonable
+enough. Behind the dike La Lancha
+begins, terminating a quarter of a
+league above it, at the foot of another
+rock, which rises vertically to a height
+of thirty feet. Over this rock the
+river dashes, covering its surface with
+great stalactites of ice, and then winds
+along the right side of the marsh,
+where it has made itself a channel.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“At one point of its surface the
+Lancha contracts, and thus presents
+the form of the figure 8. Perhaps
+one should seek the figure of a boat,
+to which the site has been compared,
+in the combination of the marsh and
+of the mountains of bluish schist that
+rise abruptly around it. According
+to this manner of viewing it, the surface
+of the marsh would represent the
+deck of the vessel, and the gold would
+be in the hold—that is to say, on the
+rock which is supposed to form the
+bottom of the basin. Several attempts
+have been made to ascertain the existence
+of the precious metal, and we
+were told a multitude of attractive
+tales—much too attractive to be credible.
+The upshot, however, which
+could not be concealed, was, that all
+attempts had ultimately failed, owing
+to the infiltration of water into the
+wells sunk in the attempt to reach the
+<i>veneros</i> (strata of argillaceous sand) in
+which the gold is found.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Nevertheless, the doctor thought
+the place worthy deliberate examination,
+and to that end established
+himself, with Mr Herrypon the engineer,
+and with Franck, their carpenter,
+under a tent, within which, during the
+night, the thermometer rarely stood
+at less than three degrees below zero.
+When the sun shone, the climate was
+genial and agreeable; but at three
+o’clock it dipped behind the mountains,
+which was the signal for the
+wanderers to creep under canvass,
+wrap themselves in blankets, and
+feast upon the hot stew their Indian
+cook had passed the morning in preparing.
+They had neighbours: several
+Indians had built huts on the
+ledges of the mountains, and daily
+drove their sheep and alpacas to graze
+upon the herbage of the marsh. From
+one of them Dr Weddell subsequently
+obtained an alpaca for his collection.
+Vicuñas occasionally strayed near the
+camp, and Franck managed to shoot
+one, which, with viscachas and a few
+wild ducks, improved the campaigning
+fare.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Of the feathered inhabitants of
+the district, the most curious, unquestionably,
+is a species of variegated
+woodpecker (<i>Picus rupicola</i>), which,
+notwithstanding its name of <i>carpintero</i>
+(carpenter), has all the habits of
+a mason. Instead of working at trees,
+as do its congeners, it finds nothing
+in that graminaceous region but rock
+and earth upon which to exercise its
+beak. These birds are invariably met
+with in isolated pairs; they skim the
+ground in flying, and settle, after a
+few moments’ flight, upon a sod or
+rock, uttering a long, shrill, cooing
+sound. If one is killed, it is rare that
+its mate does not come and place itself
+beside the dead body, as if imploring
+a similar fate—a request which the
+sportsman is not slow to comply with,
+for the <i>carpintero</i> of the Cordilleras is
+a dainty morsel.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Whilst Dr Weddell herborised,
+adding nearly a hundred species of
+plants to his collection, the engineer
+studied the Lancha with other views,
+and at last resolved to sound it. Mr
+Borniche, who had remained at La
+Paz, obtained authorisation from the
+Government—<i><span lang="es">el derecho de cateo</span></i>, or
+right of search, in the whole of the
+Lancha, during a fixed time, at the
+end of which he might, if he thought
+proper, purchase the ground at its
+rough value, fixed without reference
+to any mineral wealth it might contain.
+All this in accordance with the
+Mining Code. But poor Herrypon
+knew not what he undertook. He
+had no idea of mining difficulties in
+Bolivia. In this single operation he
+took the measure of the country’s
+capabilities. A month and a half
+passed in hammering out, in a forge at
+La Paz, a common and very clumsy
+Artesian screw, such as would have
+been got ready in three days in a
+European city, and at a cost considerably
+less than that of the coal consumed
+in the Bolivian smithy. The
+mere hire of the forge and bellows-blower
+was four dollars (sixteen shillings)
+a-day. When at last the instrument
+was ready and applied, layers
+of solid rock and a thick bed of diffluent
+clay long frustrated all the miners’
+attempts. Finally, a deep well was
+sunk, but no gold was found, nor signs
+of any, and the miners quitted the
+place, where nothing less than the
+certainty of ultimately reaching a rich
+vein would have justified them in continuing
+their costly and laborious researches.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>A second illness, by which he was
+attacked before he had fully recovered
+from the debilitating effects of the
+first, determined Dr Weddell to seek
+change of air. Whilst his engineering
+ally was still sinking wells and unprofitably
+probing the Lancha, he set out
+with Mr Borniche for Tipuani. Passing
+the magnificent Mount Illampŭ,
+which is upwards of seven thousand
+English yards high, and the great lake
+of Titicaca, they reached the town of
+Sorata, after an easy journey of thirty
+leagues. A toilsome one of forty remained
+to be accomplished before they
+should reach Tipuani. The roads were
+difficult, their muleteers fell ill, their
+mules were stubborn and restive, and
+<i>mal-pasos</i> (dangerous places to pass)
+were numerous; but after a few small
+accidents and much fatigue they
+reached the village, which derives its
+name from <i>tipa</i>, the name of a tree
+that produces a gum known in that
+country as <i>sangre de drago</i>—dragon’s
+blood. This tree, it is said, was formerly
+very abundant in the valley of
+Tipuani. In the <i>aymara</i>, or Indian
+tongue, the particle <i>ni</i>, added to a
+word, implies possession. The village
+consists of fifty or sixty houses, built
+chiefly of palm trunks, placed side by
+side, thatched with leaves of the same
+tree, and partitioned, when partitions
+there are, with bamboos. “I found
+the place somewhat increased in size
+since my visit in 1847, but no way
+improved with respect to healthiness
+and cleanliness. At its entrance,
+stagnant water, covered with a green
+scum, filled old excavations, or <i>diggings</i>,
+and told that there, as in California,
+gold and fever are inseparable.
+It sufficed, moreover, to behold the
+pallid countenances of the inhabitants,
+to judge of the atmosphere we
+breathed.” This was hardly the place
+for an invalid to recruit his health
+and strength in, and, after visiting the
+mines, Dr Weddell set out for the
+Mission of Guanay, boating it down
+the rapid and rocky Tipuani—a rather
+dangerous mode of travelling.
+The priest of the Mission was an <i>aymara</i>
+Indian, a native of La Paz; his
+parishioners were <i>Lecos</i> Indians, considerable
+savages—although they had
+abjured paint, or only secretly used it—and
+very skilful with gun and bow,
+as well as in the capture of several
+large species of fish found in the river
+Mapiri, hard by which they dwelt.
+Some of these fish attain the weight
+of nearly a hundred pounds. They
+are taken with strong hooks, shot with
+arrows, or <i>hocussed</i> and taken by
+hand. This last practice prevails
+amongst some other South American
+tribes.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The substance employed for this
+purpose by the Guanay Indians is the
+milky juice of one of the largest trees
+of their forests, known by them under
+the name of Soliman. It is the <i>Hura
+crepitans</i> of the botanist. To obtain
+this venomous milk, they cut numerous
+notches in the bark of the tree,
+and the sap which exudes runs down
+and soaks the earth at its foot. This
+earth, enclosed in a large sack, is
+thrown into the river, and as soon as
+the water becomes impregnated with
+it, the fish within the circle of its influence
+float inanimate upon the surface,
+and are collected without trouble.
+A creek or small branch of the river
+is usually selected for this operation.
+In other parts of Bolivia, and especially
+in the province of Yungas, they
+use, to poison the water, the green
+stalk of a small liana called <i>Pepko</i> or
+<i>Sacha</i>, of which they crush, upon a
+stone, a fathom’s length or two, in
+that part of the river they wish to infect.
+Its effect is said to be as speedy
+as that of the Soliman sap, and I was
+assured that the fish thus taken could
+be eaten with impunity. It is not to
+be thence inferred that the sap, like
+the poison used for their arrows by the
+Indians of Guiana and on the Amazon,
+may be taken by man without injury;
+it is to the extreme smallness of
+the dose swallowed with the fish that
+its apparent harmlessness is to be attributed.
+The sap of the Soliman has,
+in fact, such caustic qualities, that its
+mere emanations cause violent irritation
+of the organs which receive them.
+We saw at the Mission a person who
+had lost his sight in consequence of a
+few drops of this juice having accidentally
+spirted into his eyes; and Messrs
+Boussingault and Rivero related that,
+having subjected the sap of the Soliman
+to evaporation, with a view to
+analyse it, the person who superintended
+the operation had his face
+swollen and his eyes and ears ulcerated,
+and was cured only after several
+days’ medical treatment.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Bolivia is evidently a fine field for
+the botanist. Dr Weddell mentions
+a number of vegetables unknown, or
+little known, in Europe, but interesting
+and valuable by reason of their
+medical properties or economical uses.
+When in the province of Yungas, he
+briefly refers to two or three of the
+principal of these: “The <i>Matico</i>, a
+shrub of the pepper tribe, whose leaves,
+which resemble those of sage, have remarkable
+vulnerary properties; the
+<i>Vejuco</i>, a curious species of <i>Aristolochia</i>,
+whose crushed leaves are said to
+be an infallible cure for the bites of
+serpents; and a sort of <i>Myrica</i>, or
+wax-tree, whose berries, soaked in
+boiling water, yield in abundance a
+green wax, used to make candles.”
+Concerning the <i>Quinquina</i>, or Peruvian bark
+tree, and the <i>Coca</i> shrub,
+whose leaves the Indians chew, the
+doctor gives many interesting particulars.
+When descending the river
+Coroico in a <i>balsa</i> or Indian canoe, he
+frequently encountered his old acquaintances
+the <i>cascarilleros</i>, or bark-gatherers,
+who pursue their wild and
+solitary calling in the interior of the
+forests, dwelling under sheds of palm-leaves,
+and exposed to many dangers
+and hardships. Whilst seeking, one
+evening, a good place to bivouac, the
+doctor, and the <i>padre</i> from the Guanay
+Mission, who was then his fellow-traveller,
+came upon a <i>cascarillero’s</i>
+hut, in front of which they beheld a
+horrible spectacle. A man lay upon
+the ground in the agonies of death.
+He was almost naked; and, whilst yet
+alive, he was preyed upon by thousands
+of insects, whose stings and bites
+doubtless accelerated his end. “His
+face, especially, was so much swollen
+that its features could not be distinguished;
+and his limbs, the only portion
+of this corpse which still moved,
+were in an equally hideous state.
+Under the roof of leaves was the remainder
+of the poor wretch’s clothes,
+consisting of a straw hat and a ragged
+blanket; beside them lay a flint and
+steel, and an old knife. A small
+earthen pot contained the remains of
+his last meal—a little maize, and two
+or three frozen potatoes. For a few
+seconds the missionary contemplated
+this piteous object, then made a step
+towards the unfortunate man, and was
+about, I thought, to offer him some
+assistance, at least of a spiritual nature,
+but his courage failed him; and,
+suddenly turning away, he walked
+hastily to his <i>balsa</i>, and had himself
+rowed to a place some hundred yards
+farther, upon the opposite bank of the
+river.” In fact, the tortured bark-gatherer
+was beyond human aid, and
+on the brink of death. Dr Weddell
+covered him with his blanket, and returned
+to the boats.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>We have dipped but into a few
+chapters of this compendious volume
+of nearly six hundred pages. A large
+portion of its contents are more interesting
+to naturalists and miners than
+to the general reader. Dr Weddell’s
+investigations are of a comprehensive
+nature, including the animal, vegetable,
+and mineral kingdoms, extending
+to an analysis of the various Indian
+languages of the country, and even
+to Bolivian music, of which he furnishes
+specimens. A map, some useful
+illustrations, an excellent table of
+contents, and headings to the chapters,
+give the work a completeness not so
+common in French as in English publications
+of this nature. Having
+adopted it for examination as a book
+of travel, and not of scientific and
+mining research, we recommend the numerous
+chapters we have not touched
+upon to those classes of readers to
+which they especially address themselves,
+and turn to Mr Pavie’s sketches
+of countries adjacent to those in which
+Dr Weddell has more recently wandered.
+It does not appear, from the
+former gentleman’s book, that his
+rambles had any more serious motive
+than love of locomotion, and a curiosity
+to view strange lands. The form
+he has adopted, and the modest pretensions
+announced in his preface, relieving
+him of most of the responsibility
+to which writers of travel usually
+hold themselves subject, he gives
+no account of himself, is very desultory,
+and does not take the trouble to
+supply dates. We collect, however,
+from his volume and preface, that
+some years have elapsed since his
+travels were performed, and that he
+was then a young man, eager for adventure,
+and enthusiastic for local peculiarities
+and national characteristics.
+It is with a view to variety, he tells
+us, that he has jumbled the sections
+of his book, and irregularly distributed
+those of them which have a natural
+order and sequence of their own. It
+was about twenty years ago—as we
+gather from the internal evidence of
+the chapters—that Mr Pavie left
+Buenos Ayres for Valparaiso, by the
+route across the Pampas. The moment
+was not particularly well chosen
+for such a journey. Anarchy was at
+its height in South America, and especially
+in the country of the Argentine
+republic. There was strife between
+federalists and unitarians. The
+Indians, resuming the offensive, had
+committed many depredations, and
+defeated the volunteers of the province
+of Cordova. The roads were far from
+safe; impediments and stoppages were
+numerous, and two months were consumed
+by the journey from La Plata
+to the Cordillera, a distance of three
+hundred leagues. When at only four
+days’ march from the Andes, snow
+fell, and a halt was called in the poor
+little town of Mendoza. The mountains
+were white from foot to summit;
+there was no possibility of crossing
+them; patience must be cultivated,
+and spring waited for. In these
+dull winter-quarters Mr Pavie had
+abundant leisure to note down the
+incidents of his two months’ journey,
+to gather characteristic traits of
+the people, and striking anecdotes of
+the war. We shall take him up, however,
+at an earlier period of his expedition,
+when he was but a week out
+from Buenos Ayres. He had traversed
+the province of the same name and
+that of Santa Fé, and hoped to reach
+the town of Cordova upon the following
+night. A forest succeeded to bare
+and monotonous plains. The horses
+trotted briskly over a light sandy soil,
+refreshed by numerous streams; the
+country was smiling, the vegetation
+rich. It still wanted two hours of
+sunset, and another league would
+bring the travellers to the post-house
+of the <i>esquina</i>—the Corner—situated
+at the junction of the two high-roads
+which connect the Pacific and the Atlantic—one
+leading northwards, to
+Bolivia and Peru, the other south-west,
+to Chili, passing through St Luis
+and Mendoza. Mr Pavie would have
+availed himself of the remaining daylight
+to push on a stage farther, but a
+young Cordovan, who accompanied
+him, and who was a lively and pleasant
+fellow, urged him to pass the
+night at the <i>esquina</i>. It was kept by
+a widow, he said, a certain Doña Ventura,
+whose eggs with tomata sauce
+were quite beyond praise, and whose
+daughter Pepa sang like a nightingale.
+It was a long road from that to Santiago
+de Chili—three hundred leagues,
+besides the Andes to cross, and the
+season was advanced, but Mr Pavie
+was unwilling to disoblige his friend.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“An old <i>gaucho</i>, the widow’s managing
+man, came out to receive us.
+Whilst the horses were unharnessed,
+a lad of twelve or thirteen, beautiful
+as one of Murillo’s shepherds—who
+was hurling stones at the wild pigeons
+perched upon the fig-trees—threw
+his sling across his shoulder, and ran
+into the house, crying out—‘Mother!
+mother! here is Don Mateo with
+some foreign señores.’ Don Mateo,
+our Cordovan friend, went to see
+after dinner, and to inform the post-mistress
+that we should not need
+horses before the next morning.
+The travellers’ room was tolerably
+clean, and very large. Its sole furniture
+consisted of a small lamp burning
+before an image of the Virgin,
+and of a guitar suspended from a nail.
+When dinner was ready, Doña Ventura
+brought in immense arm-chairs,
+covered with leather and gilt nails,
+and evidently made at Granada in
+the time of the Catholic kings. Some
+very brisk peasant girls (<i>cholas</i>), who
+said nothing, but looked a great deal,
+laid the table, and placed upon it the
+promised eggs and tomatas, and large
+salad-bowls containing lumps of roast
+meat swimming in gravy. Pimento
+had not been spared. The soup was
+brought to us, according to the custom
+of the country, at the end of the
+repast. The post-mistress, seated
+upon the estrade or platform that
+extended completely round the room,
+triumphed in our famous appetites,
+and proudly drew herself up whenever
+one of us paid her a more or less
+exaggerated compliment on the excellence
+of her dinner. Pepa, a handsome
+girl, with a remarkably white
+skin and fresh complexion, stood near
+her, smoking a cigarrito, and gazing
+about with her great blue eyes, which
+were shaded by long dark lashes.
+Juancito, the boy with the sling,
+rambled round the table, and unceremoniously
+tasted the Bordeaux wine
+in our glasses. Dinner cleared away,
+Mateo took down the guitar and presented
+it to Pepa: ‘Señorita,’ he said,
+‘these gentlemen would be enchanted
+to hear you sing; favour them with
+a ballad, and they will consider you
+the most amiable girl—<i>la mas preciosa
+niña</i>—in the entire province.’
+We were about to add our entreaties
+to those of Mateo, but the young girl
+had already tuned the instrument;
+and, without coughing, complaining
+of a cold, or waiting to be asked
+again, she sang half-a-dozen very
+long songs. At the end of every
+verse Mateo applauded. Pepa certainly
+had a charming voice, which
+she did not badly manage. Gradually
+her countenance grew animated.
+From time to time she stopped
+and exclaimed—‘Ay, Jesus! I am
+dead!’ and then went on again.
+Doña Ventura at last began to accompany
+her daughter’s song. At
+every chorus we slapped the table
+with the palms of our hands; and
+Mateo, imitating castanets with his
+fingers, danced like a madman in the
+middle of the hall.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>This thoroughly Spanish-American
+scene was interrupted by the arrival
+of fifteen waggons, each drawn by six
+oxen, and laden with dried fruits,
+cotton, and bales of horse-hair. They
+drew up in line upon the open space
+in whose centre stood the post-house.
+The oxen, unharnessed, joined the
+reserve drove which followed the convoy,
+in charge of a dozen horsemen;
+and from the innermost recesses of
+the vehicles there emerged bullock-drivers,
+women, children, passengers
+of all ages and of motley aspect, who
+had joined the caravan in order to
+get over three hundred leagues at
+small expense. Some ran to cut
+wood, others to fetch water. Fires
+were lighted, and enormous slices of
+meat set to roast before them upon
+spits stuck in the ground. Every
+convoy of this kind is under the orders
+of a <i>capataz</i> or chief. This one
+was commanded by a certain Gil
+Perez, whose arrival seemed of strong
+interest to Doña Ventura and her
+daughter. Pepa hastened to adorn
+herself with a silk shawl, the gaudy
+product of a Lyons loom, and with a
+fashionable Buenos Ayres comb, a
+foot high. His camp established, Gil
+Perez entered the house with a beaming
+countenance. He had brought
+presents for everybody;—a scarf and
+satin shoes for Pepa, a Peruvian gold
+chain for her mother, a dirk for Juancito.
+In Spanish countries acquaintance
+is soon made. His gifts distributed,
+Perez sat down and chatted
+with Don Mateo and the other travellers;
+whilst the bullock-drivers,
+the <i>cholas</i>, and the postilions of the
+<i>esquina</i>, were dancing outside. By
+and by, Perez, who had been out to
+look after his people, announced the
+approach of more travellers, indicated
+by a cloud of dust in the south-east.
+Juancito went out to reconnoitre, and
+reported that the muleteers from San
+Juan were close at hand. Pepa and
+her mother exchanged a rapid glance.
+The muleteers halted at some distance
+from the posting-house, and
+unloaded their beasts, each of which
+carried two barrels of brandy. Their
+chief dismounted and walked towards
+the house, his saddle-bags over his
+shoulder. Walking rapidly and on
+tiptoe, on account of the long steel
+spurs which he dragged at his heels,
+he knocked at Doña Ventura’s door.
+Juancito answered.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Gil Perez looked at the muleteer
+pretty much as an admiral might look
+at the humble master of a merchantman.
+The muleteer, disconcerted at
+finding the room full of strange faces,
+to say nothing of that of the <i>capataz</i>,
+which seemed greatly to incommode
+him, paused near the door for some
+seconds.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Come in, Fernando,’ said Doña
+Ventura; ‘you are surprised to see
+my Pepita in full dress, eh, my lad?
+We have had an arrival of gentlemen.
+Will you sup? I have some <i>puchero</i>
+at hand.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Thanks, señora,’ replied Fernando;
+‘I want nothing. You know
+that I never pass this way without
+calling to see Pepita. I have brought
+you a little barrel of the best brandy
+that has been tasted at San Juan for
+many a year.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Is the brandy for Pepa?’ said
+Gil Perez.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Don Gil,’ replied the muleteer,
+‘every one gives what he has, and
+according to his means.’ Then, turning
+to the young girl—‘Pepita,’ he
+said, ‘when you were a child you
+liked the tarts made in our mountains;
+I have brought you some, and
+of the best peaches.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Whilst speaking, he drew from
+his saddle-bags the little barrel of
+brandy, and a dozen square cakes
+filled with a thick marmalade, which
+seemed particularly grateful to the
+gums of Juancito. Then he sat himself
+down near Pepa, and looked
+proudly at the captain of the waggons.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘How many beasts have you?’
+said the latter.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Fifteen, besides saddle-horses.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Just as many as I have carts.
+Not so bad, really. You carry thirty
+casks—half a load for one of my waggons.
+Pshaw! what can you earn?
+A poor trade is yours, my lad, and
+you will follow it long before you
+grow rich.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘When I am tired of it,’ replied
+Fernando, ‘I will try another.’ The
+muleteer spoke these words in a singular
+tone.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Fernando is stout-hearted,’ said
+Doña Ventura, ‘and he will do well
+yet; and he will find, somewhere in
+his own province, a pretty girl with
+a good dowry. Eh, Fernando?’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Fernando made no reply, but
+pulled down his little pointed hat
+over his forehead;—his eyes glittered
+like those of a cat. Seizing the guitar,
+which lay upon the bench beside
+Pepa, he strummed it with an absent
+air, like one absorbed by his thoughts.
+Juancito, who stood before him, waiting
+doubtless for the end of the prelude,
+and for the commencement of
+some lively mountain ditty, pushed
+his arm, and said—‘Fernando, have
+you seen the fine presents Gil Perez
+has brought us?’ Without raising
+his eyes, the muleteer sang, in a low
+voice, this verse of an old ballad:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>‘<span lang="es">No estès tan contenta, Juana,</span></div>
+ <div class='line'><span lang="es">En ver me penar por ti;</span></div>
+ <div class='line'><span lang="es">Que lo que hoy fuere de mi,</span></div>
+ <div class='line'><span lang="es">Podrá ser de ti mañana,</span>’<a id='r13'></a><a href='#f13' class='c007'><sup>[13]</sup></a></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Then suddenly throwing down the
+guitar, he jumped upon the estrade,
+extinguished the lamp that burned
+before the Madonna, and clapped his
+hand to his knife. Pepa took refuge
+close to her mother. At the cry she
+uttered, Gil Perez stood upon his
+guard; but Fernando passed close by
+him without looking at him, and
+reached the door. ‘Ah, Pepita!’
+muttered he as he went out, ‘you
+will drive me to harm!’ And he disappeared.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>This stormy episode broke up the
+party. Agitated and alarmed, Doña
+Ventura and her daughter betook
+themselves to their bedchambers.
+The travellers wrapped themselves in
+their blankets—Mr Pavie establishing
+himself, according to his custom,
+in their <i>coche-galera</i>, or travelling-carriage,
+where he slept but little,
+owing to the songs and dancing of
+the waggon-drivers, and the screaming
+of innumerable parrots. The
+night passed without incident, and
+at daybreak he was roused by Mateo.
+The horses were ready; the San Juan
+muleteers were already on their road;
+Gil Perez, foot in stirrup, was directing
+the departure of his convoy.
+That evening the travellers reached
+Cordova.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Several months had elapsed since
+the scene at the <i>esquina</i>, and Mr
+Pavie, after rambling through Chili
+and Pern, returned to Santiago, the
+capital of the former country. Looking
+on, one night, at a dance in a
+public garden, he fell in with his old
+acquaintance, Don Mateo, somewhat
+threadbare, but still a passionate
+lover of song and dance. One of the
+political changes so common in South
+America had driven him across the
+Andes. He was an exile, proscribed
+in his own country. His party had
+fallen, his patrimony had been swallowed
+up by fines, and he deemed
+himself fortunate to have saved his
+neck.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Do you remember,” said Mateo,
+as he leaned beside his French friend
+upon the parapet bordering the Tajamar,
+and gazed at the summits of the
+Cordillera, which still reflected a last
+gleam of sun—“do you recollect one
+evening at the <i>esquina</i>? Well, of all
+the persons then assembled under
+Doña Ventura’s hospitable roof, and
+including her and her daughter, how
+many, do you suppose, still live?
+Two, you and I! The first scene of
+the drama passed before your eyes.
+I will narrate those that ensued. You
+have not forgotten our merry supper
+at the posting-house, Gil Perez and
+his waggons, and Fernando, the little
+muleteer with the long spurs?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Mr Pavie perfectly remembered all
+that had passed at the <i>esquina</i>. Mateo
+took up the tale from the moment of
+their departure. Although Fernando
+and Gil Perez started nearly at the
+same moment, they met no more until
+they reached Buenos Ayres. The
+<i>aria</i> (string of mules) trotted briskly
+over the plain, whilst the heavy waggons
+lingered in the ruts. Four days
+had elapsed since Fernando’s arrival,
+when Perez reached his usual halting-ground
+near the hill of the Retiro,
+and, after turning out his cattle to
+graze, rode into the city. As soon as
+he was gone, the bullock-drivers, a vagabond
+and insubordinate race, gathered
+round the camp-fires to discuss
+the news that had reached them of
+insurrections in the inland provinces.
+Most of these wild <i>gauchos</i> felt sorely
+tempted to exchange goad for lance,
+and join the armed bands then scouring
+the country. To gallop in boundless
+plains, to pillage isolated farms,
+and attack hamlets—such was the
+fascinating perspective that offered
+itself to their imagination. Whilst
+they were debating the probable
+course of events in the <i>tierra adentro</i>,
+Fernando came by. He was on foot;
+his long spurs were still at his heels.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Ha!’ cried the bullock-drivers,
+‘here is the little muleteer, the
+brandy-merchant from San Juan!
+Give us a barrel, Fernando, and we
+will drink your health.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Give me something to eat,’ replied
+the muleteer, ‘I am fasting since
+yesterday.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“And cutting a slice off a great
+piece of beef that roasted at the fire,
+he took one end of it in his fingers,
+put the other into his mouth, and
+swallowed it at a single gulp, as a
+lazzarone swallows an ell of macaroni.
+Then he wiped his knife on his
+cowskin boot and lay down under a
+cart to sleep. When Gil Perez returned
+and walked round his camp,
+he saw the muleteer, who was snoring
+on the grass.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Hallo, Fernando!’ he cried,
+‘what do you there, my man?’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Resting myself,’ replied Fernando,
+rubbing his eyes, ‘I have
+passed four days and nights playing
+at cards.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Have you won?’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Lost everything—my load of
+brandy, my mules, all I had in the
+world. Lend me twenty dollars, Gil
+Perez?’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘To gamble them?’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Perhaps. See, I was a steady
+man; I never played, and you are cause
+that I am perhaps about to become a
+robber. I have known Pepa from
+her childhood; her mother received
+me well, saw that I loved her daughter,
+and encouraged me to work and
+increase my little trade. Every trip
+I made I never missed calling at the
+<i>esquina</i>, and every trip I found Pepa
+prettier than before. She received
+me joyfully, and I was happy. But
+since two years that you have gone
+that road, all is changed. With your
+gold chains and silk shawls you have
+turned their heads. Lend me twenty
+dollars, that I may make them presents
+and regain their favour. You
+are rich, Gil Perez—you will find a
+wife in the towns, at Salta, Cordova,
+where you please; I am poor, but I
+love Pepita, the only girl who would
+not refuse me, ruined though I be.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Surprised at the muleteer’s frank explanation
+and request, Gil Perez offered
+him the twenty dollars, but laughed
+at the idea of abandoning his pretensions
+to Pepita. Fernando refused
+the money, and departed with a muttered
+threat. That night he took to
+the plain, mounted on a fine horse and
+bearing gold in his girdle—the spoils
+of a traveller he had waylaid and murdered.
+The die was cast; the honest
+muleteer had become a <i>gaucho malo</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>A few days after this, Fernando
+rode up to the <i>esquina</i>. Little Juancito
+ran to kiss him. Torribio, the
+steward, surprised to see him come
+alone, riding a valuable horse and
+without his usual retinue of mules and
+muleteers, hurried out to meet him.
+“<i>Amigo!</i>” he cried, “whence come
+you, thus finely equipped? It seems
+the San Juan brandy fetches a good
+price in the market!” Without replying,
+Fernando abruptly opened the
+door and addressed the two women,
+astonished at his sudden appearance.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The <i>gauchada</i> is about to take
+the field,” he said, “and I greatly fear
+that one of its earliest visits will be
+for you. I have friends in its ranks;
+give me your daughter, Doña Ventura,
+and I answer for her safety and yours.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Since when are you allied with
+the brigands, Fernando?’ indignantly
+demanded Doña Ventura.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Pepita,’ said the muleteer, evading
+reply, ‘will you have me?—You
+tremble—you turn away your head!—Are
+you afraid of me, Pepita? Do
+you take me for a bandit?’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“There was something terrible in
+the sound of Fernando’s voice, which
+even the passionate love he still felt
+for Pepa was insufficient to soften.
+The young girl in vain endeavoured
+to speak.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Fernando,’ cried Doña Ventura,
+‘when last you were here, you left my
+house like a madman, your hand on
+the haft of your knife; you enter it
+to-day like a bandit, with threats upon
+your lips. Begone, and return no
+more; I need not your protection.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Ha! you mean to say that Gil
+Perez will protect you. Reckon upon
+that! There are times when fine
+shawls and gold chains are not worth
+sabre and carbine. After all, I too
+have gold! See here. Once more,
+Pepita, will you follow me? I am no
+longer a muleteer; it was too base a
+trade, was it not? Shall I carry you
+off on my horse’s crupper into the
+sierra of Cordova and to Chili?’”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Pepa, frightened at the <i>gaucho’s</i>
+fierce voice and vehement manner,
+burst into tears and fainted in her
+mother’s arms. Fernando hastily left
+the house, his love—the last good sentiment
+his heart retained—exchanged
+for bitter hate.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>It was not long after this incident,
+early upon a winter’s morning, that
+Gil Perez, riding ahead of his waggons,
+which had camped on the banks
+of the Rio Salado, discerned at the
+horizon a dozen black specks that rapidly
+approached him. Soon he made
+them out to be horsemen, armed some
+with lances, others with rifles. Deeming
+them suspicious, he rode back and
+formed his caravan in order of battle.
+The waggons were arranged in a circle,
+the bullocks inwards; arms were distributed
+to the men, and from between
+the waggons the muzzles of pistols
+and blunderbusses menaced those who
+should assail the fortress. These arrangements
+were scarcely made when
+the party of horsemen slackened speed,
+and one of them rode forward alone.
+At twenty paces from the waggons he
+drew rein and removed the handkerchief,
+which partly concealed his face.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Don Gil,’ cried the horseman,
+‘confess that the little muleteer Fernando
+has given you a famous fright.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘It is you,’ replied Perez, ‘what
+do you here? what do you want of
+us?’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘I have changed my trade, <i>amigo</i>;
+did I not once tell you that when I
+should be tired of mule-driving, I had
+another trade in view? I am now an
+ostrich hunter. A fine flock escaped
+from us this morning. Have you not
+met it?’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Another poor trade that you have
+taken to,’ replied Perez. ‘If that be
+all you have to say to me, there was no
+need to charge down upon us with
+your comrades like a band of robbers.
+When you first came in sight there
+were some ostriches about a mile in
+front of me; if those are what you
+seek, continue your hunt and leave
+us to continue our journey.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“During this parley, the bullock-drivers,
+believing danger past, ceased
+to stand upon the defensive; Fernando’s
+comrades slowly approached and
+carelessly mingled with them, rolling
+their cigarritos and entering into conversation.
+Although suspecting no
+treachery, Perez hesitated to resume
+his march so long as Fernando and
+his band were there. Thus the halt
+was prolonged, and the ostriches, no
+longer frightened by the creaking of
+wheels, reappeared upon a rising
+ground behind which they had taken
+refuge.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Don Gil,’ exclaimed Fernando,
+‘I will wager that my horse, which
+has already done ten leagues to-day,
+will overtake one of those birds sooner
+than yours, fresh though he be.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘I have no time to try,’ replied
+Perez, annoyed at the delay; ‘the
+place is not safe, and I am in haste to
+see the houses of Cordova.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Pshaw! a five minutes’ ride,’
+said the muleteer; ‘come, one gallop,
+and I will rid you of my company,
+and of that of my friends, with which
+you do not seem over and above
+pleased.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘So be it then,’ answered Perez,
+‘and then I must be off;’ and he
+set spurs to his horse. Fernando
+rode so close to him that their knees
+touched. The <i>gauchos</i> and drivers
+shouted to excite the two horses,
+which seemed to fly over the plain;
+and the ostriches, finding themselves
+pursued, fled their fastest, stretching
+out their necks, beating the air
+with their short wings, and furrowing
+the ocean of tall herbage by rapid
+zigzags right and left. The two
+horsemen gained upon them. The
+furious race had lasted at least ten
+minutes, when Fernando fell into the
+rear. Gil Perez, looking back to calculate
+the distance that separated
+them, saw him brandishing a set of
+balls as big as his fist.<a id='r14'></a><a href='#f14' class='c007'><sup>[14]</sup></a> ‘<i>Amigo</i>,’
+cried he, without stopping, ‘those
+balls are big enough to catch a wild
+horse.’ Whilst he sought, in his
+girdle, the small leaden balls he proposed
+throwing round the ostrich’s
+neck, his horse fell, his fore-legs entangled
+in the ropes that had just
+quitted the muleteer’s hands. The
+violence of the fall was in proportion
+to the rapidity of the ride. On beholding
+his rival roll in the dust,
+Fernando uttered a triumphant shout.
+Perez, who had fallen upon his left
+side, sought to extricate his sabre in
+order to cut the terrible cord which
+shackled his horse’s legs. The poor
+brute, panting and covered with foam,
+struggled violently for release. Before
+Gil Perez could draw his weapon,
+the muleteer was on foot and held him
+by the throat.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘You are a traitor and a coward!’
+cried the unfortunate Perez, giddy
+from his fall, and trying to shake his
+enemy off. ‘You have led me into
+a snare to murder me!’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘That is not all,’ coolly replied the
+muleteer. ‘Look yonder; you see
+that smoke, it proceeds from your
+waggons. The plain is on fire. ’Tis
+you whom I was hunting, <i>carretero</i>
+(waggoner); but for you I should
+still be a muleteer. I have become
+a brigand. I have seen Pepa; she
+rejects me. The traitor, I say, is
+you, who have ruined all my hopes.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Perez was active and vigorous: on
+equal terms his enemy would not have
+dared contend with him; but surprise
+and terror paralysed his strength.
+After deliberately stabbing him, Fernando
+passed a rope round his neck,
+and, as he still breathed, dragged him
+to a neighbouring stream and threw
+him into the water.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Gil Perez dead, most of his men,
+who had arms and were more than a
+match for the banditti, joined the latter,
+plundered the waggons, killed the
+oxen, and departed with their new
+comrades, those who had no horses
+riding double. Fernando promised
+to take them to a place where they
+could mount themselves well. He
+kept his word. One night, old Torribio,
+who, ever since Fernando’s
+visit and the commencement of the
+civil war, had kept vigilant watch,
+and frequently patrolled the neighbourhood
+of the <i>esquina</i>, thought he
+heard voices in the forest. He bridled
+up the horses, which he always had
+ready-saddled in the stable, and entreated
+his mistress and her daughter
+to escape by the Cordova road. The
+two women got upon the same horse;
+Torribio, armed with sabre and carbine,
+mounted another, to escort them;
+Juancito, not understanding the danger,
+leaped, light and laughing, into
+his saddle, whip in hand, and his sling
+over his shoulder. The little party
+set out. They would have escaped
+an enemy to whom the locality was
+not familiar. But Fernando had
+placed spies round the posting-house,
+and lay in ambush upon the road to
+Cordova. A bullet from Torribio’s
+carbine grazed the brigand’s cheek;
+the next moment the faithful old servant
+lay in the road, his skull cleft
+by a sabre-cut. Juancito escaped
+into the forest. His mother and
+sister did the same, but were captured
+and taken back to the posting-house,
+which was pillaged and afterwards
+burnt. The outlaws then departed.
+Doña Ventura had supplied them
+plentifully with brandy, hoping to
+escape during their intoxication, but
+Fernando drank nothing. When the
+moment came for departure, he lifted
+Pepa upon his horse, repulsed with
+his foot her despairing mother—who
+in vain struggled and clung to her
+child—and rode off. Pepita, more
+dead than alive, uttered lamentable
+cries. The muleteer heeded them
+not, but sang the lines he had sung
+upon the memorable night when he
+found Gil Perez at the posting-house,
+and left it with a sombre prediction
+that Pepa would drive him to evil.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<span lang="es">No estès tan contenta, Juana,</span></div>
+ <div class='line'><span lang="es">En ver me penar por ti;</span></div>
+ <div class='line'><span lang="es">Que lo que hoy fuere de mi,</span></div>
+ <div class='line'><span lang="es">Podrá ser de ti mañana.</span>”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Doña Ventura’s fate is not upon
+record; she is believed to have perished
+of hunger, misery, and cold.
+Juancito lost his way in the pampas.
+Although bred in the desert, the poor
+boy had not sufficient experience to
+guide himself by sun and stars. It
+was never known how long he held
+out. Not many days after his flight,
+there was found, upon the frontier of
+the Indian country, a child’s corpse,
+which was supposed to be his. A
+whip hung from the wrist, and a sling
+was over the shoulder. The birds of
+prey had made a skeleton of the body.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The fate of poor Pepita was far
+worse even than that of her mother
+and brother. Forced to follow the
+fortunes of the <i>gaucho malo</i> and his
+band, she was compelled to enliven
+their bivouacs by song and dance.
+At first, even the rude desperados
+amongst whom she had fallen, were
+inclined to pity her sufferings, but
+soon they imitated the contempt with
+which Fernando treated her. Elegantly
+dressed, she accompanied them
+everywhere; she was their ballet-dancer
+and opera-singer. Her duty
+was to amuse those who rarely addressed
+but to insult her. She was
+known in the country as the wife of
+the <i>gaucho malo</i>. Sometimes, in the
+night, when the robbers, overcome by
+fatigue, slept to the last man, she
+might have escaped; but whither
+could she fly? Their halts were
+generally in places remote from all
+habitations; and even had she reached
+a farm or village, what sort of welcome
+would there have been for the
+supposed wife of the <i>gaucho malo</i> and
+accomplice of his misdeeds?</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“After several months,” Mateo continued,
+“passed in rambling about
+the plains, Fernando, emboldened by
+impunity and success, approached the
+villages. Other bands, better organised
+and more numerous than his own,
+spread terror through the province of
+Cordova. He profited by the general
+confusion to take share in the fight,
+like a privateer who spreads his sails
+in the wake of friendly frigates. The
+militia, called out to oppose the insurgents
+who threatened the town of
+Cordova, were beaten. The town
+remained in the power of the horsemen
+of the plain, and the militia
+could not return to their homes, of
+which the enemy had taken possession.
+They were forced to fly, exchanging
+a few parting shots with
+roving corps that sought to impede
+their escape. I was of the number
+of the fugitives. The company to
+which I belonged daily diminished.
+Every man secretly betook himself to
+the place where he hoped an asylum.
+Only twenty of us remained together,
+resolved to make for the western provinces,
+and to cross the Andes into
+Chili: we had two hundred leagues
+to get over before putting the frontier
+between us and the enemy.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“One evening, as we were riding
+through the sierra of Cordova, we
+noticed a bivouac amongst the rocks.
+‘Shall we reconnoitre that camp?’ I
+asked of the officer who commanded
+us. ‘They are <i>gauchos</i>,’ he replied;
+‘it is almost dark, we can pass them
+unperceived: the robbers are not fond
+of fighting when there is no chance
+of booty;’ and we silently continued
+our march. By the light of the bivouac
+fires, we made out a dozen
+horsemen seated on the ground upon
+their saddles. Their lances were piled
+in a sheaf in the middle of the camp;
+before them a woman was dancing,
+her figure and movements clearly defined
+against the bright fire-light.
+They did not hear us; we marched
+at a walk, pistol in bridle, hand and
+carbine on thigh. We had already
+passed the bivouac unperceived, and
+were closing up our files preparatory to
+starting off at a gallop—it was no use
+fighting, the game was already lost—when
+a young man in the rearguard
+imprudently fired at the group. In
+an instant, the <i>gauchos</i> were armed
+and on horseback. Then they paused
+for a moment to see whence the danger
+came. We set up a loud shout,
+which the echoes repeated. The <i>gauchos</i>
+were terrified. Whilst they hesitated
+to assume the offensive, we
+turned their camp. They fired half-a-dozen
+carbines at us, but hit nobody.
+Those who had no firearms went about
+and ran, and their example was quickly
+followed by the rest of the band.
+Their flight was accelerated by the
+shots we sent after them. A few fell,
+but we did not stop to count the dead.
+This useless victory might betray our
+flight; our best plan was now to hasten
+on through the ravines, and avoid for
+the future all similar encounters.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“During the skirmish, the woman
+who had been dancing before the fire
+had disappeared. We thought no
+more of her. Suddenly, as we formed
+up, a shadow passed before the head of
+the column. ‘Who goes there?’ cried
+the officer, and we quickly reloaded.
+‘Who goes there?’ he repeated, probing
+with his sabre the bushes that bordered
+the path. We listened, and presently
+we heard a plaintive moan, followed
+by sobs. ‘It is a wounded man,’
+said the officer: ‘so much the worse for
+him, the devil a doctor have we here!’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Señores caballeros,’ cried the
+mysterious being that was thus hid
+in the darkness, ‘have pity upon me—save
+me! He is dead! I am free!
+Ah! mother, mother!’...</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The officer had dismounted; a
+young girl threw her arms round his
+neck, repeating the words: ‘Save me—he
+is dead!’ We had all halted.
+‘It is the dancing-girl,’ said the men;
+‘she detains us here to give time to
+her friends to return. It is the wife
+of the <i>gaucho malo</i>.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘I am Pepa Flores,’ she vehemently
+replied, ‘the daughter of Doña
+Ventura of the <i>esquina</i>! Ah, <i>señores</i>,
+you are honest people, you are!
+Never, never have I been Fernando’s
+wife. Is there none here who knows
+Doña Ventura?’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I at once recognised Pepa’s voice.
+‘She speaks the truth,’ I cried; ‘I will
+answer for her. Come, Pepita, you
+have nothing to fear with us.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Fernando had perished in the
+skirmish. It was perhaps my hand
+that had terminated the career of the
+formidable bandit, and liberated Pepita.
+When she learned that her mother
+was dead—I myself was obliged
+to impart to her the mournful fact,
+which everybody else knew—she shed
+a flood of tears, and begged me to
+take her with me. A proscribed fugitive,
+I had enough to do to take care
+of myself; but how could I resist
+the entreaties of an orphan, who had
+neither friend nor relative in the
+world?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>All the fugitives pitied the poor girl,
+and were kind to her. Her character
+had been changed, as well it might
+be, by her abode with the <i>gaucho malo</i>
+and his band. She was no longer the
+timid, indolent creature whom Mateo
+had known at the posting-house; she
+was quick, alert, courageous, and gave
+little trouble to anybody. At halts
+she made herself useful, and was particularly
+grateful and attentive to
+Mateo, whom she called her saviour
+and liberator. At the town of San
+Luis, he would have left her in
+charge of a respectable family, but
+she wept bitterly, and begged to follow
+his fortunes, disastrous though
+they were. He was then for the first
+time convinced that she had never
+loved either Fernando or Gil Perez.
+The poor girl had attached herself to
+the man who had delivered her from
+dreadful captivity, and shown her disinterested
+kindness. At Mendoza he
+again attempted to prevail on her to
+accept of an asylum under a friendly
+roof, but with no better success than
+at San Luis. The season was far advanced,
+snow rendered the passage of
+the Andes dangerous and very painful.
+Mateo’s companions urged her to wait
+till spring, when she might rejoin them
+at Santiago. She would not hear of
+delay. Her vision was fixed upon
+Chili and its Paradise Valley, Valparaiso.
+Providing themselves with
+sheepskins for protection against the
+cold, and abandoning their arms, now
+a useless encumbrance, the party commenced
+the toilsome ascent. They got
+on pretty well until they reached the
+region of snow. There they were
+obliged to quit their horses, and to
+climb on foot the steep and frozen
+acclivities, bearing on their shoulders
+heavy loads of provisions and fuel,
+their legs wrapped in fur, and handkerchiefs
+tied over their ears. Pepita,
+her head and neck enveloped in a large
+shawl, marched stoutly along, and often
+led the way, bounding like a mountain
+goat. Three days passed thus.
+There were frequent falls upon the
+frozen snow, many narrow escapes
+from death in a torrent, or over a
+precipice. The enormous condor hovered
+over the heads of the weary pilgrims,
+as if hoping a repast at their
+expense. At last they reached the
+foot of the Cumbre, the last steep
+they had to climb before commencing
+their descent into a milder climate,
+and a land of refuge. An icy wind
+blew, a driving snow fell: it was
+doubtful whether the Cumbre could
+be ascended upon the morrow. The
+wanderers halted early, in a hut
+known by the ominous name of <i>Casucha
+de Calavera</i> (the Cabin of the Skull).
+They had still a little wine in their
+ox-horns, which they heated and
+drank, and then wrapped themselves
+in their blankets and lay down to
+sleep. At midnight the wind was
+still high, but the snow had ceased,
+and they determined to proceed. The
+reflection of the sun from the snow
+had so fatigued their eyes, that they
+travelled in the night as often as they
+could safely do so. Their next stage
+was almost perpendicular, but it was
+unbroken by precipices, and they
+thought they might risk progress.
+They would have done more prudently
+to await daylight, but they were eager
+to cross the frontier—to reach the summit
+of the Cumbre, the boundary-line
+between Chili and the Argentine provinces.
+They began to ascend. Poor
+Pepa’s feet were swollen, and she suffered
+in walking, but she was as courageous
+as ever, and made light of
+hardship. Soon the travellers entered
+a dense fog: they no longer saw the
+stars; all around them was white as
+a shroud. The fog became sleet; they
+plodded wearily on, supporting themselves
+with their sticks, sometimes on
+hands and knees.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I was so weary,” said Mateo,
+“that I thought I was in a dream.
+I had no sensation in my body, but
+my head was very painful. A few
+paces off, I heard the frozen snow
+crack gently under Pepa’s feet, and
+I discerned her form accompanying
+me like my shadow. Snow succeeded
+the sleet; it fell in heavy flakes,
+and accumulated so rapidly as to
+threaten burial to laggards. The
+path—or rather the track—was invisible;
+in spite of all my efforts to
+follow it, I felt that I was deviating.
+I called to Pepa, but neither her
+voice nor the voices of my comrades
+replied; we were scattered. I walked
+on at random, I know not for how
+long. When daylight came, I found
+myself in a deep ravine, amidst snowdrifts
+and glaciers. Right and left,
+as far as I could see, was a vista of
+similar valleys. Not a vestige of Pepa
+or of my comrades. My strength
+failed me. With great difficulty I
+crept into a sort of cave amongst the
+rocks. There I fell asleep.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>He would have perished but for
+Pepa, who, on discovering his absence,
+spurred his comrades, by her
+reproaches, to a search for the friend
+whom their own terrible sufferings
+and fatigues would have induced
+them to abandon. There was, indeed,
+little chance of finding and
+saving him, and the men would have
+been fully justified in consulting their
+own safety, and pushing forwards.
+But a woman’s courage shamed them.
+Pepa, <i>esperaba desesperada</i>—despairing,
+she still hoped. She nobly paid
+her debt of gratitude to her deliverer.
+His life was saved, but hers
+was lost. Her hands and face cut
+and bleeding from the cold, her legs
+scarcely able to support her, she
+traced him out. It was still in time;
+friction restored him to consciousness.
+But the sunlight had scarcely
+greeted his eyes, when a cry of distress
+reached his ears. A treacherous
+crust of snow, covering a crevice
+of incalculable depth, gave way beneath
+Pepa’s feet, and she disappeared
+for ever.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The whole of this sketch—of which
+we have given but a bare outline,
+omitting many incidents—is full of
+life, interest, and character, although
+it is to be remarked and regretted
+that Mr Pavie’s style is deficient in
+that terseness and vigour which enhance
+the fascination of narratives of
+adventure. He is too diffuse and
+explicit, dwells too lovingly upon
+details, distrusts his readers’ intelligence,
+and is rather sentimental than
+energetic. “Pepita” is decidedly the
+best of his South American sketches.
+That entitled “The Pinchegras” has
+interest. For several years after the
+battle of Ayacucho had finally overthrown
+Spanish dominion in Chili,
+an armed band, known as the Pinchegras,
+from the name of their chief,
+still upheld the banner of Castile.
+Pablo Pinchegra began his singular
+career with his brothers and a few
+vagabonds for sole followers. They
+formed a mere gang of robbers. Presently
+he was joined by several
+Indian caciques and their warriors,
+and then by a Spaniard named Zinozain
+and five-and-twenty men, who
+carried arms in the names of Ferdinand
+and Spain. Thenceforward Pinchegra
+adopted the same rallying
+cry; at the end of 1825 the “royalist
+army” numbered eight hundred men,
+including Indians, and gained an important
+advantage over the Chilian
+troops at Longabi, where a squadron
+of cavalry was annihilated by the
+long lances of the Indians. The
+Spanish faction in Chili, encouraged
+by this unexpected success, recognised
+Pinchegra as their champion,
+and supplied him with arms and
+munitions of war. Deserters from
+the army of the Republic, adventurers
+of all kinds, flocked to his standard,
+beneath which a thousand men were
+soon ranged. With these and his
+Indian allies to support him, he found
+himself master of a large track of
+country, attacked and pillaged towns,
+carried off cattle and women to his
+camp in the Andes, and made his
+name everywhere dreaded. It was
+found necessary to send large bodies
+of troops against him. These accomplished
+little; and it was not until
+1832 that his band was completely
+defeated and broken up—or rather,
+cut to pieces—he himself having previously
+been betrayed to his enemies,
+and shot. No quarter was given to
+the fugitives, and the victor’s bulletin
+(but Spanish bulletins are proverbially
+mendacious) stated that only
+four men of the army—for it then
+really was a small army—escaped
+the slaughter. The Indian auxiliaries
+had run at the beginning of the
+action. With one of the four survivors,
+a <i>caudillo</i>, or chief of some
+mark, named Don Vicente, Mr Pavie
+fell in at Mendoza, during the winter
+he passed there. The Pinchegra was
+silent and mysterious enough; but a
+young French physician, settled in
+the place, told his countryman the
+history of the last body of men that
+maintained with arms the right of
+Spain to her South American colonies.
+It is an interesting narrative, comprising
+much personal adventure, and
+numerous romantic episodes. The
+story of <i>Batallion</i>, an Indian foundling,
+adopted by a cavalry regiment,
+in whose ranks he serves and is
+slain, and that of Rosita, a lovely
+<i>Limeña</i> who loved and was abandoned
+by an English naval officer, and
+whom Mr Pavie saw in the madhouse
+at Lima, where she inquired of every
+foreign visitor whether the frigate
+had returned, complete the South
+American portion of a very interesting
+book.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'>NAPOLEON AND SIR HUDSON LOWE.<a id='r15'></a><a href='#f15' class='c007'><sup>[15]</sup></a></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>One of the most distinguishing features
+of public life in England is the
+judgment exercised upon the character
+of its public men. In other countries
+the public man is generally seen
+through a haze of opinion. The minister
+of a foreign monarchy stands
+in the clouded light of the throne.
+If eminent, his fame is the result of
+secret councils, unknown circumstances,
+and personal influences almost
+purposely hidden from the national
+mind. If unsuccessful, his
+failures are sheltered under his partnership
+with the higher powers. He
+is hidden in the curtains of the Cabinet.
+At all events, he divides this
+responsibility with the monarch whose
+choice has placed him in office, and
+whose influence retains him in power.
+There are no publications of private
+correspondence, no despatches, except
+garbled ones; no secret instructions,
+hereafter to be developed. All the
+materials for forming a true estimate
+of the minister are withheld, by suppressing
+all the materials for forming
+a true estimate of the man. Even if
+a biography of the individual is written,
+either by a friend or an enemy,
+it is generally greatly destitute of that
+evidence from which alone posterity
+can come to a rational conclusion.
+But in England—and it is to the honour
+of England—the career of the
+public man is almost incapable of misconception.
+He has seldom been chosen
+by the caprice of power. He must have
+given pledges as to character. Parliament
+has been the point from which
+he has launched into the navigation
+of public life; his principles must have
+undergone a probation before his possession
+of office, and the whole course
+of his after life is registered by correspondences,
+despatches, and authentic
+memorials, which may be made
+public at the requisition of any member
+of the Legislature. The twofold
+advantage of this publicity is, that
+public justice is sure to be done to
+character, and that every man acts
+under a sense of that enlarged responsibility
+which is the safest guardian
+of public honour. If even to this feeling
+there may be exceptions, this view
+is the true theory of Ministerial life;
+and, among the imperfect motives of
+all human virtue, it is not the least
+that the documents are in existence,
+hourly accumulating, and sure to be
+brought forward, which shall testify
+to the nation and the world against
+every act of individual shame.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The record to which we now advert
+is a collection of letters, despatches,
+and orders, on a subject which formed
+some years ago the chief topic of
+Europe—the detention of Napoleon at
+St Helena. The treatment by the
+British officer to whom he was given
+in charge, the commands of Government,
+and the character of his captivity,
+are now, for the first time, laid
+before the world on the testimony of
+unanswerable documents; and an authentic
+form is now given to the narrative
+of that melancholy period which
+closed on the most eventful, disturbing,
+changeful, and dazzling era of
+Europe for a thousand years; the fifth
+act of the most magnificent drama of
+the modern world; the thunderstorm
+which, combining all the influences of
+a world long reeking with iniquity,
+the feculence of earth with the fires of
+heaven, at last burst down, perhaps
+to purify the moral atmosphere, or
+perhaps to warn nations of the still
+deeper vengeance to come, and startle
+them into regeneration.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>We now give a brief sketch of the
+governor of St Helena. Sir Hudson
+Lowe was born in Ireland, in Galway,
+in July 1769. His father was
+an Englishman, who had served as a
+medical officer with the British troops
+in the Seven Years’ War, and whose
+last service was as head of the medical
+department in the garrison of Gibraltar,
+where he died in 1801.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Shortly after the birth of Sir Hudson
+Lowe, his father’s regiment, the
+50th, being ordered to the West Indies,
+he was taken out with it, and thus
+underwent the first hazard of a life
+of soldiership. On his return to England
+he was made an ensign in the
+East Devon Militia—probably the
+youngest in the service, for he was
+but twelve years old. In 1787 he
+was appointed to an ensigncy in the
+50th regiment, then at Gibraltar—arriving
+while the place was still in
+ruinous confusion from the memorable
+siege. “The whole rock was
+covered with fragments of broken
+shells and shot; and there was not a
+house in the town, nor a building
+within the batteries, which did not
+bear the marks of its devastation.”
+O’Hara succeeded to Elliot as the
+governor, and seemed resolved to signalise
+himself by his discipline. “I
+was once,” says Sir Hudson, “proceeding
+with the escort, in order to reach
+the barrier-gate by daybreak, with
+my head down, to stem, as well as I
+was able, the tremendous gusts of rain
+and wind, when I heard myself very
+sharply spoken to by a mounted officer,
+who desired me to ‘hold up my head
+and look what I was about, for it was
+not as a mere matter of form I was
+ordered on that duty.’” This officer
+was General O’Hara. “This,” says
+the narrator, “is the only <i>real rebuke</i>
+I ever experienced from a superior
+officer during the whole course of my
+military life.” He approves of the
+rebuke. On another occasion, on
+parade, when the late Duke of Kent
+happened to have done something
+which displeased the General—on a
+rebuke, in the presence of the officers,
+the Prince said, “I hope, sir,
+I shall always do my duty.” The
+General’s reply was, “And if you
+don’t, I shall make you do it.” It,
+however, happened that this man
+of fierce tongue showed himself at
+least <i>unlucky</i> in the field; for, having
+been sent to take the command of
+Toulon, then in possession of the
+Allies, he was taken prisoner in an
+unsuccessful sortie, and carried off by
+the besiegers.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>On leave of absence, after four
+years’ duty in the garrison, Lowe,
+then a lieutenant, travelled into
+France and Italy, and made himself
+master of the languages of both; an
+accomplishment of prime value to a
+soldier, and which was the pivot of
+his fortunes. On his return to Gibraltar,
+the war having broken out, the
+50th was ordered to Corsica, and
+garrisoned Ajaccio—the residence of
+that family who were afterwards to
+enjoy such splendid fortune.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In a memorandum he says, “We
+were all delighted with our change of
+quarters to Ajaccio. The town was
+well laid out, spacious, well built,
+and the citadel had excellent accommodations,
+but not sufficient for all
+the officers. One of the best houses
+was occupied by the mother and sisters
+of Bonaparte. An officer of the
+50th, of the name of Ford, was, for a
+short time, quartered in the house,
+and spoke with much satisfaction of
+the kind manner in which the family
+acted towards him. The young girls—for
+such they were at that time—ran
+slipshod about the house, but hardly
+any notice was taken of them. There
+were several balls and parties given
+after our arrival there, but Madame
+Bonaparte was not invited to them,
+on account of the situation of her two
+sons (in France). She shortly after
+removed to Cargese, originally a
+Greek colony, to a house which had
+been built or occupied by Count Marbœuf
+while in the administration of
+that part of the island. It is not
+from my own recollection I mention
+those circumstances, because, strange
+as it may appear, I was not aware
+of the residence of any of the Bonaparte
+family at Ajaccio during nearly
+two years when we were in garrison
+in that town. I used frequently to
+hear Napoleon spoken of, but not as
+connected with the exploits generally
+mentioned as giving the first celebrity
+to his name—his share in the expulsion
+of the British from Toulon.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The 50th subsequently served in
+Elba, Lisbon, and Minorca. To this
+last place flocked a large body of Corsican
+emigrants, who were formed into
+a corps called the Corsican Rangers,
+the charge of which was intrusted to
+Lowe, then a captain. In 1800 they
+were attached to the Egyptian Expedition
+under Abercromby, Lowe having
+the temporary rank of major. In the
+famous landing at Aboukir, on the
+8th of March 1801—one of the most
+brilliant exploits ever performed by
+an army—the Corsican Rangers fought
+on the right of the Guards, and were
+warmly engaged; they were present
+also at the battle of Alexandria (March
+21, 1801), when the dashing attack of
+the French on the English lines was
+most gallantly defeated;—an action
+which, in fact, involved the conquest of
+Egypt, for the French fought no more,
+the rest of the campaign being a succession
+of marches and capitulations.
+In this campaign the Major had the
+good fortune to save Sir Sydney
+Smith’s life; for a picket, mistaking
+Sir Sydney for a French officer, from
+his wearing a cocked hat (the English
+wearing round hats), levelled
+their muskets at him, when Lowe
+struck up their pieces and saved him.
+His activity in command of the outposts
+received the flattering expression
+from General Moore—“Lowe,
+when you are at the outposts, I always
+feel sure of a good night’s rest.”
+Moore, in writing to Lowe’s father,
+said—“In Sir Ralph Abercromby he
+lost, in common with many others, a
+good friend; but his conduct has
+been so conspicuously good, that I
+hope he will meet with the reward
+he merits.” In Sir Robert Wilson’s
+history of the campaign, Lowe is mentioned
+as “having always gained the
+highest approbation,” and his Corsican
+Rangers as exciting, from their
+conduct and appearance, “the general
+admiration.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>On the Peace of Amiens they were
+disbanded, but Lowe was confirmed
+in his rank of Major-Commandant;
+and after being placed on half-pay,
+was appointed to the 7th or Royal
+Fusileers, on Moore’s recommendation;
+adding, “It is nothing more
+than you deserve; and if I have been
+at all instrumental in bringing it about,
+I shall think the better of myself for
+it.” This generous testimony continued
+to influence Lowe’s fortunes;
+for on his arrival in England, in 1802,
+he was appointed one of the permanent
+Assistants Quartermaster-General.
+“I have known you,” said
+Moore, “a long time; and I am
+confident your conduct, in whatever
+situation you may be placed, will be
+such as to do honour to those who
+have recommended you.” He soon
+obtained a mark of still higher confidence.
+Before he had been many
+weeks in England, he was sent on a
+secret mission to Portugal, for the
+purpose of ascertaining the state of
+Oporto and the neighbouring cities.
+On this occasion he expressed his
+opinion of the practicability of defending
+the country by united British
+and Portuguese. Thus he gave an
+opinion contradictory to that of Europe,
+but subsequently realised with
+the most admirable success by Wellington.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>He then proceeded to the Mediterranean,
+with an order to raise another
+regiment of Corsican Rangers. In
+the course of service with this corps,
+he commanded at Capri, in the Bay
+of Naples; and as the loss of this
+place formed one of the chief themes
+of foreign obloquy on this officer, we
+enter into a slight statement of the
+facts, less for the clearance of his character,
+than for the more important
+purpose of showing how truth may be
+mutilated, partly by negligence in the
+general narrative, and partly by exaggeration
+in the personal enemy.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The island of Capri, in May 1806,
+had surrendered to a British squadron.
+Its possession was of value as blocking
+up the Bay of Naples. Colonel
+Lowe, with five companies of his regiment,
+and a small detachment of
+artillery, were sent in May to garrison
+the island. The whole regiment
+was subsequently sent. In August,
+Murat took possession of the kingdom
+of Naples, and his first expedition was
+to Capri, whose possession by a British
+force, seen from the windows of his
+palace, continually molested him. Accordingly,
+on the 4th of October, an embarkation
+under General Lamarque
+attempted a landing near the town
+of Capri. Lowe with his Rangers
+hastened to the spot, and drove the
+enemy back to their ships. The island
+is three miles long, and about two
+miles across, and had 4000 inhabitants.
+Lowe had demanded a force
+of 2190 men for its defence. The
+whole number under his command
+were 1400, of whom 800 were a regiment
+of Maltese, of a miscellaneous
+description, and but imperfectly disciplined,
+though commanded by a gallant
+officer, Major Hammill. Lowe
+placed this regiment in Ana-Capri, an
+elevated district, on a platform of rock,
+to be ascended only by 500 steps of
+stone. The French landed 2000 men
+there. The Maltese regiment dispersed
+themselves, notwithstanding
+the utmost efforts of Major Hammill,
+who, disdaining to follow their flight,
+was killed; finally, the whole of the
+Maltese regiment were taken prisoners.
+Thus the 1400 men were
+reduced to 600, in the presence of a
+French force of 3000! Lowe’s object
+was now necessarily confined to defending
+the town of Capri, which he
+did vigorously, for ten days of frequent
+attacks, in the hope of being
+succoured by the English squadron,
+which would have turned the tables
+on the besiegers, and caught the
+French General in a trap. But, from
+some cause not easily accountable,
+the fleet did not appear, and the Corsican
+Rangers were left to the rotten
+and unprepared ramparts of the town.
+On the 15th the French cannon had
+made a practicable breach. Lowe
+still held out, and attempted to erect
+new defences under the fire of the
+French guns; but the walls were crumbling,
+and the cannon of the town
+were rendered nearly unserviceable by
+the enemy’s fire. The French flotilla
+also approached. In the evening Lamarque
+sent in a flag of truce, demanding
+the surrender of the garrison
+as prisoners of war, with the exception
+of Lowe and five or six of his
+officers. Lowe would permit no distinction
+between his officers and soldiers,
+nor suffer the words “prisoner
+of war,” positively refusing to accept
+of any other terms than “to evacuate
+his post with his arms and baggage.”
+On these terms alone the town was
+surrendered, and on the 20th the garrison
+embarked at the Marina, “with
+all the honours of war.” In addition,
+it deserves to be remembered that, on
+Lamarque’s demanding that several
+of the foreigners, who had enlisted in
+the British service while prisoners,
+should be given up to him, Lowe’s
+spirited answer was, “You may shoot
+<i>me</i>, but I will never give up a single
+man.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>On this occasion he received many
+flattering letters on his defence of the
+island under such difficulties; and
+among the rest, one from Major-General
+Lord Forbes, expressing the sense
+which must be entertained by his superior,
+Sir John Stuart, “of the unremitting
+zeal, ability, and judgment
+which his conduct had displayed, under
+the trying circumstances of Capri.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>After various services on the Italian
+coast, Colonel Lowe with his
+regiment was ordered on an expedition
+against the Ionian Islands, then
+garrisoned by the French. On their
+conquest, he was appointed governor
+of Cephalonia and Ithaca, with a recommendatory
+circular from General
+Oswald, commanding the expedition,
+and congratulating the people on the
+government of an officer “who had
+shown himself the common father of
+all ranks and classes of their communities.”
+In 1812 he obtained the
+rank of full Colonel, and returned on
+leave to England. “I was then,”
+he says, “in my twenty-fourth year
+of service, and had never been absent
+a single day from my public duty
+since the commencement of the war
+in 1793. I had been in England only
+once during that time.” His services
+were still required by Government in
+matters of importance; in inspecting
+foreign regiments to be taken into
+English pay; in attendance on the negotiations
+for the accession of Sweden
+to the Grand Alliance, &#38;c. &#38;c. At
+the Swedish Court he met the “Queen
+of the Blues,” the celebrated Madame
+de Stael, talking politics as usual. She
+had begun her performances in Sweden
+with writing a letter of thirty pages
+to Bernadotte, <i>instructing him</i> how to
+govern the Swedes; but she was not
+always guilty of this extravagance of
+<i>presumption</i>. Silly in her political
+ambition, she was hospitable in her
+home. A little theatre was formed
+in her house—for the French, even in
+exile, cannot live without the follies
+of the theatre—where she and her
+daughter exhibited scenes from the
+<i>Iphigenie</i> of Racine. How her physiognomy
+might have agreed with the
+requisitions of the stage, it is difficult
+to conjecture, for Nature never clothed
+a female with a more startling exterior.
+She afterwards performed in a
+farce of her own, in which her daughter
+exhibited as a dancer! And those
+were the entertainments for ambassadors
+and princes!—for Bernadotte,
+then Prince-Royal, came in, but soon
+disappeared. We should by no means
+wish to see the manners of foreign life
+adopted by the pliancy of Englishwomen.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The prince is thus described: “I
+have never seen so remarkable a
+countenance as that of Bernadotte;
+an aquiline nose of most extraordinary
+dimensions—eyes full of fire—a
+penetrating look—with a countenance
+darker than that of any Spaniard—and
+hair so black that the portrait-painters
+can find no tint dark enough to
+give its right hue: it forms a vast
+bushy protuberance round his head,
+and he takes great pains, I understand,
+to have it arranged in proper
+form.” When we had the honour of
+seeing the prince, which we did in
+Pomerania, when he was about to
+march his army to the camp of the
+Allies, every lock of his hair was
+curled like a Brutus bust displayed
+in the window of a Parisian <i>perruquier</i>.
+From Sweden Colonel Lowe
+was summoned by Lord Cathcart,
+then ambassador to Russia, to join
+him at the Imperial headquarters in
+Poland. After an interview with the
+Czar, he joined the Allied troops, and
+was present at the hard-fought battle
+of Bautzen on the 20th and 21st of
+May. Here he first saw that extraordinary
+man, whom he afterwards was to
+see under such extraordinary circumstances
+of change. In his correspondence
+with Lord Bathurst, the Colonel
+says—“Between the town of
+Bautzen and the position of the Allies
+is a long elevated ridge....
+In the morning a body of the enemy’s
+troops was observed to be formed on
+its crest. In their front a small group
+was collected, which by our spyglasses
+we discovered to be persons
+of consequence in their army. Among
+them was most clearly distinguishable
+Napoleon himself. He advanced
+about forty or fifty paces, accompanied
+only by one of his marshals
+(conjectured to have been Beauharnais),
+with whom he remained in conversation,
+walking backwards and
+forwards (having dismounted) for
+nearly an hour.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I was on an advanced battery
+in front of our position, and had
+a most distinct view of him. He
+was dressed in a plain uniform
+coat, and a star, with a plain hat,
+different from that of his marshals
+and generals (which were feathered);
+his air and manner so perfectly
+resembling the portraits that
+there was no possibility of mistake.
+He appeared to me conversing on
+some indifferent subject; very rarely
+looking towards our position, of which,
+however, the situation in which he
+stood commanded a most comprehensive
+and distinct view.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In October, through Sir C. Stewart
+(now Marquis of Londonderry), he
+was attached to the army under that
+great and bold soldier, Marshal
+Blucher, and was with him in every
+battle from Leipsic to Paris. His
+description of the horrors of the
+French retreat, after the battle of
+Leipsic, unfolds a dreadful picture of
+the sufferings of war. “For an extent
+of fifty miles, on the French route,
+there were carcasses of dead and
+dying horses without number; bodies
+of men, who had been either killed, or
+died of hunger, sickness, and fatigue,
+lying in the roads and ditches; parties
+of prisoners and stragglers brought
+in by the Cossacks; blown-up ammunition
+waggons, in such numbers as
+absolutely to obstruct the road....
+Pillaged and burning towns and villages
+marked, at the same time, the
+ferocity with which the enemy had
+conducted himself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In the close of this memorable
+year, Colonel Lowe was ordered to
+Holland on a commission for organising
+the Dutch troops who were to
+join Sir Thomas Graham’s army; but
+(as it appears), at his own request,
+his destination was changed for the
+Prussian army, under Blucher, then
+crossing the Rhine. He was present
+at all the battles fought by that army
+on their march through France, forming,
+with its four German actions, no
+less than <i>thirteen</i>—of which <i>eleven</i>
+were fought against Napoleon in
+person.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In all those campaigns he gallantly
+took the soldier’s share, being constantly
+at the Marshal’s side; being
+present, on one occasion, when he
+was wounded; on another, when the
+Cossack orderly was shot beside him;
+and on two others, when he narrowly
+escaped being made prisoner, being
+obliged to make a run of it, with the
+whole of his retinue, through a party
+of the enemy; Bonaparte also having
+been nearly taken by him in the same
+way, on the same day. He was present
+at the conferences of Chatillon,
+where he strongly joined those opinions
+which were in favour of the
+“March to Paris;” and he had the
+honour of bearing the despatch to
+England announcing the abdication
+of Napoleon; which was instantly
+published from the Foreign Office, in
+a “Gazette Extraordinary.” Colonel
+Lowe was received with great distinction.
+The Prince-Regent immediately
+knighted him; and the Prussian
+order of Military Merit was conferred
+on him, with the order of St George
+from the Emperor of Russia.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In 1814 Sir Hudson Lowe was
+promoted to the rank of major-general,
+and appointed quartermaster-general
+to the British troops in the
+Netherlands, commanded by the
+Prince of Orange. In that capacity
+he visited the fortresses on the frontier,
+and drew up reports on their restoration.
+It is remarkable that among
+his plans was the recommendation of
+building a Work at Mont <i>St Jean</i>, as
+the commanding point at the junction
+of the two principal roads from the
+French frontier, on the side of Namur
+and Charleroi, to Brussels, and the
+direction in which an army must move
+for the invasion of Belgium. How
+much earlier the battle of Waterloo
+would have terminated, and how
+many gallant lives might have been
+saved by the possession of a fortress
+in the very key of the position, we
+may conjecture from the defence of
+Hougomont, where the walls of a
+mere farmyard, defended by brave
+men, were sufficient to resist the
+entire left wing of the enemy during
+that whole hard-fought, decisive, and
+illustrious day.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The news of Napoleon’s escape from
+Elba roused all Europe. It was at
+once the most dexterous performance,
+and the most unwise act, of the great
+charlatan of empire. He ought to
+have delayed it, at least for a year.
+The negotiators at Vienna were already
+on the verge of discontents
+which might have broken up the
+general alliance; the troops were on
+the point of marching to their homes:
+thus Europe was about to be left without
+defence, or even to a renewal of
+hostilities. But the escape of Napoleon
+sobered all. The universal peril
+produced the universal reconciliation.
+And the Manifesto was issued in the
+shape of a universal declaration, proclaiming
+Napoleon Bonaparte the
+enemy of mankind.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The position of Sir Hudson Lowe
+at Brussels made his advice of importance.
+The question was, where
+the Allied armies should expect the
+attack? The Prussian generals were
+of opinion that they should be prepared
+on the side of Switzerland and
+Mayence. Sir Hudson Lowe, more
+sagaciously, affirmed that Brussels
+would be the object. Count Gneisenau,
+the Prussian quartermaster-general,
+finally decided to wait for
+the opinion of the Duke of Wellington
+on his arrival in the Netherlands.
+At this period, while matters remained
+in a state of uncertainty as to the
+movements of France, Sir Hudson
+Lowe was offered the command of the
+British troops at Genoa, intended to
+act with the Austro-Sardinian army,
+and the squadron under Lord Exmouth,
+against the south of France.
+Unwilling to quit the great Duke, he
+waited on him for his opinion. As
+all recollections of Wellington are
+dear to his country, we give his few
+words, in which, after saying that Sir
+W. Delancy (as his successor) might
+not at once be <i>au fait</i> at the business
+of the Office, and as Sir G. Murray,
+“who had been with him for six
+years, was only on his return from
+Canada, still he did <i>a good deal of
+his own business</i>, and <i>could do business
+with any one</i>.” In short, “it was a
+case that must be left to himself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Accordingly, he remained with the
+Duke until the beginning of June, and
+then went to take his command. On
+his way through Germany, he met at
+the Imperial headquarters Blucher,
+Schwartzenberg, and the Czar. With
+the last he had the honour of a conversation.
+The Czar received him in
+his cabinet, quite alone; took him by
+the hand; said that he was glad to
+see him, but that it was an unfortunate
+circumstance which compelled
+him (the Czar) to come forward; that
+oceans of blood might be again spilt;
+but that, while that man (Napoleon)
+lived, there would be no hope of repose
+for Europe; that armies must be
+kept up by every nation on a war
+footing; and that, in short, there
+appeared no other alternative than
+carrying on the war with vigour, and
+thus bringing it to the speedier close.
+The Czar spoke in English. He asked
+many other questions; but seemed
+most gratified by knowing that the
+force under the Duke of Wellington,
+instead of being 60,000 men, was,
+with the Allied forces of the Netherlands,
+not less than 100,000.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>On reaching Genoa, the expedition
+sailed to the south of France; but all
+the cities having suddenly hoisted the
+white flag, the war was at an end.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Now began the only portion of his
+prosperous and active career, which
+could be called trying and vexatious.
+On the 1st of August 1815 he received
+an order to return immediately
+to London, for the purpose of taking
+charge of Napoleon Bonaparte.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>On his arrival in Paris he had
+communications with all the Cabinet.
+Lord Castlereagh asked him his opinion
+of the possibility of Napoleon’s
+escape. He answered that he could
+see none, except in case of a mutiny,
+of which there had been two instances
+at St Helena. But on being informed
+of the nature of the intended garrison,
+he answered that its chance would be
+proportionably diminished. This was
+the only conversation which he ever
+had with Lord Castlereagh. On reaching
+London, he received the Ministerial
+orders for the charge of his memorable
+prisoner. By Lord Liverpool’s
+authority, he was told that if
+he remained in charge for three years,
+the royal confidence, and, we presume,
+the royal reward, “should not
+stop there.” Lord Ellenborough,
+Chief-Justice, assured him, “that in
+the execution of the duty the law
+would give him every support.” On
+the 23d of August, the Directors of
+the East India Company appointed
+him governor of St Helena; the command
+of the troops, with the local
+rank of lieutenant-general, was given
+to him; and his salary was fixed at
+£12,000 a-year.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The regulations for the safe keeping
+of Napoleon, adopted by the
+Secretary of War and Colonies, Lord
+Bathurst, and delivered to Sir George
+Cockburn, were (in outline) as follows:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>1. When General Bonaparte shall
+be removed from the Bellerophon to
+the Northumberland, there shall be
+an examination of the effects which
+the General shall have brought with
+him.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>2. All articles of furniture, books,
+and wine, which the General shall
+have brought, shall be transhipped to
+the Northumberland.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>3. Under the head of furniture is
+the plate, provided it be not to such
+an amount as to bespeak it rather an
+article of convertible property than
+for domestic use.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>4. His money, diamonds, and negotiable
+bills of exchange, are to be
+given up. The admiral will explain
+to him that it is by no means the intention
+of Government to confiscate
+his property, but simply to prevent its
+being converted into an instrument
+of escape.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The remainder consists of details.
+In the event of his death, the disposition
+of his property was to be determined
+by his will, which would be
+strictly attended to.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Bonaparte was to be always attended
+by a military officer; and if he
+was permitted to pass the boundaries
+allotted to him, the officer was to be
+attended by an Orderly. No individual
+of his suite was to be carried to
+St Helena but with his own consent,
+it being explained to him that he must
+be subject to the restraints necessary
+for the security of Bonaparte’s person.
+All letters addressed to him
+were to be delivered to the admiral,
+or governor, and read by them. Bonaparte
+must be informed, that any
+representation addressed to Government
+would be received and transmitted,
+but must be transmitted open
+to the governor and admiral’s inspection,
+that they might be enabled to
+transmit answers to any objections.
+If Bonaparte were to be attacked
+with serious illness, the governor and
+admiral were each to direct a medical
+person, in addition to his own physician,
+to attend him, and desire them to
+report daily on the state of his health.
+Finally, in the event of his death, the
+admiral was to give orders for the
+conveyance of his body to England.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>It would be difficult to conceive
+arrangements less severe, consistently
+with the urgent necessity of preventing
+another war.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>On the embarkation on board the
+Northumberland, the arms were to be
+taken from the French officers on
+board; but to be packed carefully,
+and put into the charge of the captain.
+Napoleon’s sword was not taken
+from him, and the swords of the officers
+were restored on their arrival at
+St Helena. Of this order, Count
+Montholon made a handsome melodramatic
+story, in the following
+style: “His lordship (Lord Keith)
+said to him, in a voice suppressed
+(assourdie) by vivid emotion, ‘England
+demands your sword.’ The Emperor,
+with a convulsive movement,
+dropped his hand on that sword,
+which an Englishman <i>dared</i> to demand.
+The expression of his look
+was his sole answer. It had never
+been more powerful, more <i>superhuman</i>
+(sur-humaine). The old admiral felt
+thunderstruck (foudroyé). His tall
+figure shrank; his head, whitened by
+age, fell upon his bosom, like that of
+a criminal humbled before his condemnation.”
+This theatric affair Mr Forsyth
+declares to be <i>pure fiction</i>. The
+story is contradicted even by Las
+Cases, who says, in his journal—“I
+asked, whether it was possible that
+they would go so far as to deprive the
+Emperor of his sword? The admiral
+replied that <i>it</i> would be respected;
+but that Napoleon was the only person
+excepted, as all the rest would be
+disarmed.” The perpetual habit of
+frequenting the theatre spoils all the
+taste of France. The simplest action
+of life must be told in rhodomontade,
+and even the gravest facts must be
+dressed up in the frippery of fiction.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>On the 7th of August 1815, Bonaparte
+was removed on board of the
+Northumberland, with a suite of
+twenty-five persons, including Count
+and Countess Bertrand, with their
+three children; Count and Countess
+Montholon, with one child; and Count
+de Las Cases, with his son, a boy of
+fourteen. As Mengeaud, the surgeon
+who had accompanied him from
+Rochefort was unwilling to go to St
+Helena; O’Meara, the surgeon of the
+Bellerophon, was chosen by Bonaparte,
+and allowed by Lord Keith to
+attend him.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>They hove to at Madeira for refreshments,
+and landed at St Helena
+on the 15th of October.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>A letter of O’Meara to a Mr Finlayson
+at the Admiralty, gives a characteristic
+detail of the voyage. “During
+the passage the ladies were either
+ill the whole time, or fancied themselves
+to be so; in either of which
+cases, it was necessary to give them
+medicine, in the choice of which it
+was extremely difficult to meet their
+tastes or humours, or their ever-unceasing
+caprice. What was most
+extraordinary, they never complained
+of loss of appetite. They generally
+ate of every dish at a profusely supplied
+table, of different meats, twice
+every day, besides occasional tiffins,
+bowls of soup, &#38;c. They mostly
+hate each other, and I am the depositary
+of their complaints—especially
+Madame Bertrand’s, who is like a
+tigress deprived of her young, when
+she perceives me doing any service
+for Madame Montholon. The latter,
+to tell the truth, is not so whimsical,
+nor subject to so many fits of rage as
+the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Bonaparte was nearly the entire of
+the time in perfect health. During
+the passage, Napoleon almost invariably
+did not appear out in the after-cabin,
+before twelve; breakfasted
+either in bed or in his own cabin
+about eleven; dined with the admiral
+about five; stayed about half an
+hour at dinner, then left the table
+and proceeded to the quarter-deck,
+where he generally spent a couple of
+hours, either in walking, or else leaning
+against the breech of one of the
+guns, talking to De las Cases. He
+generally spoke a few words to every
+officer who could understand him;
+and, according to his custom, was
+very inquisitive relative to various
+objects. His suite, until the day before
+we landed (three days after our
+arrival), invariably kept their hats off
+while speaking to him, and then, by
+his directions, remained covered. He
+professes his intention, I am informed,
+to drop the name of Bonaparte, and
+to assume that of a colonel he was
+very partial to, and who was killed
+in Italy.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“He is to proceed in a few days to
+Longwood, the present seat of the
+Lieutenant-governor, where there is
+a plain of above a mile and a half in
+length, with trees (a great rarity
+here) on it. He is to have a captain
+constantly in the house with him, and
+he is also to be accompanied by one
+whenever he goes out. None of his
+staff are to go out, unless accompanied
+by an English officer or soldier.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I had a long conversation with
+him the day before yesterday. Among
+other remarks he observed, ‘Why,
+your Government have not taken the
+most economical method of providing
+for me. They send me to a place
+where every necessary of life is four
+times as dear as in any other part of
+the globe; and not content with that,
+they send a regiment here, to a place
+where there are already four times as
+many inhabitants as it can furnish
+subsistence to, and where there are a
+superabundance of troops. This is
+the way,’ continued he, ‘that you
+have contracted your national debt—not
+by the actual necessary expenses
+of war, but by the unnecessary expenses
+of colonies.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Napoleon was in the habit of predicting
+the ruin of England, and
+pointing out, we may presume, with
+no intention of warning, the <i>blunders</i>
+of that policy which, however, had
+rescued Europe from the French yoke,
+and sent himself to moralise in a
+dungeon. “This island,” said he,
+“costs, or will cost, two millions
+a-year, which is so much money
+thrown in the sea. Your East India
+Company, if their affairs were
+narrowly scrutinised, would be found
+to lose instead of gaining, and in <i>a few
+years</i> must become bankrupt. Your
+manufactures, in consequence of the
+dearness of necessaries in England, will
+be <i>undersold</i> by those of France and
+Germany, and your manufacturers
+will be <i>ruined</i>.” All this train of
+ill omen is profitable, if it were only
+to show how little we are to depend
+upon the foresight of politicians.
+Here was unquestionably one of the
+most sagacious of human beings delivering
+his ideas on the future, and
+that not a remote future, not a future
+of centuries, but a future within the
+life of a generation; and yet what
+one of these predictions has not been
+completely baffled? The East Indian
+territories of England have been constantly
+aggrandising for nearly forty
+years of that period which was to have
+seen their bankruptcy. The manufactures
+of England, instead of total failure,
+have been growing to a magnitude
+unequalled in the annals of national
+industry, and are rapidly spreading
+over the globe. England, instead of
+struggling with exclusion from foreign
+commerce, and domestic disaffection,
+has possessed a peace, the longest in
+its duration, and the most productive
+in its increase of opulence, invention,
+and power, that Europe has ever seen.
+But if the malignant spirit of her prisoner
+may be presumed to have perverted
+his sagacity, his opinions were
+the opinions of the Continent; and
+every statesman, from Calais to Constantinople,
+occupied himself by counting
+on his fingers the number of years
+that lay between England and destruction.
+Yet England still stands, the
+envy of all nations; and will stand,
+while she retains her loyalty, her principle,
+and her honour; or, rather,
+while she retains her religion, which
+includes them all.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The exterior of St Helena is unpromising.
+“Masses of volcanic rock,
+sharp and jagged, tower up round the
+coast, and form an iron girdle. The
+few points where a landing can be
+effected are bristling with cannon.”
+The whole has the evidence of the
+agency of fire; and from the gigantic
+size of the strata, so disproportioned
+to its circuit, it has been supposed the
+wreck of a vast submerged continent.
+But the narrow valleys, radiating from
+the basaltic ridge forming the backbone
+of the island, have scenes of
+beauty. A writer on the “Geognosy”
+of the island, even describes
+those valleys as exhibiting an alternation
+of hill and dale, and luxuriant
+and constant verdure. Even Napoleon,
+in all his discontent, admitted
+that it had “good air.” Or, as in some
+more detailed remarks transmitted by
+Las Cases—“After all, as a place of
+exile, perhaps St Helena was the best.
+In high latitudes we should have
+suffered greatly from cold; and in any
+other island of the tropics we should
+have expired miserably, under the
+scorching rays of the sun. The rock
+is wild and barren, no doubt; the
+climate is monstrous and unwholesome;
+but the temperature, it must
+be confessed, is mild (douce).”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>It is of some importance to the
+national character to touch on those
+matters, as they show that Napoleon
+was not sent for any other purpose
+than security of detention. A West
+Indian island might have unduly
+hastened the catastrophe. A letter
+from Lieutenant-Colonel Jackson gives
+even a more favourable testimony
+than has been generally conceived.
+He had been a resident for several
+years.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Lying within the influence of the
+south-east trade-wind, which is usually
+a strong breeze between the Cape
+and St Helena, the tropical heat is
+moderated thereby to a delightful
+temperature, and perhaps there is no
+finer climate to be found than in certain
+parts of St Helena. In the town,
+I rarely saw the thermometer above
+80°, while the general height may
+have been about 75°. But I write
+from memory, having lost my register
+of the temperature. Between Longwood
+and Jamestown there is a difference
+of eight or ten degrees. A
+fire is rarely necessary, unless perhaps
+as a corrective of the dampness
+produced by fog, to which the elevated
+portions of the island are occasionally
+liable. I believe the average
+duration of life to be much as in England.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Mr Henry, who was stationed in
+the island as assistant-surgeon during
+Napoleon’s residence, gives even a
+more decided testimony. “For a tropical
+climate, only 15° from the line,
+St Helena is certainly a healthy island,
+if not the <i>most</i> healthy of the description
+in the world. During one period
+of twelve months, we did not lose <i>one</i>
+man by disease out of five hundred
+of the 66th quartered at Deadwood.
+In 1817, 1818, and 1819, Fahrenheit’s
+thermometer, kept at the hospital,
+ranged from fifty-five to seventy degrees;
+with the exception of calm days,
+when it rose to eighty. In Jamestown,
+from the peculiar radiation of
+heat to which it was exposed, the
+temperature was sometimes upwards
+of ninety.... There is no
+endemic in the island....
+The upper parts of St Helena, including
+the residence of Bonaparte, are decidedly
+the most healthy, and we often
+moved our regimental convalescents
+from Jamestown to Deadwood for
+cooler and better air. The clouds
+moved so steadily and regularly with
+the trade-wind that there appeared
+to be no time for atmospherical accumulations
+of electricity, and we never
+had any thunder or lightning. No
+instance of hydrophobia, in man or any
+inferior animal, had ever been known
+in St Helena.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>We shall limit ourselves to an outline
+of the transactions referring to
+Napoleon. He landed at Jamestown
+on the evening of the 17th of October,
+where he remained for the night, and on
+the next day removed to the “Briars,”
+the country house of Mr Balcombe, who
+afterwards became purveyor to the residence
+at Longwood. Two proclamations
+were immediately issued by
+the governor, Colonel Wilkes, one
+cautioning the inhabitants of the island
+against any attempt to aid the escape
+of “General Napoleon Bonaparte;”
+and the other, prohibiting all persons
+from passing through any part of the
+island (except in the immediate vicinity
+of the town) from nine at night
+until daylight, without having the
+<i>parole</i> of the night; and a third,
+placing all the coasts, and vessels or
+boats, under the control of the Admiral.
+A despatch from the Admiral, to
+the Secretary of the Admiralty, explained
+the choice of Longwood for
+the residence of the prisoner. “I
+have not hesitated on fixing on it.
+Longwood is detached from the general
+inhabited parts of the island, therefore
+none of the inhabitants have occasion,
+or are at all likely, to be met
+with in its neighbourhood; it is the
+most distant from the parts of the coast
+<i>always</i> accessible to boats.” He then
+mentions it as having an extent of
+level ground, perfectly adapted for
+horse-exercise, carriage-driving, and
+pleasant walking. The house was
+small, but it was better than any other
+in the island (out of the town) except
+the governor’s; and by the help of
+the ships’ carpenters and others, was
+capable of convenient additions. Repairs
+were accordingly made, and
+everything was done that could fit it
+for a comfortable residence.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The system of discontent, remonstrance,
+and, we must add, misrepresentation,
+was begun. A letter from
+the “Grand Marshal, Count Bertrand,”
+led the way. It protested
+against everything, and frequently
+applied the term “Emperor” to Napoleon.
+The Admiral’s reply was fair
+and manly. It expressed regret for
+the necessary inconveniences, and a
+desire to consult the wishes of General
+Bonaparte; but said that he was
+authorised to apply <i>no</i> title which had
+not been given by his Government.
+This refusal was perfectly justifiable,
+though it made one of the clamours of
+the time. The custom of European
+diplomacy is <i>never</i> to acknowledge a
+new title but by treaty, and in return,
+if possible, for some concession on the
+part of the claimant. The embarrassments
+connected with the opposite
+practice are obvious. Where is the
+line to be drawn? If every ruler,
+however trifling his territory, or however
+recent his usurpation, were to fix
+his own title, all the relations of public
+life might be outraged. The creature
+of every revolution might be authenticated
+the legitimate possessor
+of sovereignty—an upstart received
+into the family of kings, become a
+living encouragement to political convulsion.
+All the declamation which
+was lavished on the denial of the Imperial
+title to Bonaparte, amounted to
+the maxim, that success justifies usurpation.
+If, in general life, no man
+can bear a title without the sanction
+of the laws—to avoid the disturbance
+of the Civil order, why should not the
+same sanction be demanded where the
+result of concession without cause
+might influence the highest interests of
+public life? There can be no question
+that the Imperial title, continued to
+Napoleon by the credulity of Alexander,
+laid the foundation of the renewed
+disturbances of France and
+Europe. It had placed him within
+sight of power again; it had fixed the
+eye of French conspiracy on him; it
+had conveyed to all his partisanship
+the idea that he still was an object of
+fear to Europe, and it thus revived
+the hope of his restoration. This dangerous
+concession made him, while at
+Elba, the virtual Emperor of France—prompted
+him to contemplate the resumption
+of the sceptre—pointed him
+out as a rallying point for disaffection—connected
+his mock crown with his
+former sovereignty—and left the peace
+of the world to the hazard of the die
+which was thrown at Waterloo.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>If it be said that the concession
+which was dangerous at Elba was
+trifling at St Helena, we have no
+hesitation in accounting for the sudden
+forgetfulness of Napoleon exhibited
+by France to the refusal of
+the title. “General” Bonaparte lived
+only in the recollection of a broken
+army; the “Emperor” lived in the
+pride and passions of the people. It
+was essential to dissolve this combination;
+to show that the <i>prestige</i> of
+his name existed no longer; that he
+was an object of fear no more; and
+especially, that his connection with
+title-loving France was to be cut
+asunder for the remainder of his existence.
+All this was done, and could
+alone be done, by refusing to continue
+that title to the prisoner, which England
+had loftily refused to him in the
+height of his power.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Even Napoleon himself was so fully
+convinced of the contradiction between
+his present state and his former, that
+he subsequently wrote a Memorial
+addressed to the Governor, containing
+this declaration: “Seven or eight
+months ago Count Montholon proposed,
+as a means of removing the
+little inconveniences which were ever
+recurring, the adoption of an ordinary
+name.... I am quite ready
+to take any ordinary name; and I
+repeat that, when it may be deemed
+proper to remove me from this cruel
+abode, I am resolved to remain a
+stranger to politics, whatever may be
+passing in the world. Such is my resolve;
+and anything which may have
+been said different from this would not
+be the fact.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Unfortunately, it was wholly impossible
+to rely on any declaration of
+this kind, and it would have been absolute
+folly to have hazarded the peace
+of Europe on the contingency of Napoleon’s
+keeping his word. He had
+gone to Elba with the same protest
+against politics, he had publicly declared
+that his political life was ended;
+and the weakness of giving credit to
+that declaration cost the lives of perhaps
+fifty thousand men, and might
+have cost a universal war.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>If the strictness of the regulations
+at St Helena have been matter of
+charge against this country, it is to be
+remembered that the highest interests
+might have been endangered by his
+escape; that no royal captive was
+ever so indulged before; and that
+England was but a trustee for the
+tranquillity of the world. The instructions
+were the most lenient possible,
+consistently with his safe keeping.
+A captain was to ascertain
+his presence twice in the twenty-four
+hours. Whenever Napoleon rode or
+walked <i>beyond</i> the boundaries where
+the sentinels were placed, he was to
+be attended by an officer. Napoleon
+and his attendants were to be within
+his house at nine o’clock every night.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>If these restrictions might be considered
+severe, it is to be remembered
+that they were only severities against
+the necessity of a second Waterloo.
+It is to be observed, also, that these
+regulations all took place before the
+arrival of Sir Hudson Lowe. The
+English mind revolts against confinement
+of any kind; but the limits of
+Napoleon’s grounds, within which he
+might take exercise <i>unattended</i> by
+any officer, embraced a circuit of
+<i>twelve</i> miles! The ground was nearly
+flat, and well covered with turf. On
+the plain of Deadwood, adjoining, was
+an excellent race-course, a mile and
+a half long, of which one mile was in
+a straight line. The house at Longwood
+had been used by the former
+governor as a villa; but it was small,
+consisting only of five rooms. To
+these, however, additions were made;
+the whole being merely a temporary
+residence until the completion of a
+house on a larger scale, which was
+preparing in England.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>It became the peevish custom of
+the French, on the arrival of Sir Hudson
+Lowe, to contrast his conduct
+with that of Sir George Cockburn, and
+speak of their satisfaction with the
+latter; but they quarrelled equally
+with both. A letter from O’Meara
+to his correspondent Finlayson (not
+printed in his volumes), says: “Napoleon
+inveighs most bitterly against
+the English Ministry for sending him
+here. He has been for sometime back
+at Longwood, where he is tolerably
+well lodged, considering the island.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>As to his displeasure at being sent
+to the island, he should have regarded
+himself as peculiarly well treated; for
+what must have been his condition
+in the custody of any other government?
+He must have been sent to
+a fortress with no other liberty of exercise
+than within the space of the
+ramparts; he must have had sentinels
+everywhere on his steps, and
+have been subjected to all the rigid
+regulations of a garrison, and perhaps
+altogether separated from his
+attendants and general society. The
+greater probability of escape in Europe
+would have required the greater strictness;
+and the necessity of the case
+must have made his confinement little
+better than that of the dungeon. What
+liberty was allotted to Louis Napoleon
+in Ham for six years? What liberty
+was allotted to Toussaint Louverture
+by Napoleon himself?—a damp dungeon
+until he died. What liberty
+was allotted to the State prisoners
+under the Empire?—or what liberty
+was allotted to the English officers
+confined in the casemates of Biche?
+Instead of such restrictions, he had a
+large space of a healthy island in
+which he might move, without watch
+or ward, with a crowd of attendants
+of his own choice round him, with
+such society as he chose to receive,
+with a sumptuous table kept for him,
+and every deference paid to his fame
+and rank, compatible with that essential
+point, the prevention of his
+escape, which he appears to have been
+constantly meditating.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>An order prohibiting the general
+access of the population to Longwood
+was now issued. Napoleon at this
+was in great indignation. He said to
+O’Meara, “It was absurd to prohibit
+people from visiting him, while he was
+at liberty to go out and call upon them....
+I will never receive any person
+coming with a pass from the Admiral,
+as I will immediately set down
+the person receiving it as being <i>like the
+donor</i>, and a spy upon me.”...
+Then becoming more warm, he said,
+“Who is the Admiral? I have never
+heard his name as the conqueror in a
+battle, either singly or in general action....
+It is true, he has rendered
+his name in<i>famous</i> in America;
+and so he will now render it here, on
+this desolate rock.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Stopping then with much agitation,
+and looking at me earnestly—“Next
+to your Government exiling me here,
+the worst thing they could have done,
+and the most insufferable to my feelings,
+is sending me with such a <i>man as</i>
+<span class='fss'>HE</span>. I shall make my treatment known
+to all Europe. It will be a reflection
+and a stain on his posterity for centuries.
+What! does he want to introduce
+Turkish laws into the Rock?
+Other prisoners under sentence of
+death are allowed to communicate, by
+the laws of England and all other civilised
+nations.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The fact was, that Napoleon wished
+to accomplish an object incompatible
+with the purpose of his being sent to
+the island; he demanded all the conveniences
+of perfect freedom—of course
+for the purpose of escape. However,
+to avoid all shadow of cruelty, the
+passports were finally left to the distribution
+of Bertrand.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>O’Meara further says, “He has since
+discovered that the Admiral’s conduct
+has been most grossly and shamefully
+misrepresented and blackened to him.
+The people he is surrounded by at
+present give me some faint idea of
+what the court of St Cloud must have
+been during his omnipotent sway.
+Everything here is disguised and
+mutilated.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Napoleon’s theatrical rants were
+sometimes amusing. Foreigners can
+rail fluently enough at misfortune, but
+they always forget the share which
+they had in bringing it on themselves.
+“Behold the English Government!”
+said he one day, gazing round on the
+stupendous rocks which encompassed
+him; “this is their liberality to the
+unfortunate, who, <i>confiding</i> in what is
+called their national character, in an
+evil hour gave himself up to them!
+But your Ministers laugh at your laws.
+I thought once that the English were
+a free nation; but I now see that you
+are the <i>greatest slaves</i> in the world. You
+all tremble at the sight of <i>that</i> man.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Another time, talking to me
+(O’Meara) about the island, he said,
+‘In fact, I expect nothing less from your
+Government than that they will send
+out an executioner to <i>despatch</i> me. They
+send me here to a horrible rock, where
+even the water is not good. They
+send out a <i>sailor</i> with me, who does not
+know how to treat a man like me, and
+who puts a camp under my nose, so
+that I cannot put my head out without
+seeing my jailors. Here we are treated
+like felons: a proclamation is issued
+for nobody to come near and touch us,
+as if we were lepers.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>O’Meara’s description of the officers
+in attendance on Napoleon is sufficiently
+contemptuous. Of Montholon
+he speaks most offensively. He admits
+Bertrand to be a “good man;”
+but he thus characterises Gourgaud,
+whose quarrel with Sir Walter Scott
+once made some noise: “Gourgaud is
+now recovering from dysentery. During
+his illness, I never saw a man betray
+so much fear of dying as he did
+on various occasions. One night a
+large black beetle got into the bed,
+and crawled up alongside of him. His
+imagination immediately magnified the
+insect into a devil, or some other formidable
+apparition, armed with talons,
+long teeth, and ready to tear away his
+lingering soul from its mortal abode. He
+shrieked, became terribly agitated and
+convulsed; a cold sweat bedewed his
+pallid face; and when I entered he
+presented all the appearance of a man
+about to expire, with the most terrific
+ideas of what would be his future lot;
+and it was not till after a considerable
+time that he could be restored to some
+degree of composure.” Gourgaud had
+in some degree provoked this description
+by his previous <i>fanfaronades</i>.
+When he arrived in the island he had
+produced a sword to the daughters of
+Mr Balcombe, on which he had himself
+represented in the act of killing a
+Cossack who was about to take Bonaparte
+prisoner, with a pompous inscription
+narrating the feat. At the
+end of the blade he made them observe
+a spot, as if stained with the blood of
+two Englishmen, slain by him at Waterloo.
+He gave the last finish to this
+“passage of arms,” by saying, that in
+the same battle he <i>might</i> have made
+the Duke prisoner! “but that he saw
+the business was decided, and he was
+unwilling to produce any further effusion
+of human blood!” (“Credit—believe
+it who will,” says O’Meara.)
+During Gourgaud’s illness, however,
+he seemed to have forgotten all his
+chivalry—as, one day, “whining and
+lamenting over his state, he said, with
+many <i>tears</i>, ‘He did not know for
+what he was exiled, for he had never
+done harm to mortal man.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>O’Meara’s own history was a varied
+one. He had begun his course as an
+assistant-surgeon in the 18th, in 1804;
+but a duel happening in the regiment,
+in which he acted as second, a courtmartial
+was the consequence, and he
+retired from the army. He then
+served as a naval surgeon, for many
+years, in the Mediterranean and the
+West Indies, with Maitland (captain
+of the Bellerophon), who gave him
+an advantageous character. He was
+then selected as the surgeon in attendance
+on Napoleon. The quick
+observation of that sagacious personage
+saw instantly that O’Meara might
+be useful in more capacities than those
+of his profession; he flattered him with
+his confidence, and converted him
+into partisanship.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Nothing but the extraordinary selfishness
+of Napoleon’s character could
+have stooped to those perpetual complaints.
+A man who had sat upon
+the first throne of the Continent ought
+to have felt that nothing, after such a
+catastrophe, could be worth a care.
+A man of true grandeur of mind, after
+having seen all the diadems of the
+Continent under his feet, ought to
+have scorned any inferior degree of
+power—been utterly indifferent to
+title, wealth, or the homage of dependents.
+A philosopher would have
+despised the mockery of ex-emperorship;
+rejected the affectation of a
+power which he was to possess no
+more; and, having been once forced to
+submit to a change of fortune which
+displaced him from the summit of
+society for ever, would have been contemptuous
+of living on the fragments
+of his feast of supremacy. But Napoleon
+had no sense of this generous and
+lofty disdain—he clung to the wrecks
+of his royalty. He was as anxious
+to sustain the paltry ceremonial of
+kissing a hand, as when he saw kings
+crowding to his palace; and showed
+as much fretfulness at the loss of the
+most pitiful mark of respect, as he
+could at an insult to a throne which
+threw its shadow across the civilised
+world. This anomaly is easily explained.
+The spirit of selfishness belongs
+to all foreign life. Its habits,
+its amusements, its perpetual passion
+for frivolous excitement, its pursuit
+of personal indulgence in every shape,
+high or low, utterly extinguish all the
+nobler attributes of mind—substitute
+fierceness for fortitude, rashness for
+decision—and feeble repinings against
+fate, for the dignity which makes defeat
+but another occasion of showing
+the superiority of man to fortune.
+Napoleon was selfishness embodied,
+and was as important to <i>himself</i> at
+St Helena as in the Tuileries.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>On the 10th of January 1816, Sir
+Hudson Lowe received a despatch
+from Earl Bathurst, stating that, on
+his arrival at St Helena, he should
+notify to all the attendants of Napoleon
+that they were at perfect
+liberty to leave the island for Europe
+or America; but that those who remained
+should declare, in writing,
+that they were prepared to submit to
+the necessary restrictions. To Sir
+Hudson the orders were—“You are
+to continue to treat Napoleon Bonaparte
+as a prisoner of war, until further
+orders.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The governor reached St Helena on
+the 14th of April, and on the 16th he
+visited Bonaparte, having given him
+previous notice of his intention. The
+visit was unlucky, for even the hour
+was constituted into an offence. Las
+Cases thus mentions the visit: “The
+new governor arrived at Longwood
+about ten o’clock, notwithstanding
+the rain, which still continued. He
+was accompanied by the admiral, who
+was to introduce him, and who had,
+<i>no doubt</i>, told him that this was the
+most suitable hour for his visit. The
+emperor did not receive him—he was
+indisposed; and even had he been
+well, he would not have seen him.
+The governor, by this abrupt visit,
+neglected the usual forms of decorum.
+It was easy to perceive that this was
+a <i>trick of the admiral</i>. The governor,
+who probably had no intention to
+render himself at all disagreeable, appeared
+very much disconcerted. <i>We
+laughed in our sleeves.</i> As to the admiral,
+he was quite <i>triumphant</i>. The
+governor, after long hesitation, and
+very evident marks of ill-humour, took
+his leave rather abruptly. We doubted
+not that this visit had been planned
+by the admiral, with the view of prepossessing
+us against each other at
+the very outset.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The English reader of this incident
+will find in it the key to the whole
+conduct of Napoleon and his attendants;
+<i>he</i> was determined to turn
+everything into an offence, and they
+were equally determined to turn everything
+into an intrigue. The narrative
+foolishly and malignantly represents
+the conduct of a naval officer of high
+character in the light of a paltry <i>ruse</i>,
+and for no imaginable purpose but ill-will.
+“<i>They laughed in their sleeves</i>”
+at the success of this ruse. The admiral
+was <i>triumphant</i>, <i>because</i> the
+governor was vexed; and Napoleon
+was, of course, conqueror on the occasion.
+This is the most pitiful of all
+gossip, and is unworthy of even the
+nursery. Let this be contrasted with
+the manly account by the governor
+himself of the first interview which
+took place next day at four. “I was
+accompanied by Sir G. Cockburn.
+General Bertrand received us in the
+dining-room serving as an antechamber,
+and instantly ushered me into an
+inner room, where I found him (Napoleon)
+standing, having his hat in his
+hand. Not addressing me when I
+came in, but apparently waiting for
+me to speak to him, I broke silence
+by saying, ‘I am come, sir, to present
+my respects to you.’ ‘You speak
+French, sir, I perceive; but you also
+speak Italian. You once commanded
+a regiment of Corsicans.’ I replied,
+‘the language was alike to me.’ ‘We
+will speak, then, in Italian;’ and immediately
+commenced a conversation
+which lasted about half an hour—the
+purport of which was principally as
+follows. He first asked me, ‘where
+I had served?—how I liked the Corsicans?
+They carry the stiletto; are
+they not a bad people?’ (looking at
+me very significantly for an answer.)
+My reply was—‘They do not carry
+the stiletto, having abandoned that
+custom in our service. They have
+always conducted themselves with
+propriety; I was very well satisfied
+with them.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“He asked me if I had not been
+in Egypt with them; and on my replying
+in the affirmative, he entered
+into a long discussion respecting that
+country. ‘Menou was an imbecile.
+If Kleber had been there, <i>you would
+have been all made prisoners</i>.’” To this
+ungracious remark the governor seems
+to have abstained from any reply.
+How easily might he have reminded
+Napoleon of Acre! and the difficulty
+which he found then of taking prisoners
+even the crews of two English
+ships, who drove him from the walls
+at the head of his army, and virtually,
+after hunting him from Syria, drove
+him into the desertion of Egypt. In
+the French narratives of war, the
+general who has been beaten is always
+an <i>imbecile</i>. It is an extraordinary
+<i>trait</i> of character in Napoleon to have
+ventured on the subject at all. Yet
+he expatiated on it, as if he had never
+known defeat on its shores. “He
+blamed Abercromby for not having
+landed sooner, or for not proceeding
+to another point. Moore, with his six
+thousand men, ought to have been all
+destroyed.” He admitted, however,
+the bravery of the generals. “He
+asked me if I knew Hutchinson, and
+whether he was the same who had
+been arrested at Paris” (for the escape
+of Lavalette). “His question on this
+point betrayed great interest.” The
+subject of Egypt was resumed. “It
+was the most important geographical
+point in the world, and had always
+been considered so. He had reconnoitered
+the line of the Canal across
+the Isthmus of Suez; he had calculated
+the expense at ten or twelve
+millions of livres (half a million sterling,
+he said, to make me understand
+more clearly the probable cost of it);
+that a powerful colony being established
+there, it would have been <i>impossible</i>
+for us to have preserved our
+empire in India.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>This remark is an example of the
+dashing way in which foreigners settle
+all the affairs of the world. If Napoleon
+had been asked to show how a
+French colony in Egypt could have
+overthrown an Indian empire, he must
+have been profoundly puzzled. A
+French colony would, doubtless, have
+prevented the overland passage. Yet,
+<i>without</i> that passage, India had been
+ours, or in the direct progress to be
+ours, for a hundred years! What
+could a colony in Egypt have done
+while the Red Sea was blocked up by
+English ships? How could it transport
+an army over the Desert—through
+Arabia, Persia, and the passes of the
+Himalaya?—and without an army,
+what could they do in India? The
+much greater chance was, that a
+French colony would have been starved
+or slaughtered, as the French army in
+Egypt would have been, but for its
+capitulation. The same absurdity is
+common to other services. The Russians,
+from the peasant to the throne,
+think that India is at their mercy,
+from the instant of a battalion’s appearing
+on the verge of Tartary,
+while they are forced to acknowledge
+that the Desert is impassable by any
+army in summer; and General Perowsky,
+in an expedition which decimated
+his army, half way to Thibet,
+has proved it to be equally impassable
+in winter. Or, may we not ask, if
+this mighty conquest is so much a
+matter of calculation, why have not
+the poor and feeble tribes of the
+Caucasus been conquered in a war of
+twenty years, within a stone’s throw
+of the Russian frontier?—while in
+India, after a march across swamps,
+sands, and mountains, they would
+have to meet an army of two hundred
+thousand men (easily increased to
+half a million), led by British officers?</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The people of the United States are
+equally absurd in their speculations
+on the conquest of Canada. They
+pronounce it ready to drop into their
+hands, like fruit from the tree. Yet,
+every attempt at the invasion of
+Canada has resulted only in ridiculous
+defeat!</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Napoleon again railed at Menou,
+and concluded with the remark, which
+he pronounced in a very serious manner:
+“‘In war, the gain is always
+with him who commits the fewest
+faults.’ It struck me as if he was reproaching
+himself with some great
+error.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In this curious interview, Sir G.
+Cockburn’s having been shut out
+by a mere accident was made the
+most of, as a charge of incivility
+against the governor. We give Sir
+Hudson Lowe’s own version. He had
+been accompanied by the admiral to
+Longwood. “In order that there
+might be no mistake respecting the
+appointment being for Sir George
+Cockburn as well as myself, I distinctly
+specified to Bertrand that we
+should go together. We went, and
+were received in the outer room by
+Bertrand, who almost immediately
+ushered me into Bonaparte’s presence.
+I had been conversing with him for
+nearly half an hour, when, on his
+asking me if I had brought with me
+the Regent’s speech, I turned round
+to ask Sir George Cockburn if I had
+not given it to him? and observed, to
+my surprise, that he had not followed
+me into the room. On going out, I
+found him in the antechamber much
+irritated. He told me that Bertrand
+had almost shut the door in his face
+as he was following me into the room,
+and that a servant had put his arm
+across him. He said he would have
+forced his way, but that he was expecting
+I would have turned round to
+see that he was following me, when
+he supposed I would have insisted on
+our entering the room together. I
+told him I knew nothing of his not
+being in the same room till Bonaparte
+asked me for the Regent’s speech....
+Bonaparte was ready to receive him
+after I had left the room; but he would
+not go in. Bertrand and Montholon
+have been with him since, making
+apologies. But the admiral, I believe,
+is still not quite satisfied about it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Napoleon’s conversation was essentially
+rough, a circumstance to be
+accounted for, partly by his birth,
+and partly by his camp education.
+O’Meara mentions that Montholon,
+having brought a translation of the
+paper which the domestics who desired
+to remain with him were to
+sign, Napoleon, looking at it, said—“This
+is not French—it is not sense.”
+“Sire,” said the other, “it is a literal
+translation of the English.” “However,”
+said Napoleon, “it is neither
+French nor German (tearing it in
+two)—<i>you are a fool</i>.” Then, looking
+it over, he said—“He makes a
+translation into stuff, which is not
+French, and is nonsense to any Frenchman.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>As we are not the defenders of the
+governor, and the subject of mere defence
+is now past by, we shall chiefly
+give abstracts of the conversation of
+his memorable prisoner. He asked
+O’Meara if he had been at Alexandria.
+“Yes, in a line-of-battle ship.”
+“But I suppose you could not enter
+the harbour?” O’Meara told him,
+“that we soon found a passage
+through which any vessel might go.
+This he would not believe for some
+time, until I told him that I saw the
+Tigre and the Canopus, of eighty
+guns each, enter with ease. ‘Why!’
+said he, with astonishment, ‘that
+Commodore Barré, whom you took
+in the Rivoli, was ordered by me to
+sound for a passage when I was there,
+and he reported to me that there was
+not a possibility of a line-of-battle
+ship’s entering the harbour.’ He observed,
+then, ‘that the fleet might
+have been saved if he had done his
+duty.’ I told him, then, that we had
+blocked up the passage by sinking
+two vessels laden with stone in it;
+to which he replied, ‘that it was
+easy to remove such obstacles.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The expenses of Napoleon’s household
+were heavy. On the voyage
+out, between the 8th of August and
+the 17th of November, they had consumed
+a hundred dozens of wine, besides
+some casks of an inferior kind
+for the servants. In one of the governor’s
+despatches to Lord Bathurst,
+two fortnights’ accounts are given
+from Mr Balcombe, purveyor to Longwood.
+The amount of one fortnight
+is an expenditure of £683, 5s. 4d.;
+and of the other, £567, 10s. 4d.; the
+annual expense, at the former rate,
+thus amounting to above £16,000, and
+at the latter to £13,000—nine persons,
+with four children, being the
+family; the rest, with the exception
+of the two officers in attendance, being
+servants—the whole number amounting
+to 59.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>One day, on hearing that Napoleon
+had not been seen by the attendant
+officer, the governor visited Longwood.
+“I passed,” said he, “through
+his dining-room, drawing-room, and
+another room, in which were displayed
+a great number of maps and plans
+laid out on a table, and several
+quires of writing, and was then introduced
+into an inner room, with a
+small bed in it, and a couch, on which
+Bonaparte was reclining, having only
+his dressing-gown on, and without
+his shoes.” On the governor’s
+expressing regret for his indisposition,
+and offering him medical advice, “I
+want no doctor,” said he. On his
+asking “whether Lady Bingham had
+arrived, and being answered that her
+non-arrival was owing to the delay
+of the Adamant transport, which was
+also bringing wines, furniture, &#38;c.,
+for Longwood, he said—‘It was all
+owing to the want of a chronometer;
+that it was a miserable saving of the
+Admiralty not to give every vessel of
+above two hundred tons one; and that
+he had done it in France.’ After a pause,
+he asked—‘What was the situation
+of affairs in France when I left Europe?’
+I said, ‘Everything, I believe,
+was settled there.’ Beauchamp’s
+Campaign of 1814 was lying
+on the floor near him. He asked me
+if I had written the letters referred
+to in the appendix to this work. I
+answered, ‘Yes.’ ‘I recollect Marshal
+Blucher at Lubeck,’ said he; ‘is
+he not very old?’ ‘Seventy-five
+years,’ I replied, ‘but still vigorous—supporting
+himself on horseback
+for sixteen hours a-day, when circumstances
+render it necessary.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Napoleon then, after a pause, returned
+to the usual observations on
+his captivity. “I should have surrendered
+myself,” said he, to the Emperor
+of Russia, who was my friend,
+or to the Emperor of Austria, who
+was related to me. “There is courage
+in putting a man to death, but it is
+an act of cowardice to let him languish,
+and to poison him in so horrid
+an island, and so detestable a climate.”
+To the governor’s remark
+that St Helena was not unhealthy,
+and that the object of the British
+Government was, to make his residence
+on the island as satisfactory to
+himself as possible, he said—“Let
+them send me a coffin—a couple of
+balls in the head is all that is necessary.
+What does it signify to me
+whether I lie on a velvet couch or on
+fustian? I am a soldier, and accustomed
+to everything.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>As to his repeated expression, that
+he might have put himself into the
+hands of others, and that he voluntarily
+gave himself up to England,
+there can be no doubt of his <i>conscious</i>
+falsehood on both points. The French
+provisional government would not
+have suffered him to pass the frontier;
+nor would he have given himself
+up to Captain Maitland if he
+could have escaped to America. He
+also dreaded the sentence of the
+Bourbons, who would probably have
+imprisoned, or even put him to death,
+as they did Ney and Labédoyère, and
+as Murat was shot by order of the
+Neapolitan government. If he had
+fallen into Blucher’s hands, that officer
+proposed to have him shot in the ditch
+of Vincennes, on the very spot where
+the Duc d’Enghien was murdered; a
+proposal which was ineffectual only
+through the generous objections of the
+Duke of Wellington. The proclamation
+of the Allied sovereigns had already
+put him in a state of <i>outlawry</i> with
+Europe. Napoleon knew all this:
+he had been a prisoner at Malmaison;
+and though spared for the moment,
+he might be convinced that, on the
+withdrawal of the Allied troops, his
+life would have been demanded by
+the tribunals. Thus his declarations
+of confidence in England amounted
+simply to the belief that he would not
+be put to death in its hands. He was
+too sagacious to suppose that he could
+have been let loose again, to be the firebrand
+of the Continent, or to play once
+more the farce of royalty in Elba.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The inveteracy of Napoleon in his
+hatred of the governor almost amounted
+to frenzy. After one of these
+interviews, he said, “I never saw
+such a horrid countenance. He
+(Sir H. Lowe) sat in a chair opposite
+to my sofa, and on the little
+table between us was a cup of coffee.
+His physiognomy made such an unfavourable
+impression on me that
+I thought <i>his looks had poisoned it</i>.
+I ordered Marchand to throw it out
+of the window. I could not have
+swallowed it for the world.” Part of
+this “<i>horror</i>” was probably “acting;”
+but as everything reached Sir Hudson,
+it belonged to the system of insult.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Napoleon’s ideas of religion were
+sometimes regarded as <i>decent</i>, compared
+with the general tone of the
+Continent. On his deathbed he said,
+“<span lang="fr">Je ne suis ni <i>physicien</i> ni <i>philosophe</i>.</span>”
+(I am neither a <i>materialist</i>
+nor an <i>infidel</i>.) But an anecdote
+given in Sir Hudson’s correspondence
+shows the unfortunate conception
+of his creed: “Dr O’Meara
+related to me yesterday a very
+characteristic observation of this remarkable
+personage. He asked him,
+on seeing that he had taken his oath
+to the authenticity of the paper he had
+brought to me, in what manner he had
+sworn to it. Dr O’Meara replied, ‘On
+the New Testament.’ ‘<i>Then</i>, you <i>are</i>
+such a fool!’ was his reply.” His
+attendants were obviously much of
+the same order of thinking: “Cipriani
+came out one day from Bonaparte’s
+room, to Dr O’Meara, saying,
+in a manner indicative of great surprise,
+‘My master is certainly beginning
+to lose his head. <i>He believes
+in God.</i> You may think; he said to
+the servant who was shutting the
+windows, Why do you take from us
+the light which God gives us?’ Oh,
+certainly he loses his head. He
+began at Waterloo, but now it is
+<i>certain</i>.” His following remark was
+curious, as an evidence of the <i>actual</i>
+feeling of these people with respect to
+the man whom they professed to
+<i>adore</i>. Cipriani added—“I do not
+believe in God; because, if there were
+one, he would not have allowed a man,
+who has done so much harm, to live
+so long. And <i>he</i> does not believe;
+because, if he believed, he would not
+have caused so many millions of men
+to be killed in this world, for fear of
+meeting them in the other.” This is
+absurd, but it is perhaps the average
+of Italian belief. Cipriani was <i>maître
+d’hotel</i>, and a man of intelligence.
+He died on the island in 1818.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>One of the conversations transmitted
+by O’Meara related to Waterloo.
+“The worst thing,” said Napoleon,
+“that England ever did, was
+that of endeavouring to make herself
+a great military nation. In doing
+that, she must <i>always be the slave</i> of
+Russia, Prussia, or Austria, or at
+least in some degree subservient to
+them, because she has not enough of
+men to combat on the Continent either
+France or any of the others, and consequently
+must hire men from some
+of them; whereas, at sea, you are so
+superior, your sailors so much better,
+that you will always be superior to
+us. Your soldiers, too, have not the
+qualities for a military nation; they are
+not equal in agility, address, or intelligence
+to the French; and when they
+meet with a reverse, their discipline is
+very bad.... I saw myself the
+retreat of Moore, and I never in my
+life witnessed anything so bad as the
+conduct of the soldiers; it was impossible
+to collect them or make them do
+anything; nearly all were drunk.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>This is a calumny. The army under
+General Moore offered battle to the
+army under Napoleon, who <i>declined it</i>;
+and when he saw the steadiness of
+the British, on their retreat through
+an exhausted country, and especially
+saw that his troops could make no
+impression on the fifteen thousand
+men commanded by Moore, and <i>saw</i>
+(as we understood) the utter defeat of
+the cavalry of his guard by the British
+hussars, under the command of
+the present Marquis of Londonderry,
+he wisely drew rein, and returned to
+Paris, leaving it to Soult “to drive
+the leopards into the sea,” who, instead
+of performing this exploit, was
+himself beaten on the shore, and
+forced to see the British embark at
+their ease. It is true that the rapidity
+and exhaustion of the British
+march left many stragglers on the
+road; but the rapidity resulted from
+the error of having supposed that
+there were parallel roads to the highroad,
+by which a French force might
+have intercepted their march. But,
+in <i>every</i> attack on that march, the
+French were repulsed; and such was
+the nature of their defeat in the battle
+of Corunna, that they were wholly
+driven off their ground, and another
+hour of daylight must have seen their
+retreat converted into a <i>rout</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The sneer at England, as not being
+a military nation, is at once answered
+by the fact, that its whole regular
+force is an army of <i>volunteers</i>, while
+all the other armies of Europe are
+raised by a <i>conscription</i>; that in the
+French war England had an army of
+200,000 men, raised by the military
+spirit of the country, besides 500,000
+militia and yeomanry! The answer
+to the “want of soldierly qualification”
+in the British troops, is given in
+the fact, that in the whole war the
+British army <i>never</i> lost a pitched
+battle.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Napoleon’s account of Waterloo, as
+given in those pages, is, simply, that
+Wellington did everything <i>wrong</i>, but
+with the good fortune of everything
+turning out right; that he <i>ought</i>, in all
+propriety, to have been beaten, though
+he beat; that the battle was a series
+of blunders, which by the power of
+destiny, or <i>something</i> else, turned into
+victory; and that he himself ought, by
+all the rules of war, to have been
+marching in triumph into Brussels,
+while he was running away to Paris,
+leaving 40,000 Frenchmen slain, prisoners,
+or fugitives, instead of the
+40,000 Englishmen, who <i>ought</i> to have
+fallen. In the same spirit, Napoleon
+ought to have been sitting on the
+throne of France, while he was talking
+fustian at St Helena. “What,”
+said Napoleon, “must have been the
+consequence of <i>my</i> victory?” The
+indignation against the Ministry for
+having caused the loss of 40,000 of
+the flower of the English army, of the
+sons of the first families, and others,
+who would have perished there, would
+have excited such a popular commotion,
+that—“they would have been
+<i>turned out</i>.” (A rather lame and impotent
+conclusion.) “The English would
+then have made peace, and withdrawn
+from the Coalition.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>This is one of the perpetual absurdities
+of foreigners. England has
+<i>never</i> been compelled to an ignominious
+peace, by losses in war. She has
+<i>never</i> seen an enemy in her capital.
+Loving peace, she willingly makes
+peace; but she has <i>never</i> surrendered
+her sword to make it.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>He persevered in this verbiage.
+“I had succeeded; before twelve
+o’clock everything was mine, I might
+<i>almost</i> say. But <i>destiny</i> and <i>accident</i>
+decided it otherwise.” The curious
+combination of the most fixed, and
+the most casual, of all things, was
+alone adequate to account for the defeat
+of Napoleon! and with this folly
+the prisoner nursed his self-delusion to
+the end.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>One of the chief charges against
+the English Government was its stinting
+the French tables. But one of
+O’Meara’s <i>private</i> letters gives a fair
+account of the matter. “With respect
+to the allowance within which
+all the expenses were directed to be
+comprised—viz., £8000 sterling a-year,
+to which Sir Hudson Lowe has,
+on his own responsibility, since added
+£4000 yearly (!) in my opinion a due
+regard has not been paid to circumstances,
+and I do not think even this
+latter sum will be sufficient....
+You perhaps are not aware of the
+French mode of living and their cookery.
+They have, in fact, <i>two</i> dinners
+every day—one at eleven or twelve
+o’clock, to which joints, roast and
+boiled, with all their various hashes,
+ragouts, fricassees, &#38;c., &#38;c., are served
+up, with wine and liqueurs; and another
+at eight o’clock, which differs
+from the former only in being supplied
+with more dishes. Besides these two
+meals, they all have (except Bonaparte
+himself, who eats only twice
+a-day, certainly very heartily) something
+like an English breakfast, in
+<i>bed</i>, between eight and nine in the
+morning; and a luncheon, with wine,
+at four or five in the afternoon.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The common notion of the English
+eating more animal food than the
+French is most incorrect. I am convinced
+that between their two dinners
+and luncheon they consume three or
+four times as much as any English
+family of a similar number. Those
+two dinners, then, the first of which
+they have separately in their respective
+rooms, cause a great consumption
+of meat and wine, which, together
+with their mode of cookery, require a
+great quantity of either oil or butter,
+both of which are excessively dear in
+this place (and you may as well attempt
+to deprive an Irishman of potatoes
+as a Frenchman of his oil, or
+some substitute for it). Their <i>soupes
+consommés</i> (for they are, with one or
+two exceptions, the greatest gluttons
+and epicures I ever saw), producing
+great waste of meat in a place where
+the necessaries of life are so dear, altogether
+render necessary a great expenditure
+of money.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Among the cunning attempts to
+throw the conduct of the governor into
+abhorrence, was the charge of refusing
+Napoleon the <i>bust</i> of his son, and
+even intending to destroy it. O’Meara
+says, that it had been “landed fourteen
+days, and some of those in the
+governor’s hands.” This is another
+instance of the language perpetually
+used; the fact being, “that the bust
+was landed on the 10th or 11th of
+June, and sent to Longwood the <i>next
+day</i>.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The true narrative was this: In the
+summer of 1816, the ex-empress Maria
+Louisa having visited the baths of
+Leghorn, two marble busts of her son
+were executed. One of those was
+purchased by Messrs Beaggini in London,
+in hopes of an opportunity of
+sending it to St Helena. A store-ship,
+the Baring, being about to sail there
+in January 1817, a foreign gunner on
+board, named Radavich, was intrusted
+with the bust, with instructions to
+give it to Count Bertrand, for Napoleon,
+leaving it to his generosity “to refund
+their expenses.” If, however, he
+wished to know the price, it was to be
+a hundred louis. The captain of the
+ship (a half-pay lieutenant) knew
+nothing of its being on board till
+shortly before, or immediately after,
+his arrival at St Helena; at that time
+Radavich was ill of apoplexy, followed
+by delirium, so that for several
+days it was impossible to speak to him
+on the subject. When Sir Thomas
+Reade was informed that it was on
+board, he immediately acquainted
+the governor with the circumstance.
+Sir Hudson Lowe, considering the
+clandestine manner in which it was
+brought, was at first inclined to retain
+it until he had communicated
+with Lord Bathurst. But, Sir T.
+Reade suggesting that as the bust
+was not <i>plaster</i>, it could not contain
+letters, advised its being forwarded at
+once, and the governor assented. Before,
+however, ordering it on shore, he
+himself went to Longwood, to ascertain
+Napoleon’s wish through Bertrand.
+Major Gorrequer accompanied
+him, and in his notes gives an account
+of the interview. The governor mentioned
+the arrival of the bust to Bertrand,
+and said that he would take
+upon himself the responsibility of
+landing it, if such was the wish of
+Napoleon. Bertrand’s answer was,
+“No doubt it will give him pleasure.”
+The <i>next</i> day the bust was landed,
+taken to Longwood, and received by
+Napoleon with evident delight. By
+some means or other he had known
+of its arrival, and said to O’Meara
+on the 10th, “I have known it several
+days.” He then rushed into one of
+those explosions of wrath and oratory
+which were familiar to him. He said,
+“I intended, if it had not been given,
+to have made such a complaint as
+would have caused every Englishman’s
+hair to stand on end! I should
+have told a tale which would have
+made the mothers of England execrate
+him as a monster in human shape.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>And all this with the bust before
+his eyes. To heighten the effect, he
+would persist in pretending to believe
+that Sir Hudson Lowe had given
+orders for breaking up the bust, and
+on this fancy he declaimed anew
+against him, calling him “barbarous
+and atrocious.” “That countenance,”
+said he, turning to the bust, “would
+melt the heart of the most ferocious
+<i>wild beast</i>! The man who gave
+orders to break that image would
+<i>plunge a knife</i> into the heart of the
+original, if it were in his power.”
+And all this fury for a fiction!—the
+palpable contradiction to the charge
+of cruelty standing on his table.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>It is not even clear, after all, that
+there was <i>not</i> an intrigue connected
+with this bust: Napoleon exhibited extreme
+anxiety to see Radavich. This
+the governor permitted, but on the
+condition of the officer in attendance
+being present, and it was declined.
+Lord Bathurst, in his despatch to St
+Helena, said, “The suspicious circumstances
+under which the bust
+arrived, were sufficient to make you
+pause before you determined to transmit
+it to the general. Had the package
+contained anything less interesting to
+him in his character as a father, the
+clandestine manner in which it was
+introduced on board of the vessel
+would have been a sufficient reason
+for withholding the delivery of it, at
+least for a much longer period....
+I am not disposed to participate in his
+(the French ambassador’s) apprehensions
+that letters <i>were conveyed</i> in it.
+No doubt, however, can be entertained
+that attempts are making at clandestine
+communications.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>To this we may add that, by some
+secret means, the French were acquainted
+with every transaction of
+Europe, and frequently before the
+public authorities.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Napoleon ordered £300 to be given
+to Radavich (who was merely the
+agent for the London house). O’Meara
+says, in his <cite>Voice from St Helena</cite>,
+that, “by some unworthy tricks, this
+poor man did not recover the money
+for nearly two years.” This is a proof
+of the slipshod statements which are
+to be found in the volume; the fact
+being, that, in March 1818, the former
+proprietors of the bust wrote to Bertrand,
+to complain of the conduct of
+Radavich, as having come to no settlement
+with them “for the payment
+he had received for the bust, and for
+the other articles intrusted to him;
+and that he had gone from England
+without rendering any account to
+<i>them</i>.” They solicited Bertrand to
+give them some remuneration.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Our limits warn us that we must
+conclude, leaving a crowd of interesting
+incidents behind. The work seems
+perfectly to clear Sir Hudson Lowe’s
+character, not merely from the charge
+of severity, but even from the imputation
+of petulance. No man could
+be placed in a situation of greater
+difficulty. He had to deal with a
+<i>coterie</i> of the most unscrupulous kind;
+he had also especially to deal with a
+man irritated by the most signal
+downfall in European record, subtle
+beyond all example, unhesitating in
+evasion, formed of falsehood, and furious
+at necessary coercion. He had
+to meet also the clamours of French
+partisanship throughout Europe, and
+to bear the calumnies of faction even
+in England. He had to endure personal
+insult, and to counteract reckless
+intrigue. If he had been roused into
+violence of temper, no man could be
+more easily pardoned for its excess;
+but there is not a single <i>proof</i> of this
+charge, and the whole tenor of his
+conduct seems to have been patient
+and equable, though strict and firm.
+He had one paramount duty to perform—the
+prevention of Napoleon’s
+escape, and he did that duty. All
+minor deficiencies, if they existed,
+might be merged in the perfect performance
+of a duty which involved the
+peace of the world.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The dismissal of O’Meara from his
+office in the island, followed by his
+dismissal from the navy, let loose a
+personal enemy of some ability, much
+plausibility, and the bitterest anger.
+His volume, <cite>A Voice from St Helena</cite>,
+embodied all the charges against Sir
+Hudson Lowe, and was prosecuted as a
+libel. But the prosecution having, in
+the opinion of the judges, been delayed
+for some months beyond the legal
+time, it failed, on that ground only.
+The governor of St Helena drew up
+a refutation of the volume, which still
+remains in the archives of Government.
+Why he did not appeal to the
+opinion of the country—a duty which
+no public man can decline without loss
+to his own character—cannot now be
+ascertained. He was probably weary
+of a life of contradiction, and had no
+desire to continue it in controversy.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>But the task, though long delayed,
+has finally been performed, as it appears
+to us, with perfect manliness,
+clearness, and conviction, by its present
+author. Mr Forsyth’s style is
+admirably fitted for his subject—fair,
+forcible, and argumentative. By his
+work he has done credit to himself,
+and cleared the character of a brave,
+an honest, and a high-minded English
+soldier and gentleman. We know no
+ampler panegyric on the uses or the
+successes of authorship.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Sir Hudson Lowe was appointed to
+the colonelcy of the first vacant regiment
+(the 93d) on his return—was
+subsequently in command of the troops
+in Ceylon—and at length, yielding to
+the effects of toil and time, died in
+1844, in his 75th year.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'>NEW READINGS IN SHAKESPEARE.<a id='r16'></a><a href='#f16' class='c007'><sup>[16]</sup></a></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>A copy of almost any ancient
+author, with its margins studded
+with antique manuscript jottings, is
+a treasure to the scholar who possesses
+it, and a sore temptation to all
+his antiquarian friends. What, then,
+must be the pricelessness of an early
+folio, thus annotated, of Shakespeare,
+the Emperor of all the Literatures?
+Would not a lover of the poet be
+almost inclined to sell his whole library
+in order to purchase that single
+book? And when secured, with what
+zest would he not set himself to
+decipher the crabbed hieroglyphics
+on the margins of the intoxicating
+windfall! The various readings, recommended
+by the charm of novelty,
+and yet apparently as old, and <i>perhaps</i>
+as genuine as the printed text,
+would gradually become its rivals.
+Alterations, occasionally felicitous,
+would throw an air of respectability
+over their less insinuating associates.
+Sole possession would enhance the
+importance of the discovery. Solitary
+enjoyment would deepen the relish
+of the entertainment. The situation
+is one not at all favourable to the
+exercise of a sound critical judgment.
+Imagination goes to work, and colours
+the facts according to its own wishes;
+and faith and hope, “hovering o’er,”
+at length drive away all misgivings as
+to the authenticity of the emendations.
+That fine old handwriting, which
+is as conscientious as it is curious,
+is itself a guarantee that the corrections
+are not spurious—are not merely
+conjectural. The manuscript corrector
+must have had good grounds for
+what he did. He may have been
+Shakespeare’s bosom friend, his boon
+companion, his chosen confidant, and
+perhaps the assistant in his labours;
+or, if not that, at any rate the friend
+of some one who had known the great
+dramatist well—was acquainted with
+his innermost thoughts—and as intimate
+with his works, and with all
+that he intended to express, as if he
+himself had written them. At all
+events, the corrector must have had
+access to sources of information respecting
+the text of the plays, the
+results of which have perished to
+all the world—<i>except me</i>, the happy
+holder of this unique and inestimable
+volume.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Such, we conceive, would be the
+state of mind and the train of reasoning
+into which a man would naturally
+be thrown by the acquisition of
+such an agitating prize as we have
+supposed. Under the excitement of
+his feelings, the authority of the corrector
+of the work would, in all likelihood,
+supersede the authority of its
+composer; the penman would carry
+the day against the printer; and the
+possessor of the book would do his
+best to press the “new readings”
+into the ears and down the throats of
+a somewhat uncritical but not altogether
+passive or unsuspicious public.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The case which we have described
+is to be understood as a general and
+ideal one; but something of this kind
+seems to have befallen Mr Collier,
+whom accident lately placed in possession
+of a copy of the folio of Shakespeare,
+1632, plentifully garnished
+with manuscript notes and emendations.
+In these trying circumstances
+he has acted very much in the way
+which might have been anticipated.
+It is true that he announces his good
+fortune in a strain of moderated enthusiasm.
+“In the spring of 1849,”
+says he, “I happened to be in the
+shop of the late Mr Rodd, of Great
+Newport Street, at a time when a
+package of books arrived from the
+country.” Among them was a very
+indifferent copy of the folio of Shakespeare,
+1632, which Mr Collier, concluding
+hastily that it would complete
+an imperfect copy of the same edition
+which he had purchased from the
+same bookseller some time before,
+bought for thirty shillings. The purchase
+did not answer its purpose.
+The two leaves that were wanted to
+complete the other folio “were unfit
+for my purpose, not merely by being
+too short” (how very particular these
+book-fanciers are), “but otherwise
+damaged and defaced. Thus disappointed,
+I threw it by, and did not see
+it again until I made a selection of
+books I would take with me on quitting
+London. On consulting it afterwards,”
+continues Mr Collier, “it
+struck me that Thomas Perkins,
+whose name, with the addition of
+‘his Booke,’ was upon the cover,
+might be the old actor who had performed
+in Marlowe’s <cite>Jew of Malta</cite>
+on its revival shortly before 1633.”
+That would have been an important
+fact, as helping to connect the MS.
+corrections closely with the Shakesperian
+era. But here Mr Collier was
+doomed to disappointment. On further
+inquiry he found that the actor’s name
+was Richard Perkins: “still,” says
+he, with a faith too buoyant to be
+submerged by such a trifle, “Thomas
+Perkins might have been a descendant
+of Richard,” from whom, of course,
+he probably inherited a large portion
+of the emendations. “This circumstance,”
+says Mr Collier, “and others,
+induced me to examine the volume
+more particularly: I then discovered,
+to my surprise, that there was hardly
+a page which did not present, in a
+handwriting of the time, some emendations
+in the pointing or in the text,
+while on most of them they were
+frequent, and on many numerous.
+Of course I now submitted the folio
+to a most careful scrutiny; and as it
+occupied a considerable time to complete
+the inspection, how much more
+must it have consumed to make the
+alterations? The ink was of various
+shades, differing sometimes on the
+same page, and I was once disposed
+to think that two distinct hands had
+been employed upon them. This notion
+I have since abandoned, and I
+am now decidedly of opinion that the
+same writing prevails from beginning
+to end, but that the amendments
+must have been introduced from time
+to time during perhaps the course of
+several years.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>But although Mr Collier speaks
+thus calmly of his prize, we are
+nevertheless convinced, by the rapidity
+of his conversion from the old
+readings to the new, that he, like the
+rest of us, is liable to be carried a
+little off his feet by any sudden stroke
+of prosperity, and is keenly alive (as
+most people are) to the superior
+merits of anything that happens to
+be his own. It is our nature to admire
+what we alone have been privileged
+to possess or to discover. Hence
+Mr Collier has stepped at one plunge
+from possession into cordial approbation
+and unhesitating adoption of
+most of the corrections set forth on
+the margins of his folio. Formerly the
+stanchest defender of the old Shakesperian
+text, he is now the advocate
+of changes in it, to an extent
+which calls for very grave consideration
+on the part of those who regard
+the language of the poet as a sacred
+inheritance, not to be disturbed by
+innovations, without the strongest
+evidence, the most conclusive reasons,
+and the most clamant necessity being
+adduced in their support.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>We are far from blaming Mr Collier
+for having published his volume of
+“Notes and Emendations.” Although
+it might be advantageously reduced in
+bulk by the omission of many details
+occupied with the settlement of matters
+which have been long ago settled, still
+it is in some respects a valuable contribution
+to the literature of Shakespeare.
+We have no faith whatever in
+the authenticity of the new readings; a
+few of them, however—a very few—seem
+to us to be irresistibly established
+by their own self-evidence;
+while the whole of them are invested
+with a certain degree of interest as
+the interpretations of an indefatigable,
+though thick-headed—of a blundering,
+yet early and perhaps almost contemporary,
+scholiast. As a matter of
+curiosity, and as indicative of the
+state of English criticism in the 17th
+century, the new readings are acceptable;
+and the thanks of the literary
+portion of the community are due to
+Mr Collier for having favoured them
+with this publication. But here the
+obligation stops. To insert the new
+readings into the text, and to publish
+them as the genuine words of Shakespeare
+(which we understand Mr
+Collier has either done or threatens
+to do), is a proceeding which cannot
+be too solemnly denounced. This is
+to poison our language in its very
+“wells of English undefiled.” It is
+to obliterate the distinctions which
+characterise the various eras of our
+vernacular tongue; for however near
+to the time of Shakespeare our newly
+discovered scholiast may have lived,
+there was doubtless some interval
+between them—an interval during
+which our language was undergoing
+considerable changes. It is to lose
+hold of old modes of thought, as well
+as of old forms of expression;—it is
+to confound the different styles of
+our literature;—it is to vitiate with
+anachronisms the chronology of our
+speech;—it is to profane the memory
+of Shakespeare.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>When we look for evidence in favour
+of the authenticity of these (so-called)
+“Emendations,” we look for it in vain.
+The state of the case may perhaps be
+understood, by attending to the following
+particulars. Of Shakespeare’s
+handwriting, so far as is known, there
+is not now extant so much as “the
+scrape of a pen,” with the exception
+of the autograph of his name. Of his
+plays, thirteen were published in an
+authentic form during his life, and
+four in spurious or “pirated” editions.
+These are called the quartos. After
+his death, one of his plays was published,
+by itself, for the first time—“Othello.”
+In 1623, seven years after
+his death, the first folio appeared. It
+contains the eighteen plays just referred
+to, with the addition of eighteen,
+now published for the first time.
+This folio 1623 was printed (if we
+are to believe its editors, and there is
+no reason to doubt their word) <i>from
+Shakespeare’s own manuscripts</i>, and
+from the quarto editions, revised and
+corrected to some extent, either by
+his own hand or under his authority.
+So that the folio 1623 is the highest
+authority that can be appealed to in
+the settlement of his text. It ranks
+even before the quartos, except in
+cases of obvious misprint, or other
+self-evident oversights. To it, in so
+far as <i>external</i> evidence is concerned,
+all other proofs must yield. <i>Internal</i>
+evidence may occasionally solicit the
+alteration of its text; but such emendations
+must, in every case, be merely
+conjectural. It is the basis of every
+genuine edition, and must continue
+so, until Shakespeare’s own manuscripts
+be brought to light.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Out of these circumstances an important
+consideration arises. It is
+this, that we are not entitled, on any
+account, to alter the text of the folio
+1623, even in cases where manifest
+improvements might be made, so long
+as the old reading makes sense. If
+any reasonable meaning can be extracted
+from the received lection, we
+are bound to retain it, because we
+have every reason to believe that it
+is what Shakespeare wrote; and it is
+our object to possess his words and
+his meaning, not as we may suppose
+they <i>ought</i> to have been, but as they
+actually <i>were</i>. Where no sense at all
+can be obtained from a passage, a
+slight, perhaps a considerable, alteration
+is allowable; because any man’s
+intelligibility is to be preferred to
+even Shakespeare’s unintelligibility.
+But we are never to flatter ourselves,
+with any strong degree of assurance,
+that the correction has restored to us
+the exact language of the poet.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>This consideration had, in former
+years, its due weight with Mr Collier.
+No one was a keener advocate than
+he for preserving the original text inviolate.
+He now views the matter in
+a different light. He is tolerant of
+new readings, even in cases where
+sense can be elicited from the received
+text. Further, he frequently gives
+the preference to new readings, as we
+hope to show, even in cases where the
+old reading is far the more forcible
+and intelligible of the two. And on
+what ground does he countenance
+them? Setting aside at present the
+question of their internal evidence,
+we reply, that he countenances them
+on the ground that the folio 1623 is of
+doubtful authenticity. He denies that
+it was prepared from Shakespeare’s
+own papers. This is the foundation
+of his case. He maintains that the
+copy which the printer used had been
+(probably) dictated by some underling
+of the theatre, to some scribe
+whose ear (probably) often deceived
+him in taking up the right word, and
+who consequently put down a wrong
+one, which was subsequently set up
+in type by the printer. He is further
+of opinion that a text of Shakespeare,
+purer than any that ever got into
+print, was preserved <i>orally</i> in the
+theatre, and that the corrector of his
+folio, who was decidedly of a theatrical
+turn, and perhaps himself a manager,
+picked up his new readings from the
+mouths of the players themselves.
+But he has entirely failed to prove
+these improbable assertions. His
+theory in regard to the printing of
+the folio 1623 is contradicted by the
+distinct announcement of its editors,
+who say of their great master that
+“his mind and hand went together,
+and what he thought he uttered with
+that easiness that we have scarce received
+<i>from him</i> a blot <i>in his papers</i>.”
+This declaration, that the materials
+from which they worked were derived
+directly from Shakespeare himself,
+seems to establish conclusively the
+authenticity of the folio 1623; and
+that point being made good, all external
+evidence in favour of the new
+readings must of necessity fail.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>But perhaps these new readings are
+supported by their internal evidence—perhaps
+they bring along with them
+such an amount of force and propriety
+as carries conviction on the
+very face of it, and entitles them to
+a decided preference in comparison
+with the old? Mr Collier would fain
+think so. On their evident superiority,
+both in sense and in style,
+he rests the main strength of his
+case. Speaking of his volume, he
+says, “I ought not to hesitate in
+avowing my conviction, that <i>we are
+bound</i> to admit <i>by far the greater body</i>
+of the substitutions it contains, as <i>the
+restored language</i> of Shakespeare. As
+he was especially the poet of common
+life, so he was emphatically the poet
+of common sense; and to <i>the verdict
+of common sense</i> I am willing to submit
+all the more material alterations
+recommended on the authority before
+me. If they will not bear that test, I
+for one am willing <i>to relinquish</i> them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Our principal object in the following
+pages is to show that “by far the
+greater body of the substitutions”
+will not stand this test; and that
+many of them present such a perverse
+depravation of the true text, that if
+the design of the corrector had been
+to damage the literary character of
+Shakespeare, he could not have accomplished
+his purpose more effectually
+than by representing these new readings
+as his. At the same time, we
+shall endeavour to bring forward
+everything in Mr Collier’s volume
+which tells in the manuscript-corrector’s
+favour. This will probably
+cause the corrector’s notes and emendations
+to be more highly thought of
+than they deserve; because, while it
+will be no difficult matter to lay before
+the reader <i>all</i>, or nearly all, his judicious
+amendments, our space will not
+permit us to present to him one-twentieth
+part of his astounding aberrations.
+Selecting, then, as many of
+the more important alterations as our
+limits will allow, and weighing what
+their internal evidence is worth, we
+shall go over the plays <i>seriatim</i>, commencing
+with “The Tempest.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><span class='sc'>The Tempest.</span>—The new readings
+in this play are generally unimportant,
+and, in our judgment, not one of
+them ought to be admitted into the
+text. In no case would anything be
+gained, and in some cases a good deal
+would be lost, by adopting the proposed
+changes. In the following passage
+the original text is certainly unsatisfactory,
+but the new reading is at
+least equally so. Antonio, the usurping
+Duke of Milan, has become so
+habituated to the possession of his
+unlawful power, and has been so little
+checked in the exercise of it, that he
+at length believes himself to be the
+real duke. This idea is thus expressed.
+Prospero, the rightful duke, says
+of him—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in14'>“He being thus <i>lorded</i>,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Not only with what my revenue yielded,</div>
+ <div class='line'>But what my power might else exact,—like</div>
+ <div class='line'>one</div>
+ <div class='line'>Who having, <i>unto truth</i>, by telling of it,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Made such a sinner of his memory</div>
+ <div class='line'>To credit his own lie,—he did believe</div>
+ <div class='line'>He was indeed the duke.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>For “lorded,” Mr Collier’s emendator
+would read “loaded”—a correction
+which Mr Collier himself admits to be
+“questionable,” and which we throw
+overboard at once. For “unto truth”
+he proposes “to untruth”—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in26'>“like one</div>
+ <div class='line'>Who having, <i>to untruth</i>, by telling of it,” &#38;c.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>But here, if one flaw is mended, another
+and a worse one is made. By
+reading “to untruth” we obtain, indeed,
+a proper antecedent to “it,”
+which otherwise must be looked for,
+awkwardly enough, in the subsequent
+word “lie.” But as a set-off against
+this improvement, we would ask, how
+can a man be said to make his memory
+a sinner <i>to untruth</i>? This would
+mean, if it meant anything, that the
+man’s memory was true; and this is
+precisely what Prospero says Antonio’s
+memory was not. We must
+leave, therefore, the text as it stands,
+regarding it as one of those passages
+in which Shakespeare has expressed
+himself with less than his usual care
+and felicity.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The substitution of “all” for “are”
+in the lines,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in12'>“They all have met again,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And <i>are</i> upon the Mediterranean float”—</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Or, as the MS. corrector reads it,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“They <i>all</i> upon the Mediterranean float”—</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>strikes us as peculiarly un-Shakesperian.
+But this instance of the corrector’s
+injudicious meddling is a small
+matter. The following passage deserves
+more careful consideration, for we are
+convinced that the text of the first and
+second folios, which has been universally
+rejected since the days of Theobald,
+is, after all, the right reading.
+<i>Act III. Scene 1</i> opens with the soliloquy
+of Ferdinand, who declares that
+the irksome tasks to which he has
+been set by Prospero are sweetly alleviated
+by the consciousness that he
+has secured the interest and sympathy
+of Miranda. He says—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“There be some sports are painful; but their labour</div>
+ <div class='line'>Delight in them sets off: some kinds of baseness</div>
+ <div class='line'>Are nobly undergone: and most poor matters</div>
+ <div class='line'>Point to rich ends. This my mean task</div>
+ <div class='line'>Would be as heavy to me as odious; but</div>
+ <div class='line'>The mistress, which I serve, quickens what’s dead,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And makes my labours pleasures. Oh, she is</div>
+ <div class='line'>Ten times more gentle than her father’s crabbed,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And he’s composed of harshness. I must remove</div>
+ <div class='line'>Some thousands of these logs, and pile them up</div>
+ <div class='line'>Upon a sore injunction. My sweet mistress</div>
+ <div class='line'>Weeps when she sees me work, and says such baseness</div>
+ <div class='line'>Had never like executor. I forget:</div>
+ <div class='line'>But these sweet thoughts do even refresh my labours,</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Most busy-less, when I do it</i>.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The last line, as it here stands, is
+Theobald’s reading; and it has been
+adopted almost unanimously by subsequent
+editors—by the compilers of
+the <i>variorum</i> Shakespeare—by Mr
+Knight—and most recently by Mr
+Halliwell, in his magnificent folio.
+Mr Singer, in his edition of 1826, and
+Mr Collier’s emendator, are, so far as
+we can learn, the only dissentients.
+The former proposes, “most busiest
+when I do it;” and the latter, “most
+busy,—blest when I do it;” which
+reading we agree with Mr Singer in
+thinking “the very worst and most
+improbable of all that have been suggested;”—will
+he excuse us for adding—except
+perhaps, his own? Theobald’s
+text is certainly greatly to be
+preferred to either of these alterations.
+Had the MS. corrector’s emendation
+been a compound epithet, “busy-blest”
+(that is, blest with my business,
+because it is associated with
+thoughts of Miranda), something,
+though perhaps not much, might possibly
+have been said in its behalf.
+But Mr Collier regards the correction
+as consisting of two distinct words;
+and, therefore, he must excuse us for
+saying that it is one in which sense
+and grammar are equally set at defiance.
+We now take up the original
+reading, which has been universally
+discarded, but which, as we hope
+clearly to show, calls for no alteration;
+and an attention to which, at an
+earlier stage in the revision of Shakespeare’s
+text, might have prevented a
+large expenditure of very unnecessary
+criticism. The original text of the
+line under consideration is this—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Most busy, least when I do it.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>This is the reading of the second folio.
+The first folio has “lest;” but, of
+course, <i>least</i> and <i>lest</i> are the same
+word in the arbitrary spelling of that
+early period. We maintain that this
+lection makes as excellent and undeniable
+sense as could be desired.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Most busy, least when I do it;”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>—that is, “when I do it (or work) <i>least</i>,
+then am I <i>most</i> busy, <i>most</i> oppressed
+by toil.” More fully stated, the obvious
+meaning is “this labour of mine
+is so preciously sweetened, so agreeably
+refreshed by thoughts of Miranda’s
+kindness, that I really feel <i>most</i>
+busy, most burthened, most fatigued,
+when I am <i>least</i> occupied with my
+task; because, then I am not so sensible
+of being the object of her sympathy
+and approval.” Shakespeare
+intends that Ferdinand should express
+the ardour of his attachment to Miranda
+in a strong hyperbole; accordingly,
+he makes him say, “I am most
+busy, when I am least busy;” because
+the spirit of Miranda does not cheer
+and inspire my idleness, in the way
+in which it cheers and inspires my
+labour. Theobald’s line expresses,
+although in an imperfect manner, this
+same hyperbole conversely. “I am
+least busy, when I am most busy;
+because, when I am working hardest,
+the spirit of Miranda is present to
+refresh and alleviate my toils.” But
+Shakespeare’s mode of expressing the
+exaggeration is both stronger and
+finer than Theobald’s, which in point
+of language is exceedingly lame and
+defective. Our only doubt, in restoring
+the old reading, is in regard to
+the word “it.” Perhaps it would be
+as well away, and we might read more
+perspicuously</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<i>Most</i> busy,—<i>least</i> when I do.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The measure being already redundant,
+the word could be spared. But its
+absence or presence makes little or no
+difference, and, with it, or without it,
+we hope to see this restoration of the
+original text, which, of course, requires
+no authority except its own to
+establish it, embodied in all future editions
+of our great national dramatist.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The only new reading in this play
+which we have some hesitation in
+condemning, is the following. The
+witch Sycorax is spoken of (<i>Act V.
+Scene 1.</i>) as one</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“That could control the moon, make flows and ebbs,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And deal in her command <i>without</i> her power.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>This is the ordinary text. The MS.
+corrector proposes “<i>with all</i> power;”
+and, at first sight, this correction looks
+like an improvement; for how could
+the witch deal in the moon’s command,
+if she had not got the moon’s power?
+On second thoughts, however, we
+believe that Mr Knight, who defends
+the common reading, is right. By
+“power,” we are here to understand
+<i>legitimate</i> authority; and of this Sycorax
+has none. By means of her spells
+and counternatural incantations she
+could make ebbs and flows, and thus
+wielded to some extent the lunar
+influences; but she had none of that
+rightful and natural dominion over
+the tides of the ocean which belongs
+only to the moon. Our verdict, therefore,
+is in favour of the old reading.
+We pass from “The Tempest” with the
+remark that the other new readings proposed
+by Mr Collier’s emendator have
+here and elsewhere been conclusively
+set aside, in our estimation, by the
+observations of Mr Knight and Mr
+Singer; and we again protest against
+any adulteration of the text of this
+play by the introduction even of a
+single word which the MS. corrector
+has suggested.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><span class='sc'>The Two Gentlemen of Verona.</span>—Nothing
+connected with Shakespeare
+is small, and therefore we make no
+apology for calling the reader’s attention
+to what some people might consider
+a very small matter—the difference
+between <i>for</i> and <i>but</i> in the
+following lines. <i>Act I. Scene 1.</i>—Valentine
+and Proteus, “The Two
+Gentlemen of Verona,” are saying
+good-bye to each other, the former
+being on the eve of setting out on
+his travels. Valentine, the traveller,
+says to his friend—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>—“on some love-book pray for my success.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Proteus.</i> Upon some book I love, I’ll pray for thee.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Valentine.</i> That’s on some shallow story of deep love,</div>
+ <div class='line'>How young Leander cross’d the Hellespont.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Proteus.</i> That’s a deep story of a deeper love,</div>
+ <div class='line'>For he was more than over shoes in love.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Valentine.</i> ’Tis true; <i>for</i> you are over boots in love,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And yet you never swam the Hellespont.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>In place of “for” in the last line but
+one, the corrector proposes “but,”
+and Mr Collier approves, remarking
+that <i>but</i> “seems more consistent with
+the course of the dialogue.” If, however,
+we attend to the sequence of
+thought in this passage, it will be apparent
+that the change not only fails
+to render the dialogue more consistent,
+but that it altogether destroys its consistency,
+converting very good sense
+into downright nonsense; smartness
+into drivel. When Proteus says that
+Leander who crossed the Hellespont
+was more than over shoes in love, Valentine
+catches him up, “’tis true: no
+doubt of it: he must have been more
+than over shoes in love; <i>for</i> you, who
+never swam the Hellespont at all, are
+actually over boots in love.” The reasoning
+here seems very plain. If Proteus,
+without swimming the Hellespont,
+was over <i>boots</i> in love, surely the very
+least that could be said of Leander,
+who did swim it, must be that he was
+more than over <i>shoes</i> in love. “Your
+remark, friend Proteus, though very
+true, is not very recondite. It is
+decidedly common-place, and such as I
+should scarcely have expected to hear
+from a person of your wit and penetration.
+Pray favour us with something
+a little more original and profound.”
+All this banter, and we
+venture to think it rather happy, is
+implied in Valentine’s words—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“’Tis true; <i>For</i> you are over boots in love,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And yet you never swam the Hellespont.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>But change this “for” into “but,” and
+the whole point of the dialogue is
+gone. Let this new reading be adopted,
+and future commentators will be
+justified in declaring that Shakespeare’s
+words were sometimes without meaning.
+This single and apparently insignificant
+instance in which the corrector
+has palpably misconceived his
+author, compels us to distrust his
+capacity, and ought to go far to shake
+the general credit of his emendations.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>To alter “blasting in the bud,” into
+“blasted in the bud,” is merely an
+instance of excessive bad taste on the
+part of the MS. corrector. We see
+nothing worthy of approval or animadversion
+until we come to two lines
+which are quoted from <i>Act III.
+Scene 2</i>—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“But say, this <i>weed</i> her love from Valentine,</div>
+ <div class='line'>It follows not that she will love Sir Thurio”—</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>where it may be a question whether
+“wean” (the corrector’s suggestion),
+might not be judiciously substituted
+for “weed.” If rapid extirpation was
+intended to be expressed, “weed” is
+the word; otherwise we are disposed
+to prefer “wean,” as better fitted
+to denote the contemplated alienation
+of Julia’s affections from Proteus.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In <i>Act IV. Scene 2</i>, a whole new
+line is introduced; and as there is no
+evidence to prove that the corrector
+did not write this line himself, we
+must protest against its insertion in
+the genuine writings of Shakespeare.
+The interpolation is in italics. Eglamour
+says to the distressed Silvia, who
+is requesting him to be her escort—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Madam, I pity much your grievances,</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>And the most true affections that you bear</i>,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Which since I know they virtuously are placed,</div>
+ <div class='line'>I give consent to go along with you.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Johnson explains <i>grievances</i> as sorrows,
+<i>sorrowful affections</i>—an explanation
+which renders the interpolated
+line quite unnecessary. Shakespeare
+understood the art of <i>ne quid nimis</i>,
+and frequently leaves something to be
+supplied by the imagination of his
+reader or hearer. Besides, it would
+have been indelicate in Eglamour to
+have alluded more particularly to the
+“loves” of Silvia and Valentine.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>If the MS. corrector had ever seen
+<i>Scene IV.</i> effectively acted, he must
+have perceived how completely one
+good point would have been destroyed
+by his unwise insertion of the word
+“cur.” Launce, servant to Proteus,
+has been sent by his master with a
+little dog as a present to Silvia.
+Launce has lost the lap-dog, and has
+endeavoured to make compensation
+by offering to Silvia his own hulking
+mongrel in its place. These particulars
+are thus recounted:—</p>
+
+<p class='c014'>“<i>Launce.</i>—Marry, sir, I carried Mistress
+Silvia the dog you bade me.</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><i>Proteus.</i>—And what says she to my little
+jewel?</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><i>Launce.</i>—Marry, she says your dog was
+a cur; and tells you currish thanks is good
+enough for such a present.</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><i>Proteus.</i>—But she received my present?</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><i>Launce.</i>—No, indeed, she did not. Here I
+have brought him back again.</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><i>Proteus.</i>—What! didst thou offer her <i>this</i>
+from me?</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><i>Launce.</i>—Ay, sir, the other squirrel was
+stolen from me by the hangman’s boys in the
+market-place; and then I offered her mine
+own, who is a dog as big as ten of yours,
+and therefore the gift the greater.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The question is, whether the word
+“this” is better by itself, or whether
+it should be coupled with the word
+“cur,” as the MS. emendator proposes.
+Our notion is, that the single
+pronoun is greatly the more expressive.
+“Did you offer her <i>this</i>” (of
+course pointing to the brute with an
+expression of indignation and abhorrence,
+which disdained to call him
+anything but <i>this</i>) “<span class='fss'>THIS</span>!!! from
+me? The lady must think me mad.”
+In regard to the other corrections, we
+perceive no such force or propriety in
+any of them as might incline us to
+disturb, for their sake, the received
+text of “The Two Gentlemen of Verona.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><span class='sc'>The Merry Wives of Windsor.</span>—In
+<i>Act II. Scene 1</i>, the commentators
+have all been gravelled by the
+word “an-heires,” as it stands in all
+the early editions in the following
+passage—</p>
+
+<p class='c014'>“<i>Host.</i>—My hand, bully, thou shalt have
+egress and regress; said I well, and thy name
+shall be Brook. It is a merry knight—will
+you go, <i>anheires</i>?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In place of this unintelligible word,
+various substitutes have been proposed.
+The MS. corrector would read
+“Will you go <i>on here</i>?” This is very
+poor, and sounds to our ears very unlike
+the host’s ordinary slang; and we have
+no hesitation in agreeing with Mr
+Dyce,<a id='r17'></a><a href='#f17' class='c007'><sup>[17]</sup></a> who gives the preference over
+all the other readings to that of Sir
+John Hanmer, the editor of the Oxford
+edition: “Will you go on, <i>mynheers</i>?”—will
+you go on, my masters?
+The word is proved to have been used
+in England in the time of Shakespeare.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In <i>Act II. Scene 3</i>, this same host,
+who deals somewhat largely in the
+unknown tongue, again says—</p>
+
+<p class='c014'>“I will bring thee where Mistress Page is,
+at a farm-house feasting, and thou shalt woo
+her. <i>Cried game</i>, said I well?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>This obsolete slang has puzzled the
+commentators sorely. Mr Dyce suggests
+“cried I aim,” which means, it
+appears, “Did I give you encouragement?”—(<i>vide</i>
+Singer, p. 7.) We confess
+ourselves incompetent to form
+an opinion, except to this extent, that
+Mr Collier’s corrector, who proposes
+“curds and cream,” seems to us to
+have made the worst shot of any that
+have been fired.<a id='r18'></a><a href='#f18' class='c007'><sup>[18]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In <i>Act IV. Scene I</i>, we rather think
+that the MS. corrector is right in
+changing “let” into “get,” in the
+following passage: “How now,” says
+Mrs Page to Sir Hugh Evans the
+schoolmaster; “How now, Sir Hugh?—no
+school to-day?” “No,” answers
+Sir Hugh; “Master Slender is
+<i>let</i> (read <i>get</i>) the boys leave to play.”
+In Sir Hugh’s somewhat Celtic dialect,
+he <i>is get</i> the boys a holiday.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In the following passage, <i>Act IV.
+Scene 5</i>, the received text is this—</p>
+
+<p class='c014'>“<i>Simple.</i>—I would I could have spoken
+with the woman herself. I had other things
+to have spoke with her, too, from him.</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><i>Falstaff.</i>—What are they?—let us know.</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><i>Host.</i>—Ay, come; quick.</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><i>Simple.</i>—I may not <i>conceal</i> them, sir.</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><i>Falstaff.</i>—<i>Conceal</i> them, or thou diest.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Good Dr Farmer thought that, in
+both instances, we should read “reveal”—not
+perceiving that the humour
+of the dialogue (such as it is) consists
+in <i>reading</i> “conceal,” and in <i>understanding</i>
+“reveal.” But the MS.
+emendator, with an innocence beyond
+even Dr Farmer’s, would alter the
+passage thus—</p>
+
+<p class='c014'>“<i>Falstaff.</i>—What are they?—let us
+know.</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><i>Host.</i>—Ay, come quick.</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><i>Falstaff.</i>—<i>You</i> may not conceal them, sir.</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><i>Host.</i>—Conceal them, <i>and</i> thou diest.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>And Mr Collier approves of this variation,
+as “making the dialogue run
+quite consistently.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><span class='sc'>Measure for Measure.</span>—In the
+Duke’s speech, at the opening of the
+play, a formidable difficulty presents
+itself. Addressing Escalus, of whose
+statesmanlike qualities he has the
+highest opinion, the Duke says, as all
+the editions give it—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Of government the properties to unfold,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Would seem in me to affect speech and discourse,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Since I am put to know that your own science</div>
+ <div class='line'>Exceeds in that the lists of all advice</div>
+ <div class='line'>My strength can give you. Then no more remains</div>
+ <div class='line'>But that, to your sufficiency, as your worth is able,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And let them work.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The two last lines of this passage
+have been a grievous stumbling-block
+to the commentators. The <i>variorum</i>
+men, with Johnson at their head,
+have made nothing of it. Mr Singer
+reads—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in14'>“Then no more remains</div>
+ <div class='line'>But <i>there to</i> your sufficiency as your worth is able,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And let them work;”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>which seems quite as dark and perplexing
+as the original text. Mr
+Collier’s man, cutting the knot with
+desperate hook, which slashes away a
+good many words, gives us—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in12'>“Then no more remains,</div>
+ <div class='line'>But <i>add</i> to your sufficiency your worth,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And let them work.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>These words are sufficiently intelligible;
+but this is not to rectify
+Shakespeare’s text—it is to re-write
+it; and this no man can be permitted
+to do. As a private speculation of
+our own, we venture to propose the
+following, altering merely one word
+of the authentic version—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in14'>“Then no more remains,</div>
+ <div class='line'>But that (to your sufficiency as your worth is able)</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>You</i> let them work.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The Duke has remarked that he is
+not competent to give Escalus any
+advice on matters of public policy, as
+he is much better versed in such
+affairs than himself. He then goes
+on to say, “No more remains, but
+that (seeing your worth is able—that
+is, is equal—to your sufficiency or
+acquired knowledge) you should let
+the two, your worth, and your sufficiency,
+work together for the good of
+your country.” Or it might be allowable
+to introduce “equal” into the
+text, thereby making the sense still
+plainer—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in14'>“Then no more remains</div>
+ <div class='line'>But that (to your sufficiency as your worth is <i>equal</i>)</div>
+ <div class='line'>You let them work.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>But if any auxiliar authority could
+be found for the use of the word
+“able” as here employed (a point
+about which we are doubtful, though
+not desperate), we should prefer to
+retain it in the text. By making the
+words <i>to</i> and <i>as</i> change places, we obtain
+a still more perspicuous reading—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in14'>“Then no more remains,</div>
+ <div class='line'>But that (<i>as</i> your sufficiency <i>to</i> your worth is equal)</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>You</i> let them work.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Mr Collier remarks (p. 42), “Near
+the end of Mrs Overdone’s speech,
+‘is’ is required before the words ‘to
+be chopped off.’ It is deficient in <i>all</i>
+printed copies, and is inserted in
+manuscript in the corrected folio
+1632.” We can inform Mr Collier
+that the word “is” stands, in this
+place, in the <i>variorum</i> edition of 1785.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act I. Scene 4.</i>—The Duke, who
+has abdicated for a time in favour of
+Angelo, says, in allusion to the
+abuses which Angelo is expected to
+correct—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“I have on Angelo imposed my office,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Who may, in the ambush of my name, strike home,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And yet, my nature never in the sight,</div>
+ <div class='line'>To <i>do it</i> slander.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The corrector of Mr Collier’s folio
+suggests to <i>draw on</i> slander; and as a
+gloss or explanation of an antiquated
+or awkward expression, this variation
+may be accepted; but it certainly
+has no title to be admitted into the
+text as the authentic language of
+Shakespeare. The change of “story”
+into “scorn” (<i>Scene 5</i>), is perhaps
+admissible. Alluding to a false species
+of repentance, the friar, in <i>Act II.
+Scene 3</i>, says that such insufficient</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Sorrow is always towards ourselves, not heaven,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Showing we would not <i>spare</i> heaven, as we love it,</div>
+ <div class='line'>But as we stand in fear.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>On the margin of Mr Collier’s folio,
+“serve” is written, and “spare” is
+scored out. We greatly prefer the
+old reading, in spite of Mr Collier’s
+assertion that it is corrupt, and
+“seems little better than nonsense.”
+To <i>spare</i> heaven is not nonsense; it
+means to refrain from sin. To <i>serve</i>
+heaven means something more; it
+means to practise holiness. The
+difference is but slight, but it is quite
+sufficient to establish the language of
+Shakespeare as greatly superior to
+that of his anonymous corrector, because
+the point here in question is
+much rather abstinence from vice
+than the positive practice of virtue.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In <i>Act II. Scene 4</i>, the following
+somewhat obscure expression occurs:
+“in the loss of question”—what does
+it mean? “It means,” says Mr
+Singer (p. 11), “in the looseness of
+conversation.” That is a most satisfactory
+explanation. Yet if Mr Collier
+and his emendator had their own
+way, we should be deprived of this
+genuine Shakesperian phrase, and be
+put off with the unmeaning words
+“in the <i>force</i> of question.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In <i>Act III. Scene 1</i>, the alteration
+of “blessed” into “boasted,” in the
+speech in which the Duke so finely
+moralises on the vanity of human
+life, cannot be too decidedly condemned—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Thou” (oh Life) “hast nor youth nor age,</div>
+ <div class='line'>But as it were an after-dinner’s sleep,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Dreaming on both, for all thy <i>blessed</i> youth</div>
+ <div class='line'>Becomes as aged, and doth beg the alms</div>
+ <div class='line'>Of palsied eld.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Some people may not be able to
+understand how the period of youth
+can, in one and the same breath, be
+called <i>blessed</i>, and yet miserable as
+old age. They look on that as a contradiction.
+Such people ought never
+to read poetry. At any rate, they
+ought first to learn that the poet is
+privileged, nay, is often bound to declare
+as actual that which is only
+potential or ideal. Thus, he may
+say that <i>blessed</i> youth is a <i>miserable</i>
+season of existence, meaning thereby
+that misery overspreads even that
+time of life which <i>ought to be</i>, and
+which <i>ideally</i> is, the happiest in the
+pilgrimage of man. The manuscript
+corrector has but an obtuse perception
+of these niceties, and hence he
+substitutes <i>boasted</i> for <i>blessed</i>—converting
+Shakespeare’s language into
+mere verbiage.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><span class='sc'>Comedy of Errors</span>—<i>Act I. Scene</i>
+1.—The alteration of the word “nature”
+into “fortune” in the following
+lines, is an undoubted departure from
+the genuine language of Shakespeare,
+and a perversion of his sense. Ægeon,
+whose life has been forfeited by his
+accidental arrival at Ephesus, says—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Yet that the world may witness that my end</div>
+ <div class='line'>Was wrought by <i>nature</i>, not by vile offence,</div>
+ <div class='line'>I’ll utter what my sorrow gives me leave.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Mr Collier, slightly doubtful of the
+propriety of the new reading (<i>fortune</i>),
+says, “Possibly by ‘nature’ we might
+understand the natural course of
+events.” We say, <i>certainly</i> this is
+what we <i>must</i> understand by the word.
+I die by nature, says Ægeon, not by
+vile offence; or, as Warburton interprets
+it, “My death is according to
+the ordinary course of Providence,
+and not the effects of Divine vengeance
+overtaking my crimes.” But
+the word “fortune,” had Ægeon
+used it, would rather have implied
+that he regarded himself as an object
+of Divine displeasure; and therefore
+this word must not only not be
+adopted, but it must be specially
+avoided, if we would preserve the
+meaning of Shakespeare. In this case,
+the internal evidence is certainly in
+favour of the ordinary reading.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In a subsequent part of the same
+scene, the Duke, who is mercifully inclined
+towards Ægeon, advises him</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“To seek thy <i>help</i> by beneficial help.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>That is, he recommends him to
+borrow such a sum of money as may
+be sufficient to ransom his life. The
+MS. corrector reads not very intelligibly—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“To seek thy <i>hope</i> by beneficial help.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>And Mr Collier, explaining the <i>obscurum
+per obscurius</i>, remarks that
+“Ægeon was to seek what he hoped
+to obtain (viz. money to purchase his
+life) by the ‘beneficial help’ of some
+persons in Ephesus.” The “beneficial
+help” was itself the money by which
+he was to “seek his help,” or save
+his life. “Beneficial help” means
+“pecuniary assistance,” and therefore
+we are at a loss to understand Mr
+Collier when he says that Ægeon was
+to seek money by the “beneficial
+help” or pecuniary assistance of certain
+persons in Ephesus. All that he
+required to do was to obtain this pecuniary
+assistance; obtaining that, he
+of course would obtain the money by
+which his life was to be redeemed.
+The received text of the line ought on
+no account to be disturbed. The repetition
+of the word “help” is peculiarly
+Shakesperian.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act II. Scene 1.</i>—A very little consideration
+may convince any one that
+the following correction is untenable.
+The ordinary text is this: Dromio
+the slave having been well drubbed
+by his master, says—</p>
+
+<p class='c014'>“He told his mind upon mine ear; Beshrew
+his hand, I scarce could understand it.</p>
+
+<p class='c014'>“<i>Luciana.</i>—Spake he so <i>doubtfully</i>, thou
+couldst not feel his meaning?</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><i>Dromio.</i>—Nay, he struck so plainly, I
+could too well feel his blows; and withal so
+<i>doubtfully</i> that I could scarce understand
+them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The manuscript corrector proposes
+“doubly” for “doubtfully,” in both
+instances; losing sight, as we think,
+of the plain meaning of words. To
+speak doubly is to speak deceitfully;
+to speak doubtfully is to speak obscurely
+or unintelligibly. But certainly
+Luciana had no intention of
+asking Dromio if his master had
+spoken to him deceitfully. Such a
+question would have been irrelevant
+and senseless. She asks, spake he so
+<i>obscurely</i> that you could not understand
+his words?—and the slave answers,
+“By my troth, so obscurely that
+I could scarce understand (that is,
+stand under) them.” This is the only
+quibble.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In <i>Act II. Scene 2</i>, the expression
+“she <i>moves</i> me for her theme,” that
+is, “she makes me the subject of her
+discourse,” occurs. This is changed by
+the MS. corrector into “she <i>means</i>
+me for her theme;” that is, “she
+<i>means</i> to make me the subject of her
+discourse.” But the “she” who is
+here referred to is actually, at that
+very moment, talking most vehemently
+about the person who utters these
+words; and therefore this emendation
+is certainly no restoration, but a corruption
+of the genuine language of
+Shakespeare.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act IV. Scene 2.</i>—The bum-bailiff
+is thus maltreated. The words in
+italics are the MS. corrector’s wanton
+and damaging interpolations.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<i>Adriana.</i>—Where is thy master, Dromio, is he well?</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Dromio.</i>—No: he’s in Tartar limbo, worse than hell;</div>
+ <div class='line'>A devil in an everlasting garment hath him, <i>fell</i>;</div>
+ <div class='line'>One whose hard heart is buttoned up with steel,</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Who has no touch of mercy, cannot feel</i>;</div>
+ <div class='line'>A fiend, a <i>fury</i>, pitiless, and rough;</div>
+ <div class='line'>A wolf, nay worse, a fellow all in buff.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Here the only doubt is, whether
+the word “fury” (the MS., and also
+Theobald’s reading) is a judicious substitute
+for the word “fairy,” which
+the old copies present. We think
+that it is not, being satisfied with
+Johnson’s note, who observes—“There
+were fairies like hobgoblins,
+pitiless and rough, and described as
+malevolent and mischievous.”—Nowadays
+a fairy is an elegant creature
+dressed in green. So she was in
+Shakespeare’s time. But in Shakespeare’s
+time there was also another
+kind of fairy—a fellow clothed in a
+buff jerkin, made of such durable
+materials as to be well-nigh “everlasting;”
+and whose vocation it was,
+as it still is, to pay his addresses to
+those who may have imprudently allowed
+their debts to get into confusion.
+Let us not allow the old usages
+of language to drop into oblivion.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act IV. Scene 3.</i>—“The vigor of
+his rage,” is obviously a much more
+vigorous expression than “the rigor
+of his rage,” which the MS. corrector
+proposes in its place.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act V. Scene 1.</i>—“The following
+lines,” says Mr Collier, “as they are
+printed in the folio 1623, have been the
+source of considerable <i>cavil</i>,” meaning,
+we presume, <i>dispute</i>. The words
+are uttered by the Abbess, who has
+been parted from her sons for a great
+many years, and has but recently discovered
+them.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Thirty-three years have I but gone in travail</div>
+ <div class='line'>Of you, my sons, and till this present hour</div>
+ <div class='line'>My heavy burden are delivered.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>“That the above is corrupt,” continues
+Mr Collier, “there can be no
+question; and in the folio 1632, the
+printer attempted thus to amend the
+passage:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>‘Thirty-three years have I <i>been</i> gone in travail</div>
+ <div class='line'>Of you my sons, and till this present hour</div>
+ <div class='line'>My heavy burthens are delivered.’</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Malone gives it thus:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>‘Twenty-five years have I but gone in travail</div>
+ <div class='line'>Of you my sons; until this present hour</div>
+ <div class='line'>My heavy burthen <i>not</i> delivered.’</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The MS. corrector,” continues Mr
+Collier, “of the folio 1632 makes the
+slightest possible change in the second
+line, and at once removes the
+difficulty: he puts it—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>‘Thirty-three years have I been gone in travail</div>
+ <div class='line'>Of you my sons, and <i>at</i> this present hour</div>
+ <div class='line'>My heavy burthens are delivered.’”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>In his edition 1826, Mr Singer
+reads—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Twenty-five years have I but gone in travail</div>
+ <div class='line'>Of you, my sons, and till this present hour</div>
+ <div class='line'>My heavy burthen <i>ne’er</i> delivered.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>We are of opinion that a better
+reading than any here given, and than
+any ever given, might be proposed.
+Thus—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Thirty-three years have I but gone in travail</div>
+ <div class='line'>Of you, my sons, and till this present hour</div>
+ <div class='line'>My heavy burthen <i>has</i> delivered.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>That is, I have done nothing but
+go in travail of you, my children, for
+thirty-three years; and, moreover (I
+have gone in travail of you), till this
+present hour has delivered me of my
+heavy burden. This reading brings
+her pains up to the present moment,
+when she declares herself joyfully relieved
+from them by the unexpected
+restoration of her children. This
+amendment seems to yield a more
+emphatic meaning than any of the
+others; and it departs as little as any
+of them from the original text of
+1623.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><span class='sc'>Much Ado about Nothing</span>—<i>Act
+I. Scene 3.</i>—The brothers Don Pedro
+and Don John have quarrelled, and
+have been reconciled. Conrade remarks
+to the latter, “You have <i>of
+late</i> stood out against your brother,
+and he hath ta’en you newly into his
+grace.” The MS. correction is, “till
+of late,” which, as any one looking
+at the context even with half an eye,
+may perceive both spoils the idiom
+and impairs the meaning of the passage.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act II. Scene 1.</i>—We admit that
+Shakespeare might—nay, ought—to
+have written as follows, but we doubt
+whether he did. “Wooing, wedding,
+and repenting,” says Beatrice, “is as
+a Scotch jig, a measure, and a cinque-pace;
+the first suit is hot and hasty,
+like a Scotch jig, and full as fantastical;
+the wedding, mannerly modest,
+as a measure full of state and ancienty;
+and then comes repentance,
+and, with his bad legs, falls into
+cinque-pace faster and faster, till he
+sink <i>apace</i> into his grave.” “Apace”
+is MS. corrector’s contribution.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In the following much-disputed
+passage, we are of opinion that Shakespeare
+uses somewhat licentiously the
+word “impossible” in the sense of
+<i>inconceivable</i>, and that Johnson’s and
+the MS. corrector’s substitution of
+“importable” (<i>i. e.</i> insupportable) is
+unnecessary. “She told me,” says
+Benedick, speaking of Beatrice, “that
+I was the prince’s jester, and that I
+was duller than a great thaw, huddling
+jest upon jest, with such <i>impossible
+conveyance</i>, upon me, that I
+stood like a man at mark with a
+whole army shooting at me.” “Impossible
+conveyance” means inconceivable
+rapidity.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act III. Scene 1.</i>—There surely
+can be no question as to the superior
+excellence of the received reading in
+the following lines. The repentant
+Beatrice, who has overheard her character
+severely censured, says—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“What fire is in mine ears? Can this be true?</div>
+ <div class='line'>Stand I condemned for pride and scorn so much?</div>
+ <div class='line'>Contempt farewell, and maiden pride adieu!</div>
+ <div class='line'>No glory lives behind the back of such.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Beatrice means to say that contempt
+and maiden pride are never <i>the screen</i>
+to any true nobleness of character.
+This is well expressed in the line,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“No glory lives <i>behind the back</i> of such.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>A vigorous expression, which the
+MS. corrector recommends us to exchange
+for the frivolous feebleness of</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“No glory lives <i>but in the lack</i> of such.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>This substitution, we ought to say, is
+worse than feeble and frivolous. It is
+a perversion of Beatrice’s sentiments.
+She never meant to say that a maiden
+should <i>lack</i> maiden pride, but only
+that it should not occupy a prominent
+position in the <i>front</i> of her character.
+Let her have as much of it as she
+pleases, and the more the better, only
+let it be drawn up as a reserve in the
+background, and kept for defensive
+rather than for offensive operations.
+This is all that Beatrice can <i>seriously</i>
+mean when she says, “maiden pride
+adieu.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act IV. Scene 1.</i>—In the following
+passage we back Shakespeare’s
+word against the MS. corrector’s, not
+only in point of authenticity, but in
+point of taste. Leonato, greatly exasperated
+with his daughter, says to
+her—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“For did I think thou wouldst not quickly die,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Thought I thy spirits were stronger than thy shames,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Myself would, on the <i>rearward</i> of reproaches,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Strike at thy life.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>This is the reading of the folio 1632.
+The folio 1623 reads “reward,” but
+that is obviously a misprint for “rearward.”
+The MS. corrector proposes
+<i>hazard</i>. As if the infuriated father
+would have cared one straw what the
+world might think or say of him for
+slaying his daughter. In his passion
+he was far beyond minding such a
+trifle as public opinion, and would
+never have paused to give utterance
+to the sentiment which the corrector
+puts into his mouth. What he says
+is this—that after heaping reproaches
+on his daughter to the uttermost, he
+would <i>follow them up</i> by slaying her
+with his own hand. This is admirably
+expressed by the words, “rearward of
+reproaches.” In this same scene the
+fine old word “frame,” in the sense
+of fabrication, is twice most wantonly
+displaced, to make way, in the one
+instance, for “frown,” and in the
+other for “fraud.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act V. Scene 1.</i>—Let any reader
+who has an ear read the opening
+speech of Leonato, and he will perceive
+at once how grievously its effect
+is damaged by the insertion of the
+words “to me” in this line.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“And bid him speak (<i>to me</i>) of patience.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>In the same speech the following lines
+are a problem. Leonato, rebuffing
+his comforters, says, “Bring to me a
+person as miserable as myself, and</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“If such a one will smile, and stroke his beard,</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>And, sorrow wag! cry</i>, Hem, when he should groan,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Patch grief with proverbs, make misfortune drunk</div>
+ <div class='line'>With candlewasters, bring him yet to me,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And I of him will gather patience.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>“And sorrow wag! cry,” is the main
+difficulty. Johnson explains it thus:
+“If such a one will smile, and stroke
+his beard, and cry, Sorrow, <i>begone</i>!”
+This, in our opinion, is quite satisfactory;
+but what is the philology of the
+word “wag?” We believe it to be
+the German word “weg”—away—off
+with you. The MS. corrector cuts
+the knot which he cannot untie, by
+reading “call sorrow joy.” This is a
+gloss, not a reparation of the text.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act V. Scene 4.</i>—We maybe assured
+that a far finer sense is contained
+under Hero’s expression, when
+she says, according to the common
+reading,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“One Hero died <i>defiled</i>, but I do live,”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>than under the pseudo-emendation,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“One Hero died <i>belied</i>, but I do live.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='sc'>Love’s Labour Lost</span>—<i>Act I.
+Scene 1.</i>—We agree with Mr Dyce<a id='r19'></a><a href='#f19' class='c007'><sup>[19]</sup></a>
+in thinking that a quibble is intended
+in Biron’s speech, when he
+says that he and his friends will
+“<i>climb</i> in the merriness,” according
+as the absurd <i>style</i> of Armado’s letter
+shall give them cause. At any rate,
+nothing can be poorer than the MS.
+correction of this place, “chime in
+the merriness.” We think, however,
+that the corrector is right in giving the
+words, “Sirrah, come on,” to Dull
+the constable, and not to Biron, to
+whom they are usually assigned. We
+also consider the change of <i>manager</i>
+into <i>armiger</i> rather a happy alteration;
+at any rate, we can say this of
+it, that had <i>armiger</i> been the received
+reading, we should not have been disposed
+to accept <i>manager</i> in its place.
+This is a compliment which we can
+pay to very few of the MS. corrections.
+Had <i>they</i> formed the original
+text, and had the original text formed
+the <i>marginalia</i>, we should have had
+little hesitation as to which we would,
+in most cases, adopt. On the ground
+of their internal evidence—that is, of
+their superior excellence—the <i>marginalia</i>
+would certainly have obtained
+the preference. The passage to which
+we refer is this—“Adieu, valour!”
+says the fantastical Armado, “rust
+rapier! be still drum, for your <i>armiger</i>
+is in love.” This reading, we think, is
+worthy of being perpetuated in a note,
+though scarcely entitled to be elevated
+into the text.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act III. Scene 1.</i>—The corrector
+very soon relapses into his blunders.
+Passing over several, here is one, not
+so conspicuous perhaps, but as decided
+as any into which he has fallen.
+Armado, speaking to Moth his page,
+says, “Fetch hither the swain (<i>i. e.</i>,
+Costard the clown), he must carry me
+a letter.” Moth replies, “A <i>message</i>
+well-sympathed—a horse to be ambassador
+for an ass.” The MS. corrector
+reads, “A <i>messenger</i> well-sympathised,”
+not perceiving that this destroys
+the point, and meaning, and
+pertinency of Moth’s remark. “A message
+well-sympathised” means a mission
+well concocted, an embassy consistent
+with itself, which, says Moth,
+this one is, inasmuch as it is a case of
+horse (Costard) representing an ass—(to-wit,
+yourself, master mine.) Yet
+Mr Collier says that “we ought unquestionably
+to substitute messenger
+for message.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Moth, the page, having gone to fetch
+Costard, Armado says—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“A most acute juvenal, voluble, and free of grace.</div>
+ <div class='line'>By thy favour, sweet welkin, I must sigh in thy face,</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Most rude</i> Melancholy, valour gives thee place.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The MS. corrector alters the last line
+into “moist-eyed melancholy;” and
+Mr Collier remarks, “‘Most rude melancholy’
+has no particular appropriateness,
+whereas ‘moist-eyed melancholy’
+is peculiarly accordant with the
+sighs Armado breathes, in due apology,
+to the face of the welkin.” <i>No particular
+appropriateness!</i> when the
+euphuist is in the very act of apologising
+to the welkin for the breach of
+good manners of which his “most
+rude melancholy” has compelled him
+to be guilty. What else could he, in
+the circumstances, have called his
+melancholy with any degree of propriety?
+Oh, silly margins! you have
+much to answer for. You are not
+only stupid yourselves, but you are
+the cause of stupidity in other people.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act IV. Scene 1.</i>—Having considered
+the following passage very
+carefully, we are compelled to side
+with Mr Singer and Mr Dyce in favour
+of the old reading “fair” against
+“faith,” which is advocated by the
+MS. corrector, Mr Collier, and Mr
+Hunter. The princess, giving money
+to the forester, whom she playfully
+charges with having called her anything
+but good-looking, says—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Fair payment for foul words is more than due.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Forester.</i> Nothing but fair is that which you inherit.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Princess.</i> See, see, my beauty will be saved by merit.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Oh, heresy in <i>fair</i>, fit for these days!</div>
+ <div class='line'>A giving hand, though foul, shall have fair praise.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The new reading proposed is, “Oh,
+heresy in <i>faith</i>.” But this change is
+not necessary; indeed it spoils the
+passage. The princess, when the
+forester compliments her, says—“See,
+see, my beauty will be saved” (not
+on its own account, for, in this man’s
+opinion, I have little or none) but “by
+merit,” that is, because I have given
+him money. He calls me an angel of
+light because I have given him half-a-crown.
+Oh, heresy in regard to
+beauty! None but the really beautiful
+ought to be so complimented.
+Those who like me are plain (as this
+man thinks me in his heart), and have
+“foul hands,” ought not to obtain <i>fair</i>
+praise—ought not to be praised as
+fair, however “giving” or liberal
+these hands may be. The heresy here
+playfully alluded to is the error of supposing
+that people can be <i>beautified</i> by
+their gifts as well as by their appearance;
+just as a religious heresy consists
+in the idea that a person can be
+justified by his works as well as by his
+faith.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act IV. Scene 3.</i>—The following
+passage has given some trouble to the
+commentators—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in12'>“Black is the badge of hell,</div>
+ <div class='line'>The hue of dungeons, and the <i>school</i> of night.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Various substitutes have been proposed
+for the word “school.” The
+<i>variorum</i> reads “scowl,” which was
+introduced by Warburton. Theobald
+conjectured “stole.” The <i>marginalia</i>
+present “shade,” which is as poor as
+poor can be. We believe the original
+word “school” to be right, and that
+the allusion is to the different badges
+and colours by which different schools
+or sects or fraternities were formerly
+distinguished. “Black,” says the passage
+before us, “is the hue worn by all
+who belong to the school or brotherhood
+of night.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The context of the following passage
+seems fairly to justify the MS.
+correction, by which “beauty” is
+changed into “learning.” <i>Beauty</i> may
+have been a misprint. <i>Loquitur</i>
+Biron—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“For where is any author in the world</div>
+ <div class='line'>Teaches such <i>learning</i> as a woman’s eye?</div>
+ <div class='line'>Learning is but an adjunct to ourself,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And where we are our learning likewise is,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Then, when ourselves we see in ladies’ eyes,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Do we not likewise see our learning there?”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>This, we think, is one of the very few
+emendations which ought to be admitted
+into the text.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>It is curious to remark, what we
+learn incidentally from this play, that,
+in Shakespeare’s time, the words
+“doubt” and “debt” were pronounced
+as they are spelt, the “b”
+being sounded no less than the “t,”
+and that it was the height of affectation
+to say “dout” and “det,” as
+we do nowadays. So changes the
+<i>norma loquendi</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act V. Scene 2.</i>—The following, in
+the old copies, is obviously a misprint—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“So <i>pertaunt</i>-like would I o’ersway his state,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That he should be my fool, and I his fate.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The <i>variorum</i> edition reads “portent-like.”
+In 1826, Mr Singer published
+“potent-like.” The MS. corrector
+suggests “potently;” and this we
+rather prefer.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>When the princess is informed of
+the intended wit-assault on her and
+her ladies by the king and his lords,
+she exclaims—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in14'>“What are they</div>
+ <div class='line'>That <i>charge their breath</i> against us?”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>“To ‘charge their breath,’” says Mr
+Collier, “is nonsense, and the corrector
+alters it most naturally to</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in14'>‘What are they</div>
+ <div class='line'>That <i>charge the breach</i> against us?’”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Should any one,” says Mr Singer,<a id='r20'></a><a href='#f20' class='c007'><sup>[20]</sup></a>
+“wish to be convinced of the utter impossibility
+of the corrector having had
+access to better authority than we
+possess—nay, of his utter incapacity
+to comprehend the poet, I would recommend
+this example of his skill to
+their consideration. The <i>encounters</i>
+with which the ladies are threatened,
+are <i>encounters of words, wit combats</i>;”
+and therefore it was quite natural that
+they should talk of their opponents as
+“charging their breath against them.”
+We agree with Mr Singer; but we
+willingly change “love-feat,” in this
+same scene, into “love-suit,” at the
+bidding of the MS. corrector.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Oh, poverty in wit!” exclaims the
+princess, when she and her ladies have
+demolished the king and his companions
+in the wit-encounter. “Kingly-poor
+flout!” The MS. corrector reads,
+“killed by pure flout;” and Mr Singer
+“has no doubt” that “stung by poor
+flout” is the true reading. We see
+no reason for disturbing the original
+text. A double meaning is no doubt
+intended in the expression “kingly-poor
+flout.” It means “mighty poor
+badinage;” and then, a king being one
+of the performers, it also means “repartee
+as poor as might have been
+expected from royal lips;” these being
+usually understood to be better fitted
+for taking in than for giving out “good
+things.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><span class='sc'>Midsummer Night’s Dream</span>—<i>Act
+I. Scene 1.</i>—“Near the end of
+Helena’s speech,” says Mr Collier,
+“occurs this couplet where she is
+stating her determination to inform
+Demetrius of the intended flight of
+Lysander and Hermia—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in10'>‘And for this intelligence</div>
+ <div class='line'>If I have thanks, it is a dear expense’—</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>which,” continues Mr Collier, “is
+only just intelligible; but the old corrector
+<i>singularly improves</i> the passage
+by the word he substitutes—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in10'>‘And for this intelligence</div>
+ <div class='line'>If I have thanks, it is dear <i>recompense</i>.’”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The old corrector is an old woman
+who, in this case, has not merely mistaken,
+but has directly reversed Shakespeare’s
+meaning. So far from saying
+that Demetrius’s thanks will be any
+“recompense” for what she proposes
+doing, Helena says the very reverse,
+that they will be a severe aggravation
+of her pain. “A dear expense” here
+means a painful purchase, a bitter
+bargain. “If I have thanks, the sacrifice
+which I make in giving Demetrius
+this information will be doubly distressing
+to me.” Of course she would
+much rather that Demetrius, her old
+lover, did not thank her for setting
+him on the traces of his new mistress.
+Thanks would be a mockery in the
+circumstances, and this is what Helena
+means to say. Such is manifestly the
+meaning of the passage, as may be
+gathered both from the words themselves,
+and from their connection with
+the context, which is this—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“I will go tell him of fair Hermia’s flight:</div>
+ <div class='line'>Then to the wood will he to-morrow night</div>
+ <div class='line'>Pursue her; and for this intelligence,</div>
+ <div class='line'>If I have thanks, it is a dear expense;</div>
+ <div class='line'>But <i>herein</i> mean I to enrich my pain,</div>
+ <div class='line'>To <i>have his sight</i> thither, and back again.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The <i>sight</i> of Demetrius, and not his
+<i>thanks</i>, was to be Helena’s <i>recompense</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act II. Scene 1.</i>—The corrector is
+unquestionably wrong in his version
+of these lines. Of Titania it is said
+by one of the fairies, that</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“The cowslips <i>tall</i> her pensioners be,</div>
+ <div class='line'>In their gold <i>coats</i> spots you see,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Those be rubies, fairy favours,” &#38;c.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The MS. corrector reads “all” for
+“tall,” and “cups” for “coats,” to
+the manifest deterioration of the text.
+Mr Singer thus explains the matter, to
+the satisfaction, we should think, of
+all readers. “This passage has reference
+to the band of gentlemen-pensioners
+in which Queen Elizabeth
+took so much pride. They were some
+of the handsomest and <i>tallest</i> young
+men of the best families and fortune,
+and their dress was of remarkable
+splendour—their <i>coats</i> might well be
+said to be of gold. Mr Collier’s objection
+that ‘cowslips are never tall,’
+is a strange one. Drayton in his
+Nymphidia thought otherwise, and
+surely a long-stalked cowslip would
+be well designated by a fairy as tall.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act II. Scene 3.</i>—The alteration of
+“conference” into “confidence” in
+the following lines is an <i>improvement</i>,
+most decidedly, <i>for the worse</i>. Lysander
+and Hermia are going to sleep
+in the wood. She says to him—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Nay, good Lysander, for my sake, my dear,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Lye further off yet, do not lye so near.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Lysander.</i>—Oh, take the sense, sweet, of my innocence;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Love takes the meaning, in love’s <i>conference</i>.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>That is, love puts a good construction
+on all that is said or done in the “conference,”
+or intercourse of love. “Confidence,”
+the MS. correction, makes
+nonsense.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act III. Scene 2.</i>—The margins
+seem to be right in changing “What
+news, my love?” into “What means
+my love?” in the speech in which
+Hermia is appealing passionately to
+her old lover Lysander.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act V. Scene 1.</i>—But we cannot
+accept the substitution of “hot ice
+and wondrous <i>seething</i> snow” for the
+much more Shakespearian “hot ice
+and wonderous <i>strange</i> snow.” The
+late Mr Barron Field’s excellent emendation
+of the following lines is borne
+out by the MS. correction—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Then know that I, one Snug the joiner, am</div>
+ <div class='line'>A lion’s <i>fell</i>, nor else no lion’s dam.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Fell” means skin. The old reading
+was—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Then know that I, as Snug the joiner, am</div>
+ <div class='line'>A <i>lion fell</i>, nor else no lion’s dam.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>This ought to go into the text, if it
+has not done so already.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><span class='sc'>The Merchant of Venice</span>—<i>Act
+I. Scene 1.</i>—In the following passage
+the margins make rather a good hit
+in restoring “when” of the old editions,
+which had been converted into
+“who,” and in changing “would”
+into “’twould.”</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Oh, my Antonio, I do know of these</div>
+ <div class='line'>That therefore only are reputed wise</div>
+ <div class='line'>For saying nothing, <i>when</i>, I am very sure,</div>
+ <div class='line'>If they should speak, <i>’twould</i> almost damn those ears,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Which hearing them would call their brothers fools.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act II. Scene 1.</i>—The Prince of
+Morocco says—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Mislike me not for my complexion,</div>
+ <div class='line'>The shadowed livery of the <i>burnished</i> sun.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Altered by the MS. corrector into
+“burning sun,” which, says Mr Collier,
+“seems much more proper when the
+African prince is speaking of his black
+complexion as the effects of the sun’s
+rays.” Mr Collier will excuse us:
+the African Prince is doing nothing of
+the kind. He is merely throwing
+brightness and darkness into picturesque
+contrast—as the sun is bright,
+or “burnished,” so am I his retainer
+dark, or “shadowed.” “To speak of
+the sun,” continues Mr Collier, “as
+<i>artificially</i> ‘burnished,’ is very unworthy.”
+True: but Shakespeare
+speaks of it as <i>naturally</i> burnished;
+and so far is this from being unworthy,
+it is, in the circumstances, highly
+poetical.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act II. Scene 9.</i>—To change the
+words “pries not to the interior,” into
+“prize not the interior,” in the following
+lines, is wantonly to deface the
+undoubted language of Shakespeare.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“What many men desire!—that many may be meant</div>
+ <div class='line'>Of the fool multitude, that chuse by show,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Not learning more than the fond eye doth teach,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Which <i>pries</i> not to the interior; but, like the martlet,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Builds in the weather, on the outward wall.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act III. Scene 2.</i>—The MS. corrector
+proposes a very plausible reading
+in the lines where Bassanio is
+moralising on the deceitfulness of external
+appearance.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Thus ornament is but the guiled surf</div>
+ <div class='line'>To a most dangerous sea, the beauteous scarf</div>
+ <div class='line'>Veiling an Indian beauty; in a word,</div>
+ <div class='line'>The seeming truth which cunning times put on,</div>
+ <div class='line'>To entrap the wisest.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The corrector proposes to put a full
+stop after Indian, and to read on—“beauty,
+in a word,” (is) “the seeming
+truth,” &#38;c. Mr Singer says,
+“this variation in the pointing is no
+novelty; it occurs in an edition of
+Shakespeare, published by Scott and
+Webster in 1833, and has been satisfactorily
+shown to be erroneous and
+untenable by a correspondent in <cite>Notes
+and Queries</cite>, vol. v. p. 483.” We regret
+that it is not in our power, at this
+time, to consult the volume of <cite>Notes
+and Queries</cite> referred to; but we confess
+that we see no very serious objection
+to this new reading, except
+the awkwardness and peculiarly unShakespearian
+character of the construction
+which it presents. That
+there is a difficulty in the passage is
+evident from the changes that have
+been proposed. Sir Thomas Hanmer
+gave “Indian <i>dowdy</i>”—Mr Singer,
+“Indian <i>gipsy</i>,” which, however, he
+now abandons. We still confess
+a partiality for the old text, both in
+the words and in the pointing. “An
+Indian beauty” may mean the worst
+species of ugliness, just as a Dutch
+nightingale means a toad. Still we
+believe that a good deal might be said
+in favour of the MS. corrector’s punctuation.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Bassanio, descanting on the portrait
+of Portia, and on the difficulties
+the painter must have had to contend
+with, thus expresses his admiration
+of the eyes—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“How could he see to do them? having made one,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Methinks, it should have power to steal both his,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And leave itself <i>unfurnished</i>.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The corrector reads “unfinished,”
+which Johnson long ago condemned.
+“Unfurnished” means, as Mr Collier
+formerly admitted, unprovided with a
+counterpart—a fellow-eye.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>We willingly concede to Mr Collier
+the “bollen” instead of the “woolen”
+bagpipe. And when he next “blaws
+up his chanter,” may the devil dance
+away with his anonymous corrector,
+and the bulk of his emendations, as
+effectually as he ever did with the
+exciseman.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><span class='sc'>As You Like It</span>—<i>Act I. Scene 2.</i>—In
+opposition to Mr Collier, we
+take leave to say that Sir Thomas
+Hanmer was <i>not</i> right in altering
+“there is such odds in the <i>man</i>” to
+“there is such odds in the <i>men</i>.”
+What is meant to be said is, “there
+is such superiority (of strength) in the
+<i>man</i>;” and “odds” formerly signified
+<i>superiority</i>, as may be learnt from the
+following sentence of Hobbes—“The
+passion of laughter,” says Hobbes,
+“proceedeth from the sudden imagination
+of our own <i>odds</i> and eminency.”<a id='r21'></a><a href='#f21' class='c007'><sup>[21]</sup></a>
+Mr Collier’s man, who
+concurs with Sir Thomas Hanmer, is,
+of course, equally at fault.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act I. Scene 3.</i>—“Safest haste”—that
+is, most convenient despatch—is
+much more probable than “fastest
+haste,” inasmuch as the lady to whom
+the words “despatch you with your
+<i>safest</i> haste” are addressed, is allowed
+<i>ten days</i> to take herself off in.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act II. Scene 3.</i>—When Orlando,
+speaking of his unnatural brother, in
+whose hands he expresses his determination
+to place himself, rather than
+take to robbing on the highway, says,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“I will rather subject me to the malice</div>
+ <div class='line'>Of a <i>diverted blood, and bloody brother</i>,”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>the language is so strikingly Shakesperian,
+that nothing but the most
+extreme obtuseness can excuse the
+MS. corrector’s perverse reading—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Of a diverted, <i>proud</i>, and bloody brother.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Diverted blood,” says Dr Johnson,
+means “blood turned out of the
+course of nature;” and there cannot
+be a finer phrase for an unnatural
+kinsman.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act II. Scene 7.</i>—The following
+passage is obviously corrupt. Jacques,
+inveighing against the pride of going
+finely dressed, says—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Doth it not flow as hugely as the sea,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Till that the <i>very very</i> means do ebb?”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The MS. correction is—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Till that the very means <i>of wear</i> do ebb.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Mr Singer suggests, “Till that the
+<i>wearer’s</i> very means do ebb.” The
+two meanings are the same: people,
+carried away by pride, dress finely,
+until their means are exhausted.
+But Mr Singer keeps nearest to the
+old text.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act III. Scene 4.</i>—“Capable impressure”
+must be vindicated as the
+undoubted language of Shakespeare,
+against the MS. corrector, Mr Collier,
+and Mr Singer, all of whom would
+advocate “palpable impressure.”</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in12'>“Lean but on a rush,</div>
+ <div class='line'>The cicatrice and <i>capable impressure</i>,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Thy palm a moment keeps.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Capable impressure” means an indentation
+in the palm of the hand
+sufficiently deep to <i>contain</i> something
+within it.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act IV. Scene 1.</i>—Both the MS.
+corrector and Mr Collier have totally
+misunderstood Rosalind, when she
+says, “Marry, that should you, or I
+should think my honesty ranker than
+my wit.” The meaning, one would
+think, is sufficiently obvious.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act V. Scene 4.</i>—And equally obvious
+is the meaning of the following
+line, which requires no emendation.
+Orlando says that he is</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“As those who fear they hope, and know they fear.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>That is, he is as those who fear that
+they are feeding on <i>mere</i> hope—hope
+which is not to end in fruition—and
+who are certain that they fear or apprehend
+the worst:—a painful state
+to be in. The marginal correction,
+“As those who fear <i>to</i> hope, and
+know they fear,” is nonsense.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><span class='sc'>The Taming of the Shrew.</span>—<i>Induction.
+Scene I.</i>—We agree with
+the margins in thinking that the following
+line requires to be amended,
+by the insertion of “what” or “who.”
+In the directions given about the
+tricks to be played off on Sly, it is
+said—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“And when he says he is—say that he dreams.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The MS. corrector reads, properly
+as we think—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“And when he says <i>what</i> he is, say that he dreams.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Scene 2.</i>—There is something very
+feasible in the corrector’s gloss on
+the word “<i>sheer</i>-ale.” For “sheer”
+he writes “Warwickshire,” and we
+have no doubt that “shire (pronounced
+sheer) ale” is the true reading.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act I. Scene 1.</i>—One of the happiest
+and most undoubted emendations
+in Mr Collier’s folio, and one which,
+in his preface, he wisely places in the
+front of his case, now comes before
+us—“ethics” for “checks,” in these
+lines in which Tranio gives advice to
+his master Lucentio—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Let’s be no stoics, nor no stocks, I pray,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Or so devote to Aristotle’s <i>checks</i>,</div>
+ <div class='line'>As Ovid be an outcast quite abjured.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>We have no hesitation in condemning
+“checks” as a misprint for “ethics,”
+which from this time henceforward
+we hope to see the universal reading.
+It is surprising that it should not
+have become so long ago, having been
+proposed by Sir W. Blackstone nearly
+a hundred years since, and staring
+every recent editor in the face
+from among the notes of the <i>variorum</i>.
+Mr Singer alone had the good taste
+to print it in his text of 1826.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Let us here bestow a passing commendation
+on Mr Hunter for a very
+ingenious reading, or rather for what
+is better, a very acceptable restoration
+of the old text, which had been
+corrupted by Rowe and all subsequent
+editors. In the same speech, Tranio,
+who is advising Lucentio not to study
+too hard, says, according to all the
+common copies—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<i>Talk</i> logic wi’ th’ acquaintance that you have.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The elder copies read—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<i>Balk</i> logic, wi’ th’ acquaintance that you have.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>This means, <i>cut</i> logic, with such a
+smattering of it as you already possess;
+or, as Mr Hunter explains it,
+“give the go-by to logic, as satisfied
+with the acquaintance you have
+already gained with it.” “Balk”
+ought certainly to replace “talk” in
+all future editions, and our thanks
+are due to Mr Hunter for the emendation.<a id='r22'></a><a href='#f22' class='c007'><sup>[22]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c009'>How scandalous it is to change
+“mould” into “mood” in the following
+lines, addressed by Hortensio to
+the termagant Kate:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Mates, maid! how mean you that? No mates for you:</div>
+ <div class='line'>Unless you were of gentler, milder <i>mould</i>.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Kate was not, at least so thought
+Hortensio, one of those,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<span lang="la">Quas meliore luto <i>finxit</i> præcordia Titan.</span>”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act II. Scene 1.</i>—We greatly prefer
+Mr Singer’s amendment of what
+follows to the MS. corrector’s. The
+common text is this:—</p>
+
+<p class='c014'>“<i>Petruchio</i> (to Kate).—Women were made
+to bear, and so were you.</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><i>Katherine.</i>—No such jade, sir, as you, if
+me you mean.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>This being scarcely sense, the corrector
+says—</p>
+
+<p class='c014'>“No such jade <i>to bear</i> you, if me you mean.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Mr Singer says,</p>
+
+<p class='c014'>“No such <i>load</i> as you, sir, if me you mean.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act IV. Scene 2.</i>—“An ancient
+angel coming down the hill” has
+puzzled the commentators. The margins
+read “ambler.” We prefer the
+received text—the word “angel”
+being probably used in its old sense
+of <i>messenger</i>, with a spice of the
+ludicrous in its employment.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act V. Scene 1.</i>—Vincentio, who
+is on the point of being carried to
+jail, exclaims—</p>
+
+<p class='c014'>“Thus strangers may be <i>haled</i> and abused.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The MS. corrector proposes “handled;”
+and Mr Collier says that
+“haled” is a misprint, and the line
+“hardly a verse.” It is a very good
+verse; and “haled” is the very, indeed
+the only, word proper to the
+place. On turning, however, to Mr
+Collier’s appendix, we find that he
+says, “It may be doubted whether
+‘haled’ is not to be taken as <i>hauled</i>;
+but still the true word may have been
+handled.” This is <i>not</i> to be doubted;
+“haled” is <i>certainly</i> to be taken for
+<i>hauled</i>, and “handled” cannot have
+been the right word.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><span class='sc'>All’s Well that ends Well</span>—<i>Act
+I. Scene 1.</i>—In Helena’s soliloquy,
+near the end of the scene, the corrector,
+by the perverse transposition
+of two words, changes sense into
+nonsense. She says—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“The mightiest space in fortune nature brings</div>
+ <div class='line'>To join like likes and kiss like native things.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The lady is in love with Bertram,
+who is greatly above her in rank and
+in fortune; and the meaning is, that
+all-powerful nature brings things (herself,
+for example, and Bertram) which
+are separated by the widest interval
+of <i>fortune</i>, to join as if they were
+“likes” or pairs, and to kiss as if
+they were kindred things. The MS.
+corrector reverses this meaning, and
+reads—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“The mightiest space in <i>nature fortune</i> brings</div>
+ <div class='line'>To join like likes and kiss like native things.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>But there was no “space” at all
+between Helena and Bertram in
+point of “nature.” They were both
+unexceptionable human beings. They
+were separated only by a disparity of
+“fortune.” Why does the MS. corrector
+go so assiduously out of his
+way for the mere purpose of blundering,
+and why does Mr Collier so
+patiently endorse his eccentricities?
+That is indeed marvellous.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act 1. Scene 3.</i>—Helena says—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“You know my father left me some prescriptions</div>
+ <div class='line'>Of rare and proved effects, such was his reading</div>
+ <div class='line'>And <i>manifest</i> experience.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Read “manifold,” says the corrector;
+and Mr Collier adds, “we may safely
+admit the emendation.” Retain the
+old reading, say we; “manifest”
+means sure, well-grounded, indisputable,
+and is much more likely to have
+been Shakespeare’s word than “manifold.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act III. Scene 2.</i>—The countess,
+comforting Helena, who has been deserted
+by Bertram, says—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“I pr’ythee, lady, have a better cheer,</div>
+ <div class='line'>If thou engrossest all the griefs are thine,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Thou robb’st me of a moiety.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The old corrector,” says Mr Collier,
+“tells us, and we may readily
+believe him, that there is a small but
+important error in the second line.
+He reads—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>‘If thou engrossest all the griefs <i>as</i> thine</div>
+ <div class='line'>Thou robbest me of a moiety.’”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The small but important error here
+referred to is committed by the old
+corrector himself. The countess, to
+give her words in plain prose, says—if
+you keep to yourself all the griefs
+which are thine, you rob me of my
+share of them. The context where
+the countess adds—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in16'>“He was my son,</div>
+ <div class='line'>But I do wash his name out of my blood,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And thou art all my child,”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>seems to have misled the old corrector.
+He appears to have supposed
+that the countess had griefs of her
+own, occasioned by the conduct of
+her son Bertram, and that she protests
+against Helena’s monopolising
+these together with her own. This is
+the only ground on which “as” can
+be defended. But the answer is, that
+although the countess may have had
+such griefs, she was too proud to express
+them. She merely expresses
+her desire to participate in the afflictions
+which <i>are</i> Helena’s. This is
+one of the innumerable instances in
+which Shakespeare shows his fine
+knowledge of human nature. Whatever
+grief a proud mother may <i>feel</i> on
+account of a disobedient son, anger is
+the only sentiment which she will
+<i>express</i> towards him. The word “as,”
+however, had the countess used it,
+would have been equivalent to an
+expression of grief, and not merely
+of indignation; and therefore we
+strongly advocate its rejection, and
+the retention in the text of the word
+“are.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act IV. Scene 2.</i>—The following is
+a troublesome passage. Diana says
+to Bertram, who is pressing his suit
+upon her—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“I see that men make ropes, in such a scarre,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That we’ll forsake ourselves.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>This is the old reading, and it is
+manifestly corrupt. Rowe, the earliest
+of the <i>variorum</i> editors, reads—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“I see that men make <i>hopes</i>, in such <i>affairs</i>,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That we’ll forsake ourselves.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Malone gives “in such <i>a scene</i>” for
+“in such a scarre.” The MS. corrector
+proposes “in such a <i>suit</i>.” Mr
+Singer says “that it is not necessary
+to change the word <i>scarre</i> at all: it
+here signifies any surprise or alarm,
+and what we should now write <i>a
+scare</i>.” We agree with Mr Singer;
+and, following his suggestion, we give
+our vote for the following correction—</p>
+
+<p class='c014'>“I see that men make hopes, in such <i>a scare</i>,
+That we’ll forsake ourselves.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>That is, I see that men expect that
+we (poor women) will lose our self-possession
+in the flurry or agitation,
+into which we are thrown by the vehemence
+of their addresses.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act V. Scene 1.</i>—We willingly
+change the received stage direction,
+“enter <i>a gentle astringer</i>”—a most
+perplexing character certainly—into
+“enter a gentleman, a stranger,” as
+proposed by the old corrector, who,
+in this case, corrects like a human
+being.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act V. Scene 3.</i>—To change the fine
+expression</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Natural rebellion done in the <i>blade</i> of youth.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>into “Natural rebellion done in the
+<i>blaze</i> of youth,” is to convert a poeticism
+into a barbarism. “The blade of youth”
+is the springtime of life. Besides,
+there is an affinity between the word
+“natural” and the word “blade,”
+which proves the latter to have been
+Shakespeare’s expression.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>If “all was well that ended well,”
+as the title of this play declares to be
+the case, the MS. corrections throughout
+it would be impregnable; for
+these end with one of the very happiest
+conjectural emendations that ever was
+proposed. Bertram, explaining how
+Diana obtained from him the ring,
+says, according to the received text,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Her <i>insuit coming</i>, and her modern grace</div>
+ <div class='line'>Subdued me to her rate.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Insuit coming” has baffled the
+world. The <i>marginalia</i> give us, “Her
+<i>infinite cunning</i> and her modern grace
+subdued me to her rate.” It ought to
+be mentioned that this excellent emendation,
+which ought unquestionably
+to be admitted into the text, was also
+started some years ago by the late
+Mr Walker, author of the “original.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><span class='sc'>Twelfth Night, or What you
+will</span>—<i>Act II. Scene 1.</i>—The following
+words in italics are probably corrupt;
+but the MS. correction of the place is
+certainly a very bad piece of tinkering.
+Sebastian is speaking of his reputed
+likeness to his sister Viola—“A lady,
+sir, though it was said she much resembled
+me, was of many accounted
+beautiful; but though I could not,
+<i>with such estimable wonder</i>, overfar
+believe that, yet thus far I will boldly
+publish her,” &#38;c. The margins give
+us—“But though I could not <i>with selfestimation
+wander so far</i> to believe
+that.” But who can believe that,
+Shakespeare would wander so far in
+his speech as to write in such a roundabout
+feckless fashion as this? What
+he really wrote it may now be hopeless
+to inquire.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act II. Scene V.</i>—Malvolio congratulating
+himself on his ideal elevation
+says, “And then to have the
+<i>humour</i> of state,” which the MS. corrector
+changes into the poverty of
+“the <i>honour</i> of state,” overlooking
+the consideration that “the humour
+of state” means the high airs, the capricious
+insolence, of authority, which
+is precisely what Malvolio is glorying
+that he shall by and by have it in
+his power to exhibit.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act III. Scene 4.</i>—We never can
+consent to change “venerable” into
+“veritable,” at the bidding of the venerable
+corrector, in these lines—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“And to his image which methought did promise</div>
+ <div class='line'>Most venerable worth, did I devotion.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'> “The word ‘devotion,’” says Mr
+Singer, “at once determines that <i>venerable</i>
+was the poet’s word.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act V. Scene 1.</i>—How much more
+Shakesperian is the line—“A contract
+<i>of</i> eternal bond of love,” than the
+corrector’s</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“A contract <i>and</i> eternal bond of love.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The word “bond” is here used not as
+a legal term, but in the more poetical
+sense of <i>union</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><span class='sc'>Winter’s Tale</span>—<i>Act I. Scene 2.</i>—We
+agree with Mr Collier in his remark,
+that “there is no doubt we
+ought to amend the words of the old
+copies, ‘What lady <i>she</i> her lord’ by
+reading, ‘What lady <i>should</i> her lord,’”
+as given by the MS. corrector.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In the same scene, Leontes, expatiating
+on the falsehood of women, says—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in18'>“But were they false</div>
+ <div class='line'>As <i>o’erdy’d</i> blacks, as winds, as waters.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>That is, as false as “blacks” that have
+been dyed again and again until they
+have become quite rotten. This seems
+sufficiently intelligible; but it does
+not satisfy our anonymous friend, who
+proposes “as our dead blacks;” that
+is, as our mourning clothes, which,
+says Mr Collier, being “worn at the
+death of persons whose loss was not
+at all lamented,” may therefore be
+termed false or hypocritical. But
+surely <i>all</i> persons who wear mourning
+are not hypocrites; and therefore this
+new reading falls ineffectual to the
+ground.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act IV. Scene 3.</i>—We perceive nothing
+worthy of adoption or animadversion
+till we come to the following.
+Florizel is making himself very
+agreeable to Perdita, whereupon Camillo,
+noticing their intimacy, remarks,
+as the old copies give it—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in10'>“He tells her something</div>
+ <div class='line'>That makes her blood look on’t.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>There is something obviously wrong
+here. Theobald proposed—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in10'>“He tells her something</div>
+ <div class='line'>That makes her blood look <i>out</i>.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Something that calls up her blushes.
+This is the received reading, and an
+excellent emendation it is. But on
+the whole we prefer the MS. corrector’s,
+which, though perhaps not quite
+so poetical as Theobald’s, strikes us as
+more natural and simple when taken
+with the context.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in9'>“He tells her something</div>
+ <div class='line'>Which <i>wakes</i> her blood. Look on’t! Good sooth, she is</div>
+ <div class='line'>The queen of curds and cream.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>On second thoughts, we are not sure
+that this is not more poetical and dramatic
+than the other. At any rate,
+we give it our suffrage.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>There is, it seems, an old word
+“jape,” signifying a jest, which we
+willingly accept on the authority of
+the MS. corrector, in place of the unintelligible
+word “gap,” in the speech
+where “some stretch-mouthed rascal”
+is said “to break a foul jape into the
+matter.” The reading hitherto has
+been “gap.” This, however, is a
+<i>hiatus</i> only <i>mediocriter deflendus</i>. The
+next is a very lamentable case.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>Act V. Scene 3.</i>—Here the corrector
+interpolates a whole line of his own,
+which we can by no means accept.
+The miserable Leontes, gazing on the
+supposed statue of his wife, Hermione,
+which is in reality her living self,
+says, according to the received text—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in16'>“Let be, let be,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Would I were dead; but that methinks already—</div>
+ <div class='line'>What was he that did make it? see, my lord,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Would you not deem it breathed, and that those veins</div>
+ <div class='line'>Did verily bear blood?”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Here the train of emotion is evidently
+this:—Would I were dead, but
+<i>that</i> methinks already (he is about to
+add) I am, when the life-like appearance
+of the statue forcibly impresses
+his senses, whereupon he checks himself
+and exclaims, “What was <i>he</i> that
+did make it”—a god or a mere man,
+&#38;c. The MS. corrector favours us
+with the following version—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in16'>“Let be, let be,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Would I were dead, but that methinks already</div>
+ <div class='line'><i>I am but dead, stone looking upon stone</i>:</div>
+ <div class='line'>What was he that did make it? see, my lord,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Would you not deem it breathed?” &#38;c.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The corrector is not satisfied with
+making Shakespeare write poorly, he
+frequently insists on making him write
+contradictorily, as in the present instance.
+I am stone, says Leontes,
+according to this version, looking upon
+stone, for see, my lord, the statue
+breathes, these veins do verily bear
+blood. Is not that a proof, my lord,
+that this statue is mere stone? Most
+people would have considered this a
+proof of the very contrary. Not so the
+MS. corrector, who is the father of
+the emendation; not so Mr Collier,
+who says that “we may be <i>thankful</i>
+that this line has been furnished, since
+it adds so much <i>to the force and clearness</i>
+of the speech of Leontes.” Truly,
+we must be thankful for very small
+literary mercies! Mr Collier may be
+assured that the very thing which
+Leontes says most strongly, by implication,
+in this speech is, that he is <i>not</i>
+stone looking upon stone.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Our space being exhausted, we must
+reserve for our next Number the continuation
+of our survey of Shakespeare’s
+Plays as <i>amended</i> by Mr Collier’s
+anonymous corrector.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'>THE INSURRECTION IN CHINA.<a id='r23'></a><a href='#f23' class='c007'><sup>[23]</sup></a></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Two Frenchman have just published,
+at an opportune moment, a curious
+book. One of them needs no introduction
+here. The readers who have
+twice encountered, in <cite>Blackwood’s</cite>
+pages, the vivacious and intelligent Dr
+Yvan, first under canvass for Bourbon,
+and then roaming in the Eastern
+Archipelago, will gladly, we are persuaded,
+meet him again amongst the
+mandarins. This time he is not alone,
+but has taken to himself a coadjutor,
+in the person of M. Callery, once a
+missionary, and, since then, interpreter
+to the French embassy in China—to
+which, it will be remembered, Dr
+Yvan was attached as physician. M.
+Callery is author of a Chinese dictionary,
+of a system of Chinese writing,
+and of translations from the same
+language. When we add that both
+gentlemen, although at present in
+France, were long and lately resident
+in China, under circumstances peculiarly
+favourable to the acquisition of
+sound information respecting its state
+and politics, and that they have had
+free access to the archives of their
+embassy, it will hardly be doubted
+that they have efficiently carried out
+their intention of giving a lucid account
+of the origin and progress of
+the civil war now waging in that
+country, bringing it down to the
+present day. The co-operation of
+one well acquainted with the Chinese
+tongue must have been invaluable,
+and perhaps indispensable to Dr
+Yvan, who, for his part, has evidently
+contributed to the common
+stock his shrewd and observant spirit
+and pleasant unaffected style. The
+book, which was published in Paris
+in the second week of July, has
+reached us rather late for deliberate
+review in the August number of the
+Magazine, but there is still time to
+give some account of its contents.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The Chinese insurrection,” Dr
+Yvan commences, “is one of the
+most considerable events of the present
+time: politicians of all countries
+watch with curiosity the march of that
+insurgent army which, for three years
+past, has moved steadily onwards with
+the avowed object of upsetting the
+Tartar dynasty.” The Doctor then
+sketches, in a few very interesting
+pages, the chief events of Chinese
+history during the first half of the
+present century, with particular reference
+to the biography of the last
+emperor, deceased in 1850, and to the
+situation of the Chinese empire at the
+close of his reign.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The late emperor, who assumed,
+upon ascending the throne, the name
+of Tao-Kouang, <i>Brilliant Reason</i>, was
+the second son of Emperor Kia-King,
+a feeble and incapable monarch, whose
+power was virtually in the hands of
+an unworthy favourite, a certain Lin-King,
+chief of the eunuchs. In
+Chinese annals, incidents of this kind
+are, we are told, by no means rare.
+The chief of the eunuchs has always
+great influence in palace intrigues,
+and his degraded condition by no
+means constitutes, in that singular
+country, a bar to his ambition. That
+of Lin-King was boundless. He
+aspired to the throne. Having gained
+over most of the military mandarins,
+he marched into Pekin—one day that
+the emperor was out hunting with his
+sons—a body of troops whose chiefs
+were entirely devoted to him, and distributed
+them in the neighbourhood of
+the palace. His plan was to kill the
+emperor and princes, and have himself
+proclaimed by the army. Towards
+evening Kia-King and his
+eldest son returned to the palace,
+whose gates had scarcely closed behind
+them when it was surrounded by
+troops. In his haste and agitation
+the chief eunuch had not noticed that
+the emperor’s second son had not returned
+with his father. The conspiracy
+had just broken out, when that
+prince entered Pekin. He was alone,
+in a hunting dress, with none of the
+insignia of his rank, and he rode
+through the streets unrecognised,
+noting the general tumult and confusion,
+whose cause he soon understood.
+Outside the palace he found
+the ambitious eunuch haranguing his
+partisans, and at once perceived that
+his father’s favourite, at whose insolence
+he had often felt indignant, was
+at the head of the revolt. Mingling
+with the throng of horsemen, he drew
+near to the traitor; amidst a host of
+enemies, neither his coolness nor his
+courage failed him. Neither did his
+skill: he tore from his coat its round
+metal buttons, slipped them into his
+fowling-piece, took a short aim at
+Lin-King, and laid him dead upon
+the spot! Upon their leader’s fall,
+the rebels fled, throwing away their
+arms, and the prince triumphantly
+entered the palace, whose threshold
+they had not yet sullied. Old Kia-King
+learned, at one time, his past
+danger and present safety.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The prince who had displayed such
+happy promptitude and presence of
+mind, ascended the throne of China
+in 1820. He was then forty years of
+age. According to the custom of the
+princes of his dynasty, he had married
+a Tartar—a big-footed woman. By
+her he had no children; but his concubines
+had borne him a numerous
+family. In China, law and usage recognise
+no difference between legitimate
+and illegitimate children. All
+have the same rights of succession.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“During the first period of his
+reign, Tao-Kouang selected his ministers
+from amongst those statesmen
+who, in the eyes of the people, were
+the faithful guardians of Chinese traditions.
+Every nation that traces its
+history to a very remote period has
+its conservative party. In quiet times
+the government lies naturally in the
+hands of these representatives of old
+national guarantees. But when it
+becomes indispensable to modify ancient
+institutions, their exclusive attachment
+to things of the past becomes
+a real danger. This political truth is
+as perceptible in the history of the
+revolution of the Empire of the Centre
+as in our own. Tao-Kouang’s agents,
+Chinese to the backbone, and full of
+superb disdain for the barbarians, led
+their country into a disastrous war,
+because they did not understand that
+the moment was come for them to
+descend from the diplomatic elevation
+upon which their presumption
+and European forbearance had so
+long maintained them. At a later
+period, the same spirit of resistance
+to the necessity of the times brought
+on the insurrection whose history we
+are about to trace, so that the two
+most important events that Chinese
+annals have recorded during the last
+quarter of a century, the war with England
+and the revolt of Kouang-Si,
+have been determined by the same
+cause.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Dr Yvan then gives an outline of
+the dispute with England, the consequent
+war and ultimate treaty, upon
+which it is unnecessary to dwell,
+since the circumstances are familiar
+to most English readers, although in
+France they have been often distorted,
+and to many are but imperfectly
+known. He blames Lin, whom he
+describes as being then “a man of
+about fifty, wearing the plain red
+button and the peacock’s feather with
+two eyes,” for his seizure of the
+opium, especially because, by his zeal,
+activity, and by the terror he inspired,
+he had given life and vigour to the
+Chinese custom-house, and had made
+a great advance towards the suppression
+of opium smuggling. “In
+France,” says MM. Callery and
+Yvan, “where ideas are not always
+just, it is taken as an established fact
+that, in the opium war, all the oppression
+was on the side of the English, and
+that right succumbed when the treaty
+of Nankin was signed. Nothing can
+be falser than this. The English
+smuggled on the coasts of the Celestial
+Empire exactly as smuggling is
+to this day carried on by foreigners
+on our coasts and frontiers; but it
+has not yet, that we are aware, been
+established as a principle that government
+may seize foreign merchants
+and threaten them with death, upon
+the pretext that vessels with prohibited
+merchandise are riding at anchor
+off Havre or Marseilles.” It is very
+courageous of these gentlemen thus
+to tell their countrymen the truth.
+We hope it will not injure the sale of
+their book; we have small expectation
+of its making many converts
+from the received opinion in France,
+that the part played by the English
+in the whole of the Chinese affair was
+that of wholesale poisoners, cramming
+their drug down their victim’s throat
+at bayonet’s point.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>When Commissioner Lin had done
+all the mischief he could, burying the
+opium with quicklime, and bringing
+a British squadron up Canton river,
+blazing at the forts, he was recalled,
+and Ki-chan replaced him. Ki-chan
+was a capable man, resolute but prudent;
+he saw that China had found
+more than her match, and at once
+accepted the barbarian ultimatum.
+The emperor refused his sanction,
+and inflicted upon the unlucky negotiator
+the most signal disgrace any
+high functionary had endured during
+his reign. Poor Ki-chan was publicly
+degraded, his property confiscated,
+his house razed, his concubines were
+sold, and he himself was sent, an
+exile, into the depths of Tartary.
+Those who would know more of him
+need but refer to MM. Huc and
+Gabet’s curious journey to Thibet.
+At Lassa, those intrepid travellers
+knew him well. Dr Yvan and Mr
+Callery were intimate with another
+Chinese diplomatist, Ki-in, a relation
+of the emperor, who signed the treaty
+of Nankin, and whom they consider
+one of the two greatest statesmen
+that Tao-Kouang had. The other was
+Mou-tchang-ha, the Chinese prime
+minister or president of the council.
+“It is very probable that the Sublime
+Emperor, the son of Heaven, never
+exactly knew what passed between
+the English and the Chinese. He
+died, doubtless, in the consolatory
+belief that his troops were invincible,
+and that, if Hong-Kong had been
+given, as an alms, to a few miserable
+foreigners, it was because they had
+implored the happiness of becoming
+his subjects.” The treaty of Nankin
+signed, Ki-in, named governor
+of the two provinces of Kouang-Tong
+and Kouang-Si, took up his abode
+at Canton. By the disposition he
+showed to be on good terms with
+foreigners, and by his enlightened
+and progressive policy, he drew upon
+himself the hatred of the bigoted
+populace, who accused him of leaning
+to the barbarians and betraying his
+sovereign. In innumerable placards
+he was held up to popular odium and
+vengeance. “Our carnivorous mandarins,”
+began one of these violent
+and incendiary hand-bills, given by
+Dr Yvan, “have hitherto connived
+at all that those English bandits have
+done against order and justice, and
+five hundred years hence our nation
+will still deplore its humiliation. In
+the 5th moon of this year, more than
+twenty Chinese were killed by the
+strangers: their bodies were thrown
+into the river, and buried in the belly
+of the fishes; but our high authorities
+have treated these affairs as if they
+had not heard speak of them; they
+have considered the foreign devils as
+if they were gods, have taken no
+more account of Chinese than if they
+were dog’s meat, and have despised
+men’s lives like the hairs that are
+shaved off the head. Thousands of
+persons have lamented and been indignant;
+grief has penetrated the marrow
+of their bones,” &#38;c. &#38;c. These
+absurd accusations and calumnies had
+not, at the time, any influence on Ki-in’s
+political destiny. The emperor
+recalled him to Pekin, graced him
+with new dignities, and made him
+Mou-tchang-ha’s colleague. These
+two statesmen then tried to introduce
+certain reforms, beginning with the
+army, whose bows and arrows and
+old matchlocks they exchanged for
+percussion guns—thus jumping clean
+over the intermediate stage of flint
+and steel. A curious illustration of
+Chinese immobility for centuries.
+After a year’s trial, Ki-in reported
+the great perfection attained by artificers,
+officers, and soldiers, in manufacturing
+and making use of the new
+implements of war. This was towards
+the close of Tao-Kouang’s
+reign. The conciliatory spirit and
+enlightened views of the two ministers
+gave promise of that practical
+progress which even the most conservative
+Europeans must admit to
+be needed in China. Suddenly an
+unexpected and important event
+changed the aspect of affairs.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Upon the 26th February, 1850”—thus
+does Dr Yvan, after his brief
+preliminary retrospect, commence his
+second chapter—“at seven o’clock in
+the morning, the approaches to the
+imperial palace at Pekin were obstructed
+by a compact crowd of mandarins
+of the inferior classes, and of
+servants in white garments with yellow
+girdles, conversing in a low voice,
+whilst their features wore an expression
+of official grief. In the midst of
+this throng of subordinate functionaries,
+stood sixteen individuals, each
+attended by a servant holding a saddlehorse.
+These sixteen persons wore
+the satin cap fastened under the chin
+and surmounted by the white button;
+they had a girdle of bells; a tube of
+a yellow colour was slung over their
+shoulders, and they all carried whips.
+A great dignitary issued from the
+palace, and delivered, with his own
+hand, to each one of these men, a
+despatch closed with the imperial red
+seal; they received it with a bow,
+brought each the yellow tube round
+upon his breast, and respectfully placed
+within it the official despatch. Then
+they mounted their horses, and the
+grooms fastened them to the saddle
+with straps that passed over the
+thighs. When they were thus well
+secured, the crowd opened a passage,
+and the horses set off at the top of
+their speed. These sixteen messengers,
+known as <i>Feïma</i>, flying horses,
+were bound to get over six hundred
+<i>li</i>—sixty leagues—in every twenty-four
+hours. They bore the following
+despatch to the governors-general of
+the sixteen provinces of the Celestial
+Empire:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘In great haste, the minister of
+rites informs the Governor-general
+that, upon the 14th of the first moon,
+the Supreme Emperor, mounted upon
+the dragon, departed for the ethereal
+regions. In the morning, at the hour
+of <i>mao</i>, his Celestial Majesty transmitted
+the imperial dignity to his
+fourth son, <i>Se-go-Ko</i>, and in the evening,
+at the hour of <i>haï</i>, departed for
+the abode of the gods.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Directions for mourning completed
+the despatch. Agreeably with the
+constitution of the empire, the defunct
+sovereign had named his successor.
+It was his fourth son. But he had
+deviated from ancient custom by a
+verbal nomination. The legacy of
+supreme power was usually transmitted,
+long beforehand, by a solemn
+act, deposited in a golden coffer,
+opened with great ceremony upon the
+emperor’s death. Even in China,
+however, this last will and testament
+has not always been respected, and of
+this Dr Yvan digresses to give an
+example, which he considers as fully
+illustrative of Chinese manners and
+civilisation. The tale he tells abounds
+in what Europeans would laugh at as
+burlesque inventions, but which are
+doubtless very possible occurrences
+amongst the Celestials. We shall give
+its pith in a few lines. Tsin-che-houang,
+the second emperor of the
+Tsin dynasty, was already old and
+infirm when he sent his son and heir,
+Fou-sou, to superintend the building
+of the great wall, at which three hundred
+thousand men were working.
+They did less to lengthen it, Dr Yvan
+insinuates, than modern travellers
+have done. Whilst Fou-sou went
+north, accompanied by the renowned
+Mong-tièn, the greatest general of his
+time, the emperor made a pilgrimage
+southwards to the tombs of his ancestors.
+When far upon his road, he
+felt death approaching, and wrote to
+his eldest son to hasten back to the
+capital. Tcha-Kao, the chief of the
+eunuchs, having to seal and forward
+the missive, audaciously substituted
+for it a forged command from Tsin-che-houang
+to the prince and general
+to put themselves to death, as a punishment
+for their offences. Next day
+the emperor died, and the infamous
+Tcha-Kao prevailed upon his second
+son, Hou-haï, to seize the crown. To
+carry out this usurpation, it was necessary
+to conceal for a while the emperor’s
+death, lest the authorities and
+young princes at the capital should
+proclaim the successor he had appointed.
+So the body, sumptuously
+attired, and in the same attitude as
+when alive, was placed in a litter, surrounded
+by a lattice, and by thick silk
+curtains, and which none approached
+but those who were in the plot.
+The eunuch had proclamation made
+that the emperor, in haste to return,
+would travel day and night without
+quitting his litter. At meal-times a
+short halt was made, and food was
+handed into the litter and eaten by a
+man concealed in it. Unluckily, the
+weather was very hot, and the smell
+of the dead body soon became intolerable.
+This would have revealed the
+terrible truth, had not the ingenious
+eunuch hit upon a device. He sent
+forward an ante-dated decree by which
+the emperor permitted oyster-carts to
+follow the same road as himself. This
+had previously been severely prohibited,
+on account of the intolerable
+stench emitted by the oysters—an
+enormous species known to naturalists
+as spondyls, of which, then as now,
+the Chinese made enormous consumption.
+The fishmongers profited by
+the boon; hundreds of thousands of
+the full-flavoured testaceans soon preceded
+and followed the imperial convoy;
+the decomposing corpse reached
+the capital under cover of their alkaline
+emanations, and was received
+with gongs and acclamations. Meanwhile,
+the forged mandate of self-destruction
+was received by Fou-sou
+and Mong-tièn. The old officer thought
+it bad policy to order a general in
+command of three hundred thousand
+men to commit suicide, and treated
+the mission as apocryphal. But Fou-sou,
+considering only his duty as a son
+and subject, stabbed himself forthwith.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The accession of the present emperor
+was unattended by any such untoward
+circumstances, notwithstanding
+the irregularity of his nomination,
+to which the formal Chinese attach
+much importance. He ascended the
+throne without opposition, quitted,
+according to custom, the name he had
+till then borne, and assumed that of
+Hièn-foung, which signifies <i>Complete
+Abundance</i>. His accession was hailed
+with joy by both the political parties
+into which China is divided, and which
+the authors of this volume designate
+as exclusionists and progressive conservatives.
+The former expected to
+find in him a stanch supporter of their
+principles. If they did not anticipate
+the rebuilding of the crumbling wall
+of China, they doubtless hoped that
+he would so fortify Canton river as to
+prevent the <i>fire-boats</i> of the barbarians
+from ascending it to the capital of the
+two Kouangs. The progressive party,
+upon the other hand, thought that
+the son of Tao-Kouang, and the pupil
+of Ki-in, would maintain peace with
+the foreigner, regulate the opium
+trade—as the English have done in
+India, and the Dutch in Malaya—and
+would introduce into the Chinese fleets,
+armies, and administrations, those reforms
+which lapse of time had rendered
+necessary. MM. Yvan and Callery
+declare, that when they learned the
+emperor’s death they at once anticipated
+important events. It was to be
+feared that the new sovereign, a youth
+of nineteen, would sympathise with the
+sentiments and wishes of those of his
+own age. And in China, where everything
+seems diametrically opposed to
+what we observe in other countries,
+the young men of education and the
+ignorant populace compose the high
+conservative party. These two classes
+profess the same hatred of foreigners,
+the same instinctive repugnance for
+foreign institutions. “They are reactionary
+by nature, and by their attachment
+to national customs. It is
+the men of maturer age who, formed
+at the school of experience, appreciate
+the arts and institutions of Christian
+nations. When we were in China,
+Ki-in, before he had undergone any
+disgrace, frequently praised the governments
+of England, the United
+States, and France; and, at the same
+moment, Ki-chan, unjustly precipitated
+from the summit of greatness, expressed
+the same thoughts to MM. Huc
+and Gabet, in the holy city of Thibet.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>For some time the new emperor
+disappointed all parties. Surrounded
+by flatterers, eunuchs, and concubines,
+he remained inactive in his immense
+palace, which equals in size one of the
+large European fortified towns. He
+went not beyond the limits of those
+gardens whose walks are strewn with
+sparkling quartz, and seemed absorbed
+by voluptuous enjoyments. Politicians
+were wondering at this long inaction,
+when one day the thunder-cloud burst.
+The absolute monarch displayed his
+power; the reactionary party triumphed.
+The Pekin <i>Moniteur</i> published
+the dismissal of Mou-tchang-ha and
+Ki-in, overwhelming them with abuse,
+and declaring them degraded to inferior
+ranks. The document was dated
+in the 30th year of the reign of Tao-Kouang—the
+year of an emperor’s
+death being always reckoned by
+Chinese chronologists as belonging
+entire to his reign. The successors of
+the disgraced ministers were selected
+from amongst the bitterest enemies of
+Europeans, and their chief efforts were
+directed to neutralise the effect which
+the contact of the barbarians might
+have produced upon certain of their
+countrymen. This departure from the
+policy of Tao-Kouang, who had placed
+entire confidence in Ki-in, and had
+loaded him with marks of esteem,
+brought ill-luck to the new emperor.
+Very soon after the victory of the
+reactionary party, the first news came
+of the revolt of Kouang-Si.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>There had been precursory symptoms
+of this insurrection. It had been
+currently reported amongst the people
+that prophecies had fixed the re-establishment
+of the Ming dynasty to take
+place in the forty-eighth year of that
+cycle, which year corresponded with
+<span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 1851. It was further said that
+a sage, who lived under the last emperor
+of that race, had saved his
+standard, and had foretold that he
+who displayed it in the midst of his
+army should mount the throne. At
+the beginning of the insurrection it
+was affirmed that the rebels marched
+beneath this miraculous banner, and
+this was implicitly believed by the
+people. “The vulgar are incredulous
+of the extinction of old royal races;
+it is never certain that their last representative
+is in his tomb: there are
+people in Portugal who still look for
+the return of Don Sebastian, killed,
+three centuries ago, at the battle of
+Alcazar-Quivir.” An uneasy feeling
+soon spread far and wide, with rumours
+of the defection of mandarins.
+The legitimacy of the Tartar dynasty,
+and the necessity of substituting for
+it a national one, were publicly discussed.
+Here Dr Yvan translates an
+extract from an English paper, in
+which great importance is attached
+to the insurrection, and to the cry for
+reform which on all sides was heard.
+This was in August 1850. He then
+paints the portraits of the emperor
+Hièn-foung, and of the pretender
+Tièn-tè. The former is twenty-two,
+the latter twenty-three years of age.
+Without entering into a minute description
+of the physical and mental
+qualities of the two personages, some
+of which will incidentally manifest
+themselves as we proceed, we extract
+a few leading traits of Tièn-tè, whose
+portrait forms the frontispiece to the
+volume we are examining. “Study
+and vigils have prematurely aged him.
+He is grave and melancholy, and very
+reserved, communicating with those
+around him only to give them orders.
+His complexion is that of the southern
+Chinese—a saffron tint. His impassible
+gaze seems to probe the depths
+of the human soul. He commands
+rather by suggestion than by direct
+dictation. In a word” (and this reminds
+us of Dr Yvan’s own sovereign),
+“he has the silent reserve of a man
+who has reflected a great deal before
+communicating his projects to any
+one.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The Doctor then gives a Chinaman’s
+description of the pretender’s
+entrance into one of the numerous
+towns taken by his troops. “The
+new emperor and his retinue reminded
+me of the scenes represented at our
+theatres, in which we are shown the
+heroes of ancient days, those who
+lived before we came under the Tartar
+yoke. The persons who surrounded
+Tièn-tè had cut off their tails, let the
+whole of their hair grow, and, instead
+of the <i>chang</i> buttoned at the side, they
+wore tunics open in front. None of
+the officers wore upon their right
+thumb the <i>pan-tche</i>, that archer’s ring
+which our mandarins so ostentatiously
+display. The emperor was in
+a magnificent palanquin, with yellow
+satin curtains, carried by sixteen officers.
+After Tièn-tè’s palanquin came
+that of his preceptor, borne upon the
+shoulders of eight coolies; then came
+his thirty wives, in gilt and painted
+chairs. A multitude of servants and
+soldiers followed in fine order.”
+There is a most important point to
+be noted in this description—the cutting
+off of the tail. It is, perhaps,
+hardly necessary to repeat that the
+strange style of head-dress with which
+porcelain and rice-paper pictures have
+familiarised Europeans, is of Tartar
+origin, and, in the case of the Chinese,
+a mark of subjugation. It was thus
+that the victors marked the vanquished—compelling
+them to shave
+their heads, with the exception of a
+spot upon the sinciput, the hair upon
+which was suffered to grow into a
+long tail. As a sign that they had
+thrown off the foreign yoke, Tièn-tè’s
+followers cut off their tails. This bold
+act—a treasonable offence in China—was
+equivalent to throwing away the
+scabbard, and caused a great and
+painful sensation at the court of Pekin.
+As a sort of counterpoise to it,
+the celestial <i>Moniteur</i>, the Imperial
+Gazette, was made to publish a supposititious
+act of submission on the
+part of the rebels, in which they were
+made to prostrate themselves, declare
+their fidelity, and submit to stripes
+and bondage.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The person designated by the Chinaman,
+in the account of the procession,
+as Tièn-tè’s preceptor, is his intimate
+friend and privy-councillor—his
+only one—a very mysterious individual—whether
+his father, his tutor,
+or merely a friend, none know—who
+accompanies him everywhere. But
+we are getting ahead of our subject,
+and must glance at the commencement
+of the insurrection, previously
+to the appearance of Tièn-tè upon
+the stage.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The province of Kouang-Si, where
+the rebellion began, and which is
+larger than the entire dominions of
+many European sovereigns, is situated
+in the south-western portion of the
+empire, is administered by a governor-general,
+and forms part of the vice-royalty
+of the two Kouangs. Its
+mountains are one of the curiosities
+of the Celestial Empire; but, since
+the Jesuits of Pekin, no foreigner has
+been suffered freely to explore them.
+“According to native travellers, these
+masses have the form of various animals,
+unmistakably representing a
+cock, an elephant, &#38;c.; and there are
+rocks in which are found encrusted
+fantastical animals, petrified in the
+most singular attitudes. We have
+carefully examined drawings of these
+figures, which reminded us of the species
+resuscitated by Cuvier, and we
+have convinced ourselves that the
+petrified animals are merely red stains,
+produced by oxide of iron, and acutely
+defined upon the black surface of the
+rock. The general aspect of Kouang-Si
+is singularly picturesque. That
+vast district offers points of view
+which Chinese artists have frequently
+painted. To European eyes their collections
+of landscapes have a strange
+character. Those inaccessible mountains
+that seem shaped by the caprice
+of human imagination, those rocks
+representing gigantic animals, those
+rivers precipitating themselves into
+gulfs, over which are thrown impassable
+bridges, suggest an idea of fairyland.”
+A glance at the map of
+Kouang-Si suffices to prove the intelligence
+and judgment of the insurgent
+chiefs who chose that province for the
+commencement of their operations.
+Unproductive, by reason of its mountainous
+character, the misery of the
+inhabitants was a powerful auxiliary
+to the rebels. They found at once
+recruits for their army, and natural
+fortresses for their defence. The emperor
+needed a far larger army, and
+much more efficient means of attack
+than he possessed, to drive the insurgents
+from their fastnesses. If defeated
+in the plain, they had always
+the resource of mountain warfare.
+Dr Yvan compares the people of
+Kouang-Si to the guerillas who in
+Spain so severely harassed the French
+armies. Like them, he says, they are
+sober, intrepid, little sensible of fatigue,
+and animated by a spirit of
+independence. After centuries of occupation,
+the Tartars had not yet
+subdued the remotest districts of those
+mountains.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The chief vegetable products of
+Kouang-Si are cinnamon and aniseed.
+Its mountainous conformation,
+and the drawings of the Chinese artists,
+leave little doubt that it abounds
+in metallic deposits. Hence a seeming
+miracle, which took powerful hold
+on the imagination of the vulgar. Dr
+Yvan tells the tale thus:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“At the beginning of the insurrection,
+the chiefs determined to mark
+the date of their enterprise by the
+erection of a religious monument. For
+its foundation, labourers dug in decomposed
+rocks, which yielded readily
+to the pickaxe. They had attained
+the depth of but a few feet, when they
+came upon lumps similar in form and
+appearance to the stones in the bed
+of a river. These lumps were observed
+to be very heavy, and were carefully
+examined. They proved to be silver-lead
+of great richness. It was from
+this providential bank, it is said, that
+the pretender paid his first soldiers.
+Whatever the authenticity of the tale,
+it is worth noting by the collectors of
+legends, whose writings will one day
+divert the leisure of the mandarins....
+As if to confirm this metallurgic
+miracle, there have recently
+been discovered in Norway silver deposits
+precisely similar to those of
+Kouang-Si.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>It was in August 1850 that the
+Pekin papers for the first time spake
+of the insurgents, whom they designated
+as robbers; but robbers would
+hardly have established themselves
+in one of the poorest districts of the
+empire, remote from large towns and
+high-roads. The rebels showed no
+haste to contradict these rumours,
+but rather allowed them to gain credit,
+and waited patiently in the south-west
+part of the province, until the
+Celestial <i>tigers</i><a id='r24'></a><a href='#f24' class='c007'><sup>[24]</sup></a> should be sent against
+them. They were on terms of amity
+with the Miao-tze, a race of men inhabiting
+the wildest parts of Kouang-Si.
+Dining one day with a Chinese
+functionary of high rank, in a pagoda
+at Canton, the author of this book
+received from him a curious account
+of those people, which they noted
+upon their return home, and now
+publish. The Miao-tze, the minister
+told them, are aborigines of the chain
+of mountains that extends from the
+north of Kouang-Toung (the southernmost
+province) into the central
+provinces of the empire. They dwell
+in small communities, never exceeding
+two thousand persons. Their
+houses are built on posts, like those
+of the Malays. They are warlike in
+disposition, and agriculture is their
+pursuit. The Tartars have never
+succeeded in subduing them. They
+have retained the old national costume—have
+never shaved their heads—have
+always rejected the authority of
+the mandarins and the Chinese customs.
+Their independence is now a
+recognised fact; and upon Chinese
+maps a blank is left for the country
+they occupy, to signify that it does
+not obey the emperor. For a great
+many years no attempt had been made
+to subdue them, when suddenly, in
+1832, they made an incursion, pillaging
+wherever they went. They beat
+the Chinese troops sent against them,
+and were got rid of only by diplomacy
+and concession. They hold little
+intercourse with their neighbours,
+and are greatly dreaded by the Chinese
+of the towns, who call them
+man-dogs, man-wolves. “They believe
+them to have tails, and relate
+that, when a child is born, the soles
+of his feet are cauterised, to harden
+them, and render him indefatigable.
+These are mere tales,” continued the
+Chinese minister, whom Dr Yvan
+describes as a young and elegant
+man, and who is apparently of the
+more enlightened party in his country.
+“In reality, the Miao-tze
+are a very fine and intelligent race,
+and their manners have a tendency,
+I think, to become gentle.” Such a
+race as this was evidently a most
+valuable ally for the insurgents, whose
+first military movements put them in
+possession of two large towns, in one
+of which three mandarins of high
+rank were killed fighting against
+them. Siu, governor-general of the
+two Kouangs, took alarm; and upon
+learning that the rebels were coming
+his way, solicited the honour of making
+a pilgrimage to the tomb of the
+defunct emperor. This request was
+refused; and the troops he sent against
+the enemy were beaten and exterminated.
+The antiquated tactics of the
+insurgents—which would hardly have
+much success against any but a Chinese
+army—consisted in feigning a
+flight, and drawing their opponents
+into an ambuscade. This succeeded
+several times running—not being, we
+must suppose, guarded against in the
+Chinese twenty-four-volume treatise
+on the art of war. Emboldened by
+their repeated victories, the rebels
+crossed the frontier of Kouang-Si, and
+entered Kouang-Toung, where they
+soon met with and massacred, to the
+very last man, a detachment of imperial
+troops.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Two political acts of great importance
+were now simultaneously accomplished
+at Pekin and in the insurgent
+camp. In the former place, the
+emperor sent for Lin, the opium-burner,
+and bade him go and put
+down the rebellion. Notwithstanding
+his great age, the austere mandarin
+promptly obeyed. As if by
+way of retort, the insurgents issued
+a proclamation, declaring that the
+Mantchous, who for two centuries
+had hereditarily occupied the throne
+of China, had no right to it beyond
+that of the strongest; that that right
+was common to all—and that they
+had an equally good one to levy contributions
+on the towns they conquered.
+The Mantchous, they said,
+were foreigners, who had conquered
+the country by aid of a veteran army;
+their right of government consisted in
+possessing. This proclamation conveyed
+the leading idea of the rebels,
+which had previously been merely
+rumoured. They declared legitimacy
+to mean possession; and at the same
+time intimated their intention of expelling
+the Mantchous, and transferring
+to Chinese hands the management
+of the public revenues. This
+publication was the last act of the
+rebels in 1850. It coincided with
+the death of Lin, which occurred in
+November of that year. The old
+commissioner was in his seventieth
+year, and sank under the fatigue and
+anxiety of his new command.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The Chinese year begins in February.
+Its commencement is a sort of
+commercial and financial crisis, when
+everybody pays and calls in his debts.
+In January it was reported and believed,
+in Canton, that the insurrection
+of Kouang-Si was entirely suppressed,
+and that the celestial tigers
+had gained imperishable laurels. In
+consequence of this good news, business
+resumed its usual course, confidence
+returned, and the Chinese
+“settling day” passed without disaster.
+It was a mere trick of the cunning
+mandarins of Kouang-Toung,
+who, in the interest of the commercial
+community, had fabricated the bulletins.
+The public satisfaction and
+tranquillity were soon dispelled by
+intelligence of the cutting off of tails
+already mentioned, and which admitted
+of no other interpretation than
+“War to the Knife!”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Li succeeded Lin as imperial commissioner
+in Kouang-Si. The pusillanimous
+Siu was reduced four degrees
+of rank, which is something like
+reducing a field-officer to an ensigncy,
+but was still left governor of the two
+Kouangs. A very bad system was
+pursued by the agents of the Chinese
+government—exemplified by the following
+incidents. In March 1851,
+the little town of Lo-Ngan was taken
+by the insurgents, who levied a contribution,
+seized the contractor of the
+<i>Mont de Piété</i>, or pawning establishment,
+and fixed his ransom at 1000
+taels (about £320). He paid, and
+was released. Next day the imperial
+troops drove out the rebels, levied another
+contribution, and squeezed 3000
+taels from the contractor! This man,
+who was influential in the place, and
+indignant at suffering spoliation from
+those who should have protected him,
+harangued the people in the public
+square. Others spoke after him, and
+at last the excited mob cut off their
+tails, swore that the reign of the Tartars
+was at an end, and sent for the
+insurgents, who came in the night and
+massacred the garrison. Other things
+concurred to induce disaffection among
+the population to the reigning dynasty.
+Li took for his second in command a
+ferocious mandarin, who, when governor
+of the province of Hou-Nan, where
+the use of opium was very prevalent,
+had adopted the barbarous practice of
+cutting off the under lip of the smokers.
+Dr Yvan was in China at the time,
+and saw several poor wretches who
+had been thus mutilated, and whose
+aspect was horrible, the operation,
+performed by clumsy executioners,
+leaving hideous jagged wounds, “very
+different,” the doctor feelingly and
+professionally remarks, “from the elegant
+scars so artfully and happily produced
+by Parisian bistourys.” The
+nomination of the cruel Tchang (in his
+case, as in some others, we spare the
+reader the labour of reading his second
+and third names, which, although connected
+by hyphens, are not, as we
+perceive from Dr Yvan’s practice,
+inseparable from the first) was significant.
+At the same period, and in
+one day, thirty-six persons, accused
+of conspiring against the safety of the
+state, were put to death at Canton.
+Dr Yvan doubts whether their crimes
+were really political. In China they
+deal in what he calls prophylactic justice.
+The thirty-six executions were
+perhaps a preventive measure, and the
+victims common malefactors, elevated
+to the rank of rebels and traitors.
+“They may, however, have been
+members of secret societies, which are
+very numerous in China, and in those
+countries whither Chinese immigrate.
+At Singapore, Penang, Batavia, Manilla,
+we have known numerous adepts
+of the secret societies of the Empire of
+the Centre—a species of free-masonry,
+whose ascertained object is the dethronement
+of the Mantchous.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“In 1845, we lived for several days
+with a merchant of Chan-Toung, who
+clandestinely introduces arms into
+China. He took us to a house in one
+of the dirtiest and least reputable
+quarters of the town, and we ascended
+into a sort of garret. In that country
+garrets are on the first floor. His object
+was to obtain our estimate of
+arms which some Americans had sold
+him. They were enormous swords in
+steel scabbards. The heavy blades
+were clumsily forged; but cheap they
+certainly were, having been delivered
+in China at the price of ten francs
+a-piece. On our entrance the Chinese
+unsheathed one of these large blades,
+and uttered loud exclamations, gesticulating
+the while after the fashion of
+the Chinese heroes one sees painted
+upon fans. We asked him if it was
+for the equipment of the invincible
+tigers he purchased these arms. At
+the question he smiled significantly,
+and showed us, by an expressive gesture,
+the use intended to be made of
+them against the imperial troops.
+Perhaps at this moment the gigantic
+weapons are in the rebels’ hands.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Neither the appointment of the terrible
+Tchang, the executions at Canton,
+nor the mendacious reports,
+perseveringly circulated, of imperial
+triumphs, checked the rebels. On
+the contrary, they replied to all this
+violence and boasting by the proclamation
+of an emperor of their own,
+whom they called Tièn-tè, which
+means <i>Celestial Virtue</i>! He was invested
+with the imperial yellow robe,
+and, contrary to Tartar usage, which
+forbids the reproduction of the sovereign’s
+features by his subjects, his
+portrait was circulated by thousands
+of copies. From one of those prints
+MM. Callery and Yvan have taken
+the frontispiece of their volume. The
+head-dress and costume are those of
+the days of the Mings, from whom
+the pretender’s partisans declare him
+descended.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The proclamation of Tièn-tè may
+be said to close the first period of the
+insurrection. Dr Yvan points admiringly
+to the patient policy of its chiefs.
+For a whole year Tièn-tè was kept in
+the background, his partisans contenting
+themselves with spreading a
+report that there existed a descendant
+of the Mings. Then they proclaimed,
+but did not show him to the people.
+He returned to a sort of mysterious
+obscurity, and showed himself but at
+long intervals, to his enthusiastic adherents.
+The rebellion now took the
+character of a civil war. The Emperor
+Hièn-foung, although deficient in political
+judgment, and in that tact and
+penetration which enable a sovereign
+to make the best choice of agents, displayed
+a good deal of energy; but this
+was too apt to degenerate into violence.
+He was certainly not well
+served. Siu, still governor of the
+Kouangs, was unequal to the difficulties
+that every day augmented. The
+inhabitants of two districts refused to
+pay taxes; the emperor ordered their
+punishment; Siu sent a mandarin to
+bring the ringleaders before him; the
+whole population rose, and pulled the
+officer out of his palanquin, which
+they broke to pieces, its occupant
+barely escaping with life. About the
+same time Tièn-tè set a price of ten
+thousand dollars on Siu’s head. The
+placard containing the announcement
+was affixed to the north gate of Canton,
+just as Siu was about to quit that
+city at the head of three thousand men,
+to join other forces directed against
+Kouang-Si. The viceroy was furious;
+and as his palanquin passed through
+Canton’s street, preceded by two
+gongs, and by a banner on which was
+inscribed, “Get out of the way and
+be silent; here is the imperial commissioner,”
+he glanced savagely right
+and left, as if seeking some one on
+whom to wreak his vengeance. “Presently
+he slapped his hand down upon
+the edge of his chair, and bade the
+bearers stop. It was just opposite the
+house of one of those poor artists who
+paint familiar genii and large family-pictures.
+The painter had hung up
+some of his most remarkable works
+outside his house; but strange to relate!
+in the midst of smiling deities,
+irritated genii, feetless women flying
+along like birds in silken vestments,
+there was displayed a decapitated
+mandarin. The rank of the personage
+was unmistakably indicated by the
+insignia painted on his breast. The
+corpse was in a kneeling position, and
+the head, separated from the trunk,
+was placed beside a beaver-hat bearing
+the plain button.” The unfortunate
+artist was called out of his shop,
+and kneeled trembling in the dust before
+Siu’s palanquin. In vain he protested
+that the picture was painted to
+order, and hung out to dry: he was
+sent to the town-prison to receive
+twenty blows of a bamboo for placing
+such ill-omened horrors upon the viceroy’s
+passage, and Siu went upon his
+way, gloomily impressed by the double
+presage of the placard and the picture.
+Besides his three thousand men, he
+had with him a host of mandarins,
+attendants, executioners, musicians,
+standard-bearers, and women, and a
+large sum of money, which he added
+to, upon the march, as often as he
+could. The women and the treasure
+were carried on men’s shoulders, in
+palanquins and chests. Dr Yvan relates
+the following curious incident as
+having occurred upon this march:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“They one evening reached a deep
+and rapid water-course, which had to
+be crossed over a bamboo bridge.
+When a part of the escort had reached
+the farther bank, Siu stopped his palanquin,
+and ordered the coolies who
+carried the treasure-chest to cross
+slowly and cautiously. They obeyed;
+but just as they reached the centre of
+the elastic bridge, a sudden shock
+threw them and their load into the
+water. There was a moment of extreme
+confusion. The chest had sunk,
+the unfortunate coolies were struggling
+against the stream, and uttering lamentable
+cries, whilst Siu, furious,
+was breaking his fan for rage. Luckily
+the coolies swam like fish, and easily
+reached the shore. The viceroy was
+sorely tempted to bastinado them upon
+the spot; but he reserved that pleasure
+for another day, and ordered the
+poor wretches, who stood panting and
+terrified before him, instantly to fish
+up the precious chest, threatening
+them with a terrible chastisement if
+they did not find it. They stript off
+their clothes and courageously entered
+the water; skilful divers, they explored
+the river’s bed, and, after many
+efforts, succeeded in getting the heavy
+chest ashore. It was wet and muddy,
+but otherwise uninjured. Siu had it
+placed upon the shoulders of two fresh
+coolies, and the march was resumed.
+A few days later, on reaching Chao-King,
+his first care was to have the
+chest opened in his presence; but
+instead of his golden ingots, he found
+only pebbles and pieces of lead carefully
+wrapped in silk paper. The
+coolies were audacious robbers, who
+had skilfully planned the exchange.
+The viceroy set all his police on foot,
+but in vain; the thieves had doubtless
+taken refuge in the insurgent
+country, where they and their booty
+were safe.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>A Chinese gentleman, well-dressed,
+comely, and of intelligent aspect, has
+lately attracted considerable attention
+in Paris, in whose streets and public
+places he has been frequently seen.
+He is a friend and companion of M.
+Callery, and to him is owing the facsimile
+of a Chinese map included in
+the volume under notice. It represents
+those provinces which the insurgents
+have already traversed, from
+the mountains of Kouang-Si to the
+city of Nankin, the ancient capital of
+the Mings. A stream of red spots,
+running across its centre, and in some
+places spreading out wide, indicates
+the towns occupied by the rebels. The
+map is copied from one of the numerous
+charts published in China in
+1851, towards the end of which year
+the victories of Tièn-tè’s troops were
+so numerous, and their progress so
+prodigious, that even the lying <cite>Pekin
+Gazette</cite> ceased to record imaginary
+imperial triumphs. It must not be
+supposed, however, that, in the case
+of the captured towns, occupation invariably
+implied retention. The chiefs
+of the insurgents heeded not the strategical
+importance of particular places.
+With the exception of a few fortresses,
+into which the pretender occasionally
+retired, they abandoned successively
+all the towns they took, after raising
+contributions to pay their troops.
+“Their tactics,” says Dr Yvan, “are
+those of the barbarian chiefs who led
+the great invasions of which history
+has transmitted us the account. The
+insurgents go straight before them,
+seizing, each day, some new point,
+which they next day abandon. Their
+intention is evidently to cut their way
+to the capital. In a country where
+the centralising system prevails so
+completely as in China, the Mantchous
+reign as long as Pekin is in their
+power; but upon the day on which
+the descendant of the Mings enters
+the imperial city, the provinces he has
+marched through and left unconquered
+will acknowledge his right, and submit
+themselves to his authority.” In
+several chapters of Dr Yvan’s book
+we find amusing examples of the military
+tactics of these strange barbarians
+who deem all others such. Thirteen
+thousand imperialists advanced
+against the rebels near the town of
+Ping-Nan-Hien. The rebels defended
+themselves feebly, and retreated from
+one position to another. When this
+had lasted several hours, and the
+weary pursuers were about to desist,
+they suddenly found themselves in an
+ambuscade, entangled in a bamboo
+jungle, and attacked in front and flank
+by a strong body of rebels, with more
+than sixty pieces of artillery. When
+General Ou-lan-taï got back to his
+camp, it was with half his army; the
+remainder had either been killed, or
+had deserted to the enemy. Siu, the
+valiant viceroy, safe behind the thick
+walls of a fortress, swore by his meagre
+mustaches that he would revenge this
+rout. “To that end, he borrowed
+from the ancient history of the kingdom
+of Tsi a stratagem which reminds
+one of the Trojan horse, and
+of Samson’s foxes. He got together
+four thousand buffalos, to whose long
+horns he had torches fastened; the
+drove was then given in charge to
+four thousand soldiers; and the expedition,
+prepared in the most profound
+secresy, set out one night for
+the rebel camp. It was anticipated
+that each buffalo, thus transformed
+into <i>a fiery chariot</i>, would commit
+terrible ravages, kill all the men it
+could get at, and set fire to the camp.
+At first the horned battalions met with
+no obstacles; the insurgents, duly advertised
+of this splendid stratagem,
+suffered them quietly to advance.
+But before the imperialists reached
+the camp, the enemy, who observed
+all their movements by favour of the
+splendid illumination, fell upon them
+unexpectedly, as they had so often
+done before, and the same scenes of
+carnage were renewed. This manœuvre
+of Siu’s cost the lives of more
+than two thousand men, and gives an
+idea of Chinese proficiency in the art
+of war. Had our sole knowledge of
+the affair been derived from the Anglo-Chinese
+press, we should have hesitated
+to reproduce it here; but we
+have had opportunity of collating the
+account given by <i>The Friend of China</i>,
+with authentic Chinese documents,
+and they entirely agree in their narrative
+of this incredible occurrence.
+In the eyes of the Tartar warriors,
+and of the Chinese themselves, this
+comical invention of Siu’s passes for
+a highly ingenious strategical combination.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Whilst such were the disasters of
+his armies, and the progress of his
+foes, what was the occupation of his
+Imperial Majesty, the Son of Heaven,
+Hièn-foung? Surrounded by favourites
+and courtiers, he composed a
+poem, whose subject was the heroic
+exploits of his Tartar general, Oulan-taï—the
+said exploits existing but
+in the general’s own bulletins! According
+to MM. Yvan and Callery,
+who have read a portion of the emperor’s
+epic, it is an inflated performance,
+indebted in every line to
+reminiscences of the classic authors of
+the Celestial Empire—the Chinese
+Homers, the Ariostos of Pekin; so
+that the braggart general appropriately
+found a plagiarist bard. Meanwhile
+Siu, who had more confidence
+in golden than in leaden ammunition
+as a means of victory, offered ninety
+thousand taels (nearly £30,000) for
+the heads of Tièn-tè, his father, and
+his mysterious privy-councillor—that
+being, for each head, just thrice the
+sum at which the insurgents had estimated
+his. But no heads were brought
+in, and the viceroy, weary and despairing,
+implored permission to return
+to Canton. To obtain such permission,
+he invented an ingenious story,
+which the official Pekin paper was so
+unkind as to publish. He represented
+to his master that the subjects of
+Donna Maria da Gloria, queen of
+Portugal, were preparing for an expedition
+against the Celestial Empire.
+He converted the peaceable Macaists
+into a band of pirates ready to aid
+the insurgents, and to appropriate to
+themselves the provinces of Kouang-Toung
+and Fo-Kien! With an emperor,
+a general, and a viceroy, such
+as these characteristic traits exhibit,
+Dr Yvan is surely justified in anticipating
+the early dissolution of the
+Chinese Empire. Under such chiefs,
+it is not surprising when armies exhibit
+neither discipline nor courage.
+In the autumn of 1851, the insurgents,
+having taken three towns, respected
+the lives and property of the inhabitants.
+By a proclamation, Tièn-tè
+exhorted the latter to remain quietly
+where they were, but permitted those
+who would not recognise his authority
+to quit the place, taking with
+them all they could of their goods and
+chattels. A considerable number profited
+by this permission, and departed,
+laden with the most valuable portion
+of their property. They fell in with
+a body of imperialist troops, who
+stripped them of everything, and killed
+those who resisted. The unfortunate
+victims of civil war reproached their
+spoilers with their cowardice. “Before
+the rebels,” they said, “you are
+mice; it is only with us that you are
+tigers!”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>From an early period of the rebellion,
+the mandarins endeavoured to
+discredit its banner and partisans by
+the propagation of lying inventions,
+some of which had the double aim of exciting
+the Buddhist population against
+the insurgents, and of rendering the
+Christians more and more odious to
+the young emperor. Thus they asserted
+that the pretender really was a
+descendant of the Mings, but that he
+was a Catholic, and that, wherever he
+went, he upset pagodas and destroyed
+idols. Others affirmed that he was of
+the sect of Chang-ti—that is to say, a
+Protestant. Whilst noticing these
+statements, Dr Yvan contents himself
+with remarking that the name of Tièn-tè,
+chosen by the pretender, is purely
+pagan. Another manœuvre of the
+mandarins was to announce that the
+insurgents had declared their intention,
+as soon as they should have attained
+to supreme authority, of driving
+the Europeans from the five ports.
+Thus they thought to set the Europeans
+against the insurrection. But
+this flimsy fabrication was easily seen
+through. Attempts were also made
+to cast ridicule on the insurgents, by
+the circulation of pamphlets filled with
+incredible anecdotes.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“One of these satirical productions
+relates that Tièn-tè, having perished
+in an accidental conflagration of his
+camp, his wife had had his brother assassinated,
+and had seized the reins
+of government. But, in China, petticoat
+government is inadmissible, and
+people never speak but with horror of
+the Empress Ou-heou, that Elizabeth
+of the East, who possessed herself of
+the imperial power, and exercised it
+for more than twenty years. In this
+respect, Chinese prejudices are so invincible
+that the name of Ou-heou has
+been effaced from the list of the sovereigns
+of the Celestial Empire. For
+the Chinese, that shameful reign never
+took place. The idea of sovereign
+power in a woman’s hands fills them
+with indignation; yet they know that
+a woman reigns over that western
+people which conquered them, and
+that the English nation was never
+greater or more glorious than under
+the rule of Her Most Gracious Majesty,
+Queen Victoria.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The existence of a Christian element
+or influence in the ranks and
+councils of the insurgents, which the
+mandarins put forward, probably without
+any better grounds than their own
+malicious intent, is traced, at a later
+period, by MM. Callery and Yvan, in
+a proclamation issued after several
+triumphs won, at short intervals, by
+the armies of Tièn-tè. In a previous
+proclamation, the pretender had referred,
+somewhat obscurely, to the
+idea of a federal empire, to be composed
+of several kingdoms dependent
+on one chief. This idea was more
+clearly developed in the manifesto
+affixed to the walls of the captured
+town of Young-Gan-Tcheou, and
+signed, not by Tièn-tè, although he
+was then present, but by Tièn-kio,
+one of the future feudatory kings, who
+dated it from the first year of his
+reign. It announced, in plain terms,
+the plans of the insurgents. They
+would combine their forces, march on
+Pekin, and then divide the empire.
+The whole plan, Dr Yvan, who highly
+lauds it, believes to have been conceived
+and elaborated by the secret
+societies. “Since the overthrow of
+the Mings, and the accession of the
+Mantchous,” he says, “those clandestine
+associations, the intellectual
+laboratory of declining countries, have
+been constantly active. The most
+celebrated of them, the Society of the
+Three Principles, or of the Triad, is
+powerfully organised. In every part
+of China, and in all the countries
+where Chinese reside, are found members
+of this association; and the children
+of the Empire of the Centre
+might say, almost without exaggeration,
+that when three of them are assembled
+together, the Triad is amongst
+them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>But if the substance of Tièn-kio’s
+proclamation is politically important,
+to its form Dr Yvan assigns immense
+significance. He recognises in it a
+new and regenerative element—that
+of Christianity. “Its authors speak of
+<i>decrees of Heaven. They have prostrated
+themselves before the Supreme
+Being, after having learned to adore
+God. They have striven to save the
+people from calamities.</i> This is a style
+unknown to the idolatrous Chinese,
+and foreign to Catholic language: to
+Protestantism is due the honour of
+having introduced it into China; and
+it appears that there really is, amongst
+the insurgents, an indigenous Protestant,
+holding a very high rank, and
+exercising very great authority. This
+Protestant is, it is stated, a disciple
+of Gutzlaff, the last secretary interpreter
+of the government of Hong-Kong.”
+Having mentioned Gutzlaff’s
+name, MM. Callery and Yvan—one,
+if not both, of whom appears to have
+known him—give some curious particulars
+concerning him. They speak
+of him as an intelligent man, having
+extraordinary facility in learning languages,
+and of his books as narratives
+in which a little truth is mingled with
+very agreeable falsehoods. Born in
+Pomerania, there was nothing German
+in his aspect; his features were
+Mongul, and in his Chinese costume
+he could not be distinguished from a
+Chinese.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“One night, during our residence
+in China, we were conversing about
+him with the mandarin Pan-se-tchèn,
+who was a great friend of his, and one
+of us expressed his surprise at finding,
+in a European, the characteristic signs
+of the Chinese race.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘Nothing is more natural,’ the
+mandarin, quietly replied; ‘Gutzlaff’s
+father was a Fokienese settled in Germany.’</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“This fact appeared to us so extraordinary
+that we should hesitate to
+mention it here, if Pan had not affirmed
+that he had it from M. Gutzlaff himself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>We do not here trace the progress
+of the Insurrection in China, the leading
+events of whose earlier stages
+have, to a certain extent, been made
+known to Europeans by the public
+press; whilst the details of its later
+period, and especially those of the
+siege and capture of Nankin, had not
+come to the knowledge of MM. Callery
+and Yvan up to the very recent
+date at which their volume went to
+press. We have preferred to cull
+from this curious and uncommon
+book, traits and incidents which, although
+they may not be of paramount
+importance in a political or military
+sense, exhibit, as clearly as could do
+the most circumstantial narrative of
+the war, the character of people and
+parties, and the probable eventualities
+of the struggle. There exists, it appears,
+amongst the Chinese—at least
+in certain provinces—so strong a tendency
+to assist the insurrection, that
+the viceroy of the two Kouangs published
+a decree forbidding the young
+men of the towns to form themselves
+into volunteer corps. In this cunningly-drawn-up
+document he thanked
+them for their zeal, and assured them
+that the imperial troops amply sufficed
+to put down the rebellion. The fact
+was, experience had taught him, that,
+as soon as the volunteers were put
+under the command of a military mandarin,
+and taken into the field, they
+deserted to the enemy. Their aid
+would have been welcome, could it
+have been relied upon; for, at the
+very time the decree was issued, the
+imperialists were enduring daily defeats,
+whilst the insurgents, who everywhere
+appropriated public money, but
+respected private property, daily acquired
+fresh partisans.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In the month of September 1852,
+Tièn-tè, with all his court, and with
+his body-guard, which never quits
+him, took up his quarters at a town
+within a few leagues of the wily and
+prudent Viceroy Siu. This personage
+is the most amusing of all the
+strange characters we meet with in
+Dr Yvan’s pages. Crafty, cowardly,
+and particularly careful of his person,
+he is a type of the Chinese, as Europeans
+understand that nation, of which,
+however, Dr Yvan leads us to believe
+that we have but an imperfect notion.
+A short time before he found himself
+in the perilous proximity of the insurgent
+leader, Siu had been at his old
+tricks, trying to impose upon his
+countrymen. Having caught a petty
+chief of the rebels, he ticketed him
+Tièn-tè, and sent him to Pekin in an
+iron cage. The official gazette published
+the capital sentence pronounced
+upon him, which, according to Chinese
+custom, was preceded by the criminal’s
+confession. This was a long
+document, drawn up, doubtless, by
+some Pekin man of letters, in which
+the spurious Tièn-tè acknowledged
+his delinquencies, and attributed the
+insurrection especially to a secret society
+founded by Gutzlaff, the Chang-Ti,
+or Protestant. Here was evident
+the perfidious intention of the exclusionist
+party to bring the Christians
+into discredit. The execution of the
+sham Tièn-tè was still the leading
+topic of discussion at Pekin, when
+news came that the real pretender
+was still alive and active in the
+mountains of Kouang-Si, whence he
+exercised his occult influence, and observed
+the progress of the revolt.
+When his pretended captor, Siu, found
+himself in his immediate vicinity, he
+made no attempt to capture him in
+reality; and soon afterwards (in
+January of the present year) that
+officer fell into disgrace with his sovereign,
+owing to the disasters that
+occurred under his government. He
+was deprived of his vice-royalty, and
+of his peacock’s feather with two eyes.
+Shortly after the appearance of this
+decree in the <cite>Pekin Gazette</cite>, a melancholy
+report was circulated at Canton;
+Siu, it was affirmed, driven to
+despair by his disgrace, had poisoned
+himself. When the circumstances of
+the act came to be known, the minds
+of his anxious friends were considerably
+relieved. He had poisoned himself
+with gold leaf.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The science of toxicology is about
+on a par, in China, with the military
+knowledge of the generals of the imperial
+army. When a great personage
+wishes to put himself to death, he
+takes an ounce of gold leaf, rolls it
+into a ball, and swallows the valuable
+pill. According to the physiologists
+of the Celestial Empire, these balls,
+once in the stomach, unroll themselves,
+and adhere to the whole interior of
+the organ, like paper on a wall. The
+stomach, thus gilt, ceases to act, and
+the unhappy mandarin dies suffocated,
+after a few hours’ somnolency—a
+mode of suicide which we recommend
+to despairing sybarites.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The year 1852 closed as disastrously
+as it had begun. Throughout its
+whole course, the imperialists—or, to
+speak more correctly, the troops of
+the Tartar dynasty, since there are
+now two emperors in the field—had
+been invariably worsted, and the insurrection
+had spread far and wide.
+Stringent measures were adopted by
+Hièn-foung; his generals were warned
+that defeat would be promptly followed
+by their degradation, and even by the
+loss of their heads: Victory or Death
+was the motto they literally and compulsorily
+assumed. Another evil was
+soon added to the many that assailed
+the young emperor. The imperial
+finances were exhausted; the Celestial
+Chancellor of the Exchequer declared
+his penury, and denounced the mandarins
+who nominally commanded in
+the insurgent provinces. They would
+render no account of their stewardship;
+not a copper was to be got from
+them—that was hardly to be expected—but
+they sent in fabulous “states”
+of the troops under their command,
+and demanded enormous sums wherewith
+to carry on the war. In this
+emergency, the means proposed, and
+those resorted to, to raise the wind,
+transcend belief. No desperate prodigal,
+reckless of reputation, ever
+adopted more shameless expedients
+to replenish his purse. A mandarin
+proposed an opium monopoly. A
+similar proposal, under the reign of
+Tao-Kouang, cost a minister his
+place, and was near costing him his
+life. Times are changed; Hièn-foung,
+less scrupulous, and notwithstanding
+his aversion to opium-smokers,
+was giving to the project, at
+the date of the last advices, his serious
+consideration. Meanwhile, the official
+newspaper published (12th November
+1852) a document, comprising
+twenty-three articles, in which everything
+was put up for sale—titles,
+judgeships, peacocks’ feathers, mandarins’
+buttons, exemptions from service,
+promotions in the army. In
+this publication, a casual reference
+being made to the English, they were
+still treated as barbarians; but, five
+months later (on the 16th March
+last), when the insurgents were before
+Nankin, and likely soon to be within
+it, Celestial pride was so far humbled
+that we find the authorities earnestly
+and respectfully supplicating Christian
+succour, in a circular addressed
+to all the representatives of civilised
+nations, resident in those Chinese
+ports open to European commerce,
+and especially to the consuls of Great
+Britain and the United States. For
+“barbarians” was now substituted
+“your great and honourable nation.”
+To such an extent are carried Chinese
+vanity and conceit, that, Dr Yvan
+assures us, if the demand for aid were
+complied with by the English and
+American plenipotentiaries, the Son
+of Heaven would instantly persuade
+himself that those Western people
+rank amongst his tributaries, and
+would very probably issue a proclamation
+announcing that his troops had
+subdued the rebels, aided by nations
+who had lately made their submission,
+and who had conducted themselves
+faithfully in those circumstances.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Meanwhile, the insurgents employed
+much more straightforward and satisfactory
+means of filling their treasury
+than those resorted to in extremity of
+distress by the Mantchou emperor. In
+the month of February last they captured
+Ou-Tchang-Fou, a rich city of
+four hundred thousand inhabitants,
+the capital of the province of Hou-Pé.
+A friend of MM. Yvan and Callery, an
+intrepid traveller, gave them a glowing
+description of this city, situated
+upon the right bank of the Yang-Tze-Kiang,
+or Son of the Ocean—an enormous
+river, in whose waters porpoises
+disport themselves as in the open sea,
+and which allows the ascent of ships
+of the largest burthen. Five or six
+thousand (and Dr Yvan’s friend expressly
+disclaims exaggeration) are the
+number of the junks usually at anchor
+before Ou-Tchang. The person referred
+to saw upwards of a thousand
+laden with salt alone, and the town is
+an immense depot of China produce
+and of European and American manufactures.
+Chinese junks are the
+noisiest vessels that float; their crews
+are continually beating gongs and
+letting off fireworks. The quiet of
+Ou-Tchang may be imagined. It
+was on the occasion of the capture of
+this wealthy and important city that
+poor Siu was deprived of his peacock’s
+feather and driven to internal gilding.
+“The troubles of the south,”
+said the emperor in his proclamation,
+“leave us no rest by night, and take
+away our appetite.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The fourteenth chapter of <cite><span lang="fr">L’Insurrection
+en Chine</span></cite> is chiefly occupied by
+a description of the five feudatory
+kings appointed by Tièn-tè (one of
+whom takes the title of the Great Pacificator,
+whilst the four others are
+known as Kings of the North, South,
+East, and West), of the Pretender’s
+ministers, of the dress and official insignia
+of the various dignitaries, and
+of the organisation of the insurgent
+army, which is regular and perfect.
+It also comprises a proclamation, exhorting
+the people to rise in arms
+against their tyrannical government,
+and whose exalted and metaphorical
+style may be judged of by a single
+short extract. “How is it that you,
+Tartars, do not yet understand that it
+is time to gather up your scattered
+bones, and to light slices of bacon to
+serve as signals to your terror?” Notwithstanding
+such eccentricities of
+expression, which may possibly be
+heightened by extreme literalness of
+translation, the document has its importance,
+especially by reason of a
+tendency to Christianity traced by
+MM. Callery and Yvan in the commencement
+of one of its paragraphs.
+“We adore respectfully the Supreme
+Lord,” says Tièn-tè, “in order to obtain
+His protection for the people.”
+The descendant of the Mings was now
+in full march for the city which, under
+the ancient dynasty he assumes to
+represent, and proposes to restore, was
+the capital of all China. With a formidable
+fleet and an army of fifty
+thousand men, the five kings appeared
+before Nankin.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“This city, which contains more
+than half a million of inhabitants, has
+thrice the circumference of Paris; but
+amidst its deserted streets are found
+large spaces turned up by the plough,
+and the grass grows upon the quays,
+to which a triple line of shipping was
+formerly moored. It is situated in
+an immense plain, furrowed by canals
+as numerous as those which traverse
+the human body. Its fertile district
+is a net-work of rivulets and of navigable
+water-courses, fringed with willows
+and bamboos. In the province
+of Nankin grows the yellowish cotton
+from which is made the cloth exported
+thence in enormous quantities; there
+also is reaped the greater part of all
+the rice consumed in the empire. The
+Kiang-Nan, or province of Nankin, is
+the richest gem in the diadem of the
+Son of Heaven. Nothing in old Europe
+can give an idea of its fruitfulness—neither
+the plains of Beauce, nor those
+of Lombardy, nor even opulent Flanders.
+Twice a-year its fields are
+covered with crops, and they yield
+fruit and vegetables uninterruptedly....
+We have had the happiness
+to sit in the shadow of the orchards
+which fringe the Ou-Soung, one of
+the numerous veins that fertilise the
+province of Kiang-Nan. There we
+have gathered with our own hands the
+fleshy jujube, which travellers have
+often mistaken for the date; the pomegranate,
+with its transparent grains;
+monstrous peaches, beside which the
+finest produced at Montreuil seem but
+wild fruit, and the diospyros as large
+as a tomata. We have seen the
+scarlet pheasant and his brother of
+the pearl-tinted plumage running in
+the fields. This province contains
+thirty-eight millions of inhabitants.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“To a Chinese nothing is beautiful,
+good, graceful, elegant, or tasteful, but
+what comes from Nankin or from
+Sou-Tcheou-Fou. Wedded to routine,
+we have but one city which sets
+the fashions; the Chinese have two.
+The fashionables of the Celestial Empire
+are divided into two schools, one
+of which holds by Nankin, the other
+by Sou-Tcheou-Fou. It is still doubtful
+which of the two will carry the
+day. As to Pekin, the centre of government,
+it has no weight in matters
+of pleasure and taste; it has the monopoly
+of ennui. In Nankin reside the
+men of letters and learning, the dancers,
+painters, archæologists, jugglers, physicians,
+poets, and celebrated courtesans.
+In that charming city are held
+schools of science, art, and pleasure;
+for pleasure is, in that country, both
+an art and a science.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>With this interesting extract we
+shall conclude our article, after quoting
+a significant passage from a short
+proclamation which Tièn-tè’s agents
+have lately circulated:</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“As to those stupid priests of
+Bouddha, and those jugglers of Tao-se,”
+it says, “they shall all be repressed,
+and their temples and their
+monasteries shall be demolished, as well
+as those of all the other corrupt sects.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>MM. Callery and Yvan anxiously
+speculate as to who are designated by
+the words <i>other corrupt sects</i>. Was
+the proclamation drawn up by a disciple
+of Confucius, or by a member of
+Gutzlaff’s Chinese Union? They admit
+that for the present it is impossible
+to answer the question.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>But Tièn-tè’s banner waves over
+Nankin, and the riddle may soon be
+solved.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'>LADY LEE’S WIDOWHOOD.</h2>
+</div>
+<h3 class='c015'>PART VIII.—CHAPTER XXXVII.</h3>
+
+<p class='c016'>Between the village of Lanscote
+and the Heronry a side-road branched
+off, leading also to Doddington. At
+their junction the two roads bounded
+an abrupt rocky chasm, containing a
+black gloomy pool of unknown depth;
+known to the neighbourhood as the
+Mine Pool. A speculator had dug it
+many years before, in expectation of
+being richly rewarded by the mineral
+treasures supposed to exist there, and
+had continued the enterprise till the
+miners reached a great depth, when
+the water rose too rapidly to be kept
+under, and the work was abandoned.
+A few low bushes fringed the edge of
+it, besides which a dilapidated railing
+fenced it from the road. It formed a
+grim feature as it appeared unexpectedly
+yawning beside the green and
+flowery lane, and suggested ideas
+altogether incongruous with the smiling,
+peaceful character of the surrounding
+landscape.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>On the morning after Bagot’s interview
+with Mr Holmes, as related in
+the last chapter, Fillett and Julius
+were coming down the lane towards
+Lanscote. They were often sent out
+for a morning walk, and had been
+easily induced to choose this road by
+the Colonel, who had promised Julius
+a ride on the front of his saddle if he
+would come towards the village.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In these walks Julius was accustomed
+to impart, for the benefit of
+Kitty, most of the information collected
+from his various instructors. He
+would tell her of distant countries
+which his mamma had described to
+him—of pictures of foreign people and
+animals drawn for him by Orelia—of
+fairy tales told him by Rosa—of scraps
+of botanical rudiments communicated
+to him by the Curate. And being a
+sharp-witted little fellow, with a wonderful
+memory, he seldom failed to
+command Kitty’s admiration and applause.
+There were few branches of
+natural or metaphysical science which
+he had not treated of in this way. He
+had explained to her all about thunderbolts—he
+had destroyed for ever
+her faith in will-o’-the-wisps, leaving
+instead a mere matter-of-fact, uninteresting
+<i>ignis fatuus</i>—he had sounded
+her belief in witchcraft—he had
+put questions respecting the nature
+and habits of ghosts which she was
+wholly unable to solve: “Bless the
+child,” Kitty would say, “it’s as good
+as a play to hear him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Julius, hovering round Kitty, and
+chatting with her, frequently looked
+anxiously about to see if his Uncle
+Bag were coming, that he might claim
+the promised ride. When they arrived
+near the Mine Pool, down into
+the depths of which he was fond of
+gazing with a child’s awe, the Colonel
+suddenly met them coming on horseback
+up the road. Julius, clamorous
+to be lifted up, ran towards him; but
+Bagot called out that he was riding
+home for something he had forgotten,
+and would speedily overtake him. He
+passed them, and trotted on to where
+the road made a bend. There he
+suddenly pulled up, and called to
+Kitty to leave the boy for a minute
+and come up—that he wanted to speak
+to her.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Fillett obeyed, tripped up to the
+horse’s side, and walked beside the
+Colonel, who proceeded onward at a
+slow pace, talking of the old affair of
+Dubbley and her ladyship, and pretending
+to have some fresh matter of
+the kind in his head. Kitty noticed
+that his manner was odd and nervous,
+and his language incoherent, and
+before she could at all clearly perceive
+what it was he wanted to tell her, he
+released her and trotted onward to the
+Heronry, while she hastened to rejoin
+her young charge.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Julius was not in the spot where
+she had left him, and Fillett ran
+breathlessly down the road, calling
+him by name. Reaching a point where
+she could see a long way down the
+path, and finding he was not in sight,
+she retraced her steps, alternately
+calling him aloud and muttering to
+herself what a plaguey child he was.
+She looked behind every bush as she
+came along, and on again reaching
+the Mine Pool looked anxiously over
+the fence. Some object hung in the
+bushes a few yards from where she
+stood, just below a broken part of the
+fence; she hastened to the spot and
+looked down—it was Juley’s hat.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Clasping her hands together with a
+loud shriek, poor Kitty’s eyes wandered
+round in every direction in
+search of some gleam of comfort;—in
+search of some one to help her, under
+the burden of this terrible discovery.
+No one was in sight; only she saw a
+yellow caravan going up the other
+road to Doddington, at a quarter of a
+mile off. She would have run after
+it shrieking to the driver to stop; but
+her limbs and voice alike failed her,
+and poor Kitty sunk down moaning
+on the ground. “What shall I say to
+my lady?” gasped Fillett.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Lee was sitting in the library
+dressed for a walk, and waiting for
+her two friends who were getting
+ready to accompany her, when she
+heard a great commotion in the servants’
+hall and rung the bell to ask
+the reason. It was slowly answered
+by a footman, who entered with a
+perturbed aspect, and said the noise
+was caused by Fillett, who was in
+hysterics. Lady Lee asked what had
+caused her disorder, but the man
+looked confused, and stammered in
+his reply. Before she could make
+any further inquiries, Fillett herself
+rushed frantically into the room, and
+threw herself down before Lady Lee.
+“O, my lady, my lady!” sobbed
+Fillett.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“What ails the girl?” asked Lady
+Lee, looking down at her with an
+astonished air.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Fillett tried to answer, but nothing
+was distinguishable except that “indeed
+it wasn’t her fault.” At this
+moment a whispering at the door
+caused Lady Lee to look up, and she
+saw that the servants were gathered
+there, peering fearfully in. Rising up
+she grasped Kitty’s shoulder, and
+shook her, faltering out, “Speak,
+girl!”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Fillett seized her mistress’s dress,
+and again tried to tell her tale. In
+the midst of her sobs and exclamations,
+the words “Master Juley,” and
+“the Mine Pool,” alone were heard;
+but thus coupled they were enough.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Kitty, not daring to look up,
+fancied she felt her ladyship pulling
+away her dress from her grasp, and
+clutched it more firmly. At the same
+moment there was a rush of servants
+from the door—the dress that Fillett
+held gave way with a loud rending—and
+Lady Lee fell senseless to the
+ground.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c017'>CHAPTER XXXVIII.</h3>
+
+<p class='c016'>Until they lost him, they did not
+fully know the importance of Julius
+in the household. He was a very
+limb lopt off. To miss his tiny step
+at the door, his chubby face at their
+knees, his ringing voice about the
+rooms and corridors, made all appear
+very desolate at the Heronry. Though
+there had been no funeral, no room
+made dismal for ever by the presence
+of his coffin, and though there was no
+little green grave in the churchyard,
+yet the house seemed a tomb haunted
+by the dim shadow of his form, and
+saddened by the echoes of his voice.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Every endeavour was made to recover
+the poor child’s body. The
+Mine Pool was searched and dragged—it
+was even proposed to pump it
+dry; but the numerous crannies and
+recesses that lurked in its gloomy
+depths precluded much prospect of
+success, though the attempts were
+still persisted in after all hope was
+relinquished.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Lady Lee’s grief was of that silent
+sort which does not encourage attempts
+to console the mourner. She
+did not talk about her boy; she was
+not often observed to weep—but,
+whenever any stray relic brought the
+poor child strongly before her mind’s
+eye, she might be seen gazing at it
+with woeful earnestness, while her
+imagination “stuffed out his vacant
+garments with his form.” Rosa, observing
+this, stealthily removed, one
+by one, all the objects most likely to
+recall his image, and conveyed them
+to her own chamber; and she and
+Orelia avoided, so far as might be,
+while in Lady Lee’s presence, all allusions
+to their little lost friend. But
+in their own room at night they would
+talk about him for hours, cry themselves
+to sleep, and recover him in
+their dreams. A large closet in their
+apartment was sacred to his memory;
+his clothes, his rocking-horse, his
+trumpet, his musket, his box of dominoes,
+and a variety of other peaceful
+and warlike implements were stored
+there, and served vividly to recall the
+image of their late owner.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Rosa, waking in the morning with
+her face all swoln with crying, would
+indulge her grief with occasional
+peeps into the cupboard at these melancholy
+relics; while Orelia, a more
+austere mourner, sat silent under the
+hands of Fillett, whose sadness was
+of an infectious and obtrusive nature.
+Kitty would sniff, sigh, compress her
+under lip with her teeth, and glance
+sideways through her red, watery
+eyes at the sympathetic Rosa.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I dreamt of dear Juley again last
+night, Orelia,” Rosa would say.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Oh, Miss Rosa, so did I,” Fillett
+would break in, eager to give audible
+vent to her sorrow, “and so did
+Martha. Martha says she saw him
+like an angel; but I dreamed that I
+saw him galloping away upon Colonel
+Lee’s horse, and that I called and
+called, ‘Master Juley!’ says I, the
+same as if it had been real, ‘come to
+Kitty!’ but he never looked back.
+And the butler dreamed the night
+before last he was drawing a bottle of
+port, and just as he was going to stick
+in the corkscrew, he saw the cork was
+in the likeness of Master Juley, and
+he woke up all of a cold shiver.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Conversations on this subject did
+not tend to cheer the young ladies’
+countenances before they met Lady
+Lee at the breakfast-table. On their
+way down stairs they would form the
+sternest resolutions (generally originating
+with Orelia, and assented to
+by Rosa), as to their self-command,
+and exertions to be cheerful in the
+presence of their still more afflicted
+friend. They would walk up and kiss
+her pale, mournful face, feeling their
+stoicism sorely tried the while, and
+sitting down to table would try to get
+up a little conversation; till Rosa
+would suddenly sob and choke in her
+breakfast cup, and there was an end
+of the attempt.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>This melancholy state of things was
+not confined to the drawing-room. A
+dismal hush pervaded the household,
+and the servants went about their
+avocations with slow steps and whispered
+voices. They took a strange
+pleasure, too, in assembling together
+at night, and remembering warnings
+and omens which were supposed to
+have foreshadowed the mournful fate
+of the poor little baronet. Exactly
+a week before the event, the cook had
+been woke while dozing before the
+kitchen fire after supper, by a voice
+calling her name three times, and
+when she looked round there was nobody
+there. The very day month
+before his loss, the housekeeper distinctly
+remembered to have dreamt of
+her grandmother, then deceased about
+half a century, who had appeared to
+her in a lavender gown trimmed with
+crape, and black mittens, and she had
+said the next morning that she was
+sure something would happen; in support
+of which prophecy she appealed
+to Mr Short the butler, who confirmed
+the same, and added, on his own account,
+that an evening or two afterwards
+he had heard a strange noise
+in the cellar, which might have been
+rats, but he didn’t think it was.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The sight of Fillett, so intimately
+connected with the memory and the
+fate of her lost child, was naturally
+painful to Lady Lee, and Kitty, perceiving
+this to be the case, wisely kept
+out of her way, devoting herself entirely
+to the young ladies. Self-reproach
+greatly increased the sharpness
+of Kitty’s sorrow for poor Julius;
+she accused herself of having, by her
+negligence, contributed to the unhappy
+catastrophe. She fancied, too,
+that she could read similar reproach
+in the behaviour of her fellow-servants
+towards her; with the exception,
+however, of Noble, who, melted at
+the sight of her melancholy, and forgetting
+all his previous causes of
+jealous resentment, was assiduous in
+his efforts to console her.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Come,” said Harry, meeting her
+near the stables one evening—“come,
+cheer up. Why, you ain’t like the
+same girl. Anybody would think you
+had killed the poor boy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I feel as if I had, Noble,” said
+Kitty, with pious austerity.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“But you shouldn’t think so much
+about it, you know,” replied her comforter.
+“It can’t be helped now.
+You’re crying of your eyes out, and
+they ain’t a quarter so bright as what
+they was.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Ho, don’t talk to me of heyes,”
+said Kitty, at the same time flashing
+at him a glance from the corners of
+the organs in question. “This is no
+time for such vanities. We ought to
+think of our souls, Noble.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Noble appeared to be thinking just
+then less of souls than of bodies, for
+in his anxiety to comfort her he had
+passed his arm round her waist.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Noble, I wonder at you!” exclaimed
+Kitty, drawing away from
+him with a reproving glance. “After
+the warning we’ve all had, such conduct
+is enough to call down a judgment
+upon us. I’m all of a trimble
+at the thoughts of what will become
+of you, if you don’t repent.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Perhaps Harry may be excused for
+not seeing any immediate connection
+between the decease of his young
+master and the necessity of himself
+becoming an ascetic. But Kitty, in
+the excess of her penitence, from
+being as lively and coquettish a waiting-maid
+as could be found anywhere
+off the stage, suddenly became a kind
+of Puritan. It happened that at this
+time the members of a religious sect,
+very numerous in Doddington, having
+been suddenly seized with an access
+of religious zeal, held almost nightly
+what they termed “revivals”—meetings
+where inspired brethren poured
+forth their souls in extempore prayer;
+and those who were not fortunate
+enough to obtain possession of the
+platform indemnified themselves by
+torrents of pious ejaculations, which
+well-nigh drowned the voice of the
+principal orator. There is something
+attractive to the plebeian imagination
+in the idea of taking heaven by storm:
+the clamour, excitement, and <i>éclat</i>
+attending a public conversion had
+caused the ranks of these uproarious
+devotees to be recruited by many of
+their hearers, for the most part susceptible
+females; and Kitty, going to
+attend these meetings under the escort
+of Mr Noble (who, with profound
+hypocrisy, affected a leaning towards
+Methodism as soon as he perceived
+Miss Fillett’s bias in that direction),
+was converted the very first night.
+The grocer whose lodgings Oates and
+Bruce occupied was the preacher on
+this occasion, and his eloquence was
+so fervid and effective that, coupled
+with the heat of the place, it threw
+Kitty into hysterics. At the sight of
+so fair a penitent in this condition,
+many brethren of great sanctity hastened
+to her assistance, and questioned
+her so earnestly and affectionately as
+to her spiritual feelings, some of them
+even embracing her in the excess of
+their joy at seeing this good-looking
+brand snatched from the burning,
+that Mr Noble, conceiving (erroneously
+no doubt) that they were somewhat
+trenching on his prerogative,
+interfered, and conveyed her from the
+scene. After this, Kitty became a
+regular attendant at the revivals, and
+her demeanour grew more serious than
+ever, insomuch that Mr Dubbley,
+ignorant of this change in her sentiments,
+and petitioning for a meeting
+at the white gate, received an unexpected
+and dispiriting repulse.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The personage who seemed the least
+affected by grief of the household was
+the cat Pick. Perhaps he missed the
+teazings and tuggings, and frequent
+invasions of his majestic ease, which
+he had been wont to sustain; if so,
+this was probably to him a source of
+private self-congratulation and rejoicing.
+Never was a cat so petted as
+he now was, for the sake of his departed
+master, with whom he had
+been such a favourite. But Pick, far
+from testifying any regret, eat, lapped,
+purred, basked, and washed his face
+with his paw, as philosophically as
+ever.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The Curate’s sorrow at the event
+did him good—it distracted his mind
+from his own sorrows, and gave a new
+direction to his feelings for Hester.
+The unselfishness of his nature had an
+opportunity of displaying itself on the
+occasion. The thought of Lady Lee’s
+grief had roused his warmest sympathies,
+and he longed to comfort her—he
+longed to sit by her side, to hold
+her hand, to pour forth words of consolation
+and hope. He had done this,
+but not to the extent he could have
+wished; he could not trust himself
+for that. The Curate felt the most
+deep and tender pity for her—and we
+all know what pity is akin to: those
+very near relations, the Siamese twins,
+were not more closely allied than the
+Curate’s compassion and love for
+Lady Lee. Therefore Josiah, in his
+moments of extremest sympathy, kept
+watch and ward upon his heart, and
+said not all he felt.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>But he bethought himself of preaching
+a sermon on the subject. He was
+conscious that his sermons had of late
+lacked earnestness and spirit; and he
+would now pour his feelings into a
+discourse at once touching and consolatory.
+He chose for his text,
+“<i>He was the only son of his mother,
+and she was a widow.</i>” He had intended
+to extract from this text a
+hopeful moral, and to set forth powerfully
+the reasons for being resigned
+and trustful under such trials. But
+the poor Curate felt too deeply himself
+on the occasion to be the minister
+of comfort to others, and, breaking
+down half-a-dozen times from emotion,
+set all Lanscote weeping.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“How could you make us all cry
+so, Josiah?” asked Rosa, reproachfully.
+“Weren’t we sad enough before?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In fact, it seemed as if poor Julius
+might have lived long, and died at a
+green old age, without being either
+more faithfully remembered or more
+sincerely lamented.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Finding themselves disappointed in
+all their efforts to comfort Lady Lee,
+Orelia and Rosa came to the conclusion
+that, so long as she remained at
+the Heronry, she would never cease
+to be saddened by the image of the
+lost Juley. So they agreed it would
+be well to persuade her to leave the
+now sorrowful scene; and no place
+seemed so likely to divert her sorrow,
+by making a powerful appeal to her
+feelings, as Orelia’s cottage. Here
+she might recall her maiden fancies,
+and renew her youth, while her married
+life might slip aside like a sad
+episode in her existence.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“We’ll all start together next
+week,” said Orelia, when she had
+obtained Lady Lee’s sanction to this
+arrangement.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“No,” said Rosa, “not all, Reley.
+You and Hester shall go.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“What does the monkey mean?”
+cried Orelia. “You don’t suppose
+we’re going without you, do you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“You know I should like to accompany
+you, Reley,” said Rosa, “and
+you know I shall be dreadfully disconsolate
+without you; but I must go
+and live with Josiah.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Live with Josiah, indeed!” quoth
+Orelia, with high scorn. “What does
+Josiah want of you, d’ye think, to
+plague his life out? Hasn’t he got
+that Mrs what’s-her-name, his housekeeper,
+to take care of him and his
+property? I’m sure I never see the
+woman without thinking of candle-ends.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“’Tisn’t to take care of him that I
+stay, but to comfort him,” said Rosa.
+“You’ve no idea how low-spirited
+Josiah has been this some time past,
+ever since his friend Captain Fane
+went away. He has lost his interest
+in his books and flowers, and sits for
+hours in thought looking so melancholy.
+Oh! I couldn’t think of leaving
+him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Rosa persisted in this determination,
+and all the concession they
+could obtain was, that as soon as
+Josiah recovered his spirits she would
+rejoin her friends at Orelia’s cottage.
+Meantime, the latter and Lady Lee
+made preparations for a speedy departure.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c017'>CHAPTER XXXIX.</h3>
+
+<p class='c016'>The Squire’s preceptor, Mr Randy,
+saw with concern that he could never
+hope to obtain undivided empire over
+his pupil. He had, it is true, considerable
+influence with him—knew
+and humoured his foibles—assisted
+him with advice on difficult points,
+and had, in fact, become in various
+ways almost necessary to him. Nevertheless,
+he felt that Mr Dubbley’s
+susceptibility to female fascinations
+perpetually endangered his position.
+He had, indeed, attained the post of
+grand vizier, but might at any moment
+be stripped of his dignities at
+the first suggestion of a hostile sultana.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>After long consideration of the subject,
+Mr Randy came to the conclusion
+that the most effectual way to establish
+himself firmly at Monkstone
+would be, to take care that this other
+great power, whose possible advent be
+constantly dreaded, instead of being
+a rival, should be entirely in his interests.
+This seemed to him, theoretically,
+a master-stroke of policy; to
+carry it into practice might not be
+easy. As he was revolving the matter
+in his mind one evening, after passing
+through Lanscote on his way home
+from Monkstone to Doddington, he
+perceived the Curate’s housekeeper
+taking a little fresh air at the garden
+gate. She had heated herself with
+the operation of making her own tea,
+and leaving the tea-pot on the hob,
+to “draw” as she termed it, had
+come out to cool herself before drinking
+it.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>At the sight of her, Mr Randy’s
+air became brisker. He walked more
+jauntily—he swung and twirled his
+stick, instead of leaning on it—he
+placed his hat a little on one side of his
+head—and he re-buttoned his coat,
+which he had loosened in order to
+walk with more ease and convenience.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>He was acquainted with Mrs Greene,
+and frequently stopped to talk with
+her as he passed; and, as he approached
+now, he took off his hat, and
+made what would have been a very
+imposing bow had he not unluckily
+slipt at a critical moment on a pebble,
+and thus impaired the dignity of the
+obeisance.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“A lovely evening, Mrs Greene,”
+said Mr Randy, whose courtesy was
+somewhat ponderous and antique, and
+whose conversation, when he was on
+his stilts, rather resembled scraps from
+a paper of the <cite>Rambler</cite> than the discourse
+of ordinary men. “Happy
+are you, my good Mrs Greene, who,
+‘far from the busy hum of men,’”
+(whenever Mr Randy indulged in a
+quotation he made a pause before and
+after it) “can dwell placidly in such
+a scene as this. A scene,” added Mr
+Randy, looking round at the house
+and garden with a gratified air—“a
+scene that Horus would have revelled
+in. A pleasant life, is it not, my good
+madam?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“It’s lonesome,” said Mrs Greene.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The better for meditation,” returned
+Mr Randy didactically. “What
+says the poet?—‘My mind to me a
+kingdom is,’—and who could desire a
+fairer dominion? Ay,” (shaking his
+head and smiling seriously) “with a
+few favourite authors, and with the
+necessaries of life, one might be content
+to let the hours slip by here
+without envying the proud possessors
+of palluses.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Though Jennifer admired this style
+of conversation exceedingly, she was
+hardly equal to sustaining it. “You
+seem to be a good deal with Squire
+Dubbley, Mr Randy,” she said.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Mr Randy answered in the affirmative,
+taking, at the same time, a pinch
+of snuff.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“He’s a queer one, they say,” said
+Jennifer. “I should think ’twas tiresome
+for a book-learned gentleman
+like you, Mr Randy, to be so much in
+his company.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Not at all, Mrs Greene,” said Mr
+Randy. “What says the Latin
+writer?—‘Homo sum, nihil humanum
+a me alienum puto,’ which means, my
+good madam, that, being myself a
+human being, I am interested in all
+that appertains to humanity. I study
+the squire with much satisfaction.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“He’s a gay man the Squire,” said
+Jennifer sententiously. “Why don’t
+he marry and live respectable, I wonder?
+Hasn’t he got a lady in his eye
+yet, Mr Randy?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Marriage is a serious thing, my
+good Mrs Greene—a very serious thing
+indeed. No,” said Mr Randy, confidentially:
+“what he wants is a housekeeper,
+Mrs Greene, such a one as
+some gentlemen I could name are so
+fortunate as to possess—a respectable,
+careful person, who could take care
+of his domestic affairs, and prevent
+him from being fooled by any idle
+hussy of a servant-maid who may
+happen to have an impudent, pretty
+face of her own.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I should like,” said Jennifer,
+with compressed lips and threatening
+eyes—“I should like to see any such
+show their impudent faces in a house
+where I was. They wouldn’t come
+again in a hurry, I can tell ’em.” And,
+indeed, it was very likely they would
+not.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Ah,” said Mr Randy, in deep admiration,
+“Mr Young is a fortunate
+man. He has secured a housekeeper
+whom we may safely pronounce to be
+one in a thousand.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Jennifer, though austere, was not
+quite steeled against flattery. She
+looked on the learned man with prim
+complacency—she remembered that
+her tea had now stood long enough—and
+she suggested that perhaps Mr
+Randy’s walk had disposed him for
+some refreshment, and she should
+take his company during the meal as
+a favour.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Mr Randy was not particularly
+addicted to tea: on all those points
+for which it has been extolled—as a
+stimulant, as a refresher, as an agreeable
+beverage—he considered it to
+be greatly excelled by brandy-and-water.
+But the subject just touched
+upon was one in which he was greatly
+interested, and he resolved to follow
+up an idea that had occurred to him;
+so he courteously accepted Jennifer’s
+invitation, and followed her into the
+parsonage.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Mrs Greene’s room was a model of
+order, rather too much so perhaps for
+comfort—and showed other traces
+of her presiding spirit in a certain
+air of thriftiness which pervaded it.
+Reigning supreme, as Jennifer did in
+the Curate’s household, she might have
+indulged in small luxuries at her
+pleasure had she possessed any taste
+for them, but the practice of saving,
+for its own sake, afforded her positive
+delight. The shelves were rather
+sparingly furnished with jam-pots of
+very small dimensions, carefully tied
+down and corded, and marked with
+the name of the confection, and the
+year of its manufacture; various boxes
+and canisters, labelled as containing
+different groceries, were securely padlocked,
+as if they were not likely to
+be opened on light or insufficient
+grounds; the curtains rather scantily
+covered the window, and the carpet
+was too small for the floor.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Jennifer, unlocking the tea-caddy,
+put in two additional spoonfuls of tea
+in consideration of her guest. Then
+she invited Mr Randy to sit down,
+which he did with great ceremony;
+while she placed on the table two
+saucers of jam, helped Mr Randy to
+toast and butter, and some of the
+sweetmeat, and poured out the tea.
+And Mr Randy observing that Jennifer
+transferred hers to her saucer, for
+the better convenience of drinking, not
+only did the like, but also blew on the
+surface to reduce the temperature before
+the successive gulps, which were
+then both copious and sonorous.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“So the Squire’s not a good manager,
+eh, Mr Randy?” said Jennifer,
+after some little conversation on indifferent
+matters.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“No comfort, no elegance,” said
+Mr Randy. “The superintending
+hand of a female is greatly wanted.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“And does the Squire think of
+getting a housekeeper?” asked Jennifer.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I’ve not suggested it to him as
+yet,” returned her guest, “but I’m
+thinking of doing so, if I could fix my
+eye on a proper person.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Bless me, you’ve got no preserve,”
+said Jennifer, emptying, in a sudden
+access of liberality, the saucer of damsons
+on Mr Randy’s plate. “And
+there’s nothing but grounds in your
+cup—perhaps you’d like it a little
+stronger, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“No more, my good madam, I’m
+obliged to you,” said that gentleman,
+drawing away his cup, and covering
+it with his hand to show he was
+in earnest, so that Jennifer, pressing
+ardently upon him with the tea-pot,
+very nearly poured the hot tea upon
+his knuckles. “I’ve had quite an
+abundance—quite a sufficiency, I
+assure you. No, ma’am, things do
+not go on at Monkstone precisely as I
+could wish in all respects. For instance,
+it would be agreeable to me
+sometimes to find an attentive female
+to receive me—to say to me, Mr
+Randy you are wet, won’t you have
+a basin of soup to warm you?—or, Mr
+Randy, it rains, you’ll be the better of
+a glass of spirits and water to fortify
+you against the inclemency of the
+elements. Mr Dubbley is very kind,
+but these little things don’t occur to
+him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Indeed, then, I think they might,”
+said Mrs Greene with warmth. “The
+least he could do is to be civil. Take
+some toast, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“’Tis forgetfulness, Mrs Greene,
+not incivility—a sin of omission, not
+of commission. I flatter myself few
+men would venture to be uncivil to
+me,” and Mr Randy drew himself up
+and looked majestic. “Then the want
+of a proper person in the house obliges
+him to look more closely after
+some small matters than is quite becoming
+in a man of property.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Closeness,” said Jennifer, with
+great disdain, “is what I never could
+abide. I could forgive anything better
+than that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Well, well, Mrs Greene,” said her
+visitor, waving his hand, “we won’t
+be hard upon him—he means well.
+Yes, I’ve been looking out for some
+time for a lady that would answer the
+Squire’s purpose.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“And what kind of person would
+be likely to suit you?” inquired Jennifer
+with interest.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“We should require,” said Mr
+Randy, brushing some crumbs from
+his lap with his pocket-handkerchief,
+as he concluded his meal—“we should
+require a character not easy to be
+met with;—a sensible—respectable—experienced—discreet—per-r-son—and
+one, too, who would not give
+herself presumptuous airs, but would
+conduct herself towards me—me, Mrs
+Greene, as I could wish.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Of course,” said Jennifer, “if
+she was beholden to you for her place,
+’twould be her duty to make things
+pleasant to you, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Ah,” said Mr Randy, “<i>you</i> are
+both a discreet and a sensible person,
+Mrs Greene, I perceive.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“And as to terms, Mr Randy,”
+suggested Jennifer.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“As to terms, they would be hardly
+worth higgling about, Mrs Greene—for,
+if the lady possessed the manifold
+merits I have enumerated, and allowed
+herself to be guided in all things
+by me, why, she would be <i>de facto</i>—that
+is to say, in reality—mistress of
+Monkstone, and might feather her
+nest to her own liking.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>This was a dazzling prospect indeed,
+and well calculated to appeal to the
+heart of Jennifer. There was a grand
+indefiniteness as to the extent of power
+and profit which might be acquired,
+which she found inexpressibly alluring;
+for Jennifer was, after her fashion,
+ambitious, though her ambition was
+of too practical a nature to set itself
+on objects hopelessly remote.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Mr Randy perceiving the effect of
+what he had said, and considering it
+would be well to give her time to digest
+it before entering into details,
+now rose to take leave.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Good evening, sir, and thank
+you,” said Jennifer. “When you’re
+passing another day, I hope you’ll
+look in;” and Mr Randy, having
+promised to do so, walked with his
+customary dignity up the road.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Mr Randy had not directly said
+that he thought Jennifer, if she would
+agree to share interests with him,
+would be exactly the person he wanted;
+nor had Jennifer directly stated
+that, if she succeeded in obtaining the
+post of housekeeper to the Squire, she
+would show her gratitude by being
+all Mr Randy could wish. But the
+knowledge of human nature displayed
+by the Randies and Jennifers is intuitive
+and unerring, so long as it is
+employed upon natures on a level
+with their own; and Jennifer knew
+perfectly well that Mr Randy wanted
+her for the furtherance of his own designs
+at Monkstone; while Mr Randy
+never doubted that the lure he had
+held out would secure her.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Jennifer, however, had by no means
+made up her mind to accept the offer
+at once. It was dazzling, certainly;
+but, on the other hand, she did not
+like the idea of giving up her long and
+persevering designs upon the Curate’s
+heart, which, as the reader knows,
+she had from the first been determined
+to attack. That was too grievous a
+waste of time and subtlety to be contemplated.
+But Mr Randy’s implied
+offer gave her an opportunity of carrying
+into execution a scheme she
+had long meditated. She considered
+(her cogitations being assisted by a
+third cup of tea, obtained by putting
+fresh water in the tea-pot after Mr
+Randy’s departure) that she had now
+lived so long with the Curate that she
+could not possibly become more necessary
+to him than she already was—that
+the sooner he was brought to
+the point the better—that being such
+an absent person, far from making
+any proposals of the kind she desired
+of his own accord, a very strong hint
+from herself would be required in
+order to extract them. Now if she
+resolved upon giving this hint, she
+must also be prepared to quit the parsonage
+in case of failure; and Monkstone
+would form exactly the point
+she wanted to retreat upon.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>This secured, she would commence
+operations at once with the Curate.
+He was, in Jennifer’s estimation, a
+man who did not know his own mind
+or his own interests. But though he
+might never discover what was for
+his own good unassisted, yet a man
+must be foolish indeed who can’t perceive
+it when ’tis shown him. From
+frequent victories obtained over the
+Curate, and long managing and ruling
+him, she flattered herself she might
+now make her own terms, for that he
+could never bear to part with her;
+but if she deceived herself in this,
+why, then Monkstone would be a
+more lucrative place. So in any case
+she should gain some end, and she determined
+to put her powers of cajolery
+to proof without delay. Indeed, there
+was no time to lose, for that very
+morning Miss Rosa had signified her
+intention of coming to live with her
+brother when the ladies left the
+Heronry.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c017'>CHAPTER XL.</h3>
+
+<p class='c016'>For many weeks the poor Curate
+had been indeed alone; for so long
+had his old companions, hope and
+cheerfulness, deserted him; for so
+long had he gone mechanically about
+his old pursuits, feeling that the glory
+had departed from them, and sat in
+the stormy autumn evenings by a
+hearth where only the vacant pedestals
+reminded him of the wonted presence
+of household gods.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Time, of whose lapse heretofore he
+had taken little note, became now a
+dull, remorseless enemy. The Curate,
+when he woke, would sometimes
+shudder at the prospect of the many-houred
+day between him and the
+grateful oblivion of sleep; for the
+day, formerly so busy, was now to
+him but a long tract of weary, reiterated
+sorrows.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Though he still spent many hours
+in his garden, it was lamentable to
+see the change there. Weeds sprung
+unregarded side by side with his
+choicest flowers—worms revelled in
+his tenderest buds—and the caterpillars
+were so numerous as to form
+quite an army of occupation. His
+books, too, were blank to him—the
+pages he used to love seemed meaningless.
+His only remaining consolation
+was his pipe.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>See, then, the Curate sitting in the
+twilight in his elbow-chair, in an attitude
+at once listless and uncomfortable,
+his waist bent sharply in, his
+head drooping, one leg gathered under
+the seat, the other straddling
+toward the fire, his right hand shading
+his eyes, while the elbow rests on
+the table—the left holding the bowl of
+his pipe, while the elbow rests on the
+arm of his chair. Frequently he takes
+the mouthpiece from his lips, sighs
+heavily, and forgets to smoke—then,
+with a shake of the head, he again
+sucks comfort from his meerschaum.
+There is a tap at the door, which opens
+slowly—Jennifer looks in at him, and
+then draws near.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Jennifer stopt—looked at him—sighed—then
+drew a little closer—sighed
+again. The Curate, fancying
+she had come on some of her accustomed
+visits of inspection (for of late
+she had found frequent excuses for
+entering, such as to dust his books, to
+stir his fire, to draw his curtains),
+took no notice of her, but continued
+to pursue his train of thought. Presently
+he, too, sighed; it was echoed
+so sympathetically by Mrs Greene,
+that her suspiration sounded like a
+gust coming down the chimney. Finding
+that the Curate, as usual, pursued
+the plan which is popularly attributed
+to apparitions in their intercourse
+with human beings, and was not likely
+to speak till spoken to, Jennifer, with
+a little cough, came round between the
+table and the fire, and stirred the
+latter. Being thus quite close to the
+Curate, with the table in her rear, and
+her master’s chair close to her left
+hand, she commenced.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I’m vexed to see you so down, Mr
+Young. I’m afraid you’re not satisfied
+in your mind. You used to be a
+far cheerfuller gentleman than what
+you are now.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Mr Young, rousing himself, looked
+up with an assumed briskness.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“It’s my way, Mrs Greene—only
+my way.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“No, sir,” said Jennifer, peremptorily,
+“’tis not your way, asking your
+pardon. There’s something on your
+mind. Perhaps it’s me—perhaps
+things have not gone according to
+your wishes in the house. If it’s me,
+sir, say so, I beg.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“You, Mrs Greene—impossible.
+I’m quite sensible of your kind attention
+to my comforts, I assure you,”
+protested the Curate.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Because,” said Jennifer, heedless
+of his disclaimer, and going on as if
+he had not uttered it—“because, if so,
+I wish to say one word. I only wish
+to remark, sir, that whatever fault
+there is of that kind, ’tis not a fault
+according to my will. My wish is,
+and always has been, to serve you to
+the utmost of my”—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Mrs Greene!” began the Curate,
+touching her on the arm with the extended
+stem of his meerschaum, to
+check her volubility for a moment,
+“my good soul”—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>——“To the utmost of my ability,”
+went on Jennifer, with a slight faltering
+in her voice. “If laying down
+my life could have served you, Mr
+Young, I’m sure”— Here Jennifer
+whimpered.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Faithful creature!” thought the
+Curate, “what an interest she takes
+in me! My dear Mrs Greene,” said
+he, “your doubts wrong me very
+much; but this proof of your care for
+me is exceedingly gratifying”—which
+was perhaps an unconscious fib, for
+the Curate felt more embarrassment
+than gratification.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“And after all my trials and efforts,
+thinking only how I could please you,
+to see you—oh—oh—” and Jennifer
+broke down again, and in the excess
+of her agitation sat down on a chair
+near her. And though to sit down in
+his presence was a quite unusual proceeding
+on her part, yet the Curate
+was so heedless of forms, that if she
+had seated herself on the mantelpiece,
+he would possibly have thought it
+merely a harmless eccentricity.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Calm yourself, Mrs Greene,” entreated
+the Curate. “These doubts
+of my regard are quite unfounded;
+be assured I fully appreciate your
+value.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“But in that case,” said Jennifer,
+pursuing her own hypothesis with
+great perseverance, “in that case I
+must quit you whatever it costs me.
+And I hope you could find them, Mr
+Young, as would serve you better.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Don’t talk of quitting me, Mrs
+Greene,” said the Curate soothingly.
+“This is all mere creation of your
+fancy. I am perfectly satisfied—more
+than satisfied with you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“No, sir—I’ve seen it—I’ve seen it
+this some time. You don’t look upon
+me like what you used. ’Tisn’t any
+longer, ‘Mrs Greene, do this,’ and
+‘Mrs Greene, do that,’ and the other.
+You can do without Mrs Greene now.
+And perhaps,” said Jennifer, “’tis
+better I was—gone” (the last word
+almost inaudible).</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Really, Mrs Greene, this is quite
+unnecessary. You are paining yourself
+and me to no purpose. Be persuaded”—(and
+the Curate took Jennifer’s
+hand)—“be persuaded of my
+sense of your merits.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Jennifer wiped her eyes; then starting
+and looking round over her shoulder,
+“O sir,” said she, “if anybody
+should catch us!—what would they
+say?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Catch us, Mrs Greene,” said the
+Curate, hastening to withdraw his
+hand; but Jennifer clutched it nervously.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Stop!” said Jennifer, “there’s a
+step—and that maid’s got such a
+tongue! No, ’twas my fancy—the
+maid’s asleep in the kitchen. O, sir—yes,
+what would they say?—people is
+so scandalous. They’ve been talking
+already.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Talking!” exclaimed Mr Young,
+withdrawing his hand with a jerk.
+“What can you mean, Mrs Greene?
+Talking of what?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“O yes!” said Jennifer. “They’ve
+been remarking, the busy ones has,
+how it comes that a lone woman like
+me could live so long with a single
+gentleman. Many’s the bitter thought
+it gave me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Good heavens, Mrs Greene!” cried
+the Curate, pushing his chair, which
+ran on castors, away with a loud creak,
+“really this is all very strange and
+unexpected.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“And more than that,” pursued
+Jennifer, “they’ve said concerning
+my looks——but I couldn’t repeat
+what they said, further than to mention
+that they meant I wasn’t old nor
+ugly—which perhaps I’m not. And
+they know what a good wife I made
+to Samuel” (this was the deceased
+shipmaster’s Christian appellation)—“never,
+as Mrs Britton that keeps
+the grocery said to me last Wednesday,
+never was a better. And when
+’twas named to me what they’d been
+saying, I thought—O good gracious!—I
+thought I should have sunk into
+the hearth.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Gracious goodness!” exclaimed
+Mr Young, starting from his chair,
+and pacing the room in great perturbation.
+“How extremely infamous!
+Why, ’tis like a terrible nightmare.
+To spread false reports—to drive me
+to part with a valuable servant—’tis
+atrocious! I’m afraid, Mrs Greene,
+you really had better go to-morrow.
+I need not say how I regret it, but
+what you have told me renders it imperative.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I wish it mayn’t be too late, sir,”
+said Jennifer, putting her handkerchief
+to her eyes.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Too late!—too late for what?”
+inquired the Curate.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“And where do you think I’m to
+get another place? Who’ll take in a
+lone woman, whose character have
+been breathed upon? Oh, that ever
+I should have seen Lanscote parsonage!”
+cried Jennifer, choking.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“But, Mrs Greene,” said the agitated
+Curate, stopping in his walk to
+lean his hands on the table, and looking
+earnestly at her, “it shall be my
+care, as it is my duty, to prove the
+falsehood of these reports. You shall
+not suffer on my account, believe me.
+If necessary, I’ll expose the wicked
+slander from the pulpit.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>This wouldn’t have suited Jennifer
+at all. The Curate was going off quite
+on the wrong track, and she made a
+last effort to bring him into the right
+direction.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“And my—my—my feelings,” sobbed
+she, “ain’t they to be considered?
+Oh, that ever I should be a weak
+foolish woman! Oh, that ever I
+should have been born with a weak
+trustful heart!”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I daresay ’twill be painful to leave
+a place where you have lived long,
+and a master who I hope has been
+kind to you,” said the Curate. (Jennifer
+lifted up her voice here, and
+writhed in her chair.) “No doubt
+it will, for you have an excellent
+heart, Mrs Greene. But what you
+have said convinces me of the necessity
+of it. And you shall be no
+loser; until you can suit yourself with
+a place, I’ll continue your salary as
+usual.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Salary!” cried Jennifer, starting
+from her chair. “Oh, that I should be
+talked to like a hireling! God forgive
+you, Mr Young. Well, it’s over now.
+I’ll consider what you’ve said, Mr
+Young, and I’ll try—try to bring my
+mind to it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Jennifer rose—sobbed a little—looked
+at her chair as if she had a
+mind to sit down again, and then
+prepared to depart. In her way out
+of the room, she passed close to the
+Curate, and paused, almost touching
+him, with her handkerchief to her
+eyes. “If ever he’d say the word,
+he’d say it now,” thought Jennifer,
+weeping copiously. But Mr Young,
+far from availing himself of the proximity
+to take her hand, or say anything
+even of comfort, far less of a tenderer
+nature, retreated with great alacrity
+to his original post near the fire, and
+Jennifer had no alternative but to
+walk onward out of the room.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>She left him, roused, certainly, most
+effectually from his melancholy; but
+the change was not for the better.
+The poor shy Curate was exactly the
+man to feel the full annoyance of such
+reports as, according to Jennifer, were
+in circulation. He fancied himself an
+object of derision to all Lanscote—how
+could he hope to do any good
+among parishioners who said scandalous
+things of him and his housekeeper?
+How could he hope to convince
+them of his innocence? How
+preserve his dignity in the pulpit, with
+the consciousness that a whole congregation
+were looking at him in a
+false light?</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Jennifer’s demeanour next day was
+sad and subdued. After breakfast she
+came into the room, and, without lifting
+her eyes, said that she thought
+she had better go next Wednesday.
+“On Wednesday,” said Jennifer,
+“Miss Rosa’s coming, and then, with
+your leave, I’ll quit, Mr Young.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The Curate highly approved of this;
+he knew he could not feel easy till she
+was out of the house, and meanwhile
+he absented himself from it as much
+as possible.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>It was fortunate for the Curate that
+the period of her stay was so short,
+for she took care it should be far from
+pleasant. She personally superintended
+the making of his bed, which she
+caused to slope downwards towards
+the feet, and at one side, so that the
+hapless occupant was perpetually waking
+from a dream in which he had
+been sliding over precipices; and, reascending
+to his pillow for another
+precarious slumber, would be again
+woke by finding his feet sticking out
+from beneath the clothes, and his body
+gradually following them. He got
+hairs in his butter, and plenty of salt
+in his soup; his tea, the only luxury
+of the palate that he really cared
+about, and that rather on intellectual
+than sensual grounds, grew weaker
+and weaker; his toast simultaneously
+got tougher; and he was kept the
+whole time on mutton-chops, which,
+from their identity of flavour, appeared
+to have been all cut from the same
+patriarchal ram.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Wednesday arrived. The Curate,
+leaning over his garden gate, saw the
+carriage from the Heronry coming
+down the lane. It drew up at the
+parsonage; in it were Lady Lee,
+Orelia, and Rosa, all in black, and all
+looking very sad. Rosa, rising to take
+leave of her friends, underwent innumerable
+embraces.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Orelia was the calmest of the three,
+but even her grandeur and stateliness
+quite gave way in parting. “Good-bye,
+Rosalinda,” was all she could
+trust herself to say, as Rosa alighted.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The Curate had intended to say a
+great deal to Hester, but it had all
+vanished from his mind, and remained
+unexpressed, unless a long pressure
+of the hand could convey it. Lady
+Lee gave several things in charge to
+the Curate to execute, and delivered a
+purse to him, the contents of which
+were to be distributed among various
+pensioners in the village; then she
+told the coachman to drive on.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Write at least three times a-week,
+Rosalinda,” cried Orelia, putting a
+tearful face over the hood of the carriage,
+“or never hope for forgiveness.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>They were gone. A white handkerchief
+waved from the side, and
+another from the top of the carriage,
+till it disappeared, and the Curate and
+his sister slowly turned into the house—the
+last remnant of the once joyous
+party assembled at the Heronry.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>What a hard thing was life! What
+a cruel thing was fate, that they could
+not all be left as they were! Their
+happiness did no harm to any one—nay,
+good to many—yet it was inexorably
+scattered to the winds for ever.
+So thought the Curate; and so felt
+Rosa, though perhaps her feelings did
+not shape themselves into thoughts.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>But there was no time just then to
+indulge their grief. Scarcely had the
+carriage departed, when its place was
+taken by a vehicle of altogether different
+description. A donkey-cart, destined
+to convey away Jennifer’s chattels,
+and driven by a small boy, drew
+up at the gate, producing a kind of
+practical anti-climax. Then Jennifer,
+attired in bonnet and shawl, entered,
+and announced, in an austere and
+steady voice, that she was ready to
+hand over her keys of office to the still
+weeping Rosa.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Now, Miss,” said Jennifer sharply,
+“if you could make it convenient
+to come at once, I should be obliged.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Go with Mrs Greene, my child,”
+said the Curate. When Jennifer found
+she had failed in her grand design on
+the Curate, and must quit the parsonage,
+she did not continue to affect
+regret at her departure; and having
+easily and at once secured the coveted
+post at Monkstone, through the influence
+of Mr Randy, she felt the
+change was likely to be for the better.
+She might, therefore, have been expected
+to quit her present abode, if
+with some natural regret, yet at perfect
+peace and charity with all the
+household. Jennifer’s disposition did
+not, however, admit of this. She felt
+enraged at the Curate because of the
+failure of her design upon him, and
+resolved to be of as little use as possible
+in the last moments of her expiring
+authority. “He’ll be wishing me back
+again before a week’s over his head,”
+said Jennifer to herself, with infinite
+satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>In vain Rosa protested against being
+dragged into every corner of the
+house, and having every bit of household
+property set before her eyes. In
+vain she assured Mrs Greene that both
+her brother and herself were perfectly
+satisfied of the correctness of everything.
+“’Twas a satisfaction to herself,”
+Jennifer said, “to show everything;”
+and it really was, for the
+extreme bewilderment and ignorance
+of Rosa on all points of housekeeping
+afforded Jennifer the keenest gratification.
+The Heronry, where Rosa’s
+chief business had been to amuse herself,
+was a very bad school to learn
+anything of the sort.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Accordingly, Jennifer did not spare
+her the enumeration of a single kitchen
+implement, pot of jam, nor article of
+linen.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The bed and table linen’s all in
+this press,” said Jennifer, opening a
+large one of walnut wood in the spare
+bedroom.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“These are the sheets, I suppose,
+Mrs Greene,” Rosa remarked, wishing
+to show an interest in the matter.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Bless you, they’re the tablecloths!”
+returned Jennifer, with a
+glance of disdain.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Oh, to be sure! And these are
+towels?” resumed Rosa.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Napkins,” said Jennifer, with
+calm superiority. “Mr Young’s
+shirts, and collars, and bands, and
+neckcloths, is all in these two drawers.
+Do you understand much about clear-starching,
+Miss?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“N—n—no; I am afraid not
+much,” said Rosa.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Ah, ’twould be just as well you
+should, perhaps, because the washerwoman
+requires a deal of looking
+after. She can be careless and impudent,
+too, when she dares, especially
+when she’s in drink. She never
+ventured upon any tricks with <i>me</i>,
+though.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The thought of this terrible washerwoman
+made Rosa tremble, while Jennifer
+secretly exulted in the thought
+of seeing the Curate in limp collars
+and a crumpled shirt.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“There,” said the ex-housekeeper,
+locking up the press, and handing the
+key to Rosa; “I advise you, Miss,
+to take out everything that’s wanted
+yourself. The girl’s hands is generally
+dirty, and, besides, in taking
+out one thing she drags all the rest
+out upon the floor. Oh, she’s a nice
+one, that girl!—the work I’ve had to
+manage her! Well, Miss, I hope
+you’ll keep an eye upon her, that’s
+all.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Having thus rendered Rosa as uncomfortable
+as possible at the prospect
+before her, Jennifer at length prepared
+to depart. Opening the door
+of the sitting-room, she said to the
+Curate, “The young lady’s seen
+everything, and is quite satisfied.
+Well, good-bye, and wishing you
+well, sir.” But the benediction was
+quite contradicted by the ferocity of
+her look and tone.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Good-bye, good-bye, my good
+Mrs Greene,” said the Curate, who
+could not help regarding Jennifer as
+a martyr. “I wish you all success
+and happiness; I hope you won’t
+fret too much after the parsonage,
+Mrs Greene.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Ho, no,” said Jennifer, with an
+ironical little laugh; “it’s not likely.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I’m heartily glad of that,” said
+the Curate, who would not have detected
+irony even in Dean Swift;
+“and I hope you’ll soon get another
+and as good a place.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I’ve got one,” said Jennifer, “as
+good a one as ever I could wish.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Indeed! that is fortunate,” said
+the Curate; “and when do you go
+to it then?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I’m going now,” said Jennifer.
+“Ho, bless you! as soon as ’twas
+known I was going to leave this, I
+had more offers than enough. I took
+Monkstone,” said Jennifer, “being
+’twas near my friends in the village.
+Wishing you good-bye, sir,”—here
+she dropt a curtsey, and closed the
+door. The boy had already conveyed
+her trunks and bandboxes to the
+donkey-cart. Jennifer marched past
+the window (from whence the Curate
+was watching this exodus) in austere
+majesty, and never deigned to turn
+her head. Then she, the boy, the
+donkey-cart, and the bandboxes, all
+went in procession down the road,
+leaving Rosa sole superintendant of
+the Curate’s household.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c017'>CHAPTER XLI.</h3>
+
+<p class='c016'>The friendship which Bruce at this
+time conceived for Josiah was uncommonly
+warm and sudden. Though
+always well disposed towards the
+worthy Curate, he had not, while
+Rosa was living at the Heronry,
+taken much pains to seek his society,
+but he now became of a sudden a frequent
+visitor to the Parsonage. He
+showed great interest in flowers,
+though he hardly knew a dahlia from
+a polyanthus; he listened to details
+of parish matters with an attention
+quite wonderful, considering how
+little taste he had that way; and
+he became enamoured of those old
+English authors who were Josiah’s
+especial favourites. Finding these
+manifold pretences insufficient to account
+for the frequency of his visits,
+he hit upon a project for rendering
+them quite plausible. He insisted
+on subscribing fifty pounds towards a
+school-house that was to be built in
+the village under the Curate’s auspices;
+and when Josiah protested
+against this liberality as indiscreet
+and uncalled for, he hinted that it
+was not altogether disinterested—that
+his classical knowledge was
+getting rusty—that he perceived
+Josiah to be often unoccupied for an
+hour or two of a morning—and proposed
+they should read some Latin
+together.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The Curate liked the project much;
+it would divert his thoughts from
+painful subjects—his own classics
+wanted rubbing up—he had a great
+regard for Bruce, whose openness,
+vivacity, and good-nature had quite
+won his heart, and the readings commenced
+forthwith.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>They were carried on upon a plan
+which, however agreeable to the
+master and his disciple, was scarcely
+calculated to answer the proposed
+end. Bruce and Josiah would sit
+down together with their Horace, or
+their Virgil, or their Terence before
+them, and for a time would read
+away with tolerable diligence. Presently
+Rosa, coming into the room
+from some household avocation, would
+trip across it softly, not to disturb
+them—get what she was in quest of,
+perhaps a cookery-book, and go off
+in the same silent fashion, with a nod
+and a smile at Bruce. At this stage
+of the lesson the student’s attention
+would begin to waver; he would look
+a good deal oftener at the door than
+upon his page. Perhaps shortly after
+Rosa would re-enter, to request
+Josiah to get from the garden some
+celery, parsnip, or other winter vegetable,
+of which she stood in need for
+culinary purposes. “Why didn’t
+you ask me before, when I was in the
+garden, my child?” the Curate would
+say, which, indeed, she might very
+well have done; and Josiah, rising
+with a sigh to comply with her request,
+would be forcibly reseated by
+Bruce, who would desire him to try
+again at that crabbed bit of Latinity,
+while <i>he</i> went to get what Miss Rosa
+wanted. Whereupon he and Rosa
+would repair to the garden together,
+she pointing out what she wanted,
+while Bruce supplied her with it; and
+the Curate, after looking dreamily
+about for their re-entrance, would
+forget them altogether, plunging
+either into a reverie or into a book.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Sometimes Bruce found the Curate
+absent on some clerical or parochial
+errand, and on these occasions he
+thought no apology necessary for his
+stay, nor did Rosa expect one. If
+she was too busy to talk to him in
+the study, he would repair to the
+kitchen, and even take a share in the
+culinary mysteries to which that region
+is sacred, though his presence
+did not perhaps, on the whole, contribute
+to the excellence of the cookery.
+I have always suspected that
+King Alfred, when he let the cakes
+burn, was making love to the herdsman’s
+wife, and that the idea of her
+scolding him for negligence was devised
+to conceal her share in the delinquency.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Mr Oates, seeing the state of affairs
+between them, grew quite morose,
+and would hardly speak to Bruce at
+breakfast-time. He addicted himself
+to the society of Suckling, and attempted
+to divert his thoughts by
+getting up a scratch pack of harriers,
+and hunting them himself; and might
+be heard two or three times a-week
+in the woods about Doddington, attended
+by the fast spirits of the place,
+hallooing, and pouring through the
+mellow horn his pensive soul.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Rosa had none of the dignity which
+in Lady Lee and Orelia could always
+have kept the most impassioned lovers
+under a certain restraint. It is well
+known to be the duty of young ladies
+to affect total ignorance of the fact
+that they are objects of adoration,
+and to harrow up the souls of their
+admirers with affectation of indifference,
+at any rate until coming to the
+point of proposal. Rosa, however,
+showed undisguised pleasure at Bruce’s
+visits, and one day, when he came in
+with a melancholy face, and told her
+the detachment was to leave Doddington
+immediately, she began to
+cry.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The Curate was from home that
+morning, and Bruce had found Rosa
+in the kitchen, rolling paste for mince-pies,
+while the cat Pick, whom she
+had, when leaving the Heronry,
+brought with her to the Parsonage,
+sat on the table, watching the process,
+and occasionally putting out his paw
+to arrest the motion of the rolling-pin.
+The smile with which she
+looked up at Bruce’s entrance turned
+to a look of sympathetic sadness, as
+she perceived his sorrowful aspect.
+He stood by her at the end of the
+table, and told her the news which
+had come that morning.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“You see what a life ours is,” said
+Bruce, trying to smile; “here to-day,
+gone to-morrow. And when we were
+going to spend such a pleasant winter
+too!”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“And won’t you be here at Christmas?”
+said Rosa; “and won’t you
+have any of the mince-pies after all?
+And is there to be an end of our rides,
+and walks, and evening readings?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I’m afraid so,” said Bruce, shaking
+his head. “The troop that relieves
+us will be here to-morrow
+week—though, in my opinion,” he
+added, with a faint attempt at pleasantry,
+“the best way to relieve us
+would be to let us alone.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“And won’t you be coming back?”
+asked Rosa, with sorrow shining
+moistly in her blue eyes.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I fear not,” said Bruce, “though,
+to be sure, it might be managed. But
+you won’t wish that when you’ve
+made acquaintance with our successors.
+The new-comers will take the
+place of your old friends, and you’ll
+forget us—won’t you, Miss Rosa?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>This highly sincere speech was too
+much for Rosa. “No—oh, no—ne—never!”
+sobbed she, sinking on a
+chair, and burying her face on her
+plump arms as they lay folded on the
+table.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Bruce had certainly supposed she
+would be sorry to hear he was going,
+but this display of sympathy surpassed
+his expectations. He stooped
+down over her—he whispered that
+nothing should prevent him from coming
+back—he also mentioned that she
+was “a dear little thing,” and spying
+a little white space amid her hair,
+between her ear and her cheek, and
+the whispering having brought his
+lips into that neighbourhood, he
+thought he would kiss it, and did so.
+Rosa wept on, which distressed the
+humane young man so much, that,
+after begging her, in vain, to look up
+and be comforted, he managed to insinuate
+his hand between her cheek
+and her arms, and to turn her face,
+using the chin as a handle, gently
+towards him. A flushed, tearful,
+glistening face it was; and really, considering
+the temptation and proximity,
+one can’t altogether blame him
+for kissing it, which he did both on
+the eyes and lips; and then, turning
+it so that his left cheek rested
+against hers, with only the tresses
+between, as he whispered in her left
+ear, while her glistening eyes appeared
+over his shoulder, he did his
+best to pacify her. And so absorbed
+was he in whispering, and she in
+listening, that the cat Pick, advancing
+along the flat paste (from which
+he had only been kept before by the
+terror of the rolling-pin), and leaving
+his foot-marks on the soft substance,
+proceeded, with the utmost effrontery,
+to lick up, under their very noses, the
+little dabs of butter dotted thereon.
+He made a good deal of noise in doing
+so; but as Bruce, between the whispers,
+made a noise not altogether dissimilar
+(for there were constantly
+fresh tears requiring to be attended
+to), Pick finished the butter with perfect
+impunity, and sat up in the middle
+of the paste, much about the same
+time that Rosa pushed Bruce gently
+away, and removed the last moisture
+from her eyes with her apron.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The two having, by this time, come
+to an understanding, Bruce suggested
+that he would write to his father,
+who, he assured her, was a splendid
+old fellow, and who would, no doubt,
+enter into the spirit of the thing immediately,
+and give his consent like a
+trump.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Accordingly, he fetched pen, ink,
+and paper from the study, and sitting
+at one end of the kitchen-table, while
+Rosa rolled fresh paste at the other,
+he indited a very eloquent and enthusiastic
+epistle to his parent, and having
+folded and directed it to “The
+Very Rev. the Dean of Trumpington,”
+put it with great confidence in his
+pocket.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>After this their conversation took
+a more cheerful turn, and Rosa worked
+so diligently at her task that the
+mince-pies were made, after a receipt
+which Bruce read out to her from a
+cookery-book, and were ready for
+dinner that very day, and Bruce stayed
+to eat them.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>That splendid old fellow the Dean
+of Trumpington got the letter in due
+time. It was brought in after dinner
+by his butler when he was chatting,
+in a pleasant digestive sort of way,
+with a couple of old Canons over
+a bottle of port. He put on his spectacles
+to peruse it, and as his wife
+was in the room, and the Canons old
+friends and admirers of Harry, he
+proceeded to read it aloud, and had
+got pretty well into the matter before
+he discovered its interesting nature.
+“Why, bless my soul!” interpolated
+the Reverend Doctor Bruce, in the
+middle of a warm passage, “the boy’s
+fallen in love!”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“My dearest Harry!” exclaimed
+Mrs Bruce; and then eagerly added,
+“go on, love!”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>While the reading proceeded, one
+old Canon, who was married and had
+a large family, looked fiercely at his
+glass of port, as he held it between
+him and the light, and cried “hum!”
+or “ha!” at the most touching passages;
+while the other, who was a
+bachelor, rubbed his hands as he
+listened, and chuckled aloud.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Her brother, Mr Young, is a
+member of your own profession,” read
+the Dean over again slowly. “Sillery”
+(to the bachelor Canon), “oblige
+me by touching the bell. Bring the
+Clergy List,” said the Dean to the
+butler, when the latter entered.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Y,” read the Dean, running his
+finger down the list, when he got it—“Yorke—Youatt—Young—here
+you
+are: Young, George, Vicar of Feathernest
+(is that him, I wonder? good
+living Feathernest)—Young, Henry,
+Prebendary of Durham—Young, Josiah,
+Curate of Lanscote—that must
+be the man,” said the Dean, referring
+to the letter; “he dates from Lanscote,
+near Doddington.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“There was a Young at Oxford
+with me,” said Dr Macvino, the married
+Canon, in a deep, oily, sententious
+voice. “He left college on coming
+into six thousand a-year. He
+might have a daughter,” said the
+Canon, looking round as he propounded
+the theory. “And,” added
+the Canon, “he might also have a
+son in the Church. He was a tall
+fellow, who once pulled the stroke oar
+in a match, as I remember—he gave
+remarkably good breakfasts.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Dear boy!” said Mrs Bruce,
+apostrophising Harry, “I’m certain he
+wouldn’t make other than a charming
+choice. I’m certain she’s a sweet girl.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Harry knows what’s what,” said
+the Dean; “I’ve confidence in that
+boy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Plenty of good sense,” said the
+bachelor Canon.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Good stuff,” said Dr Macvino,
+who, sipping his wine before he gave
+the opinion, left it doubtful whether
+he was praising Bruce junior or
+the port.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Harry’s got something here,” said
+the Dean, pointing to his forehead.
+“He’s almost thrown away in his
+present profession. He ought to have
+come into the Church.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Decidedly he ought,” said Dr
+Macvino, who thought himself an example
+to teach other clever fellows
+how to choose a profession.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“He’s the most sensible darling!”
+said Mrs Bruce; “and I, too, was
+sorry that he hadn’t chosen a learned
+profession, till I saw him in his uniform.
+His mustache promised to be
+beautiful” (there had been perhaps
+four hairs in it when she last saw
+him,) “and ’tis very becoming.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Suits him to a hair,” said the
+bachelor Canon, who was a wag in a
+mild way.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The boy’s letter is a little high-flown,”
+said the Dean, “but that was
+to be expected, perhaps. I remember
+describing Mrs Bruce there to my
+family in such terms, that, when I
+brought her home, they were rather
+disappointed at finding her without
+wings. But I’ve no doubt the young
+lady is a most proper person.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“A young man like my Harry
+ought to get a wife with twenty
+thousand pounds any day,” said his
+mother.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“There were two things, I remember,”
+said Dr Bruce, “that Harry
+was very fastidious about in women—dress
+and manner: I venture to
+prophecy that our future daughter-in-law
+is irreproachable in both.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“A tall girl, I suspect,” said Mrs
+Bruce.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Tall, and with a good deal of the
+air noble—perhaps a little proud,”
+the Doctor went on.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“But not disagreeably so,” said
+Mrs Bruce.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Certainly not,” said the Doctor.
+“A hauteur of manner merely. I like
+to see a woman keep up her dignity.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I wish he had said something
+about her fortune,” said Mrs Bruce.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“So do I,” said the Doctor, “and I
+think I’ll go down to Doddington to-morrow,
+and see what he’s about. I’m
+rather in want of change of air.” And
+the two canons drank success to his
+journey in another bottle of port.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Accordingly, the next day the Doctor
+went down to Doddington, three
+counties off, and not finding Harry at
+his lodgings, got a conveyance and
+a man to take him over to Lanscote.
+Bruce was there of course—he had
+rushed away from the parade that
+morning, and, without changing his
+dress, galloped to Lanscote at a tremendous
+pace. He was not sorry to
+find the Curate absent, and, going
+clanking into the kitchen in his spurs,
+found Rosa there with a great pinafore
+on, making a tart.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>For about ten minutes after his arrival
+the manufacture of the tart proceeded
+but slowly; and Rosa, to keep
+him out of her way, begged him to
+superintend the re-boiling of some
+preserves, which Jennifer’s economy
+had left to spoil in their jars. “You’ve
+nothing to do,” said she, “but to sit
+still before the fire, and skim the pan
+from time to time with this spoon;
+and I’ll get you something to keep
+your uniform clean, while you’re doing
+it.” So Rosa went and got a small
+table-cloth, and causing him to seat
+himself in the desired position in front
+of the fire, she pinned it round his
+neck as if he was going to be shaved—his
+brass shoulder-scales sticking
+out rather incongruously from under
+the vestment.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I ought to hear from my father,
+to-day,” said Harry, skimming away
+at the pan with his spoon.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“He won’t be angry, I hope,” said
+Rosa, putting a strip of paste round
+the edge of her tart-dish.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Angry,” said Bruce, “not he. If
+he was, I should just show you to him,
+and if he were the most peppery old
+man in existence, he’d come to the
+down charge directly, like a well-bred
+pointer—just as the lion did before
+Una. He’d love you directly—I’m
+certain he would—he must, you know—he
+couldn’t help himself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I’m sure I shall love <i>him</i>,” said
+Rosa, smiling at Bruce as she took
+the spoon from him in order to taste
+the jam, and see how it was getting
+on.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Of course you will,” said Harry.
+“As I said before, he’s a splendid old
+fellow.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>At this moment a step was heard
+on the gravel in front of the house,
+followed by a tapping at the door of
+the porch, which was open.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Come in!” cried Bruce. “Come
+in, can’t you!” he repeated, as the
+tapping was renewed. “I <i>can’t</i> go to
+the door in this way,” he said to Rosa,
+looking down at his table-cloth.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“It’s only the butcher, or Josiah’s
+clerk, or some of those people,” said
+Rosa; “come in, if you please.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>At this the step advanced along the
+passage, and came to the kitchen door.
+Bruce, skimming away at his pan,
+didn’t turn round till he heard a voice
+he knew exclaim behind him, “God
+bless my soul!” The spoon fell into
+the brass pan, and disappeared in the
+seething fruit.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Why, in heaven’s name,” said the
+Doctor, “what is the boy about?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The boy in question, standing up in
+great confusion to the height of six
+feet, with the table-cloth descending
+like a large cloud about his person,
+hiding all of it except his military-looking
+arms and legs, did not make
+any reply. Rosa, when she tasted the
+jam, had left some on her lips, and
+somehow a splash of it had got transferred
+to Bruce’s face.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“What prank is this, sir?” asked
+the Dean sternly. “Who is this person?”
+pointing his thick yellow cane
+at Rosa. “Is it the cook or the
+dairymaid?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“That, sir,” said Bruce, coming to
+Rosa’s rescue, “is Miss Young—the
+lady I wrote to you about.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Oh, indeed!” said the Doctor,
+who had not found the answers to the
+inquiries he made in Doddington as
+to the worldly condition of the house
+of Young at all to his mind, and who,
+at the sight of the Parsonage, had
+been more struck with its diminutiveness
+than its picturesqueness. “You’re
+a pretty fellow! Don’t you think
+you’re a pretty fellow? Answer me,
+puppy!”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I’m not doing any harm, sir,”
+said Bruce, his handsome face looking
+very red over the table-cloth,
+which he struggled to unpin.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Not doing any harm, sir!” sung
+the Dean after him, through his
+nose. “Are you making an ass of
+yourself, sir, do you think? Come,
+sir, I’m waiting for ye. Come along
+with me, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Bruce having got rid of the table-cloth,
+went up to console Rosa, who
+was now sobbing in a chair.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Are ye coming, sir?” shouted the
+Dean from the door; and Bruce,
+with a last whisper of comfort, went
+to join his parent, who, lifting his
+shovel-hat, said, “Ma’am, I wish
+you a very good morning!” As they
+went through the passage, Rosa heard
+the Doctor say something about
+“What a shock to your poor mother!”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>When Josiah returned, he found
+Rosa weeping by the kitchen fire,
+now sunk to embers, the jam reduced
+to a sort of dark concrete, and the
+tart still in an elemental state.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Harry’s papa has been here,”
+sobbed Rosa; “and he’s been so
+angry; and he’s carried Harry away,
+and I shall ne—never—see him—any
+mo—re.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The Dean kept such strict watch
+over his son while the troop remained
+at Doddington, lecturing him all the
+time, that he never got the smallest
+glimpse of Rosa before quitting the
+place, though he managed to write
+her some tender and consoling letters.
+His only other consolation was in
+confiding his grief to Mr Titcherly,
+the old antiquary. They had become
+intimate and fond of one another—“a
+pair of friends, though he was
+young, and Titcherly seventy-two.”
+Bruce had sympathised with the old
+gentleman’s pursuits, and aided them—he
+had, moreover, made drawings
+illustrative of the great work on the
+antiquities of Doddington, which were
+now being engraved for a second
+edition; and when the troop left the
+town, nobody missed him more, nor
+thought more kindly of him, next to
+Rosa, than Mr Titcherly.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Bruce had nourished in his secret
+heart an intention of getting leave
+when they got to headquarters, and
+coming back to see Rosa. This was
+defeated by the vigilance of his parent,
+who, suspecting the design, made it
+a particular request to the Colonel
+that he would allow his son no leave
+of absence, hinting at an indiscreet
+attachment; and the Colonel, in the
+most friendly way, promised to comply
+with the Dean’s wishes. Afterwards
+the Dean went home, and told
+his wife (he being a pious man, and
+familiar with the ways of Providence)
+that he considered the moving of the
+detachment from Doddington in the
+light of a special interference.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c017'>CHAPTER XLII.</h3>
+
+<p class='c016'>For my own private choice, I don’t
+know whether I should have preferred
+to live at Larches or the Heronry.
+People who like aristocratic-looking
+houses of imposing size and respectable
+age would have preferred the
+latter. But there are others whose
+ambition does not soar so high—who
+would feel encumbered by space
+which they could not occupy, and by
+galleries and apartments to them
+superfluous; yet who have sometimes,
+when dreaming in a verandah
+in the tropics, a snow-hut of some
+northern region, or a narrow cabin
+at sea, figured to themselves a snug
+English home, not too remote for the
+world’s affairs, nor too public for
+seclusion—not so large as to be dull
+without visitors, nor so small as
+to be unfit to accommodate them—not
+so grand as to invite inspection,
+nor so unadorned as to disappoint
+it—standing, in fact, on the boundary
+which divides comfort from
+ostentation; and such would have
+preferred Larches.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Yet, ah! that air from Queen Anne’s
+time that breathed about the Heronry—that
+library, where Samuel Johnson
+might have devoured books in
+his boyhood—the trim gardens, where
+Pope might have sat in fine weather,
+polishing his mellifluous lines—the
+gateway and porticoes that Vanbrugh
+might have regarded with paternal
+complacency, as hooped dames and
+bewigged cavaliers passed underneath—all
+these were pleasant to the eye
+and mind that love the picturesque
+and antique.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Yet even these advantages would
+not weigh in the scale for a minute,
+when Larches was inhabited as now.
+Place Lady Lee and Orelia in the
+balance, and the Heronry kicks the
+beam. They would have made a hut
+in Tipperary, or South Africa, or any
+other pagan and barbarous region,
+more alluring than the palace of
+Aladdin.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>However (to describe its intrinsic
+advantages), Larches was a onestoried
+house, too spacious to be
+called a cottage, which, however, it
+resembled in shape, and surrounded
+by a deep verandah open from the
+eaves to the ground. To please a
+caprice of Orelia’s, the slated roof had
+been covered with thatch—indeed,
+she exercised her fancy in so many
+alterations, both of the house and
+grounds, that the place was like a
+dissolving view, and never presented
+the same appearance for two consecutive
+seasons. The house stood
+on a knoll which raised it above the
+surrounding garden, except at the
+back, where the north winds were repelled
+by a small grove rising from a
+high bank. In the front rank of this
+grove rose three tall larches that
+gave the place its name. The verandah
+kept the sun from the apartments,
+but the windows, opening to
+the ground, admitted plenty of sober
+light. Looked at from without, the
+open verandah and the large space
+occupied by windows and doors gave
+an idea of extreme airiness; while
+the rich heavy curtains that lined the
+windows, and the glimpses of luxurious
+furniture behind, conveyed ample
+assurance of comfort.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Hither Orelia had brought her
+friend, and here she applied herself to
+soothe her sorrow. Many offices
+would, perhaps, have suited Orelia
+better than that of comforter—but
+her affection and warm sympathy for
+Lady Lee made her discharge it with
+right good-will.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>When Hester had entered the hall,
+at the conclusion of their journey,
+Orelia came up and kissed her.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“We will forget now,” she said,
+“that you have ever been Lady Lee.
+We will revive in substance, as well
+as in idea, the old times when you
+were Hester Broome at the parsonage;
+and we will see if there is not yet in
+store for you as bright a future as
+ever you dreamt of in your imaginative
+days.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>A thin elderly person, holding a
+handkerchief to her face to keep off the
+draught, was hovering about an inner
+door of the lobby as they entered.
+This was Miss Priscilla Winter, the
+lady who did propriety in Orelia’s
+establishment, and managed the
+minor details thereof. She had lived
+with Orelia’s mother as a companion,
+when the young lady herself was
+a child, and had subsequently accompanied
+the latter to Larches. She
+was a good kind of ancient nonentity,
+without any very decided opinions
+on any subject, resembling, indeed,
+rather a vague idea than an
+absolute person. As she always had
+a smile ready, and agreed with everybody,
+Priscilla was sufficiently popular
+and endurable. At present she smiled
+a welcome on one side of her face
+only, because the other was swelled—a
+frequent symptom of the perpetual
+toothach which afflicted her.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Here’s Frisky,” said Orelia, on
+seeing her; “dear old Frisky!—good
+old Frisk!” and she went up and
+greeted the old lady very cordially, as
+did Lady Lee.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Orelia called her Frisky, not because
+of any particular fitness in the
+appellation, but, having a way of her
+own of altering people’s names, she
+used to call her first Priskilla, then,
+when she wanted to coax her, Prisky,
+which suggested Frisky, and the total
+and glaring inappropriateness of the
+epithet tickled the inventor so much
+that it was permanently adopted by
+her. The old virgin preceded them
+into the drawing-room, where a comfortable
+fire was blazing, and told
+them dinner would be ready in a
+quarter of an hour.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“And how are the live stock,
+Frisk?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“All well except Dick, who had a
+fit yesterday,” said Miss Winter, “but
+he seems quite cheerful again to-day.”
+Dick was a bullfinch.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I’ll see him presently,” said Orelia,
+“but first I must visit Moloch.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Take care, my dear Orelia,” said
+Priscilla; “Francis has got him
+chained up—the cook says she thinks
+he’s going mad, for he hasn’t drank
+his water to-day.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Stuff!” said Orelia, marching out
+of the room.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Moloch, a great yellow bloodhound,
+flecked with white, chained in the
+yard, thundered a deep welcome as
+his mistress went towards him, and
+upset his kennel in his eagerness to
+jump upon her. She unstrapped his
+collar, and he preceded her backwards
+in a series of curvets to the drawing-room,
+yelping joyfully, and nearly
+upsetting Priscilla, whom Orelia found
+occupied in settling Lady Lee near
+the fire, that she might be warm before
+taking off her things; for the old
+lady was a great hand at coddling
+people, if permitted.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Hester looks pale, poor dear,”
+said Priscilla, with a heart-rending
+sadness of tone and aspect—“ah, well,
+she’s had her trials and”—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Now, I’ll tell you what it is,
+Frisk,” interrupted Orelia, looking
+sternly at the old lady, “I didn’t
+bring her here to be made dismal, and
+if ever I hear you saying anything of
+a doleful character, I’ll leave a chink
+of your bedroom window open at night,
+and give you a stiff neck.—I will, as
+sure as your name’s Frisky.” And
+this speech at once produced the desired
+effect; the venerable spinster
+caught her cue with alacrity, and the
+unswelled side of her face at once assumed
+an expression of great cheerfulness.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Dinner was presently announced.
+“I’m afraid the dining-room will be
+chilly,” mumbled Priscilla, “and this
+terrible face of mine—would you mind
+it, my dear, if I sat at dinner in my
+bonnet?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Not in the least, my tender
+Frisk,” quoth Orelia; “and pray
+bring your umbrella and pattens
+also.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>A few days after their arrival, they
+went down to the parsonage where
+Hester had formerly lived with her
+father. Orelia was curious to see
+what effect the memories attached to
+the place would have upon her ladyship.
+She saw her grow flushed and
+excited as they passed the familiar
+cottages, and trees, and fields along
+the road. She saw her excitement
+increase as they came in sight of the
+parsonage. A glimpse of it was afforded
+from the road, as it stood at
+the end of a lane, and looked down
+upon a lawn dotted with dwarf firs.
+That glimpse showed it little changed;
+but as they entered the swinging gate,
+opening on the gravel path that curved
+round to the front of the house, the
+place seemed to Hester to have
+dwindled. Perhaps the spacious proportions
+of the Heronry dwarfed the
+parsonage by contrast—perhaps her
+remembrance had flattered the scene—perhaps
+it had lost its interest together
+with its former inhabitants—for,
+her father having died soon after her
+marriage, a new clergyman now lived
+there, and neither he nor his wife
+were likely to renew much of the romantic
+atmosphere of the spot—at any
+rate, Hester’s associations vanished
+rapidly. The furniture was all so
+different: there was a new door
+opened in the sitting-room, which
+might be a convenience, but was to
+her an impertinence—her bedroom,
+the chamber of her maiden dreams
+(ah, sacrilege!) was now a nursery.
+The walls where the echoes of Hester’s
+voice, as she read aloud, or sung, or
+said her prayers, ought yet to have
+lingered, resounded to the squalls of
+the latest baby published by the prolific
+clergyman’s wife, and the clamour
+of its small seniors. A cradle had
+taken the place of her bookcase;
+and her bed, whose white curtains
+had once enclosed the poetic dreams
+and bright fancies of the virgin Hester—the
+very altar-piece, as it were—was
+occupied by a rocking-horse with
+its head knocked off. Scarcely worse
+the desecration, when the French
+stabled their chargers in the cathedrals
+of Spain.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>She descended to the porch, and
+paused there, trying to recall her former
+self as she had sat in its shadow,
+reading, working, dreaming, fancying
+that the world was paradise. She
+wondered what could have made her
+fancy so; it had, indeed, been blissful
+ignorance, but very silly, nevertheless:
+her eyes were open now, and
+she was quite sure—yes, quite—she
+should never see things again surrounded
+by such delusive splendour.
+The Hester of eighteen had been quite
+a different person from the Hester of
+twenty-five. And so sad seemed to
+be the train of thoughts thus aroused,
+and bringing with it so many silent
+tears, that Orelia was sorry she had
+carried her well-intended visit to the
+parsonage into execution. She mentioned
+it in a letter to Rosa; and here,
+in common type, wherein it loses all
+the character it gained in the original,
+from that bold yet feminine hand,
+with its long upstrokes and downstrokes,
+and its audacious dashes, we
+will insert Orelia’s letter.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Dearest Rosalinda,” (it said,)
+“what is there about you, do you
+suppose, that you should be so constantly
+in my thoughts as you are, to
+the utter exclusion, of course, of all
+kinds of rational contemplation? For
+how can any serious or important idea
+be expected to remain in company
+with that of a little laughing, redfaced
+thing? In vain I banish the pert
+image; it comes back with all the annoying
+and saucy pertinacity of the
+original, till I actually catch myself
+addressing it; and my first impulse,
+on waking of a morning, always is to
+pull you out of bed.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“People sometimes say of their deceased
+relations (especially if they
+have left them any money), that it
+would be wrong to wish them back to
+this scene of trial. And I grow somewhat
+resigned to your absence, when
+I think that you are probably much
+happier where you are. For Hester
+and I are very dismal, Rosey—not a
+bit better than we were during the
+last sad weeks at the Heronry. She
+grows paler, Rosetta—paler and thinner
+every day. And I don’t think ’tis
+owing to any failure of mine in carrying
+out our plan for her benefit. I
+have, in every possible way, closed
+up the avenues to sad recollections.
+I have avoided all allusions to her
+married life, as if it had been wiped
+out of my memory with a great wet
+sponge. I have nearly choked myself
+by arresting, on the brink of utterance,
+observations that might have
+awakened in her mind some train of
+thought ending in a sigh. I have endeavoured
+to interest her in her old
+occupations here, and to get her to
+resume the subjects of conversation
+and of fancy that used to delight her
+in the old times, when she was the
+most enthusiastic and bright and
+hopeful of friends; and I have had
+my labour for my pains. She wandered
+through my hothouses with
+most annoying apathy—stood on the
+very spot where she and I first saw
+one another, and which I expected
+would have had an electrical effect on
+her, with an absence of recognition
+that quite exasperated me; and when
+I wished her good night, in the very
+bedroom that was always allotted to
+her when weather-bound at my cottage,
+she returned the benediction
+without one allusion to the old days
+that have departed apparently for
+ever.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Well, Rosetta, I persevered, nevertheless—yes,
+I did—I struck my
+great <i>coup</i>—I took her down to the
+parsonage, where she was born and
+bred. Long after her father’s death
+it stood untenanted; but a new family
+now live there. I watched the effect
+of each familiar object that we passed
+on the road; her breath now and then
+came a little quicker, and, at the first
+distant glimpse of the house, her colour
+rose, and she smiled more naturally
+than she has done any time these three
+months. ‘Now,’ said I to myself,
+‘the old Hester is going to peep out
+of this melancholy mask;’ so I said,
+by way of assisting the metamorphosis,
+‘Do you remember anything
+about that stone, Hester?’ pointing
+to a great white one by the side of the
+road. Now, by this stone hangs a
+tale, Rosamunda. You must know
+(if I never told you) that Hester and
+I had once a little quarrel; and as it’s
+so long ago, I don’t mind saying ’twas
+all my fault. Well, we did not meet
+for two or three days, for Hester was
+hurt, and I was sullen; but then, by
+a simultaneous impulse, we started to
+meet and be reconciled. Hester was
+near this stone when she caught sight
+of me, and, forgetting all cause of
+offence, ran towards me. In her haste
+(’twould take a deal to make her run
+now, Rosey) she tript on the grass at
+the side of the road, and fell with her
+head against the corner of the stone.
+There she lay for a moment, stunned,
+and I, who had just reached the spot,
+sat down on the stone, and, taking
+her head on my lap, vowed, after she
+had opened her eyes, and assured me
+she was but little hurt, that I would
+never again offend her.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“She remembered it well, she said,
+as I stopt and pointed to the spot;
+then, pressing my hand, ‘Though I
+am not so demonstrative now as then,
+you must not think my friendship
+colder, dear Orelia,’ she said. This
+looked all very promising, and I walked
+on in great spirits, awaiting the
+further effect of the coming scenes.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The clergyman’s wife had called
+on us, so our visit had an excuse.
+The porch looked just as it used—we
+entered; but there, in the identical
+spot where Mr Broome used to sit and
+talk to us, when a pause in his disorder
+let him brighten up for an hour or
+two, with the benignity of a Socrates—his
+pale face glowing, his dim eye
+kindling, and his failing voice hardly
+able to keep pace with his eloquent
+flow of thought—there sat his successor—fat,
+contented, vulgar. The first
+words he spoke, in tones that seemed
+to struggle through layers of beef and
+cabbage and Yorkshire pudding, dissipated
+the romance that lingered for
+me and Hester about the scene. And
+his wife! I don’t deny that the woman
+may have good qualities, Rosa; but I
+never can forgive her that cap of hers—nor
+her furniture—nor her younger
+sister, with her vulgar affectation of
+well-bred ease—nor her mode of addressing
+her husband—she called him
+by the initial letter of his horrible
+surname.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“In vain I struggled with these
+prosaic influences—in vain I tried to
+recall the old memories of the place—they
+had absolutely deserted me.
+I did not look at Hester, for I should
+only have looked disappointment. I
+did not speak to her, for I had nothing
+to say. But I looked at the clergyman
+and his wife and sister-in-law—daggers,
+Rosetta—and I was glad,
+when we departed, to see them reduced
+to a state of terrified and silent civility.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“So this part of the project signally
+failed. Hitherto we had lived altogether
+by ourselves, for I did not wish
+to annoy her with the task of making
+a parcel of new acquaintances, not
+likely to be particularly interesting
+either to her or to me. But now I
+thought visitors might rouse her from
+her melancholy, and I let them come.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The time when Lady Lee and Orelia
+were most disposed to be communicative
+to each other was the last hour
+before they went to bed. Both, after
+flickering fitfully between dinner and
+tea, musing, looking into the fire,
+sighing, &#38;c., would brighten up into
+temporary effulgence, before undergoing
+the extinction of sleep.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“You are cheerful to-night, Orelia,”
+said Lady Lee, one night after some
+guests had departed. “I am happy
+to see it, my dear. Come closer,”
+said her ladyship, passing her arm
+round her friend’s waist, and drawing
+her on to the sofa beside her. “I
+want to whisper to you. May I venture
+to hope” (this in Orelia’s ear,
+from which she had brushed back the
+volume of black hair that hid it)
+“that you have forgotten that little
+romance of yours?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Orelia silently turned, and sat facing
+her with her black eyes, without answering.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“You never confided in me in that
+matter,” said her ladyship, still whispering,
+though there was nobody but
+those two in the room, and the servants
+had gone to bed. “I shouldn’t
+speak of it now, only that I observe
+some symptoms occasionally which
+make me still doubt the direction of
+your thoughts. Can I help to guide
+them back to tranquillity?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“No, Hester,” said Orelia; “I
+don’t want any aid. I’ve come to a
+resolution of my own accord.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Tell it me,” said Lady Lee.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“How can I tell you all?” said
+Orelia. “You didn’t know him. To
+you he was merely what he appeared
+to the world—to me he was himself—the
+manliest, the cleverest, the most
+independent, the—ah, you smile; but,
+had you met him in his true position,
+you would have thought of him as I
+do.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Lady Lee squeezed the hand of
+the somewhat indignant enthusiast.
+“Who so apt as I to believe,” she
+said, “that when Orelia Payne admires,
+the object is an elevated one?
+Well, dearest?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Well,” said Orelia, “I dreamt at
+the Heronry a sort of dream—that he
+would regain his position in the world,
+and be all you or any of my friends
+could wish. He left me apparently
+with some such expectation; but now
+I see it was fallacious.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“But a man could scarcely make a
+very great stride in the world in a
+couple of months,” observed Lady Lee.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“’Twill take years, perhaps,” said
+Orelia, “even if he ever succeeds;
+and consider the chances against him.
+And, except as successful, I shall
+never see him—he is prouder than a
+fallen angel.” Here she paused, and
+pondered a little. “But,” she resumed,
+“I have resolved to think no
+more on that subject. Yes, resolved!”
+(stamping with her foot, while her
+colour heightened, and a tear came
+into her eye). “It can do no good—it
+will be vain, weak, idle—it will
+be wasting life in unreality; therefore
+it shall end”—(another little stamp).</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Lady Lee looked at her with a kind
+of serious half smile. “So earnest,
+Orelia!—then the cause cannot be
+slight.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“It is not,” said Orelia petulantly.
+“I am ashamed to think how much
+it has engrossed my thoughts. And
+yet—everything considered—so much
+merit in so unfitting a position! Had
+he been placed where he deserves, I
+should perhaps have withheld my admiration;
+but indignation at the way
+in which fortune and the world have
+treated him lent it double force. Now,
+Hester, I have been franker than you—for
+we both had our secrets; had
+we not?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>It was Lady Lee’s turn to redden
+and be silent.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Hester,” went on Orelia, “what
+do you think of the men who sometimes
+come here? Is there one of
+them fit to be named with either of
+those to whom we gave—I mean to
+whom we would have given—our
+hearts? Think for a moment of the
+best of them—and then place their
+images, side by side, with those I
+speak of. Don’t they dwindle?—don’t
+they show like wax-work beside
+sculpture, with their fleeting hues of
+character, their feeble melting outlines,
+their stupid conventionalities?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“You are severe, my dear,” said
+Lady Lee, without, however, heeding
+much her own reply—for Orelia had
+confused her.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“O, it scatters my patience!” said
+her impetuous friend. “I think less
+of myself when one of them has hinted
+admiration. Yesterday, that worthy
+noodle, Mr Straitlace—he who thinks
+it good to be wise, but not to be
+merry, and whose expressive eyebrows
+proclaim all pursuits to be
+vanity except his own—had the astonishing
+effrontery to give my hand a
+kind of meaning squeeze, at taking
+leave, muttering something about ‘his
+pleasure at recognising a congenial
+spirit.’ What have I done, Hester,
+to deserve that?—the owl!”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I don’t see the congeniality, certainly,”
+said Lady Lee, smiling,
+“more than between an owl and a—peacock,
+or any other majestic bird.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Then there’s that baronet Sir
+Dudley (you seem to have an attraction
+for baronets, Hester)—that well-dressed
+Mephistopheles, with crow’s
+feet about his eyes and his heart at
+five and twenty, who has just cleverness
+enough to find out the faulty side
+of everything—he had the impudence,
+after looking at you as if he were
+judging a horse, to pronounce that
+‘you had some good points,’ which
+from him is equivalent, I suppose, to
+high praise.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I hope he specified the points that
+struck him,” said Lady Lee, smiling.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“He hadn’t time,” returned Orelia.
+“I felt downright savage at the idea
+of such a snail as that crawling on
+your petals. I asked him who had
+told him of your merits? for that we
+all knew him to be slow at finding
+them in anything.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“And what did he say?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“He turned to his next neighbour
+and merely said, ‘Shut up, by Jove!’
+Why, compared with these people,
+Major Tindal grows respectable; for
+though he has but one side to his character,
+’tis a manly and decided one.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Poor, misguided Major Tindal,”
+said Lady Lee; “to think that he
+should have taken the trouble to come
+all the way here” (the Major hadn’t
+been able to forbear singeing his
+wings again), “just to do hopeless
+homage to a girl who talks of him in
+that way.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Certainly he had better have stayed
+at Doddington,” said Orelia. “But,
+now, Hester, tell me—could you admire,
+or ever be induced to love, any
+of our present acquaintances, after
+having seen others so much worthier?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I will go farther than that,” said
+Lady Lee, resuming her habitual tone
+of melancholy, which she had relinquished
+for one of assumed gaiety,
+merely to cover the confusion that
+Orelia’s home-thrust had caused her;
+“I will say that we never could have
+admired or loved them in any case.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“And yet they are not below the
+average of those we shall meet in our
+pilgrimage,” said this severe censor;
+“and that brings me to a subject I
+have for some time thought of. You
+and I can never link our lives to people
+of that sort.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Never,” said Lady Lee, fervently.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Neither will we spend them in
+vain regrets,” said Orelia. “In men
+that would be unmanly, and in us
+’twould equally be unwomanly. We
+will drive out thought—we will leave
+it no avenue to enter—we will place
+a quickset round our hearts. Some
+do this by openly relinquishing the
+world, and taking vows; our resolutions
+shall be none the weaker because
+we only take our vows privately, and
+to one another.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Lady Lee looked at her friend inquiringly.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Why should we have done with
+life because we have been disappointed
+in one of its objects?” said
+Orelia. “Why should we languish
+or let ourselves rust because those
+we prefer are withheld from us? <i>We</i>
+could not be content to go lingering
+and dreaming all our lives.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Not content, certainly,” said Lady
+Lee. “But what are we to do?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Make business for ourselves in
+the world,” said Orelia. “Be of use—turn
+our energies to account. How
+many women younger than we quit a
+life of ease without our provocation,
+and devote themselves to one of active
+usefulness! We might be the founders
+of an unprofessed sisterhood. What
+do you say, Hester? When shall we
+begin?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“When?” said Lady Lee. “My
+dear, such a thing requires thought.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Say a week,” said Orelia.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“A week!” cried Lady Lee—“a
+year you mean. Nuns have a noviciate.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“And a contemptible thing it is,”
+said Orelia, “that hovering between
+two worlds, as it were—that lingering
+on the bridge, shilly shally. No,
+Hester; we won’t show any such
+want of confidence in ourselves—we
+will begin after a week’s trial. We
+must commence by closing up all
+paths to thoughts that might unsteady
+us—lay aside at once poetry,
+romance, music, except anthems and
+oratorios. We will prescribe for ourselves
+a simple dress and a uniform
+and disciplined life. Come, are you
+not anxious to begin?”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I <i>do</i> almost catch a gleam of your
+enthusiasm,” said Hester. “To relinquish
+my present life will be no
+privation” (with a sigh). “But we
+must mature the idea before acting
+on it. We must not begin lightly.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Lightly!” said Orelia. “I’ve
+been thinking of it these four days.
+And, for our plan—feeding the poor—educating
+the ignorant—comforting
+the sick—there is a field! So much
+for our duty towards our neighbour—for
+ourselves, we will improve and
+occupy our minds with study, and I
+was going to say meditation; but I’m
+not so sure whether our meditations
+would be always on profitable subjects,
+at least not just yet. When
+nuns turn out not so good as they
+might be, who knows what share
+meditation may have had in it?
+We’ll act now, Hester, and put off
+meditation till we grow older.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Now, there was something in
+Orelia’s proposal that was not unpleasing
+to Lady Lee. To banish
+thought which she found so wearisome—to
+occupy time that hung so
+heavy—to labour with an object and
+obtain a result—these were what she
+had long desired in a dreamy sort of
+way, and, now that the more energetic
+Orelia had struck out the path,
+she was ardent to follow it. Thus
+the mind would be provided for; and,
+for the heart, why shouldn’t she and
+Orelia, her chosen friend, be all in all
+to each other? which last idea was,
+perhaps, even more brilliant than the
+other.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Accordingly the noviciate commenced
+forthwith. They had, in
+Hester’s maiden days, studied together
+French and Italian; they now
+began a spirited attack upon the
+German language. Mathematics was
+desirable, as it required attention,
+exercised the mind, and did not excite
+the imagination, and they plodded
+away at Euclid and algebra with a
+perseverance praiseworthy in an ambitious
+freshman, but, in them, lamentable
+to behold. The piano remained
+unopened, the harp untouched,
+except on Sunday, when they performed
+a piece out of Handel. Lady
+Lee’s copy of <cite>Corinne</cite> was put in the
+fire by Orelia, who had never particularly
+admired the work; and, indeed,
+a great part of their library
+underwent such a weeding as Don
+Quixote’s suffered at the hands of the
+barber and curate. Both were dressed
+in mourning before for Julius, so no
+great change was needed in their
+attire. To crown all, they discovered,
+in a couple of days, some babies in the
+smallpox and croup, three distressed
+families with the fathers out of work,
+and a pair of rheumatic old women, so
+that their charitable resolutions were
+not likely to fail for want of objects.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>It is very well known that heroines
+of respectability ought to be naturally
+benevolent. They ought, moreover,
+to have a happy knack of winning
+the hearts of all who experience
+their bounty. I would with pleasure
+bestow on my heroines all the good
+attributes that belong to them, but I
+have already said they were far from
+faultless, and, to say the truth, the
+line they had chosen was not their
+forte. Lady Lee’s fastidious taste
+was speedily revolted by misery,
+whose pathos was impaired by selfishness
+or coarseness; and Orelia, after
+a visit to one of the rheumatic patients,
+left a sovereign for the sufferer,
+and vowed she would never go near
+that horrid old grumbler again. In
+fact, this was one of the points in
+which they were both of them inferior
+to Rosa. Their benevolence sprang
+from a sense of duty, and was artificial
+in expression, like the conversation
+of one who has learnt a foreign
+tongue grammatically; while Rosa’s
+was natural, and fluent in the happiest
+idioms of goodness.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>However, they persevered, and,
+though they were striving against
+nature, their conduct was quite natural.
+Women are never so enthusiastic
+about their duties as when they
+have just been disappointed in love.
+Your pretty Puritans are sure to have
+had an attachment blighted, and Devotion
+is called in, like a Beguine, to
+dress the wounds made by that rascal
+Cupid.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>But yet, reader, if Hester and
+Orelia should really persist in their
+project, what a glimpse of the possible
+is here opened! Let imagination
+hold up the curtain for a moment.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Methinks I see Orelia, aged say
+about thirty-five; severe of aspect,
+and with what novelists call “the
+traces of former beauty,” though the
+arch of the nose has strengthened to
+Roman firmness, the mouth is quite
+stern in its decision, and the fire of
+the eyes has some fierceness in its
+sparkle. Irreproachable, but not amicable—unsparing
+to the indiscretion
+of others, and having none of her
+own—rigid in the performance of
+duties, as well as in exacting them—I
+see her, in fact, become that formidable
+being, an exemplary woman, and
+I should like to see anybody make
+love to her now.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Lady Lee, too, now getting on for
+forty, has changed from what we
+knew her. She is not called, like
+Orelia, an exemplary woman, but is
+stigmatised by the equally opprobrious
+epithet, a superior person. Her
+eyes, dimmed with long perusing of
+good wearisome books through a veil
+of tears, are still beautiful in their
+melancholy, but the rest of her charms
+have withered. She does not discharge
+her duties with the unfailing
+spirit of the more energetic Orelia,
+but requires a new weary effort for
+the performance of each; and when
+the old obstinate question recurs of
+what her business in the world may
+be, she silences it by a contemplation
+of the indurated virtues of her friend,
+which she nerves herself to imitate.
+There are no more confidences or
+confessions of weakness between herself
+and Orelia, but a friendship such
+as might have subsisted between the
+Mother of the Gracchi and Mrs Fry.
+They are punctual in ——, but, as
+Sterne says, when the idea of his
+captive becomes too painful, “I cannot
+sustain the picture that my fancy
+has drawn.” Fane—Onslow—to the
+rescue!</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'>THE MARQUIS DE LAROCHEJAQUELEIN.<a id='r25'></a><a href='#f25' class='c007'><sup>[25]</sup></a></h2>
+</div>
+<h3 class='c015'>FRANCE IN 1853.</h3>
+
+<p class='c016'>The name of Larochejaquelein is
+not an obscure one. It was once
+familiar to the world. It was known
+and venerated wherever stainless
+honour, fidelity proof against all
+temptations and suffering, chivalrous
+valour, and patient courage amid dangers
+that do not try the nerves less
+that they want the excitement which
+sustains the soldier on the battle-field,
+were held in reverence. The two
+brothers who covered that name with
+glory of the purest kind were noble
+specimens of the old chivalry of
+France, when chivalry had well-nigh
+passed away; and the chronicler of
+their romantic gallantry and their
+heroic death was the gentle female
+who bore their name, and who bore it
+high, and who shared in their sufferings,
+their triumphs, and their defeats.
+We know of few compositions more
+interesting than the narrative of the
+Marchioness de Larochejaquelein,
+who, we are happy to find, still survives,
+her form bowed by age, but
+her heart as true as when, in early
+youth and beauty, she traversed on
+foot the ravines of the Bocage, or
+forded the canals of the Marais, and
+witnessed the sanguinary wars waged
+by the insurgents of La Vendée during
+the wildest period of the French
+Republic. It is curious that the most
+attractive records of the great revolutions
+which convulsed the two kingdoms
+of England and France, at
+periods so distant from each other,
+should respectively be the production
+of a female pen. The memoirs of Mrs
+Hutchinson and the narrative of Madame
+de Larochejaquelein are companions
+fit to be placed side by side
+with each other; and though the character
+of the two works is different, the
+interest they excite is identical. They
+both possess all the fascination of romance,
+but they are valuable in a degree
+which few romances can pretend
+to. It has been remarked, that until
+their publication the world was
+strangely in error on many of the important
+events to which they relate,
+and that they have been singularly
+useful in diminishing a great deal of
+the prejudice, and in dissipating the
+ignorance which had existed, particularly
+with reference to some of the
+principal actors in these terrible scenes.
+The character of the English heroine is
+shadowed forth in her history; it is
+more unbending, more masculine,
+more stern, perhaps, and commands
+admiration which the mind cannot
+refuse. But the heart is led away
+by the tenderness of the Frenchwoman;
+and her pathetic touches,
+while they add to the interest of her
+story, impart to it the impress of
+truth.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The nobleman who has just published
+a defence of his own political
+career during the eventful changes
+which France has again witnessed, is
+the son of that lady by a second marriage.
+His lineage is an ancient and
+honourable one. Sprung from the old
+house of Vergier de Larochejaquelein,
+he counts among his ancestors a Crusader
+whose arms form one of the
+many ornaments of the rich gallery of
+Versailles; two warriors who fell on
+the hard-fought field of Pavia, when
+“all was lost except honour;” a brother
+in arms and tent-companion of
+Henry IV., who was left “with his
+back to the field and his feet to the
+foe” on the plains of Arques; a
+<i>mestre-de-camp</i>, who met his death
+while in the act of boarding a pirate
+off St Domingo. His uncle was the
+general-in-chief in the Vendean army,
+and it was this gallant gentleman, on
+whose history Froissart would have
+loved to linger, who spoke this last
+address to his army, which is still
+remembered by the peasants of the
+Morbihan—“If I advance, follow
+me; if I retreat, slay me; if I fall,
+avenge me!” Another of this heroic
+family was a dashing officer of carabineers
+under the Empire; and on the
+battle-field of the Moskowa he maintained
+the old valour of the house of
+Larochejaquelein. Count Louis, the
+father of the present Marquis, refused
+to serve under Napoleon. When the
+flight from Elba roused Europe again
+from its brief tranquillity, the peasant
+soldiers of La Vendée gathered once
+more round the white banner of
+their chief. The insurrection was,
+however, soon put down, and Larochejaquelein,
+while in the act of leading
+on his men against the Imperial
+troops, fell with a bullet in his heart.
+This is an ancestry of which any man
+may be proud.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The present Marquis is the son of
+the Royalist chief of the Hundred Days,
+who had married the widow of his old
+companion in arms, the Marquis de
+Lescure. He was born in 1804, and
+at the early age of eleven was created
+a peer of France, under what is called
+the Second Restoration. He entered
+the military service in 1821, joined
+the army under the Duke d’Angoulême
+in 1823, and made the campaign
+of Spain. He was captain in the
+horse grenadiers of the Royal Guard
+in 1828, and, inheriting the military
+ardour which characterised his family,
+petitioned the king to be allowed to
+serve in the Greek war of independence,
+but was refused. He was permitted,
+however, to join the Russian
+army as a simple volunteer in the
+campaign of the Balkan against the
+Turks, “having nothing better to
+do,” as he himself said on one occasion
+in the Chamber of Deputies.
+Though a peer of France, he had not
+taken his seat in the Upper House
+when the revolution of 1830 broke
+out; and refusing to accept place, favour,
+or honours at the hands of the
+revolutionary government of July, he
+resigned his functions as peer of
+France. Endowed with remarkable
+activity of mind, he devoted himself
+for some time, and with much energy,
+to industrial pursuits, and gave up
+politics till 1842, when he was named
+a member of the Chamber of Deputies
+by the electoral college of Ploermel,
+in the Morbihan. During his parliamentary
+career he did not remain
+idle. He took a prominent part in
+most of the stormy discussions of the
+time: the various projects of replies
+to the addresses from the throne, the
+conscription reform law, prison reform,
+railroad bills, electoral reform,
+liberty of instruction, all found in
+him a ready, fluent, and vigorous, if
+not an eloquent debater. On all occasions
+he spoke out his mind frankly
+and boldly; and though on many
+occasions in opposition to his own
+party, as well as to the government,
+it is said that he never had a personal
+enemy in the Chamber. His conduct,
+when the paltry attempt was made
+by the servile adherents of the new
+régime to affix infamy on the Royalists
+who paid their homage to the descendant
+of their former master, on
+the occasion of the Count de Chambord’s
+visit to London in 1842, is
+beyond all praise. He rejected, with
+scornful indignation, the stigma attempted
+to be fixed on him by the
+Orleanists, who did not feel the sentiment
+of honour, and were incapable
+of appreciating it in others. He at
+once resigned his seat as deputy, and
+appealed from the outrage offered
+him by the Philippists to the judgment
+of the electors. The electors answered
+the appeal, and Ploermel sent
+him back to the Chamber, where he
+persevered in the same independent
+course. When the base arts of corruption
+employed by the government
+of July were to be dragged to the
+light of day, Larochejaquelein was
+never silent. “A corrupting and
+degrading selfishness pervades all
+parts of society,” he said, in the discussion
+of the budget in 1845. “I
+have, in common with the rest of the
+nation, given up all illusions about
+the constitutional forms of the state,
+and I have no longer any faith in
+their independence. On all sides, in
+all places, I behold the triumph of
+the base over the generous, of evil
+over good; and each day that passes
+by brings us nearer to a tremendous
+crisis—the future is indeed dark and
+threatening!” These prophetic words
+were destined to be soon realised—sooner,
+perhaps, than the speaker
+himself imagined.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>We have said that M. de Larochejaquelein
+was a frequent and a forcible
+speaker on important occasions. Without
+much claim to what is termed
+oratory, his language is fluent and full
+of energy; and he has scarcely uttered
+a few sentences, when you feel that
+he is a man of profound convictions—and
+this we hold to be a great, as it
+is a rare, merit in times like the present.
+His portly presence, open brow,
+and flowing hair—his quick, earnest,
+and impassioned gesticulation, remind
+you of the tribune of revolutionary
+days. The haughty movement of his
+head, and the scornful expression of
+his eye, when repelling some unjust
+accusation, give him an appearance
+of pride, which certainly is not characteristic
+of him, for in private life no
+one can be gentler or more unaffected.
+You see before you the gentleman of
+the old <i>souche</i>, not the marquis of
+the <i>salon</i>, or that trifling race which
+the wit of Molière has perpetuated.
+Had the Marquis de Larochejaquelein
+not been born an aristocrat, he would
+have been a tribune of the people.
+Whatever be his merits or demerits
+as a speaker or a politician, he possesses,
+at all events, the courage, the
+audacity of his opinions. He was
+devoted to the Bourbons of the elder
+branch (and they have not always
+paid his devotedness with gratitude),
+not for interest, but for honour, from
+family traditions; and were not the
+days of chivalry all but extinct in
+what was once a nation of cavaliers,
+and were men again to combat for
+dynasties in France, we are inclined
+to think that he would be among the
+first to place his lance in rest, as his
+ancestors did before him; and yet, if
+we are to judge from recent events,
+neither the hereditary devotedness of
+his family to the cause which was so
+often sealed with their blood, nor the
+sacrifices (and we are informed they
+are not few) which he himself has
+made to it, have won him the favour
+of the court of Frohsdorf. On
+the contrary, we believe that he has
+been exposed to all the persecution
+that petty malignity can set at work;
+and we know that attempts have, on
+many occasions, been made to ruin
+him among the primitive peasantry of
+La Vendée and the Morbihan. His
+position with reference to his own party
+became so intolerable, that he has
+considered it necessary to publish, in
+a small volume, a review of the state
+of parties in France in 1853, and
+which is, at the same time, a vindication
+of his own conduct.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The work is curious and instructive.
+It notices the events which have recently
+occurred in France; and though
+the causes which led to that very decided
+act of vigour known as the <i>coup-d’état</i>
+of December 1851, have been
+long since known to the public, and
+appreciated by impartial men, a narrative
+bearing the impress of truth,
+and penned by one of the actors in the
+drama, cannot fail to be interesting.
+We do not concur in all the views of M.
+de Larochejaquelein, nor do we agree
+in all his deductions; but we readily
+admit the truth of his sketch of political
+parties in France previous to the
+month of December, of the intrigues
+of the Orleanist faction, their hypocrisy
+and selfishness, their utter recklessness
+of consequences, provided but
+a chance was afforded them, no matter
+at what cost to the country, of recovering
+the power for which they had shown
+themselves unfit, and of which they
+were deprived almost without an effort.
+In all this we agree; and we
+confess we are not a little pleased at
+finding the opinions we have already
+had occasion to express on these points
+fully borne out by one who has so intimate
+a knowledge of affairs. We
+believe that the French press has, with
+one or two exceptions, passed over in
+silence the work of M. de Larochejaquelein;
+and we are not much surprised
+at that silence. It is some time
+since all political intercourse has ended
+between him and the persons who
+compose the court of Frohsdorf.
+These persons, we fear, too truly represent
+the extravagant opinions and
+the intolerant conduct of the men who
+contributed by their evil counsels to
+the overthrow of the legitimate monarchy.
+They are the same of whom
+it has been said, and said truly, that
+they returned from their long exile,
+having learned nothing and forgotten
+nothing; and were the Count de
+Chambord to be restored to the throne
+of his ancestors, their policy would
+again lead to its overthrow. We desire
+to speak with respect of the present
+chief of the house of Bourbon.
+We admire the dignity of his bearing;
+the position he has assumed with respect
+to the Orleans family; the proud
+refusal to make any sacrifice of what
+he considered to be a principle, even
+though that sacrifice increased the
+number of his partisans; the firmness
+with which he maintains his superiority
+over those who despoiled him—the
+innocent victim of base intriguers,
+and a successful insurrection—of his
+rights. But we fear that he allows
+himself to be too much influenced in
+certain matters by a coterie composed
+of persons of antiquated notions,
+and who do not appear to have
+any conception of the progress made
+in the social and political world during
+the last half-century. The errors
+of that coterie are exposed by M. de
+Larochejaquelein; and that exposure
+will not narrow the distance which
+separates him from his party, or rather
+from the court of Frohsdorf. The
+unpalatable truth he tells will not
+easily be forgiven; and the Legitimist
+organs of the press have considered it
+more prudent to pass them over without
+notice or contradiction. The
+organs of what is called the <i>Fusion</i>
+have been equally discreet, and with
+one or two exceptions the other journals
+have imitated their discretion,
+either because they considered his
+sketch not sufficiently Buonapartist to
+merit unqualified praise, or too much
+so for censure. The object of the
+Marquis de Larochejaquelein, who still
+professes to be a Legitimist in principle,
+is to show that he has been guilty
+of no inconsistency in giving in his
+adhesion to the imperial government,
+and that he has not discarded the
+opinions he always professed; that he
+has not denied the name he bears, nor
+renounced the political faith in which
+he was brought up, by accepting that
+régime, and taking, as a member of
+the Senate, the oaths of allegiance to
+the Emperor and the constitution.
+It is principally in this respect that
+the interest of the book consists, and
+we have noticed briefly and impartially
+the conduct of the writer, and
+that of a certain number of his fellow-Legitimists
+who have, equally with
+himself, comprehended the imminent
+danger their common country was exposed
+to, and availed themselves of
+the only means of safety left at their
+disposal.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The offence committed by M. de Larochejaquelein,
+and which the more intolerant
+of the Royalist party do not
+pardon, is not of recent date. He was a
+Legitimist, it is true, but he was also
+attached to constitutional government.
+He preferred a sovereign who inherited
+a crown from his ancestors, but
+he was likewise the supporter of representative
+institutions. But so
+many catastrophes—so many revolutions
+had passed over France—so
+many governments had been overthrown
+and institutions subverted,
+that all notions of right and justice,
+as of government, were completely
+lost. The actors in the first Republic
+denounced all monarchical forms, as
+not only incompatible with human
+rights, but actually opposed to common
+sense itself—in fact, something
+monstrous and unnatural. After convulsing
+all Europe, and utterly changing
+the country where it first broke
+into mad violence, that Revolution
+became exhausted from its very excesses;
+the Republic fell into contempt;
+but the terror inspired by it was such,
+that then, as in more recent days,
+people were glad to take shelter in
+any government that promised security
+to life and property. The great
+object of the Consulate, as of the Empire,
+was to obliterate the last traces
+of a system which had cost France so
+dear. That régime was so great and
+so dazzling that the loss of liberty was
+soon forgotten; and the yoke that
+pressed on the nation was the less galling
+because it was concealed in glory;
+and Frenchmen consoled themselves
+for not being free, because their master
+was a hero.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>That brilliant meteor, after blinding
+the world with its splendour, and
+awing it by its power, fell into darkness.
+The ancient line was restored;
+and the Restoration in turn began by
+proclaiming the imperial rule as a
+usurpation; and Louis XVIII., in the
+charter of 1814, dated his reign, not
+from his return to France and the fall
+of Napoleon, but from the death of
+his nephew, the son of Louis XVI.;—as
+if the imperial epoch, with all its
+marvellous events, had never existed,
+and as if the account popularly, but
+erroneously, attributed to the famous
+Father Loriquet, was exact, that
+there had been no such government
+as the Republic, and that the man
+who was generally believed to have
+ruled the French nation despotically,
+but not ingloriously, for fourteen
+years, was in reality only Monsieur
+le Marquis de Buonaparte, lieutenant-general
+in the service of his most
+Christian Majesty.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Next came the Revolution of July,
+which proclaimed that Charles X.
+had forfeited his right to the crown,
+for himself and his heirs—who, however,
+were admitted to have done nothing
+to merit that forfeiture—by the
+manner in which he interpreted the
+14th article of the charter, which,
+nevertheless, authorised him “to
+make regulations and ordinances necessary
+for the execution of the laws
+and the safety of the state.”—(<cite><span lang="fr">Charte
+Constitutionnelle de 1814.</span></cite>) Republican
+writers (<cite><span lang="fr">Dictionnaire Politique</span></cite>,
+p. 216) admit that the aforesaid article
+left to the king “the dangerous privilege
+of being the sole judge of the
+necessity of the case;” though they
+refused to recognise that or any other
+article of a charter which had been
+<i>octroyée</i>, or issued by royal authority
+alone. The responsible advisers whom
+Charles X. consulted, were of opinion
+that his conduct in issuing the famous
+ordinances was legal. The Orleanist
+revolution denounced that act as a
+violation of the charter, and declared
+that Charles X. had broken some
+imaginary compact between him and
+his people, and had forfeited the
+crown. This was admitting, to all
+intents and purposes, the right of
+armed insurrection. The principle
+thus admitted by the new régime was
+often turned against itself; and the
+right of overthrowing the government
+was many times tried during the
+reign of Louis Philippe. Various insurrections
+broke forth, which were
+successively put down; but had any
+of them succeeded, Louis Philippe
+would long before 1848 have been
+accused, on equally just grounds, of a
+violation of the new charter, and consequent
+forfeiture of the crown, as
+his predecessor. At length <i>his</i> turn
+came; and at the very moment that
+most people believed the throne of
+July to be fixed on the surest basis,
+the insurrection of February in a few
+hours overthrew that which had already
+triumphed over so many previous
+dangers. Louis Philippe rose
+to power on the barricades of July;—that
+power was laid prostrate by the
+same means. He, in turn, was proclaimed
+a usurper of the people’s
+rights, a violater of public liberty,
+and condemned to execration. It is
+not strange, therefore, if the minds
+of men became bewildered amid so
+many conflicting doctrines. There no
+longer appeared any fixed standard
+by which to judge of authority. Monarchy
+in its absolute form was decried
+by some; constitutional monarchy by
+others. Monarchy under any denomination,
+or under any form whatever,
+was denounced by many as an
+outrage on human reason. Some
+maintained that a republican rule was
+hateful to the immense majority of
+the nation, and that France only desired
+a fair opportunity to declare its
+will. Under such circumstances what
+was to be done? The Royalists did
+not conceal that they only <i>endured</i>
+the Republic until an occasion offered
+for re-establishing their own form of
+government. Each party maintained
+that it, <i>and it alone</i>, represented the
+wants and wishes of the people;
+while the unhappy people, in whose
+name, and on whose behalf, all this
+had been done, stood by in silent dismay,
+and bent to the yoke which
+each faction that got uppermost imposed
+upon it. All was confusion,
+anarchy, chaos;—and the country,
+whose wellbeing was the pretext,
+rapidly approached the brink of ruin.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Under such circumstances, we again
+ask, what was to be done? The Marquis
+de Larochejaquelein thought that
+the only way of solving the problem
+was by an appeal to the very people
+in whose name every outrage was
+successively perpetrated; and calling
+upon it to declare, once for all, frankly
+and freely, what form of government
+it preferred—whether monarchy legitimate
+or constitutional, or a republic.
+From the day he took his seat in the
+Chamber of Deputies until the 2d
+December, when the National Assembly
+was dissolved by the <i>coup-d’état</i>,
+such was his constant theme. He
+denied the legitimacy of the Orleans
+monarchy of July, and refused to recognise
+the right of two hundred deputies,
+a portion of only one branch
+of the legislature, to exceed the terms
+of their mission, and to bestow sovereign
+power on any one. He expressed
+his belief that France would, if an
+occasion offered, return to the government
+of her legitimate sovereign, and
+he did not conceal that such was the
+motive for his appeal; but at all
+events he demanded that France
+should be consulted, and he pledged
+himself to abide by the issue. By
+such conduct he incurred the hatred
+of Legitimists and Orleanists;—of the
+former, because his doctrine was inconsistent
+with the principle of divine
+right; and of the latter, because the
+admission of such an appeal vitiated,
+<i>ab initio</i>, the right of the sovereign
+whom the two hundred deputies
+had, of their own sole act, given to
+the nation. We offer no opinion as
+to whether M. de Larochejaquelein
+would have attained his object had his
+plan been carried into effect, nor on the
+abstract fitness of such an appeal;
+but in so complete a dissolution of
+authority of every kind, and amid
+such a confusion of all ideas of government,
+it would be difficult to suggest
+any other experiment whereby the
+right of those who founded their claim
+on the will of the nation could be
+tested.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The first great offence committed
+by M. de Larochejaquelein consisted,
+as we have just seen, in his having so
+far deviated from the principle of
+divine right, as to recommend an
+“appeal to the nation;”—but the
+crime for which he can hope for no
+forgiveness from the court of Frohsdorf,
+is his having recognised the imperial
+government, and accepted the
+office of senator under it. M. de Larochejaquelein
+is of opinion, that after
+so many revolutions there was no
+chance for monarchy in France otherwise
+than by means of universal suffrage,
+by which the present government
+has been elected. He thought
+that the Legitimists, who had always
+maintained that they, and they alone,
+were acceptable to the nation, would
+run no risk in abating something of
+their <i>amour propre</i>, and in meeting
+the reaction half-way. If they were
+right, there was no fear of the result
+of such an appeal. The Orleanists,
+who were few in number and factious
+in conduct, would indeed be justified
+in shrinking from such an ordeal as
+the ratification of the act of two hundred
+deputies of the opposition; but
+in any case he despaired of a monarchical
+government in any form that
+attempted to establish itself on a narrower
+basis. “Let us now suppose,”
+he says (p. 190), “that monarchy
+were proclaimed in France otherwise
+than by universal suffrage, which no
+accredited leader of the old Royalist
+parties admitted. Of the three monarchical
+parties, two would have been
+in open hostility with the government,
+and would, as now, rely for aid
+on the Republicans—this time in open
+hostility, and with much more reason.
+It is, perhaps, from a feeling akin to
+paternal weakness that I invariably
+recur to this article of my political
+faith—If the question of <i>Monarchy</i>
+or <i>Republic</i> had been frankly put to
+the country under the Republican
+government, under the Republican
+constitution, all dynastic pretensions
+would vanish before traditional right,
+and the majority of the Republicans
+themselves would have submitted to
+the declared will of the nation. But
+no!—it was thought better to carry
+on intrigues up to the very day when
+the <i>coup-d’état</i> of the 2d December
+became a social and political necessity;
+instead of cherishing carefully
+that liberty which we claimed for the
+national will, the parties I refer to
+preferred reserving themselves for
+chances which had only the effect of
+prolonging our intestine divisions.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>M. de Larochejaquelein explains
+why he has given his adhesion to the
+present government, elected, as it has
+been, by means of that very appeal
+to the nation which he had, with certainly
+the hope of a different result,
+always advocated. “If I am asked,”
+he says (p. 214), “the reason of the
+humble support I give to the present
+government, my answer is very simple:
+I see before me a strong government,
+which has rendered real
+service to my country, and at this
+moment I do not see any other that
+can possibly succeed to it. The faults
+that have been committed are so
+numerous—revolutions have so exhausted
+our strength—events have
+such complete power over us—that, I
+confess, my reason forces me to accept
+the vote of eight millions of my
+fellow-citizens. Nevertheless, I have
+never been more convinced than I
+now am, of the excellence of the hereditary
+principle. Let us suppose
+the Emperor to have issue—he has
+also relations. Let us suppose the
+Count de Chambord to have issue—but
+the princes of the house of Orleans
+are numerous. Under such
+circumstances, France would be exposed
+for centuries to the danger
+resulting from the dissensions of the
+monarchical parties disputing among
+each other the possession of the
+crown. Hereditary right, respected
+by France for her own sake, saved
+her from the evils which perhaps
+were the fate of future generations,
+and spared us the repetition of those
+trials which we have already so severely
+felt. I will be frank. The
+reason that many Legitimists support
+the government is, that they do not
+wish on any account, or any terms,
+either Orleanism or anarchy—the one
+being, in their opinion, the consequence
+of the other. Were there no
+other motive than to destroy the
+chance of either, the persons I speak
+of are of opinion that they ought not
+to refuse taking part in the affairs of
+their country. Europe is equally interested
+with us that the principle of
+the Revolution should not be represented
+on the throne of France by a
+new family usurpation, for there is
+no sovereign that such usurpation
+should not alarm.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The reign of Louis Philippe was
+the reign of the <i>bourgeoisie</i>—of the
+revolutionary shopkeepers of Paris.
+The scepticism of the eighteenth century
+had extended to morals—the
+mockery that assailed religion gradually
+undermined society—and all
+notions about virtue, honour, independence,
+were destroyed by a blighting
+incredulity. We are no believers
+in what is termed the perfectibility of
+human nature, but we do not think
+that, even with the most mercantile
+people of the world, a love of gain
+is incompatible with ideas of personal
+and national honour. The all-powerful
+<i>bourgeoisie</i> of the Orleanist régime
+was not a good specimen of that class;
+it carried into political life the characteristics
+of its social life. Insolent
+and overbearing in prosperity, it was
+fawning and mean in adversity. A
+difference is always observable between
+the bearing of a gentleman—and
+by the term we refer as much to
+moral as to social superiority, as the
+gentleman of nature may be found in
+all classes—and the mere upstart, and
+in France it was perhaps more striking
+than elsewhere. Dignified humility,
+lofty submission, obedience that
+implies no forgetfulness, no sacrifice
+of self-respect, loyalty which cannot
+be degraded even in political servitude,
+a sense of personal honour which
+despotism cannot wound, are far different
+from the pertness of the <i>parvenu</i>,
+the nervous pedantry of the
+<i>doctrinaire</i>, or the fawning of the sycophant.
+The one inclines low, with a
+consciousness of just subordination to
+high station; but after so inclining he
+stands up with erect face: the other
+falls to the dust prostrate. The aristocratic
+courtier will offer the incense
+of his adulation, but his censer is not
+rudely flung in the eyes of his royal
+master, and his homage is not without
+grace and dignity. His words may
+be soft and insinuating, but he will
+not change his nature. To use the
+language of one who knew both classes
+well, he may stoop to pick up his
+master’s hat or handkerchief, but it
+is the act of polite attention to superior
+rank, and not the mercenary subserviency
+of a valet; and there is an
+air of equality about it which shocks
+no one, and does not offend the personage
+to whom it is paid. We rather
+think that, generally speaking, a
+prince prefers selecting his ministers
+from the class of plebeians, because he
+believes he shall be served by them
+as mere mercenaries; while the others
+he must treat as servants of his
+crown, and no otherwise. It is mentioned
+as one of the anecdotes of the
+Court of Louis Philippe, whose fault
+was want of dignity, that, one day,
+wishing to gain over to some project
+of family interest, on which he had set
+his heart, one of his ministers, he
+offered him, in a familiar, off-hand, and
+half-contemptuous manner, a portion
+of the fruit he was at the moment eating.
+The minister appeared much
+flattered, bowed low, and accepted
+the royal gift. We are not aware
+whether the bribe produced the effect
+intended, but we much doubt if the
+citizen-king would have treated with
+such disdainful familiarity a Montmorency,
+a Noailles, or a Molé.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The effect produced by the exclusiveness
+of the July régime was such
+as might have been expected. It was
+inculcated that the primary object of
+man’s existence was the gratification
+of his meaner passion;—success in
+the pursuit of wealth without any
+close examination as to the means by
+which it was acquired, was regarded
+as the <i>summum bonum</i>; the <i>enrichissez-vous</i>
+so often repeated in the banquet
+and electioneering speeches of even
+the most eminent of Louis Philippe’s
+ministers (though we readily admit
+that no such incentive influenced the
+person who so spoke) were the leading
+maxims of that system. Fidelity
+to principles, faith in high and noble
+aspirations, were rather sneered at as
+the ravings of the imagination, suited
+perhaps to the age of romance; and
+strong attachment to traditions was referred
+to as a folly unworthy of men of
+sense. The <i>bourgeois</i> were often assured
+that they alone were the sovereign;
+that they alone were eminent in
+eloquence and in thought; that to them
+alone belonged the gifts of the earth;
+that they alone, provided they were
+men of substance, were superior in the
+social as in the moral scale; that to
+them belonged all distinctions as a
+matter of right; that they only were
+fit to occupy eminent posts in every
+branch of the administration, and in
+fact that in their hands were exclusively
+placed the destinies of the state.
+They who thus extravagantly exalted
+the pursuit of mere material interests,
+were destined to pay dearly for the
+lessons they had taught. Faith and
+reverence for the past had been held
+up to contempt by the new school of
+statesmen; but the doctrines that had
+been inculcated for the overthrow of
+the former dynasty, were equally applicable
+to the modern one, and the
+Revolution of February was the consequence.
+Empty and dogmatic, the
+real <i>bourgeois</i>—the <i>bourgeois</i> whose
+stupidity or conceit makes him sure
+good material in the hands of the revolutionists—has
+nevertheless pretensions
+to nothing less than universal
+knowledge. Jealous of all superior to
+him in social position, and insolent to
+those below him, he would drag down
+the former to his own level, but would
+not permit the latter to rise to it.
+With the examples yet before him,
+and the preceptors he had to guide
+him, he could not be a <i>bourgeois</i> such
+as July encouraged, without being
+somewhat of an infidel. The reverence
+for religious forms that characterised
+his fathers, was in his opinion
+fit for times of ignorance, but not
+for the enlightened nineteenth century.
+He had dipped here and there
+into the <cite>Philosophical Dictionary</cite> of
+Voltaire; he could sneer at the Mosaic
+chronology; be witty on the description
+of Noah’s Ark; was incredulous
+about the Deluge; and laughed outright
+at the Passage of the Red Sea.
+He had read the <cite>Origine de tous les
+Cultes</cite> of Dupuis, and could quote
+whole pages from Volney. He was
+therefore a philosopher. With those
+severer studies he mingled the lighter
+graces of wit and poetry, and for
+these accomplishments he was indebted
+to the doggrel of the “philosopher
+of Ferney” in <cite>Joan of Arc</cite>; the
+<cite>Guerre des Dieux</cite> of Parny, and the
+looser songs of Beranger. To show
+that he thoroughly appreciated these
+great masters, and that he was superior
+to popular prejudice, he would
+not enter the doors of a church, as
+the observances of religion were only
+fit for women and children. To prove
+his independence, and to give “a lesson
+to the government,” he would not
+pay the just respect, which degrades no
+man, to the accredited representative
+of authority; but he would fall on his
+knees to worship the merest political
+mountebank. He incessantly clamoured
+about <i>equality</i>, and decried the
+aristocracy if he happened to see a
+carriage, with a coronet or armorial
+bearings, roll by him; but his pride
+was up if a struggling artist or poor
+man of letters addressed him otherwise
+than with cap in hand. The
+noisy advocate of social and political
+liberty, there was no greater despot
+in his domestic circle. His house-porter
+crouched before him, and his
+servants grew dumb when they heard
+the creak of his shoe. Railing against
+the “upper classes,” his ambition
+was to scrape acquaintance with some
+decayed viscount, some equivocal
+marquis; and if he had a visit from
+some one who bore a title, the coroneted
+card lay for whole months in
+full view on the central table of his
+drawing-room, or was stuck in the
+most conspicuous part of the looking-glass
+frame. His personal pomposity
+was increased the more he was disposed
+to corpulence, and his boldness
+was decisive proof of the superiority
+of his intellect. Our worthy <i>bourgeois</i>
+was rather hard to be pleased. When
+the political world was tranquil, he
+passed his leisure hours in running
+down the government; and though no
+one had more experienced the mischief
+of agitation, he generally voted
+for its most dangerous adversaries:
+not because he approved of their principles,
+or that the ministerial candidates
+were not honourable men, but
+because he was determined to let no
+opportunity pass of making the king
+and his government feel that he, M.
+St Godibert, was not pleased with
+them, and would “give them a lesson.”
+These lessons occasionally cost
+the teacher very dear; and when agitation,
+warmed by himself into incipient
+insurrection, grew dangerous,
+he was sure to be the first to accuse
+the government of having excited it
+for its own special purposes. When
+insurrection was defeated, he again
+blamed the government for excessive
+lenity in the punishment of those who
+disturbed the public peace; and when
+all peril was over, and a complete lull
+ensued, then he accused the same government
+of excessive cruelty to
+those who a day or two before were
+the <i>infame canaille</i>, but who now were
+his <i>frères egarés</i>—his deluded brethren
+and fellow-citizens.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>These were the men who served as
+the instruments to bring about the
+Revolution of July, and these were
+they who were feasted and flattered
+until they were led to believe themselves
+the only beings on earth worthy
+of consideration. Such specimens
+were of course to be met with as <i>employés</i>
+in the various ministerial departments.
+Nothing could be more
+insolent, or more griping, than the
+general run of those underlings. The
+recommendation “<i>enrichissez-vous</i>,”
+coming, as it did, from the first minister
+of the crown, was not forgotten;—he
+was one of the few who did not carry
+out for himself his own theory; but
+we fear that the love of power, which
+was in him a passion, induced him to
+tolerate, or at least not to prevent,
+the scandalous jobbing which it was
+known was going on—for it is not
+credible that such things could be done
+in secret. A government where such
+men enjoy, in consequence of their
+position, a great though underhand
+influence, is humiliating for an honourable
+man to live under. There is
+something more respectable in the
+audacity with which the insurgent
+flings out his crimson flag, and eyes,
+as he passes through the richest quarters
+of Paris, the trembling <i>bourgeois</i>,
+whose fine mansion he has already
+marked out, than in the system which
+admits as its principal instruments
+the rapacious and insolent underlings,
+who too often had the ministerial
+ear under the Orleans régime.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>As for the representative system in
+France during the period of which we
+speak, it was a farce. Two hundred
+thousand electors, for a population of
+thirty-three or thirty-four millions,
+was not much better than an oligarchy,
+and the worst of all oligarchies, for its
+corruption was its bond of union, as was
+proved by the disclosures made to the
+world towards the conclusion of Louis
+Philippe’s reign, when some of the
+highest functionaries were dragged
+before the tribunals for mal-practices;
+and we believe that there were other
+persons who did not regret that the
+Revolution of February came to save
+them from public disgrace. A minister
+who wishes to be regarded as a
+philosopher and a statesman, should
+try to purify his age rather than corrupt
+it; and it is as immoral as impolitic
+to encourage the baser passions
+of men in order to keep yourself
+in power, however clean your own
+conscience, and virtuous your purposes.
+Such things might be palliated
+in so loose a politician as Walpole;
+but they would shock and
+disgust were they, by the remotest
+chance, to be found in so austere a
+moralist as Guizot.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Some time previous to the <i>coup-d’état</i>
+of 1851, a new scheme was
+formed by the Orleanists, who were
+tired of the forced leisure to which
+the successful imitation, in February
+1848, of the example set by themselves
+in 1830, condemned them. The
+object of this new project was the
+complete reconciliation of the elder
+and younger branches of the Bourbon
+family, and of the two important sections
+of the Royalist party, with a
+view to a restoration, on the expiry
+of the presidential power in May
+1852, by a <i>coup-d’état</i> on the part
+of the majority of the National
+Assembly, a successful rising of the
+people or the army, or, in fact, any
+other means that offered. None of
+those eventualities were, it is true,
+expressed in the journals that acted
+as organs of the party, but they were
+so understood by all the initiated.
+Each party looked forward to the
+term fixed by the constitution for
+Louis Napoleon to lay down his
+power, for the triumph of its cause.
+The Mountain took no pains to conceal
+its designs; and not unfrequently,
+amid the stormy debates which raged
+in the Assembly, the “second Sunday
+in May” 1852 was declared to be the
+date when full vengeance was to be
+exacted from Legitimists, Orleanists,
+Buonapartists, and “reactionists” of
+every kind and colour. As that fatal
+term approached, the Orleanists, who
+surpass all others in intrigue, and
+such of the Legitimists as were
+credulous enough to trust them, and
+simple enough to be led by them, did
+their utmost to rouse the revolutionary
+demon in the Chamber, and on several
+occasions openly coalesced with
+the Terrorists. The Republicans suspected,
+as every one who knew him
+must have suspected, the sincerity of
+M. Thiers; and though they were
+fully aware of his real motive for
+seeking admittance into their ranks,
+their passions would not allow them
+to refuse the co-operation of any ally,
+and they relied, besides, on their own
+courage and energy against treachery
+when the important moment arrived.
+On the other hand, the Royalists were
+full of confidence in their success, if
+the preliminary and indispensable condition
+of reconciliation were adopted,
+and they agreed that France would
+not again submit to the brutal tyranny
+of some three hundred Socialists.
+Their ordinary language was, that,
+even at the worst, the “promised
+land” would at length be reached
+through the Red Sea—the “promised
+land” being, of course, the Royalist
+restoration; and the “Red Sea” the
+massacre and pillage it would be necessary
+for France to traverse before
+it was attained. The leaders of the
+Royalists, superior in all the arts of
+intrigue to their more brutal rivals,
+were vastly inferior to them in energy
+of action. During a brief régime of
+terror they would disappear, if necessary,
+and remain in some place of
+safety until France, exhausted and
+panic-stricken, threw herself into their
+arms, when they would at once establish
+a dictatorship. Louis Napoleon
+was, in their opinion, the obstacle
+easiest to be got rid of; they would
+leave his account to be settled by the
+Republicans, in case they themselves
+had not previously got him out of the
+way. As for any difficulties on this
+latter point, they considered that it
+was absurd to think of them. Louis
+Napoleon had, according to them,
+fallen into such contempt with the
+army and the nation, that not a finger
+would be raised to save him. M.
+Thiers, and other great statesmen like
+him, had, not merely in the saloons
+of Paris, and in his own particular
+circle, but openly in the <cite>Salle des pas
+Perdus</cite>, and the corridors of the National
+Assembly, sneered at him as
+“a poor creature;” and the redoubted
+General Changarnier himself—on
+whom, by the way, the eyes of the
+whole world were fixed—had more
+than once insulted him in the Chamber,
+and in his official quarters in the
+Tuileries. Louis Napoleon, therefore,
+was so utterly scorned as to be
+made the butt for continual sarcasm
+in the saloons of an old foreign <i>intriguante</i>,
+long resident in Paris; and
+this was his last degradation. The
+only doubt was, whether imprisonment
+at Vincennes would not be investing
+such a miserable being with
+too much importance. The ditch of
+Vincennes would be much better, and
+if a few ignorant persons thought him
+of consequence, why, an ounce of lead
+would quiet their fears. Some of the
+more judicious and far-seeing of the
+political leaders of the day, very properly
+considered that the main object
+they had in view would be materially
+advanced, if, as we have said, a reconciliation
+could be effected between the
+partisans of the Count de Chambord
+and the Orleanists. The idea originated
+with the latter. A meeting was
+held of about a dozen persons at first,
+in order to explain the plan which
+had been formed, and to organise
+what was termed a “fusionist agitation.”
+Other meetings, more numerously
+attended, were held at brief intervals;
+and it was resolved to send
+out agents to influential persons in
+the departments to win them over to
+the cause of the <i>fusion</i>—the <i>fusion</i>
+having for object the restoration of the
+Bourbons; and the parties who were
+engaged in it were precisely the same
+men who, in the press and in the Assembly,
+expressed their preference for
+the government as established in February,
+and who denounced the man
+who was <i>suspected</i> of an intention to
+attack the immaculate purity of the
+young and as yet innocent Republic.
+The first step of the <i>fusionists</i> was
+directed to the chief of the house of
+Bourbon and the princes of Orleans.
+But the Count de Chambord refused
+to sacrifice a particle of what he considered
+to be his just rights. He was
+King of France, and the only representative
+of legitimate royalty of his
+family, and he would consent to no
+divided allegiance. The princes of
+Orleans had been princes of the blood
+before their father had usurped the
+crown, and they must remain so. Past
+wrongs and injuries he was not unwilling
+to forgive; he would not be
+very exacting in matters of secondary
+importance, but on the great principle
+that the sovereignty resided in him
+since the abdication of the Duke
+d’Angoulême, which followed that of
+Charles X., he would hear of no compromise.
+On the other hand, the
+princes of Orleans would not admit of
+any act which had the effect of making
+their father a usurper; they were
+the more induced to do so that they
+were receiving from their agents in
+France, and particularly in Paris, assurances
+that great popular sympathy
+existed for them; and in fact, that to
+the house of Orleans alone the nation
+was looking for salvation! At the
+same time it was known that the Prince
+de Joinville was doing something on
+his own account with reference to the
+presidency of the Republic. Relying
+on the popularity he enjoyed to a
+greater degree than any of his family,
+he seems to have entertained some
+hopes of success. With the prudence
+which characterised his father, he
+would not, however, commit himself
+to any declaration; would neither deny
+nor admit that he was a candidate for
+the presidency; would neither avow
+nor disavow the acts of his friends;
+he might profit by their exertions, but
+if they failed, he would leave them to
+all the consequences of their defeat,
+and, in the latter case, would very
+probably disavow them. This, it will
+be admitted, was not very frank, or
+straightforward, or princely. It can
+scarcely be believed that the Prince
+de Joinville had all at once become a
+Republican; and it is not unfair to
+conclude, that, if successful, he would
+have employed his position as President
+to the restoration of his family.
+The mistrust of the house of Orleans
+that had characterised the elder Bourbons—and
+its history proves how their
+mistrust was justified—was increased
+by that conduct; and the Count de
+Chambord was disgusted with the policy
+which permitted, without disavowal,
+the name of his cousin to be
+spoken of by his partisans in Paris as
+the candidate for the future presidency
+of the Republic. M. Thiers did not,
+after all, approve of the fusion. It was
+sufficient that the suggestion of a reconciliation
+had proceeded from a rival
+of whom he had been always jealous,
+for that clever and restless intriguer
+to set his face against it. His utmost
+energies were devoted to secure the
+establishment of a <i>regency</i> in the person
+of the Duchess of Orleans, mother
+of the Count de Paris, whose confidential
+adviser he was, and whose
+minister he hoped to be. A restoration
+by means of the fusion would
+seriously interfere with his private
+plans, and he gave it therefore his
+most decided opposition. To secure
+at any cost the services of the man
+who at that time commanded the
+army of Paris, and whose influence
+over the vast military force of the Republic
+was long believed to be unbounded,
+was a great object. That
+man had unquestionably rendered services
+to order. But his head had been
+turned by adulation arising from gratitude
+for past and hopes of future
+services; and he at length came to
+believe that on him alone depended
+the fate of France. He was flattered
+with the idea that the part of Monk
+was reserved for him; and to enhance
+the value of his co-operation, he coquetted
+with both parties, and affected
+an air of mysterious reserve, which rendered
+him equally impenetrable to all.
+That reserve was carried on so long
+that it began to be whispered that
+General Changarnier would, when
+matters came to the point, declare
+neither for the one party nor the other,
+but would offer himself as candidate
+for the Presidency. This rumour was
+absurd; and the silence of the general,
+who was Legitimist by tradition
+rather than from principle, and an
+Orleanist from interest and habit, was
+nothing more than the usual coquetry
+in which he apparently took much
+delight. In fact, he remained dreaming
+away till the <i>coup-d’état</i> rudely
+woke him and others from their slumber.
+Of the possibility of a fusion of
+interests between these parties, or of
+a sincere reconciliation between the
+elder and younger branches of the
+royal family, we entertain very serious
+doubts.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The house of Orleans had been, from
+the time of the Regent, of infamous
+memory, fatal to the elder Bourbons.
+It was the evil genius that haunted
+them from the cradle to the grave.
+The government of Louis Philippe repaid
+the benefits conferred on the
+house of Orleans with ingratitude.
+One of its earliest acts was the introduction
+of a measure for the perpetual
+banishment of the elder Bourbons,
+and for the compulsory sale of the
+property they held in France. They
+who have been shocked, and, we
+readily admit, <i>justly</i> shocked, at the
+decree of the 22d January 1852, confiscating
+to the state the appanages
+which, according to the usages of the
+French monarchy, should have reverted
+to the state at the accession of
+a prince of the royal family, and at
+the compulsory sale of the Orleans
+property, may have forgotten that
+that decree was but an imitation of
+the legislative enactment of the 10th
+April 1832. We condemn, on principle,
+such acts of confiscation; they are replete
+with injustice; but we cannot help
+feeling that the decree of the 22d January
+1852, all bad as it was, was an act
+of retribution. Signal ingratitude is
+seldom left unpunished; and while
+we reprobate the conduct of Louis
+Napoleon, we cannot say that the
+house of Orleans was wholly undeserving
+of the treatment it met with.
+The sentence of perpetual exile,
+and confiscation of property, was
+passed by the Restoration on the
+Buonaparte family. That family
+owed no gratitude to the Bourbons;
+but the princes of Orleans were
+bound by the strongest ties of gratitude
+to them. On the 10th April
+1832, the law was promulgated relative
+to the elder branch of the Bourbons
+and the family of Napoleon.
+The law bore, of course, the signature
+Louis Philippe, and the counter-signature
+of M. Barthe, Louis Philippe’s
+Minister of Justice. The 1st, 2d,
+3d, and 6th articles were as follows:
+“1st, The territory of France
+and of its colonies is interdicted <i>for
+ever</i> to Charles X., deposed as he is
+from the royal dignity in virtue of
+the declaration of the 7th August
+1830; it is also interdicted to his
+descendants, and to the husbands
+and wives of his descendants. 2d,
+The persons mentioned in the preceding
+article shall not enjoy in
+France any civil rights; they shall
+not possess any property real or personal;
+they shall not acquire any,
+gratuitous or otherwise. 3d, The
+aforesaid persons are bound to sell,
+in a definitive manner, the whole
+of the property, without exception,
+which they possess in France. That
+sale shall be effected, for the unencumbered
+property, within the year dating
+from the promulgation of the present
+law; and for the property susceptible
+of liquidation, within the year dating
+from the period at which the right of
+possession shall have been irrevocably
+fixed. 6th, The provisions of
+the first and second articles of the
+present law are applicable to the
+ascendants and descendants of Napoleon,
+to his uncles and aunts, his
+nephews and nieces; to his brothers,
+their wives and their descendants;
+to his sisters and their husbands.”
+This law against the benefactors
+and the kinsmen of Louis Philippe
+was not enacted in the first heat of
+animosity, and the first impulse of
+revenge for real or fancied wrongs,
+which, immediately following a great
+revolution, might have been alleged as
+a palliation. It was enacted one year
+and nine months after the Revolution
+of July, when the passions of political
+parties, so far as they affected the
+unfortunate Charles X. and his family,
+had time to cool down. A high-minded
+man would have preferred
+forfeiting even the crown of France,
+glorious though it be, to putting his
+signature to such a document. The
+public and private virtues of the
+Orleans family have been enlarged
+upon even to satiety. State reasons
+may be alleged as an excuse for
+things which morality condemns; but
+the vaunted qualities of that family
+should have placed them above any
+such justification. State reasons may
+be alleged for the perpetration of any
+enormity. We have no doubt that
+Catherine II. could allege them for
+the partition of Poland; and the
+Emperor Nicholas justifies his present
+conduct towards the Ottoman Empire
+quite as satisfactorily. Pretensions
+to virtues far superior to those of
+ordinary men should, however, place
+those who are so gifted out of ordinary
+rules. We have said that we
+reprobate the decree of the 22d
+January 1852, but we have no doubt
+that Louis Napoleon justified that
+arbitrary act by the law of 1832.
+The house of Orleans renewed the
+sentence of perpetual banishment
+against the family of Napoleon, and
+of incapability to possess property
+in the French territory. Louis
+Philippe owed a heavy debt of gratitude
+to Charles X. and his family;
+we have seen how that debt was paid
+off; no such obligation bound the
+Buonapartes to the house of Orleans.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>But there existed another obstacle
+in the way of reconciliation between
+the elder and younger branches of
+the Bourbons—another outrage which
+it is scarcely in human nature to
+forget. The Orleanist party had protested
+in 1820 against the legitimacy
+of the present Count de Chambord.
+In that year a document appeared in
+London, entitled “Protest of the
+Duke of Orleans.” It was headed
+as follows: “His Royal Highness
+declares that he protests formally
+against the minutes of the 29th September
+last, which pretend to establish
+that the child named Charles
+Ferdinand Dieu-Donné is the legitimate
+son of the Duchess of Berri.
+The Duke of Orleans will produce,
+in fitting time and place, witnesses
+who can prove the origin of that
+child and its mother. He will produce
+all the papers necessary to show
+that the Duchess of Berri has never
+been <i>enceinte</i> since the unfortunate
+death of her husband, and he will
+point out the authors of the machination
+of which that very weak-minded
+princess has been the instrument.
+Until such time as the favourable
+moment arrives for disclosing the
+whole of that intrigue, the Duke of
+Orleans cannot do otherwise than
+call attention to the fantastical scene
+which, according to the above-mentioned
+minutes, has been played at
+the Pavilion Marsan (the apartment
+of the Duchess of Berri at the
+Tuileries.)” The paper then repeats
+the whole of the account of the
+<i>accouchement</i> as it appeared in the
+<cite>Journal de Paris</cite>, the confidential
+journal of the government, and shows
+the alleged contradictions in it, with
+the view of proving that the whole
+was an imposture. The Protest and
+the accompanying details to which we
+have alluded, were republished in the
+<cite><span lang="fr">Courrier Français</span></cite> of the 2d August
+1830; and the <cite><span lang="fr">Courrier Français</span></cite> was
+devoted to the Orleanist dynasty.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>But those are not the only humiliations
+which the elder Bourbons have
+suffered from the family of Orleans;
+and when we are told that the son of
+the Duchess of Berri is about to take
+to his bosom the sons of the man who
+laid bare to the world’s mockery the
+weakness of his mother, we are called
+upon to believe that that son has
+become lost to every manly sentiment.
+We doubt much if this be the
+case. There can be no sincerity on
+the part of the Orleanists who first
+suggested the <i>fusion</i>. They well
+know that, in the event of a Legitimist
+restoration, the men who overthrew
+the throne of his grandfather
+and drove him into exile, who resisted
+all attempts to restore them
+to their country, can never be his advisers—if
+he be what we hope he is.
+Could the Duchess of Berri receive
+at her levee the purchasers of the Jew
+Deutz, or those who signed and gave
+to publication the medical report of
+Blaye? It is a vile intrigue, got up
+for the sole benefit of the Orleanists.
+It was not out of love for the house
+of Bourbon, but from hatred to Louis
+Napoleon, that the fusion originated;
+and we agree with M. de Larochejaquelein
+when he says that “the Orleanists
+and Legitimists, not being able
+to effect a fusion of love, try to effect
+one of hatred, with the predetermined
+resolution to tear each other to pieces
+hereafter, and with a violence all the
+greater from the consciousness that
+one party was tricked by the other,
+if indeed both were not tricked.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>The Legitimists are no match for their
+rivals in cunning—in the lower arts of
+Machiavellism—in what is vulgarly
+but expressively termed <i>la politique de
+cuisine</i>. In 1848 the former occupied
+a much better position than the latter.
+The régime they had combated for
+eighteen long years was at length
+overthrown, and the comparison between
+the fall of <i>their</i> sovereign and
+that of the “citizen” king was infinitely
+in favour of the former.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Charles X. retired slowly before
+his enemies, and with all the dignity
+of a defeat which is not dishonourable,
+nor dishonouring. In the most critical
+moments, and when menaced with
+great danger, he never forgot who
+and what he was. He assumed no
+disguise; he put on no menial livery;
+and to the last moment of his embarkation
+for the land of his exile, his
+friends had no cause to blush for him.
+He was throughout a king—“Ay,
+every inch a king!” Whatever the
+faults he may have committed when
+on the throne—and we are free to
+admit that his rule was far from
+faultless—there was no loss of personal
+dignity in his descent from it. If the
+revolution of February succeeded without
+the co-operation of the Legitimists,
+it was not against them that it
+was directed, nor was it the Legitimists
+who were to be conquered. And
+yet, in the course of a very few
+months, the party became completely
+subordinate to their more clever and
+more unscrupulous rivals. It is true
+that in the first movement, when
+anarchy was wildest, the instinct of
+self-preservation from the evils which
+menaced society itself, bound all men
+of order, without reference to party,
+against the common enemy, Socialism.
+But it is difficult to understand, when
+the impossibility of a Republican system
+was recognised, when the necessity
+of substituting another form of
+government was evident to all, how
+the Legitimists allowed themselves
+to be seduced by their enemies. A
+snare in the form of the “fusion” was
+laid for them, and they easily fell
+into it. It would be a waste of time
+to detail all the manœuvres, the negotiations,
+the conferences, the
+schemes for the realisation of that
+idea. There was nothing positive
+or real at bottom. Everything was
+left to chance. It was soon evident
+that neither of the parties was sincere;
+each tried to deceive the other.
+Some of the more confident, or the more
+audacious, suggested that propositions
+should be made to Louis Napoleon
+himself; and among the Legitimists
+there were found persons silly enough
+to believe that he would, notwithstanding
+all the chances in his favour,
+derived from the spontaneous election
+of the 10th December 1848, gladly
+co-operate in the restoration of a
+prince of the house of Bourbon. The
+name of General Changarnier was
+proposed as the person to whom the
+dictatorship was to be intrusted until
+such time as the Royalist restoration
+was accomplished. A dictatorship
+was the great object with all
+parties: the Socialists, in order that
+France should be regenerated according
+to their peculiar ideas; the “moderate
+Republicans” would have
+selected General Cavaignac, as they
+did after the insurrection of June,
+and would have tried once more to
+force their system on a terrified population;
+the Legitimists and Orleanists
+looked to a dictatorship as the surest
+means toward a Royalist restoration,
+though it was not decided among
+them who was to be the future sovereign.
+The Orleanists counted much
+on their cleverness to beat their allies
+out of the field—allies in the moment
+of uncertainty and danger, but foes to
+be got rid of at any cost when the booty
+came to be divided. “In 1849,” says
+M. de Larochejaquelein, “I was one
+of those who wished at least to maintain
+the Republic, in order to insure
+the union of all that was reasonable
+and patriotic in the country; to call
+on France to put an end, once for all,
+to revolutions; and our object was to
+form the electoral committee, known
+afterwards by the name of the Committee
+of the <i>Rue de Poitiers</i>. I had
+been chosen by the Legitimists; but
+when we met, I requested to have it
+explained to me for what reason the
+committee was only composed of Orleanists
+and Legitimists. It appeared
+to me fitting and proper that the more
+judicious and moderate Republicans
+should form at least a third part of
+our committee, as we had at heart
+hopes of a different kind. I was told
+that the committee did not wish for
+Republicans, simply because it did not
+wish for the Republic. I demanded
+why, out of sixty members of the
+committee, forty-five belonged to the
+Orleanists, and only fifteen to the Legitimist
+party. An ex-minister replied
+that, though the party of legitimacy
+was, no doubt, honourable, yet
+that it formed a very small minority,
+while the other was in fact the nation.
+Not being of that opinion, I withdrew,
+and I declined being made use of as
+an instrument for the restoration to
+the throne of France of the revolutionary
+monarchy of 1830.” The
+division and weakness of those parties
+is further illustrated in this passage:
+“There remained another means of
+which the intimate confidants of the
+Count de Chambord were dupes—a
+plan which was never admitted except
+by them, and the impossibility of
+which was evident—namely, to bring
+about a restoration through the instrumentality
+of the Legislative Assembly
+itself. Without understanding
+what they were doing, the parliamentary
+Legitimists of 1850 directed
+all their efforts to renew the act of
+1830, when 219 deputies, without
+right of any kind, and with the most
+flagrant disregard of their duty,
+presumed to change the form of
+Government. The Assembly was
+divided into so many parties that
+it was in vain to hope for a majority
+for that object. It is true that towards
+the close of the Assembly all
+parties made a desperate attempt to
+combat Buonapartism; but the moment
+that a serious proposition was
+made to substitute a government for
+that of the President, it was found
+that concord did not and could not
+exist between two of the great parties
+who composed that Assembly.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>M. de Larochejaquelein gives some
+interesting details of the secret intrigues
+of the Orleanists to win over
+the Legitimists to the “fusion;” and
+it is amusing to find how both parties
+were deeply engaged in the duty of
+allotting crowns and imposing conditions
+on pretenders, up to the very
+eve of the <i>coup-d’état</i>. We had
+already become acquainted, through
+the channel of the public press, with
+the intrigues which made the presidency
+of Louis Napoleon one continued
+agitation, and we are not sorry
+to have the testimony of one who was
+an eye and an ear witness of the
+whole. “I appeal,” says M. de Larochejaquelein,
+“to the good faith of
+all political men—Is it, or is it not,
+true, that the idea of the most confidential
+advisers of the house of Orleans
+was to induce the Count de
+Chambord to abdicate in favour of the
+Count de Paris? Is it, or is it not
+true, that they urged the adoption of
+the Count de Paris by the Count de
+Chambord, even to the prejudice of
+the issue of the latter, supposing that
+he had any? Is it, or is it not true,
+that on the eve of the 2d December,
+certain persons who were the most
+influential, who stood highest in favour
+at Claremont, made that monstrous
+proposition in the <cite>Salle des Conferences</cite>
+of the National Assembly, and that it
+produced a great effect on the Legitimist
+members of the Assembly? Is it,
+or is it not true, that the <i>Sceptics</i> of the
+party replied, with surprising impertinence,
+Yes, no doubt we earnestly
+desire the fusion! What then? But
+it is not our interest to oppose it.
+You (the Legitimists) have for a long
+time kept yourselves apart from public
+affairs. The country belongs to us.
+<i>Your</i> principle is the best; we do not
+dispute the fact; but, above all, it is
+certain that your principle (legitimacy)
+is necessary for us to adopt. <i>Your</i>
+prince (the Count de Chambord) may
+return with <i>our</i> royal family. <i>He</i> is
+its chief; agreed. But at the end
+of six months he will see what his
+position really is. He will see that it
+is impossible for him to govern with
+<i>you</i>, and without <i>us</i>. He has no children;
+he has too deep a sense of religion
+to be ambitious; he loves France
+too much to wish her to be given up
+to commotions which would expose
+her to new revolutions. He will prefer
+the castle of Chambord as a residence
+to the Tuileries. You may be
+certain that we shall treat him well,
+and we shall all be contented. The
+principle itself will be respected, and
+<i>we</i> shall govern France.” Such were
+the propositions, and such the language
+of the partisans of the Orleans
+family to the Legitimists. Not a word,
+of course, was said of Louis Napoleon;
+and these profound statesmen were
+thus disposing in sure confidence of
+the fruit of their schemes only a few
+hours before they were scattered like
+chaff before the wind by the man on
+whom they disdained even to pass a
+thought! The Orleanists were still
+tormented by one fear; they trembled
+lest the proposition so often presented
+to the Assembly by M. de Larochejaquelein
+should again be renewed at
+that critical moment which preceded
+the expiration of the presidency of
+Louis Napoleon. The President of
+the Assembly, M. Dupin, the principal
+agent of the Orleans family,
+urged, and with more than usual energy,
+that body to refuse its authorisation
+for the printing of M. Leo de
+Laborde’s proposition, namely, that
+France should, at the important moment
+when every faction was struggling
+for supremacy, be consulted as
+to whether she desired, or not, the
+re-establishment of her traditional
+monarchy. M. Dupin treated the
+question as if it were one of life or
+death to himself. He threw off all
+restraint, and resisted with his utmost
+efforts any measure resembling an appeal
+to the nation, or embodying the
+principle of legitimacy. “And even
+at the present moment,” says M. de
+Larochejaquelein, “the language of the
+Orleanists is this: ‘We find that the
+<i>fusion</i> is the best instrument of hostility
+against the government of Louis
+Napoleon, and for that object we must
+effect it. But if the Count de Chambord
+should ever become a widower,
+he must not think of forming a new
+matrimonial engagement. Should he
+happen to have children, he must no
+longer count on our support.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>One of the hallucinations under
+which the Orleanists laboured was,
+that Louis Napoleon was in his heart
+devoted to them exclusively; and that
+when the <i>fusion</i> was consummated,
+he would transfer his power to them.
+That delusion survived even the <i>coup-d’état</i>.
+M. de Larochejaquelein admits,
+in common with all rational men, that
+the <i>coup-d’état</i> was the salvation of
+society itself, and they who were
+loudest in their applause of it were
+the Orleanists. “The most ardent in
+their approbation,” the noble writer remarks,
+“were the Orleanists, because
+they were convinced that the President
+was, perhaps without meaning it,
+working for them. The decrees of the
+22d January undeceived them. From
+that moment they became divided into
+two camps, that of the extreme opponents,
+and that of the men who
+accept the government, but who yet
+cherish a spirit of hostility to it, more
+or less openly declared.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>We have often thought it extraordinary
+why those Legitimists who
+had freely taken the oaths of allegiance
+to Louis Philippe refused them
+to Louis Napoleon; and on what
+grounds those who yielded prompt
+obedience to a revolutionary system,
+established by some two hundred deputies,
+should, while demanding an
+appeal to the people, decline to recognise
+a power which is the issue of
+the national will. M. de Larochejaquelein
+professes to be unable to account
+for the fact. “It would be
+curious,” he says, “to find out the
+reasons on which they found that refusal.
+I confess that I cannot explain
+a proceeding of the kind, and which
+is so advantageous to the revolution
+of July. It is true that the Legitimists
+must be pained at seeing their
+hopes baffled once more; but were it
+only in a social point of view, they
+ought to give their co-operation to
+the government. By keeping apart,
+they leave the place open to the men
+whom they had for so many years
+combated, and they commit the injustice
+of placing on an equality the
+usurpation of 1830 with the election
+of the Emperor successively by six,
+by seven, and by eight millions of
+suffrages. Prince Louis Napoleon had
+overthrown nothing which was endeared
+to us; it was not he who had
+persecuted the princes who were the
+object of our reverence and of our devotedness;
+it was not he who placed
+the revolution on a throne; but it was
+he who combated the revolution. He
+had, in the opinion of the immense
+majority of the people, rendered a
+signal service to France by effacing
+beforehand the fatal term of May 1852.
+He made an appeal to all honest men,
+without distinction of party, to aid him
+in saving the country. The majority
+of Legitimists could not well disregard
+the will of the nation; they submitted
+to the verdict without sacrificing
+their principles.” We need not
+say that we approve of the policy
+which has preferred the good of their
+country to the mere gratification of
+party feeling or personal ambition;
+and we see no inconsistency in the
+accepting a government that has
+fulfilled the conditions which, in the
+eyes of these persons, alone justified
+their adhesion.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>As for the Orleanists, they began
+in intrigue, have continued in it, and
+we have no reason to suppose that
+they will ever change. Place and
+power are, with very few exceptions,
+their object. The Palais Royal
+was, during the Restoration, the favourite
+resort, the headquarters of
+all the malcontents of the day: all
+who stirred up opposition to the government,
+all who intrigued against
+Louis XVIII. or Charles X., were
+welcome to the palace of “our cousin
+of Orleans.” They were not true even
+to the government of their own choice;
+they had overthrown one dynasty, and
+because M. Thiers or M. Odillon Barrot
+wanted the place, which M. Guizot
+preferred exposing the country to convulsion
+rather than be torn from, another
+dynasty was flung down after it.
+The tactics of the party have been always
+pretty much the same; revolution
+was evoked by them to the hypocritical
+cry of <i><span lang="fr">Vive la Charte</span></i>, or <i><span lang="fr">Vive la Constitution</span></i>.
+They were the men who organised,
+in 1829, the formidable associations
+against the payment of the taxes.
+At that time, also, as twenty years
+later, banquets were got up; and at
+one of those scenes of feasting, 221
+crowns, in honour of the 221 deputies
+of the opposition, adorned the hall;
+and that nothing should be wanting
+to complete the resemblance, it was
+M. Odillon Barrot who made the
+speech on the 4th July 1830, which
+was the prelude to the fall of Charles
+X.—the same great citizen whose
+banquettings and whose orations
+helped to destroy the throne of Orleans
+in 1848—the same demagogue
+whose conceit led him to suppose that
+<i>he</i> alone could lay the fiend he had
+evoked. There was nothing too low
+for them to stoop to, no instrument
+too mean for them to reject. It was
+that faction that brought about the
+revolution of July, it was the same
+that helped on that of February, and
+it was the coalition of the <i>fusionists</i>
+with the Mountain that provoked the
+<i>coup-d’état</i> of December 1851. Where
+were all those eminent statesmen,
+those solemn orators, those sour pedants,
+those profound thinkers, those
+philosophers, those great citizens, when
+the widowed Duchess of Orleans faced
+the mob, who had been rendered infuriate
+by the men who were afterwards
+unable or afraid to control them?</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>It has been made a matter of reproach
+to Louis Napoleon, that the
+persons who enjoy his confidence, or
+preside at his councils, are obscure
+adventurers, of no moral or social influence;
+and that no man of eminence,
+worth, or standing, will accept either
+power or place in a government so
+degraded. This, we rather think, is
+too sweeping an assertion. We should
+like to know what was the social,
+moral, or political eminence of M.
+Thiers, when the Revolution of July
+brought him first into notice. If we
+cast our eye over the list of senators
+under the imperial régime, we find
+names there that may stand a comparison
+with many in the late Chamber
+of Peers; and as for corruption,
+we may point to the events that immediately
+preceded the Revolution of
+February, when some of the highest
+had to answer for acts which were
+anything but moral. It is true that
+some of the leading men who directed
+the policy of the country under Louis
+Philippe have taken no active part in
+public affairs under the imperial government.
+But when we hear all this
+talk about “eminent men” refusing
+office, and declining all participation
+in the government of the day, we are
+tempted to ask how had those “eminent
+men” managed the business of the
+country when they had its sole direction
+and control? Their government,
+with immense resources at its command,
+and after eighteen years of profound
+peace, was upset in a few hours
+by a contemptible street row.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>We are not aware that M. de Larochejaquelein
+has been answered by
+any of the parties whose intrigues he
+has exposed. We think it would be
+difficult to answer him; his sketch
+carries with it internal evidence of its
+correctness. It is no answer, so far
+as the truth of his allegations is concerned,
+that he has abandoned the
+party with which he had been connected.
+We believe that he has had
+to undergo the petty persecutions of
+the <i>coterie</i> of Frohsdorf, who have resorted
+to every stratagem to destroy
+whatever influence his name may still
+carry with it in La Vendée; and,
+judging from his present production,
+he is of opinion that that <i>coterie</i> is not
+worth any man’s making any extraordinary
+sacrifices for them. But
+whatever be the motives that have
+influenced his conduct, or whatever
+the value of his “appeal to the
+people,” we are bound to admit, that
+so far he has acted consistently with
+his theory.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c018'>
+ <div><i>Printed by William Blackwood &#38; Sons, Edinburgh.</i></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='c019'>
+<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. <cite>The Elements of Materia Medica and Therapeutics.</cite> By <span class='sc'>Jonathan Pereira</span>,
+M.D., F.R.S. Third Edition. London, 1849–50. Pp. 1538.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. <cite>The Confessions of an English Opium-Eater.</cite> Fifth Edition. London.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. <cite>M‘Culloch’s Commercial Dictionary</cite>, edit. 1847, p. 1314.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. Madden, <cite>Travels in Turkey</cite>, vol. i. p. 16.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. The effects, real or imaginary, of this “juice” are thus described:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in8'>“Sleeping within mine orchard,</div>
+ <div class='line'>My custom always of the afternoon,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Upon my secure hour thy uncle stole,</div>
+ <div class='line'>With juice of cursed hebenon in a vial,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And in the porches of mine ears did pour</div>
+ <div class='line'>The leperous distilment: whose effect</div>
+ <div class='line'>Holds such an enmity with blood of man,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That, swift as quicksilver, it courses through</div>
+ <div class='line'>The natural gates and alleys of the body;</div>
+ <div class='line'>And, with a sudden vigour, it doth posset</div>
+ <div class='line'>And curd, like eager droppings into milk,</div>
+ <div class='line'>The thin and wholesome blood: so did it mine;</div>
+ <div class='line'>And a most instant tetter bark’d about,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Most lazar-like, with vile and loathsome crust,</div>
+ <div class='line'>All my smooth body.”—<cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act i. scene v.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. Pereira, p. 1427.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r7'>7</a>. English edition, p. 278, quoted in M‘Culloch’s <cite>Commercial Dictionary</cite>, p. 1314.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r8'>8</a>. <cite>Five Hundred Points of Good Husbandry.</cite> London edition of 1812, p. 167.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r9'>9</a>. <i>Ale</i> was the name given to unhopped malt liquor before the use of hops was introduced.
+When hops were added, it was called <i>beer</i>, by way of distinction, I suppose,
+because we imported the custom from the Low Countries, where the word beer was,
+and is still, in common use. Ground ivy (<i>Glechoma hederacea</i>), called also alehoof
+and tunhoof, was generally employed for preserving ale before the use of hops was
+known. “The manifold virtues in hops,” says Gerard in 1596, “do manifestly argue
+the holesomeness of <i>beere</i> above <i>ale</i>, for the hops rather make it physicall drink to
+keep the body in health, than an ordinary drink for the quenching of our thirst.”</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r10'>10</a>. <span lang="fr"><cite>Voyage dans le Nord de la Bolivie, et dans les parties voisines du Perou.</cite> Par <span class='sc'>H.
+A. Weddell</span>, M.D., &#38;c. &#38;c. Paris, Bertrand; London, Baillière. 1853.</span></p>
+
+<p class='c009'><span lang="fr"><cite>Scènes et Récits des Pays d’Outre-Mer.</cite> Par <span class='sc'>Théodore Pavie</span>. Paris, Lévy.
+1853.</span></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r11'>11</a>. <cite>Blackwood’s Magazine</cite>, No. CCCCXXX., for August 1851.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r12'>12</a>. The occupants of the pit at a theatre are called in Spain the <i>mosqueteria</i>.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r13'>13</a>. “Be not so well pleased, Juana, to see how I suffer for thee; that which is my
+fate to-day, to-morrow may chance to be thine.”</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r14'>14</a>. This arm, which the <i>gauchos</i> throw to a distance of twenty paces, consists of
+three balls fastened to the same number of cords. The one held in the hand is
+longer than the two others.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r15'>15</a>. <cite>History of the Captivity of Napoleon at St Helena.</cite> By <span class='sc'>John Forsyth</span>, M.A.
+3 vols. London: Murray.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r16'>16</a>. <i>Notes and Emendations to the Text of Shakespeare’s Plays, from Early MS. Corrections
+in a Copy of the Folio, 1632, in the possession of J. Payne Collier, Esq., F.S.A.;
+forming a Supplemental Volume to the Works of Shakespeare, by the same Editor.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>The Text of Shakespeare vindicated from the Interpolations and Corruptions advocated
+by J. P. Collier, Esq., in his Notes and Emendations.</i> By <span class='sc'>Samuel Weller
+Singer</span>. 1853.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><cite>Old Lamps or New? A Plea for the Original Editions of the Text of Shakespeare,
+forming an Introductory Notice to the Stratford Shakespeare.</cite> Edited by <span class='sc'>Charles
+Knight</span>. 1853.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><cite>A Few Notes on Shakespeare, with Occasional Remarks on the Emendations of the
+MS. Corrector in Mr Collier’s Copy of the Folio, 1632.</cite> By the Rev. <span class='sc'>Alexander
+Dyce</span>. 1853.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><cite>A Few Remarks on the Emendation “Who smothers her with Painting,” in the Play
+of Cymbeline, discovered by Mr Collier in a Corrected Copy of the Second Edition of
+Shakespeare.</cite> 1852.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><cite>New Illustrations of the Life, Studies, and Writings of Shakespeare, supplementary
+to all Editions.</cite> By <span class='sc'>Joseph Hunter</span>. In 2 vols. 1845.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r17'>17</a>. <cite>A Few Notes on Shakespeare</cite>, &#38;c., p. 22.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r18'>18</a>. This expression, “to cry aim,” occurs, in a serious application, in the following
+lines from “King John,” <cite>Act II. Scene 1</cite>:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<i>K. Philip.</i>—Peace, lady; pause or be more temperate:</div>
+ <div class='line in13'>It ill beseems this presence, <i>to cry aim</i></div>
+ <div class='line in13'>To these ill-tuned repetitions”—</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>that is, to give encouragement to these ill-tuned wranglings.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r19'>19</a>. <cite>A Few Notes</cite>, &#38;c., p. 50.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f20'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r20'>20</a>. <cite>The Text of Shakespeare Vindicated</cite>, &#38;c., p. 24.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f21'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r21'>21</a>. Molesworth’s edition, vol. iv. p. 46.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f22'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r22'>22</a>. See <cite>New Illustrations</cite>, &#38;c., vol. i. p. 356.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f23'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r23'>23</a>. <span lang="fr"><cite>L’Insurrection en Chine, depuis son Origine jusqu’à la Prise de Nankin.</cite> Par MM.
+<span class='sc'>Callery</span> et <span class='sc'>Yvan</span>. Avec une Carte topographique, et le Portrait du Prétendant.
+Paris: 1853.</span></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f24'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r24'>24</a>. Painted upon the bucklers of the Chinese soldiers are all manner of ferocious
+animals;—the tiger is the one most frequently seen, hence the surname. On behalf
+of his Celestial friend, and in extenuation of this ridiculous custom, Dr Yvan maintains
+that, in many of our European military equipments, the same intention of terrifying
+by a fierce aspect is manifest—as, for instance, in the bear-skin caps of grenadiers,
+hussars, &#38;c. The Spaniards, who bear little love to any foreigners, and who
+are particularly given to laughing at their Portuguese neighbours, assert that there
+was formerly in use, in the Portuguese army, the word of command, “<i>Rosto feroz a o
+enimigo!</i>”—Ferocious face to the enemy!—upon receiving which, the soldiers looked
+excessively savage, showed their teeth, and made a threatening gesture. This must
+have been a base imitation of the Chinese. To this day the <i>tigers</i>, who are often
+faint-hearted enough, go into action making horrible grimaces. Dr Yvan gives a
+very curious account of the Chinese army, in which sound of gong is used instead of
+word of command, and the officers are stationed behind their men to prevent their
+running away—an exercise to which they are extremely addicted. Silence in the
+ranks is far from being enjoined; on the contrary, when approaching an enemy, the
+tigers and other wild beasts roar in character—their sweet voices, with a gong accompaniment,
+combining in a discord that is truly infernal. There exists a Chinese
+treatise on the art of war, in twenty-four volumes, entitled Ou-Pi-Tche. Its perusal
+is not allowed to civil mandarins below the third rank, or to military mandarins
+below the fourth, nor, of course, to persons of inferior degree. It is not admitted in
+China that a private person, a literary man, a merchant, an agriculturist, can have
+any good motive in studying such a work. Booksellers are permitted to keep but
+one copy at a time, and are compelled to register the names of purchasers. “Before
+beginning the war with the Celestial Empire,” Dr Yvan says, “the English procured
+several copies of this treatise. One day, at Canton, an American merchant mentioned
+this fact to a mandarin of very high rank. The mandarin struck the palm of
+his left hand with his fan: ‘I no longer wonder,’ he cried, ‘that the red-haired barbarians
+vanquished us!’”—<cite><span lang="fr">L’Insurrection en Chine</span></cite>, chap. ix. pp. 119–124.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f25'>
+<p class='c009'><a href='#r25'>25</a>. <cite>La France en 1853.</cite> Par Le Marquis <span class='sc'>De Larochejaquelein</span>. Paris: 1853.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c005'>
+</div>
+<div class='tnotes x-ebookmaker'>
+
+<div class='chapter ph2'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c006'>
+ <div>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+ <ul class='ul_1 c018'>
+ <li>Typos fixed; non-standard spelling and dialect retained.
+
+ </li>
+ <li>Used numbers for footnotes, placing them all at the end of the last chapter.
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76973 ***</div>
+ </body>
+ <!-- created with ppgen.py 3.57e (with regex) on 2025-09-12 17:27:06 GMT -->
+</html>
+
diff --git a/76973-h/images/cover.jpg b/76973-h/images/cover.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..888010b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/76973-h/images/cover.jpg
Binary files differ