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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/935-0.txt b/935-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4b94daa --- /dev/null +++ b/935-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,13293 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook of Self-Help, by Samuel Smiles + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and +most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions +whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms +of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at +www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you +will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before +using this eBook. + +Title: Self-Help + with illustrations of Conduct and Perseverance + +Author: Samuel Smiles + +Release Date: June 10, 1997 [eBook #935] +[Most recently updated: January 29, 2021] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: UTF-8 + +Produced by: David Price + +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SELF-HELP *** + + + + + [Picture: Cover (somewhat battered)] + + + + + + SELF HELP + WITH ILLUSTRATIONS OF + CONDUCT AND PERSEVERANCE. + + + * * * * * + + BY SAMUEL SMILES, LL.D., + AUTHOR OF “LIVES OF THE ENGINEERS,” ETC. + + * * * * * + + “This above all,—To thine own self be true; + And it must follow, as the night the day, + Then canst not then be false to any man.” + + SHAKESPEARE. + + “Might I give counsel to any young man, I would say to him, try + to frequent the company of your betters. In books and in life, + that is the most wholesome society; learn to admire rightly; the + great pleasure of life is that. Note what great men admired; + they admired great things; narrow spirits admire basely and + worship meanly.”—W. M. THACKERAY. + + * * * * * + + POPULAR EDITION. + + * * * * * + + LONDON: + JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET. + 1897. + + + + +PREFACE. + + +THIS is a revised edition of a book which has already been received with +considerable favour at home and abroad. It has been reprinted in various +forms in America; translations have appeared in Dutch and French, and +others are about to appear in German and Danish. The book has, +doubtless, proved attractive to readers in different countries by reason +of the variety of anecdotal illustrations of life and character which it +contains, and the interest which all more or less feel in the labours, +the trials, the struggles, and the achievements of others. No one can be +better aware than the author, of its fragmentary character, arising from +the manner in which it was for the most part originally composed,—having +been put together principally from jottings made during many +years,—intended as readings for young men, and without any view to +publication. The appearance of this edition has furnished an opportunity +for pruning the volume of some superfluous matter, and introducing +various new illustrations, which will probably be found of general +interest. + +In one respect the title of the book, which it is now too late to alter, +has proved unfortunate, as it has led some, who have judged it merely by +the title, to suppose that it consists of a eulogy of selfishness: the +very opposite of what it really is,—or at least of what the author +intended it to be. Although its chief object unquestionably is to +stimulate youths to apply themselves diligently to right +pursuits,—sparing neither labour, pains, nor self-denial in prosecuting +them,—and to rely upon their own efforts in life, rather than depend upon +the help or patronage of others, it will also be found, from the examples +given of literary and scientific men, artists, inventors, educators, +philanthropists, missionaries, and martyrs, that the duty of helping +one’s self in the highest sense involves the helping of one’s neighbours. + +It has also been objected to the book that too much notice is taken in it +of men who have succeeded in life by helping themselves, and too little +of the multitude of men who have failed. “Why should not Failure,” it +has been asked, “have its Plutarch as well as Success?” There is, +indeed, no reason why Failure should not have its Plutarch, except that a +record of mere failure would probably be found excessively depressing as +well as uninstructive reading. It is, however, shown in the following +pages that Failure is the best discipline of the true worker, by +stimulating him to renewed efforts, evoking his best powers, and carrying +him onward in self-culture, self-control, and growth in knowledge and +wisdom. Viewed in this light, Failure, conquered by Perseverance, is +always full of interest and instruction, and this we have endeavoured to +illustrate by many examples. + +As for Failure _per se_, although it may be well to find consolations for +it at the close of life, there is reason to doubt whether it is an object +that ought to be set before youth at the beginning of it. Indeed, “how +_not_ to do it” is of all things the easiest learnt: it needs neither +teaching, effort, self-denial, industry, patience, perseverance, nor +judgment. Besides, readers do not care to know about the general who +lost his battles, the engineer whose engines blew up, the architect who +designed only deformities, the painter who never got beyond daubs, the +schemer who did not invent his machine, the merchant who could not keep +out of the Gazette. It is true, the best of men may fail, in the best of +causes. But even these best of men did not try to fail, or regard their +failure as meritorious; on the contrary, they tried to succeed, and +looked upon failure as misfortune. Failure in any good cause is, +however, honourable, whilst success in any bad cause is merely infamous. +At the same time success in the good cause is unquestionably better than +failure. But it is not the result in any case that is to be regarded so +much as the aim and the effort, the patience, the courage, and the +endeavour with which desirable and worthy objects are pursued;— + + “’Tis not in mortals to command success; + We will do more—deserve it.” + +The object of the book briefly is, to re-inculcate these old-fashioned +but wholesome lessons—which perhaps cannot be too often urged,—that youth +must work in order to enjoy,—that nothing creditable can be accomplished +without application and diligence,—that the student must not be daunted +by difficulties, but conquer them by patience and perseverance,—and that, +above all, he must seek elevation of character, without which capacity is +worthless and worldly success is naught. If the author has not succeeded +in illustrating these lessons, he can only say that he has failed in his +object. + +Among the new passages introduced in the present edition, may be +mentioned the following:—Illustrious Foreigners of humble origin (pp. +10–12), French Generals and Marshals risen from the ranks (14), De +Tocqueville and Mutual Help (24), William Lee, M.A., and the +Stocking-loom (42), John Heathcoat, M.P., and the Bobbin-net machine +(47), Jacquard and his Loom (55), Vaucanson (58), Joshua Heilmann and the +Combing-machine (62), Bernard Palissy and his struggles (69), Böttgher, +discoverer of Hard Porcelain (80), Count de Buffon as Student (104), +Cuvier (128), Ambrose Paré (134), Claud Lorraine (160), Jacques Callot +(162), Benvenuto Cellini (164), Nicholas Poussin (168), Ary Scheffer +(171), the Strutts of Belper (214), Francis Xavier (238), Napoleon as a +man of business (276), Intrepidity of Deal Boatmen (400), besides +numerous other passages which it is unnecessary to specify. + +_London_, _May_, 1866. + + + + +INTRODUCTION TO THE FIRST EDITION. + + +THE origin of this book may be briefly told. + +Some fifteen years since, the author was requested to deliver an address +before the members of some evening classes, which had been formed in a +northern town for mutual improvement, under the following circumstances:— + +Two or three young men of the humblest rank resolved to meet in the +winter evenings, for the purpose of improving themselves by exchanging +knowledge with each other. Their first meetings were held in the room of +a cottage in which one of the members lived; and, as others shortly +joined them, the place soon became inconveniently filled. When summer +set in, they adjourned to the cottage garden outside; and the classes +were then held in the open air, round a little boarded hut used as a +garden-house, in which those who officiated as teachers set the sums, and +gave forth the lessons of the evening. When the weather was fine, the +youths might be seen, until a late hour, hanging round the door of the +hut like a cluster of bees; but sometimes a sudden shower of rain would +dash the sums from their slates, and disperse them for the evening +unsatisfied. + +Winter, with its cold nights, was drawing near, and what were they to do +for shelter? Their numbers had by this time so increased, that no room +of an ordinary cottage could accommodate them. Though they were for the +most part young men earning comparatively small weekly wages, they +resolved to incur the risk of hiring a room; and, on making inquiry, they +found a large dingy apartment to let, which had been used as a temporary +Cholera Hospital. No tenant could be found for the place, which was +avoided as if the plague still clung to it. But the mutual improvement +youths, nothing daunted, hired the cholera room at so much a week, lit it +up, placed a few benches and a deal table in it, and began their winter +classes. The place soon presented a busy and cheerful appearance in the +evenings. The teaching may have been, as no doubt it was, of a very rude +and imperfect sort; but it was done with a will. Those who knew a little +taught those who knew less—improving themselves while they improved the +others; and, at all events, setting before them a good working example. +Thus these youths—and there were also grown men amongst them—proceeded to +teach themselves and each other, reading and writing, arithmetic and +geography; and even mathematics, chemistry, and some of the modern +languages. + +About a hundred young men had thus come together, when, growing +ambitious, they desired to have lectures delivered to them; and then it +was that the author became acquainted with their proceedings. A party of +them waited on him, for the purpose of inviting him to deliver an +introductory address, or, as they expressed it, “to talk to them a bit;” +prefacing the request by a modest statement of what they had done and +what they were doing. He could not fail to be touched by the admirable +self-helping spirit which they had displayed; and, though entertaining +but slight faith in popular lecturing, he felt that a few words of +encouragement, honestly and sincerely uttered, might not be without some +good effect. And in this spirit he addressed them on more than one +occasion, citing examples of what other men had done, as illustrations of +what each might, in a greater or less degree, do for himself; and +pointing out that their happiness and well-being as individuals in after +life, must necessarily depend mainly upon themselves—upon their own +diligent self-culture, self-discipline, and self-control—and, above all, +on that honest and upright performance of individual duty, which is the +glory of manly character. + +There was nothing in the slightest degree new or original in this +counsel, which was as old as the Proverbs of Solomon, and possibly quite +as familiar. But old-fashioned though the advice may have been, it was +welcomed. The youths went forward in their course; worked on with energy +and resolution; and, reaching manhood, they went forth in various +directions into the world, where many of them now occupy positions of +trust and usefulness. Several years after the incidents referred to, the +subject was unexpectedly recalled to the author’s recollection by an +evening visit from a young man—apparently fresh from the work of a +foundry—who explained that he was now an employer of labour and a +thriving man; and he was pleased to remember with gratitude the words +spoken in all honesty to him and to his fellow-pupils years before, and +even to attribute some measure of his success in life to the endeavours +which he had made to work up to their spirit. + +The author’s personal interest having in this way been attracted to the +subject of Self-Help, he was accustomed to add to the memoranda from +which he had addressed these young men; and to note down occasionally in +his leisure evening moments, after the hours of business, the results of +such reading, observation, and experience of life, as he conceived to +bear upon it. One of the most prominent illustrations cited in his +earlier addresses, was that of George Stephenson, the engineer; and the +original interest of the subject, as well as the special facilities and +opportunities which the author possessed for illustrating Mr. +Stephenson’s life and career, induced him to prosecute it at his leisure, +and eventually to publish his biography. The present volume is written +in a similar spirit, as it has been similar in its origin. The +illustrative sketches of character introduced, are, however, necessarily +less elaborately treated—being busts rather than full-length portraits, +and, in many of the cases, only some striking feature has been noted; the +lives of individuals, as indeed of nations, often concentrating their +lustre and interest in a few passages. Such as the book is, the author +now leaves it in the hands of the reader; in the hope that the lessons of +industry, perseverance, and self-culture, which it contains, will be +found useful and instructive, as well as generally interesting. + +_London_, _September_, 1859. + + + + +CONTENTS. + + CHAPTER I. + + SELF-HELP—NATIONAL AND INDIVIDUAL. +Spirit of Self-Help—Institutions and men—Government a Page +reflex of the individualism of a nation—Cæsarism and 1–26 +Self-Help—William Dargan on Independence—Patient +labourers in all ranks—Self-Help a feature in the +English character—Power of example and of work in +practical education—Value of biographies—Great men +belong to no exclusive class or rank—Illustrious men +sprung from the ranks—Shakespeare—Various humble +origin of many eminent men—Distinguished +astronomers—Eminent sons of clergymen—Of +attorneys—Illustrious foreigners of humble +origin—Vauquelin, the chemist—Promotions from the +ranks in the French army—Instances of persevering +application and energy—Joseph Brotherton—W. J. Fox—W. +S. Lindsay—William Jackson—Richard Cobden—Diligence +indispensable to usefulness and distinction—The +wealthier ranks not all idlers—Examples—Military +men—Philosophers—Men of science—Politicians—Literary +men—Sir Robert Peel—Lord +Brougham—Lytton—Disraeli—Wordsworth on +self-reliance—De Tocqueville: his industry and +recognition of the help of others—Men their own best +helpers + CHAPTER II. + + LEADERS OF INDUSTRY—INVENTORS AND PRODUCERS. +Industry of the English people—Work the best 27–66 +educator—Hugh Miller—Poverty and toil not +insurmountable obstacles—Working men as +inventors—Invention of the steam-engine—James Watt: +his industry and habit of attention—Matthew +Boulton—Applications of the steam-engine—The Cotton +manufacture—The early inventors—Paul and +Highs—Arkwright: his early life—Barber, inventor and +manufacturer—His influence and character—The Peels of +South Lancashire—The founder of the family—The first +Sir Robert Peel, cotton-printer—Lady Peel—Rev. William +Lee, inventor of the stocking-frame—Dies abroad in +misery—James Lee—The Nottingham lace manufacture—John +Heathcoat, inventor of the bobbin-net machine—His +early life, his ingenuity, and plodding +perseverance—Invention of his machine—Anecdote of Lord +Lyndhurst—Progress of the lace-trade—Heathcoat’s +machines destroyed by the Luddites—His +character—Jacquard: his inventions and +adventures—Vaucanson: his mechanical genius, +improvements in silk manufacture—Jacquard improves +Vaucanson’s machine—The Jacquard loom adopted—Joshua +Heilmann, inventor of the combing-machine—History of +the invention—Its value + CHAPTER III. + + THREE GREAT POTTERS—PALLISSY, BÖTTGHER, WEDGWOOD. +Ancient pottery—Etruscan ware—Luca della Robbia, the 67–93 +Florentine sculptor: re-discovers the art of +enamelling—Bernard Pallissy: sketch of his life and +labours—Inflamed by the sight of an Italian cup—His +search after the secret of the enamel—His experiments +during years of unproductive toil—His personal and +family privations—Indomitable perseverance, burns his +furniture to heat the furnace, and success at +last—Reduced to destitution—Condemned to death, and +release—His writings—Dies in the Bastille—John +Frederick Böttgher, the Berlin ‘gold cook’—His trick +in alchemy and consequent troubles—Flight into +Saxony—His detention at Dresden—Discovers how to make +red and white porcelain—The manufacture taken up by +the Saxon Government—Böttgher treated as a prisoner +and a slave—His unhappy end—The Sèvres porcelain +manufactory—Josiah Wedgwood, the English potter—Early +state of English earthenware manufacture—Wedgwood’s +indefatigable industry, skill, and perseverance—His +success—The Barberini vase—Wedgwood a national +benefactor—Industrial heroes + CHAPTER IV. + + APPLICATION AND PERSEVERANCE. +Great results attained by simple means—Fortune favours 94–117 +the industrious—“Genius is patience”—Newton and +Kepler—Industry of eminent men—Power acquired by +repeated effort—Anecdote of Sir Robert Peel’s +cultivation of memory—Facility comes by +practice—Importance of patience—Cheerfulness—Sydney +Smith—Dr. Hook—Hope an important element in +character—Carey the missionary—Anecdote of Dr. +Young—Anecdote of Audubon the ornithologist—Anecdote +of Mr. Carlyle and his MS. of the ‘French +Revolution’—Perseverance of Watt and +Stephenson—Perseverance displayed in the discovery of +the Nineveh marbles by Rawlinson and Layard—Comte de +Buffon as student—His continuous and unremitting +labours—Sir Walter Scott’s perseverance—John +Britton—Loudon—Samuel Drew—Joseph Hume + CHAPTER V. + + HELPS AND OPPORTUNITIES—SCIENTIFIC PURSUITS. +No great result achieved by accident—Newton’s 118–153 +discoveries—Dr. Young—Habit of observing with +intelligence—Galileo—Inventions of Brown, Watt, and +Brunel, accidentally suggested—Philosophy in little +things—Apollonius Pergæus and conic sections—Franklin +and Galvani—Discovery of steam power—Opportunities +seized or made—Simple and rude tools of great +workers—Lee and Stone’s opportunities for learning—Sir +Walter Scott’s—Dr. Priestly—Sir Humphry +Davy—Faraday—Davy and Coleridge—Cuvier—Dalton’s +industry—Examples of improvement of time—Daguesseau +and Bentham—Melancthon and Baxter—Writing down +observations—Great note-makers—Dr. Pye Smith—John +Hunter: his patient study of little things—His great +labours—Ambrose Paré the French +surgeon—Harvey—Jenner—Sir Charles Bell—Dr. Marshall +Hall—Sir William Herschel—William Smith the geologist: +his discoveries, his geological map—Hugh Miller: his +observant faculties—John Brown and Robert Dick, +geologists—Sir Roderick Murchison, his industry and +attainments + CHAPTER VI. + + WORKERS IN ART. +Sir Joshua Reynolds on the power of industry in 154–201 +art—Humble origin of eminent artists—Acquisition of +wealth not the ruling motive with artists—Michael +Angelo on riches—Patient labours of Michael Angelo and +Titian—West’s early success a disadvantage—Richard +Wilson and Zuccarelli—Sir Joshua Reynolds, Blake, +Bird, Gainsborough, and Hogarth, as boy +artists—Hogarth a keen observer—Banks and +Mulready—Claude Lorraine and Turner: their +indefatigable industry—Perrier and Jacques Callot and +their visits to Rome—Callot and the gipsies—Benvenuto +Cellini, goldsmith and musician: his ambition to +excel—Casting of his statue of Perseus—Nicolas +Poussin, a sedulous student and +worker—Duquesnoi—Poussin’s fame—Ary Scheffer: his +hindrances and success—John Flaxman: his genius and +perseverance—His brave wife—Their visit to +Rome—Francis Chantrey: his industry and energy—David +Wilkie and William Etty, unflagging workers—Privations +endured by artists—Martin—Pugin—George Kemp, architect +of the Scott monument—John Gibson, Robert Thorburn, +Noel Paton—James Sharples the blacksmith artist: his +autobiography—Industry of musicians—Handel, Haydn, +Beethoven, Bach, Meyerbeer—Dr. Arne—William Jackson +the self-taught composer + CHAPTER VII. + + INDUSTRY AND THE PEERAGE. +The peerage fed from the industrial ranks—Fall of old 202–222 +families: Bohuns, Mortimers, and Plantagenets—The +peerage comparatively modern—Peerages originating with +traders and merchants—Richard Foley, nailmaker, +founder of the Foley peerage—Adventurous career of +William Phipps, founder of the Normanby peerage: his +recovery of sunken treasure—Sir William Petty, founder +of the Lansdowne peerage—Jedediah Strutt, founder of +the Belper peerage—William and Edward Strutt—Naval and +Military peers—Peerages founded by lawyers—Lords +Tenterden and Campbell—Lord Eldon: his early struggles +and eventual success—Baron Langdale—Rewards of +perseverance + CHAPTER VIII. + + ENERGY AND COURAGE. +Energy characteristic of the Teutonic race—The 223–262 +foundations of strength of character—Force of +purpose—Concentration—Courageous working—Words of Hugh +Miller and Fowell Buxton—Power and freedom of +will—Words of Lamennais—Suwarrow—Napoleon and +“glory”—Wellington and “duty”—Promptitude in +action—Energy displayed by the British in India—Warren +Hastings—Sir Charles Napier: his adventure with the +Indian swordsman—The rebellion in India—The +Lawrences—Nicholson—The siege of Delhi—Captain +Hodson—Missionary labourers—Francis Xavier’s missions +in the East—John Williams—Dr. Livingstone—John +Howard—Jonas Hanway: his career—The philanthropic +labours of Granville Sharp—Position of slaves in +England—Result of Sharp’s efforts—Clarkson’s +labours—Fowell Buxton: his resolute purpose and +energy—Abolition of slavery + CHAPTER IX. + + MEN OF BUSINESS. +Hazlitt’s definition of the man of business—The chief 263–289 +requisite qualities—Men of genius men of +business—Shakespeare, Chaucer, Spenser, Milton, +Newton, Cowper, Wordsworth, Scott, Ricardo, Grote, J. +S. Mill—Labour and application necessary to +success—Lord Melbourne’s advice—The school of +difficulty a good school—Conditions of success in +Law—The industrious architect—The salutary influence +of work—Consequences of contempt for arithmetic—Dr. +Johnson on the alleged injustice of “the +world”—Washington Irving’s views—Practical qualities +necessary in business—Importance of accuracy—Charles +James Fox—Method—Richard Cecil and De Witt: their +despatch of business—Value of time—Sir Walter Scott’s +advice—Promptitude—Economy of +time—Punctuality—Firmness—Tact—Napoleon and Wellington +as men of business—Napoleon’s attention to details—The +‘Napoleon Correspondence’—Wellington’s business +faculty—Wellington in the Peninsula—“Honesty the best +policy”—Trade tries character—Dishonest gains—David +Barclay a model man of business + CHAPTER X. + + MONEY—ITS USE AND ABUSE. +The right use of money a test of wisdom—The virtue of 290–313 +self-denial—Self-imposed taxes—Economy necessary to +independence—Helplessness of the improvident—Frugality +an important public question—Counsels of Richard +Cobden and John Bright—The bondage of the +improvident—Independence attainable by working +men—Francis Horner’s advice from his father—Robert +Burns—Living within the means—Bacon’s +maxim—Wasters—Running into debt—Haydon’s +debts—Fichte—Dr. Johnson on debt—John Locke—The Duke +of Wellington on debt—Washington—Earl St. Vincent: his +protested bill—Joseph Hume on living too high—Ambition +after gentility—Napier’s order to his officers in +India—Resistance to temptation—Hugh Miller’s case—High +standard of life necessary—Proverbs on money-making +and thrift—Thomas Wright and the reclamation of +criminals—Mere money-making—John Foster—Riches no +proof of worth—All honest industry honourable—The +power of money over-estimated—Joseph Brotherton—True +Respectability—Lord Collingwood + CHAPTER XI. + + SELF-CULTURE—FACILITIES AND DIFFICULTIES. +Sir W. Scott and Sir B. Brodie on self-culture—Dr. 314–359 +Arnold’s spirit—Active employment salutary—Malthus’s +advice to his son—Importance of physical +health—Hodson, of “Hodson’s Horse”—Dr. Channing—Early +labour—Training in use of tools—Healthiness of great +men—Sir Walter Scott’s athletic sports—Barrow, Fuller, +Clarke—Labour conquers all things—Words of Chatterton, +Ferguson, Stone, Drew—Well-directed labour—Opinions of +Sir Joshua Reynolds, Fowell Buxton, Dr. Ross, F. +Horner, Loyola, and Lord St. Leonards—Thoroughness, +accuracy, decision, and promptitude—The virtue of +patient labour—The mischievous effects of “cramming” +in labour-saving processes and multifarious +reading—The right use of knowledge—Books may impart +learning, but well-applied knowledge and experience +only exhibit wisdom—The Magna Charta men—Brindley, +Stephenson, Hunter, and others, not book-learned yet +great—Self-respect—Jean Paul Richter—Knowledge as a +means of rising—Base views of the value of +knowledge—Ideas of Bacon and Southey—Douglas Jerrold +on comic literature—Danger of immoderate love of +pleasure—Benjamin Constant: his high thinking and low +living—Thierry: his noble character—Coleridge and +Southey—Robert Nicoll on Coleridge—Charles James Fox +on perseverance—The wisdom and strength acquired +through failure—Hunter, Rossini, Davy, Mendelssohn—The +uses of difficulty and adversity—Lyndhurst, +D’Alembert, Carissimi, Reynolds, and Henry Clay on +persistency—Curran on honest poverty—Struggles with +difficulties: Alexander Murray, William Chambers, +Cobbet—The French stonemason turned Professor—Sir +Samuel Romilly as a self-cultivator—John Leyden’s +perseverance—Professor Lee: his perseverance and his +attainments as a linguist—Late learners: Spelman, +Franklin, Dryden, Scott, Boccaccio, Arnold, and +others—Illustrious dunces: Generals Grant, Stonewall +Jackson, John Howard, Davy, and others—Story of a +dunce—Success depends on perseverance + CHAPTER XII. + + EXAMPLE—MODELS. +Example a potent instructor—Influence of 360–381 +conduct—Parental example—All acts have their train of +consequences—Disraeli on Cobden—Words of Babbage—Human +responsibility—Every person owes a good example to +others—Doing, not saying—Mrs. Chisholm—Dr. Guthrie and +John Pounds—Good models of conduct—The company of our +betters—Francis Horner’s views on personal +intercourse—The Marquis of Lansdowne and +Malesherbes—Fowell Buxton and the Gurney +family—Personal influence of John Sterling—Influence +of artistic genius upon others—Example of the brave an +inspiration to the timid—Biography valuable as forming +high models of character—Lives influenced by +biography—Romilly, Franklin, Drew, Alfieri, Loyola, +Wolff, Horner, Reynolds—Examples of cheerfulness—Dr. +Arnold’s influence over others—Career of Sir John +Sinclair + CHAPTER XIII. + + CHARACTER—THE TRUE GENTLEMAN. +Character a man’s best possession—Character of Francis 382–408 +Horner—Franklin—Character is power—The higher +qualities of character—Lord Erskine’s rules of +conduct—A high standard of life +necessary—Truthfulness—Wellington’s character of +Peel—Be what you seem—Integrity and honesty of +action—Importance of habits—Habits constitute +character—Growth of habit in youth—Words of Robertson +of Brighton—Manners and morals—Civility and +kindness—Anecdote of Abernethy—True +politeness—Great-hearted men of no exclusive rank or +class—William and Charles Grant, the “Brothers +Cheeryble”—The true gentleman—Lord Edward +Fitzgerald—Honour, probity, rectitude—The gentleman +will not be bribed—Anecdotes of Hanway, Wellington, +Wellesley, and Sir C. Napier—The poor in purse may be +rich in spirit—A noble peasant—Intrepidity of Deal +boatmen—Anecdotes of the Emperor of Austria and of two +English navvies—Truth makes the success of the +gentleman—Courage and gentleness—Gentlemen in +India—Outram, Henry Lawrence—Lord Clyde—The private +soldiers at Agra—The wreck of the _Birkenhead_—Use of +power, the test of the Gentleman—Sir Ralph +Abercrombie—Fuller’s character of Sir Francis Drake + + + + +CHAPTER I. +SELF-HELP—NATIONAL AND INDIVIDUAL. + + + “The worth of a State, in the long run, is the worth of the + individuals composing it.”—_J. S. Mill_. + + “We put too much faith in systems, and look too little to men.”—_B. + Disraeli_. + +“HEAVEN helps those who help themselves” is a well-tried maxim, embodying +in a small compass the results of vast human experience. The spirit of +self-help is the root of all genuine growth in the individual; and, +exhibited in the lives of many, it constitutes the true source of +national vigour and strength. Help from without is often enfeebling in +its effects, but help from within invariably invigorates. Whatever is +done _for_ men or classes, to a certain extent takes away the stimulus +and necessity of doing for themselves; and where men are subjected to +over-guidance and over-government, the inevitable tendency is to render +them comparatively helpless. + +Even the best institutions can give a man no active help. Perhaps the +most they can do is, to leave him free to develop himself and improve his +individual condition. But in all times men have been prone to believe +that their happiness and well-being were to be secured by means of +institutions rather than by their own conduct. Hence the value of +legislation as an agent in human advancement has usually been much +over-estimated. To constitute the millionth part of a Legislature, by +voting for one or two men once in three or five years, however +conscientiously this duty may be performed, can exercise but little +active influence upon any man’s life and character. Moreover, it is +every day becoming more clearly understood, that the function of +Government is negative and restrictive, rather than positive and active; +being resolvable principally into protection—protection of life, liberty, +and property. Laws, wisely administered, will secure men in the +enjoyment of the fruits of their labour, whether of mind or body, at a +comparatively small personal sacrifice; but no laws, however stringent, +can make the idle industrious, the thriftless provident, or the drunken +sober. Such reforms can only be effected by means of individual action, +economy, and self-denial; by better habits, rather than by greater +rights. + +The Government of a nation itself is usually found to be but the reflex +of the individuals composing it. The Government that is ahead of the +people will inevitably be dragged down to their level, as the Government +that is behind them will in the long run be dragged up. In the order of +nature, the collective character of a nation will as surely find its +befitting results in its law and government, as water finds its own +level. The noble people will be nobly ruled, and the ignorant and +corrupt ignobly. Indeed all experience serves to prove that the worth +and strength of a State depend far less upon the form of its institutions +than upon the character of its men. For the nation is only an aggregate +of individual conditions, and civilization itself is but a question of +the personal improvement of the men, women, and children of whom society +is composed. + +National progress is the sum of individual industry, energy, and +uprightness, as national decay is of individual idleness, selfishness, +and vice. What we are accustomed to decry as great social evils, will, +for the most part, be found to be but the outgrowth of man’s own +perverted life; and though we may endeavour to cut them down and +extirpate them by means of Law, they will only spring up again with fresh +luxuriance in some other form, unless the conditions of personal life and +character are radically improved. If this view be correct, then it +follows that the highest patriotism and philanthropy consist, not so much +in altering laws and modifying institutions, as in helping and +stimulating men to elevate and improve themselves by their own free and +independent individual action. + +It may be of comparatively little consequence how a man is governed from +without, whilst everything depends upon how he governs himself from +within. The greatest slave is not he who is ruled by a despot, great +though that evil be, but he who is the thrall of his own moral ignorance, +selfishness, and vice. Nations who are thus enslaved at heart cannot be +freed by any mere changes of masters or of institutions; and so long as +the fatal delusion prevails, that liberty solely depends upon and +consists in government, so long will such changes, no matter at what cost +they may be effected, have as little practical and lasting result as the +shifting of the figures in a phantasmagoria. The solid foundations of +liberty must rest upon individual character; which is also the only sure +guarantee for social security and national progress. John Stuart Mill +truly observes that “even despotism does not produce its worst effects so +long as individuality exists under it; and whatever crushes individuality +_is_ despotism, by whatever name it be called.” + +Old fallacies as to human progress are constantly turning up. Some call +for Cæsars, others for Nationalities, and others for Acts of Parliament. +We are to wait for Cæsars, and when they are found, “happy the people who +recognise and follow them.” {4} This doctrine shortly means, everything +_for_ the people, nothing _by_ them,—a doctrine which, if taken as a +guide, must, by destroying the free conscience of a community, speedily +prepare the way for any form of despotism. Cæsarism is human idolatry in +its worst form—a worship of mere power, as degrading in its effects as +the worship of mere wealth would be. A far healthier doctrine to +inculcate among the nations would be that of Self-Help; and so soon as it +is thoroughly understood and carried into action, Cæsarism will be no +more. The two principles are directly antagonistic; and what Victor Hugo +said of the Pen and the Sword alike applies to them, “Ceci tuera cela.” +[This will kill that.] + +The power of Nationalities and Acts of Parliament is also a prevalent +superstition. What William Dargan, one of Ireland’s truest patriots, +said at the closing of the first Dublin Industrial Exhibition, may well +be quoted now. “To tell the truth,” he said, “I never heard the word +independence mentioned that my own country and my own fellow townsmen did +not occur to my mind. I have heard a great deal about the independence +that we were to get from this, that, and the other place, and of the +great expectations we were to have from persons from other countries +coming amongst us. Whilst I value as much as any man the great +advantages that must result to us from that intercourse, I have always +been deeply impressed with the feeling that our industrial independence +is dependent upon ourselves. I believe that with simple industry and +careful exactness in the utilization of our energies, we never had a +fairer chance nor a brighter prospect than the present. We have made a +step, but perseverance is the great agent of success; and if we but go on +zealously, I believe in my conscience that in a short period we shall +arrive at a position of equal comfort, of equal happiness, and of equal +independence, with that of any other people.” + +All nations have been made what they are by the thinking and the working +of many generations of men. Patient and persevering labourers in all +ranks and conditions of life, cultivators of the soil and explorers of +the mine, inventors and discoverers, manufacturers, mechanics and +artisans, poets, philosophers, and politicians, all have contributed +towards the grand result, one generation building upon another’s labours, +and carrying them forward to still higher stages. This constant +succession of noble workers—the artisans of civilisation—has served to +create order out of chaos in industry, science, and art; and the living +race has thus, in the course of nature, become the inheritor of the rich +estate provided by the skill and industry of our forefathers, which is +placed in our hands to cultivate, and to hand down, not only unimpaired +but improved, to our successors. + +The spirit of self-help, as exhibited in the energetic action of +individuals, has in all times been a marked feature in the English +character, and furnishes the true measure of our power as a nation. +Rising above the heads of the mass, there were always to be found a +series of individuals distinguished beyond others, who commanded the +public homage. But our progress has also been owing to multitudes of +smaller and less known men. Though only the generals’ names may be +remembered in the history of any great campaign, it has been in a great +measure through the individual valour and heroism of the privates that +victories have been won. And life, too, is “a soldiers’ battle,”—men in +the ranks having in all times been amongst the greatest of workers. Many +are the lives of men unwritten, which have nevertheless as powerfully +influenced civilisation and progress as the more fortunate Great whose +names are recorded in biography. Even the humblest person, who sets +before his fellows an example of industry, sobriety, and upright honesty +of purpose in life, has a present as well as a future influence upon the +well-being of his country; for his life and character pass unconsciously +into the lives of others, and propagate good example for all time to +come. + +Daily experience shows that it is energetic individualism which produces +the most powerful effects upon the life and action of others, and really +constitutes the best practical education. Schools, academies, and +colleges, give but the merest beginnings of culture in comparison with +it. Far more influential is the life-education daily given in our homes, +in the streets, behind counters, in workshops, at the loom and the +plough, in counting-houses and manufactories, and in the busy haunts of +men. This is that finishing instruction as members of society, which +Schiller designated “the education of the human race,” consisting in +action, conduct, self-culture, self-control,—all that tends to discipline +a man truly, and fit him for the proper performance of the duties and +business of life,—a kind of education not to be learnt from books, or +acquired by any amount of mere literary training. With his usual weight +of words Bacon observes, that “Studies teach not their own use; but that +is a wisdom without them, and above them, won by observation;” a remark +that holds true of actual life, as well as of the cultivation of the +intellect itself. For all experience serves to illustrate and enforce +the lesson, that a man perfects himself by work more than by +reading,—that it is life rather than literature, action rather than +study, and character rather than biography, which tend perpetually to +renovate mankind. + +Biographies of great, but especially of good men, are nevertheless most +instructive and useful, as helps, guides, and incentives to others. Some +of the best are almost equivalent to gospels—teaching high living, high +thinking, and energetic action for their own and the world’s good. The +valuable examples which they furnish of the power of self-help, of +patient purpose, resolute working, and steadfast integrity, issuing in +the formation of truly noble and manly character, exhibit in language not +to be misunderstood, what it is in the power of each to accomplish for +himself; and eloquently illustrate the efficacy of self-respect and +self-reliance in enabling men of even the humblest rank to work out for +themselves an honourable competency and a solid reputation. + +Great men of science, literature, and art—apostles of great thoughts and +lords of the great heart—have belonged to no exclusive class nor rank in +life. They have come alike from colleges, workshops, and +farmhouses,—from the huts of poor men and the mansions of the rich. Some +of God’s greatest apostles have come from “the ranks.” The poorest have +sometimes taken the highest places; nor have difficulties apparently the +most insuperable proved obstacles in their way. Those very difficulties, +in many instances, would ever seem to have been their best helpers, by +evoking their powers of labour and endurance, and stimulating into life +faculties which might otherwise have lain dormant. The instances of +obstacles thus surmounted, and of triumphs thus achieved, are indeed so +numerous, as almost to justify the proverb that “with Will one can do +anything.” Take, for instance, the remarkable fact, that from the +barber’s shop came Jeremy Taylor, the most poetical of divines; Sir +Richard Arkwright, the inventor of the spinning-jenny and founder of the +cotton manufacture; Lord Tenterden, one of the most distinguished of Lord +Chief Justices; and Turner, the greatest among landscape painters. + +No one knows to a certainty what Shakespeare was; but it is +unquestionable that he sprang from a humble rank. His father was a +butcher and grazier; and Shakespeare himself is supposed to have been in +early life a woolcomber; whilst others aver that he was an usher in a +school and afterwards a scrivener’s clerk. He truly seems to have been +“not one, but all mankind’s epitome.” For such is the accuracy of his +sea phrases that a naval writer alleges that he must have been a sailor; +whilst a clergyman infers, from internal evidence in his writings, that +he was probably a parson’s clerk; and a distinguished judge of +horse-flesh insists that he must have been a horse-dealer. Shakespeare +was certainly an actor, and in the course of his life “played many +parts,” gathering his wonderful stores of knowledge from a wide field of +experience and observation. In any event, he must have been a close +student and a hard worker; and to this day his writings continue to +exercise a powerful influence on the formation of English character. + +The common class of day labourers has given us Brindley the engineer, +Cook the navigator, and Burns the poet. Masons and bricklayers can boast +of Ben Jonson, who worked at the building of Lincoln’s Inn, with a trowel +in his hand and a book in his pocket, Edwards and Telford the engineers, +Hugh Miller the geologist, and Allan Cunningham the writer and sculptor; +whilst among distinguished carpenters we find the names of Inigo Jones +the architect, Harrison the chronometer-maker, John Hunter the +physiologist, Romney and Opie the painters, Professor Lee the +Orientalist, and John Gibson the sculptor. + +From the weaver class have sprung Simson the mathematician, Bacon the +sculptor, the two Milners, Adam Walker, John Foster, Wilson the +ornithologist, Dr. Livingstone the missionary traveller, and Tannahill +the poet. Shoemakers have given us Sir Cloudesley Shovel the great +Admiral, Sturgeon the electrician, Samuel Drew the essayist, Gifford the +editor of the ‘Quarterly Review,’ Bloomfield the poet, and William Carey +the missionary; whilst Morrison, another laborious missionary, was a +maker of shoe-lasts. Within the last few years, a profound naturalist +has been discovered in the person of a shoemaker at Banff, named Thomas +Edwards, who, while maintaining himself by his trade, has devoted his +leisure to the study of natural science in all its branches, his +researches in connexion with the smaller crustaceæ having been rewarded +by the discovery of a new species, to which the name of “Praniza +Edwardsii” has been given by naturalists. + +Nor have tailors been undistinguished. John Stow, the historian, worked +at the trade during some part of his life. Jackson, the painter, made +clothes until he reached manhood. The brave Sir John Hawkswood, who so +greatly distinguished himself at Poictiers, and was knighted by Edward +III. for his valour, was in early life apprenticed to a London tailor. +Admiral Hobson, who broke the boom at Vigo in 1702, belonged to the same +calling. He was working as a tailor’s apprentice near Bonchurch, in the +Isle of Wight, when the news flew through the village that a squadron of +men-of-war was sailing off the island. He sprang from the shopboard, and +ran down with his comrades to the beach, to gaze upon the glorious sight. +The boy was suddenly inflamed with the ambition to be a sailor; and +springing into a boat, he rowed off to the squadron, gained the admiral’s +ship, and was accepted as a volunteer. Years after, he returned to his +native village full of honours, and dined off bacon and eggs in the +cottage where he had worked as an apprentice. But the greatest tailor of +all is unquestionably Andrew Johnson, the present President of the United +States—a man of extraordinary force of character and vigour of intellect. +In his great speech at Washington, when describing himself as having +begun his political career as an alderman, and run through all the +branches of the legislature, a voice in the crowd cried, “From a tailor +up.” It was characteristic of Johnson to take the intended sarcasm in +good part, and even to turn it to account. “Some gentleman says I have +been a tailor. That does not disconcert me in the least; for when I was +a tailor I had the reputation of being a good one, and making close fits; +I was always punctual with my customers, and always did good work.” + +Cardinal Wolsey, De Foe, Akenside, and Kirke White were the sons of +butchers; Bunyan was a tinker, and Joseph Lancaster a basket-maker. +Among the great names identified with the invention of the steam-engine +are those of Newcomen, Watt, and Stephenson; the first a blacksmith, the +second a maker of mathematical instruments, and the third an +engine-fireman. Huntingdon the preacher was originally a coalheaver, and +Bewick, the father of wood-engraving, a coalminer. Dodsley was a +footman, and Holcroft a groom. Baffin the navigator began his seafaring +career as a man before the mast, and Sir Cloudesley Shovel as a +cabin-boy. Herschel played the oboe in a military band. Chantrey was a +journeyman carver, Etty a journeyman printer, and Sir Thomas Lawrence the +son of a tavern-keeper. Michael Faraday, the son of a blacksmith, was in +early life apprenticed to a bookbinder, and worked at that trade until he +reached his twenty-second year: he now occupies the very first rank as a +philosopher, excelling even his master, Sir Humphry Davy, in the art of +lucidly expounding the most difficult and abstruse points in natural +science. + +Among those who have given the greatest impulse to the sublime science of +astronomy, we find Copernicus, the son of a Polish baker; Kepler, the son +of a German public-house keeper, and himself the “garçon de cabaret;” +d’Alembert, a foundling picked up one winter’s night on the steps of the +church of St. Jean le Rond at Paris, and brought up by the wife of a +glazier; and Newton and Laplace, the one the son of a small freeholder +near Grantham, the other the son of a poor peasant of Beaumont-en-Auge, +near Honfleur. Notwithstanding their comparatively adverse circumstances +in early life, these distinguished men achieved a solid and enduring +reputation by the exercise of their genius, which all the wealth in the +world could not have purchased. The very possession of wealth might +indeed have proved an obstacle greater even than the humble means to +which they were born. The father of Lagrange, the astronomer and +mathematician, held the office of Treasurer of War at Turin; but having +ruined himself by speculations, his family were reduced to comparative +poverty. To this circumstance Lagrange was in after life accustomed +partly to attribute his own fame and happiness. “Had I been rich,” said +he, “I should probably not have become a mathematician.” + +The sons of clergymen and ministers of religion generally, have +particularly distinguished themselves in our country’s history. Amongst +them we find the names of Drake and Nelson, celebrated in naval heroism; +of Wollaston, Young, Playfair, and Bell, in science; of Wren, Reynolds, +Wilson, and Wilkie, in art; of Thurlow and Campbell, in law; and of +Addison, Thomson, Goldsmith, Coleridge, and Tennyson, in literature. +Lord Hardinge, Colonel Edwardes, and Major Hodson, so honourably known in +Indian warfare, were also the sons of clergymen. Indeed, the empire of +England in India was won and held chiefly by men of the middle class—such +as Clive, Warren Hastings, and their successors—men for the most part +bred in factories and trained to habits of business. + +Among the sons of attorneys we find Edmund Burke, Smeaton the engineer, +Scott and Wordsworth, and Lords Somers, Hardwick, and Dunning. Sir +William Blackstone was the posthumous son of a silk-mercer. Lord +Gifford’s father was a grocer at Dover; Lord Denman’s a physician; judge +Talfourd’s a country brewer; and Lord Chief Baron Pollock’s a celebrated +saddler at Charing Cross. Layard, the discoverer of the monuments of +Nineveh, was an articled clerk in a London solicitor’s office; and Sir +William Armstrong, the inventor of hydraulic machinery and of the +Armstrong ordnance, was also trained to the law and practised for some +time as an attorney. Milton was the son of a London scrivener, and Pope +and Southey were the sons of linendrapers. Professor Wilson was the son +of a Paisley manufacturer, and Lord Macaulay of an African merchant. +Keats was a druggist, and Sir Humphry Davy a country apothecary’s +apprentice. Speaking of himself, Davy once said, “What I am I have made +myself: I say this without vanity, and in pure simplicity of heart.” +Richard Owen, the Newton of Natural History, began life as a midshipman, +and did not enter upon the line of scientific research in which he has +since become so distinguished, until comparatively late in life. He laid +the foundations of his great knowledge while occupied in cataloguing the +magnificent museum accumulated by the industry of John Hunter, a work +which occupied him at the College of Surgeons during a period of about +ten years. + +Foreign not less than English biography abounds in illustrations of men +who have glorified the lot of poverty by their labours and their genius. +In Art we find Claude, the son of a pastrycook; Geefs, of a baker; +Leopold Robert, of a watchmaker; and Haydn, of a wheelwright; whilst +Daguerre was a scene-painter at the Opera. The father of Gregory VII. +was a carpenter; of Sextus V., a shepherd; and of Adrian VI., a poor +bargeman. When a boy, Adrian, unable to pay for a light by which to +study, was accustomed to prepare his lessons by the light of the lamps in +the streets and the church porches, exhibiting a degree of patience and +industry which were the certain forerunners of his future distinction. +Of like humble origin were Hauy, the mineralogist, who was the son of a +weaver of Saint-Just; Hautefeuille, the mechanician, of a baker at +Orleans; Joseph Fourier, the mathematician, of a tailor at Auxerre; +Durand, the architect, of a Paris shoemaker; and Gesner, the naturalist, +of a skinner or worker in hides, at Zurich. This last began his career +under all the disadvantages attendant on poverty, sickness, and domestic +calamity; none of which, however, were sufficient to damp his courage or +hinder his progress. His life was indeed an eminent illustration of the +truth of the saying, that those who have most to do and are willing to +work, will find the most time. Pierre Ramus was another man of like +character. He was the son of poor parents in Picardy, and when a boy was +employed to tend sheep. But not liking the occupation he ran away to +Paris. After encountering much misery, he succeeded in entering the +College of Navarre as a servant. The situation, however, opened for him +the road to learning, and he shortly became one of the most distinguished +men of his time. + +The chemist Vauquelin was the son of a peasant of Saint-André-d’Herbetot, +in the Calvados. When a boy at school, though poorly clad, he was full +of bright intelligence; and the master, who taught him to read and write, +when praising him for his diligence, used to say, “Go on, my boy; work, +study, Colin, and one day you will go as well dressed as the parish +churchwarden!” A country apothecary who visited the school, admired the +robust boy’s arms, and offered to take him into his laboratory to pound +his drugs, to which Vauquelin assented, in the hope of being able to +continue his lessons. But the apothecary would not permit him to spend +any part of his time in learning; and on ascertaining this, the youth +immediately determined to quit his service. He therefore left +Saint-André and took the road for Paris with his havresac on his back. +Arrived there, he searched for a place as apothecary’s boy, but could not +find one. Worn out by fatigue and destitution, Vauquelin fell ill, and +in that state was taken to the hospital, where he thought he should die. +But better things were in store for the poor boy. He recovered, and +again proceeded in his search of employment, which he at length found +with an apothecary. Shortly after, he became known to Fourcroy the +eminent chemist, who was so pleased with the youth that he made him his +private secretary; and many years after, on the death of that great +philosopher, Vauquelin succeeded him as Professor of Chemistry. Finally, +in 1829, the electors of the district of Calvados appointed him their +representative in the Chamber of Deputies, and he re-entered in triumph +the village which he had left so many years before, so poor and so +obscure. + +England has no parallel instances to show, of promotions from the ranks +of the army to the highest military offices; which have been so common in +France since the first Revolution. “La carrière ouverte aux talents” has +there received many striking illustrations, which would doubtless be +matched among ourselves were the road to promotion as open. Hoche, +Humbert, and Pichegru, began their respective careers as private +soldiers. Hoche, while in the King’s army, was accustomed to embroider +waistcoats to enable him to earn money wherewith to purchase books on +military science. Humbert was a scapegrace when a youth; at sixteen he +ran away from home, and was by turns servant to a tradesman at Nancy, a +workman at Lyons, and a hawker of rabbit skins. In 1792, he enlisted as +a volunteer; and in a year he was general of brigade. Kleber, Lefèvre, +Suchet, Victor, Lannes, Soult, Massena, St. Cyr, D’Erlon, Murat, +Augereau, Bessières, and Ney, all rose from the ranks. In some cases +promotion was rapid, in others it was slow. Saint Cyr, the son of a +tanner of Toul, began life as an actor, after which he enlisted in the +Chasseurs, and was promoted to a captaincy within a year. Victor, Duc de +Belluno, enlisted in the Artillery in 1781: during the events preceding +the Revolution he was discharged; but immediately on the outbreak of war +he re-enlisted, and in the course of a few months his intrepidity and +ability secured his promotion as Adjutant-Major and chief of battalion. +Murat, “le beau sabreur,” was the son of a village innkeeper in Perigord, +where he looked after the horses. He first enlisted in a regiment of +Chasseurs, from which he was dismissed for insubordination: but again +enlisting, he shortly rose to the rank of Colonel. Ney enlisted at +eighteen in a hussar regiment, and gradually advanced step by step: +Kleber soon discovered his merits, surnaming him “The Indefatigable,” and +promoted him to be Adjutant-General when only twenty-five. On the other +hand, Soult {15} was six years from the date of his enlistment before he +reached the rank of sergeant. But Soult’s advancement was rapid compared +with that of Massena, who served for fourteen years before he was made +sergeant; and though he afterwards rose successively, step by step, to +the grades of Colonel, General of Division, and Marshal, he declared that +the post of sergeant was the step which of all others had cost him the +most labour to win. Similar promotions from the ranks, in the French +army, have continued down to our own day. Changarnier entered the King’s +bodyguard as a private in 1815. Marshal Bugeaud served four years in the +ranks, after which he was made an officer. Marshal Randon, the present +French Minister of War, began his military career as a drummer boy; and +in the portrait of him in the gallery at Versailles, his hand rests upon +a drum-head, the picture being thus painted at his own request. +Instances such as these inspire French soldiers with enthusiasm for their +service, as each private feels that he may possibly carry the baton of a +marshal in his knapsack. + +The instances of men, in this and other countries, who, by dint of +persevering application and energy, have raised themselves from the +humblest ranks of industry to eminent positions of usefulness and +influence in society, are indeed so numerous that they have long ceased +to be regarded as exceptional. Looking at some of the more remarkable, +it might almost be said that early encounter with difficulty and adverse +circumstances was the necessary and indispensable condition of success. +The British House of Commons has always contained a considerable number +of such self-raised men—fitting representatives of the industrial +character of the people; and it is to the credit of our Legislature that +they have been welcomed and honoured there. When the late Joseph +Brotherton, member for Salford, in the course of the discussion on the +Ten Hours Bill, detailed with true pathos the hardships and fatigues to +which he had been subjected when working as a factory boy in a cotton +mill, and described the resolution which he had then formed, that if ever +it was in his power he would endeavour to ameliorate the condition of +that class, Sir James Graham rose immediately after him, and declared, +amidst the cheers of the House, that he did not before know that Mr. +Brotherton’s origin had been so humble, but that it rendered him more +proud than he had ever before been of the House of Commons, to think that +a person risen from that condition should be able to sit side by side, on +equal terms, with the hereditary gentry of the land. + +The late Mr. Fox, member for Oldham, was accustomed to introduce his +recollections of past times with the words, “when I was working as a +weaver boy at Norwich;” and there are other members of parliament, still +living, whose origin has been equally humble. Mr. Lindsay, the +well-known ship owner, until recently member for Sunderland, once told +the simple story of his life to the electors of Weymouth, in answer to an +attack made upon him by his political opponents. He had been left an +orphan at fourteen, and when he left Glasgow for Liverpool to push his +way in the world, not being able to pay the usual fare, the captain of +the steamer agreed to take his labour in exchange, and the boy worked his +passage by trimming the coals in the coal hole. At Liverpool he remained +for seven weeks before he could obtain employment, during which time he +lived in sheds and fared hardly; until at last he found shelter on board +a West Indiaman. He entered as a boy, and before he was nineteen, by +steady good conduct he had risen to the command of a ship. At +twenty-three he retired from the sea, and settled on shore, after which +his progress was rapid “he had prospered,” he said, “by steady industry, +by constant work, and by ever keeping in view the great principle of +doing to others as you would be done by.” + +The career of Mr. William Jackson, of Birkenhead, the present member for +North Derbyshire, bears considerable resemblance to that of Mr. Lindsay. +His father, a surgeon at Lancaster, died, leaving a family of eleven +children, of whom William Jackson was the seventh son. The elder boys +had been well educated while the father lived, but at his death the +younger members had to shift for themselves. William, when under twelve +years old, was taken from school, and put to hard work at a ship’s side +from six in the morning till nine at night. His master falling ill, the +boy was taken into the counting-house, where he had more leisure. This +gave him an opportunity of reading, and having obtained access to a set +of the ‘Encyclopædia Britannica,’ he read the volumes through from A to +Z, partly by day, but chiefly at night. He afterwards put himself to a +trade, was diligent, and succeeded in it. Now he has ships sailing on +almost every sea, and holds commercial relations with nearly every +country on the globe. + +Among like men of the same class may be ranked the late Richard Cobden, +whose start in life was equally humble. The son of a small farmer at +Midhurst in Sussex, he was sent at an early age to London and employed as +a boy in a warehouse in the City. He was diligent, well conducted, and +eager for information. His master, a man of the old school, warned him +against too much reading; but the boy went on in his own course, storing +his mind with the wealth found in books. He was promoted from one +position of trust to another—became a traveller for his house—secured a +large connection, and eventually started in business as a calico printer +at Manchester. Taking an interest in public questions, more especially +in popular education, his attention was gradually drawn to the subject of +the Corn Laws, to the repeal of which he may be said to have devoted his +fortune and his life. It may be mentioned as a curious fact that the +first speech he delivered in public was a total failure. But he had +great perseverance, application, and energy; and with persistency and +practice, he became at length one of the most persuasive and effective of +public speakers, extorting the disinterested eulogy of even Sir Robert +Peel himself. M. Drouyn de Lhuys, the French Ambassador, has eloquently +said of Mr. Cobden, that he was “a living proof of what merit, +perseverance, and labour can accomplish; one of the most complete +examples of those men who, sprung from the humblest ranks of society, +raise themselves to the highest rank in public estimation by the effect +of their own worth and of their personal services; finally, one of the +rarest examples of the solid qualities inherent in the English +character.” + +In all these cases, strenuous individual application was the price paid +for distinction; excellence of any sort being invariably placed beyond +the reach of indolence. It is the diligent hand and head alone that +maketh rich—in self-culture, growth in wisdom, and in business. Even +when men are born to wealth and high social position, any solid +reputation which they may individually achieve can only be attained by +energetic application; for though an inheritance of acres may be +bequeathed, an inheritance of knowledge and wisdom cannot. The wealthy +man may pay others for doing his work for him, but it is impossible to +get his thinking done for him by another, or to purchase any kind of +self-culture. Indeed, the doctrine that excellence in any pursuit is +only to be achieved by laborious application, holds as true in the case +of the man of wealth as in that of Drew and Gifford, whose only school +was a cobbler’s stall, or Hugh Miller, whose only college was a Cromarty +stone quarry. + +Riches and ease, it is perfectly clear, are not necessary for man’s +highest culture, else had not the world been so largely indebted in all +times to those who have sprung from the humbler ranks. An easy and +luxurious existence does not train men to effort or encounter with +difficulty; nor does it awaken that consciousness of power which is so +necessary for energetic and effective action in life. Indeed, so far +from poverty being a misfortune, it may, by vigorous self-help, be +converted even into a blessing; rousing a man to that struggle with the +world in which, though some may purchase ease by degradation, the +right-minded and true-hearted find strength, confidence, and triumph. +Bacon says, “Men seem neither to understand their riches nor their +strength: of the former they believe greater things than they should; of +the latter much less. Self-reliance and self-denial will teach a man to +drink out of his own cistern, and eat his own sweet bread, and to learn +and labour truly to get his living, and carefully to expend the good +things committed to his trust.” + +Riches are so great a temptation to ease and self-indulgence, to which +men are by nature prone, that the glory is all the greater of those who, +born to ample fortunes, nevertheless take an active part in the work of +their generation—who “scorn delights and live laborious days.” It is to +the honour of the wealthier ranks in this country that they are not +idlers; for they do their fair share of the work of the state, and +usually take more than their fair share of its dangers. It was a fine +thing said of a subaltern officer in the Peninsular campaigns, observed +trudging alone through mud and mire by the side of his regiment, “There +goes 15,000_l._ a year!” and in our own day, the bleak slopes of +Sebastopol and the burning soil of India have borne witness to the like +noble self-denial and devotion on the part of our gentler classes; many a +gallant and noble fellow, of rank and estate, having risked his life, or +lost it, in one or other of those fields of action, in the service of his +country. + +Nor have the wealthier classes been undistinguished in the more peaceful +pursuits of philosophy and science. Take, for instance, the great names +of Bacon, the father of modern philosophy, and of Worcester, Boyle, +Cavendish, Talbot, and Rosse, in science. The last named may be regarded +as the great mechanic of the peerage; a man who, if he had not been born +a peer, would probably have taken the highest rank as an inventor. So +thorough is his knowledge of smith-work that he is said to have been +pressed on one occasion to accept the foremanship of a large workshop, by +a manufacturer to whom his rank was unknown. The great Rosse telescope, +of his own fabrication, is certainly the most extraordinary instrument of +the kind that has yet been constructed. + +But it is principally in the departments of politics and literature that +we find the most energetic labourers amongst our higher classes. Success +in these lines of action, as in all others, can only be achieved through +industry, practice, and study; and the great Minister, or parliamentary +leader, must necessarily be amongst the very hardest of workers. Such +was Palmerston; and such are Derby and Russell, Disraeli and Gladstone. +These men have had the benefit of no Ten Hours Bill, but have often, +during the busy season of Parliament, worked “double shift,” almost day +and night. One of the most illustrious of such workers in modern times +was unquestionably the late Sir Robert Peel. He possessed in an +extraordinary degree the power of continuous intellectual labour, nor did +he spare himself. His career, indeed, presented a remarkable example of +how much a man of comparatively moderate powers can accomplish by means +of assiduous application and indefatigable industry. During the forty +years that he held a seat in Parliament, his labours were prodigious. He +was a most conscientious man, and whatever he undertook to do, he did +thoroughly. All his speeches bear evidence of his careful study of +everything that had been spoken or written on the subject under +consideration. He was elaborate almost to excess; and spared no pains to +adapt himself to the various capacities of his audience. Withal, he +possessed much practical sagacity, great strength of purpose, and power +to direct the issues of action with steady hand and eye. In one respect +he surpassed most men: his principles broadened and enlarged with time; +and age, instead of contracting, only served to mellow and ripen his +nature. To the last he continued open to the reception of new views, +and, though many thought him cautious to excess, he did not allow himself +to fall into that indiscriminating admiration of the past, which is the +palsy of many minds similarly educated, and renders the old age of many +nothing but a pity. + +The indefatigable industry of Lord Brougham has become almost proverbial. +His public labours have extended over a period of upwards of sixty years, +during which he has ranged over many fields—of law, literature, politics, +and science,—and achieved distinction in them all. How he contrived it, +has been to many a mystery. Once, when Sir Samuel Romilly was requested +to undertake some new work, he excused himself by saying that he had no +time; “but,” he added, “go with it to that fellow Brougham, he seems to +have time for everything.” The secret of it was, that he never left a +minute unemployed; withal he possessed a constitution of iron. When +arrived at an age at which most men would have retired from the world to +enjoy their hard-earned leisure, perhaps to doze away their time in an +easy chair, Lord Brougham commenced and prosecuted a series of elaborate +investigations as to the laws of Light, and he submitted the results to +the most scientific audiences that Paris and London could muster. About +the same time, he was passing through the press his admirable sketches of +the ‘Men of Science and Literature of the Reign of George III.,’ and +taking his full share of the law business and the political discussions +in the House of Lords. Sydney Smith once recommended him to confine +himself to only the transaction of so much business as three strong men +could get through. But such was Brougham’s love of work—long become a +habit—that no amount of application seems to have been too great for him; +and such was his love of excellence, that it has been said of him that if +his station in life had been only that of a shoe-black, he would never +have rested satisfied until he had become the best shoe-black in England. + +Another hard-working man of the same class is Sir E. Bulwer Lytton. Few +writers have done more, or achieved higher distinction in various +walks—as a novelist, poet, dramatist, historian, essayist, orator, and +politician. He has worked his way step by step, disdainful of ease, and +animated throughout by the ardent desire to excel. On the score of mere +industry, there are few living English writers who have written so much, +and none that have produced so much of high quality. The industry of +Bulwer is entitled to all the greater praise that it has been entirely +self-imposed. To hunt, and shoot, and live at ease,—to frequent the +clubs and enjoy the opera, with the variety of London visiting and +sight-seeing during the “season,” and then off to the country mansion, +with its well-stocked preserves, and its thousand delightful out-door +pleasures,—to travel abroad, to Paris, Vienna, or Rome,—all this is +excessively attractive to a lover of pleasure and a man of fortune, and +by no means calculated to make him voluntarily undertake continuous +labour of any kind. Yet these pleasures, all within his reach, Bulwer +must, as compared with men born to similar estate, have denied himself in +assuming the position and pursuing the career of a literary man. Like +Byron, his first effort was poetical (‘Weeds and Wild Flowers’), and a +failure. His second was a novel (‘Falkland’), and it proved a failure +too. A man of weaker nerve would have dropped authorship; but Bulwer had +pluck and perseverance; and he worked on, determined to succeed. He was +incessantly industrious, read extensively, and from failure went +courageously onwards to success. ‘Pelham’ followed ‘Falkland’ within a +year, and the remainder of Bulwer’s literary life, now extending over a +period of thirty years, has been a succession of triumphs. + +Mr. Disraeli affords a similar instance of the power of industry and +application in working out an eminent public career. His first +achievements were, like Bulwer’s, in literature; and he reached success +only through a succession of failures. His ‘Wondrous Tale of Alroy’ and +‘Revolutionary Epic’ were laughed at, and regarded as indications of +literary lunacy. But he worked on in other directions, and his +‘Coningsby,’ ‘Sybil,’ and ‘Tancred,’ proved the sterling stuff of which +he was made. As an orator too, his first appearance in the House of +Commons was a failure. It was spoken of as “more screaming than an +Adelphi farce.” Though composed in a grand and ambitious strain, every +sentence was hailed with “loud laughter.” ‘Hamlet’ played as a comedy +were nothing to it. But he concluded with a sentence which embodied a +prophecy. Writhing under the laughter with which his studied eloquence +had been received, he exclaimed, “I have begun several times many things, +and have succeeded in them at last. I shall sit down now, but the time +will come when you will hear me.” The time did come; and how Disraeli +succeeded in at length commanding the attention of the first assembly of +gentlemen in the world, affords a striking illustration of what energy +and determination will do; for Disraeli earned his position by dint of +patient industry. He did not, as many young men do, having once failed, +retire dejected, to mope and whine in a corner, but diligently set +himself to work. He carefully unlearnt his faults, studied the character +of his audience, practised sedulously the art of speech, and +industriously filled his mind with the elements of parliamentary +knowledge. He worked patiently for success; and it came, but slowly: +then the House laughed with him, instead of at him. The recollection of +his early failure was effaced, and by general consent he was at length +admitted to be one of the most finished and effective of parliamentary +speakers. + +Although much may be accomplished by means of individual industry and +energy, as these and other instances set forth in the following pages +serve to illustrate, it must at the same time be acknowledged that the +help which we derive from others in the journey of life is of very great +importance. The poet Wordsworth has well said that “these two things, +contradictory though they may seem, must go together—manly dependence and +manly independence, manly reliance and manly self-reliance.” From +infancy to old age, all are more or less indebted to others for nurture +and culture; and the best and strongest are usually found the readiest to +acknowledge such help. Take, for example, the career of the late Alexis +de Tocqueville, a man doubly well-born, for his father was a +distinguished peer of France, and his mother a grand-daughter of +Malesherbes. Through powerful family influence, he was appointed Judge +Auditor at Versailles when only twenty-one; but probably feeling that he +had not fairly won the position by merit, he determined to give it up and +owe his future advancement in life to himself alone. “A foolish +resolution,” some will say; but De Tocqueville bravely acted it out. He +resigned his appointment, and made arrangements to leave France for the +purpose of travelling through the United States, the results of which +were published in his great book on ‘Democracy in America.’ His friend +and travelling companion, Gustave de Beaumont, has described his +indefatigable industry during this journey. “His nature,” he says, “was +wholly averse to idleness, and whether he was travelling or resting, his +mind was always at work. . . . With Alexis, the most agreeable +conversation was that which was the most useful. The worst day was the +lost day, or the day ill spent; the least loss of time annoyed him.” +Tocqueville himself wrote to a friend—“There is no time of life at which +one can wholly cease from action, for effort without one’s self, and +still more effort within, is equally necessary, if not more so, when we +grow old, as it is in youth. I compare man in this world to a traveller +journeying without ceasing towards a colder and colder region; the higher +he goes, the faster he ought to walk. The great malady of the soul is +cold. And in resisting this formidable evil, one needs not only to be +sustained by the action of a mind employed, but also by contact with +one’s fellows in the business of life.” {25} + +Notwithstanding de Tocqueville’s decided views as to the necessity of +exercising individual energy and self-dependence, no one could be more +ready than he was to recognise the value of that help and support for +which all men are indebted to others in a greater or less degree. Thus, +he often acknowledged, with gratitude, his obligations to his friends De +Kergorlay and Stofells,—to the former for intellectual assistance, and to +the latter for moral support and sympathy. To De Kergorlay he +wrote—“Thine is the only soul in which I have confidence, and whose +influence exercises a genuine effect upon my own. Many others have +influence upon the details of my actions, but no one has so much +influence as thou on the origination of fundamental ideas, and of those +principles which are the rule of conduct.” De Tocqueville was not less +ready to confess the great obligations which he owed to his wife, Marie, +for the preservation of that temper and frame of mind which enabled him +to prosecute his studies with success. He believed that a noble-minded +woman insensibly elevated the character of her husband, while one of a +grovelling nature as certainly tended to degrade it. {26} + +In fine, human character is moulded by a thousand subtle influences; by +example and precept; by life and literature; by friends and neighbours; +by the world we live in as well as by the spirits of our forefathers, +whose legacy of good words and deeds we inherit. But great, +unquestionably, though these influences are acknowledged to be, it is +nevertheless equally clear that men must necessarily be the active agents +of their own well-being and well-doing; and that, however much the wise +and the good may owe to others, they themselves must in the very nature +of things be their own best helpers. + + + + +CHAPTER II. +LEADERS OF INDUSTRY—INVENTORS AND PRODUCERS. + + + “Le travail et la Science sont désormais les maîtres du monde.”—_De + Salvandy_. + + “Deduct all that men of the humbler classes have done for England in + the way of inventions only, and see where she would have been but for + them.”—_Arthur Helps_. + +ONE of the most strongly-marked features of the English people is their +spirit of industry, standing out prominent and distinct in their past +history, and as strikingly characteristic of them now as at any former +period. It is this spirit, displayed by the commons of England, which +has laid the foundations and built up the industrial greatness of the +empire. This vigorous growth of the nation has been mainly the result of +the free energy of individuals, and it has been contingent upon the +number of hands and minds from time to time actively employed within it, +whether as cultivators of the soil, producers of articles of utility, +contrivers of tools and machines, writers of books, or creators of works +of art. And while this spirit of active industry has been the vital +principle of the nation, it has also been its saving and remedial one, +counteracting from time to time the effects of errors in our laws and +imperfections in our constitution. + +The career of industry which the nation has pursued, has also proved its +best education. As steady application to work is the healthiest training +for every individual, so is it the best discipline of a state. +Honourable industry travels the same road with duty; and Providence has +closely linked both with happiness. The gods, says the poet, have placed +labour and toil on the way leading to the Elysian fields. Certain it is +that no bread eaten by man is so sweet as that earned by his own labour, +whether bodily or mental. By labour the earth has been subdued, and man +redeemed from barbarism; nor has a single step in civilization been made +without it. Labour is not only a necessity and a duty, but a blessing: +only the idler feels it to be a curse. The duty of work is written on +the thews and muscles of the limbs, the mechanism of the hand, the nerves +and lobes of the brain—the sum of whose healthy action is satisfaction +and enjoyment. In the school of labour is taught the best practical +wisdom; nor is a life of manual employment, as we shall hereafter find, +incompatible with high mental culture. + +Hugh Miller, than whom none knew better the strength and the weakness +belonging to the lot of labour, stated the result of his experience to +be, that Work, even the hardest, is full of pleasure and materials for +self-improvement. He held honest labour to be the best of teachers, and +that the school of toil is the noblest of schools—save only the Christian +one,—that it is a school in which the ability of being useful is +imparted, the spirit of independence learnt, and the habit of persevering +effort acquired. He was even of opinion that the training of the +mechanic,—by the exercise which it gives to his observant faculties, from +his daily dealing with things actual and practical, and the close +experience of life which he acquires,—better fits him for picking his way +along the journey of life, and is more favourable to his growth as a Man, +emphatically speaking, than the training afforded by any other condition. + +The array of great names which we have already cursorily cited, of men +springing from the ranks of the industrial classes, who have achieved +distinction in various walks of life—in science, commerce, literature, +and art—shows that at all events the difficulties interposed by poverty +and labour are not insurmountable. As respects the great contrivances +and inventions which have conferred so much power and wealth upon the +nation, it is unquestionable that for the greater part of them we have +been indebted to men of the humblest rank. Deduct what they have done in +this particular line of action, and it will be found that very little +indeed remains for other men to have accomplished. + +Inventors have set in motion some of the greatest industries of the +world. To them society owes many of its chief necessaries, comforts, and +luxuries; and by their genius and labour daily life has been rendered in +all respects more easy as well as enjoyable. Our food, our clothing, the +furniture of our homes, the glass which admits the light to our dwellings +at the same time that it excludes the cold, the gas which illuminates our +streets, our means of locomotion by land and by sea, the tools by which +our various articles of necessity and luxury are fabricated, have been +the result of the labour and ingenuity of many men and many minds. +Mankind at large are all the happier for such inventions, and are every +day reaping the benefit of them in an increase of individual well-being +as well as of public enjoyment. + +Though the invention of the working steam-engine—the king of +machines—belongs, comparatively speaking, to our own epoch, the idea of +it was born many centuries ago. Like other contrivances and discoveries, +it was effected step by step—one man transmitting the result of his +labours, at the time apparently useless, to his successors, who took it +up and carried it forward another stage,—the prosecution of the inquiry +extending over many generations. Thus the idea promulgated by Hero of +Alexandria was never altogether lost; but, like the grain of wheat hid in +the hand of the Egyptian mummy, it sprouted and again grew vigorously +when brought into the full light of modern science. The steam-engine was +nothing, however, until it emerged from the state of theory, and was +taken in hand by practical mechanics; and what a noble story of patient, +laborious investigation, of difficulties encountered and overcome by +heroic industry, does not that marvellous machine tell of! It is indeed, +in itself, a monument of the power of self-help in man. Grouped around +it we find Savary, the military engineer; Newcomen, the Dartmouth +blacksmith; Cawley, the glazier; Potter, the engine-boy; Smeaton, the +civil engineer; and, towering above all, the laborious, patient, +never-tiring James Watt, the mathematical-instrument maker. + +Watt was one of the most industrious of men; and the story of his life +proves, what all experience confirms, that it is not the man of the +greatest natural vigour and capacity who achieves the highest results, +but he who employs his powers with the greatest industry and the most +carefully disciplined skill—the skill that comes by labour, application, +and experience. Many men in his time knew far more than Watt, but none +laboured so assiduously as he did to turn all that he did know to useful +practical purposes. He was, above all things, most persevering in the +pursuit of facts. He cultivated carefully that habit of active attention +on which all the higher working qualities of the mind mainly depend. +Indeed, Mr. Edgeworth entertained the opinion, that the difference of +intellect in men depends more upon the early cultivation of this _habit +of attention_, than upon any great disparity between the powers of one +individual and another. + +Even when a boy, Watt found science in his toys. The quadrants lying +about his father’s carpenter’s shop led him to the study of optics and +astronomy; his ill health induced him to pry into the secrets of +physiology; and his solitary walks through the country attracted him to +the study of botany and history. While carrying on the business of a +mathematical-instrument maker, he received an order to build an organ; +and, though without an ear for music, he undertook the study of +harmonics, and successfully constructed the instrument. And, in like +manner, when the little model of Newcomen’s steam-engine, belonging to +the University of Glasgow, was placed in his hands to repair, he +forthwith set himself to learn all that was then known about heat, +evaporation, and condensation,—at the same time plodding his way in +mechanics and the science of construction,—the results of which he at +length embodied in his condensing steam-engine. + +For ten years he went on contriving and inventing—with little hope to +cheer him, and with few friends to encourage him. He went on, meanwhile, +earning bread for his family by making and selling quadrants, making and +mending fiddles, flutes, and musical instruments; measuring mason-work, +surveying roads, superintending the construction of canals, or doing +anything that turned up, and offered a prospect of honest gain. At +length, Watt found a fit partner in another eminent leader of +industry—Matthew Boulton, of Birmingham; a skilful, energetic, and +far-seeing man, who vigorously undertook the enterprise of introducing +the condensing-engine into general use as a working power; and the +success of both is now matter of history. {31} + +Many skilful inventors have from time to time added new power to the +steam-engine; and, by numerous modifications, rendered it capable of +being applied to nearly all the purposes of manufacture—driving +machinery, impelling ships, grinding corn, printing books, stamping +money, hammering, planing, and turning iron; in short, of performing +every description of mechanical labour where power is required. One of +the most useful modifications in the engine was that devised by +Trevithick, and eventually perfected by George Stephenson and his son, in +the form of the railway locomotive, by which social changes of immense +importance have been brought about, of even greater consequence, +considered in their results on human progress and civilization, than the +condensing-engine of Watt. + +One of the first grand results of Watt’s invention,—which placed an +almost unlimited power at the command of the producing classes,—was the +establishment of the cotton-manufacture. The person most closely +identified with the foundation of this great branch of industry was +unquestionably Sir Richard Arkwright, whose practical energy and sagacity +were perhaps even more remarkable than his mechanical inventiveness. His +originality as an inventor has indeed been called in question, like that +of Watt and Stephenson. Arkwright probably stood in the same relation to +the spinning-machine that Watt did to the steam-engine and Stephenson to +the locomotive. He gathered together the scattered threads of ingenuity +which already existed, and wove them, after his own design, into a new +and original fabric. Though Lewis Paul, of Birmingham, patented the +invention of spinning by rollers thirty years before Arkwright, the +machines constructed by him were so imperfect in their details, that they +could not be profitably worked, and the invention was practically a +failure. Another obscure mechanic, a reed-maker of Leigh, named Thomas +Highs, is also said to have invented the water-frame and spinning-jenny; +but they, too, proved unsuccessful. + +When the demands of industry are found to press upon the resources of +inventors, the same idea is usually found floating about in many +minds;—such has been the case with the steam-engine, the safety-lamp, the +electric telegraph, and other inventions. Many ingenious minds are found +labouring in the throes of invention, until at length the master mind, +the strong practical man, steps forward, and straightway delivers them of +their idea, applies the principle successfully, and the thing is done. +Then there is a loud outcry among all the smaller contrivers, who see +themselves distanced in the race; and hence men such as Watt, Stephenson, +and Arkwright, have usually to defend their reputation and their rights +as practical and successful inventors. + +Richard Arkwright, like most of our great mechanicians, sprang from the +ranks. He was born in Preston in 1732. His parents were very poor, and +he was the youngest of thirteen children. He was never at school: the +only education he received he gave to himself; and to the last he was +only able to write with difficulty. When a boy, he was apprenticed to a +barber, and after learning the business, he set up for himself in Bolton, +where he occupied an underground cellar, over which he put up the sign, +“Come to the subterraneous barber—he shaves for a penny.” The other +barbers found their customers leaving them, and reduced their prices to +his standard, when Arkwright, determined to push his trade, announced his +determination to give “A clean shave for a halfpenny.” After a few years +he quitted his cellar, and became an itinerant dealer in hair. At that +time wigs were worn, and wig-making formed an important branch of the +barbering business. Arkwright went about buying hair for the wigs. He +was accustomed to attend the hiring fairs throughout Lancashire resorted +to by young women, for the purpose of securing their long tresses; and it +is said that in negotiations of this sort he was very successful. He +also dealt in a chemical hair dye, which he used adroitly, and thereby +secured a considerable trade. But he does not seem, notwithstanding his +pushing character, to have done more than earn a bare living. + +The fashion of wig-wearing having undergone a change, distress fell upon +the wig-makers; and Arkwright, being of a mechanical turn, was +consequently induced to turn machine inventor or “conjurer,” as the +pursuit was then popularly termed. Many attempts were made about that +time to invent a spinning-machine, and our barber determined to launch +his little bark on the sea of invention with the rest. Like other +self-taught men of the same bias, he had already been devoting his spare +time to the invention of a perpetual-motion machine; and from that the +transition to a spinning-machine was easy. He followed his experiments +so assiduously that he neglected his business, lost the little money he +had saved, and was reduced to great poverty. His wife—for he had by this +time married—was impatient at what she conceived to be a wanton waste of +time and money, and in a moment of sudden wrath she seized upon and +destroyed his models, hoping thus to remove the cause of the family +privations. Arkwright was a stubborn and enthusiastic man, and he was +provoked beyond measure by this conduct of his wife, from whom he +immediately separated. + +In travelling about the country, Arkwright had become acquainted with a +person named Kay, a clockmaker at Warrington, who assisted him in +constructing some of the parts of his perpetual-motion machinery. It is +supposed that he was informed by Kay of the principle of spinning by +rollers; but it is also said that the idea was first suggested to him by +accidentally observing a red-hot piece of iron become elongated by +passing between iron rollers. However this may be, the idea at once took +firm possession of his mind, and he proceeded to devise the process by +which it was to be accomplished, Kay being able to tell him nothing on +this point. Arkwright now abandoned his business of hair collecting, and +devoted himself to the perfecting of his machine, a model of which, +constructed by Kay under his directions, he set up in the parlour of the +Free Grammar School at Preston. Being a burgess of the town, he voted at +the contested election at which General Burgoyne was returned; but such +was his poverty, and such the tattered state of his dress, that a number +of persons subscribed a sum sufficient to have him put in a state fit to +appear in the poll-room. The exhibition of his machine in a town where +so many workpeople lived by the exercise of manual labour proved a +dangerous experiment; ominous growlings were heard outside the +school-room from time to time, and Arkwright,—remembering the fate of +Kay, who was mobbed and compelled to fly from Lancashire because of his +invention of the fly-shuttle, and of poor Hargreaves, whose +spinning-jenny had been pulled to pieces only a short time before by a +Blackburn mob,—wisely determined on packing up his model and removing to +a less dangerous locality. He went accordingly to Nottingham, where he +applied to some of the local bankers for pecuniary assistance; and the +Messrs. Wright consented to advance him a sum of money on condition of +sharing in the profits of the invention. The machine, however, not being +perfected so soon as they had anticipated, the bankers recommended +Arkwright to apply to Messrs. Strutt and Need, the former of whom was the +ingenious inventor and patentee of the stocking-frame. Mr. Strutt at +once appreciated the merits of the invention, and a partnership was +entered into with Arkwright, whose road to fortune was now clear. The +patent was secured in the name of “Richard Arkwright, of Nottingham, +clockmaker,” and it is a circumstance worthy of note, that it was taken +out in 1769, the same year in which Watt secured the patent for his +steam-engine. A cotton-mill was first erected at Nottingham, driven by +horses; and another was shortly after built, on a much larger scale, at +Cromford, in Derbyshire, turned by a water-wheel, from which circumstance +the spinning-machine came to be called the water-frame. + +Arkwright’s labours, however, were, comparatively speaking, only begun. +He had still to perfect all the working details of his machine. It was +in his hands the subject of constant modification and improvement, until +eventually it was rendered practicable and profitable in an eminent +degree. But success was only secured by long and patient labour: for +some years, indeed, the speculation was disheartening and unprofitable, +swallowing up a very large amount of capital without any result. When +success began to appear more certain, then the Lancashire manufacturers +fell upon Arkwright’s patent to pull it in pieces, as the Cornish miners +fell upon Boulton and Watt to rob them of the profits of their +steam-engine. Arkwright was even denounced as the enemy of the working +people; and a mill which he built near Chorley was destroyed by a mob in +the presence of a strong force of police and military. The Lancashire +men refused to buy his materials, though they were confessedly the best +in the market. Then they refused to pay patent-right for the use of his +machines, and combined to crush him in the courts of law. To the disgust +of right-minded people, Arkwright’s patent was upset. After the trial, +when passing the hotel at which his opponents were staying, one of them +said, loud enough to be heard by him, “Well, we’ve done the old shaver at +last;” to which he coolly replied, “Never mind, I’ve a razor left that +will shave you all.” He established new mills in Lancashire, Derbyshire, +and at New Lanark, in Scotland. The mills at Cromford also came into his +hands at the expiry of his partnership with Strutt, and the amount and +the excellence of his products were such, that in a short time he +obtained so complete a control of the trade, that the prices were fixed +by him, and he governed the main operations of the other cotton-spinners. + +Arkwright was a man of great force of character, indomitable courage, +much worldly shrewdness, with a business faculty almost amounting to +genius. At one period his time was engrossed by severe and continuous +labour, occasioned by the organising and conducting of his numerous +manufactories, sometimes from four in the morning till nine at night. At +fifty years of age he set to work to learn English grammar, and improve +himself in writing and orthography. After overcoming every obstacle, he +had the satisfaction of reaping the reward of his enterprise. Eighteen +years after he had constructed his first machine, he rose to such +estimation in Derbyshire that he was appointed High Sheriff of the +county, and shortly after George III. conferred upon him the honour of +knighthood. He died in 1792. Be it for good or for evil, Arkwright was +the founder in England of the modern factory system, a branch of industry +which has unquestionably proved a source of immense wealth to individuals +and to the nation. + +All the other great branches of industry in Britain furnish like examples +of energetic men of business, the source of much benefit to the +neighbourhoods in which they have laboured, and of increased power and +wealth to the community at large. Amongst such might be cited the +Strutts of Belper; the Tennants of Glasgow; the Marshalls and Gotts of +Leeds; the Peels, Ashworths, Birleys, Fieldens, Ashtons, Heywoods, and +Ainsworths of South Lancashire, some of whose descendants have since +become distinguished in connection with the political history of England. +Such pre-eminently were the Peels of South Lancashire. + +The founder of the Peel family, about the middle of last century, was a +small yeoman, occupying the Hole House Farm, near Blackburn, from which +he afterwards removed to a house situated in Fish Lane in that town. +Robert Peel, as he advanced in life, saw a large family of sons and +daughters growing up about him; but the land about Blackburn being +somewhat barren, it did not appear to him that agricultural pursuits +offered a very encouraging prospect for their industry. The place had, +however, long been the seat of a domestic manufacture—the fabric called +“Blackburn greys,” consisting of linen weft and cotton warp, being +chiefly made in that town and its neighbourhood. It was then +customary—previous to the introduction of the factory system—for +industrious yeomen with families to employ the time not occupied in the +fields in weaving at home; and Robert Peel accordingly began the domestic +trade of calico-making. He was honest, and made an honest article; +thrifty and hardworking, and his trade prospered. He was also +enterprising, and was one of the first to adopt the carding cylinder, +then recently invented. + +But Robert Peel’s attention was principally directed to the _printing_ of +calico—then a comparatively unknown art—and for some time he carried on a +series of experiments with the object of printing by machinery. The +experiments were secretly conducted in his own house, the cloth being +ironed for the purpose by one of the women of the family. It was then +customary, in such houses as the Peels, to use pewter plates at dinner. +Having sketched a figure or pattern on one of the plates, the thought +struck him that an impression might be got from it in reverse, and +printed on calico with colour. In a cottage at the end of the farm-house +lived a woman who kept a calendering machine, and going into her cottage, +he put the plate with colour rubbed into the figured part and some calico +over it, through the machine, when it was found to leave a satisfactory +impression. Such is said to have been the origin of roller printing on +calico. Robert Peel shortly perfected his process, and the first pattern +he brought out was a parsley leaf; hence he is spoken of in the +neighbourhood of Blackburn to this day as “Parsley Peel.” The process of +calico printing by what is called the mule machine—that is, by means of a +wooden cylinder in relief, with an engraved copper cylinder—was +afterwards brought to perfection by one of his sons, the head of the firm +of Messrs. Peel and Co., of Church. Stimulated by his success, Robert +Peel shortly gave up farming, and removing to Brookside, a village about +two miles from Blackburn, he devoted himself exclusively to the printing +business. There, with the aid of his sons, who were as energetic as +himself, he successfully carried on the trade for several years; and as +the young men grew up towards manhood, the concern branched out into +various firms of Peels, each of which became a centre of industrial +activity and a source of remunerative employment to large numbers of +people. + +From what can now be learnt of the character of the original and untitled +Robert Peel, he must have been a remarkable man—shrewd, sagacious, and +far-seeing. But little is known of him excepting from traditions and the +sons of those who knew him are fast passing away. His son, Sir Robert, +thus modestly spoke of him:—“My father may be truly said to have been the +founder of our family; and he so accurately appreciated the importance of +commercial wealth in a national point of view, that he was often heard to +say that the gains to individuals were small compared with the national +gains arising from trade.” + +Sir Robert Peel, the first baronet and the second manufacturer of the +name, inherited all his father’s enterprise, ability, and industry. His +position, at starting in life, was little above that of an ordinary +working man; for his father, though laying the foundations of future +prosperity, was still struggling with the difficulties arising from +insufficient capital. When Robert was only twenty years of age, he +determined to begin the business of cotton-printing, which he had by this +time learnt from his father, on his own account. His uncle, James +Haworth, and William Yates of Blackburn, joined him in his enterprise; +the whole capital which they could raise amongst them amounting to only +about 500_l._, the principal part of which was supplied by William Yates. +The father of the latter was a householder in Blackburn, where he was +well known and much respected; and having saved money by his business, he +was willing to advance sufficient to give his son a start in the +lucrative trade of cotton-printing, then in its infancy. Robert Peel, +though comparatively a mere youth, supplied the practical knowledge of +the business; but it was said of him, and proved true, that he “carried +an old head on young shoulders.” A ruined corn-mill, with its adjoining +fields, was purchased for a comparatively small sum, near the then +insignificant town of Bury, where the works long after continued to be +known as “The Ground;” and a few wooden sheds having been run up, the +firm commenced their cotton-printing business in a very humble way in the +year 1770, adding to it that of cotton-spinning a few years later. The +frugal style in which the partners lived may be inferred from the +following incident in their early career. William Yates, being a married +man with a family, commenced housekeeping on a small scale, and, to +oblige Peel, who was single, he agreed to take him as a lodger. The sum +which the latter first paid for board and lodging was only 8_s._ a week; +but Yates, considering this too little, insisted on the weekly payment +being increased a shilling, to which Peel at first demurred, and a +difference between the partners took place, which was eventually +compromised by the lodger paying an advance of sixpence a week. William +Yates’s eldest child was a girl named Ellen, and she very soon became an +especial favourite with the young lodger. On returning from his hard +day’s work at “The Ground,” he would take the little girl upon his knee, +and say to her, “Nelly, thou bonny little dear, wilt be my wife?” to +which the child would readily answer “Yes,” as any child would do. “Then +I’ll wait for thee, Nelly; I’ll wed thee, and none else.” And Robert +Peel did wait. As the girl grew in beauty towards womanhood, his +determination to wait for her was strengthened; and after the lapse of +ten years—years of close application to business and rapidly increasing +prosperity—Robert Peel married Ellen Yates when she had completed her +seventeenth year; and the pretty child, whom her mother’s lodger and +father’s partner had nursed upon his knee, became Mrs. Peel, and +eventually Lady Peel, the mother of the future Prime Minister of England. +Lady Peel was a noble and beautiful woman, fitted to grace any station in +life. She possessed rare powers of mind, and was, on every emergency, +the high-souled and faithful counsellor of her husband. For many years +after their marriage, she acted as his amanuensis, conducting the +principal part of his business correspondence, for Mr. Peel himself was +an indifferent and almost unintelligible writer. She died in 1803, only +three years after the Baronetcy had been conferred upon her husband. It +is said that London fashionable life—so unlike what she had been +accustomed to at home—proved injurious to her health; and old Mr. Yates +afterwards used to say, “if Robert hadn’t made our Nelly a ‘Lady,’ she +might ha’ been living yet.” + +The career of Yates, Peel, & Co., was throughout one of great and +uninterrupted prosperity. Sir Robert Peel himself was the soul of the +firm; to great energy and application uniting much practical sagacity, +and first-rate mercantile abilities—qualities in which many of the early +cotton-spinners were exceedingly deficient. He was a man of iron mind +and frame, and toiled unceasingly. In short, he was to cotton printing +what Arkwright was to cotton-spinning, and his success was equally great. +The excellence of the articles produced by the firm secured the command +of the market, and the character of the firm stood pre-eminent in +Lancashire. Besides greatly benefiting Bury, the partnership planted +similar extensive works in the neighbourhood, on the Irwell and the Roch; +and it was cited to their honour, that, while they sought to raise to the +highest perfection the quality of their manufactures, they also +endeavoured, in all ways, to promote the well-being and comfort of their +workpeople; for whom they contrived to provide remunerative employment +even in the least prosperous times. + +Sir Robert Peel readily appreciated the value of all new processes and +inventions; in illustration of which we may allude to his adoption of the +process for producing what is called _resist work_ in calico printing. +This is accomplished by the use of a paste, or resist, on such parts of +the cloth as were intended to remain white. The person who discovered +the paste was a traveller for a London house, who sold it to Mr. Peel for +an inconsiderable sum. It required the experience of a year or two to +perfect the system and make it practically useful; but the beauty of its +effect, and the extreme precision of outline in the pattern produced, at +once placed the Bury establishment at the head of all the factories for +calico printing in the country. Other firms, conducted with like spirit, +were established by members of the same family at Burnley, Foxhill bank, +and Altham, in Lancashire; Salley Abbey, in Yorkshire; and afterwards at +Burton-on-Trent, in Staffordshire; these various establishments, whilst +they brought wealth to their proprietors, setting an example to the whole +cotton trade, and training up many of the most successful printers and +manufacturers in Lancashire. + +Among other distinguished founders of industry, the Rev. William Lee, +inventor of the Stocking Frame, and John Heathcoat, inventor of the +Bobbin-net Machine, are worthy of notice, as men of great mechanical +skill and perseverance, through whose labours a vast amount of +remunerative employment has been provided for the labouring population of +Nottingham and the adjacent districts. The accounts which have been +preserved of the circumstances connected with the invention of the +Stocking Frame are very confused, and in many respects contradictory, +though there is no doubt as to the name of the inventor. This was +William Lee, born at Woodborough, a village some seven miles from +Nottingham, about the year 1563. According to some accounts, he was the +heir to a small freehold, while according to others he was a poor +scholar, {43a} and had to struggle with poverty from his earliest years. +He entered as a sizar at Christ College, Cambridge, in May, 1579, and +subsequently removed to St. John’s, taking his degree of B.A. in 1582–3. +It is believed that he commenced M.A. in 1586; but on this point there +appears to be some confusion in the records of the University. The +statement usually made that he was expelled for marrying contrary to the +statutes, is incorrect, as he was never a Fellow of the University, and +therefore could not be prejudiced by taking such a step. + +At the time when Lee invented the Stocking Frame he was officiating as +curate of Calverton, near Nottingham; and it is alleged by some writers +that the invention had its origin in disappointed affection. The curate +is said to have fallen deeply in love with a young lady of the village, +who failed to reciprocate his affections; and when he visited her, she +was accustomed to pay much more attention to the process of knitting +stockings and instructing her pupils in the art, than to the addresses of +her admirer. This slight is said to have created in his mind such an +aversion to knitting by hand, that he formed the determination to invent +a machine that should supersede it and render it a gainless employment. +For three years he devoted himself to the prosecution of the invention, +sacrificing everything to his new idea. At the prospect of success +opened before him, he abandoned his curacy, and devoted himself to the +art of stocking making by machinery. This is the version of the story +given by Henson {43b} on the authority of an old stocking-maker, who died +in Collins’s Hospital, Nottingham, aged ninety-two, and was apprenticed +in the town during the reign of Queen Anne. It is also given by Deering +and Blackner as the traditional account in the neighbourhood, and it is +in some measure borne out by the arms of the London Company of Frame-Work +Knitters, which consists of a stocking frame without the wood-work, with +a clergyman on one side and a woman on the other as supporters. {44} + +Whatever may have been the actual facts as to the origin of the invention +of the Stocking Loom, there can be no doubt as to the extraordinary +mechanical genius displayed by its inventor. That a clergyman living in +a remote village, whose life had for the most part been spent with books, +should contrive a machine of such delicate and complicated movements, and +at once advance the art of knitting from the tedious process of linking +threads in a chain of loops by three skewers in the fingers of a woman, +to the beautiful and rapid process of weaving by the stocking frame, was +indeed an astonishing achievement, which may be pronounced almost +unequalled in the history of mechanical invention. Lee’s merit was all +the greater, as the handicraft arts were then in their infancy, and +little attention had as yet been given to the contrivance of machinery +for the purposes of manufacture. He was under the necessity of +extemporising the parts of his machine as he best could, and adopting +various expedients to overcome difficulties as they arose. His tools +were imperfect, and his materials imperfect; and he had no skilled +workmen to assist him. According to tradition, the first frame he made +was a twelve gauge, without lead sinkers, and it was almost wholly of +wood; the needles being also stuck in bits of wood. One of Lee’s +principal difficulties consisted in the formation of the stitch, for want +of needle eyes; but this he eventually overcame by forming eyes to the +needles with a three-square file. {45} At length, one difficulty after +another was successfully overcome, and after three years’ labour the +machine was sufficiently complete to be fit for use. The quondam curate, +full of enthusiasm for his art, now began stocking weaving in the village +of Calverton, and he continued to work there for several years, +instructing his brother James and several of his relations in the +practice of the art. + +Having brought his frame to a considerable degree of perfection, and +being desirous of securing the patronage of Queen Elizabeth, whose +partiality for knitted silk stockings was well known, Lee proceeded to +London to exhibit the loom before her Majesty. He first showed it to +several members of the court, among others to Sir William (afterwards +Lord) Hunsdon, whom he taught to work it with success; and Lee was, +through their instrumentality, at length admitted to an interview with +the Queen, and worked the machine in her presence. Elizabeth, however, +did not give him the encouragement that he had expected; and she is said +to have opposed the invention on the ground that it was calculated to +deprive a large number of poor people of their employment of hand +knitting. Lee was no more successful in finding other patrons, and +considering himself and his invention treated with contempt, he embraced +the offer made to him by Sully, the sagacious minister of Henry IV., to +proceed to Rouen and instruct the operatives of that town—then one of the +most important manufacturing centres of France—in the construction and +use of the stocking-frame. Lee accordingly transferred himself and his +machines to France, in 1605, taking with him his brother and seven +workmen. He met with a cordial reception at Rouen, and was proceeding +with the manufacture of stockings on a large scale—having nine of his +frames in full work,—when unhappily ill fortune again overtook him. +Henry IV., his protector, on whom he had relied for the rewards, honours, +and promised grant of privileges, which had induced Lee to settle in +France, was murdered by the fanatic Ravaillac; and the encouragement and +protection which had heretofore been extended to him were at once +withdrawn. To press his claims at court, Lee proceeded to Paris; but +being a protestant as well as a foreigner, his representations were +treated with neglect; and worn out with vexation and grief, this +distinguished inventor shortly after died at Paris, in a state of extreme +poverty and distress. + +Lee’s brother, with seven of the workmen, succeeded in escaping from +France with their frames, leaving two behind. On James Lee’s return to +Nottinghamshire, he was joined by one Ashton, a miller of Thoroton, who +had been instructed in the art of frame-work knitting by the inventor +himself before he left England. These two, with the workmen and their +frames, began the stocking manufacture at Thoroton, and carried it on +with considerable success. The place was favourably situated for the +purpose, as the sheep pastured in the neighbouring district of Sherwood +yielded a kind of wool of the longest staple. Ashton is said to have +introduced the method of making the frames with lead sinkers, which was a +great improvement. The number of looms employed in different parts of +England gradually increased; and the machine manufacture of stockings +eventually became an important branch of the national industry. + +One of the most important modifications in the Stocking-Frame was that +which enabled it to be applied to the manufacture of lace on a large +scale. In 1777, two workmen, Frost and Holmes, were both engaged in +making point-net by means of the modifications they had introduced in the +stocking-frame; and in the course of about thirty years, so rapid was the +growth of this branch of production that 1500 point-net frames were at +work, giving employment to upwards of 15,000 people. Owing, however, to +the war, to change of fashion, and to other circumstances, the Nottingham +lace manufacture rapidly fell off; and it continued in a decaying state +until the invention of the Bobbin-net Machine by John Heathcoat, late +M.P. for Tiverton, which had the effect of at once re-establishing the +manufacture on solid foundations. + +John Heathcoat was the youngest son of a respectable small farmer at +Duffield, Derbyshire, where he was born in 1783. When at school he made +steady and rapid progress, but was early removed from it to be +apprenticed to a frame-smith near Loughborough. The boy soon learnt to +handle tools with dexterity, and he acquired a minute knowledge of the +parts of which the stocking-frame was composed, as well as of the more +intricate warp-machine. At his leisure he studied how to introduce +improvements in them, and his friend, Mr. Bazley, M.P., states that as +early as the age of sixteen, he conceived the idea of inventing a machine +by which lace might be made similar to Buckingham or French lace, then +all made by hand. The first practical improvement he succeeded in +introducing was in the warp-frame, when, by means of an ingenious +apparatus, he succeeded in producing “mitts” of a lacy appearance, and it +was this success which determined him to pursue the study of mechanical +lace-making. The stocking-frame had already, in a modified form, been +applied to the manufacture of point-net lace, in which the mesh was +_looped_ as in a stocking, but the work was slight and frail, and +therefore unsatisfactory. Many ingenious Nottingham mechanics had, +during a long succession of years, been labouring at the problem of +inventing a machine by which the mesh of threads should be _twisted_ +round each other on the formation of the net. Some of these men died in +poverty, some were driven insane, and all alike failed in the object of +their search. The old warp-machine held its ground. + +When a little over twenty-one years of age, Heathcoat went to Nottingham, +where he readily found employment, for which he soon received the highest +remuneration, as a setter-up of hosiery and warp-frames, and was much +respected for his talent for invention, general intelligence, and the +sound and sober principles that governed his conduct. He also continued +to pursue the subject on which his mind had before been occupied, and +laboured to compass the contrivance of a twist traverse-net machine. He +first studied the art of making the Buckingham or pillow-lace by hand, +with the object of effecting the same motions by mechanical means. It +was a long and laborious task, requiring the exercise of great +perseverance and ingenuity. His master, Elliot, described him at that +time as inventive, patient, self-denying, and taciturn, undaunted by +failures and mistakes, full of resources and expedients, and entertaining +the most perfect confidence that his application of mechanical principles +would eventually be crowned with success. + +It is difficult to describe in words an invention so complicated as the +bobbin-net machine. It was, indeed, a mechanical pillow for making lace, +imitating in an ingenious manner the motions of the lace-maker’s fingers +in intersecting or tying the meshes of the lace upon her pillow. On +analysing the component parts of a piece of hand-made lace, Heathcoat was +enabled to classify the threads into longitudinal and diagonal. He began +his experiments by fixing common pack-threads lengthwise on a sort of +frame for the warp, and then passing the weft threads between them by +common plyers, delivering them to other plyers on the opposite side; +then, after giving them a sideways motion and twist, the threads were +repassed back between the next adjoining cords, the meshes being thus +tied in the same way as upon pillows by hand. He had then to contrive a +mechanism that should accomplish all these nice and delicate movements, +and to do this cost him no small amount of mental toil. Long after he +said, “The single difficulty of getting the diagonal threads to twist in +the allotted space was so great that if it had now to be done, I should +probably not attempt its accomplishment.” His next step was to provide +thin metallic discs, to be used as bobbins for conducting the threads +backwards and forwards through the warp. These discs, being arranged in +carrier-frames placed on each side of the warp, were moved by suitable +machinery so as to conduct the threads from side to side in forming the +lace. He eventually succeeded in working out his principle with +extraordinary skill and success; and, at the age of twenty-four, he was +enabled to secure his invention by a patent. + +During this time his wife was kept in almost as great anxiety as himself, +for she well knew of his trials and difficulties while he was striving to +perfect his invention. Many years after they had been successfully +overcome, the conversation which took place one eventful evening was +vividly remembered. “Well,” said the anxious wife, “will it work?” +“No,” was the sad answer; “I have had to take it all to pieces again.” +Though he could still speak hopefully and cheerfully, his poor wife could +restrain her feelings no longer, but sat down and cried bitterly. She +had, however, only a few more weeks to wait, for success long laboured +for and richly deserved, came at last, and a proud and happy man was John +Heathcoat when he brought home the first narrow strip of bobbin-net made +by his machine, and placed it in the hands of his wife. + +As in the case of nearly all inventions which have proved productive, +Heathcoat’s rights as a patentee were disputed, and his claims as an +inventor called in question. On the supposed invalidity of the patent, +the lace-makers boldly adopted the bobbin-net machine, and set the +inventor at defiance. But other patents were taken out for alleged +improvements and adaptations; and it was only when these new patentees +fell out and went to law with each other that Heathcoat’s rights became +established. One lace-manufacturer having brought an action against +another for an alleged infringement of his patent, the jury brought in a +verdict for the defendant, in which the judge concurred, on the ground +that _both_ the machines in question were infringements of Heathcoat’s +patent. It was on the occasion of this trial, “Boville v. Moore,” that +Sir John Copley (afterwards Lord Lyndhurst), who was retained for the +defence in the interest of Mr. Heathcoat, learnt to work the bobbin-net +machine in order that he might master the details of the invention. On +reading over his brief, he confessed that he did not quite understand the +merits of the case; but as it seemed to him to be one of great +importance, he offered to go down into the country forthwith and study +the machine until he understood it; “and then,” said he, “I will defend +you to the best of my ability.” He accordingly put himself into that +night’s mail, and went down to Nottingham to get up his case as perhaps +counsel never got it up before. Next morning the learned sergeant placed +himself in a lace-loom, and he did not leave it until he could deftly +make a piece of bobbin-net with his own hands, and thoroughly understood +the principle as well as the details of the machine. When the case came +on for trial, the learned sergeant was enabled to work the model on the +table with such case and skill, and to explain the precise nature of the +invention with such felicitous clearness, as to astonish alike judge, +jury, and spectators; and the thorough conscientiousness and mastery with +which he handled the case had no doubt its influence upon the decision of +the court. + +After the trial was over, Mr. Heathcoat, on inquiry, found about six +hundred machines at work after his patent, and he proceeded to levy +royalty upon the owners of them, which amounted to a large sum. But the +profits realised by the manufacturers of lace were very great, and the +use of the machines rapidly extended; while the price of the article was +reduced from five pounds the square yard to about five pence in the +course of twenty-five years. During the same period the average annual +returns of the lace-trade have been at least four millions sterling, and +it gives remunerative employment to about 150,000 workpeople. + +To return to the personal history of Mr. Heathcoat. In 1809 we find him +established as a lace-manufacturer at Loughborough, in Leicestershire. +There he carried on a prosperous business for several years, giving +employment to a large number of operatives, at wages varying from 5_l._ +to 10_l._ a week. Notwithstanding the great increase in the number of +hands employed in lace-making through the introduction of the new +machines, it began to be whispered about among the workpeople that they +were superseding labour, and an extensive conspiracy was formed for the +purpose of destroying them wherever found. As early as the year 1811 +disputes arose between the masters and men engaged in the stocking and +lace trades in the south-western parts of Nottinghamshire and the +adjacent parts of Derbyshire and Leicestershire, the result of which was +the assembly of a mob at Sutton, in Ashfield, who proceeded in open day +to break the stocking and lace-frames of the manufacturers. Some of the +ringleaders having been seized and punished, the disaffected learnt +caution; but the destruction of the machines was nevertheless carried on +secretly wherever a safe opportunity presented itself. As the machines +were of so delicate a construction that a single blow of a hammer +rendered them useless, and as the manufacture was carried on for the most +part in detached buildings, often in private dwellings remote from towns, +the opportunities of destroying them were unusually easy. In the +neighbourhood of Nottingham, which was the focus of turbulence, the +machine-breakers organized themselves in regular bodies, and held +nocturnal meetings at which their plans were arranged. Probably with the +view of inspiring confidence, they gave out that they were under the +command of a leader named Ned Ludd, or General Ludd, and hence their +designation of Luddites. Under this organization machine-breaking was +carried on with great vigour during the winter of 1811, occasioning great +distress, and throwing large numbers of workpeople out of employment. +Meanwhile, the owners of the frames proceeded to remove them from the +villages and lone dwellings in the country, and brought them into +warehouses in the towns for their better protection. + +The Luddites seem to have been encouraged by the lenity of the sentences +pronounced on such of their confederates as had been apprehended and +tried; and, shortly after, the mania broke out afresh, and rapidly +extended over the northern and midland manufacturing districts. The +organization became more secret; an oath was administered to the members +binding them to obedience to the orders issued by the heads of the +confederacy; and the betrayal of their designs was decreed to be death. +All machines were doomed by them to destruction, whether employed in the +manufacture of cloth, calico, or lace; and a reign of terror began which +lasted for years. In Yorkshire and Lancashire mills were boldly attacked +by armed rioters, and in many cases they were wrecked or burnt; so that +it became necessary to guard them by soldiers and yeomanry. The masters +themselves were doomed to death; many of them were assaulted, and some +were murdered. At length the law was vigorously set in motion; numbers +of the misguided Luddites were apprehended; some were executed; and after +several years’ violent commotion from this cause, the machine-breaking +riots were at length quelled. + +Among the numerous manufacturers whose works were attacked by the +Luddites, was the inventor of the bobbin-net machine himself. One bright +sunny day, in the summer of 1816, a body of rioters entered his factory +at Loughborough with torches, and set fire to it, destroying thirty-seven +lace-machines, and above 10,000_l._ worth of property. Ten of the men +were apprehended for the felony, and eight of them were executed. Mr. +Heathcoat made a claim upon the county for compensation, and it was +resisted; but the Court of Queen’s Bench decided in his favour, and +decreed that the county must make good his loss of 10,000_l._ The +magistrates sought to couple with the payment of the damage the condition +that Mr. Heathcoat should expend the money in the county of Leicester; +but to this he would not assent, having already resolved on removing his +manufacture elsewhere. At Tiverton, in Devonshire, he found a large +building which had been formerly used as a woollen manufactory; but the +Tiverton cloth trade having fallen into decay, the building remained +unoccupied, and the town itself was generally in a very poverty-stricken +condition. Mr. Heathcoat bought the old mill, renovated and enlarged it, +and there recommenced the manufacture of lace upon a larger scale than +before; keeping in full work as many as three hundred machines, and +employing a large number of artisans at good wages. Not only did he +carry on the manufacture of lace, but the various branches of business +connected with it—yarn-doubling, silk-spinning, net-making, and +finishing. He also established at Tiverton an iron-foundry and works for +the manufacture of agricultural implements, which proved of great +convenience to the district. It was a favourite idea of his that steam +power was capable of being applied to perform all the heavy drudgery of +life, and he laboured for a long time at the invention of a steam-plough. +In 1832 he so far completed his invention as to be enabled to take out a +patent for it; and Heathcoat’s steam-plough, though it has since been +superseded by Fowler’s, was considered the best machine of the kind that +had up to that time been invented. + +Mr. Heathcoat was a man of great natural gifts. He possessed a sound +understanding, quick perception, and a genius for business of the highest +order. With these he combined uprightness, honesty, and +integrity—qualities which are the true glory of human character. Himself +a diligent self-educator, he gave ready encouragement to deserving youths +in his employment, stimulating their talents and fostering their +energies. During his own busy life, he contrived to save time to master +French and Italian, of which he acquired an accurate and grammatical +knowledge. His mind was largely stored with the results of a careful +study of the best literature, and there were few subjects on which he had +not formed for himself shrewd and accurate views. The two thousand +workpeople in his employment regarded him almost as a father, and he +carefully provided for their comfort and improvement. Prosperity did not +spoil him, as it does so many; nor close his heart against the claims of +the poor and struggling, who were always sure of his sympathy and help. +To provide for the education of the children of his workpeople, he built +schools for them at a cost of about 6000_l._ He was also a man of +singularly cheerful and buoyant disposition, a favourite with men of all +classes and most admired and beloved by those who knew him best. + +In 1831 the electors of Tiverton, of which town Mr. Heathcoat had proved +himself so genuine a benefactor, returned him to represent them in +Parliament, and he continued their member for nearly thirty years. +During a great part of that time he had Lord Palmerston for his +colleague, and the noble lord, on more than one public occasion, +expressed the high regard which he entertained for his venerable friend. +On retiring from the representation in 1859, owing to advancing age and +increasing infirmities, thirteen hundred of his workmen presented him +with a silver inkstand and gold pen, in token of their esteem. He +enjoyed his leisure for only two more years, dying in January, 1861, at +the age of seventy-seven, and leaving behind him a character for probity, +virtue, manliness, and mechanical genius, of which his descendants may +well be proud. + +We next turn to a career of a very different kind, that of the +illustrious but unfortunate Jacquard, whose life also illustrates in a +remarkable manner the influence which ingenious men, even of the humblest +rank, may exercise upon the industry of a nation. Jacquard was the son +of a hard-working couple of Lyons, his father being a weaver, and his +mother a pattern reader. They were too poor to give him any but the most +meagre education. When he was of age to learn a trade, his father placed +him with a book-binder. An old clerk, who made up the master’s accounts, +gave Jacquard some lessons in mathematics. He very shortly began to +display a remarkable turn for mechanics, and some of his contrivances +quite astonished the old clerk, who advised Jacquard’s father to put him +to some other trade, in which his peculiar abilities might have better +scope than in bookbinding. He was accordingly put apprentice to a +cutler; but was so badly treated by his master, that he shortly +afterwards left his employment, on which he was placed with a +type-founder. + +His parents dying, Jacquard found himself in a measure compelled to take +to his father’s two looms, and carry on the trade of a weaver. He +immediately proceeded to improve the looms, and became so engrossed with +his inventions that he forgot his work, and very soon found himself at +the end of his means. He then sold the looms to pay his debts, at the +same time that he took upon himself the burden of supporting a wife. He +became still poorer, and to satisfy his creditors, he next sold his +cottage. He tried to find employment, but in vain, people believing him +to be an idler, occupied with mere dreams about his inventions. At +length he obtained employment with a line-maker of Bresse, whither he +went, his wife remaining at Lyons, earning a precarious living by making +straw bonnets. + +We hear nothing further of Jacquard for some years, but in the interval +he seems to have prosecuted his improvement in the drawloom for the +better manufacture of figured fabrics; for, in 1790, he brought out his +contrivance for selecting the warp threads, which, when added to the +loom, superseded the services of a draw-boy. The adoption of this +machine was slow but steady, and in ten years after its introduction, +4000 of them were found at work in Lyons. Jacquard’s pursuits were +rudely interrupted by the Revolution, and, in 1792, we find him fighting +in the ranks of the Lyonnaise Volunteers against the Army of the +Convention under the command of Dubois Crancé. The city was taken; +Jacquard fled and joined the Army of the Rhine, where he rose to the rank +of sergeant. He might have remained a soldier, but that, his only son +having been shot dead at his side, he deserted and returned to Lyons to +recover his wife. He found her in a garret still employed at her old +trade of straw-bonnet making. While living in concealment with her, his +mind reverted to the inventions over which he had so long brooded in +former years; but he had no means wherewith to prosecute them. Jacquard +found it necessary, however, to emerge from his hiding-place and try to +find some employment. He succeeded in obtaining it with an intelligent +manufacturer, and while working by day he went on inventing by night. It +had occurred to him that great improvements might still be introduced in +looms for figured goods, and he incidentally mentioned the subject one +day to his master, regretting at the same time that his limited means +prevented him from carrying out his ideas. Happily his master +appreciated the value of the suggestions, and with laudable generosity +placed a sum of money at his disposal, that he might prosecute the +proposed improvements at his leisure. + +In three months Jacquard had invented a loom to substitute mechanical +action for the irksome and toilsome labour of the workman. The loom was +exhibited at the Exposition of National Industry at Paris in 1801, and +obtained a bronze medal. Jacquard was further honoured by a visit at +Lyons from the Minister Carnot, who desired to congratulate him in person +on the success of his invention. In the following year the Society of +Arts in London offered a prize for the invention of a machine for +manufacturing fishing-nets and boarding-netting for ships. Jacquard +heard of this, and while walking one day in the fields according to his +custom, he turned the subject over in his mind, and contrived the plan of +a machine for the purpose. His friend, the manufacturer, again furnished +him with the means of carrying out his idea, and in three weeks Jacquard +had completed his invention. + +Jacquard’s achievement having come to the knowledge of the Prefect of the +Department, he was summoned before that functionary, and, on his +explanation of the working of the machine, a report on the subject was +forwarded to the Emperor. The inventor was forthwith summoned to Paris +with his machine, and brought into the presence of the Emperor, who +received him with the consideration due to his genius. The interview +lasted two hours, during which Jacquard, placed at his ease by the +Emperor’s affability, explained to him the improvements which he proposed +to make in the looms for weaving figured goods. The result was, that he +was provided with apartments in the Conservatoire des Arts et Métiers, +where he had the use of the workshop during his stay, and was provided +with a suitable allowance for his maintenance. + +Installed in the Conservatoire, Jacquard proceeded to complete the +details of his improved loom. He had the advantage of minutely +inspecting the various exquisite pieces of mechanism contained in that +great treasury of human ingenuity. Among the machines which more +particularly attracted his attention, and eventually set him upon the +track of his discovery, was a loom for weaving flowered silk, made by +Vaucanson the celebrated automaton-maker. + +Vaucanson was a man of the highest order of constructive genius. The +inventive faculty was so strong in him that it may almost be said to have +amounted to a passion, and could not be restrained. The saying that the +poet is born, not made, applies with equal force to the inventor, who, +though indebted, like the other, to culture and improved opportunities, +nevertheless contrives and constructs new combinations of machinery +mainly to gratify his own instinct. This was peculiarly the case with +Vaucanson; for his most elaborate works were not so much distinguished +for their utility as for the curious ingenuity which they displayed. +While a mere boy attending Sunday conversations with his mother, he +amused himself by watching, through the chinks of a partition wall, part +of the movements of a clock in the adjoining apartment. He endeavoured +to understand them, and by brooding over the subject, after several +months he discovered the principle of the escapement. + +From that time the subject of mechanical invention took complete +possession of him. With some rude tools which he contrived, he made a +wooden clock that marked the hours with remarkable exactness; while he +made for a miniature chapel the figures of some angels which waved their +wings, and some priests that made several ecclesiastical movements. With +the view of executing some other automata he had designed, he proceeded +to study anatomy, music, and mechanics, which occupied him for several +years. The sight of the Flute-player in the Gardens of the Tuileries +inspired him with the resolution to invent a similar figure that should +_play_; and after several years’ study and labour, though struggling with +illness, he succeeded in accomplishing his object. He next produced a +Flageolet-player, which was succeeded by a Duck—the most ingenious of his +contrivances,—which swam, dabbled, drank, and quacked like a real duck. +He next invented an asp, employed in the tragedy of ‘Cléopâtre,’ which +hissed and darted at the bosom of the actress. + +Vaucanson, however, did not confine himself merely to the making of +automata. By reason of his ingenuity, Cardinal de Fleury appointed him +inspector of the silk manufactories of France; and he was no sooner in +office, than with his usual irrepressible instinct to invent, he +proceeded to introduce improvements in silk machinery. One of these was +his mill for thrown silk, which so excited the anger of the Lyons +operatives, who feared the loss of employment through its means, that +they pelted him with stones and had nearly killed him. He nevertheless +went on inventing, and next produced a machine for weaving flowered +silks, with a contrivance for giving a dressing to the thread, so as to +render that of each bobbin or skein of an equal thickness. + +When Vaucanson died in 1782, after a long illness, he bequeathed his +collection of machines to the Queen, who seems to have set but small +value on them, and they were shortly after dispersed. But his machine +for weaving flowered silks was happily preserved in the Conservatoire des +Arts et Métiers, and there Jacquard found it among the many curious and +interesting articles in the collection. It proved of the utmost value to +him, for it immediately set him on the track of the principal +modification which he introduced in his improved loom. + +One of the chief features of Vaucanson’s machine was a pierced cylinder +which, according to the holes it presented when revolved, regulated the +movement of certain needles, and caused the threads of the warp to +deviate in such a manner as to produce a given design, though only of a +simple character. Jacquard seized upon the suggestion with avidity, and, +with the genius of the true inventor, at once proceeded to improve upon +it. At the end of a month his weaving-machine was completed. To the +cylinder of Vancanson, he added an endless piece of pasteboard pierced +with a number of holes, through which the threads of the warp were +presented to the weaver; while another piece of mechanism indicated to +the workman the colour of the shuttle which he ought to throw. Thus the +drawboy and the reader of designs were both at once superseded. The +first use Jacquard made of his new loom was to weave with it several +yards of rich stuff which he presented to the Empress Josephine. +Napoleon was highly gratified with the result of the inventor’s labours, +and ordered a number of the looms to be constructed by the best workmen, +after Jacquard’s model, and presented to him; after which he returned to +Lyons. + +There he experienced the frequent fate of inventors. He was regarded by +his townsmen as an enemy, and treated by them as Kay, Hargreaves, and +Arkwright had been in Lancashire. The workmen looked upon the new loom +as fatal to their trade, and feared lest it should at once take the bread +from their mouths. A tumultuous meeting was held on the Place des +Terreaux, when it was determined to destroy the machines. This was +however prevented by the military. But Jacquard was denounced and hanged +in effigy. The ‘Conseil des prud’hommes’ in vain endeavoured to allay +the excitement, and they were themselves denounced. At length, carried +away by the popular impulse, the prud’hommes, most of whom had been +workmen and sympathized with the class, had one of Jacquard’s looms +carried off and publicly broken in pieces. Riots followed, in one of +which Jacquard was dragged along the quay by an infuriated mob intending +to drown him, but he was rescued. + +The great value of the Jacquard loom, however, could not be denied, and +its success was only a question of time. Jacquard was urged by some +English silk manufacturers to pass over into England and settle there. +But notwithstanding the harsh and cruel treatment he had received at the +hands of his townspeople, his patriotism was too strong to permit him to +accept their offer. The English manufacturers, however, adopted his +loom. Then it was, and only then, that Lyons, threatened to be beaten +out of the field, adopted it with eagerness; and before long the Jacquard +machine was employed in nearly all kinds of weaving. The result proved +that the fears of the workpeople had been entirely unfounded. Instead of +diminishing employment, the Jacquard loom increased it at least tenfold. +The number of persons occupied in the manufacture of figured goods in +Lyons, was stated by M. Leon Faucher to have been 60,000 in 1833; and +that number has since been considerably increased. + +As for Jacquard himself, the rest of his life passed peacefully, +excepting that the workpeople who dragged him along the quay to drown him +were shortly after found eager to bear him in triumph along the same +route in celebration of his birthday. But his modesty would not permit +him to take part in such a demonstration. The Municipal Council of Lyons +proposed to him that he should devote himself to improving his machine +for the benefit of the local industry, to which Jacquard agreed in +consideration of a moderate pension, the amount of which was fixed by +himself. After perfecting his invention accordingly, he retired at sixty +to end his days at Oullins, his father’s native place. It was there that +he received, in 1820, the decoration of the Legion of Honour; and it was +there that he died and was buried in 1834. A statue was erected to his +memory, but his relatives remained in poverty; and twenty years after his +death, his two nieces were under the necessity of selling for a few +hundred francs the gold medal bestowed upon their uncle by Louis XVIII. +“Such,” says a French writer, “was the gratitude of the manufacturing +interests of Lyons to the man to whom it owes so large a portion of its +splendour.” + +It would be easy to extend the martyrology of inventors, and to cite the +names of other equally distinguished men who have, without any +corresponding advantage to themselves, contributed to the industrial +progress of the age,—for it has too often happened that genius has +planted the tree, of which patient dulness has gathered the fruit; but we +will confine ourselves for the present to a brief account of an inventor +of comparatively recent date, by way of illustration of the difficulties +and privations which it is so frequently the lot of mechanical genius to +surmount. We allude to Joshua Heilmann, the inventor of the Combing +Machine. + +Heilmann was born in 1796 at Mulhouse, the principal seat of the Alsace +cotton manufacture. His father was engaged in that business; and Joshua +entered his office at fifteen. He remained there for two years, +employing his spare time in mechanical drawing. He afterwards spent two +years in his uncle’s banking-house in Paris, prosecuting the study of +mathematics in the evenings. Some of his relatives having established a +small cotton-spinning factory at Mulhouse, young Heilmann was placed with +Messrs. Tissot and Rey, at Paris, to learn the practice of that firm. At +the same time he became a student at the Conservatoire des Arts et +Métiers, where he attended the lectures, and studied the machines in the +museum. He also took practical lessons in turning from a toymaker. +After some time, thus diligently occupied, he returned to Alsace, to +superintend the construction of the machinery for the new factory at +Vieux-Thann, which was shortly finished and set to work. The operations +of the manufactory were, however, seriously affected by a commercial +crisis which occurred, and it passed into other hands, on which Heilmann +returned to his family at Mulhouse. + +He had in the mean time been occupying much of his leisure with +inventions, more particularly in connection with the weaving of cotton +and the preparation of the staple for spinning. One of his earliest +contrivances was an embroidering-machine, in which twenty needles were +employed, working simultaneously; and he succeeded in accomplishing his +object after about six months’ labour. For this invention, which he +exhibited at the Exposition of 1834, he received a gold medal, and was +decorated with the Legion of Honour. Other inventions quickly +followed—an improved loom, a machine for measuring and folding fabrics, +an improvement of the “bobbin and fly frames” of the English spinners, +and a weft winding-machine, with various improvements in the machinery +for preparing, spinning, and weaving silk and cotton. One of his most +ingenious contrivances was his loom for weaving simultaneously two pieces +of velvet or other piled fabric, united by the pile common to both, with +a knife and traversing apparatus for separating the two fabrics when +woven. But by far the most beautiful and ingenious of his inventions was +the combing-machine, the history of which we now proceed shortly to +describe. + +Heilmann had for some years been diligently studying the contrivance of a +machine for combing long-stapled cotton, the ordinary carding-machine +being found ineffective in preparing the raw material for spinning, +especially the finer sorts of yarn, besides causing considerable waste. +To avoid these imperfections, the cotton-spinners of Alsace offered a +prize of 5000 francs for an improved combing-machine, and Heilmann +immediately proceeded to compete for the reward. He was not stimulated +by the desire of gain, for he was comparatively rich, having acquired a +considerable fortune by his wife. It was a saying of his that “one will +never accomplish great things who is constantly asking himself, how much +gain will this bring me?” What mainly impelled him was the irrepressible +instinct of the inventor, who no sooner has a mechanical problem set +before him than he feels impelled to undertake its solution. The problem +in this case was, however, much more difficult than he had anticipated. +The close study of the subject occupied him for several years, and the +expenses in which he became involved in connection with it were so great, +that his wife’s fortune was shortly swallowed up, and he was reduced to +poverty, without being able to bring his machine to perfection. From +that time he was under the necessity of relying mainly on the help of his +friends to enable him to prosecute the invention. + +While still struggling with poverty and difficulties, Heilmann’s wife +died, believing her husband ruined; and shortly after he proceeded to +England and settled for a time at Manchester, still labouring at his +machine. He had a model made for him by the eminent machine-makers, +Sharpe, Roberts, and Company; but still he could not make it work +satisfactorily, and he was at length brought almost to the verge of +despair. He returned to France to visit his family, still pursuing his +idea, which had obtained complete possession of his mind. While sitting +by his hearth one evening, meditating upon the hard fate of inventors and +the misfortunes in which their families so often become involved, he +found himself almost unconsciously watching his daughters coming their +long hair and drawing it out at full length between their fingers. The +thought suddenly struck him that if he could successfully imitate in a +machine the process of combing out the longest hair and forcing back the +short by reversing the action of the comb, it might serve to extricate +him from his difficulty. It may be remembered that this incident in the +life of Heilmann has been made the subject of a beautiful picture by Mr. +Elmore, R.A., which was exhibited at the Royal Academy Exhibition of +1862. + +Upon this idea he proceeded, introduced the apparently simple but really +most intricate process of machine-combing, and after great labour he +succeeded in perfecting the invention. The singular beauty of the +process can only be appreciated by those who have witnessed the machine +at work, when the similarity of its movements to that of combing the +hair, which suggested the invention, is at once apparent. The machine +has been described as “acting with almost the delicacy of touch of the +human fingers.” It combs the lock of cotton _at both ends_, places the +fibres exactly parallel with each other, separates the long from the +short, and unites the long fibres in one sliver and the short ones in +another. In fine, the machine not only acts with the delicate accuracy +of the human fingers, but apparently with the delicate intelligence of +the human mind. + +The chief commercial value of the invention consisted in its rendering +the commoner sorts of cotton available for fine spinning. The +manufacturers were thereby enabled to select the most suitable fibres for +high-priced fabrics, and to produce the finer sorts of yarn in much +larger quantities. It became possible by its means to make thread so +fine that a length of 334 miles might be spun from a single pound weight +of the prepared cotton, and, worked up into the finer sorts of lace, the +original shilling’s worth of cotton-wool, before it passed into the hands +of the consumer, might thus be increased to the value of between 300_l._ +and 400_l._ sterling. + +The beauty and utility of Heilmann’s invention were at once appreciated +by the English cotton-spinners. Six Lancashire firms united and +purchased the patent for cotton-spinning for England for the sum of +30,000_l._; the wool-spinners paid the same sum for the privilege of +applying the process to wool; and the Messrs. Marshall, of Leeds, +20,000_l._ for the privilege of applying it to flax. Thus wealth +suddenly flowed in upon poor Heilmann at last. But he did not live to +enjoy it. Scarcely had his long labours been crowned by success than he +died, and his son, who had shared in his privations, shortly followed +him. + +It is at the price of lives such as these that the wonders of +civilisation are achieved. + + + + +CHAPTER III. +HE GREAT POTTERS—PALISSY, BÖTTGHER, WEDGWOOD. + + + “Patience is the finest and worthiest part of fortitude, and the + rarest too . . . Patience lies at the root of all pleasures, as well + as of all powers. Hope herself ceases to be happiness when + Impatience companions her.”—_John Ruskin_. + + “Il y a vingt et cinq ans passez qu’il ne me fut monstré une coupe de + terre, tournée et esmaillée d’une telle beauté que . . . dèslors, + sans avoir esgard que je n’avois nulle connoissance des terres + argileuses, je me mis a chercher les émaux, comme un homme qui taste + en ténèbres.”—_Bernard Palissy_. + +IT so happens that the history of Pottery furnishes some of the most +remarkable instances of patient perseverance to be found in the whole +range of biography. Of these we select three of the most striking, as +exhibited in the lives of Bernard Palissy, the Frenchman; Johann +Friedrich Böttgher, the German; and Josiah Wedgwood, the Englishman. + +Though the art of making common vessels of clay was known to most of the +ancient nations, that of manufacturing enamelled earthenware was much +less common. It was, however, practised by the ancient Etruscans, +specimens of whose ware are still to be found in antiquarian collections. +But it became a lost art, and was only recovered at a comparatively +recent date. The Etruscan ware was very valuable in ancient times, a +vase being worth its weight in gold in the time of Augustus. The Moors +seem to have preserved amongst them a knowledge of the art, which they +were found practising in the island of Majorca when it was taken by the +Pisans in 1115. Among the spoil carried away were many plates of Moorish +earthenware, which, in token of triumph, were embedded in the walls of +several of the ancient churches of Pisa, where they are to be seen to +this day. About two centuries later the Italians began to make an +imitation enamelled ware, which they named Majolica, after the Moorish +place of manufacture. + +The reviver or re-discoverer of the art of enamelling in Italy was Luca +della Robbia, a Florentine sculptor. Vasari describes him as a man of +indefatigable perseverance, working with his chisel all day and +practising drawing during the greater part of the night. He pursued the +latter art with so much assiduity, that when working late, to prevent his +feet from freezing with the cold, he was accustomed to provide himself +with a basket of shavings, in which he placed them to keep himself warm +and enable him to proceed with his drawings. “Nor,” says Vasari, “am I +in the least astonished at this, since no man ever becomes distinguished +in any art whatsoever who does not early begin to acquire the power of +supporting heat, cold, hunger, thirst, and other discomforts; whereas +those persons deceive themselves altogether who suppose that when taking +their ease and surrounded by all the enjoyments of the world they may +still attain to honourable distinction,—for it is not by sleeping, but by +waking, watching, and labouring continually, that proficiency is attained +and reputation acquired.” + +But Luca, notwithstanding all his application and industry, did not +succeed in earning enough money by sculpture to enable him to live by the +art, and the idea occurred to him that he might nevertheless be able to +pursue his modelling in some material more facile and less dear than +marble. Hence it was that he began to make his models in clay, and to +endeavour by experiment so to coat and bake the clay as to render those +models durable. After many trials he at length discovered a method of +covering the clay with a material, which, when exposed to the intense +heat of a furnace, became converted into an almost imperishable enamel. +He afterwards made the further discovery of a method of imparting colour +to the enamel, thus greatly adding to its beauty. + +The fame of Luca’s work extended throughout Europe, and specimens of his +art became widely diffused. Many of them were sent into France and +Spain, where they were greatly prized. At that time coarse brown jars +and pipkins were almost the only articles of earthenware produced in +France; and this continued to be the case, with comparatively small +improvement, until the time of Palissy—a man who toiled and fought +against stupendous difficulties with a heroism that sheds a glow almost +of romance over the events of his chequered life. + +Bernard Palissy is supposed to have been born in the south of France, in +the diocese of Agen, about the year 1510. His father was probably a +worker in glass, to which trade Bernard was brought up. His parents were +poor people—too poor to give him the benefit of any school education. “I +had no other books,” said he afterwards, “than heaven and earth, which +are open to all.” He learnt, however, the art of glass-painting, to +which he added that of drawing, and afterwards reading and writing. + +When about eighteen years old, the glass trade becoming decayed, Palissy +left his father’s house, with his wallet on his back, and went out into +the world to search whether there was any place in it for him. He first +travelled towards Gascony, working at his trade where he could find +employment, and occasionally occupying part of his time in +land-measuring. Then he travelled northwards, sojourning for various +periods at different places in France, Flanders, and Lower Germany. + +Thus Palissy occupied about ten more years of his life, after which he +married, and ceased from his wanderings, settling down to practise +glass-painting and land-measuring at the small town of Saintes, in the +Lower Charente. There children were born to him; and not only his +responsibilities but his expenses increased, while, do what he could, his +earnings remained too small for his needs. It was therefore necessary +for him to bestir himself. Probably he felt capable of better things +than drudging in an employment so precarious as glass-painting; and hence +he was induced to turn his attention to the kindred art of painting and +enamelling earthenware. Yet on this subject he was wholly ignorant; for +he had never seen earth baked before he began his operations. He had +therefore everything to learn by himself, without any helper. But he was +full of hope, eager to learn, of unbounded perseverance and inexhaustible +patience. + +It was the sight of an elegant cup of Italian manufacture—most probably +one of Luca della Robbia’s make—which first set Palissy a-thinking about +the new art. A circumstance so apparently insignificant would have +produced no effect upon an ordinary mind, or even upon Palissy himself at +an ordinary time; but occurring as it did when he was meditating a change +of calling, he at once became inflamed with the desire of imitating it. +The sight of this cup disturbed his whole existence; and the +determination to discover the enamel with which it was glazed +thenceforward possessed him like a passion. Had he been a single man he +might have travelled into Italy in search of the secret; but he was bound +to his wife and his children, and could not leave them; so he remained by +their side groping in the dark in the hope of finding out the process of +making and enamelling earthenware. + +At first he could merely guess the materials of which the enamel was +composed; and he proceeded to try all manner of experiments to ascertain +what they really were. He pounded all the substances which he supposed +were likely to produce it. Then he bought common earthen pots, broke +them into pieces, and, spreading his compounds over them, subjected them +to the heat of a furnace which he erected for the purpose of baking them. +His experiments failed; and the results were broken pots and a waste of +fuel, drugs, time, and labour. Women do not readily sympathise with +experiments whose only tangible effect is to dissipate the means of +buying clothes and food for their children; and Palissy’s wife, however +dutiful in other respects, could not be reconciled to the purchase of +more earthen pots, which seemed to her to be bought only to be broken. +Yet she must needs submit; for Palissy had become thoroughly possessed by +the determination to master the secret of the enamel, and would not leave +it alone. + +For many successive months and years Palissy pursued his experiments. +The first furnace having proved a failure, he proceeded to erect another +out of doors. There he burnt more wood, spoiled more drugs and pots, and +lost more time, until poverty stared him and his family in the face. +“Thus,” said he, “I fooled away several years, with sorrow and sighs, +because I could not at all arrive at my intention.” In the intervals of +his experiments he occasionally worked at his former callings, painting +on glass, drawing portraits, and measuring land; but his earnings from +these sources were very small. At length he was no longer able to carry +on his experiments in his own furnace because of the heavy cost of fuel; +but he bought more potsherds, broke them up as before into three or four +hundred pieces, and, covering them with chemicals, carried them to a +tile-work a league and a half distant from Saintes, there to be baked in +an ordinary furnace. After the operation he went to see the pieces taken +out; and, to his dismay, the whole of the experiments were failures. But +though disappointed, he was not yet defeated; for he determined on the +very spot to “begin afresh.” + +His business as a land-measurer called him away for a brief season from +the pursuit of his experiments. In conformity with an edict of the +State, it became necessary to survey the salt-marshes in the +neighbourhood of Saintes for the purpose of levying the land-tax. +Palissy was employed to make this survey, and prepare the requisite map. +The work occupied him some time, and he was doubtless well paid for it; +but no sooner was it completed than he proceeded, with redoubled zeal, to +follow up his old investigations “in the track of the enamels.” He began +by breaking three dozen new earthen pots, the pieces of which he covered +with different materials which he had compounded, and then took them to a +neighbouring glass-furnace to be baked. The results gave him a glimmer +of hope. The greater heat of the glass-furnace had melted some of the +compounds; but though Palissy searched diligently for the white enamel he +could find none. + +For two more years he went on experimenting without any satisfactory +result, until the proceeds of his survey of the salt-marshes having +become nearly spent, he was reduced to poverty again. But he resolved to +make a last great effort; and he began by breaking more pots than ever. +More than three hundred pieces of pottery covered with his compounds were +sent to the glass-furnace; and thither he himself went to watch the +results of the baking. Four hours passed, during which he watched; and +then the furnace was opened. The material on _one_ only of the three +hundred pieces of potsherd had melted, and it was taken out to cool. As +it hardened, it grew white-white and polished! The piece of potsherd was +covered with white enamel, described by Palissy as “singularly +beautiful!” And beautiful it must no doubt have been in his eyes after +all his weary waiting. He ran home with it to his wife, feeling himself, +as he expressed it, quite a new creature. But the prize was not yet +won—far from it. The partial success of this intended last effort merely +had the effect of luring him on to a succession of further experiments +and failures. + +In order that he might complete the invention, which he now believed to +be at hand, he resolved to build for himself a glass-furnace near his +dwelling, where he might carry on his operations in secret. He proceeded +to build the furnace with his own hands, carrying the bricks from the +brick-field upon his back. He was bricklayer, labourer, and all. From +seven to eight more months passed. At last the furnace was built and +ready for use. Palissy had in the mean time fashioned a number of +vessels of clay in readiness for the laying on of the enamel. After +being subjected to a preliminary process of baking, they were covered +with the enamel compound, and again placed in the furnace for the grand +crucial experiment. Although his means were nearly exhausted, Palissy +had been for some time accumulating a great store of fuel for the final +effort; and he thought it was enough. At last the fire was lit, and the +operation proceeded. All day he sat by the furnace, feeding it with +fuel. He sat there watching and feeding all through the long night. But +the enamel did not melt. The sun rose upon his labours. His wife +brought him a portion of the scanty morning meal,—for he would not stir +from the furnace, into which he continued from time to time to heave more +fuel. The second day passed, and still the enamel did not melt. The sun +set, and another night passed. The pale, haggard, unshorn, baffled yet +not beaten Palissy sat by his furnace eagerly looking for the melting of +the enamel. A third day and night passed—a fourth, a fifth, and even a +sixth,—yes, for six long days and nights did the unconquerable Palissy +watch and toil, fighting against hope; and still the enamel would not +melt. + +It then occurred to him that there might be some defect in the materials +for the enamel—perhaps something wanting in the flux; so he set to work +to pound and compound fresh materials for a new experiment. Thus two or +three more weeks passed. But how to buy more pots?—for those which he +had made with his own hands for the purposes of the first experiment were +by long baking irretrievably spoilt for the purposes of a second. His +money was now all spent; but he could borrow. His character was still +good, though his wife and the neighbours thought him foolishly wasting +his means in futile experiments. Nevertheless he succeeded. He borrowed +sufficient from a friend to enable him to buy more fuel and more pots, +and he was again ready for a further experiment. The pots were covered +with the new compound, placed in the furnace, and the fire was again lit. + +It was the last and most desperate experiment of the whole. The fire +blazed up; the heat became intense; but still the enamel did not melt. +The fuel began to run short! How to keep up the fire? There were the +garden palings: these would burn. They must be sacrificed rather than +that the great experiment should fail. The garden palings were pulled up +and cast into the furnace. They were burnt in vain! The enamel had not +yet melted. Ten minutes more heat might do it. Fuel must be had at +whatever cost. There remained the household furniture and shelving. A +crashing noise was heard in the house; and amidst the screams of his wife +and children, who now feared Palissy’s reason was giving way, the tables +were seized, broken up, and heaved into the furnace. The enamel had not +melted yet! There remained the shelving. Another noise of the wrenching +of timber was heard within the house; and the shelves were torn down and +hurled after the furniture into the fire. Wife and children then rushed +from the house, and went frantically through the town, calling out that +poor Palissy had gone mad, and was breaking up his very furniture for +firewood! {74} + +For an entire month his shirt had not been off his back, and he was +utterly worn out—wasted with toil, anxiety, watching, and want of food. +He was in debt, and seemed on the verge of ruin. But he had at length +mastered the secret; for the last great burst of heat had melted the +enamel. The common brown household jars, when taken out of the furnace +after it had become cool, were found covered with a white glaze! For +this he could endure reproach, contumely, and scorn, and wait patiently +for the opportunity of putting his discovery into practice as better days +came round. + +Palissy next hired a potter to make some earthen vessels after designs +which he furnished; while he himself proceeded to model some medallions +in clay for the purpose of enamelling them. But how to maintain himself +and his family until the wares were made and ready for sale? Fortunately +there remained one man in Saintes who still believed in the integrity, if +not in the judgment, of Palissy—an inn-keeper, who agreed to feed and +lodge him for six months, while he went on with his manufacture. As for +the working potter whom he had hired, Palissy soon found that he could +not pay him the stipulated wages. Having already stripped his dwelling, +he could but strip himself; and he accordingly parted with some of his +clothes to the potter, in part payment of the wages which he owed him. + +Palissy next erected an improved furnace, but he was so unfortunate as to +build part of the inside with flints. When it was heated, these flints +cracked and burst, and the spiculæ were scattered over the pieces of +pottery, sticking to them. Though the enamel came out right, the work +was irretrievably spoilt, and thus six more months’ labour was lost. +Persons were found willing to buy the articles at a low price, +notwithstanding the injury they had sustained; but Palissy would not sell +them, considering that to have done so would be to “decry and abate his +honour;” and so he broke in pieces the entire batch. “Nevertheless,” +says he, “hope continued to inspire me, and I held on manfully; +sometimes, when visitors called, I entertained them with pleasantry, +while I was really sad at heart. . . . Worst of all the sufferings I had +to endure, were the mockeries and persecutions of those of my own +household, who were so unreasonable as to expect me to execute work +without the means of doing so. For years my furnaces were without any +covering or protection, and while attending them I have been for nights +at the mercy of the wind and the rain, without help or consolation, save +it might be the wailing of cats on the one side and the howling of dogs +on the other. Sometimes the tempest would beat so furiously against the +furnaces that I was compelled to leave them and seek shelter within +doors. Drenched by rain, and in no better plight than if I had been +dragged through mire, I have gone to lie down at midnight or at daybreak, +stumbling into the house without a light, and reeling from one side to +another as if I had been drunken, but really weary with watching and +filled with sorrow at the loss of my labour after such long toiling. But +alas! my home proved no refuge; for, drenched and besmeared as I was, I +found in my chamber a second persecution worse than the first, which +makes me even now marvel that I was not utterly consumed by my many +sorrows.” + +At this stage of his affairs, Palissy became melancholy and almost +hopeless, and seems to have all but broken down. He wandered gloomily +about the fields near Saintes, his clothes hanging in tatters, and +himself worn to a skeleton. In a curious passage in his writings he +describes how that the calves of his legs had disappeared and were no +longer able with the help of garters to hold up his stockings, which fell +about his heels when he walked. {77} The family continued to reproach +him for his recklessness, and his neighbours cried shame upon him for his +obstinate folly. So he returned for a time to his former calling; and +after about a year’s diligent labour, during which he earned bread for +his household and somewhat recovered his character among his neighbours, +he again resumed his darling enterprise. But though he had already spent +about ten years in the search for the enamel, it cost him nearly eight +more years of experimental plodding before he perfected his invention. +He gradually learnt dexterity and certainty of result by experience, +gathering practical knowledge out of many failures. Every mishap was a +fresh lesson to him, teaching him something new about the nature of +enamels, the qualities of argillaceous earths, the tempering of clays, +and the construction and management of furnaces. + +At last, after about sixteen years’ labour, Palissy took heart and called +himself Potter. These sixteen years had been his term of apprenticeship +to the art; during which he had wholly to teach himself, beginning at the +very beginning. He was now able to sell his wares and thereby maintain +his family in comfort. But he never rested satisfied with what he had +accomplished. He proceeded from one step of improvement to another; +always aiming at the greatest perfection possible. He studied natural +objects for patterns, and with such success that the great Buffon spoke +of him as “so great a naturalist as Nature only can produce.” His +ornamental pieces are now regarded as rare gems in the cabinets of +virtuosi, and sell at almost fabulous prices. {78} The ornaments on them +are for the most part accurate models from life, of wild animals, +lizards, and plants, found in the fields about Saintes, and tastefully +combined as ornaments into the texture of a plate or vase. When Palissy +had reached the height of his art he styled himself “Ouvrier de Terre et +Inventeur des Rustics Figulines.” + +We have not, however, come to an end of the sufferings of Palissy, +respecting which a few words remain to be said. Being a Protestant, at a +time when religious persecution waxed hot in the south of France, and +expressing his views without fear, he was regarded as a dangerous +heretic. His enemies having informed against him, his house at Saintes +was entered by the officers of “justice,” and his workshop was thrown +open to the rabble, who entered and smashed his pottery, while he himself +was hurried off by night and cast into a dungeon at Bordeaux, to wait his +turn at the stake or the scaffold. He was condemned to be burnt; but a +powerful noble, the Constable de Montmorency, interposed to save his +life—not because he had any special regard for Palissy or his religion, +but because no other artist could be found capable of executing the +enamelled pavement for his magnificent château then in course of erection +at Ecouen, about four leagues from Paris. By his influence an edict was +issued appointing Palissy Inventor of Rustic Figulines to the King and to +the Constable, which had the effect of immediately removing him from the +jurisdiction of Bourdeaux. He was accordingly liberated, and returned to +his home at Saintes only to find it devastated and broken up. His +workshop was open to the sky, and his works lay in ruins. Shaking the +dust of Saintes from his feet he left the place never to return to it, +and removed to Paris to carry on the works ordered of him by the +Constable and the Queen Mother, being lodged in the Tuileries {79} while +so occupied. + +Besides carrying on the manufacture of pottery, with the aid of his two +sons, Palissy, during the latter part of his life, wrote and published +several books on the potter’s art, with a view to the instruction of his +countrymen, and in order that they might avoid the many mistakes which he +himself had made. He also wrote on agriculture, on fortification, and +natural history, on which latter subject he even delivered lectures to a +limited number of persons. He waged war against astrology, alchemy, +witchcraft, and like impostures. This stirred up against him many +enemies, who pointed the finger at him as a heretic, and he was again +arrested for his religion and imprisoned in the Bastille. He was now an +old man of seventy-eight, trembling on the verge of the grave, but his +spirit was as brave as ever. He was threatened with death unless he +recanted; but he was as obstinate in holding to his religion as he had +been in hunting out the secret of the enamel. The king, Henry III., even +went to see him in prison to induce him to abjure his faith. “My good +man,” said the King, “you have now served my mother and myself for +forty-five years. We have put up with your adhering to your religion +amidst fires and massacres: now I am so pressed by the Guise party as +well as by my own people, that I am constrained to leave you in the hands +of your enemies, and to-morrow you will be burnt unless you become +converted.” “Sire,” answered the unconquerable old man, “I am ready to +give my life for the glory of God. You have said many times that you +have pity on me; and now I have pity on you, who have pronounced the +words _I am constrained_! It is not spoken like a king, sire; it is what +you, and those who constrain you, the Guisards and all your people, can +never effect upon me, for I know how to die.” {80a} Palissy did indeed +die shortly after, a martyr, though not at the stake. He died in the +Bastille, after enduring about a year’s imprisonment,—there peacefully +terminating a life distinguished for heroic labour, extraordinary +endurance, inflexible rectitude, and the exhibition of many rare and +noble virtues. {80b} + +The life of John Frederick Böttgher, the inventor of hard porcelain, +presents a remarkable contrast to that of Palissy; though it also +contains many points of singular and almost romantic interest. Böttgher +was born at Schleiz, in the Voightland, in 1685, and at twelve years of +age was placed apprentice with an apothecary at Berlin. He seems to have +been early fascinated by chemistry, and occupied most of his leisure in +making experiments. These for the most part tended in one direction—the +art of converting common on metals into gold. At the end of several +years, Böttgher pretended to have discovered the universal solvent of the +alchemists, and professed that he had made gold by its means. He +exhibited its powers before his master, the apothecary Zörn, and by some +trick or other succeeded in making him and several other witnesses +believe that he had actually converted copper into gold. + +The news spread abroad that the apothecary’s apprentice had discovered +the grand secret, and crowds collected about the shop to get a sight of +the wonderful young “gold-cook.” The king himself expressed a wish to +see and converse with him, and when Frederick I. was presented with a +piece of the gold pretended to have been converted from copper, he was so +dazzled with the prospect of securing an infinite quantity of it—Prussia +being then in great straits for money—that he determined to secure +Böttgher and employ him to make gold for him within the strong fortress +of Spandau. But the young apothecary, suspecting the king’s intention, +and probably fearing detection, at once resolved on flight, and he +succeeded in getting across the frontier into Saxony. + +A reward of a thousand thalers was offered for Böttgher’s apprehension, +but in vain. He arrived at Wittenberg, and appealed for protection to +the Elector of Saxony, Frederick Augustus I. (King of Poland), surnamed +“the Strong.” Frederick was himself very much in want of money at the +time, and he was overjoyed at the prospect of obtaining gold in any +quantity by the aid of the young alchemist. Böttgher was accordingly +conveyed in secret to Dresden, accompanied by a royal escort. He had +scarcely left Wittenberg when a battalion of Prussian grenadiers appeared +before the gates demanding the gold-maker’s extradition. But it was too +late: Böttgher had already arrived in Dresden, where he was lodged in the +Golden House, and treated with every consideration, though strictly +watched and kept under guard. + +The Elector, however, must needs leave him there for a time, having to +depart forthwith to Poland, then almost in a state of anarchy. But, +impatient for gold, he wrote Böttgher from Warsaw, urging him to +communicate the secret, so that he himself might practise the art of +commutation. The young “gold-cook,” thus pressed, forwarded to Frederick +a small phial containing “a reddish fluid,” which, it was asserted, +changed all metals, when in a molten state, into gold. This important +phial was taken in charge by the Prince Fürst von Fürstenburg, who, +accompanied by a regiment of Guards, hurried with it to Warsaw. Arrived +there, it was determined to make immediate trial of the process. The +King and the Prince locked themselves up in a secret chamber of the +palace, girt themselves about with leather aprons, and like true +“gold-cooks” set to work melting copper in a crucible and afterwards +applying to it the red fluid of Böttgher. But the result was +unsatisfactory; for notwithstanding all that they could do, the copper +obstinately remained copper. On referring to the alchemist’s +instructions, however, the King found that, to succeed with the process, +it was necessary that the fluid should be used “in great purity of +heart;” and as his Majesty was conscious of having spent the evening in +very bad company he attributed the failure of the experiment to that +cause. A second trial was followed by no better results, and then the +King became furious; for he had confessed and received absolution before +beginning the second experiment. + +Frederick Augustus now resolved on forcing Böttgher to disclose the +golden secret, as the only means of relief from his urgent pecuniary +difficulties. The alchemist, hearing of the royal intention, again +determined to fly. He succeeded in escaping his guard, and, after three +days’ travel, arrived at Ens in Austria, where he thought himself safe. +The agents of the Elector were, however, at his heels; they had tracked +him to the “Golden Stag,” which they surrounded, and seizing him in his +bed, notwithstanding his resistance and appeals to the Austrian +authorities for help, they carried him by force to Dresden. From this +time he was more strictly watched than ever, and he was shortly after +transferred to the strong fortress of Köningstein. It was communicated +to him that the royal exchequer was completely empty, and that ten +regiments of Poles in arrears of pay were waiting for his gold. The King +himself visited him, and told him in a severe tone that if he did not at +once proceed to make gold, he would be hung! (“_Thu mir zurecht_, +_Böttgher_, _sonst lass ich dich hangen_”). + +Years passed, and still Böttgher made no gold; but he was not hung. It +was reserved for him to make a far more important discovery than the +conversion of copper into gold, namely, the conversion of clay into +porcelain. Some rare specimens of this ware had been brought by the +Portuguese from China, which were sold for more than their weight in +gold. Böttgher was first induced to turn his attention to the subject by +Walter von Tschirnhaus, a maker of optical instruments, also an +alchemist. Tschirnhaus was a man of education and distinction, and was +held in much esteem by Prince Fürstenburg as well as by the Elector. He +very sensibly said to Böttgher, still in fear of the gallows—“If you +can’t make gold, try and do something else; make porcelain.” + +The alchemist acted on the hint, and began his experiments, working night +and day. He prosecuted his investigations for a long time with great +assiduity, but without success. At length some red clay, brought to him +for the purpose of making his crucibles, set him on the right track. He +found that this clay, when submitted to a high temperature, became +vitrified and retained its shape; and that its texture resembled that of +porcelain, excepting in colour and opacity. He had in fact accidentally +discovered red porcelain, and he proceeded to manufacture it and sell it +as porcelain. + +Böttgher was, however, well aware that the white colour was an essential +property of true porcelain; and he therefore prosecuted his experiments +in the hope of discovering the secret. Several years thus passed, but +without success; until again accident stood his friend, and helped him to +a knowledge of the art of making white porcelain. One day, in the year +1707, he found his perruque unusually heavy, and asked of his valet the +reason. The answer was, that it was owing to the powder with which the +wig was dressed, which consisted of a kind of earth then much used for +hair powder. Böttgher’s quick imagination immediately seized upon the +idea. This white earthy powder might possibly be the very earth of which +he was in search—at all events the opportunity must not be let slip of +ascertaining what it really was. He was rewarded for his painstaking +care and watchfulness; for he found, on experiment, that the principal +ingredient of the hair-powder consisted of _kaolin_, the want of which +had so long formed an insuperable difficulty in the way of his inquiries. + +The discovery, in Böttgher’s intelligent hands, led to great results, and +proved of far greater importance than the discovery of the philosopher’s +stone would have been. In October, 1707, he presented his first piece of +porcelain to the Elector, who was greatly pleased with it; and it was +resolved that Böttgher should be furnished with the means necessary for +perfecting his invention. Having obtained a skilled workman from Delft, +he began to _turn_ porcelain with great success. He now entirely +abandoned alchemy for pottery, and inscribed over the door of his +workshop this distich:— + + “_Es machte Gott_, _der grosse Schöpfer_, + _Aus einem Goldmacher einen Töpfer_.” {84} + +Böttgher, however, was still under strict surveillance, for fear lest he +should communicate his secret to others or escape the Elector’s control. +The new workshops and furnaces which were erected for him, were guarded +by troops night and day, and six superior officers were made responsible +for the personal security of the potter. + +Böttgher’s further experiments with his new furnaces proving very +successful, and the porcelain which he manufactured being found to fetch +large prices, it was next determined to establish a Royal Manufactory of +porcelain. The manufacture of delft ware was known to have greatly +enriched Holland. Why should not the manufacture of porcelain equally +enrich the Elector? Accordingly, a decree went forth, dated the 23rd of +January, 1710, for the establishment of “a large manufactory of +porcelain” at the Albrechtsburg in Meissen. In this decree, which was +translated into Latin, French, and Dutch, and distributed by the +Ambassadors of the Elector at all the European Courts, Frederick Augustus +set forth that to promote the welfare of Saxony, which had suffered much +through the Swedish invasion, he had “directed his attention to the +subterranean treasures (_unterirdischen Schätze_)” of the country, and +having employed some able persons in the investigation, they had +succeeded in manufacturing “a sort of red vessels (_eine Art rother +Gefässe_) far superior to the Indian terra sigillata;” {85} as also +“coloured ware and plates (_buntes Geschirr und Tafeln_) which may be +cut, ground, and polished, and are quite equal to Indian vessels,” and +finally that “specimens of white porcelain (_Proben von weissem +Porzellan_)” had already been obtained, and it was hoped that this +quality, too, would soon be manufactured in considerable quantities. The +royal decree concluded by inviting “foreign artists and handicraftmen” to +come to Saxony and engage as assistants in the new factory, at high +wages, and under the patronage of the King. This royal edict probably +gives the best account of the actual state of Böttgher’s invention at the +time. + +It has been stated in German publications that Böttgher, for the great +services rendered by him to the Elector and to Saxony, was made Manager +of the Royal Porcelain Works, and further promoted to the dignity of +Baron. Doubtless he deserved these honours; but his treatment was of an +altogether different character, for it was shabby, cruel, and inhuman. +Two royal officials, named Matthieu and Nehmitz, were put over his head +as directors of the factory, while he himself only held the position of +foreman of potters, and at the same time was detained the King’s +prisoner. During the erection of the factory at Meissen, while his +assistance was still indispensable, he was conducted by soldiers to and +from Dresden; and even after the works were finished, he was locked up +nightly in his room. All this preyed upon his mind, and in repeated +letters to the King he sought to obtain mitigation of his fate. Some of +these letters are very touching. “I will devote my whole soul to the art +of making porcelain,” he writes on one occasion, “I will do more than any +inventor ever did before; only give me liberty, liberty!” + +To these appeals, the King turned a deaf ear. He was ready to spend +money and grant favours; but liberty he would not give. He regarded +Böttgher as his slave. In this position, the persecuted man kept on +working for some time, till, at the end of a year or two, he grew +negligent. Disgusted with the world and with himself, he took to +drinking. Such is the force of example, that it no sooner became known +that Böttgher had betaken himself to this vice, than the greater number +of the workmen at the Meissen factory became drunkards too. Quarrels and +fightings without end were the consequence, so that the troops were +frequently called upon to interfere and keep peace among the +“Porzellanern,” as they were nicknamed. After a while, the whole of +them, more than three hundred, were shut up in the Albrechtsburg, and +treated as prisoners of state. + +Böttgher at last fell seriously ill, and in May, 1713, his dissolution +was hourly expected. The King, alarmed at losing so valuable a slave, +now gave him permission to take carriage exercise under a guard; and, +having somewhat recovered, he was allowed occasionally to go to Dresden. +In a letter written by the King in April, 1714, Böttgher was promised his +full liberty; but the offer came too late. Broken in body and mind, +alternately working and drinking, though with occasional gleams of nobler +intention, and suffering under constant ill-health, the result of his +enforced confinement, Böttgher lingered on for a few years more, until +death freed him from his sufferings on the 13th March, 1719, in the +thirty-fifth year of his age. He was buried _at night_—as if he had been +a dog—in the Johannis Cemetery of Meissen. Such was the treatment and +such the unhappy end, of one of Saxony’s greatest benefactors. + +The porcelain manufacture immediately opened up an important source of +public revenue, and it became so productive to the Elector of Saxony, +that his example was shortly after followed by most European monarchs. +Although soft porcelain had been made at St. Cloud fourteen years before +Böttgher’s discovery, the superiority of the hard porcelain soon became +generally recognised. Its manufacture was begun at Sèvres in 1770, and +it has since almost entirely superseded the softer material. This is now +one of the most thriving branches of French industry, of which the high +quality of the articles produced is certainly indisputable. + +The career of Josiah Wedgwood, the English potter, was less chequered and +more prosperous than that of either Palissy or Böttgher, and his lot was +cast in happier times. Down to the middle of last century England was +behind most other nations of the first order in Europe in respect of +skilled industry. Although there were many potters in Staffordshire—and +Wedgwood himself belonged to a numerous clan of potters of the same +name—their productions were of the rudest kind, for the most part only +plain brown ware, with the patterns scratched in while the clay was wet. +The principal supply of the better articles of earthenware came from +Delft in Holland, and of drinking stone pots from Cologne. Two foreign +potters, the brothers Elers from Nuremberg, settled for a time in +Staffordshire, and introduced an improved manufacture, but they shortly +after removed to Chelsea, where they confined themselves to the +manufacture of ornamental pieces. No porcelain capable of resisting a +scratch with a hard point had yet been made in England; and for a long +time the “white ware” made in Staffordshire was not white, but of a dirty +cream colour. Such, in a few words, was the condition of the pottery +manufacture when Josiah Wedgwood was born at Burslem in 1730. By the +time that he died, sixty-four years later, it had become completely +changed. By his energy, skill, and genius, he established the trade upon +a new and solid foundation; and, in the words of his epitaph, “converted +a rude and inconsiderable manufacture into an elegant art and an +important branch of national commerce.” + +Josiah Wedgwood was one of those indefatigable men who from time to time +spring from the ranks of the common people, and by their energetic +character not only practically educate the working population in habits +of industry, but by the example of diligence and perseverance which they +set before them, largely influence the public activity in all directions, +and contribute in a great degree to form the national character. He was, +like Arkwright, the youngest of a family of thirteen children. His +grandfather and granduncle were both potters, as was also his father who +died when he was a mere boy, leaving him a patrimony of twenty pounds. +He had learned to read and write at the village school; but on the death +of his father he was taken from it and set to work as a “thrower” in a +small pottery carried on by his elder brother. There he began life, his +working life, to use his own words, “at the lowest round of the ladder,” +when only eleven years old. He was shortly after seized by an attack of +virulent smallpox, from the effects of which he suffered during the rest +of his life, for it was followed by a disease in the right knee, which +recurred at frequent intervals, and was only got rid of by the amputation +of the limb many years later. Mr. Gladstone, in his eloquent Éloge on +Wedgwood recently delivered at Burslem, well observed that the disease +from which he suffered was not improbably the occasion of his subsequent +excellence. “It prevented him from growing up to be the active, vigorous +English workman, possessed of all his limbs, and knowing right well the +use of them; but it put him upon considering whether, as he could not be +that, he might not be something else, and something greater. It sent his +mind inwards; it drove him to meditate upon the laws and secrets of his +art. The result was, that he arrived at a perception and a grasp of them +which might, perhaps, have been envied, certainly have been owned, by an +Athenian potter.” {89} + +When he had completed his apprenticeship with his brother, Josiah joined +partnership with another workman, and carried on a small business in +making knife-hafts, boxes, and sundry articles for domestic use. Another +partnership followed, when he proceeded to make melon table plates, green +pickle leaves, candlesticks, snuffboxes, and such like articles; but he +made comparatively little progress until he began business on his own +account at Burslem in the year 1759. There he diligently pursued his +calling, introducing new articles to the trade, and gradually extending +his business. What he chiefly aimed at was to manufacture cream-coloured +ware of a better quality than was then produced in Staffordshire as +regarded shape, colour, glaze, and durability. To understand the subject +thoroughly, he devoted his leisure to the study of chemistry; and he made +numerous experiments on fluxes, glazes, and various sorts of clay. Being +a close inquirer and accurate observer, he noticed that a certain earth +containing silica, which was black before calcination, became white after +exposure to the heat of a furnace. This fact, observed and pondered on, +led to the idea of mixing silica with the red powder of the potteries, +and to the discovery that the mixture becomes white when calcined. He +had but to cover this material with a vitrification of transparent glaze, +to obtain one of the most important products of fictile art—that which, +under the name of English earthenware, was to attain the greatest +commercial value and become of the most extensive utility. + +Wedgwood was for some time much troubled by his furnaces, though nothing +like to the same extent that Palissy was; and he overcame his +difficulties in the same way—by repeated experiments and unfaltering +perseverance. His first attempts at making porcelain for table use was a +succession of disastrous failures,—the labours of months being often +destroyed in a day. It was only after a long series of trials, in the +course of which he lost time, money, and labour, that he arrived at the +proper sort of glaze to be used; but he would not be denied, and at last +he conquered success through patience. The improvement of pottery became +his passion, and was never lost sight of for a moment. Even when he had +mastered his difficulties, and become a prosperous man—manufacturing +white stone ware and cream-coloured ware in large quantities for home and +foreign use—he went forward perfecting his manufactures, until, his +example extending in all directions, the action of the entire district +was stimulated, and a great branch of British industry was eventually +established on firm foundations. He aimed throughout at the highest +excellence, declaring his determination “to give over manufacturing any +article, whatsoever it might be, rather than to degrade it.” + +Wedgwood was cordially helped by many persons of rank and influence; for, +working in the truest spirit, he readily commanded the help and +encouragement of other true workers. He made for Queen Charlotte the +first royal table-service of English manufacture, of the kind afterwards +called “Queen’s-ware,” and was appointed Royal Potter; a title which he +prized more than if he had been made a baron. Valuable sets of porcelain +were entrusted to him for imitation, in which he succeeded to admiration. +Sir William Hamilton lent him specimens of ancient art from Herculaneum, +of which he produced accurate and beautiful copies. The Duchess of +Portland outbid him for the Barberini Vase when that article was offered +for sale. He bid as high as seventeen hundred guineas for it: her grace +secured it for eighteen hundred; but when she learnt Wedgwood’s object +she at once generously lent him the vase to copy. He produced fifty +copies at a cost of about 2500_l._, and his expenses were not covered by +their sale; but he gained his object, which was to show that whatever had +been done, that English skill and energy could and would accomplish. + +Wedgwood called to his aid the crucible of the chemist, the knowledge of +the antiquary, and the skill of the artist. He found out Flaxman when a +youth, and while he liberally nurtured his genius drew from him a large +number of beautiful designs for his pottery and porcelain; converting +them by his manufacture into objects of taste and excellence, and thus +making them instrumental in the diffusion of classical art amongst the +people. By careful experiment and study he was even enabled to +rediscover the art of painting on porcelain or earthenware vases and +similar articles—an art practised by the ancient Etruscans, but which had +been lost since the time of Pliny. He distinguished himself by his own +contributions to science, and his name is still identified with the +Pyrometer which he invented. He was an indefatigable supporter of all +measures of public utility; and the construction of the Trent and Mersey +Canal, which completed the navigable communication between the eastern +and western sides of the island, was mainly due to his public-spirited +exertions, allied to the engineering skill of Brindley. The road +accommodation of the district being of an execrable character, he planned +and executed a turnpike-road through the Potteries, ten miles in length. +The reputation he achieved was such that his works at Burslem, and +subsequently those at Etruria, which he founded and built, became a point +of attraction to distinguished visitors from all parts of Europe. + +The result of Wedgwood’s labours was, that the manufacture of pottery, +which he found in the very lowest condition, became one of the staples of +England; and instead of importing what we needed for home use from +abroad, we became large exporters to other countries, supplying them with +earthenware even in the face of enormous prohibitory duties on articles +of British produce. Wedgwood gave evidence as to his manufactures before +Parliament in 1785, only some thirty years after he had begun his +operations; from which it appeared, that instead of providing only casual +employment to a small number of inefficient and badly remunerated +workmen, about 20,000 persons then derived their bread directly from the +manufacture of earthenware, without taking into account the increased +numbers to which it gave employment in coal-mines, and in the carrying +trade by land and sea, and the stimulus which it gave to employment in +many ways in various parts of the country. Yet, important as had been +the advances made in his time, Mr. Wedgwood was of opinion that the +manufacture was but in its infancy, and that the improvements which he +had effected were of but small amount compared with those to which the +art was capable of attaining, through the continued industry and growing +intelligence of the manufacturers, and the natural facilities and +political advantages enjoyed by Great Britain; an opinion which has been +fully borne out by the progress which has since been effected in this +important branch of industry. In 1852 not fewer than 84,000,000 pieces +of pottery were exported from England to other countries, besides what +were made for home use. But it is not merely the quantity and value of +the produce that is entitled to consideration, but the improvement of the +condition of the population by whom this great branch of industry is +conducted. When Wedgwood began his labours, the Staffordshire district +was only in a half-civilized state. The people were poor, uncultivated, +and few in number. When Wedgwood’s manufacture was firmly established, +there was found ample employment at good wages for three times the number +of population; while their moral advancement had kept pace with their +material improvement. + +Men such as these are fairly entitled to take rank as the Industrial +Heroes of the civilized world. Their patient self-reliance amidst trials +and difficulties, their courage and perseverance in the pursuit of worthy +objects, are not less heroic of their kind than the bravery and devotion +of the soldier and the sailor, whose duty and pride it is heroically to +defend what these valiant leaders of industry have so heroically +achieved. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. +APPLICATION AND PERSEVERANCE. + + + “Rich are the diligent, who can command + Time, nature’s stock! and could his hour-glass fall, + Would, as for seed of stars, stoop for the sand, + And, by incessant labour, gather all.”—_D’Avenant_. + + “Allez en avant, et la foi vous viendra!”—_D’Alembert_. + +THE greatest results in life are usually attained by simple means, and +the exercise of ordinary qualities. The common life of every day, with +its cares, necessities, and duties, affords ample opportunity for +acquiring experience of the best kind; and its most beaten paths provide +the true worker with abundant scope for effort and room for +self-improvement. The road of human welfare lies along the old highway +of steadfast well-doing; and they who are the most persistent, and work +in the truest spirit, will usually be the most successful. + +Fortune has often been blamed for her blindness; but fortune is not so +blind as men are. Those who look into practical life will find that +fortune is usually on the side of the industrious, as the winds and waves +are on the side of the best navigators. In the pursuit of even the +highest branches of human inquiry, the commoner qualities are found the +most useful—such as common sense, attention, application, and +perseverance. Genius may not be necessary, though even genius of the +highest sort does not disdain the use of these ordinary qualities. The +very greatest men have been among the least believers in the power of +genius, and as worldly wise and persevering as successful men of the +commoner sort. Some have even defined genius to be only common sense +intensified. A distinguished teacher and president of a college spoke of +it as the power of making efforts. John Foster held it to be the power +of lighting one’s own fire. Buffon said of genius “it is patience.” + +Newton’s was unquestionably a mind of the very highest order, and yet, +when asked by what means he had worked out his extraordinary discoveries, +he modestly answered, “By always thinking unto them.” At another time he +thus expressed his method of study: “I keep the subject continually +before me, and wait till the first dawnings open slowly by little and +little into a full and clear light.” It was in Newton’s case, as in +every other, only by diligent application and perseverance that his great +reputation was achieved. Even his recreation consisted in change of +study, laying down one subject to take up another. To Dr. Bentley he +said: “If I have done the public any service, it is due to nothing but +industry and patient thought.” So Kepler, another great philosopher, +speaking of his studies and his progress, said: “As in Virgil, ‘Fama +mobilitate viget, vires acquirit eundo,’ so it was with me, that the +diligent thought on these things was the occasion of still further +thinking; until at last I brooded with the whole energy of my mind upon +the subject.” + +The extraordinary results effected by dint of sheer industry and +perseverance, have led many distinguished men to doubt whether the gift +of genius be so exceptional an endowment as it is usually supposed to be. +Thus Voltaire held that it is only a very slight line of separation that +divides the man of genius from the man of ordinary mould. Beccaria was +even of opinion that all men might be poets and orators, and Reynolds +that they might be painters and sculptors. If this were really so, that +stolid Englishman might not have been so very far wrong after all, who, +on Canova’s death, inquired of his brother whether it was “his intention +to carry on the business!” Locke, Helvetius, and Diderot believed that +all men have an equal aptitude for genius, and that what some are able to +effect, under the laws which regulate the operations of the intellect, +must also be within the reach of others who, under like circumstances, +apply themselves to like pursuits. But while admitting to the fullest +extent the wonderful achievements of labour, and recognising the fact +that men of the most distinguished genius have invariably been found the +most indefatigable workers, it must nevertheless be sufficiently obvious +that, without the original endowment of heart and brain, no amount of +labour, however well applied, could have produced a Shakespeare, a +Newton, a Beethoven, or a Michael Angelo. + +Dalton, the chemist, repudiated the notion of his being “a genius,” +attributing everything which he had accomplished to simple industry and +accumulation. John Hunter said of himself, “My mind is like a beehive; +but full as it is of buzz and apparent confusion, it is yet full of order +and regularity, and food collected with incessant industry from the +choicest stores of nature.” We have, indeed, but to glance at the +biographies of great men to find that the most distinguished inventors, +artists, thinkers, and workers of all kinds, owe their success, in a +great measure, to their indefatigable industry and application. They +were men who turned all things to gold—even time itself. Disraeli the +elder held that the secret of success consisted in being master of your +subject, such mastery being attainable only through continuous +application and study. Hence it happens that the men who have most moved +the world, have not been so much men of genius, strictly so called, as +men of intense mediocre abilities, and untiring perseverance; not so +often the gifted, of naturally bright and shining qualities, as those who +have applied themselves diligently to their work, in whatsoever line that +might lie. “Alas!” said a widow, speaking of her brilliant but careless +son, “he has not the gift of continuance.” Wanting in perseverance, such +volatile natures are outstripped in the race of life by the diligent and +even the dull. “Che va piano, va longano, e va lontano,” says the +Italian proverb: Who goes slowly, goes long, and goes far. + +Hence, a great point to be aimed at is to get the working quality well +trained. When that is done, the race will be found comparatively easy. +We must repeat and again repeat; facility will come with labour. Not +even the simplest art can be accomplished without it; and what +difficulties it is found capable of achieving! It was by early +discipline and repetition that the late Sir Robert Peel cultivated those +remarkable, though still mediocre powers, which rendered him so +illustrious an ornament of the British Senate. When a boy at Drayton +Manor, his father was accustomed to set him up at table to practise +speaking extempore; and he early accustomed him to repeat as much of the +Sunday’s sermon as he could remember. Little progress was made at first, +but by steady perseverance the habit of attention became powerful, and +the sermon was at length repeated almost verbatim. When afterwards +replying in succession to the arguments of his parliamentary opponents—an +art in which he was perhaps unrivalled—it was little surmised that the +extraordinary power of accurate remembrance which he displayed on such +occasions had been originally trained under the discipline of his father +in the parish church of Drayton. + +It is indeed marvellous what continuous application will effect in the +commonest of things. It may seem a simple affair to play upon a violin; +yet what a long and laborious practice it requires! Giardini said to a +youth who asked him how long it would take to learn it, “Twelve hours a +day for twenty years together.” Industry, it is said, _fait l’ours +danser_. The poor figurante must devote years of incessant toil to her +profitless task before she can shine in it. When Taglioni was preparing +herself for her evening exhibition, she would, after a severe two hours’ +lesson from her father, fall down exhausted, and had to be undressed, +sponged, and resuscitated totally unconscious. The agility and bounds of +the evening were insured only at a price like this. + +Progress, however, of the best kind, is comparatively slow. Great +results cannot be achieved at once; and we must be satisfied to advance +in life as we walk, step by step. De Maistre says that “to know _how to +wait_ is the great secret of success.” We must sow before we can reap, +and often have to wait long, content meanwhile to look patiently forward +in hope; the fruit best worth waiting for often ripening the slowest. +But “time and patience,” says the Eastern proverb, “change the mulberry +leaf to satin.” + +To wait patiently, however, men must work cheerfully. Cheerfulness is an +excellent working quality, imparting great elasticity to the character. +As a bishop has said, “Temper is nine-tenths of Christianity;” so are +cheerfulness and diligence nine-tenths of practical wisdom. They are the +life and soul of success, as well as of happiness; perhaps the very +highest pleasure in life consisting in clear, brisk, conscious working; +energy, confidence, and every other good quality mainly depending upon +it. Sydney Smith, when labouring as a parish priest at Foston-le-Clay, +in Yorkshire,—though he did not feel himself to be in his proper +element,—went cheerfully to work in the firm determination to do his +best. “I am resolved,” he said, “to like it, and reconcile myself to it, +which is more manly than to feign myself above it, and to send up +complaints by the post of being thrown away, and being desolate, and such +like trash.” So Dr. Hook, when leaving Leeds for a new sphere of labour +said, “Wherever I may be, I shall, by God’s blessing, do with my might +what my hand findeth to do; and if I do not find work, I shall make it.” + +Labourers for the public good especially, have to work long and +patiently, often uncheered by the prospect of immediate recompense or +result. The seeds they sow sometimes lie hidden under the winter’s snow, +and before the spring comes the husbandman may have gone to his rest. It +is not every public worker who, like Rowland Hill, sees his great idea +bring forth fruit in his life-time. Adam Smith sowed the seeds of a +great social amelioration in that dingy old University of Glasgow where +he so long laboured, and laid the foundations of his ‘Wealth of Nations;’ +but seventy years passed before his work bore substantial fruits, nor +indeed are they all gathered in yet. + +Nothing can compensate for the loss of hope in a man: it entirely changes +the character. “How can I work—how can I be happy,” said a great but +miserable thinker, “when I have lost all hope?” One of the most cheerful +and courageous, because one of the most hopeful of workers, was Carey, +the missionary. When in India, it was no uncommon thing for him to weary +out three pundits, who officiated as his clerks, in one day, he himself +taking rest only in change of employment. Carey, the son of a +shoe-maker, was supported in his labours by Ward, the son of a carpenter, +and Marsham, the son of a weaver. By their labours, a magnificent +college was erected at Serampore; sixteen flourishing stations were +established; the Bible was translated into sixteen languages, and the +seeds were sown of a beneficent moral revolution in British India. Carey +was never ashamed of the humbleness of his origin. On one occasion, when +at the Governor-General’s table he over-heard an officer opposite him +asking another, loud enough to be heard, whether Carey had not once been +a shoemaker: “No, sir,” exclaimed Carey immediately; “only a cobbler.” +An eminently characteristic anecdote has been told of his perseverance as +a boy. When climbing a tree one day, his foot slipped, and he fell to +the ground, breaking his leg by the fall. He was confined to his bed for +weeks, but when he recovered and was able to walk without support, the +very first thing he did was to go and climb that tree. Carey had need of +this sort of dauntless courage for the great missionary work of his life, +and nobly and resolutely he did it. + +It was a maxim of Dr. Young, the philosopher, that “Any man can do what +any other man has done;” and it is unquestionable that he himself never +recoiled from any trials to which he determined to subject himself. It +is related of him, that the first time he mounted a horse, he was in +company with the grandson of Mr. Barclay of Ury, the well-known +sportsman; when the horseman who preceded them leapt a high fence. Young +wished to imitate him, but fell off his horse in the attempt. Without +saying a word, he remounted, made a second effort, and was again +unsuccessful, but this time he was not thrown further than on to the +horse’s neck, to which he clung. At the third trial, he succeeded, and +cleared the fence. + +The story of Timour the Tartar learning a lesson of perseverance under +adversity from the spider is well known. Not less interesting is the +anecdote of Audubon, the American ornithologist, as related by himself: +“An accident,” he says, “which happened to two hundred of my original +drawings, nearly put a stop to my researches in ornithology. I shall +relate it, merely to show how far enthusiasm—for by no other name can I +call my perseverance—may enable the preserver of nature to surmount the +most disheartening difficulties. I left the village of Henderson, in +Kentucky, situated on the banks of the Ohio, where I resided for several +years, to proceed to Philadelphia on business. I looked to my drawings +before my departure, placed them carefully in a wooden box, and gave them +in charge of a relative, with injunctions to see that no injury should +happen to them. My absence was of several months; and when I returned, +after having enjoyed the pleasures of home for a few days, I inquired +after my box, and what I was pleased to call my treasure. The box was +produced and opened; but reader, feel for me—a pair of Norway rats had +taken possession of the whole, and reared a young family among the gnawed +bits of paper, which, but a month previous, represented nearly a thousand +inhabitants of air! The burning beat which instantly rushed through my +brain was too great to be endured without affecting my whole nervous +system. I slept for several nights, and the days passed like days of +oblivion—until the animal powers being recalled into action through the +strength of my constitution, I took up my gun, my notebook, and my +pencils, and went forth to the woods as gaily as if nothing had happened. +I felt pleased that I might now make better drawings than before; and, +ere a period not exceeding three years had elapsed, my portfolio was +again filled.” + +The accidental destruction of Sir Isaac Newton’s papers, by his little +dog ‘Diamond’ upsetting a lighted taper upon his desk, by which the +elaborate calculations of many years were in a moment destroyed, is a +well-known anecdote, and need not be repeated: it is said that the loss +caused the philosopher such profound grief that it seriously injured his +health, and impaired his understanding. An accident of a somewhat +similar kind happened to the MS. of Mr. Carlyle’s first volume of his +‘French Revolution.’ He had lent the MS. to a literary neighbour to +peruse. By some mischance, it had been left lying on the parlour floor, +and become forgotten. Weeks ran on, and the historian sent for his work, +the printers being loud for “copy.” Inquiries were made, and it was +found that the maid-of-all-work, finding what she conceived to be a +bundle of waste paper on the floor, had used it to light the kitchen and +parlour fires with! Such was the answer returned to Mr. Carlyle; and his +feelings may be imagined. There was, however, no help for him but to set +resolutely to work to re-write the book; and he turned to and did it. He +had no draft, and was compelled to rake up from his memory facts, ideas, +and expressions, which had been long since dismissed. The composition of +the book in the first instance had been a work of pleasure; the +re-writing of it a second time was one of pain and anguish almost beyond +belief. That he persevered and finished the volume under such +circumstances, affords an instance of determination of purpose which has +seldom been surpassed. + +The lives of eminent inventors are eminently illustrative of the same +quality of perseverance. George Stephenson, when addressing young men, +was accustomed to sum up his best advice to them, in the words, “Do as I +have done—persevere.” He had worked at the improvement of his locomotive +for some fifteen years before achieving his decisive victory at Rainhill; +and Watt was engaged for some thirty years upon the condensing-engine +before he brought it to perfection. But there are equally striking +illustrations of perseverance to be found in every other branch of +science, art, and industry. Perhaps one of the most interesting is that +connected with the disentombment of the Nineveh marbles, and the +discovery of the long-lost cuneiform or arrow-headed character in which +the inscriptions on them are written—a kind of writing which had been +lost to the world since the period of the Macedonian conquest of Persia. + +An intelligent cadet of the East India Company, stationed at Kermanshah, +in Persia, had observed the curious cuneiform inscriptions on the old +monuments in the neighbourhood—so old that all historical traces of them +had been lost,—and amongst the inscriptions which he copied was that on +the celebrated rock of Behistun—a perpendicular rock rising abruptly some +1700 feet from the plain, the lower part bearing inscriptions for the +space of about 300 feet in three languages—Persian, Scythian, and +Assyrian. Comparison of the known with the unknown, of the language +which survived with the language that had been lost, enabled this cadet +to acquire some knowledge of the cuneiform character, and even to form an +alphabet. Mr. (afterwards Sir Henry) Rawlinson sent his tracings home +for examination. No professors in colleges as yet knew anything of the +cuneiform character; but there was a ci-devant clerk of the East India +House—a modest unknown man of the name of Norris—who had made this +little-understood subject his study, to whom the tracings were submitted; +and so accurate was his knowledge, that, though he had never seen the +Behistun rock, he pronounced that the cadet had not copied the puzzling +inscription with proper exactness. Rawlinson, who was still in the +neighbourhood of the rock, compared his copy with the original, and found +that Norris was right; and by further comparison and careful study the +knowledge of the cuneiform writing was thus greatly advanced. + +But to make the learning of these two self-taught men of avail, a third +labourer was necessary in order to supply them with material for the +exercise of their skill. Such a labourer presented himself in the person +of Austen Layard, originally an articled clerk in the office of a London +solicitor. One would scarcely have expected to find in these three men, +a cadet, an India-House clerk, and a lawyer’s clerk, the discoverers of a +forgotten language, and of the buried history of Babylon; yet it was so. +Layard was a youth of only twenty-two, travelling in the East, when he +was possessed with a desire to penetrate the regions beyond the +Euphrates. Accompanied by a single companion, trusting to his arms for +protection, and, what was better, to his cheerfulness, politeness, and +chivalrous bearing, he passed safely amidst tribes at deadly war with +each other; and, after the lapse of many years, with comparatively +slender means at his command, but aided by application and perseverance, +resolute will and purpose, and almost sublime patience,—borne up +throughout by his passionate enthusiasm for discovery and research,—he +succeeded in laying bare and digging up an amount of historical +treasures, the like of which has probably never before been collected by +the industry of any one man. Not less than two miles of bas-reliefs were +thus brought to light by Mr. Layard. The selection of these valuable +antiquities, now placed in the British Museum, was found so curiously +corroborative of the scriptural records of events which occurred some +three thousand years ago, that they burst upon the world almost like a +new revelation. And the story of the disentombment of these remarkable +works, as told by Mr. Layard himself in his ‘Monuments of Nineveh,’ will +always be regarded as one of the most charming and unaffected records +which we possess of individual enterprise, industry, and energy. + +The career of the Comte de Buffon presents another remarkable +illustration of the power of patient industry as well as of his own +saying, that “Genius is patience.” Notwithstanding the great results +achieved by him in natural history, Buffon, when a youth, was regarded as +of mediocre talents. His mind was slow in forming itself, and slow in +reproducing what it had acquired. He was also constitutionally indolent; +and being born to good estate, it might be supposed that he would indulge +his liking for ease and luxury. Instead of which, he early formed the +resolution of denying himself pleasure, and devoting himself to study and +self-culture. Regarding time as a treasure that was limited, and finding +that he was losing many hours by lying a-bed in the mornings, he +determined to break himself of the habit. He struggled hard against it +for some time, but failed in being able to rise at the hour he had fixed. +He then called his servant, Joseph, to his help, and promised him the +reward of a crown every time that he succeeded in getting him up before +six. At first, when called, Buffon declined to rise—pleaded that he was +ill, or pretended anger at being disturbed; and on the Count at length +getting up, Joseph found that he had earned nothing but reproaches for +having permitted his master to lie a-bed contrary to his express orders. +At length the valet determined to earn his crown; and again and again he +forced Buffon to rise, notwithstanding his entreaties, expostulations, +and threats of immediate discharge from his service. One morning Buffon +was unusually obstinate, and Joseph found it necessary to resort to the +extreme measure of dashing a basin of ice-cold water under the +bed-clothes, the effect of which was instantaneous. By the persistent +use of such means, Buffon at length conquered his habit; and he was +accustomed to say that he owed to Joseph three or four volumes of his +Natural History. + +For forty years of his life, Buffon worked every morning at his desk from +nine till two, and again in the evening from five till nine. His +diligence was so continuous and so regular that it became habitual. His +biographer has said of him, “Work was his necessity; his studies were the +charm of his life; and towards the last term of his glorious career he +frequently said that he still hoped to be able to consecrate to them a +few more years.” He was a most conscientious worker, always studying to +give the reader his best thoughts, expressed in the very best manner. He +was never wearied with touching and retouching his compositions, so that +his style may be pronounced almost perfect. He wrote the ‘Epoques de la +Nature’ not fewer than eleven times before he was satisfied with it; +although he had thought over the work about fifty years. He was a +thorough man of business, most orderly in everything; and he was +accustomed to say that genius without order lost three-fourths of its +power. His great success as a writer was the result mainly of his +painstaking labour and diligent application. “Buffon,” observed Madame +Necker, “strongly persuaded that genius is the result of a profound +attention directed to a particular subject, said that he was thoroughly +wearied out when composing his first writings, but compelled himself to +return to them and go over them carefully again, even when he thought he +had already brought them to a certain degree of perfection; and that at +length he found pleasure instead of weariness in this long and elaborate +correction.” It ought also to be added that Buffon wrote and published +all his great works while afflicted by one of the most painful diseases +to which the human frame is subject. + +Literary life affords abundant illustrations of the same power of +perseverance; and perhaps no career is more instructive, viewed in this +light, than that of Sir Walter Scott. His admirable working qualities +were trained in a lawyer’s office, where he pursued for many years a sort +of drudgery scarcely above that of a copying clerk. His daily dull +routine made his evenings, which were his own, all the more sweet; and he +generally devoted them to reading and study. He himself attributed to +his prosaic office discipline that habit of steady, sober diligence, in +which mere literary men are so often found wanting. As a copying clerk +he was allowed 3_d._ for every page containing a certain number of words; +and he sometimes, by extra work, was able to copy as many as 120 pages in +twenty-four hours, thus earning some 30_s._; out of which he would +occasionally purchase an odd volume, otherwise beyond his means. + +During his after-life Scott was wont to pride himself upon being a man of +business, and he averred, in contradiction to what he called the cant of +sonneteers, that there was no necessary connection between genius and an +aversion or contempt for the common duties of life. On the contrary, he +was of opinion that to spend some fair portion of every day in any +matter-of-fact occupation was good for the higher faculties themselves in +the upshot. While afterwards acting as clerk to the Court of Session in +Edinburgh, he performed his literary work chiefly before breakfast, +attending the court during the day, where he authenticated registered +deeds and writings of various kinds. On the whole, says Lockhart, “it +forms one of the most remarkable features in his history, that throughout +the most active period of his literary career, he must have devoted a +large proportion of his hours, during half at least of every year, to the +conscientious discharge of professional duties.” It was a principle of +action which he laid down for himself, that he must earn his living by +business, and not by literature. On one occasion he said, “I determined +that literature should be my staff, not my crutch, and that the profits +of my literary labour, however convenient otherwise, should not, if I +could help it, become necessary to my ordinary expenses.” + +His punctuality was one of the most carefully cultivated of his habits, +otherwise it had not been possible for him to get through so enormous an +amount of literary labour. He made it a rule to answer every letter +received by him on the same day, except where inquiry and deliberation +were requisite. Nothing else could have enabled him to keep abreast with +the flood of communications that poured in upon him and sometimes put his +good nature to the severest test. It was his practice to rise by five +o’clock, and light his own fire. He shaved and dressed with +deliberation, and was seated at his desk by six o’clock, with his papers +arranged before him in the most accurate order, his works of reference +marshalled round him on the floor, while at least one favourite dog lay +watching his eye, outside the line of books. Thus by the time the family +assembled for breakfast, between nine and ten, he had done enough—to use +his own words—to break the neck of the day’s work. But with all his +diligent and indefatigable industry, and his immense knowledge, the +result of many years’ patient labour, Scott always spoke with the +greatest diffidence of his own powers. On one occasion he said, +“Throughout every part of my career I have felt pinched and hampered by +my own ignorance.” + +Such is true wisdom and humility; for the more a man really knows, the +less conceited he will be. The student at Trinity College who went up to +his professor to take leave of him because he had “finished his +education,” was wisely rebuked by the professor’s reply, “Indeed! I am +only beginning mine.” The superficial person who has obtained a +smattering of many things, but knows nothing well, may pride himself upon +his gifts; but the sage humbly confesses that “all he knows is, that he +knows nothing,” or like Newton, that he has been only engaged in picking +shells by the sea shore, while the great ocean of truth lies all +unexplored before him. + +The lives of second-rate literary men furnish equally remarkable +illustrations of the power of perseverance. The late John Britton, +author of ‘The Beauties of England and Wales,’ and of many valuable +architectural works, was born in a miserable cot in Kingston, Wiltshire. +His father had been a baker and maltster, but was ruined in trade and +became insane while Britton was yet a child. The boy received very +little schooling, but a great deal of bad example, which happily did not +corrupt him. He was early in life set to labour with an uncle, a +tavern-keeper in Clerkenwell, under whom he bottled, corked, and binned +wine for more than five years. His health failing him, his uncle turned +him adrift in the world, with only two guineas, the fruits of his five +years’ service, in his pocket. During the next seven years of his life +he endured many vicissitudes and hardships. Yet he says, in his +autobiography, “in my poor and obscure lodgings, at eighteenpence a week, +I indulged in study, and often read in bed during the winter evenings, +because I could not afford a fire.” Travelling on foot to Bath, he there +obtained an engagement as a cellarman, but shortly after we find him back +in the metropolis again almost penniless, shoeless, and shirtless. He +succeeded, however, in obtaining employment as a cellarman at the London +Tavern, where it was his duty to be in the cellar from seven in the +morning until eleven at night. His health broke down under this +confinement in the dark, added to the heavy work; and he then engaged +himself, at fifteen shillings a week, to an attorney,—for he had been +diligently cultivating the art of writing during the few spare minutes +that he could call his own. While in this employment, he devoted his +leisure principally to perambulating the bookstalls, where he read books +by snatches which he could not buy, and thus picked up a good deal of odd +knowledge. Then he shifted to another office, at the advanced wages of +twenty shillings a week, still reading and studying. At twenty-eight he +was able to write a book, which he published under the title of ‘The +Enterprising Adventures of Pizarro;’ and from that time until his death, +during a period of about fifty-five years, Britton was occupied in +laborious literary occupation. The number of his published works is not +fewer than eighty-seven; the most important being ‘The Cathedral +Antiquities of England,’ in fourteen volumes, a truly magnificent work; +itself the best monument of John Britton’s indefatigable industry. + +London, the landscape gardener, was a man of somewhat similar character, +possessed of an extraordinary working power. The son of a farmer near +Edinburgh, he was early inured to work. His skill in drawing plans and +making sketches of scenery induced his father to train him for a +landscape gardener. During his apprenticeship he sat up two whole nights +every week to study; yet he worked harder during the day than any +labourer. In the course of his night studies he learnt French, and +before he was eighteen he translated a life of Abelard for an +Encyclopædia. He was so eager to make progress in life, that when only +twenty, while working as a gardener in England, he wrote down in his +note-book, “I am now twenty years of age, and perhaps a third part of my +life has passed away, and yet what have I done to benefit my fellow men?” +an unusual reflection for a youth of only twenty. From French he +proceeded to learn German, and rapidly mastered that language. Having +taken a large farm, for the purpose of introducing Scotch improvements in +the art of agriculture, he shortly succeeded in realising a considerable +income. The continent being thrown open at the end of the war, he +travelled abroad for the purpose of inquiring into the system of +gardening and agriculture in other countries. He twice repeated his +journeys, and the results were published in his Encyclopædias, which are +among the most remarkable works of their kind,—distinguished for the +immense mass of useful matter which they contain, collected by an amount +of industry and labour which has rarely been equalled. + +The career of Samuel Drew is not less remarkable than any of those which +we have cited. His father was a hard-working labourer of the parish of +St. Austell, in Cornwall. Though poor, he contrived to send his two sons +to a penny-a-week school in the neighbourhood. Jabez, the elder, took +delight in learning, and made great progress in his lessons; but Samuel, +the younger, was a dunce, notoriously given to mischief and playing +truant. When about eight years old he was put to manual labour, earning +three-halfpence a day as a buddle-boy at a tin mine. At ten he was +apprenticed to a shoemaker, and while in this employment he endured much +hardship,—living, as he used to say, “like a toad under a harrow.” He +often thought of running away and becoming a pirate, or something of the +sort, and he seems to have grown in recklessness as he grew in years. In +robbing orchards he was usually a leader; and, as he grew older, he +delighted to take part in any poaching or smuggling adventure. When +about seventeen, before his apprenticeship was out, he ran away, +intending to enter on board a man-of-war; but, sleeping in a hay-field at +night cooled him a little, and he returned to his trade. + +Drew next removed to the neighbourhood of Plymouth to work at his +shoemaking business, and while at Cawsand he won a prize for +cudgel-playing, in which he seems to have been an adept. While living +there, he had nearly lost his life in a smuggling exploit which he had +joined, partly induced by the love of adventure, and partly by the love +of gain, for his regular wages were not more than eight shillings a-week. +One night, notice was given throughout Crafthole, that a smuggler was off +the coast, ready to land her cargo; on which the male population of the +place—nearly all smugglers—made for the shore. One party remained on the +rocks to make signals and dispose of the goods as they were landed; and +another manned the boats, Drew being of the latter party. The night was +intensely dark, and very little of the cargo had been landed, when the +wind rose, with a heavy sea. The men in the boats, however, determined +to persevere, and several trips were made between the smuggler, now +standing farther out to sea, and the shore. One of the men in the boat +in which Drew was, had his hat blown off by the wind, and in attempting +to recover it, the boat was upset. Three of the men were immediately +drowned; the others clung to the boat for a time, but finding it drifting +out to sea, they took to swimming. They were two miles from land, and +the night was intensely dark. After being about three hours in the +water, Drew reached a rock near the shore, with one or two others, where +he remained benumbed with cold till morning, when he and his companions +were discovered and taken off, more dead than alive. A keg of brandy +from the cargo just landed was brought, the head knocked in with a +hatchet, and a bowlfull of the liquid presented to the survivors; and, +shortly after, Drew was able to walk two miles through deep snow, to his +lodgings. + +This was a very unpromising beginning of a life; and yet this same Drew, +scapegrace, orchard-robber, shoemaker, cudgel-player, and smuggler, +outlived the recklessness of his youth and became distinguished as a +minister of the Gospel and a writer of good books. Happily, before it +was too late, the energy which characterised him was turned into a more +healthy direction, and rendered him as eminent in usefulness as he had +before been in wickedness. His father again took him back to St. +Austell, and found employment for him as a journeyman shoemaker. Perhaps +his recent escape from death had tended to make the young man serious, as +we shortly find him attracted by the forcible preaching of Dr. Adam +Clarke, a minister of the Wesleyan Methodists. His brother having died +about the same time, the impression of seriousness was deepened; and +thenceforward he was an altered man. He began anew the work of +education, for he had almost forgotten how to read and write; and even +after several years’ practice, a friend compared his writing to the +traces of a spider dipped in ink set to crawl upon paper. Speaking of +himself, about that time, Drew afterwards said, “The more I read, the +more I felt my own ignorance; and the more I felt my ignorance, the more +invincible became my energy to surmount it. Every leisure moment was now +employed in reading one thing or another. Having to support myself by +manual labour, my time for reading was but little, and to overcome this +disadvantage, my usual method was to place a book before me while at +meat, and at every repast I read five or six pages.” The perusal of +Locke’s ‘Essay on the Understanding’ gave the first metaphysical turn to +his mind. “It awakened me from my stupor,” said he, “and induced me to +form a resolution to abandon the grovelling views which I had been +accustomed to entertain.” + +Drew began business on his own account, with a capital of a few +shillings; but his character for steadiness was such that a neighbouring +miller offered him a loan, which was accepted, and, success attending his +industry, the debt was repaid at the end of a year. He started with a +determination to “owe no man anything,” and he held to it in the midst of +many privations. Often he went to bed supperless, to avoid rising in +debt. His ambition was to achieve independence by industry and economy, +and in this he gradually succeeded. In the midst of incessant labour, he +sedulously strove to improve his mind, studying astronomy, history, and +metaphysics. He was induced to pursue the latter study chiefly because +it required fewer books to consult than either of the others. “It +appeared to be a thorny path,” he said, “but I determined, nevertheless, +to enter, and accordingly began to tread it.” + +Added to his labours in shoemaking and metaphysics, Drew became a local +preacher and a class leader. He took an eager interest in politics, and +his shop became a favourite resort with the village politicians. And +when they did not come to him, he went to them to talk over public +affairs. This so encroached upon his time that he found it necessary +sometimes to work until midnight to make up for the hours lost during the +day. His political fervour become the talk of the village. While busy +one night hammering away at a shoe-sole, a little boy, seeing a light in +the shop, put his mouth to the keyhole of the door, and called out in a +shrill pipe, “Shoemaker! shoe-maker! work by night and run about by day!” +A friend, to whom Drew afterwards told the story, asked, “And did not you +run after the boy, and strap him?” “No, no,” was the reply; “had a +pistol been fired off at my ear, I could not have been more dismayed or +confounded. I dropped my work, and said to myself, ‘True, true! but you +shall never have that to say of me again.’ To me that cry was as the +voice of God, and it has been a word in season throughout my life. I +learnt from it not to leave till to-morrow the work of to-day, or to idle +when I ought to be working.” + +From that moment Drew dropped politics, and stuck to his work, reading +and studying in his spare hours: but he never allowed the latter pursuit +to interfere with his business, though it frequently broke in upon his +rest. He married, and thought of emigrating to America; but he remained +working on. His literary taste first took the direction of poetical +composition; and from some of the fragments which have been preserved, it +appears that his speculations as to the immateriality and immortality of +the soul had their origin in these poetical musings. His study was the +kitchen, where his wife’s bellows served him for a desk; and he wrote +amidst the cries and cradlings of his children. Paine’s ‘Age of Reason’ +having appeared about this time and excited much interest, he composed a +pamphlet in refutation of its arguments, which was published. He used +afterwards to say that it was the ‘Age of Reason’ that made him an +author. Various pamphlets from his pen shortly appeared in rapid +succession, and a few years later, while still working at shoemaking, he +wrote and published his admirable ‘Essay on the Immateriality and +Immortality of the Human Soul,’ which he sold for twenty pounds, a great +sum in his estimation at the time. The book went through many editions, +and is still prized. + +Drew was in no wise puffed up by his success, as many young authors are, +but, long after he had become celebrated as a writer, used to be seen +sweeping the street before his door, or helping his apprentices to carry +in the winter’s coals. Nor could he, for some time, bring himself to +regard literature as a profession to live by. His first care was, to +secure an honest livelihood by his business, and to put into the “lottery +of literary success,” as he termed it, only the surplus of his time. At +length, however, he devoted himself wholly to literature, more +particularly in connection with the Wesleyan body; editing one of their +magazines, and superintending the publication of several of their +denominational works. He also wrote in the ‘Eclectic Review,’ and +compiled and published a valuable history of his native county, Cornwall, +with numerous other works. Towards the close of his career, he said of +himself,—“Raised from one of the lowest stations in society, I have +endeavoured through life to bring my family into a state of +respectability, by honest industry, frugality, and a high regard for my +moral character. Divine providence has smiled on my exertions, and +crowned my wishes with success.” + +The late Joseph Hume pursued a very different career, but worked in an +equally persevering spirit. He was a man of moderate parts, but of great +industry and unimpeachable honesty of purpose. The motto of his life was +“Perseverance,” and well, he acted up to it. His father dying while he +was a mere child, his mother opened a small shop in Montrose, and toiled +hard to maintain her family and bring them up respectably. Joseph she +put apprentice to a surgeon, and educated for the medical profession. +Having got his diploma, he made several voyages to India as ship’s +surgeon, {115} and afterwards obtained a cadetship in the Company’s +service. None worked harder, or lived more temperately, than he did, +and, securing the confidence of his superiors, who found him a capable +man in the performance of his duty, they gradually promoted him to higher +offices. In 1803 he was with the division of the army under General +Powell, in the Mahratta war; and the interpreter having died, Hume, who +had meanwhile studied and mastered the native languages, was appointed in +his stead. He was next made chief of the medical staff. But as if this +were not enough to occupy his full working power, he undertook in +addition the offices of paymaster and post-master, and filled them +satisfactorily. He also contracted to supply the commissariat, which he +did with advantage to the army and profit to himself. After about ten +years’ unremitting labour, he returned to England with a competency; and +one of his first acts was to make provision for the poorer members of his +family. + +But Joseph Hume was not a man to enjoy the fruits of his industry in +idleness. Work and occupation had become necessary for his comfort and +happiness. To make himself fully acquainted with the actual state of his +own country, and the condition of the people, he visited every town in +the kingdom which then enjoyed any degree of manufacturing celebrity. He +afterwards travelled abroad for the purpose of obtaining a knowledge of +foreign states. Returned to England, he entered Parliament in 1812, and +continued a member of that assembly, with a short interruption, for a +period of about thirty-four years. His first recorded speech was on the +subject of public education, and throughout his long and honourable +career he took an active and earnest interest in that and all other +questions calculated to elevate and improve the condition of the +people—criminal reform, savings-banks, free trade, economy and +retrenchment, extended representation, and such like measures, all of +which he indefatigably promoted. Whatever subject he undertook, he +worked at with all his might. He was not a good speaker, but what he +said was believed to proceed from the lips of an honest, single-minded, +accurate man. If ridicule, as Shaftesbury says, be the test of truth, +Joseph Hume stood the test well. No man was more laughed at, but there +he stood perpetually, and literally, “at his post.” He was usually +beaten on a division, but the influence which he exercised was +nevertheless felt, and many important financial improvements were +effected by him even with the vote directly against him. The amount of +hard work which he contrived to get through was something extraordinary. +He rose at six, wrote letters and arranged his papers for parliament; +then, after breakfast, he received persons on business, sometimes as many +as twenty in a morning. The House rarely assembled without him, and +though the debate might be prolonged to two or three o’clock in the +morning, his name was seldom found absent from the division. In short, +to perform the work which he did, extending over so long a period, in the +face of so many Administrations, week after week, year after year,—to be +outvoted, beaten, laughed at, standing on many occasions almost alone,—to +persevere in the face of every discouragement, preserving his temper +unruffled, never relaxing in his energy or his hope, and living to see +the greater number of his measures adopted with acclamation, must be +regarded as one of the most remarkable illustrations of the power of +human perseverance that biography can exhibit. + + + + +CHAPTER V. +HELPS AND OPPORTUNITIES—SCIENTIFIC PURSUITS. + + + “Neither the naked hand, nor the understanding, left to itself, can + do much; the work is accomplished by instruments and helps, of which + the need is not less for the understanding than the hand.”—_Bacon_. + + “Opportunity has hair in front, behind she is bald; if you seize her + by the forelock you may hold her, but, if suffered to escape, not + Jupiter himself can catch her again.”—_From the Latin_. + +ACCIDENT does very little towards the production of any great result in +life. Though sometimes what is called “a happy hit” may be made by a +bold venture, the common highway of steady industry and application is +the only safe road to travel. It is said of the landscape painter +Wilson, that when he had nearly finished a picture in a tame, correct +manner, he would step back from it, his pencil fixed at the end of a long +stick, and after gazing earnestly on the work, he would suddenly walk up +and by a few bold touches give a brilliant finish to the painting. But +it will not do for every one who would produce an effect, to throw his +brush at the canvas in the hope of producing a picture. The capability +of putting in these last vital touches is acquired only by the labour of +a life; and the probability is, that the artist who has not carefully +trained himself beforehand, in attempting to produce a brilliant effect +at a dash, will only produce a blotch. + +Sedulous attention and painstaking industry always mark the true worker. +The greatest men are not those who “despise the day of small things,” but +those who improve them the most carefully. Michael Angelo was one day +explaining to a visitor at his studio, what he had been doing at a statue +since his previous visit. “I have retouched this part—polished +that—softened this feature—brought out that muscle—given some expression +to this lip, and more energy to that limb.” “But these are trifles,” +remarked the visitor. “It may be so,” replied the sculptor, “but +recollect that trifles make perfection, and perfection is no trifle.” So +it was said of Nicholas Poussin, the painter, that the rule of his +conduct was, that “whatever was worth doing at all was worth doing well;” +and when asked, late in life, by his friend Vigneul de Marville, by what +means he had gained so high a reputation among the painters of Italy, +Poussin emphatically answered, “Because I have neglected nothing.” + +Although there are discoveries which are said to have been made by +accident, if carefully inquired into, it will be found that there has +really been very little that was accidental about them. For the most +part, these so-called accidents have only been opportunities, carefully +improved by genius. The fall of the apple at Newton’s feet has often +been quoted in proof of the accidental character of some discoveries. +But Newton’s whole mind had already been devoted for years to the +laborious and patient investigation of the subject of gravitation; and +the circumstance of the apple falling before his eyes was suddenly +apprehended only as genius could apprehend it, and served to flash upon +him the brilliant discovery then opening to his sight. In like manner, +the brilliantly-coloured soap-bubbles blown from a common tobacco +pipe—though “trifles light as air” in most eyes—suggested to Dr. Young +his beautiful theory of “interferences,” and led to his discovery +relating to the diffraction of light. Although great men are popularly +supposed only to deal with great things, men such as Newton and Young +were ready to detect the significance of the most familiar and simple +facts; their greatness consisting mainly in their wise interpretation of +them. + +The difference between men consists, in a great measure, in the +intelligence of their observation. The Russian proverb says of the +non-observant man, “He goes through the forest and sees no firewood.” +“The wise man’s eyes are in his head,” says Solomon, “but the fool +walketh in darkness.” “Sir,” said Johnson, on one occasion, to a fine +gentleman just returned from Italy, “some men will learn more in the +Hampstead stage than others in the tour of Europe.” It is the mind that +sees as well as the eye. Where unthinking gazers observe nothing, men of +intelligent vision penetrate into the very fibre of the phenomena +presented to them, attentively noting differences, making comparisons, +and recognizing their underlying idea. Many before Galileo had seen a +suspended weight swing before their eyes with a measured beat; but he was +the first to detect the value of the fact. One of the vergers in the +cathedral at Pisa, after replenishing with oil a lamp which hung from the +roof, left it swinging to and fro; and Galileo, then a youth of only +eighteen, noting it attentively, conceived the idea of applying it to the +measurement of time. Fifty years of study and labour, however, elapsed, +before he completed the invention of his Pendulum,—the importance of +which, in the measurement of time and in astronomical calculations, can +scarcely be overrated. In like manner, Galileo, having casually heard +that one Lippershey, a Dutch spectacle-maker, had presented to Count +Maurice of Nassau an instrument by means of which distant objects +appeared nearer to the beholder, addressed himself to the cause of such a +phenomenon, which led to the invention of the telescope, and proved the +beginning of the modern science of astronomy. Discoveries such as these +could never have been made by a negligent observer, or by a mere passive +listener. + +While Captain (afterwards Sir Samuel) Brown was occupied in studying the +construction of bridges, with the view of contriving one of a cheap +description to be thrown across the Tweed, near which he lived, he was +walking in his garden one dewy autumn morning, when he saw a tiny +spider’s net suspended across his path. The idea immediately occurred to +him, that a bridge of iron ropes or chains might be constructed in like +manner, and the result was the invention of his Suspension Bridge. So +James Watt, when consulted about the mode of carrying water by pipes +under the Clyde, along the unequal bed of the river, turned his attention +one day to the shell of a lobster presented at table; and from that model +he invented an iron tube, which, when laid down, was found effectually to +answer the purpose. Sir Isambert Brunel took his first lessons in +forming the Thames Tunnel from the tiny shipworm: he saw how the little +creature perforated the wood with its well-armed head, first in one +direction and then in another, till the archway was complete, and then +daubed over the roof and sides with a kind of varnish; and by copying +this work exactly on a large scale, Brunel was at length enabled to +construct his shield and accomplish his great engineering work. + +It is the intelligent eye of the careful observer which gives these +apparently trivial phenomena their value. So trifling a matter as the +sight of seaweed floating past his ship, enabled Columbus to quell the +mutiny which arose amongst his sailors at not discovering land, and to +assure them that the eagerly sought New World was not far off. There is +nothing so small that it should remain forgotten; and no fact, however +trivial, but may prove useful in some way or other if carefully +interpreted. Who could have imagined that the famous “chalk cliffs of +Albion” had been built up by tiny insects—detected only by the help of +the microscope—of the same order of creatures that have gemmed the sea +with islands of coral! And who that contemplates such extraordinary +results, arising from infinitely minute operations, will venture to +question the power of little things? + +It is the close observation of little things which is the secret of +success in business, in art, in science, and in every pursuit in life. +Human knowledge is but an accumulation of small facts, made by successive +generations of men, the little bits of knowledge and experience carefully +treasured up by them growing at length into a mighty pyramid. Though +many of these facts and observations seemed in the first instance to have +but slight significance, they are all found to have their eventual uses, +and to fit into their proper places. Even many speculations seemingly +remote, turn out to be the basis of results the most obviously practical. +In the case of the conic sections discovered by Apollonius Pergæus, +twenty centuries elapsed before they were made the basis of astronomy—a +science which enables the modern navigator to steer his way through +unknown seas and traces for him in the heavens an unerring path to his +appointed haven. And had not mathematicians toiled for so long, and, to +uninstructed observers, apparently so fruitlessly, over the abstract +relations of lines and surfaces, it is probable that but few of our +mechanical inventions would have seen the light. + +When Franklin made his discovery of the identity of lightning and +electricity, it was sneered at, and people asked, “Of what use is it?” +To which his reply was, “What is the use of a child? It may become a +man!” When Galvani discovered that a frog’s leg twitched when placed in +contact with different metals, it could scarcely have been imagined that +so apparently insignificant a fact could have led to important results. +Yet therein lay the germ of the Electric Telegraph, which binds the +intelligence of continents together, and, probably before many years have +elapsed, will “put a girdle round the globe.” So too, little bits of +stone and fossil, dug out of the earth, intelligently interpreted, have +issued in the science of geology and the practical operations of mining, +in which large capitals are invested and vast numbers of persons +profitably employed. + +The gigantic machinery employed in pumping our mines, working our mills +and manufactures, and driving our steam-ships and locomotives, in like +manner depends for its supply of power upon so slight an agency as little +drops of water expanded by heat,—that familiar agency called steam, which +we see issuing from that common tea-kettle spout, but which, when put up +within an ingeniously contrived mechanism, displays a force equal to that +of millions of horses, and contains a power to rebuke the waves and set +even the hurricane at defiance. The same power at work within the bowels +of the earth has been the cause of those volcanoes and earthquakes which +have played so mighty a part in the history of the globe. + +It is said that the Marquis of Worcester’s attention was first +accidentally directed to the subject of steam power, by the tight cover +of a vessel containing hot water having been blown off before his eyes, +when confined a prisoner in the Tower. He published the result of his +observations in his ‘Century of Inventions,’ which formed a sort of +text-book for inquirers into the powers of steam for a time, until +Savary, Newcomen, and others, applying it to practical purposes, brought +the steam-engine to the state in which Watt found it when called upon to +repair a model of Newcomen’s engine, which belonged to the University of +Glasgow. This accidental circumstance was an opportunity for Watt, which +he was not slow to improve; and it was the labour of his life to bring +the steam-engine to perfection. + +This art of seizing opportunities and turning even accidents to account, +bending them to some purpose is a great secret of success. Dr. Johnson +has defined genius to be “a mind of large general powers accidentally +determined in some particular direction.” Men who are resolved to find a +way for themselves, will always find opportunities enough; and if they do +not lie ready to their hand, they will make them. It is not those who +have enjoyed the advantages of colleges, museums, and public galleries, +that have accomplished the most for science and art; nor have the +greatest mechanics and inventors been trained in mechanics’ institutes. +Necessity, oftener than facility, has been the mother of invention; and +the most prolific school of all has been the school of difficulty. Some +of the very best workmen have had the most indifferent tools to work +with. But it is not tools that make the workman, but the trained skill +and perseverance of the man himself. Indeed it is proverbial that the +bad workman never yet had a good tool. Some one asked Opie by what +wonderful process he mixed his colours. “I mix them with my brains, +sir,” was his reply. It is the same with every workman who would excel. +Ferguson made marvellous things—such as his wooden clock, that accurately +measured the hours—by means of a common penknife, a tool in everybody’s +hand; but then everybody is not a Ferguson. A pan of water and two +thermometers were the tools by which Dr. Black discovered latent heat; +and a prism, a lens, and a sheet of pasteboard enabled Newton to unfold +the composition of light and the origin of colours. An eminent foreign +_savant_ once called upon Dr. Wollaston, and requested to be shown over +his laboratories in which science had been enriched by so many important +discoveries, when the doctor took him into a little study, and, pointing +to an old tea-tray on the table, containing a few watch-glasses, test +papers, a small balance, and a blowpipe, said, “There is all the +laboratory that I have!” + +Stothard learnt the art of combining colours by closely studying +butterflies’ wings: he would often say that no one knew what he owed to +these tiny insects. A burnt stick and a barn door served Wilkie in lieu +of pencil and canvas. Bewick first practised drawing on the cottage +walls of his native village, which he covered with his sketches in chalk; +and Benjamin West made his first brushes out of the cat’s tail. Ferguson +laid himself down in the fields at night in a blanket, and made a map of +the heavenly bodies by means of a thread with small beads on it stretched +between his eye and the stars. Franklin first robbed the thundercloud of +its lightning by means of a kite made with two cross sticks and a silk +handkerchief. Watt made his first model of the condensing steam-engine +out of an old anatomist’s syringe, used to inject the arteries previous +to dissection. Gifford worked his first problems in mathematics, when a +cobbler’s apprentice, upon small scraps of leather, which he beat smooth +for the purpose; whilst Rittenhouse, the astronomer, first calculated +eclipses on his plough handle. + +The most ordinary occasions will furnish a man with opportunities or +suggestions for improvement, if he be but prompt to take advantage of +them. Professor Lee was attracted to the study of Hebrew by finding a +Bible in that tongue in a synagogue, while working as a common carpenter +at the repairs of the benches. He became possessed with a desire to read +the book in the original, and, buying a cheap second-hand copy of a +Hebrew grammar, he set to work and learnt the language for himself. As +Edmund Stone said to the Duke of Argyle, in answer to his grace’s inquiry +how he, a poor gardener’s boy, had contrived to be able to read Newton’s +Principia in Latin, “One needs only to know the twenty-four letters of +the alphabet in order to learn everything else that one wishes.” +Application and perseverance, and the diligent improvement of +opportunities, will do the rest. + +Sir Walter Scott found opportunities for self-improvement in every +pursuit, and turned even accidents to account. Thus it was in the +discharge of his functions as a writer’s apprentice that he first visited +the Highlands, and formed those friendships among the surviving heroes of +1745 which served to lay the foundation of a large class of his works. +Later in life, when employed as quartermaster of the Edinburgh Light +Cavalry, he was accidentally disabled by the kick of a horse, and +confined for some time to his house; but Scott was a sworn enemy to +idleness, and he forthwith set his mind to work. In three days he had +composed the first canto of ‘The Lay of the Last Minstrel,’ which he +shortly after finished,—his first great original work. + +The attention of Dr. Priestley, the discoverer of so many gases, was +accidentally drawn to the subject of chemistry through his living in the +neighbourhood of a brewery. When visiting the place one day, he noted +the peculiar appearances attending the extinction of lighted chips in the +gas floating over the fermented liquor. He was forty years old at the +time, and knew nothing of chemistry. He consulted books to ascertain the +cause, but they told him little, for as yet nothing was known on the +subject. Then he began to experiment, with some rude apparatus of his +own contrivance. The curious results of his first experiments led to +others, which in his hands shortly became the science of pneumatic +chemistry. About the same time, Scheele was obscurely working in the +same direction in a remote Swedish village; and he discovered several new +gases, with no more effective apparatus at his command than a few +apothecaries’ phials and pigs’ bladders. + +Sir Humphry Davy, when an apothecary’s apprentice, performed his first +experiments with instruments of the rudest description. He extemporised +the greater part of them himself, out of the motley materials which +chance threw in his way,—the pots and pans of the kitchen, and the phials +and vessels of his master’s surgery. It happened that a French ship was +wrecked off the Land’s End, and the surgeon escaped, bearing with him his +case of instruments, amongst which was an old-fashioned glyster +apparatus; this article he presented to Davy, with whom he had become +acquainted. The apothecary’s apprentice received it with great +exultation, and forthwith employed it as a part of a pneumatic apparatus +which he contrived, afterwards using it to perform the duties of an +air-pump in one of his experiments on the nature and sources of heat. + +In like manner Professor Faraday, Sir Humphry Davy’s scientific +successor, made his first experiments in electricity by means of an old +bottle, while he was still a working bookbinder. And it is a curious +fact that Faraday was first attracted to the study of chemistry by +hearing one of Sir Humphry Davy’s lectures on the subject at the Royal +Institution. A gentleman, who was a member, calling one day at the shop +where Faraday was employed in binding books, found him poring over the +article “Electricity” in an Encyclopædia placed in his hands to bind. +The gentleman, having made inquiries, found that the young bookbinder was +curious about such subjects, and gave him an order of admission to the +Royal Institution, where he attended a course of four lectures delivered +by Sir Humphry. He took notes of them, which he showed to the lecturer, +who acknowledged their scientific accuracy, and was surprised when +informed of the humble position of the reporter. Faraday then expressed +his desire to devote himself to the prosecution of chemical studies, from +which Sir Humphry at first endeavoured to dissuade him: but the young man +persisting, he was at length taken into the Royal Institution as an +assistant; and eventually the mantle of the brilliant apothecary’s boy +fell upon the worthy shoulders of the equally brilliant bookbinder’s +apprentice. + +The words which Davy entered in his note-book, when about twenty years of +age, working in Dr. Beddoes’ laboratory at Bristol, were eminently +characteristic of him: “I have neither riches, nor power, nor birth to +recommend me; yet if I live, I trust I shall not be of less service to +mankind and my friends, than if I had been born with all these +advantages.” Davy possessed the capability, as Faraday does, of devoting +the whole power of his mind to the practical and experimental +investigation of a subject in all its bearings; and such a mind will +rarely fail, by dint of mere industry and patient thinking, in producing +results of the highest order. Coleridge said of Davy, “There is an +energy and elasticity in his mind, which enables him to seize on and +analyze all questions, pushing them to their legitimate consequences. +Every subject in Davy’s mind has the principle of vitality. Living +thoughts spring up like turf under his feet.” Davy, on his part, said of +Coleridge, whose abilities he greatly admired, “With the most exalted +genius, enlarged views, sensitive heart, and enlightened mind, he will be +the victim of a want of order, precision, and regularity.” + +The great Cuvier was a singularly accurate, careful, and industrious +observer. When a boy, he was attracted to the subject of natural history +by the sight of a volume of Buffon which accidentally fell in his way. +He at once proceeded to copy the drawings, and to colour them after the +descriptions given in the text. While still at school, one of his +teachers made him a present of ‘Linnæus’s System of Nature;’ and for more +than ten years this constituted his library of natural history. At +eighteen he was offered the situation of tutor in a family residing near +Fécamp, in Normandy. Living close to the sea-shore, he was brought face +to face with the wonders of marine life. Strolling along the sands one +day, he observed a stranded cuttlefish. He was attracted by the curious +object, took it home to dissect, and thus began the study of the +molluscæ, in the pursuit of which he achieved so distinguished a +reputation. He had no books to refer to, excepting only the great book +of Nature which lay open before him. The study of the novel and +interesting objects which it daily presented to his eyes made a much +deeper impression on his mind than any written or engraved descriptions +could possibly have done. Three years thus passed, during which he +compared the living species of marine animals with the fossil remains +found in the neighbourhood, dissected the specimens of marine life that +came under his notice, and, by careful observation, prepared the way for +a complete reform in the classification of the animal kingdom. About +this time Cuvier became known to the learned Abbé Teissier, who wrote to +Jussieu and other friends in Paris on the subject of the young +naturalist’s inquiries, in terms of such high commendation, that Cuvier +was requested to send some of his papers to the Society of Natural +History; and he was shortly after appointed assistant-superintendent at +the Jardin des Plantes. In the letter written by Teissier to Jussieu, +introducing the young naturalist to his notice, he said, “You remember +that it was I who gave Delambre to the Academy in another branch of +science: this also will be a Delambre.” We need scarcely add that the +prediction of Teissier was more than fulfilled. + +It is not accident, then, that helps a man in the world so much as +purpose and persistent industry. To the feeble, the sluggish and +purposeless, the happiest accidents avail nothing,—they pass them by, +seeing no meaning in them. But it is astonishing how much can be +accomplished if we are prompt to seize and improve the opportunities for +action and effort which are constantly presenting themselves. Watt +taught himself chemistry and mechanics while working at his trade of a +mathematical-instrument maker, at the same time that he was learning +German from a Swiss dyer. Stephenson taught himself arithmetic and +mensuration while working as an engineman during the night shifts; and +when he could snatch a few moments in the intervals allowed for meals +during the day, he worked his sums with a bit of chalk upon the sides of +the colliery waggons. Dalton’s industry was the habit of his life. He +began from his boyhood, for he taught a little village-school when he was +only about twelve years old,—keeping the school in winter, and working +upon his father’s farm in summer. He would sometimes urge himself and +companions to study by the stimulus of a bet, though bred a Quaker; and +on one occasion, by his satisfactory solution of a problem, he won as +much as enabled him to buy a winter’s store of candles. He continued his +meteorological observations until a day or two before he died,—having +made and recorded upwards of 200,000 in the course of his life. + +With perseverance, the very odds and ends of time may be worked up into +results of the greatest value. An hour in every day withdrawn from +frivolous pursuits would, if profitably employed, enable a person of +ordinary capacity to go far towards mastering a science. It would make +an ignorant man a well-informed one in less than ten years. Time should +not be allowed to pass without yielding fruits, in the form of something +learnt worthy of being known, some good principle cultivated, or some +good habit strengthened. Dr. Mason Good translated Lucretius while +riding in his carriage in the streets of London, going the round of his +patients. Dr. Darwin composed nearly all his works in the same way while +driving about in his “sulky” from house to house in the country,—writing +down his thoughts on little scraps of paper, which he carried about with +him for the purpose. Hale wrote his ‘Contemplations’ while travelling on +circuit. Dr. Burney learnt French and Italian while travelling on +horseback from one musical pupil to another in the course of his +profession. Kirke White learnt Greek while walking to and from a +lawyer’s office; and we personally know a man of eminent position who +learnt Latin and French while going messages as an errand-boy in the +streets of Manchester. + +Daguesseau, one of the great Chancellors of France, by carefully working +up his odd bits of time, wrote a bulky and able volume in the successive +intervals of waiting for dinner, and Madame de Genlis composed several of +her charming volumes while waiting for the princess to whom she gave her +daily lessons. Elihu Burritt attributed his first success in +self-improvement, not to genius, which he disclaimed, but simply to the +careful employment of those invaluable fragments of time, called “odd +moments.” While working and earning his living as a blacksmith, he +mastered some eighteen ancient and modern languages, and twenty-two +European dialects. + +What a solemn and striking admonition to youth is that inscribed on the +dial at All Souls, Oxford—“Pereunt et imputantur”—the hours perish, and +are laid to our charge. Time is the only little fragment of Eternity +that belongs to man; and, like life, it can never be recalled. “In the +dissipation of worldly treasure,” says Jackson of Exeter, “the frugality +of the future may balance the extravagance of the past; but who can say, +‘I will take from minutes to-morrow to compensate for those I have lost +to-day’?” Melancthon noted down the time lost by him, that he might +thereby reanimate his industry, and not lose an hour. An Italian scholar +put over his door an inscription intimating that whosoever remained there +should join in his labours. “We are afraid,” said some visitors to +Baxter, “that we break in upon your time.” “To be sure you do,” replied +the disturbed and blunt divine. Time was the estate out of which these +great workers, and all other workers, formed that rich treasury of +thoughts and deeds which they have left to their successors. + +The mere drudgery undergone by some men in carrying on their undertakings +has been something extraordinary, but the drudgery they regarded as the +price of success. Addison amassed as much as three folios of manuscript +materials before he began his ‘Spectator.’ Newton wrote his ‘Chronology’ +fifteen times over before he was satisfied with it; and Gibbon wrote out +his ‘Memoir’ nine times. Hale studied for many years at the rate of +sixteen hours a day, and when wearied with the study of the law, he would +recreate himself with philosophy and the study of the mathematics. Hume +wrote thirteen hours a day while preparing his ‘History of England.’ +Montesquieu, speaking of one part of his writings, said to a friend, “You +will read it in a few hours; but I assure you it has cost me so much +labour that it has whitened my hair.” + +The practice of writing down thoughts and facts for the purpose of +holding them fast and preventing their escape into the dim region of +forgetfulness, has been much resorted to by thoughtful and studious men. +Lord Bacon left behind him many manuscripts entitled “Sudden thoughts set +down for use.” Erskine made great extracts from Burke; and Eldon copied +Coke upon Littleton twice over with his own hand, so that the book +became, as it were, part of his own mind. The late Dr. Pye Smith, when +apprenticed to his father as a bookbinder, was accustomed to make copious +memoranda of all the books he read, with extracts and criticisms. This +indomitable industry in collecting materials distinguished him through +life, his biographer describing him as “always at work, always in +advance, always accumulating.” These note-books afterwards proved, like +Richter’s “quarries,” the great storehouse from which he drew his +illustrations. + +The same practice characterized the eminent John Hunter, who adopted it +for the purpose of supplying the defects of memory; and he was accustomed +thus to illustrate the advantages which one derives from putting one’s +thoughts in writing: “It resembles,” he said, “a tradesman taking stock, +without which he never knows either what he possesses or in what he is +deficient.” John Hunter—whose observation was so keen that Abernethy was +accustomed to speak of him as “the Argus-eyed”—furnished an illustrious +example of the power of patient industry. He received little or no +education till he was about twenty years of age, and it was with +difficulty that he acquired the arts of reading and writing. He worked +for some years as a common carpenter at Glasgow, after which he joined +his brother William, who had settled in London as a lecturer and +anatomical demonstrator. John entered his dissecting-room as an +assistant, but soon shot ahead of his brother, partly by virtue of his +great natural ability, but mainly by reason of his patient application +and indefatigable industry. He was one of the first in this country to +devote himself assiduously to the study of comparative anatomy, and the +objects he dissected and collected took the eminent Professor Owen no +less than ten years to arrange. The collection contains some twenty +thousand specimens, and is the most precious treasure of the kind that +has ever been accumulated by the industry of one man. Hunter used to +spend every morning from sunrise until eight o’clock in his museum; and +throughout the day he carried on his extensive private practice, +performed his laborious duties as surgeon to St. George’s Hospital and +deputy surgeon-general to the army; delivered lectures to students, and +superintended a school of practical anatomy at his own house; finding +leisure, amidst all, for elaborate experiments on the animal economy, and +the composition of various works of great scientific importance. To find +time for this gigantic amount of work, he allowed himself only four hours +of sleep at night, and an hour after dinner. When once asked what method +he had adopted to insure success in his undertakings, he replied, “My +rule is, deliberately to consider, before I commence, whether the thing +be practicable. If it be not practicable, I do not attempt it. If it be +practicable, I can accomplish it if I give sufficient pains to it; and +having begun, I never stop till the thing is done. To this rule I owe +all my success.” + +Hunter occupied a great deal of his time in collecting definite facts +respecting matters which, before his day, were regarded as exceedingly +trivial. Thus it was supposed by many of his contemporaries that he was +only wasting his time and thought in studying so carefully as he did the +growth of a deer’s horn. But Hunter was impressed with the conviction +that no accurate knowledge of scientific facts is without its value. By +the study referred to, he learnt how arteries accommodate themselves to +circumstances, and enlarge as occasion requires; and the knowledge thus +acquired emboldened him, in a case of aneurism in a branch artery, to tie +the main trunk where no surgeon before him had dared to tie it, and the +life of his patient was saved. Like many original men, he worked for a +long time as it were underground, digging and laying foundations. He was +a solitary and self-reliant genius, holding on his course without the +solace of sympathy or approbation,—for but few of his contemporaries +perceived the ultimate object of his pursuits. But like all true +workers, he did not fail in securing his best reward—that which depends +less upon others than upon one’s self—the approval of conscience, which +in a right-minded man invariably follows the honest and energetic +performance of duty. + +Ambrose Paré, the great French surgeon, was another illustrious instance +of close observation, patient application, and indefatigable +perseverance. He was the son of a barber at Laval, in Maine, where he +was born in 1509. His parents were too poor to send him to school, but +they placed him as foot-boy with the curé of the village, hoping that +under that learned man he might pick up an education for himself. But +the curé kept him so busily employed in grooming his mule and in other +menial offices that the boy found no time for learning. While in his +service, it happened that the celebrated lithotomist, Cotot, came to +Laval to operate on one of the curé’s ecclesiastical brethren. Paré was +present at the operation, and was so much interested by it that he is +said to have from that time formed the determination of devoting himself +to the art of surgery. + +Leaving the curé’s household service, Paré apprenticed himself to a +barber-surgeon named Vialot, under whom he learnt to let blood, draw +teeth, and perform the minor operations. After four years’ experience of +this kind, he went to Paris to study at the school of anatomy and +surgery, meanwhile maintaining himself by his trade of a barber. He +afterwards succeeded in obtaining an appointment as assistant at the +Hôtel Dieu, where his conduct was so exemplary, and his progress so +marked, that the chief surgeon, Goupil, entrusted him with the charge of +the patients whom he could not himself attend to. After the usual course +of instruction, Paré was admitted a master barber-surgeon, and shortly +after was appointed to a charge with the French army under Montmorenci in +Piedmont. Paré was not a man to follow in the ordinary ruts of his +profession, but brought the resources of an ardent and original mind to +bear upon his daily work, diligently thinking out for himself the +_rationale_ of diseases and their befitting remedies. Before his time +the wounded suffered much more at the hands of their surgeons than they +did at those of their enemies. To stop bleeding from gunshot wounds, the +barbarous expedient was resorted to of dressing them with boiling oil. +Hæmorrhage was also stopped by searing the wounds with a red-hot iron; +and when amputation was necessary, it was performed with a red-hot knife. +At first Paré treated wounds according to the approved methods; but, +fortunately, on one occasion, running short of boiling oil, he +substituted a mild and emollient application. He was in great fear all +night lest he should have done wrong in adopting this treatment; but was +greatly relieved next morning on finding his patients comparatively +comfortable, while those whose wounds had been treated in the usual way +were writhing in torment. Such was the casual origin of one of Paré’s +greatest improvements in the treatment of gun-shot wounds; and he +proceeded to adopt the emollient treatment in all future cases. Another +still more important improvement was his employment of the ligature in +tying arteries to stop hæmorrhage, instead of the actual cautery. Paré, +however, met with the usual fate of innovators and reformers. His +practice was denounced by his surgical brethren as dangerous, +unprofessional, and empirical; and the older surgeons banded themselves +together to resist its adoption. They reproached him for his want of +education, more especially for his ignorance of Latin and Greek; and they +assailed him with quotations from ancient writers, which he was unable +either to verify or refute. But the best answer to his assailants was +the success of his practice. The wounded soldiers called out everywhere +for Paré, and he was always at their service: he tended them carefully +and affectionately; and he usually took leave of them with the words, “I +have dressed you; may God cure you.” + +After three years’ active service as army-surgeon, Paré returned to Paris +with such a reputation that he was at once appointed surgeon in ordinary +to the King. When Metz was besieged by the Spanish army, under Charles +V., the garrison suffered heavy loss, and the number of wounded was very +great. The surgeons were few and incompetent, and probably slew more by +their bad treatment than the Spaniards did by the sword. The Duke of +Guise, who commanded the garrison, wrote to the King imploring him to +send Paré to his help. The courageous surgeon at once set out, and, +after braving many dangers (to use his own words, “d’estre pendu, +estranglé ou mis en pièces”), he succeeded in passing the enemy’s lines, +and entered Metz in safety. The Duke, the generals, and the captains +gave him an affectionate welcome; while the soldiers, when they heard of +his arrival, cried, “We no longer fear dying of our wounds; our friend is +among us.” In the following year Paré was in like manner with the +besieged in the town of Hesdin, which shortly fell before the Duke of +Savoy, and he was taken prisoner. But having succeeded in curing one of +the enemy’s chief officers of a serious wound, he was discharged without +ransom, and returned in safety to Paris. + +The rest of his life was occupied in study, in self-improvement, in +piety, and in good deeds. Urged by some of the most learned among his +contemporaries, he placed on record the results of his surgical +experience, in twenty-eight books, which were published by him at +different times. His writings are valuable and remarkable chiefly on +account of the great number of facts and cases contained in them, and the +care with which he avoids giving any directions resting merely upon +theory unsupported by observation. Paré continued, though a Protestant, +to hold the office of surgeon in ordinary to the King; and during the +Massacre of St. Bartholomew he owed his life to the personal friendship +of Charles IX., whom he had on one occasion saved from the dangerous +effects of a wound inflicted by a clumsy surgeon in performing the +operation of venesection. Brantôme, in his ‘Mémoires,’ thus speaks of +the King’s rescue of Paré on the night of Saint Bartholomew—“He sent to +fetch him, and to remain during the night in his chamber and +wardrobe-room, commanding him not to stir, and saying that it was not +reasonable that a man who had preserved the lives of so many people +should himself be massacred.” Thus Paré escaped the horrors of that +fearful night, which he survived for many years, and was permitted to die +in peace, full of age and honours. + +Harvey was as indefatigable a labourer as any we have named. He spent +not less than eight long years of investigation and research before he +published his views of the circulation of the blood. He repeated and +verified his experiments again and again, probably anticipating the +opposition he would have to encounter from the profession on making known +his discovery. The tract in which he at length announced his views, was +a most modest one,—but simple, perspicuous, and conclusive. It was +nevertheless received with ridicule, as the utterance of a crack-brained +impostor. For some time, he did not make a single convert, and gained +nothing but contumely and abuse. He had called in question the revered +authority of the ancients; and it was even averred that his views were +calculated to subvert the authority of the Scriptures and undermine the +very foundations of morality and religion. His little practice fell +away, and he was left almost without a friend. This lasted for some +years, until the great truth, held fast by Harvey amidst all his +adversity, and which had dropped into many thoughtful minds, gradually +ripened by further observation, and after a period of about twenty-five +years, it became generally recognised as an established scientific truth. + +The difficulties encountered by Dr. Jenner in promulgating and +establishing his discovery of vaccination as a preventive of small-pox, +were even greater than those of Harvey. Many, before him, had witnessed +the cow-pox, and had heard of the report current among the milkmaids in +Gloucestershire, that whoever had taken that disease was secure against +small-pox. It was a trifling, vulgar rumour, supposed to have no +significance whatever; and no one had thought it worthy of investigation, +until it was accidentally brought under the notice of Jenner. He was a +youth, pursuing his studies at Sodbury, when his attention was arrested +by the casual observation made by a country girl who came to his master’s +shop for advice. The small-pox was mentioned, when the girl said, “I +can’t take that disease, for I have had cow-pox.” The observation +immediately riveted Jenner’s attention, and he forthwith set about +inquiring and making observations on the subject. His professional +friends, to whom he mentioned his views as to the prophylactic virtues of +cow-pox, laughed at him, and even threatened to expel him from their +society, if he persisted in harassing them with the subject. In London +he was so fortunate as to study under John Hunter, to whom he +communicated his views. The advice of the great anatomist was thoroughly +characteristic: “Don’t think, but _try_; be patient, be accurate.” +Jenner’s courage was supported by the advice, which conveyed to him the +true art of philosophical investigation. He went back to the country to +practise his profession and make observations and experiments, which he +continued to pursue for a period of twenty years. His faith in his +discovery was so implicit that he vaccinated his own son on three several +occasions. At length he published his views in a quarto of about seventy +pages, in which he gave the details of twenty-three cases of successful +vaccination of individuals, to whom it was found afterwards impossible to +communicate the small-pox either by contagion or inoculation. It was in +1798 that this treatise was published; though he had been working out his +ideas since the year 1775, when they had begun to assume a definite form. + +How was the discovery received? First with indifference, then with +active hostility. Jenner proceeded to London to exhibit to the +profession the process of vaccination and its results; but not a single +medical man could be induced to make trial of it, and after fruitlessly +waiting for nearly three months, he returned to his native village. He +was even caricatured and abused for his attempt to “bestialize” his +species by the introduction into their systems of diseased matter from +the cow’s udder. Vaccination was denounced from the pulpit as +“diabolical.” It was averred that vaccinated children became “ox-faced,” +that abscesses broke out to “indicate sprouting horns,” and that the +countenance was gradually “transmuted into the visage of a cow, the voice +into the bellowing of bulls.” Vaccination, however, was a truth, and +notwithstanding the violence of the opposition, belief in it spread +slowly. In one village, where a gentleman tried to introduce the +practice, the first persons who permitted themselves to be vaccinated +were absolutely pelted and driven into their houses if they appeared out +of doors. Two ladies of title—Lady Ducie and the Countess of Berkeley—to +their honour be it remembered—had the courage to vaccinate their +children; and the prejudices of the day were at once broken through. The +medical profession gradually came round, and there were several who even +sought to rob Dr. Jenner of the merit of the discovery, when its +importance came to be recognised. Jenner’s cause at last triumphed, and +he was publicly honoured and rewarded. In his prosperity he was as +modest as he had been in his obscurity. He was invited to settle in +London, and told that he might command a practice of 10,000_l._ a year. +But his answer was, “No! In the morning of my days I have sought the +sequestered and lowly paths of life—the valley, and not the mountain,—and +now, in the evening of my days, it is not meet for me to hold myself up +as an object for fortune and for fame.” During Jenner’s own life-time +the practice of vaccination became adopted all over the civilized world; +and when he died, his title as a Benefactor of his kind was recognised +far and wide. Cuvier has said, “If vaccine were the only discovery of +the epoch, it would serve to render it illustrious for ever; yet it +knocked twenty times in vain at the doors of the Academies.” + +Not less patient, resolute, and persevering was Sir Charles Bell in the +prosecution of his discoveries relating to the nervous system. Previous +to his time, the most confused notions prevailed as to the functions of +the nerves, and this branch of study was little more advanced than it had +been in the times of Democritus and Anaxagoras three thousand years +before. Sir Charles Bell, in the valuable series of papers the +publication of which was commenced in 1821, took an entirely original +view of the subject, based upon a long series of careful, accurate, and +oft-repeated experiments. Elaborately tracing the development of the +nervous system up from the lowest order of animated being, to man—the +lord of the animal kingdom,—he displayed it, to use his own words, “as +plainly as if it were written in our mother-tongue.” His discovery +consisted in the fact, that the spinal nerves are double in their +function, and arise by double roots from the spinal marrow,—volition +being conveyed by that part of the nerves springing from the one root, +and sensation by the other. The subject occupied the mind of Sir Charles +Bell for a period of forty years, when, in 1840, he laid his last paper +before the Royal Society. As in the cases of Harvey and Jenner, when he +had lived down the ridicule and opposition with which his views were +first received, and their truth came to be recognised, numerous claims +for priority in making the discovery were set up at home and abroad. +Like them, too, he lost practice by the publication of his papers; and he +left it on record that, after every step in his discovery, he was obliged +to work harder than ever to preserve his reputation as a practitioner. +The great merits of Sir Charles Bell were, however, at length fully +recognised; and Cuvier himself, when on his death-bed, finding his face +distorted and drawn to one side, pointed out the symptom to his +attendants as a proof of the correctness of Sir Charles Bell’s theory. + +An equally devoted pursuer of the same branch of science was the late Dr. +Marshall Hall, whose name posterity will rank with those of Harvey, +Hunter, Jenner, and Bell. During the whole course of his long and useful +life he was a most careful and minute observer; and no fact, however +apparently insignificant, escaped his attention. His important discovery +of the diastaltic nervous system, by which his name will long be known +amongst scientific men, originated in an exceedingly simple circumstance. +When investigating the pneumonic circulation in the Triton, the +decapitated object lay upon the table; and on separating the tail and +accidentally pricking the external integument, he observed that it moved +with energy, and became contorted into various forms. He had not touched +a muscle or a muscular nerve; what then was the nature of these +movements? The same phenomena had probably been often observed before, +but Dr. Hall was the first to apply himself perseveringly to the +investigation of their causes; and he exclaimed on the occasion, “I will +never rest satisfied until I have found all this out, and made it clear.” +His attention to the subject was almost incessant; and it is estimated +that in the course of his life he devoted not less than 25,000 hours to +its experimental and chemical investigation. He was at the same time +carrying on an extensive private practice, and officiating as lecturer at +St. Thomas’s Hospital and other Medical Schools. It will scarcely be +credited that the paper in which he embodied his discovery was rejected +by the Royal Society, and was only accepted after the lapse of seventeen +years, when the truth of his views had become acknowledged by scientific +men both at home and abroad. + +The life of Sir William Herschel affords another remarkable illustration +of the force of perseverance in another branch of science. His father +was a poor German musician, who brought up his four sons to the same +calling. William came over to England to seek his fortune, and he joined +the band of the Durham Militia, in which he played the oboe. The +regiment was lying at Doncaster, where Dr. Miller first became acquainted +with Herschel, having heard him perform a solo on the violin in a +surprising manner. The Doctor entered into conversation with the youth, +and was so pleased with him, that he urged him to leave the militia and +take up his residence at his house for a time. Herschel did so, and +while at Doncaster was principally occupied in violin-playing at +concerts, availing himself of the advantages of Dr. Miller’s library to +study at his leisure hours. A new organ having been built for the parish +church of Halifax, an organist was advertised for, on which Herschel +applied for the office, and was selected. Leading the wandering life of +an artist, he was next attracted to Bath, where he played in the +Pump-room band, and also officiated as organist in the Octagon chapel. +Some recent discoveries in astronomy having arrested his mind, and +awakened in him a powerful spirit of curiosity, he sought and obtained +from a friend the loan of a two-foot Gregorian telescope. So fascinated +was the poor musician by the science, that he even thought of purchasing +a telescope, but the price asked by the London optician was so alarming, +that he determined to make one. Those who know what a reflecting +telescope is, and the skill which is required to prepare the concave +metallic speculum which forms the most important part of the apparatus, +will be able to form some idea of the difficulty of this undertaking. +Nevertheless, Herschel succeeded, after long and painful labour, in +completing a five-foot reflector, with which he had the gratification of +observing the ring and satellites of Saturn. Not satisfied with his +triumph, he proceeded to make other instruments in succession, of seven, +ten, and even twenty feet. In constructing the seven-foot reflector, he +finished no fewer than two hundred specula before he produced one that +would bear any power that was applied to it,—a striking instance of the +persevering laboriousness of the man. While gauging the heavens with his +instruments, he continued patiently to earn his bread by piping to the +fashionable frequenters of the Pump-room. So eager was he in his +astronomical observations, that he would steal away from the room during +an interval of the performance, give a little turn at his telescope, and +contentedly return to his oboe. Thus working away, Herschel discovered +the Georgium Sidus, the orbit and rate of motion of which he carefully +calculated, and sent the result to the Royal Society; when the humble +oboe player found himself at once elevated from obscurity to fame. He +was shortly after appointed Astronomer Royal, and by the kindness of +George III. was placed in a position of honourable competency for life. +He bore his honours with the same meekness and humility which had +distinguished him in the days of his obscurity. So gentle and patient, +and withal so distinguished and successful a follower of science under +difficulties, perhaps cannot be found in the entire history of biography. + +The career of William Smith, the father of English geology, though +perhaps less known, is not less interesting and instructive as an example +of patient and laborious effort, and the diligent cultivation of +opportunities. He was born in 1769, the son of a yeoman farmer at +Churchill, in Oxfordshire. His father dying when he was but a child, he +received a very sparing education at the village school, and even that +was to a considerable extent interfered with by his wandering and +somewhat idle habits as a boy. His mother having married a second time, +he was taken in charge by an uncle, also a farmer, by whom he was brought +up. Though the uncle was by no means pleased with the boy’s love of +wandering about, collecting “poundstones,” “pundips,” and other stony +curiosities which lay scattered about the adjoining land, he yet enabled +him to purchase a few of the necessary books wherewith to instruct +himself in the rudiments of geometry and surveying; for the boy was +already destined for the business of a land-surveyor. One of his marked +characteristics, even as a youth, was the accuracy and keenness of his +observation; and what he once clearly saw he never forgot. He began to +draw, attempted to colour, and practised the arts of mensuration and +surveying, all without regular instruction; and by his efforts in +self-culture, he shortly became so proficient, that he was taken on as +assistant to a local surveyor of ability in the neighbourhood. In +carrying on his business he was constantly under the necessity of +traversing Oxfordshire and the adjoining counties. One of the first +things he seriously pondered over, was the position of the various soils +and strata that came under his notice on the lands which he surveyed or +travelled over; more especially the position of the red earth in regard +to the lias and superincumbent rocks. The surveys of numerous collieries +which he was called upon to make, gave him further experience; and +already, when only twenty-three years of age, he contemplated making a +model of the strata of the earth. + +While engaged in levelling for a proposed canal in Gloucestershire, the +idea of a general law occurred to him relating to the strata of that +district. He conceived that the strata lying above the coal were not +laid horizontally, but inclined, and in one direction, towards the east; +resembling, on a large scale, “the ordinary appearance of superposed +slices of bread and butter.” The correctness of this theory he shortly +after confirmed by observations of the strata in two parallel valleys, +the “red ground,” “lias,” and “freestone” or “oolite,” being found to +come down in an eastern direction, and to sink below the level, yielding +place to the next in succession. He was shortly enabled to verify the +truth of his views on a larger scale, having been appointed to examine +personally into the management of canals in England and Wales. During +his journeys, which extended from Bath to Newcastle-on-Tyne, returning by +Shropshire and Wales, his keen eyes were never idle for a moment. He +rapidly noted the aspect and structure of the country through which he +passed with his companions, treasuring up his observations for future +use. His geologic vision was so acute, that though the road along which +he passed from York to Newcastle in the post chaise was from five to +fifteen miles distant from the hills of chalk and oolite on the east, he +was satisfied as to their nature, by their contours and relative +position, and their ranges on the surface in relation to the lias and +“red ground” occasionally seen on the road. + +The general results of his observation seem to have been these. He noted +that the rocky masses of country in the western parts of England +generally inclined to the east and south-east; that the red sandstones +and marls above the coal measures passed beneath the lias, clay, and +limestone, that these again passed beneath the sands, yellow limestones +and clays, forming the table-land of the Cotswold Hills, while these in +turn passed beneath the great chalk deposits occupying the eastern parts +of England. He further observed, that each layer of clay, sand, and +limestone held its own peculiar classes of fossils; and pondering much on +these things, he at length came to the then unheard-of conclusion, that +each distinct deposit of marine animals, in these several strata, +indicated a distinct sea-bottom, and that each layer of clay, sand, +chalk, and stone, marked a distinct epoch of time in the history of the +earth. + +This idea took firm possession of his mind, and he could talk and think +of nothing else. At canal boards, at sheep-shearings, at county +meetings, and at agricultural associations, ‘Strata Smith,’ as he came to +be called, was always running over with the subject that possessed him. +He had indeed made a great discovery, though he was as yet a man utterly +unknown in the scientific world. He proceeded to project a map of the +stratification of England; but was for some time deterred from proceeding +with it, being fully occupied in carrying out the works of the +Somersetshire coal canal, which engaged him for a period of about six +years. He continued, nevertheless, to be unremitting in his observation +of facts; and he became so expert in apprehending the internal structure +of a district and detecting the lie of the strata from its external +configuration, that he was often consulted respecting the drainage of +extensive tracts of land, in which, guided by his geological knowledge, +he proved remarkably successful, and acquired an extensive reputation. + +One day, when looking over the cabinet collection of fossils belonging to +the Rev. Samuel Richardson, at Bath, Smith astonished his friend by +suddenly disarranging his classification, and re-arranging the fossils in +their stratigraphical order, saying—“These came from the blue lias, these +from the over-lying sand and freestone, these from the fuller’s earth, +and these from the Bath building stone.” A new light flashed upon Mr. +Richardson’s mind, and he shortly became a convert to and believer in +William Smith’s doctrine. The geologists of the day were not, however, +so easily convinced; and it was scarcely to be tolerated that an unknown +land-surveyor should pretend to teach them the science of geology. But +William Smith had an eye and mind to penetrate deep beneath the skin of +the earth; he saw its very fibre and skeleton, and, as it were, divined +its organization. His knowledge of the strata in the neighbourhood of +Bath was so accurate, that one evening, when dining at the house of the +Rev. Joseph Townsend, he dictated to Mr. Richardson the different strata +according to their order of succession in descending order, twenty-three +in number, commencing with the chalk and descending in continuous series +down to the coal, below which the strata were not then sufficiently +determined. To this was added a list of the more remarkable fossils +which had been gathered in the several layers of rock. This was printed +and extensively circulated in 1801. + +He next determined to trace out the strata through districts as remote +from Bath as his means would enable him to reach. For years he journeyed +to and fro, sometimes on foot, sometimes on horseback, riding on the tops +of stage coaches, often making up by night-travelling the time he had +lost by day, so as not to fail in his ordinary business engagements. +When he was professionally called away to any distance from home—as, for +instance, when travelling from Bath to Holkham, in Norfolk, to direct the +irrigation and drainage of Mr. Coke’s land in that county—he rode on +horseback, making frequent detours from the road to note the geological +features of the country which he traversed. + +For several years he was thus engaged in his journeys to distant quarters +in England and Ireland, to the extent of upwards of ten thousand miles +yearly; and it was amidst this incessant and laborious travelling, that +he contrived to commit to paper his fast-growing generalizations on what +he rightly regarded as a new science. No observation, howsoever trivial +it might appear, was neglected, and no opportunity of collecting fresh +facts was overlooked. Whenever he could, he possessed himself of records +of borings, natural and artificial sections, drew them to a constant +scale of eight yards to the inch, and coloured them up. Of his keenness +of observation take the following illustration. When making one of his +geological excursions about the country near Woburn, as he was drawing +near to the foot of the Dunstable chalk hills, he observed to his +companion, “If there be any broken ground about the foot of these hills, +we may find _shark’s teeth_;” and they had not proceeded far, before they +picked up six from the white bank of a new fence-ditch. As he afterwards +said of himself, “The habit of observation crept on me, gained a +settlement in my mind, became a constant associate of my life, and +started up in activity at the first thought of a journey; so that I +generally went off well prepared with maps, and sometimes with +contemplations on its objects, or on those on the road, reduced to +writing before it commenced. My mind was, therefore, like the canvas of +a painter, well prepared for the first and best impressions.” + +Notwithstanding his courageous and indefatigable industry, many +circumstances contributed to prevent the promised publication of William +Smith’s ‘Map of the Strata of England and Wales,’ and it was not until +1814 that he was enabled, by the assistance of some friends, to give to +the world the fruits of his twenty years’ incessant labour. To prosecute +his inquiries, and collect the extensive series of facts and observations +requisite for his purpose, he had to expend the whole of the profits of +his professional labours during that period; and he even sold off his +small property to provide the means of visiting remoter parts of the +island. Meanwhile he had entered on a quarrying speculation near Bath, +which proved unsuccessful, and he was under the necessity of selling his +geological collection (which was purchased by the British Museum), his +furniture and library, reserving only his papers, maps, and sections, +which were useless save to himself. He bore his losses and misfortunes +with exemplary fortitude; and amidst all, he went on working with +cheerful courage and untiring patience. He died at Northampton, in +August, 1839, while on his way to attend the meeting of the British +Association at Birmingham. + +It is difficult to speak in terms of too high praise of the first +geological map of England, which we owe to the industry of this +courageous man of science. An accomplished writer says of it, “It was a +work so masterly in conception and so correct in general outline, that in +principle it served as a basis not only for the production of later maps +of the British Islands, but for geological maps of all other parts of the +world, wherever they have been undertaken. In the apartments of the +Geological Society Smith’s map may yet be seen—a great historical +document, old and worn, calling for renewal of its faded tints. Let any +one conversant with the subject compare it with later works on a similar +scale, and he will find that in all essential features it will not suffer +by the comparison—the intricate anatomy of the Silurian rocks of Wales +and the north of England by Murchison and Sedgwick being the chief +additions made to his great generalizations.” {149} The genius of the +Oxfordshire surveyor did not fail to be duly recognised and honoured by +men of science during his lifetime. In 1831 the Geological Society of +London awarded to him the Wollaston medal, “in consideration of his being +a great original discoverer in English geology, and especially for his +being the first in this country to discover and to teach the +identification of strata, and to determine their succession by means of +their imbedded fossils.” William Smith, in his simple, earnest way, +gained for himself a name as lasting as the science he loved so well. To +use the words of the writer above quoted, “Till the manner as well as the +fact of the first appearance of successive forms of life shall be solved, +it is not easy to surmise how any discovery can be made in geology equal +in value to that which we owe to the genius of William Smith.” + +Hugh Miller was a man of like observant faculties, who studied literature +as well as science with zeal and success. The book in which he has told +the story of his life, (‘My Schools and Schoolmasters’), is extremely +interesting, and calculated to be eminently useful. It is the history of +the formation of a truly noble character in the humblest condition of +life; and inculcates most powerfully the lessons of self-help, +self-respect, and self-dependence. While Hugh was but a child, his +father, who was a sailor, was drowned at sea, and he was brought up by +his widowed mother. He had a school training after a sort, but his best +teachers were the boys with whom he played, the men amongst whom he +worked, the friends and relatives with whom he lived. He read much and +miscellaneously, and picked up odd sorts of knowledge from many +quarters,—from workmen, carpenters, fishermen and sailors, and above all, +from the old boulders strewed along the shores of the Cromarty Frith. +With a big hammer which had belonged to his great-grandfather, an old +buccaneer, the boy went about chipping the stones, and accumulating +specimens of mica, porphyry, garnet, and such like. Sometimes he had a +day in the woods, and there, too, the boy’s attention was excited by the +peculiar geological curiosities which came in his way. While searching +among the rocks on the beach, he was sometimes asked, in irony, by the +farm servants who came to load their carts with sea-weed, whether he “was +gettin’ siller in the stanes,” but was so unlucky as never to be able to +answer in the affirmative. When of a suitable age he was apprenticed to +the trade of his choice—that of a working stonemason; and he began his +labouring career in a quarry looking out upon the Cromarty Frith. This +quarry proved one of his best schools. The remarkable geological +formations which it displayed awakened his curiosity. The bar of +deep-red stone beneath, and the bar of pale-red clay above, were noted by +the young quarryman, who even in such unpromising subjects found matter +for observation and reflection. Where other men saw nothing, he detected +analogies, differences, and peculiarities, which set him a-thinking. He +simply kept his eyes and his mind open; was sober, diligent, and +persevering; and this was the secret of his intellectual growth. + +His curiosity was excited and kept alive by the curious organic remains, +principally of old and extinct species of fishes, ferns, and ammonites, +which were revealed along the coast by the washings of the waves, or were +exposed by the stroke of his mason’s hammer. He never lost sight of the +subject; but went on accumulating observations and comparing formations, +until at length, many years afterwards, when no longer a working mason, +he gave to the world his highly interesting work on the Old Red +Sandstone, which at once established his reputation as a scientific +geologist. But this work was the fruit of long years of patient +observation and research. As he modestly states in his autobiography, +“the only merit to which I lay claim in the case is that of patient +research—a merit in which whoever wills may rival or surpass me; and this +humble faculty of patience, when rightly developed, may lead to more +extraordinary developments of idea than even genius itself.” + +The late John Brown, the eminent English geologist, was, like Miller, a +stonemason in his early life, serving an apprenticeship to the trade at +Colchester, and afterwards working as a journeyman mason at Norwich. He +began business as a builder on his own account at Colchester, where by +frugality and industry he secured a competency. It was while working at +his trade that his attention was first drawn to the study of fossils and +shells; and he proceeded to make a collection of them, which afterwards +grew into one of the finest in England. His researches along the coasts +of Essex, Kent, and Sussex brought to light some magnificent remains of +the elephant and rhinoceros, the most valuable of which were presented by +him to the British Museum. During the last few years of his life he +devoted considerable attention to the study of the Foraminifera in chalk, +respecting which he made several interesting discoveries. His life was +useful, happy, and honoured; and he died at Stanway, in Essex, in +November 1859, at the ripe age of eighty years. + +Not long ago, Sir Roderick Murchison discovered at Thurso, in the far +north of Scotland, a profound geologist, in the person of a baker there, +named Robert Dick. When Sir Roderick called upon him at the bakehouse in +which he baked and earned his bread, Robert Dick delineated to him, by +means of flour upon the board, the geographical features and geological +phenomena of his native county, pointing out the imperfections in the +existing maps, which he had ascertained by travelling over the country in +his leisure hours. On further inquiry, Sir Roderick ascertained that the +humble individual before him was not only a capital baker and geologist, +but a first-rate botanist. “I found,” said the President of the +Geographical Society, “to my great humiliation that the baker knew +infinitely more of botanical science, ay, ten times more, than I did; and +that there were only some twenty or thirty specimens of flowers which he +had not collected. Some he had obtained as presents, some he had +purchased, but the greater portion had been accumulated by his industry, +in his native county of Caithness; and the specimens were all arranged in +the most beautiful order, with their scientific names affixed.” + +Sir Roderick Murchison himself is an illustrious follower of these and +kindred branches of science. A writer in the ‘Quarterly Review’ cites +him as a “singular instance of a man who, having passed the early part of +his life as a soldier, never having had the advantage, or disadvantage as +the case might have been, of a scientific training, instead of remaining +a fox-hunting country gentleman, has succeeded by his own native vigour +and sagacity, untiring industry and zeal, in making for himself a +scientific reputation that is as wide as it is likely to be lasting. He +took first of all an unexplored and difficult district at home, and, by +the labour of many years, examined its rock-formations, classed them in +natural groups, assigned to each its characteristic assemblage of +fossils, and was the first to decipher two great chapters in the world’s +geological history, which must always henceforth carry his name on their +title-page. Not only so, but he applied the knowledge thus acquired to +the dissection of large districts, both at home and abroad, so as to +become the geological discoverer of great countries which had formerly +been ‘terræ incognitæ.’” But Sir Roderick Murchison is not merely a +geologist. His indefatigable labours in many branches of knowledge have +contributed to render him among the most accomplished and complete of +scientific men. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. +WORKERS IN ART. + + + “If what shone afar so grand, + Turn to nothing in thy hand, + On again; the virtue lies + In struggle, not the prize.”—_R. M. Milnes_. + + “Excelle, et tu vivras.”—_Joubert_. + +EXCELLENCE in art, as in everything else, can only be achieved by dint of +painstaking labour. + +There is nothing less accidental than the painting of a fine picture or +the chiselling of a noble statue. Every skilled touch of the artist’s +brush or chisel, though guided by genius, is the product of unremitting +study. + +Sir Joshua Reynolds was such a believer in the force of industry, that he +held that artistic excellence, “however expressed by genius, taste, or +the gift of heaven, may be acquired.” Writing to Barry he said, “Whoever +is resolved to excel in painting, or indeed any other art, must bring all +his mind to bear upon that one object from the moment that he rises till +he goes to bed.” And on another occasion he said, “Those who are +resolved to excel must go to their work, willing or unwilling, morning, +noon, and night: they will find it no play, but very hard labour.” But +although diligent application is no doubt absolutely necessary for the +achievement of the highest distinction in art, it is equally true that +without the inborn genius, no amount of mere industry, however well +applied, will make an artist. The gift comes by nature, but is perfected +by self-culture, which is of more avail than all the imparted education +of the schools. + +Some of the greatest artists have had to force their way upward in the +face of poverty and manifold obstructions. Illustrious instances will at +once flash upon the reader’s mind. Claude Lorraine, the pastrycook; +Tintoretto, the dyer; the two Caravaggios, the one a colour-grinder, the +other a mortar-carrier at the Vatican; Salvator Rosa, the associate of +bandits; Giotto, the peasant boy; Zingaro, the gipsy; Cavedone, turned +out of doors to beg by his father; Canova, the stone-cutter; these, and +many other well-known artists, succeeded in achieving distinction by +severe study and labour, under circumstances the most adverse. + +Nor have the most distinguished artists of our own country been born in a +position of life more than ordinarily favourable to the culture of +artistic genius. Gainsborough and Bacon were the sons of cloth-workers; +Barry was an Irish sailor boy, and Maclise a banker’s apprentice at Cork; +Opie and Romney, like Inigo Jones, were carpenters; West was the son of a +small Quaker farmer in Pennsylvania; Northcote was a watchmaker, Jackson +a tailor, and Etty a printer; Reynolds, Wilson, and Wilkie, were the sons +of clergymen; Lawrence was the son of a publican, and Turner of a barber. +Several of our painters, it is true, originally had some connection with +art, though in a very humble way,—such as Flaxman, whose father sold +plaster casts; Bird, who ornamented tea-trays; Martin, who was a +coach-painter; Wright and Gilpin, who were ship-painters; Chantrey, who +was a carver and gilder; and David Cox, Stanfield, and Roberts, who were +scene-painters. + +It was not by luck or accident that these men achieved distinction, but +by sheer industry and hard work. Though some achieved wealth, yet this +was rarely, if ever, the ruling motive. Indeed, no mere love of money +could sustain the efforts of the artist in his early career of +self-denial and application. The pleasure of the pursuit has always been +its best reward; the wealth which followed but an accident. Many +noble-minded artists have preferred following the bent of their genius, +to chaffering with the public for terms. Spagnoletto verified in his +life the beautiful fiction of Xenophon, and after he had acquired the +means of luxury, preferred withdrawing himself from their influence, and +voluntarily returned to poverty and labour. When Michael Angelo was +asked his opinion respecting a work which a painter had taken great pains +to exhibit for profit, he said, “I think that he will be a poor fellow so +long as he shows such an extreme eagerness to become rich.” + +Like Sir Joshua Reynolds, Michael Angelo was a great believer in the +force of labour; and he held that there was nothing which the imagination +conceived, that could not be embodied in marble, if the hand were made +vigorously to obey the mind. He was himself one of the most +indefatigable of workers; and he attributed his power of studying for a +greater number of hours than most of his contemporaries, to his spare +habits of living. A little bread and wine was all he required for the +chief part of the day when employed at his work; and very frequently he +rose in the middle of the night to resume his labours. On these +occasions, it was his practice to fix the candle, by the light of which +he chiselled, on the summit of a paste-board cap which he wore. +Sometimes he was too wearied to undress, and he slept in his clothes, +ready to spring to his work so soon as refreshed by sleep. He had a +favourite device of an old man in a go-cart, with an hour-glass upon it +bearing the inscription, _Ancora imparo_! Still I am learning. + +Titian, also, was an indefatigable worker. His celebrated “Pietro +Martire” was eight years in hand, and his “Last Supper” seven. In his +letter to Charles V. he said, “I send your Majesty the ‘Last Supper’ +after working at it almost daily for seven years—_dopo sette anni +lavorandovi quasi continuamente_.” Few think of the patient labour and +long training involved in the greatest works of the artist. They seem +easy and quickly accomplished, yet with how great difficulty has this +ease been acquired. “You charge me fifty sequins,” said the Venetian +nobleman to the sculptor, “for a bust that cost you only ten days’ +labour.” “You forget,” said the artist, “that I have been thirty years +learning to make that bust in ten days.” Once when Domenichino was +blamed for his slowness in finishing a picture which was bespoken, he +made answer, “I am continually painting it within myself.” It was +eminently characteristic of the industry of the late Sir Augustus +Callcott, that he made not fewer than forty separate sketches in the +composition of his famous picture of “Rochester.” This constant +repetition is one of the main conditions of success in art, as in life +itself. + +No matter how generous nature has been in bestowing the gift of genius, +the pursuit of art is nevertheless a long and continuous labour. Many +artists have been precocious, but without diligence their precocity would +have come to nothing. The anecdote related of West is well known. When +only seven years old, struck with the beauty of the sleeping infant of +his eldest sister whilst watching by its cradle, he ran to seek some +paper and forthwith drew its portrait in red and black ink. The little +incident revealed the artist in him, and it was found impossible to draw +him from his bent. West might have been a greater painter, had he not +been injured by too early success: his fame, though great, was not +purchased by study, trials, and difficulties, and it has not been +enduring. + +Richard Wilson, when a mere child, indulged himself with tracing figures +of men and animals on the walls of his father’s house, with a burnt +stick. He first directed his attention to portrait painting; but when in +Italy, calling one day at the house of Zucarelli, and growing weary with +waiting, he began painting the scene on which his friend’s chamber window +looked. When Zucarelli arrived, he was so charmed with the picture, that +he asked if Wilson had not studied landscape, to which he replied that he +had not. “Then, I advise you,” said the other, “to try; for you are sure +of great success.” Wilson adopted the advice, studied and worked hard, +and became our first great English landscape painter. + +Sir Joshua Reynolds, when a boy, forgot his lessons, and took pleasure +only in drawing, for which his father was accustomed to rebuke him. The +boy was destined for the profession of physic, but his strong instinct +for art could not be repressed, and he became a painter. Gainsborough +went sketching, when a schoolboy, in the woods of Sudbury; and at twelve +he was a confirmed artist: he was a keen observer and a hard worker,—no +picturesque feature of any scene he had once looked upon, escaping his +diligent pencil. William Blake, a hosier’s son, employed himself in +drawing designs on the backs of his father’s shop-bills, and making +sketches on the counter. Edward Bird, when a child only three or four +years old, would mount a chair and draw figures on the walls, which he +called French and English soldiers. A box of colours was purchased for +him, and his father, desirous of turning his love of art to account, put +him apprentice to a maker of tea-trays! Out of this trade he gradually +raised himself, by study and labour, to the rank of a Royal Academician. + +Hogarth, though a very dull boy at his lessons, took pleasure in making +drawings of the letters of the alphabet, and his school exercises were +more remarkable for the ornaments with which he embellished them, than +for the matter of the exercises themselves. In the latter respect he was +beaten by all the blockheads of the school, but in his adornments he +stood alone. His father put him apprentice to a silversmith, where he +learnt to draw, and also to engrave spoons and forks with crests and +ciphers. From silver-chasing, he went on to teach himself engraving on +copper, principally griffins and monsters of heraldry, in the course of +which practice he became ambitious to delineate the varieties of human +character. The singular excellence which he reached in this art, was +mainly the result of careful observation and study. He had the gift, +which he sedulously cultivated, of committing to memory the precise +features of any remarkable face, and afterwards reproducing them on +paper; but if any singularly fantastic form or _outré_ face came in his +way, he would make a sketch of it on the spot, upon his thumb-nail, and +carry it home to expand at his leisure. Everything fantastical and +original had a powerful attraction for him, and he wandered into many +out-of-the-way places for the purpose of meeting with character. By this +careful storing of his mind, he was afterwards enabled to crowd an +immense amount of thought and treasured observation into his works. +Hence it is that Hogarth’s pictures are so truthful a memorial of the +character, the manners, and even the very thoughts of the times in which +he lived. True painting, he himself observed, can only be learnt in one +school, and that is kept by Nature. But he was not a highly cultivated +man, except in his own walk. His school education had been of the +slenderest kind, scarcely even perfecting him in the art of spelling; his +self-culture did the rest. For a long time he was in very straitened +circumstances, but nevertheless worked on with a cheerful heart. Poor +though he was, he contrived to live within his small means, and he +boasted, with becoming pride, that he was “a punctual paymaster.” When +he had conquered all his difficulties and become a famous and thriving +man, he loved to dwell upon his early labours and privations, and to +fight over again the battle which ended so honourably to him as a man and +so gloriously as an artist. “I remember the time,” said he on one +occasion, “when I have gone moping into the city with scarce a shilling, +but as soon as I have received ten guineas there for a plate, I have +returned home, put on my sword, and sallied out with all the confidence +of a man who had thousands in his pockets.” + +“Industry and perseverance” was the motto of the sculptor Banks, which he +acted on himself, and strongly recommended to others. His well-known +kindness induced many aspiring youths to call upon him and ask for his +advice and assistance; and it is related that one day a boy called at his +door to see him with this object, but the servant, angry at the loud +knock he had given, scolded him, and was about sending him away, when +Banks overhearing her, himself went out. The little boy stood at the +door with some drawings in his hand. “What do you want with me?” asked +the sculptor. “I want, sir, if you please, to be admitted to draw at the +Academy.” Banks explained that he himself could not procure his +admission, but he asked to look at the boy’s drawings. Examining them, +he said, “Time enough for the Academy, my little man! go home—mind your +schooling—try to make a better drawing of the Apollo—and in a month come +again and let me see it.” The boy went home—sketched and worked with +redoubled diligence—and, at the end of the month, called again on the +sculptor. The drawing was better; but again Banks sent him back, with +good advice, to work and study. In a week the boy was again at his door, +his drawing much improved; and Banks bid him be of good cheer, for if +spared he would distinguish himself. The boy was Mulready; and the +sculptor’s augury was amply fulfilled. + +The fame of Claude Lorraine is partly explained by his indefatigable +industry. Born at Champagne, in Lorraine, of poor parents, he was first +apprenticed to a pastrycook. His brother, who was a wood-carver, +afterwards took him into his shop to learn that trade. Having there +shown indications of artistic skill, a travelling dealer persuaded the +brother to allow Claude to accompany him to Italy. He assented, and the +young man reached Rome, where he was shortly after engaged by Agostino +Tassi, the landscape painter, as his house-servant. In that capacity +Claude first learnt landscape painting, and in course of time he began to +produce pictures. We next find him making the tour of Italy, France, and +Germany, occasionally resting by the way to paint landscapes, and thereby +replenish his purse. On returning to Rome he found an increasing demand +for his works, and his reputation at length became European. He was +unwearied in the study of nature in her various aspects. It was his +practice to spend a great part of his time in closely copying buildings, +bits of ground, trees, leaves, and such like, which he finished in +detail, keeping the drawings by him in store for the purpose of +introducing them in his studied landscapes. He also gave close attention +to the sky, watching it for whole days from morning till night, and +noting the various changes occasioned by the passing clouds and the +increasing and waning light. By this constant practice he acquired, +although it is said very slowly, such a mastery of hand and eye as +eventually secured for him the first rank among landscape painters. + +Turner, who has been styled “the English Claude,” pursued a career of +like laborious industry. He was destined by his father for his own trade +of a barber, which he carried on in London, until one day the sketch +which the boy had made of a coat of arms on a silver salver having +attracted the notice of a customer whom his father was shaving, the +latter was urged to allow his son to follow his bias, and he was +eventually permitted to follow art as a profession. Like all young +artists, Turner had many difficulties to encounter, and they were all the +greater that his circumstances were so straitened. But he was always +willing to work, and to take pains with his work, no matter how humble it +might be. He was glad to hire himself out at half-a-crown a night to +wash in skies in Indian ink upon other people’s drawings, getting his +supper into the bargain. Thus he earned money and acquired expertness. +Then he took to illustrating guide-books, almanacs, and any sort of books +that wanted cheap frontispieces. “What could I have done better?” said +he afterwards; “it was first-rate practice.” He did everything carefully +and conscientiously, never slurring over his work because he was +ill-remunerated for it. He aimed at learning as well as living; always +doing his best, and never leaving a drawing without having made a step in +advance upon his previous work. A man who thus laboured was sure to do +much; and his growth in power and grasp of thought was, to use Ruskin’s +words, “as steady as the increasing light of sunrise.” But Turner’s +genius needs no panegyric; his best monument is the noble gallery of +pictures bequeathed by him to the nation, which will ever be the most +lasting memorial of his fame. + +To reach Rome, the capital of the fine arts, is usually the highest +ambition of the art student. But the journey to Rome is costly, and the +student is often poor. With a will resolute to overcome difficulties, +Rome may however at last be reached. Thus François Perrier, an early +French painter, in his eager desire to visit the Eternal City, consented +to act as guide to a blind vagrant. After long wanderings he reached the +Vatican, studied and became famous. Not less enthusiasm was displayed by +Jacques Callot in his determination to visit Rome. Though opposed by his +father in his wish to be an artist, the boy would not be baulked, but +fled from home to make his way to Italy. Having set out without means, +he was soon reduced to great straits; but falling in with a band of +gipsies, he joined their company, and wandered about with them from one +fair to another, sharing in their numerous adventures. During this +remarkable journey Callot picked up much of that extraordinary knowledge +of figure, feature, and character which he afterwards reproduced, +sometimes in such exaggerated forms, in his wonderful engravings. + +When Callot at length reached Florence, a gentleman, pleased with his +ingenious ardour, placed him with an artist to study; but he was not +satisfied to stop short of Rome, and we find him shortly on his way +thither. At Rome he made the acquaintance of Porigi and Thomassin, who, +on seeing his crayon sketches, predicted for him a brilliant career as an +artist. But a friend of Callot’s family having accidentally encountered +him, took steps to compel the fugitive to return home. By this time he +had acquired such a love of wandering that he could not rest; so he ran +away a second time, and a second time he was brought back by his elder +brother, who caught him at Turin. At last the father, seeing resistance +was in vain, gave his reluctant consent to Callot’s prosecuting his +studies at Rome. Thither he went accordingly; and this time he remained, +diligently studying design and engraving for several years, under +competent masters. On his way back to France, he was encouraged by Cosmo +II. to remain at Florence, where he studied and worked for several years +more. On the death of his patron he returned to his family at Nancy, +where, by the use of his burin and needle, he shortly acquired both +wealth and fame. When Nancy was taken by siege during the civil wars, +Callot was requested by Richelieu to make a design and engraving of the +event, but the artist would not commemorate the disaster which had +befallen his native place, and he refused point-blank. Richelieu could +not shake his resolution, and threw him into prison. There Callot met +with some of his old friends the gipsies, who had relieved his wants on +his first journey to Rome. When Louis XIII. heard of his imprisonment, +he not only released him, but offered to grant him any favour he might +ask. Callot immediately requested that his old companions, the gipsies, +might be set free and permitted to beg in Paris without molestation. +This odd request was granted on condition that Callot should engrave +their portraits, and hence his curious book of engravings entitled “The +Beggars.” Louis is said to have offered Callot a pension of 3000 livres +provided he would not leave Paris; but the artist was now too much of a +Bohemian, and prized his liberty too highly to permit him to accept it; +and he returned to Nancy, where he worked till his death. His industry +may be inferred from the number of his engravings and etchings, of which +he left not fewer than 1600. He was especially fond of grotesque +subjects, which he treated with great skill; his free etchings, touched +with the graver, being executed with especial delicacy and wonderful +minuteness. + +Still more romantic and adventurous was the career of Benvenuto Cellini, +the marvellous gold worker, painter, sculptor, engraver, engineer, and +author. His life, as told by himself, is one of the most extraordinary +autobiographies ever written. Giovanni Cellini, his father, was one of +the Court musicians to Lorenzo de Medici at Florence; and his highest +ambition concerning his son Benvenuto was that he should become an expert +player on the flute. But Giovanni having lost his appointment, found it +necessary to send his son to learn some trade, and he was apprenticed to +a goldsmith. The boy had already displayed a love of drawing and of art; +and, applying himself to his business, he soon became a dexterous +workman. Having got mixed up in a quarrel with some of the townspeople, +he was banished for six months, during which period he worked with a +goldsmith at Sienna, gaining further experience in jewellery and +gold-working. + +His father still insisting on his becoming a flute-player, Benvenuto +continued to practise on the instrument, though he detested it. His +chief pleasure was in art, which he pursued with enthusiasm. Returning +to Florence, he carefully studied the designs of Leonardo da Vinci and +Michael Angelo; and, still further to improve himself in gold-working, he +went on foot to Rome, where he met with a variety of adventures. He +returned to Florence with the reputation of being a most expert worker in +the precious metals, and his skill was soon in great request. But being +of an irascible temper, he was constantly getting into scrapes, and was +frequently under the necessity of flying for his life. Thus he fled from +Florence in the disguise of a friar, again taking refuge at Sienna, and +afterwards at Rome. + +During his second residence in Rome, Cellini met with extensive +patronage, and he was taken into the Pope’s service in the double +capacity of goldsmith and musician. He was constantly studying and +improving himself by acquaintance with the works of the best masters. He +mounted jewels, finished enamels, engraved seals, and designed and +executed works in gold, silver, and bronze, in such a style as to excel +all other artists. Whenever he heard of a goldsmith who was famous in +any particular branch, he immediately determined to surpass him. Thus it +was that he rivalled the medals of one, the enamels of another, and the +jewellery of a third; in fact, there was not a branch of his business +that he did not feel impelled to excel in. + +Working in this spirit, it is not so wonderful that Cellini should have +been able to accomplish so much. He was a man of indefatigable activity, +and was constantly on the move. At one time we find him at Florence, at +another at Rome; then he is at Mantua, at Rome, at Naples, and back to +Florence again; then at Venice, and in Paris, making all his long +journeys on horseback. He could not carry much luggage with him; so, +wherever he went, he usually began by making his own tools. He not only +designed his works, but executed them himself,—hammered and carved, and +cast and shaped them with his own hands. Indeed, his works have the +impress of genius so clearly stamped upon them, that they could never +have been designed by one person, and executed by another. The humblest +article—a buckle for a lady’s girdle, a seal, a locket, a brooch, a ring, +or a button—became in his hands a beautiful work of art. + +Cellini was remarkable for his readiness and dexterity in handicraft. +One day a surgeon entered the shop of Raffaello del Moro, the goldsmith, +to perform an operation on his daughter’s hand. On looking at the +surgeon’s instruments, Cellini, who was present, found them rude and +clumsy, as they usually were in those days, and he asked the surgeon to +proceed no further with the operation for a quarter of an hour. He then +ran to his shop, and taking a piece of the finest steel, wrought out of +it a beautifully finished knife, with which the operation was +successfully performed. + +Among the statues executed by Cellini, the most important are the silver +figure of Jupiter, executed at Paris for Francis I., and the Perseus, +executed in bronze for the Grand Duke Cosmo of Florence. He also +executed statues in marble of Apollo, Hyacinthus, Narcissus, and Neptune. +The extraordinary incidents connected with the casting of the Perseus +were peculiarly illustrative of the remarkable character of the man. + +The Grand Duke having expressed a decided opinion that the model, when +shown to him in wax, could not possibly be cast in bronze, Cellini was +immediately stimulated by the predicted impossibility, not only to +attempt, but to do it. He first made the clay model, baked it, and +covered it with wax, which he shaped into the perfect form of a statue. +Then coating the wax with a sort of earth, he baked the second covering, +during which the wax dissolved and escaped, leaving the space between the +two layers for the reception of the metal. To avoid disturbance, the +latter process was conducted in a pit dug immediately under the furnace, +from which the liquid metal was to be introduced by pipes and apertures +into the mould prepared for it. + +Cellini had purchased and laid in several loads of pine-wood, in +anticipation of the process of casting, which now began. The furnace was +filled with pieces of brass and bronze, and the fire was lit. The +resinous pine-wood was soon in such a furious blaze, that the shop took +fire, and part of the roof was burnt; while at the same time the wind +blowing and the rain filling on the furnace, kept down the heat, and +prevented the metals from melting. For hours Cellini struggled to keep +up the heat, continually throwing in more wood, until at length he became +so exhausted and ill, that he feared he should die before the statue +could be cast. He was forced to leave to his assistants the pouring in +of the metal when melted, and betook himself to his bed. While those +about him were condoling with him in his distress, a workman suddenly +entered the room, lamenting that “Poor Benvenuto’s work was irretrievably +spoiled!” On hearing this, Cellini immediately sprang from his bed and +rushed to the workshop, where he found the fire so much gone down that +the metal had again become hard. + +Sending across to a neighbour for a load of young oak which had been more +than a year in drying, he soon had the fire blazing again and the metal +melting and glittering. The wind was, however, still blowing with fury, +and the rain falling heavily; so, to protect himself, Cellini had some +tables with pieces of tapestry and old clothes brought to him, behind +which he went on hurling the wood into the furnace. A mass of pewter was +thrown in upon the other metal, and by stirring, sometimes with iron and +sometimes with long poles, the whole soon became completely melted. At +this juncture, when the trying moment was close at hand, a terrible noise +as of a thunderbolt was heard, and a glittering of fire flashed before +Cellini’s eyes. The cover of the furnace had burst, and the metal began +to flow! Finding that it did not run with the proper velocity, Cellini +rushed into the kitchen, bore away every piece of copper and pewter that +it contained—some two hundred porringers, dishes, and kettles of +different kinds—and threw them into the furnace. Then at length the +metal flowed freely, and thus the splendid statue of Perseus was cast. + +The divine fury of genius in which Cellini rushed to his kitchen and +stripped it of its utensils for the purposes of his furnace, will remind +the reader of the like act of Pallissy in breaking up his furniture for +the purpose of baking his earthenware. Excepting, however, in their +enthusiasm, no two men could be less alike in character. Cellini was an +Ishmael against whom, according to his own account, every man’s hand was +turned. But about his extraordinary skill as a workman, and his genius +as an artist, there cannot be two opinions. + +Much less turbulent was the career of Nicolas Poussin, a man as pure and +elevated in his ideas of art as he was in his daily life, and +distinguished alike for his vigour of intellect, his rectitude of +character, and his noble simplicity. He was born in a very humble +station, at Andeleys, near Rouen, where his father kept a small school. +The boy had the benefit of his parent’s instruction, such as it was, but +of that he is said to have been somewhat negligent, preferring to spend +his time in covering his lesson-books and his slate with drawings. A +country painter, much pleased with his sketches, besought his parents not +to thwart him in his tastes. The painter agreed to give Poussin lessons, +and he soon made such progress that his master had nothing more to teach +him. Becoming restless, and desirous of further improving himself, +Poussin, at the age of 18, set out for Paris, painting signboards on his +way for a maintenance. + +At Paris a new world of art opened before him, exciting his wonder and +stimulating his emulation. He worked diligently in many studios, +drawing, copying, and painting pictures. After a time, he resolved, if +possible, to visit Rome, and set out on his journey; but he only +succeeded in getting as far as Florence, and again returned to Paris. A +second attempt which he made to reach Rome was even less successful; for +this time he only got as far as Lyons. He was, nevertheless, careful to +take advantage of all opportunities for improvement which came in his +way, and continued as sedulous as before in studying and working. + +Thus twelve years passed, years of obscurity and toil, of failures and +disappointments, and probably of privations. At length Poussin succeeded +in reaching Rome. There he diligently studied the old masters, and +especially the ancient statues, with whose perfection he was greatly +impressed. For some time he lived with the sculptor Duquesnoi, as poor +as himself, and assisted him in modelling figures after the antique. +With him he carefully measured some of the most celebrated statues in +Rome, more particularly the ‘Antinous:’ and it is supposed that this +practice exercised considerable influence on the formation of his future +style. At the same time he studied anatomy, practised drawing from the +life, and made a great store of sketches of postures and attitudes of +people whom he met, carefully reading at his leisure such standard books +on art as he could borrow from his friends. + +During all this time he remained very poor, satisfied to be continually +improving himself. He was glad to sell his pictures for whatever they +would bring. One, of a prophet, he sold for eight livres; and another, +the ‘Plague of the Philistines,’ he sold for 60 crowns—a picture +afterwards bought by Cardinal de Richelieu for a thousand. To add to his +troubles, he was stricken by a cruel malady, during the helplessness +occasioned by which the Chevalier del Posso assisted him with money. For +this gentleman Poussin afterwards painted the ‘Rest in the Desert,’ a +fine picture, which far more than repaid the advances made during his +illness. + +The brave man went on toiling and learning through suffering. Still +aiming at higher things, he went to Florence and Venice, enlarging the +range of his studies. The fruits of his conscientious labour at length +appeared in the series of great pictures which he now began to +produce,—his ‘Death of Germanicus,’ followed by ‘Extreme Unction,’ the +‘Testament of Eudamidas,’ the ‘Manna,’ and the ‘Abduction of the +Sabines.’ + +The reputation of Poussin, however, grew but slowly. He was of a +retiring disposition and shunned society. People gave him credit for +being a thinker much more than a painter. When not actually employed in +painting, he took long solitary walks in the country, meditating the +designs of future pictures. One of his few friends while at Rome was +Claude Lorraine, with whom he spent many hours at a time on the terrace +of La Trinité-du-Mont, conversing about art and antiquarianism. The +monotony and the quiet of Rome were suited to his taste, and, provided he +could earn a moderate living by his brush, he had no wish to leave it. + +But his fame now extended beyond Rome, and repeated invitations were sent +him to return to Paris. He was offered the appointment of principal +painter to the King. At first he hesitated; quoted the Italian proverb, +_Chi sta bene non si muove_; said he had lived fifteen years in Rome, +married a wife there, and looked forward to dying and being buried there. +Urged again, he consented, and returned to Paris. But his appearance +there awakened much professional jealousy, and he soon wished himself +back in Rome again. While in Paris he painted some of his greatest +works—his ‘Saint Xavier,’ the ‘Baptism,’ and the ‘Last Supper.’ He was +kept constantly at work. At first he did whatever he was asked to do, +such as designing frontispieces for the royal books, more particularly a +Bible and a Virgil, cartoons for the Louvre, and designs for tapestry; +but at length he expostulated:—“It is impossible for me,” he said to M. +de Chanteloup, “to work at the same time at frontispieces for books, at a +Virgin, at a picture of the Congregation of St. Louis, at the various +designs for the gallery, and, finally, at designs for the royal tapestry. +I have only one pair of hands and a feeble head, and can neither be +helped nor can my labours be lightened by another.” + +Annoyed by the enemies his success had provoked and whom he was unable to +conciliate, he determined, at the end of less than two years’ labour in +Paris, to return to Rome. Again settled there in his humble dwelling on +Mont Pincio, he employed himself diligently in the practice of his art +during the remaining years of his life, living in great simplicity and +privacy. Though suffering much from the disease which afflicted him, he +solaced himself by study, always striving after excellence. “In growing +old,” he said, “I feel myself becoming more and more inflamed with the +desire of surpassing myself and reaching the highest degree of +perfection.” Thus toiling, struggling, and suffering, Poussin spent his +later years. He had no children; his wife died before him; all his +friends were gone: so that in his old age he was left absolutely alone in +Rome, so full of tombs, and died there in 1665, bequeathing to his +relatives at Andeleys the savings of his life, amounting to about 1000 +crowns; and leaving behind him, as a legacy to his race, the great works +of his genius. + +The career of Ary Scheffer furnishes one of the best examples in modern +times of a like high-minded devotion to art. Born at Dordrecht, the son +of a German artist, he early manifested an aptitude for drawing and +painting, which his parents encouraged. His father dying while he was +still young, his mother resolved, though her means were but small, to +remove the family to Paris, in order that her son might obtain the best +opportunities for instruction. There young Scheffer was placed with +Guérin the painter. But his mother’s means were too limited to permit +him to devote himself exclusively to study. She had sold the few jewels +she possessed, and refused herself every indulgence, in order to forward +the instruction of her other children. Under such circumstances, it was +natural that Ary should wish to help her; and by the time he was eighteen +years of age he began to paint small pictures of simple subjects, which +met with a ready sale at moderate prices. He also practised portrait +painting, at the same time gathering experience and earning honest money. +He gradually improved in drawing, colouring, and composition. The +‘Baptism’ marked a new epoch in his career, and from that point he went +on advancing, until his fame culminated in his pictures illustrative of +‘Faust,’ his ‘Francisca de Rimini,’ ‘Christ the Consoler,’ the ‘Holy +Women,’ ‘St. Monica and St. Augustin,’ and many other noble works. + +“The amount of labour, thought, and attention,” says Mrs. Grote, “which +Scheffer brought to the production of the ‘Francisca,’ must have been +enormous. In truth, his technical education having been so imperfect, he +was forced to climb the steep of art by drawing upon his own resources, +and thus, whilst his hand was at work, his mind was engaged in +meditation. He had to try various processes of handling, and experiments +in colouring; to paint and repaint, with tedious and unremitting +assiduity. But Nature had endowed him with that which proved in some +sort an equivalent for shortcomings of a professional kind. His own +elevation of character, and his profound sensibility, aided him in acting +upon the feelings of others through the medium of the pencil.” {173} + +One of the artists whom Scheffer most admired was Flaxman; and he once +said to a friend, “If I have unconsciously borrowed from any one in the +design of the ‘Francisca,’ it must have been from something I had seen +among Flaxman’s drawings.” John Flaxman was the son of a humble seller +of plaster casts in New Street, Covent Garden. When a child, he was such +an invalid that it was his custom to sit behind his father’s shop counter +propped by pillows, amusing himself with drawing and reading. A +benevolent clergyman, the Rev. Mr. Matthews, calling at the shop one day, +saw the boy trying to read a book, and on inquiring what it was, found it +to be a Cornelius Nepos, which his father had picked up for a few pence +at a bookstall. The gentleman, after some conversation with the boy, +said that was not the proper book for him to read, but that he would +bring him one. The next day he called with translations of Homer and +‘Don Quixote,’ which the boy proceeded to read with great avidity. His +mind was soon filled with the heroism which breathed through the pages of +the former, and, with the stucco Ajaxes and Achilleses about him, ranged +along the shop shelves, the ambition took possession of him, that he too +would design and embody in poetic forms those majestic heroes. + +Like all youthful efforts, his first designs were crude. The proud +father one day showed some of them to Roubilliac the sculptor, who turned +from them with a contemptuous “pshaw!” But the boy had the right stuff +in him; he had industry and patience; and he continued to labour +incessantly at his books and drawings. He then tried his young powers in +modelling figures in plaster of Paris, wax, and clay. Some of these +early works are still preserved, not because of their merit, but because +they are curious as the first healthy efforts of patient genius. It was +long before the boy could walk, and he only learnt to do so by hobbling +along upon crutches. At length he became strong enough to walk without +them. + +The kind Mr. Matthews invited him to his house, where his wife explained +Homer and Milton to him. They helped him also in his self-culture—giving +him lessons in Greek and Latin, the study of which he prosecuted at home. +By dint of patience and perseverance, his drawing improved so much that +he obtained a commission from a lady, to execute six original drawings in +black chalk of subjects in Homer. His first commission! What an event +in the artist’s life! A surgeon’s first fee, a lawyer’s first retainer, +a legislator’s first speech, a singer’s first appearance behind the +foot-lights, an author’s first book, are not any of them more full of +interest to the aspirant for fame than the artist’s first commission. +The boy at once proceeded to execute the order, and he was both well +praised and well paid for his work. + +At fifteen Flaxman entered a pupil at the Royal Academy. Notwithstanding +his retiring disposition, he soon became known among the students, and +great things were expected of him. Nor were their expectations +disappointed: in his fifteenth year he gained the silver prize, and next +year he became a candidate for the gold one. Everybody prophesied that +he would carry off the medal, for there was none who surpassed him in +ability and industry. Yet he lost it, and the gold medal was adjudged to +a pupil who was not afterwards heard of. This failure on the part of the +youth was really of service to him; for defeats do not long cast down the +resolute-hearted, but only serve to call forth their real powers. “Give +me time,” said he to his father, “and I will yet produce works that the +Academy will be proud to recognise.” He redoubled his efforts, spared no +pains, designed and modelled incessantly, and made steady if not rapid +progress. But meanwhile poverty threatened his father’s household; the +plaster-cast trade yielded a very bare living; and young Flaxman, with +resolute self-denial, curtailed his hours of study, and devoted himself +to helping his father in the humble details of his business. He laid +aside his Homer to take up the plaster-trowel. He was willing to work in +the humblest department of the trade so that his father’s family might be +supported, and the wolf kept from the door. To this drudgery of his art +he served a long apprenticeship; but it did him good. It familiarised +him with steady work, and cultivated in him the spirit of patience. The +discipline may have been hard, but it was wholesome. + +Happily, young Flaxman’s skill in design had reached the knowledge of +Josiah Wedgwood, who sought him out for the purpose of employing him to +design improved patterns of china and earthenware. It may seem a humble +department of art for such a genius as Flaxman to work in; but it really +was not so. An artist may be labouring truly in his vocation while +designing a common teapot or water-jug. Articles in daily use amongst +the people, which are before their eyes at every meal, may be made the +vehicles of education to all, and minister to their highest culture. The +most ambitious artist way thus confer a greater practical benefit on his +countrymen than by executing an elaborate work which he may sell for +thousands of pounds to be placed in some wealthy man’s gallery where it +is hidden away from public sight. Before Wedgwood’s time the designs +which figured upon our china and stoneware were hideous both in drawing +and execution, and he determined to improve both. Flaxman did his best +to carry out the manufacturer’s views. He supplied him from time to time +with models and designs of various pieces of earthenware, the subjects of +which were principally from ancient verse and history. Many of them are +still in existence, and some are equal in beauty and simplicity to his +after designs for marble. The celebrated Etruscan vases, specimens of +which were to be found in public museums and in the cabinets of the +curious, furnished him with the best examples of form, and these he +embellished with his own elegant devices. Stuart’s ‘Athens,’ then +recently published, furnished him with specimens of the purest-shaped +Greek utensils; of these he adopted the best, and worked them into new +shapes of elegance and beauty. Flaxman then saw that he was labouring in +a great work—no less than the promotion of popular education; and he was +proud, in after life, to allude to his early labours in this walk, by +which he was enabled at the same time to cultivate his love of the +beautiful, to diffuse a taste for art among the people, and to replenish +his own purse, while he promoted the prosperity of his friend and +benefactor. + +At length, in the year 1782, when twenty-seven years of age, he quitted +his father’s roof and rented a small house and studio in Wardour Street, +Soho; and what was more, he married—Ann Denman was the name of his +wife—and a cheerful, bright-souled, noble woman she was. He believed +that in marrying her he should be able to work with an intenser spirit; +for, like him, she had a taste for poetry and art; and besides was an +enthusiastic admirer of her husband’s genius. Yet when Sir Joshua +Reynolds—himself a bachelor—met Flaxman shortly after his marriage, he +said to him, “So, Flaxman, I am told you are married; if so, sir, I tell +you you are ruined for an artist.” Flaxman went straight home, sat down +beside his wife, took her hand in his, and said, “Ann, I am ruined for an +artist.” “How so, John? How has it happened? and who has done it?” “It +happened,” he replied, “in the church, and Ann Denman has done it.” He +then told her of Sir Joshua’s remark—whose opinion was well known, and +had often been expressed, that if students would excel they must bring +the whole powers of their mind to bear upon their art, from the moment +they rose until they went to bed; and also, that no man could be a +_great_ artist unless he studied the grand works of Raffaelle, Michael +Angelo, and others, at Rome and Florence. “And I,” said Flaxman, drawing +up his little figure to its full height, “_I_ would be a great artist.” +“And a great artist you shall be,” said his wife, “and visit Rome too, if +that be really necessary to make you great.” “But how?” asked Flaxman. +“_Work and economise_,” rejoined the brave wife; “I will never have it +said that Ann Denman ruined John Flaxman for an artist.” And so it was +determined by the pair that the journey to Rome was to be made when their +means would admit. “I will go to Rome,” said Flaxman, “and show the +President that wedlock is for a man’s good rather than his harm; and you, +Ann, shall accompany me.” + +Patiently and happily the affectionate couple plodded on during five +years in their humble little home in Wardour Street, always with the long +journey to Rome before them. It was never lost sight of for a moment, +and not a penny was uselessly spent that could be saved towards the +necessary expenses. They said no word to any one about their project; +solicited no aid from the Academy; but trusted only to their own patient +labour and love to pursue and achieve their object. During this time +Flaxman exhibited very few works. He could not afford marble to +experiment in original designs; but he obtained frequent commissions for +monuments, by the profits of which he maintained himself. He still +worked for Wedgwood, who was a prompt paymaster; and, on the whole, he +was thriving, happy, and hopeful. His local respectability was even such +as to bring local honours and local work upon him; for he was elected by +the ratepayers to collect the watch-rate for the Parish of St. Anne, when +he might be seen going about with an ink-bottle suspended from his +button-hole, collecting the money. + +At length Flaxman and his wife having accumulated a sufficient store of +savings, set out for Rome. Arrived there, he applied himself diligently +to study, maintaining himself, like other poor artists, by making copies +from the antique. English visitors sought his studio, and gave him +commissions; and it was then that he composed his beautiful designs +illustrative of Homer, Æschylus, and Dante. The price paid for them was +moderate—only fifteen shillings a-piece; but Flaxman worked for art as +well as money; and the beauty of the designs brought him other friends +and patrons. He executed Cupid and Aurora for the munificent Thomas +Hope, and the Fury of Athamas for the Earl of Bristol. He then prepared +to return to England, his taste improved and cultivated by careful study; +but before he left Italy, the Academies of Florence and Carrara +recognised his merit by electing him a member. + +His fame had preceded him to London, where he soon found abundant +employment. While at Rome he had been commissioned to execute his famous +monument in memory of Lord Mansfield, and it was erected in the north +transept of Westminster Abbey shortly after his return. It stands there +in majestic grandeur, a monument to the genius of Flaxman himself—calm, +simple, and severe. No wonder that Banks, the sculptor, then in the +heyday of his fame, exclaimed when he saw it, “This little man cuts us +all out!” + +When the members of the Royal Academy heard of Flaxman’s return, and +especially when they had an opportunity of seeing and admiring his +portrait-statue of Mansfield, they were eager to have him enrolled among +their number. He allowed his name to be proposed in the candidates’ list +of associates, and was immediately elected. Shortly after, he appeared +in an entirely new character. The little boy who had begun his studies +behind the plaster-cast-seller’s shop-counter in New Street, Covent +Garden, was now a man of high intellect and recognised supremacy in art, +to instruct students, in the character of Professor of Sculpture to the +Royal Academy! And no man better deserved to fill that distinguished +office; for none is so able to instruct others as he who, for himself and +by his own efforts, has learnt to grapple with and overcome difficulties. + +After a long, peaceful, and happy life, Flaxman found himself growing +old. The loss which he sustained by the death of his affectionate wife +Ann, was a severe shock to him; but he survived her several years, during +which he executed his celebrated “Shield of Achilles,” and his noble +“Archangel Michael vanquishing Satan,”—perhaps his two greatest works. + +Chantrey was a more robust man;—somewhat rough, but hearty in his +demeanour; proud of his successful struggle with the difficulties which +beset him in early life; and, above all, proud of his independence. He +was born a poor man’s child, at Norton, near Sheffield. His father dying +when he was a mere boy, his mother married again. Young Chantrey used to +drive an ass laden with milk-cans across its back into the neighbouring +town of Sheffield, and there serve his mother’s customers with milk. +Such was the humble beginning of his industrial career; and it was by his +own strength that he rose from that position, and achieved the highest +eminence as an artist. Not taking kindly to his step-father, the boy was +sent to trade, and was first placed with a grocer in Sheffield. The +business was very distasteful to him; but, passing a carver’s shop window +one day, his eye was attracted by the glittering articles it contained, +and, charmed with the idea of being a carver, he begged to be released +from the grocery business with that object. His friends consented, and +he was bound apprentice to the carver and gilder for seven years. His +new master, besides being a carver in wood, was also a dealer in prints +and plaster models; and Chantrey at once set about imitating both, +studying with great industry and energy. All his spare hours were +devoted to drawing, modelling, and self-improvement, and he often carried +his labours far into the night. Before his apprenticeship was out—at the +ace of twenty-one—he paid over to his master the whole wealth which he +was able to muster—a sum of 50_l._—to cancel his indentures, determined +to devote himself to the career of an artist. He then made the best of +his way to London, and with characteristic good sense, sought employment +as an assistant carver, studying painting and modelling at his bye-hours. +Among the jobs on which he was first employed as a journeyman carver, was +the decoration of the dining-room of Mr. Rogers, the poet—a room in which +he was in after years a welcome visitor; and he usually took pleasure in +pointing out his early handywork to the guests whom he met at his +friend’s table. + +Returning to Sheffield on a professional visit, he advertised himself in +the local papers as a painter of portraits in crayons and miniatures, and +also in oil. For his first crayon portrait he was paid a guinea by a +cutler; and for a portrait in oil, a confectioner paid him as much as +5_l._ and a pair of top boots! Chantrey was soon in London again to +study at the Royal Academy; and next time he returned to Sheffield he +advertised himself as ready to model plaster busts of his townsmen, as +well as paint portraits of them. He was even selected to design a +monument to a deceased vicar of the town, and executed it to the general +satisfaction. When in London he used a room over a stable as a studio, +and there he modelled his first original work for exhibition. It was a +gigantic head of Satan. Towards the close of Chantrey’s life, a friend +passing through his studio was struck by this model lying in a corner. +“That head,” said the sculptor, “was the first thing that I did after I +came to London. I worked at it in a garret with a paper cap on my head; +and as I could then afford only one candle, I stuck that one in my cap +that it might move along with me, and give me light whichever way I +turned.” Flaxman saw and admired this head at the Academy Exhibition, +and recommended Chantrey for the execution of the busts of four admirals, +required for the Naval Asylum at Greenwich. This commission led to +others, and painting was given up. But for eight years before, he had +not earned 5_l._ by his modelling. His famous head of Horne Tooke was +such a success that, according to his own account, it brought him +commissions amounting to 12,000_l._ + +Chantrey had now succeeded, but he had worked hard, and fairly earned his +good fortune. He was selected from amongst sixteen competitors to +execute the statue of George III. for the city of London. A few years +later, he produced the exquisite monument of the Sleeping Children, now +in Lichfield Cathedral,—a work of great tenderness and beauty; and +thenceforward his career was one of increasing honour, fame, and +prosperity. His patience, industry, and steady perseverance were the +means by which he achieved his greatness. Nature endowed him with +genius, and his sound sense enabled him to employ the precious gift as a +blessing. He was prudent and shrewd, like the men amongst whom he was +born; the pocket-book which accompanied him on his Italian tour +containing mingled notes on art, records of daily expenses, and the +current prices of marble. His tastes were simple, and he made his finest +subjects great by the mere force of simplicity. His statue of Watt, in +Handsworth church, seems to us the very consummation of art; yet it is +perfectly artless and simple. His generosity to brother artists in need +was splendid, but quiet and unostentatious. He left the principal part +of his fortune to the Royal Academy for the promotion of British art. + +The same honest and persistent industry was throughout distinctive of the +career of David Wilkie. The son of a Scotch minister, he gave early +indications of an artistic turn; and though he was a negligent and inapt +scholar, he was a sedulous drawer of faces and figures. A silent boy, he +already displayed that quiet concentrated energy of character which +distinguished him through life. He was always on the look-out for an +opportunity to draw,—and the walls of the manse, or the smooth sand by +the river side, were alike convenient for his purpose. Any sort of tool +would serve him; like Giotto, he found a pencil in a burnt stick, a +prepared canvas in any smooth stone, and the subject for a picture in +every ragged mendicant he met. When he visited a house, he generally +left his mark on the walls as an indication of his presence, sometimes to +the disgust of cleanly housewives. In short, notwithstanding the +aversion of his father, the minister, to the “sinful” profession of +painting, Wilkie’s strong propensity was not to be thwarted, and he +became an artist, working his way manfully up the steep of difficulty. +Though rejected on his first application as a candidate for admission to +the Scottish Academy, at Edinburgh, on account of the rudeness and +inaccuracy of his introductory specimens, he persevered in producing +better, until he was admitted. But his progress was slow. He applied +himself diligently to the drawing of the human figure, and held on with +the determination to succeed, as if with a resolute confidence in the +result. He displayed none of the eccentric humour and fitful application +of many youths who conceive themselves geniuses, but kept up the routine +of steady application to such an extent that he himself was afterwards +accustomed to attribute his success to his dogged perseverance rather +than to any higher innate power. “The single element,” he said, “in all +the progressive movements of my pencil was persevering industry.” At +Edinburgh he gained a few premiums, thought of turning his attention to +portrait painting, with a view to its higher and more certain +remuneration, but eventually went boldly into the line in which he earned +his fame,—and painted his Pitlessie Fair. What was bolder still, he +determined to proceed to London, on account of its presenting so much +wider a field for study and work; and the poor Scotch lad arrived in +town, and painted his Village Politicians while living in a humble +lodging on eighteen shillings a week. + +Notwithstanding the success of this picture, and the commissions which +followed it, Wilkie long continued poor. The prices which his works +realized were not great, for he bestowed upon them so much time and +labour, that his earnings continued comparatively small for many years. +Every picture was carefully studied and elaborated beforehand; nothing +was struck off at a heat; many occupied him for years—touching, +retouching, and improving them until they finally passed out of his +hands. As with Reynolds, his motto was “Work! work! work!” and, like +him, he expressed great dislike for talking artists. Talkers may sow, +but the silent reap. “Let us be _doing_ something,” was his oblique mode +of rebuking the loquacious and admonishing the idle. He once related to +his friend Constable that when he studied at the Scottish Academy, +Graham, the master of it, was accustomed to say to the students, in the +words of Reynolds, “If you have genius, industry will improve it; if you +have none, industry will supply its place.” “So,” said Wilkie, “I was +determined to be very industrious, for I knew I had no genius.” He also +told Constable that when Linnell and Burnett, his fellow-students in +London, were talking about art, he always contrived to get as close to +them as he could to hear all they said, “for,” said he, “they know a +great deal, and I know very little.” This was said with perfect +sincerity, for Wilkie was habitually modest. One of the first things +that he did with the sum of thirty pounds which he obtained from Lord +Mansfield for his Village Politicians, was to buy a present—of bonnets, +shawls, and dresses—for his mother and sister at home, though but little +able to afford it at the time. Wilkie’s early poverty had trained him in +habits of strict economy, which were, however, consistent with a noble +liberality, as appears from sundry passages in the Autobiography of +Abraham Raimbach the engraver. + +William Etty was another notable instance of unflagging industry and +indomitable perseverance in art. His father was a ginger-bread and +spicemaker at York, and his mother—a woman of considerable force and +originality of character—was the daughter of a ropemaker. The boy early +displayed a love of drawing, covering walls, floors, and tables with +specimens of his skill; his first crayon being a farthing’s worth of +chalk, and this giving place to a piece of coal or a bit of charred +stick. His mother, knowing nothing of art, put the boy apprentice to a +trade—that of a printer. But in his leisure hours he went on with the +practice of drawing; and when his time was out he determined to follow +his bent—he would be a painter and nothing else. Fortunately his uncle +and elder brother were able and willing to help him on in his new career, +and they provided him with the means of entering as pupil at the Royal +Academy. We observe, from Leslie’s Autobiography, that Etty was looked +upon by his fellow students as a worthy but dull, plodding person, who +would never distinguish himself. But he had in him the divine faculty of +work, and diligently plodded his way upward to eminence in the highest +walks of art. + +Many artists have had to encounter privations which have tried their +courage and endurance to the utmost before they succeeded. What number +may have sunk under them we can never know. Martin encountered +difficulties in the course of his career such as perhaps fall to the lot +of few. More than once he found himself on the verge of starvation while +engaged on his first great picture. It is related of him that on one +occasion he found himself reduced to his last shilling—a _bright_ +shilling—which he had kept because of its very brightness, but at length +he found it necessary to exchange it for bread. He went to a baker’s +shop, bought a loaf, and was taking it away, when the baker snatched it +from him, and tossed back the shilling to the starving painter. The +bright shilling had failed him in his hour of need—it was a bad one! +Returning to his lodgings, he rummaged his trunk for some remaining crust +to satisfy his hunger. Upheld throughout by the victorious power of +enthusiasm, he pursued his design with unsubdued energy. He had the +courage to work on and to wait; and when, a few days after, he found an +opportunity to exhibit his picture, he was from that time famous. Like +many other great artists, his life proves that, in despite of outward +circumstances, genius, aided by industry, will be its own protector, and +that fame, though she comes late, will never ultimately refuse her +favours to real merit. + +The most careful discipline and training after academic methods will fail +in making an artist, unless he himself take an active part in the work. +Like every highly cultivated man, he must be mainly self-educated. When +Pugin, who was brought up in his father’s office, had learnt all that he +could learn of architecture according to the usual formulas, he still +found that he had learned but little; and that he must begin at the +beginning, and pass through the discipline of labour. Young Pugin +accordingly hired himself out as a common carpenter at Covent Garden +Theatre—first working under the stage, then behind the flys, then upon +the stage itself. He thus acquired a familiarity with work, and +cultivated an architectural taste, to which the diversity of the +mechanical employment about a large operatic establishment is peculiarly +favourable. When the theatre closed for the season, he worked a +sailing-ship between London and some of the French ports, carrying on at +the same time a profitable trade. At every opportunity he would land and +make drawings of any old building, and especially of any ecclesiastical +structure which fell in his way. Afterwards he would make special +journeys to the Continent for the same purpose, and returned home laden +with drawings. Thus he plodded and laboured on, making sure of the +excellence and distinction which he eventually achieved. + +A similar illustration of plodding industry in the same walk is presented +in the career of George Kemp, the architect of the beautiful Scott +Monument at Edinburgh. He was the son of a poor shepherd, who pursued +his calling on the southern slope of the Pentland Hills. Amidst that +pastoral solitude the boy had no opportunity of enjoying the +contemplation of works of art. It happened, however, that in his tenth +year he was sent on a message to Roslin, by the farmer for whom his +father herded sheep, and the sight of the beautiful castle and chapel +there seems to have made a vivid and enduring impression on his mind. +Probably to enable him to indulge his love of architectural construction, +the boy besought his father to let him be a joiner; and he was +accordingly put apprentice to a neighbouring village carpenter. Having +served his time, he went to Galashiels to seek work. As he was plodding +along the valley of the Tweed with his tools upon his back, a carriage +overtook him near Elibank Tower; and the coachman, doubtless at the +suggestion of his master, who was seated inside, having asked the youth +how far he had to walk, and learning that he was on his way to +Galashiels, invited him to mount the box beside him, and thus to ride +thither. It turned out that the kindly gentleman inside was no other +than Sir Walter Scott, then travelling on his official duty as Sheriff of +Selkirkshire. Whilst working at Galashiels, Kemp had frequent +opportunities of visiting Melrose, Dryburgh, and Jedburgh Abbeys, which +he studied carefully. Inspired by his love of architecture, he worked +his way as a carpenter over the greater part of the north of England, +never omitting an opportunity of inspecting and making sketches of any +fine Gothic building. On one occasion, when working in Lancashire, he +walked fifty miles to York, spent a week in carefully examining the +Minster, and returned in like manner on foot. We next find him in +Glasgow, where he remained four years, studying the fine cathedral there +during his spare time. He returned to England again, this time working +his way further south; studying Canterbury, Winchester, Tintern, and +other well-known structures. In 1824 he formed the design of travelling +over Europe with the same object, supporting himself by his trade. +Reaching Boulogne, he proceeded by Abbeville and Beauvais to Paris, +spending a few weeks making drawings and studies at each place. His +skill as a mechanic, and especially his knowledge of mill-work, readily +secured him employment wherever he went; and he usually chose the site of +his employment in the neighbourhood of some fine old Gothic structure, in +studying which he occupied his leisure. After a year’s working, travel, +and study abroad, he returned to Scotland. He continued his studies, and +became a proficient in drawing and perspective: Melrose was his favourite +ruin; and he produced several elaborate drawings of the building, one of +which, exhibiting it in a “restored” state, was afterwards engraved. He +also obtained employment as a modeller of architectural designs; and made +drawings for a work begun by an Edinburgh engraver, after the plan of +Britton’s ‘Cathedral Antiquities.’ This was a task congenial to his +tastes, and he laboured at it with an enthusiasm which ensured its rapid +advance; walking on foot for the purpose over half Scotland, and living +as an ordinary mechanic, whilst executing drawings which would have done +credit to the best masters in the art. The projector of the work having +died suddenly, the publication was however stopped, and Kemp sought other +employment. Few knew of the genius of this man—for he was exceedingly +taciturn and habitually modest—when the Committee of the Scott Monument +offered a prize for the best design. The competitors were +numerous—including some of the greatest names in classical architecture; +but the design unanimously selected was that of George Kemp, who was +working at Kilwinning Abbey in Ayrshire, many miles off, when the letter +reached him intimating the decision of the committee. Poor Kemp! +Shortly after this event he met an untimely death, and did not live to +see the first result of his indefatigable industry and self-culture +embodied in stone,—one of the most beautiful and appropriate memorials +ever erected to literary genius. + +John Gibson was another artist full of a genuine enthusiasm and love for +his art, which placed him high above those sordid temptations which urge +meaner natures to make time the measure of profit. He was born at Gyffn, +near Conway, in North Wales—the son of a gardener. He early showed +indications of his talent by the carvings in wood which he made by means +of a common pocket knife; and his father, noting the direction of his +talent, sent him to Liverpool and bound him apprentice to a cabinet-maker +and wood-carver. He rapidly improved at his trade, and some of his +carvings were much admired. He was thus naturally led to sculpture, and +when eighteen years old he modelled a small figure of Time in wax, which +attracted considerable notice. The Messrs. Franceys, sculptors, of +Liverpool, having purchased the boy’s indentures, took him as their +apprentice for six years, during which his genius displayed itself in +many original works. From thence he proceeded to London, and afterwards +to Rome; and his fame became European. + +Robert Thorburn, the Royal Academician, like John Gibson, was born of +poor parents. His father was a shoe-maker at Dumfries. Besides Robert +there were two other sons; one of whom is a skilful carver in wood. One +day a lady called at the shoemaker’s and found Robert, then a mere boy, +engaged in drawing upon a stool which served him for a table. She +examined his work, and observing his abilities, interested herself in +obtaining for him some employment in drawing, and enlisted in his behalf +the services of others who could assist him in prosecuting the study of +art. The boy was diligent, pains-taking, staid, and silent, mixing +little with his companions, and forming but few intimacies. About the +year 1830, some gentlemen of the town provided him with the means of +proceeding to Edinburgh, where he was admitted a student at the Scottish +Academy. There he had the advantage of studying under competent masters, +and the progress which he made was rapid. From Edinburgh he removed to +London, where, we understand, he had the advantage of being introduced to +notice under the patronage of the Duke of Buccleuch. We need scarcely +say, however, that of whatever use patronage may have been to Thorburn in +giving him an introduction to the best circles, patronage of no kind +could have made him the great artist that he unquestionably is, without +native genius and diligent application. + +Noel Paton, the well-known painter, began his artistic career at +Dunfermline and Paisley, as a drawer of patterns for table-cloths and +muslin embroidered by hand; meanwhile working diligently at higher +subjects, including the drawing of the human figure. He was, like +Turner, ready to turn his hand to any kind of work, and in 1840, when a +mere youth, we find him engaged, among his other labours, in illustrating +the ‘Renfrewshire Annual.’ He worked his way step by step, slowly yet +surely; but he remained unknown until the exhibition of the prize +cartoons painted for the houses of Parliament, when his picture of the +Spirit of Religion (for which he obtained one of the first prizes) +revealed him to the world as a genuine artist; and the works which he has +since exhibited—such as the ‘Reconciliation of Oberon and Titania,’ +‘Home,’ and ‘The bluidy Tryste’—have shown a steady advance in artistic +power and culture. + +Another striking exemplification of perseverance and industry in the +cultivation of art in humble life is presented in the career of James +Sharples, a working blacksmith at Blackburn. He was born at Wakefield in +Yorkshire, in 1825, one of a family of thirteen children. His father was +a working ironfounder, and removed to Bury to follow his business. The +boys received no school education, but were all sent to work as soon as +they were able; and at about ten James was placed in a foundry, where he +was employed for about two years as smithy-boy. After that he was sent +into the engine-shop where his father worked as engine-smith. The boy’s +employment was to heat and carry rivets for the boiler-makers. Though +his hours of labour were very long—often from six in the morning until +eight at night—his father contrived to give him some little teaching +after working hours; and it was thus that he partially learned his +letters. An incident occurred in the course of his employment among the +boiler-makers, which first awakened in him the desire to learn drawing. +He had occasionally been employed by the foreman to hold the chalked line +with which he made the designs of boilers upon the floor of the workshop; +and on such occasions the foreman was accustomed to hold the line, and +direct the boy to make the necessary dimensions. James soon became so +expert at this as to be of considerable service to the foreman; and at +his leisure hours at home his great delight was to practise drawing +designs of boilers upon his mother’s floor. On one occasion, when a +female relative was expected from Manchester to pay the family a visit, +and the house had been made as decent as possible for her reception, the +boy, on coming in from the foundry in the evening, began his usual +operations upon the floor. He had proceeded some way with his design of +a large boiler in chalk, when his mother arrived with the visitor, and to +her dismay found the boy unwashed and the floor chalked all over. The +relative, however, professed to be pleased with the boy’s industry, +praised his design, and recommended his mother to provide “the little +sweep,” as she called him, with paper and pencils. + +Encouraged by his elder brother, he began to practise figure and +landscape drawing, making copies of lithographs, but as yet without any +knowledge of the rules of perspective and the principles of light and +shade. He worked on, however, and gradually acquired expertness in +copying. At sixteen, he entered the Bury Mechanic’s Institution in order +to attend the drawing class, taught by an amateur who followed the trade +of a barber. There he had a lesson a week during three months. The +teacher recommended him to obtain from the library Burnet’s ‘Practical +Treatise on Painting;’ but as he could not yet read with ease, he was +under the necessity of getting his mother, and sometimes his elder +brother, to read passages from the book for him while he sat by and +listened. Feeling hampered by his ignorance of the art of reading, and +eager to master the contents of Burnet’s book, he ceased attending the +drawing class at the Institute after the first quarter, and devoted +himself to learning reading and writing at home. In this he soon +succeeded; and when he again entered the Institute and took out ‘Burnet’ +a second time, he was not only able to read it, but to make written +extracts for further use. So ardently did he study the volume, that he +used to rise at four o’clock in the morning to read it and copy out +passages; after which he went to the foundry at six, worked until six and +sometimes eight in the evening; and returned home to enter with fresh +zest upon the study of Burnet, which he continued often until a late +hour. Parts of his nights were also occupied in drawing and making +copies of drawings. On one of these—a copy of Leonardo da Vinci’s “Last +Supper”—he spent an entire night. He went to bed indeed, but his mind +was so engrossed with the subject that he could not sleep, and rose again +to resume his pencil. + +He next proceeded to try his hand at painting in oil, for which purpose +he procured some canvas from a draper, stretched it on a frame, coated it +over with white lead, and began painting on it with colours bought from a +house-painter. But his work proved a total failure; for the canvas was +rough and knotty, and the paint would not dry. In his extremity he +applied to his old teacher, the barber, from whom he first learnt that +prepared canvas was to be had, and that there were colours and varnishes +made for the special purpose of oil-painting. As soon therefore, as his +means would allow, he bought a small stock of the necessary articles and +began afresh,—his amateur master showing him how to paint; and the pupil +succeeded so well that he excelled the master’s copy. His first picture +was a copy from an engraving called “Sheep-shearing,” and was afterwards +sold by him for half-a-crown. Aided by a shilling Guide to Oil-painting, +he went on working at his leisure hours, and gradually acquired a better +knowledge of his materials. He made his own easel and palette, +palette-knife, and paint-chest; he bought his paint, brushes, and canvas, +as he could raise the money by working over-time. This was the slender +fund which his parents consented to allow him for the purpose; the burden +of supporting a very large family precluding them from doing more. Often +he would walk to Manchester and back in the evenings to buy two or three +shillings’ worth of paint and canvas, returning almost at midnight, after +his eighteen miles’ walk, sometimes wet through and completely exhausted, +but borne up throughout by his inexhaustible hope and invincible +determination. The further progress of the self-taught artist is best +narrated in his own words, as communicated by him in a letter to the +author:— + +“The next pictures I painted,” he says, “were a Landscape by Moonlight, a +Fruitpiece, and one or two others; after which I conceived the idea of +painting ‘The Forge.’ I had for some time thought about it, but had not +attempted to embody the conception in a drawing. I now, however, made a +sketch of the subject upon paper, and then proceeded to paint it on +canvas. The picture simply represents the interior of a large workshop +such as I have been accustomed to work in, although not of any particular +shop. It is, therefore, to this extent, an original conception. Having +made an outline of the subject, I found that, before I could proceed with +it successfully, a knowledge of anatomy was indispensable to enable me +accurately to delineate the muscles of the figures. My brother Peter +came to my assistance at this juncture, and kindly purchased for me +Flaxman’s ‘Anatomical studies,’—a work altogether beyond my means at the +time, for it cost twenty-four shillings. This book I looked upon as a +great treasure, and I studied it laboriously, rising at three o’clock in +the morning to draw after it, and occasionally getting my brother Peter +to stand for me as a model at that untimely hour. Although I gradually +improved myself by this practice, it was some time before I felt +sufficient confidence to go on with my picture. I also felt hampered by +my want of knowledge of perspective, which I endeavoured to remedy by +carefully studying Brook Taylor’s ‘Principles;’ and shortly after I +resumed my painting. While engaged in the study of perspective at home, +I used to apply for and obtain leave to work at the heavier kinds of +smith work at the foundry, and for this reason—the time required for +heating the heaviest iron work is so much longer than that required for +heating the lighter, that it enabled me to secure a number of spare +minutes in the course of the day, which I carefully employed in making +diagrams in perspective upon the sheet iron casing in front of the hearth +at which I worked.” + +Thus assiduously working and studying, James Sharples steadily advanced +in his knowledge of the principles of art, and acquired greater facility +in its practice. Some eighteen months after the expiry of his +apprenticeship he painted a portrait of his father, which attracted +considerable notice in the town; as also did the picture of “The Forge,” +which he finished soon after. His success in portrait-painting obtained +for him a commission from the foreman of the shop to paint a family +group, and Sharples executed it so well that the foreman not only paid +him the agreed price of eighteen pounds, but thirty shillings to boot. +While engaged on this group he ceased to work at the foundry, and he had +thoughts of giving up his trade altogether and devoting himself +exclusively to painting. He proceeded to paint several pictures, amongst +others a head of Christ, an original conception, life-size, and a view of +Bury; but not obtaining sufficient employment at portraits to occupy his +time, or give him the prospect of a steady income, he had the good sense +to resume his leather apron, and go on working at his honest trade of a +blacksmith; employing his leisure hours in engraving his picture of “The +Forge,” since published. He was induced to commence the engraving by the +following circumstance. A Manchester picture-dealer, to whom he showed +the painting, let drop the observation, that in the hands of a skilful +engraver it would make a very good print. Sharples immediately conceived +the idea of engraving it himself, though altogether ignorant of the art. +The difficulties which he encountered and successfully overcame in +carrying out his project are thus described by himself:— + +“I had seen an advertisement of a Sheffield steel-plate maker, giving a +list of the prices at which he supplied plates of various sizes, and, +fixing upon one of suitable dimensions, I remitted the amount, together +with a small additional sum for which I requested him to send me a few +engraving tools. I could not specify the articles wanted, for I did not +then know anything about the process of engraving. However, there duly +arrived with the plate three or four gravers and an etching needle; the +latter I spoiled before I knew its use. While working at the plate, the +Amalgamated Society of Engineers offered a premium for the best design +for an emblematical picture, for which I determined to compete, and I was +so fortunate as to win the prize. Shortly after this I removed to +Blackburn, where I obtained employment at Messrs. Yates’, engineers, as +an engine-smith; and continued to employ my leisure time in drawing, +painting, and engraving, as before. With the engraving I made but very +slow progress, owing to the difficulties I experienced from not +possessing proper tools. I then determined to try to make some that +would suit my purpose, and after several failures I succeeded in making +many that I have used in the course of my engraving. I was also greatly +at a loss for want of a proper magnifying glass, and part of the plate +was executed with no other assistance of this sort than what my father’s +spectacles afforded, though I afterwards succeeded in obtaining a proper +magnifier, which was of the utmost use to me. An incident occurred while +I was engraving the plate, which had almost caused me to abandon it +altogether. It sometimes happened that I was obliged to lay it aside for +a considerable time, when other work pressed; and in order to guard it +against rust, I was accustomed to rub over the graven parts with oil. +But on examining the plate after one of such intervals, I found that the +oil had become a dark sticky substance extremely difficult to get out. I +tried to pick it out with a needle, but found that it would almost take +as much time as to engrave the parts afresh. I was in great despair at +this, but at length hit upon the expedient of boiling it in water +containing soda, and afterwards rubbing the engraved parts with a +tooth-brush; and to my delight found the plan succeeded perfectly. My +greatest difficulties now over, patience and perseverance were all that +were needed to bring my labours to a successful issue. I had neither +advice nor assistance from any one in finishing the plate. If, +therefore, the work possess any merit, I can claim it as my own; and if +in its accomplishment I have contributed to show what can be done by +persevering industry and determination, it is all the honour I wish to +lay claim to.” + +It would be beside our purpose to enter upon any criticism of “The Forge” +as an engraving; its merits having been already fully recognised by the +art journals. The execution of the work occupied Sharples’s leisure +evening hours during a period of five years; and it was only when he took +the plate to the printer that he for the first time saw an engraved plate +produced by any other man. To this unvarnished picture of industry and +genius, we add one other trait, and it is a domestic one. “I have been +married seven years,” says he, “and during that time my greatest +pleasure, after I have finished my daily labour at the foundry, has been +to resume my pencil or graver, frequently until a late hour of the +evening, my wife meanwhile sitting by my side and reading to me from some +interesting book,”—a simple but beautiful testimony to the thorough +common sense as well as the genuine right-heartedness of this most +interesting and deserving workman. + +The same industry and application which we have found to be necessary in +order to acquire excellence in painting and sculpture, are equally +required in the sister art of music—the one being the poetry of form and +colour, the other of the sounds of nature. Handel was an indefatigable +and constant worker; he was never cast down by defeat, but his energy +seemed to increase the more that adversity struck him. When a prey to +his mortifications as an insolvent debtor, he did not give way for a +moment, but in one year produced his ‘Saul,’ ‘Israel,’ the music for +Dryden’s ‘Ode,’ his ‘Twelve Grand Concertos,’ and the opera of ‘Jupiter +in Argos,’ among the finest of his works. As his biographer says of him, +“He braved everything, and, by his unaided self, accomplished the work of +twelve men.” + +Haydn, speaking of his art, said, “It consists in taking up a subject and +pursuing it.” “Work,” said Mozart, “is my chief pleasure.” Beethoven’s +favourite maxim was, “The barriers are not erected which can say to +aspiring talents and industry, ‘Thus far and no farther.’” When +Moscheles submitted his score of ‘Fidelio’ for the pianoforte to +Beethoven, the latter found written at the bottom of the last page, +“Finis, with God’s help.” Beethoven immediately wrote underneath, “O +man! help thyself!” This was the motto of his artistic life. John +Sebastian Bach said of himself, “I was industrious; whoever is equally +sedulous, will be equally successful.” But there is no doubt that Bach +was born with a passion for music, which formed the mainspring of his +industry, and was the true secret of his success. When a mere youth, his +elder brother, wishing to turn his abilities in another direction, +destroyed a collection of studies which the young Sebastian, being denied +candles, had copied by moonlight; proving the strong natural bent of the +boy’s genius. Of Meyerbeer, Bayle thus wrote from Milan in 1820:—“He is +a man of some talent, but no genius; he lives solitary, working fifteen +hours a day at music.” Years passed, and Meyerbeer’s hard work fully +brought out his genius, as displayed in his ‘Roberto,’ ‘Huguenots,’ +‘Prophète,’ and other works, confessedly amongst the greatest operas +which have been produced in modern times. + +Although musical composition is not an art in which Englishmen have as +yet greatly distinguished themselves, their energies having for the most +part taken other and more practical directions, we are not without native +illustrations of the power of perseverance in this special pursuit. Arne +was an upholsterer’s son, intended by his father for the legal +profession; but his love of music was so great, that he could not be +withheld from pursuing it. While engaged in an attorney’s office, his +means were very limited, but, to gratify his tastes, he was accustomed to +borrow a livery and go into the gallery of the Opera, then appropriated +to domestics. Unknown to his father he made great progress with the +violin, and the first knowledge his father had of the circumstance was +when accidentally calling at the house of a neighbouring gentleman, to +his surprise and consternation he found his son playing the leading +instrument with a party of musicians. This incident decided the fate of +Arne. His father offered no further opposition to his wishes; and the +world thereby lost a lawyer, but gained a musician of much taste and +delicacy of feeling, who added many valuable works to our stores of +English music. + +The career of the late William Jackson, author of ‘The Deliverance of +Israel,’ an oratorio which has been successfully performed in the +principal towns of his native county of York, furnishes an interesting +illustration of the triumph of perseverance over difficulties in the +pursuit of musical science. He was the son of a miller at Masham, a +little town situated in the valley of the Yore, in the north-west corner +of Yorkshire. Musical taste seems to have been hereditary in the family, +for his father played the fife in the band of the Masham Volunteers, and +was a singer in the parish choir. His grandfather also was leading +singer and ringer at Masham Church; and one of the boy’s earliest musical +treats was to be present at the bell pealing on Sunday mornings. During +the service, his wonder was still more excited by the organist’s +performance on the barrel-organ, the doors of which were thrown open +behind to let the sound fully into the church, by which the stops, pipes, +barrels, staples, keyboard, and jacks, were fully exposed, to the +wonderment of the little boys sitting in the gallery behind, and to none +more than our young musician. At eight years of age he began to play +upon his father’s old fife, which, however, would not sound D; but his +mother remedied the difficulty by buying for him a one-keyed flute; and +shortly after, a gentleman of the neighbourhood presented him with a +flute with four silver keys. As the boy made no progress with his “book +learning,” being fonder of cricket, fives, and boxing, than of his school +lessons—the village schoolmaster giving him up as “a bad job”—his parents +sent him off to a school at Pateley Bridge. While there he found +congenial society in a club of village choral singers at Brighouse Gate, +and with them he learnt the sol-fa-ing gamut on the old English plan. He +was thus well drilled in the reading of music, in which he soon became a +proficient. His progress astonished the club, and he returned home full +of musical ambition. He now learnt to play upon his father’s old piano, +but with little melodious result; and he became eager to possess a +finger-organ, but had no means of procuring one. About this time, a +neighbouring parish clerk had purchased, for an insignificant sum, a +small disabled barrel-organ, which had gone the circuit of the northern +counties with a show. The clerk tried to revive the tones of the +instrument, but failed; at last he bethought him that he would try the +skill of young Jackson, who had succeeded in making some alterations and +improvements in the hand-organ of the parish church. He accordingly +brought it to the lad’s house in a donkey cart, and in a short time the +instrument was repaired, and played over its old tunes again, greatly to +the owner’s satisfaction. + +The thought now haunted the youth that he could make a barrel-organ, and +he determined to do so. His father and he set to work, and though +without practice in carpentering, yet, by dint of hard labour and after +many failures, they at last succeeded; and an organ was constructed which +played ten tunes very decently, and the instrument was generally regarded +as a marvel in the neighbourhood. Young Jackson was now frequently sent +for to repair old church organs, and to put new music upon the barrels +which he added to them. All this he accomplished to the satisfaction of +his employers, after which he proceeded with the construction of a +four-stop finger-organ, adapting to it the keys of an old harpsichord. +This he learnt to play upon,—studying ‘Callcott’s Thorough Bass’ in the +evening, and working at his trade of a miller during the day; +occasionally also tramping about the country as a “cadger,” with an ass +and a cart. During summer he worked in the fields, at turnip-time, +hay-time, and harvest, but was never without the solace of music in his +leisure evening hours. He next tried his hand at musical composition, +and twelve of his anthems were shown to the late Mr. Camidge, of York, as +“the production of a miller’s lad of fourteen.” Mr. Camidge was pleased +with them, marked the objectionable passages, and returned them with the +encouraging remark, that they did the youth great credit, and that he +must “go on writing.” + +A village band having been set on foot at Masham, young Jackson joined +it, and was ultimately appointed leader. He played all the instruments +by turns, and thus acquired a considerable practical knowledge of his +art: he also composed numerous tunes for the band. A new finger-organ +having been presented to the parish church, he was appointed the +organist. He now gave up his employment as a journeyman miller, and +commenced tallow-chandling, still employing his spare hours in the study +of music. In 1839 he published his first anthem—‘For joy let fertile +valleys sing;’ and in the following year he gained the first prize from +the Huddersfield Glee Club, for his ‘Sisters of the Lea.’ His other +anthem ‘God be merciful to us,’ and the 103rd Psalm, written for a double +chorus and orchestra, are well known. In the midst of these minor works, +Jackson proceeded with the composition of his oratorio,—‘The Deliverance +of Israel from Babylon.’ His practice was, to jot down a sketch of the +ideas as they presented themselves to his mind, and to write them out in +score in the evenings, after he had left his work in the candle-shop. +His oratorio was published in parts, in the course of 1844–5, and he +published the last chorus on his twenty-ninth birthday. The work was +exceedingly well received, and has been frequently performed with much +success in the northern towns. Mr. Jackson eventually settled as a +professor of music at Bradford, where he contributed in no small degree +to the cultivation of the musical taste of that town and its +neighbourhood. Some years since he had the honour of leading his fine +company of Bradford choral singers before Her Majesty at Buckingham +Palace; on which occasion, as well as at the Crystal Palace, some choral +pieces of his composition, were performed with great effect. {201} + +Such is a brief outline of the career of a self-taught musician, whose +life affords but another illustration of the power of self-help, and the +force of courage and industry in enabling a man to surmount and overcome +early difficulties and obstructions of no ordinary kind. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. +INDUSTRY AND THE PEERAGE. + + + “He either fears his fate too much, + Or his deserts are small, + That dares not put it to the touch, + To gain or lose it all.”—_Marquis of Montrose_. + + “He hath put down the mighty from their seats; and exalted them of + low degree.”—_St. Luke_. + +WE have already referred to some illustrious Commoners raised from humble +to elevated positions by the power of application and industry; and we +might point to even the Peerage itself as affording equally instructive +examples. One reason why the Peerage of England has succeeded so well in +holding its own, arises from the fact that, unlike the peerages of other +countries, it has been fed, from time to time, by the best industrial +blood of the country—the very “liver, heart, and brain of Britain.” Like +the fabled Antæus, it has been invigorated and refreshed by touching its +mother earth, and mingling with that most ancient order of nobility—the +working order. + +The blood of all men flows from equally remote sources; and though some +are unable to trace their line directly beyond their grandfathers, all +are nevertheless justified in placing at the head of their pedigree the +great progenitors of the race, as Lord Chesterfield did when he wrote, +“ADAM _de Stanhope_—EVE _de Stanhope_.” No class is ever long +stationary. The mighty fall, and the humble are exalted. New families +take the place of the old, who disappear among the ranks of the common +people. Burke’s ‘Vicissitudes of Families’ strikingly exhibit this rise +and fall of families, and show that the misfortunes which overtake the +rich and noble are greater in proportion than those which overwhelm the +poor. This author points out that of the twenty-five barons selected to +enforce the observance of Magna Charta, there is not now in the House of +Peers a single male descendant. Civil wars and rebellions ruined many of +the old nobility and dispersed their families. Yet their descendants in +many cases survive, and are to be found among the ranks of the people. +Fuller wrote in his ‘Worthies,’ that “some who justly hold the surnames +of Bohuns, Mortimers, and Plantagenets, are hid in the heap of common +men.” Thus Burke shows that two of the lineal descendants of the Earl of +Kent, sixth son of Edward I., were discovered in a butcher and a +toll-gatherer; that the great grandson of Margaret Plantagenet, daughter +of the Duke of Clarance, sank to the condition of a cobbler at Newport, +in Shropshire; and that among the lineal descendants of the Duke of +Gloucester, son of Edward III., was the late sexton of St. George’s, +Hanover Square. It is understood that the lineal descendant of Simon de +Montfort, England’s premier baron, is a saddler in Tooley Street. One of +the descendants of the “Proud Percys,” a claimant of the title of Duke of +Northumberland, was a Dublin trunk-maker; and not many years since one of +the claimants for the title of Earl of Perth presented himself in the +person of a labourer in a Northumberland coal-pit. Hugh Miller, when +working as a stone-mason near Edinburgh, was served by a hodman, who was +one of the numerous claimants for the earldom of Crauford—all that was +wanted to establish his claim being a missing marriage certificate; and +while the work was going on, the cry resounded from the walls many times +in the day, of—“John, Yearl Crauford, bring us anither hod o’lime.” One +of Oliver Cromwell’s great grandsons was a grocer on Snow Hill, and +others of his descendants died in great poverty. Many barons of proud +names and titles have perished, like the sloth, upon their family tree, +after eating up all the leaves; while others have been overtaken by +adversities which they have been unable to retrieve, and sunk at last +into poverty and obscurity. Such are the mutabilities of rank and +fortune. + +The great bulk of our peerage is comparatively modern, so far as the +titles go; but it is not the less noble that it has been recruited to so +large an extent from the ranks of honourable industry. In olden times, +the wealth and commerce of London, conducted as it was by energetic and +enterprising men, was a prolific source of peerages. Thus, the earldom +of Cornwallis was founded by Thomas Cornwallis, the Cheapside merchant; +that of Essex by William Capel, the draper; and that of Craven by William +Craven, the merchant tailor. The modern Earl of Warwick is not descended +from the “King-maker,” but from William Greville, the woolstapler; whilst +the modern dukes of Northumberland find their head, not in the Percies, +but in Hugh Smithson, a respectable London apothecary. The founders of +the families of Dartmouth, Radnor, Ducie, and Pomfret, were respectively +a skinner, a silk manufacturer, a merchant tailor, and a Calais merchant; +whilst the founders of the peerages of Tankerville, Dormer, and Coventry, +were mercers. The ancestors of Earl Romney, and Lord Dudley and Ward, +were goldsmiths and jewellers; and Lord Dacres was a banker in the reign +of Charles I., as Lord Overstone is in that of Queen Victoria. Edward +Osborne, the founder of the Dukedom of Leeds, was apprentice to William +Hewet, a rich clothworker on London Bridge, whose only daughter he +courageously rescued from drowning, by leaping into the Thames after her, +and eventually married. Among other peerages founded by trade are those +of Fitzwilliam, Leigh, Petre, Cowper, Darnley, Hill, and Carrington. The +founders of the houses of Foley and Normanby were remarkable men in many +respects, and, as furnishing striking examples of energy of character, +the story of their lives is worthy of preservation. + +The father of Richard Foley, the founder of the family, was a small +yeoman living in the neighbourhood of Stourbridge in the time of Charles +I. That place was then the centre of the iron manufacture of the midland +districts, and Richard was brought up to work at one of the branches of +the trade—that of nail-making. He was thus a daily observer of the great +labour and loss of time caused by the clumsy process then adopted for +dividing the rods of iron in the manufacture of nails. It appeared that +the Stourbridge nailers were gradually losing their trade in consequence +of the importation of nails from Sweden, by which they were undersold in +the market. It became known that the Swedes were enabled to make their +nails so much cheaper, by the use of splitting mills and machinery, which +had completely superseded the laborious process of preparing the rods for +nail-making then practised in England. + +Richard Foley, having ascertained this much, determined to make himself +master of the new process. He suddenly disappeared from the +neighbourhood of Stourbridge, and was not heard of for several years. No +one knew whither he had gone, not even his own family; for he had not +informed them of his intention, lest he should fail. He had little or no +money in his pocket, but contrived to get to Hull, where he engaged +himself on board a ship bound for a Swedish port, and worked his passage +there. The only article of property which he possessed was his fiddle, +and on landing in Sweden he begged and fiddled his way to the Dannemora +mines, near Upsala. He was a capital musician, as well as a pleasant +fellow, and soon ingratiated himself with the iron-workers. He was +received into the works, to every part of which he had access; and he +seized the opportunity thus afforded him of storing his mind with +observations, and mastering, as he thought, the mechanism of iron +splitting. After a continued stay for this purpose, he suddenly +disappeared from amongst his kind friends the miners—no one knew whither. + +Returned to England, he communicated the results of his voyage to Mr. +Knight and another person at Stourbridge, who had sufficient confidence +in him to advance the requisite funds for the purpose of erecting +buildings and machinery for splitting iron by the new process. But when +set to work, to the great vexation and disappointment of all, and +especially of Richard Foley, it was found that the machinery would not +act—at all events it would not split the bars of iron. Again Foley +disappeared. It was thought that shame and mortification at his failure +had driven him away for ever. Not so! Foley had determined to master +this secret of iron-splitting, and he would yet do it. He had again set +out for Sweden, accompanied by his fiddle as before, and found his way to +the iron works, where he was joyfully welcomed by the miners; and, to +make sure of their fiddler, they this time lodged him in the very +splitting-mill itself. There was such an apparent absence of +intelligence about the man, except in fiddle-playing, that the miners +entertained no suspicions as to the object of their minstrel, whom they +thus enabled to attain the very end and aim of his life. He now +carefully examined the works, and soon discovered the cause of his +failure. He made drawings or tracings of the machinery as well as he +could, though this was a branch of art quite new to him; and after +remaining at the place long enough to enable him to verify his +observations, and to impress the mechanical arrangements clearly and +vividly on his mind, he again left the miners, reached a Swedish port, +and took ship for England. A man of such purpose could not but succeed. +Arrived amongst his surprised friends, he now completed his arrangements, +and the results were entirely successful. By his skill and his industry +he soon laid the foundations of a large fortune, at the same time that he +restored the business of an extensive district. He himself continued, +during his life, to carry on his trade, aiding and encouraging all works +of benevolence in his neighbourhood. He founded and endowed a school at +Stourbridge; and his son Thomas (a great benefactor of Kidderminster), +who was High Sheriff of Worcestershire in the time of “The Rump,” founded +and endowed an hospital, still in existence, for the free education of +children at Old Swinford. All the early Foleys were Puritans. Richard +Baxter seems to have been on familiar and intimate terms with various +members of the family, and makes frequent mention of them in his ‘Life +and Times.’ Thomas Foley, when appointed high sheriff of the county, +requested Baxter to preach the customary sermon before him; and Baxter in +his ‘Life’ speaks of him as “of so just and blameless dealing, that all +men he ever had to do with magnified his great integrity and honesty, +which were questioned by none.” The family was ennobled in the reign of +Charles the Second. + +William Phipps, the founder of the Mulgrave or Normanby family, was a man +quite as remarkable in his way as Richard Foley. His father was a +gunsmith—a robust Englishman settled at Woolwich, in Maine, then forming +part of our English colonies in America. He was born in 1651, one of a +family of not fewer than twenty-six children (of whom twenty-one were +sons), whose only fortune lay in their stout hearts and strong arms. +William seems to have had a dash of the Danish-sea blood in his veins, +and did not take kindly to the quiet life of a shepherd in which he spent +his early years. By nature bold and adventurous, he longed to become a +sailor and roam through the world. He sought to join some ship; but not +being able to find one, he apprenticed himself to a shipbuilder, with +whom he thoroughly learnt his trade, acquiring the arts of reading and +writing during his leisure hours. Having completed his apprenticeship +and removed to Boston, he wooed and married a widow of some means, after +which he set up a little shipbuilding yard of his own, built a ship, and, +putting to sea in her, he engaged in the lumber trade, which he carried +on in a plodding and laborious way for the space of about ten years. + +It happened that one day, whilst passing through the crooked streets of +old Boston, he overheard some sailors talking to each other of a wreck +which had just taken place off the Bahamas; that of a Spanish ship, +supposed to have much money on board. His adventurous spirit was at once +kindled, and getting together a likely crew without loss of time, he set +sail for the Bahamas. The wreck being well in-shore, he easily found it, +and succeeded in recovering a great deal of its cargo, but very little +money; and the result was, that he barely defrayed his expenses. His +success had been such, however, as to stimulate his enterprising spirit; +and when he was told of another and far more richly laden vessel which +had been wrecked near Port de la Plata more than half a century before, +he forthwith formed the resolution of raising the wreck, or at all events +of fishing up the treasure. + +Being too poor, however, to undertake such an enterprise without powerful +help, he set sail for England in the hope that he might there obtain it. +The fame of his success in raising the wreck off the Bahamas had already +preceded him. He applied direct to the Government. By his urgent +enthusiasm, he succeeded in overcoming the usual inertia of official +minds; and Charles II. eventually placed at his disposal the “Rose +Algier,” a ship of eighteen guns and ninety-five men, appointing him to +the chief command. + +Phipps then set sail to find the Spanish ship and fish up the treasure. +He reached the coast of Hispaniola in safety; but how to find the sunken +ship was the great difficulty. The fact of the wreck was more than fifty +years old; and Phipps had only the traditionary rumours of the event to +work upon. There was a wide coast to explore, and an outspread ocean +without any trace whatever of the argosy which lay somewhere at its +bottom. But the man was stout in heart and full of hope. He set his +seamen to work to drag along the coast, and for weeks they went on +fishing up sea-weed, shingle, and bits of rock. No occupation could be +more trying to seamen, and they began to grumble one to another, and to +whisper that the man in command had brought them on a fool’s errand. + +At length the murmurers gained head, and the men broke into open mutiny. +A body of them rushed one day on to the quarter-deck, and demanded that +the voyage should be relinquished. Phipps, however, was not a man to be +intimidated; he seized the ringleaders, and sent the others back to their +duty. It became necessary to bring the ship to anchor close to a small +island for the purpose of repairs; and, to lighten her, the chief part of +the stores was landed. Discontent still increasing amongst the crew, a +new plot was laid amongst the men on shore to seize the ship, throw +Phipps overboard, and start on a piratical cruize against the Spaniards +in the South Seas. But it was necessary to secure the services of the +chief ship carpenter, who was consequently made privy to the pilot. This +man proved faithful, and at once told the captain of his danger. +Summoning about him those whom he knew to be loyal, Phipps had the ship’s +guns loaded which commanded the shore, and ordered the bridge +communicating with the vessel to be drawn up. When the mutineers made +their appearance, the captain hailed them, and told the men he would fire +upon them if they approached the stores (still on land),—when they drew +back; on which Phipps had the stores reshipped under cover of his guns. +The mutineers, fearful of being left upon the barren island, threw down +their arms and implored to be permitted to return to their duty. The +request was granted, and suitable precautions were taken against future +mischief. Phipps, however, took the first opportunity of landing the +mutinous part of the crew, and engaging other men in their places; but, +by the time that he could again proceed actively with his explorations, +he found it absolutely necessary to proceed to England for the purpose of +repairing the ship. He had now, however, gained more precise information +as to the spot where the Spanish treasure ship had sunk; and, though as +yet baffled, he was more confident than ever of the eventual success of +his enterprise. + +Returned to London, Phipps reported the result of his voyage to the +Admiralty, who professed to be pleased with his exertions; but he had +been unsuccessful, and they would not entrust him with another king’s +ship. James II. was now on the throne, and the Government was in +trouble; so Phipps and his golden project appealed to them in vain. He +next tried to raise the requisite means by a public subscription. At +first he was laughed at; but his ceaseless importunity at length +prevailed, and after four years’ dinning of his project into the ears of +the great and influential—during which time he lived in poverty—he at +length succeeded. A company was formed in twenty shares, the Duke of +Albermarle, son of General Monk, taking the chief interest in it, and +subscribing the principal part of the necessary fund for the prosecution +of the enterprise. + +Like Foley, Phipps proved more fortunate in his second voyage than in his +first. The ship arrived without accident at Port de la Plata, in the +neighbourhood of the reef of rocks supposed to have been the scene of the +wreck. His first object was to build a stout boat capable of carrying +eight or ten oars, in constructing which Phipps used the adze himself. +It is also said that he constructed a machine for the purpose of +exploring the bottom of the sea similar to what is now known as the +Diving Bell. Such a machine was found referred to in books, but Phipps +knew little of books, and may be said to have re-invented the apparatus +for his own use. He also engaged Indian divers, whose feats of diving +for pearls, and in submarine operations, were very remarkable. The +tender and boat having been taken to the reef, the men were set to work, +the diving bell was sunk, and the various modes of dragging the bottom of +the sea were employed continuously for many weeks, but without any +prospect of success. Phipps, however, held on valiantly, hoping almost +against hope. At length, one day, a sailor, looking over the boat’s side +down into the clear water, observed a curious sea-plant growing in what +appeared to be a crevice of the rock; and he called upon an Indian diver +to go down and fetch it for him. On the red man coming up with the weed, +he reported that a number of ships guns were lying in the same place. +The intelligence was at first received with incredulity, but on further +investigation it proved to be correct. Search was made, and presently a +diver came up with a solid bar of silver in his arms. When Phipps was +shown it, he exclaimed, “Thanks be to God! we are all made men.” Diving +bell and divers now went to work with a will, and in a few days, treasure +was brought up to the value of about £300,000, with which Phipps set sail +for England. On his arrival, it was urged upon the king that he should +seize the ship and its cargo, under the pretence that Phipps, when +soliciting his Majesty’s permission, had not given accurate information +respecting the business. But the king replied, that he knew Phipps to be +an honest man, and that he and his friends should divide the whole +treasure amongst them, even though he had returned with double the value. +Phipps’s share was about £20,000, and the king, to show his approval of +his energy and honesty in conducting the enterprise, conferred upon him +the honour of knighthood. He was also made High Sheriff of New England; +and during the time he held the office, he did valiant service for the +mother country and the colonists against the French, by expeditions +against Port Royal and Quebec. He also held the post of Governor of +Massachusetts, from which he returned to England, and died in London in +1695. + +Phipps throughout the latter part of his career, was not ashamed to +allude to the lowness of his origin, and it was matter of honest pride to +him that he had risen from the condition of common ship carpenter to the +honours of knighthood and the government of a province. When perplexed +with public business, he would often declare that it would be easier for +him to go back to his broad axe again. He left behind him a character +for probity, honesty, patriotism, and courage, which is certainly not the +least noble inheritance of the house of Normanby. + +William Petty, the founder of the house of Lansdowne, was a man of like +energy and public usefulness in his day. He was the son of a clothier in +humble circumstances, at Romsey, in Hampshire, where he was born in 1623. +In his boyhood he obtained a tolerable education at the grammar school of +his native town; after which he determined to improve himself by study at +the University of Caen, in Normandy. Whilst there he contrived to +support himself unassisted by his father, carrying on a sort of small +pedler’s trade with “a little stock of merchandise.” Returning to +England, he had himself bound apprentice to a sea captain, who “drubbed +him with a rope’s end” for the badness of his sight. He left the navy in +disgust, taking to the study of medicine. When at Paris he engaged in +dissection, during which time he also drew diagrams for Hobbes, who was +then writing his treatise on Optics. He was reduced to such poverty that +he subsisted for two or three weeks entirely on walnuts. But again he +began to trade in a small way, turning an honest penny, and he was +enabled shortly to return to England with money in his pocket. Being of +an ingenious mechanical turn, we find him taking out a patent for a +letter-copying machine. He began to write upon the arts and sciences, +and practised chemistry and physic with such success that his reputation +shortly became considerable. Associating with men of science, the +project of forming a Society for its prosecution was discussed, and the +first meetings of the infant Royal Society were held at his lodgings. At +Oxford he acted for a time as deputy to the anatomical professor there, +who had a great repugnance to dissection. In 1652 his industry was +rewarded by the appointment of physician to the army in Ireland, whither +he went; and whilst there he was the medical attendant of three +successive lords-lieutenant, Lambert, Fleetwood, and Henry Cromwell. +Large grants of forfeited land having been awarded to the Puritan +soldiery, Petty observed that the lands were very inaccurately measured; +and in the midst of his many avocations he undertook to do the work +himself. His appointments became so numerous and lucrative that he was +charged by the envious with corruption, and removed from them all; but he +was again taken into favour at the Restoration. + +Petty was a most indefatigable contriver, inventor, and organizer of +industry. One of his inventions was a double-bottomed ship, to sail +against wind and tide. He published treatises on dyeing, on naval +philosophy, on woollen cloth manufacture, on political arithmetic, and +many other subjects. He founded iron works, opened lead mines, and +commenced a pilchard fishery and a timber trade; in the midst of which he +found time to take part in the discussions of the Royal Society, to which +he largely contributed. He left an ample fortune to his sons, the eldest +of whom was created Baron Shelburne. His will was a curious document, +singularly illustrative of his character; containing a detail of the +principal events of his life, and the gradual advancement of his fortune. +His sentiments on pauperism are characteristic: “As for legacies for the +poor,” said he, “I am at a stand; as for beggars by trade and election, I +give them nothing; as for impotents by the hand of God, the public ought +to maintain them; as for those who have been bred to no calling nor +estate, they should be put upon their kindred;” . . . “wherefore I am +contented that I have assisted all my poor relations, and put many into a +way of getting their own bread; have laboured in public works; and by +inventions have sought out real objects of charity; and I do hereby +conjure all who partake of my estate, from time to time, to do the same +at their peril. Nevertheless to answer custom, and to take the surer +side, I give 20_l._ to the most wanting of the parish wherein I die.” He +was interred in the fine old Norman church of Romsey—the town wherein he +was born a poor man’s son—and on the south side of the choir is still to +be seen a plain slab, with the inscription, cut by an illiterate workman, +“Here Layes Sir William Petty.” + +Another family, ennobled by invention and trade in our own day, is that +of Strutt of Belper. Their patent of nobility was virtually secured by +Jedediah Strutt in 1758, when he invented his machine for making ribbed +stockings, and thereby laid the foundations of a fortune which the +subsequent bearers of the name have largely increased and nobly employed. +The father of Jedediah was a farmer and malster, who did but little for +the education of his children; yet they all prospered. Jedediah was the +second son, and when a boy assisted his father in the work of the farm. +At an early age he exhibited a taste for mechanics, and introduced +several improvements in the rude agricultural implements of the period. +On the death of his uncle he succeeded to a farm at Blackwall, near +Normanton, long in the tenancy of the family, and shortly after he +married Miss Wollatt, the daughter of a Derby hosier. Having learned +from his wife’s brother that various unsuccessful attempts had been made +to manufacture ribbed-stockings, he proceeded to study the subject with a +view to effect what others had failed in accomplishing. He accordingly +obtained a stocking-frame, and after mastering its construction and mode +of action, he proceeded to introduce new combinations, by means of which +he succeeded in effecting a variation in the plain looped-work of the +frame, and was thereby enabled to turn out “ribbed” hosiery. Having +secured a patent for the improved machine, he removed to Derby, and there +entered largely on the manufacture of ribbed-stockings, in which he was +very successful. He afterwards joined Arkwright, of the merits of whose +invention he fully satisfied himself, and found the means of securing his +patent, as well as erecting a large cotton-mill at Cranford, in +Derbyshire. After the expiry of the partnership with Arkwright, the +Strutts erected extensive cotton-mills at Milford, near Belper, which +worthily gives its title to the present head of the family. The sons of +the founder were, like their father, distinguished for their mechanical +ability. Thus William Strutt, the eldest, is said to have invented a +self-acting mule, the success of which was only prevented by the +mechanical skill of that day being unequal to its manufacture. Edward, +the son of William, was a man of eminent mechanical genius, having early +discovered the principle of suspension-wheels for carriages: he had a +wheelbarrow and two carts made on the principle, which were used on his +farm near Belper. It may be added that the Strutts have throughout been +distinguished for their noble employment of the wealth which their +industry and skill have brought them; that they have sought in all ways +to improve the moral and social condition of the work-people in their +employment; and that they have been liberal donors in every good cause—of +which the presentation, by Mr. Joseph Strutt, of the beautiful park or +Arboretum at Derby, as a gift to the townspeople for ever, affords only +one of many illustrations. The concluding words of the short address +which he delivered on presenting this valuable gift are worthy of being +quoted and remembered:—“As the sun has shone brightly on me through life, +it would be ungrateful in me not to employ a portion of the fortune I +possess in promoting the welfare of those amongst whom I live, and by +whose industry I have been aided in its organisation.” + +No less industry and energy have been displayed by the many brave men, +both in present and past times, who have earned the peerage by their +valour on land and at sea. Not to mention the older feudal lords, whose +tenure depended upon military service, and who so often led the van of +the English armies in great national encounters, we may point to Nelson, +St. Vincent, and Lyons—to Wellington, Hill, Hardinge, Clyde, and many +more in recent times, who have nobly earned their rank by their +distinguished services. But plodding industry has far oftener worked its +way to the peerage by the honourable pursuit of the legal profession, +than by any other. No fewer than seventy British peerages, including two +dukedoms, have been founded by successful lawyers. Mansfield and Erskine +were, it is true, of noble family; but the latter used to thank God that +out of his own family he did not know a lord. {216} The others were, for +the most part, the sons of attorneys, grocers, clergymen, merchants, and +hardworking members of the middle class. Out of this profession have +sprung the peerages of Howard and Cavendish, the first peers of both +families having been judges; those of Aylesford, Ellenborough, Guildford, +Shaftesbury, Hardwicke, Cardigan, Clarendon, Camden, Ellesmere, Rosslyn; +and others nearer our own day, such as Tenterden, Eldon, Brougham, +Denman, Truro, Lyndhurst, St. Leonards, Cranworth, Campbell, and +Chelmsford. + +Lord Lyndhurst’s father was a portrait painter, and that of St. Leonards +a perfumer and hairdresser in Burlington Street. Young Edward Sugden was +originally an errand-boy in the office of the late Mr. Groom, of +Henrietta Street, Cavendish Square, a certificated conveyancer; and it +was there that the future Lord Chancellor of Ireland obtained his first +notions of law. The origin of the late Lord Tenterden was perhaps the +humblest of all, nor was he ashamed of it; for he felt that the industry, +study, and application, by means of which he achieved his eminent +position, were entirely due to himself. It is related of him, that on +one occasion he took his son Charles to a little shed, then standing +opposite the western front of Canterbury Cathedral, and pointing it out +to him, said, “Charles, you see this little shop; I have brought you here +on purpose to show it you. In that shop your grandfather used to shave +for a penny: that is the proudest reflection of my life.” When a boy, +Lord Tenterden was a singer in the Cathedral, and it is a curious +circumstance that his destination in life was changed by a +disappointment. When he and Mr. Justice Richards were going the Home +Circuit together, they went to service in the cathedral; and on Richards +commending the voice of a singing man in the choir, Lord Tenterden said, +“Ah! that is the only man I ever envied! When at school in this town, we +were candidates for a chorister’s place, and he obtained it.” + +Not less remarkable was the rise to the same distinguished office of Lord +Chief Justice, of the rugged Kenyon and the robust Ellenborough; nor was +he a less notable man who recently held the same office—the astute Lord +Campbell, late Lord Chancellor of England, son of a parish minister in +Fifeshire. For many years he worked hard as a reporter for the press, +while diligently preparing himself for the practice of his profession. +It is said of him, that at the beginning of his career, he was accustomed +to walk from county town to county town when on circuit, being as yet too +poor to afford the luxury of posting. But step by step he rose slowly +but surely to that eminence and distinction which ever follow a career of +industry honourably and energetically pursued, in the legal, as in every +other profession. + +There have been other illustrious instances of Lords Chancellors who have +plodded up the steep of fame and honour with equal energy and success. +The career of the late Lord Eldon is perhaps one of the most remarkable +examples. He was the son of a Newcastle coal-fitter; a mischievous +rather than a studious boy; a great scapegrace at school, and the subject +of many terrible thrashings,—for orchard-robbing was one of the favourite +exploits of the future Lord Chancellor. His father first thought of +putting him apprentice to a grocer, and afterwards had almost made up his +mind to bring him up to his own trade of a coal-fitter. But by this time +his eldest son William (afterwards Lord Stowell) who had gained a +scholarship at Oxford, wrote to his father, “Send Jack up to me, I can do +better for him.” John was sent up to Oxford accordingly, where, by his +brother’s influence and his own application, he succeeded in obtaining a +fellowship. But when at home during the vacation, he was so +unfortunate—or rather so fortunate, as the issue proved—as to fall in +love; and running across the Border with his eloped bride, he married, +and as his friends thought, ruined himself for life. He had neither +house nor home when he married, and had not yet earned a penny. He lost +his fellowship, and at the same time shut himself out from preferment in +the Church, for which he had been destined. He accordingly turned his +attention to the study of the law. To a friend he wrote, “I have married +rashly; but it is my determination to work hard to provide for the woman +I love.” + +John Scott came up to London, and took a small house in Cursitor Lane, +where he settled down to the study of the law. He worked with great +diligence and resolution; rising at four every morning and studying till +late at night, binding a wet towel round his head to keep himself awake. +Too poor to study under a special pleader, he copied out three folio +volumes from a manuscript collection of precedents. Long after, when +Lord Chancellor, passing down Cursitor Lane one day, he said to his +secretary, “Here was my first perch: many a time do I recollect coming +down this street with sixpence in my hand to buy sprats for supper.” +When at length called to the bar, he waited long for employment. His +first year’s earnings amounted to only nine shillings. For four years he +assiduously attended the London Courts and the Northern Circuit, with +little better success. Even in his native town, he seldom had other than +pauper cases to defend. The results were indeed so discouraging, that he +had almost determined to relinquish his chance of London business, and +settle down in some provincial town as a country barrister. His brother +William wrote home, “Business is dull with poor Jack, very dull indeed!” +But as he had escaped being a grocer, a coal-fitter, and a country parson +so did he also escape being a country lawyer. + +An opportunity at length occurred which enabled John Scott to exhibit the +large legal knowledge which he had so laboriously acquired. In a case in +which he was engaged, he urged a legal point against the wishes both of +the attorney and client who employed him. The Master of the Rolls +decided against him, but on an appeal to the House of Lords, Lord Thurlow +reversed the decision on the very point that Scott had urged. On leaving +the House that day, a solicitor tapped him on the shoulder and said, +“Young man, your bread and butter’s cut for life.” And the prophecy +proved a true one. Lord Mansfield used to say that he knew no interval +between no business and 3000_l._ a-year, and Scott might have told the +same story; for so rapid was his progress, that in 1783, when only +thirty-two, he was appointed King’s Counsel, was at the head of the +Northern Circuit, and sat in Parliament for the borough of Weobley. It +was in the dull but unflinching drudgery of the early part of his career +that he laid the foundation of his future success. He won his spurs by +perseverance, knowledge, and ability, diligently cultivated. He was +successively appointed to the offices of solicitor and attorney-general, +and rose steadily upwards to the highest office that the Crown had to +bestow—that of Lord Chancellor of England, which he held for a quarter of +a century. + +Henry Bickersteth was the son of a surgeon at Kirkby Lonsdale, in +Westmoreland, and was himself educated to that profession. As a student +at Edinburgh, he distinguished himself by the steadiness with which he +worked, and the application which he devoted to the science of medicine. +Returned to Kirkby Lonsdale, he took an active part in his father’s +practice; but he had no liking for the profession, and grew discontented +with the obscurity of a country town. He went on, nevertheless, +diligently improving himself, and engaged on speculations in the higher +branches of physiology. In conformity with his own wish, his father +consented to send him to Cambridge, where it was his intention to take a +medical degree with the view of practising in the metropolis. Close +application to his studies, however, threw him out of health, and with a +view to re-establishing his strength he accepted the appointment of +travelling physician to Lord Oxford. While abroad he mastered Italian, +and acquired a great admiration for Italian literature, but no greater +liking for medicine than before. On the contrary, he determined to +abandon it; but returning to Cambridge, he took his degree; and that he +worked hard may be inferred from the fact that he was senior wrangler of +his year. Disappointed in his desire to enter the army, he turned to the +bar, and entered a student of the Inner Temple. He worked as hard at law +as he had done at medicine. Writing to his father, he said, “Everybody +says to me, ‘You are certain of success in the end—only persevere;’ and +though I don’t well understand how this is to happen, I try to believe it +as much as I can, and I shall not fail to do everything in my power.” At +twenty-eight he was called to the bar, and had every step in life yet to +make. His means were straitened, and he lived upon the contributions of +his friends. For years he studied and waited. Still no business came. +He stinted himself in recreation, in clothes, and even in the necessaries +of life; struggling on indefatigably through all. Writing home, he +“confessed that he hardly knew how he should be able to struggle on till +he had fair time and opportunity to establish himself.” After three +years’ waiting, still without success, he wrote to his friends that +rather than be a burden upon them longer, he was willing to give the +matter up and return to Cambridge, “where he was sure of support and some +profit.” The friends at home sent him another small remittance, and he +persevered. Business gradually came in. Acquitting himself creditably +in small matters, he was at length entrusted with cases of greater +importance. He was a man who never missed an opportunity, nor allowed a +legitimate chance of improvement to escape him. His unflinching industry +soon began to tell upon his fortunes; a few more years and he was not +only enabled to do without assistance from home, but he was in a position +to pay back with interest the debts which he had incurred. The clouds +had dispersed, and the after career of Henry Bickersteth was one of +honour, of emolument, and of distinguished fame. He ended his career as +Master of the Rolls, sitting in the House of Peers as Baron Langdale. +His life affords only another illustration of the power of patience, +perseverance, and conscientious working, in elevating the character of +the individual, and crowning his labours with the most complete success. + +Such are a few of the distinguished men who have honourably worked their +way to the highest position, and won the richest rewards of their +profession, by the diligent exercise of qualities in many respects of an +ordinary character, but made potent by the force of application and +industry. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. +ENERGY AND COURAGE. + + + “A cœur vaillant rien d’impossible.”—_Jacques Cœur_. + + “Den Muthigen gehört die Welt.”—_German Proverb_. + + “In every work that he began . . . he did it with all his heart, and + prospered.”—_II. Chron._ xxxi. 21. + +THERE is a famous speech recorded of an old Norseman, thoroughly +characteristic of the Teuton. “I believe neither in idols nor demons,” +said he, “I put my sole trust in my own strength of body and soul.” The +ancient crest of a pickaxe with the motto of “Either I will find a way or +make one,” was an expression of the same sturdy independence which to +this day distinguishes the descendants of the Northmen. Indeed nothing +could be more characteristic of the Scandinavian mythology, than that it +had a god with a hammer. A man’s character is seen in small matters; and +from even so slight a test as the mode in which a man wields a hammer, +his energy may in some measure be inferred. Thus an eminent Frenchman +hit off in a single phrase the characteristic quality of the inhabitants +of a particular district, in which a friend of his proposed to settle and +buy land. “Beware,” said he, “of making a purchase there; I know the men +of that department; the pupils who come from it to our veterinary school +at Paris _do nor strike hard upon the anvil_; they want energy; and you +will not get a satisfactory return on any capital you may invest there.” +A fine and just appreciation of character, indicating the thoughtful +observer; and strikingly illustrative of the fact that it is the energy +of the individual men that gives strength to a State, and confers a value +even upon the very soil which they cultivate. As the French proverb has +it: “Tant vaut l’homme, tant vaut sa terre.” + +The cultivation of this quality is of the greatest importance; resolute +determination in the pursuit of worthy objects being the foundation of +all true greatness of character. Energy enables a man to force his way +through irksome drudgery and dry details, and carries him onward and +upward in every station in life. It accomplishes more than genius, with +not one-half the disappointment and peril. It is not eminent talent that +is required to ensure success in any pursuit, so much as purpose,—not +merely the power to achieve, but the will to labour energetically and +perseveringly. Hence energy of will may be defined to be the very +central power of character in a man—in a word, it is the Man himself. It +gives impulse to his every action, and soul to every effort. True hope +is based on it,—and it is hope that gives the real perfume to life. +There is a fine heraldic motto on a broken helmet in Battle Abbey, +“L’espoir est ma force,” which might be the motto of every man’s life. +“Woe unto him that is fainthearted,” says the son of Sirach. There is, +indeed, no blessing equal to the possession of a stout heart. Even if a +man fail in his efforts, it will be a satisfaction to him to enjoy the +consciousness of having done his best. In humble life nothing can be +more cheering and beautiful than to see a man combating suffering by +patience, triumphing in his integrity, and who, when his feet are +bleeding and his limbs failing him, still walks upon his courage. + +Mere wishes and desires but engender a sort of green sickness in young +minds, unless they are promptly embodied in act and deed. It will not +avail merely to wait as so many do, “until Blucher comes up,” but they +must struggle on and persevere in the mean time, as Wellington did. The +good purpose once formed must be carried out with alacrity and without +swerving. In most conditions of life, drudgery and toil are to be +cheerfully endured as the best and most wholesome discipline. “In life,” +said Ary Scheffer, “nothing bears fruit except by labour of mind or body. +To strive and still strive—such is life; and in this respect mine is +fulfilled; but I dare to say, with just pride, that nothing has ever +shaken my courage. With a strong soul, and a noble aim, one can do what +one wills, morally speaking.” + +Hugh Miller said the only school in which he was properly taught was +“that world-wide school in which toil and hardship are the severe but +noble teachers.” He who allows his application to falter, or shirks his +work on frivolous pretexts, is on the sure road to ultimate failure. Let +any task be undertaken as a thing not possible to be evaded, and it will +soon come to be performed with alacrity and cheerfulness. Charles IX. of +Sweden was a firm believer in the power of will, even in youth. Laying +his hand on the head of his youngest son when engaged on a difficult +task, he exclaimed, “He _shall_ do it! he _shall_ do it!” The habit of +application becomes easy in time, like every other habit. Thus persons +with comparatively moderate powers will accomplish much, if they apply +themselves wholly and indefatigably to one thing at a time. Fowell +Buxton placed his confidence in ordinary means and extraordinary +application; realizing the scriptural injunction, “Whatsoever thy hand +findeth to do, do it with all thy might;” and he attributed his own +success in life to his practice of “being a whole man to one thing at a +time.” + +Nothing that is of real worth can be achieved without courageous working. +Man owes his growth chiefly to that active striving of the will, that +encounter with difficulty, which we call effort; and it is astonishing to +find how often results apparently impracticable are thus made possible. +An intense anticipation itself transforms possibility into reality; our +desires being often but the precursors of the things which we are capable +of performing. On the contrary, the timid and hesitating find everything +impossible, chiefly because it seems so. It is related of a young French +officer, that he used to walk about his apartment exclaiming, “I _will_ +be Marshal of France and a great general.” His ardent desire was the +presentiment of his success; for the young officer did become a +distinguished commander, and he died a Marshal of France. + +Mr. Walker, author of the ‘Original,’ had so great a faith in the power +of will, that he says on one occasion he _determined_ to be well, and he +was so. This may answer once; but, though safer to follow than many +prescriptions, it will not always succeed. The power of mind over body +is no doubt great, but it may be strained until the physical power breaks +down altogether. It is related of Muley Moluc, the Moorish leader, that, +when lying ill, almost worn out by an incurable disease, a battle took +place between his troops and the Portuguese; when, starting from his +litter at the great crisis of the fight, he rallied his army, led them to +victory, and instantly afterwards sank exhausted and expired. + +It is will,—force of purpose,—that enables a man to do or be whatever he +sets his mind on being or doing. A holy man was accustomed to say, +“Whatever you wish, that you are: for such is the force of our will, +joined to the Divine, that whatever we wish to be, seriously, and with a +true intention, that we become. No one ardently wishes to be submissive, +patient, modest, or liberal, who does not become what he wishes.” The +story is told of a working carpenter, who was observed one day planing a +magistrate’s bench which he was repairing, with more than usual +carefulness; and when asked the reason, he replied, “Because I wish to +make it easy against the time when I come to sit upon it myself.” And +singularly enough, the man actually lived to sit upon that very bench as +a magistrate. + +Whatever theoretical conclusions logicians may have formed as to the +freedom of the will, each individual feels that practically he is free to +choose between good and evil—that he is not as a mere straw thrown upon +the water to mark the direction of the current, but that he has within +him the power of a strong swimmer, and is capable of striking out for +himself, of buffeting with the waves, and directing to a great extent his +own independent course. There is no absolute constraint upon our +volitions, and we feel and know that we are not bound, as by a spell, +with reference to our actions. It would paralyze all desire of +excellence were we to think otherwise. The entire business and conduct +of life, with its domestic rules, its social arrangements, and its public +institutions, proceed upon the practical conviction that the will is +free. Without this where would be responsibility?—and what the advantage +of teaching, advising, preaching, reproof, and correction? What were the +use of laws, were it not the universal belief, as it is the universal +fact, that men obey them or not, very much as they individually +determine? In every moment of our life, conscience is proclaiming that +our will is free. It is the only thing that is wholly ours, and it rests +solely with ourselves individually, whether we give it the right or the +wrong direction. Our habits or our temptations are not our masters, but +we of them. Even in yielding, conscience tells us we might resist; and +that were we determined to master them, there would not be required for +that purpose a stronger resolution than we know ourselves to be capable +of exercising. + +“You are now at the age,” said Lamennais once, addressing a gay youth, +“at which a decision must be formed by you; a little later, and you may +have to groan within the tomb which you yourself have dug, without the +power of rolling away the stone. That which the easiest becomes a habit +in us is the will. Learn then to will strongly and decisively; thus fix +your floating life, and leave it no longer to be carried hither and +thither, like a withered leaf, by every wind that blows.” + +Buxton held the conviction that a young man might be very much what he +pleased, provided he formed a strong resolution and held to it. Writing +to one of his sons, he said to him, “You are now at that period of life, +in which you must make a turn to the right or the left. You must now +give proofs of principle, determination, and strength of mind; or you +must sink into idleness, and acquire the habits and character of a +desultory, ineffective young man; and if once you fall to that point, you +will find it no easy matter to rise again. I am sure that a young man +may be very much what he pleases. In my own case it was so. . . . Much +of my happiness, and all my prosperity in life, have resulted from the +change I made at your age. If you seriously resolve to be energetic and +industrious, depend upon it that you will for your whole life have reason +to rejoice that you were wise enough to form and to act upon that +determination.” As will, considered without regard to direction, is +simply constancy, firmness, perseverance, it will be obvious that +everything depends upon right direction and motives. Directed towards +the enjoyment of the senses, the strong will may be a demon, and the +intellect merely its debased slave; but directed towards good, the strong +will is a king, and the intellect the minister of man’s highest +well-being. + +“Where there is a will there is a way,” is an old and true saying. He +who resolves upon doing a thing, by that very resolution often scales the +barriers to it, and secures its achievement. To think we are able, is +almost to be so—to determine upon attainment is frequently attainment +itself. Thus, earnest resolution has often seemed to have about it +almost a savour of omnipotence. The strength of Suwarrow’s character lay +in his power of willing, and, like most resolute persons, he preached it +up as a system. “You can only half will,” he would say to people who +failed. Like Richelieu and Napoleon, he would have the word “impossible” +banished from the dictionary. “I don’t know,” “I can’t,” and +“impossible,” were words which he detested above all others. “Learn! +Do! Try!” he would exclaim. His biographer has said of him, that he +furnished a remarkable illustration of what may be effected by the +energetic development and exercise of faculties, the germs of which at +least are in every human heart. + +One of Napoleon’s favourite maxims was, “The truest wisdom is a resolute +determination.” His life, beyond most others, vividly showed what a +powerful and unscrupulous will could accomplish. He threw his whole +force of body and mind direct upon his work. Imbecile rulers and the +nations they governed went down before him in succession. He was told +that the Alps stood in the way of his armies—“There shall be no Alps,” he +said, and the road across the Simplon was constructed, through a district +formerly almost inaccessible. “Impossible,” said he, “is a word only to +be found in the dictionary of fools.” He was a man who toiled terribly; +sometimes employing and exhausting four secretaries at a time. He spared +no one, not even himself. His influence inspired other men, and put a +new life into them. “I made my generals out of mud,” he said. But all +was of no avail; for Napoleon’s intense selfishness was his ruin, and the +ruin of France, which he left a prey to anarchy. His life taught the +lesson that power, however energetically wielded, without beneficence, is +fatal to its possessor and its subjects; and that knowledge, or +knowingness, without goodness, is but the incarnate principle of Evil. + +Our own Wellington was a far greater man. Not less resolute, firm, and +persistent, but more self-denying, conscientious, and truly patriotic. +Napoleon’s aim was “Glory;” Wellington’s watchword, like Nelson’s, was +“Duty.” The former word, it is said, does not once occur in his +despatches; the latter often, but never accompanied by any high-sounding +professions. The greatest difficulties could neither embarrass nor +intimidate Wellington; his energy invariably rising in proportion to the +obstacles to be surmounted. The patience, the firmness, the resolution, +with which he bore through the maddening vexations and gigantic +difficulties of the Peninsular campaigns, is, perhaps, one of the +sublimest things to be found in history. In Spain, Wellington not only +exhibited the genius of the general, but the comprehensive wisdom of the +statesman. Though his natural temper was irritable in the extreme, his +high sense of duty enabled him to restrain it; and to those about him his +patience seemed absolutely inexhaustible. His great character stands +untarnished by ambition, by avarice, or any low passion. Though a man of +powerful individuality, he yet displayed a great variety of endowment. +The equal of Napoleon in generalship, he was as prompt, vigorous, and +daring as Clive; as wise a statesman as Cromwell; and as pure and +high-minded as Washington. The great Wellington left behind him an +enduring reputation, founded on toilsome campaigns won by skilful +combination, by fortitude which nothing could exhaust, by sublime daring, +and perhaps by still sublimer patience. + +Energy usually displays itself in promptitude and decision. When Ledyard +the traveller was asked by the African Association when he would be ready +to set out for Africa, he immediately answered, “To-morrow morning.” +Blucher’s promptitude obtained for him the cognomen of “Marshal Forwards” +throughout the Prussian army. When John Jervis, afterwards Earl St. +Vincent, was asked when he would be ready to join his ship, he replied, +“Directly.” And when Sir Colin Campbell, appointed to the command of the +Indian army, was asked when he could set out, his answer was, +“To-morrow,”—an earnest of his subsequent success. For it is rapid +decision, and a similar promptitude in action, such as taking instant +advantage of an enemy’s mistakes, that so often wins battles. “At +Arcola,” said Napoleon, “I won the battle with twenty-five horsemen. I +seized a moment of lassitude, gave every man a trumpet, and gained the +day with this handful. Two armies are two bodies which meet and +endeavour to frighten each other: a moment of panic occurs, and _that +moment_ must be turned to advantage.” “Every moment lost,” said he at +another time, “gives an opportunity for misfortune;” and he declared that +he beat the Austrians because they never knew the value of time: while +they dawdled, he overthrew them. + +India has, during the last century, been a great field for the display of +British energy. From Clive to Havelock and Clyde there is a long and +honourable roll of distinguished names in Indian legislation and +warfare,—such as Wellesley, Metcalfe, Outram, Edwardes, and the +Lawrences. Another great but sullied name is that of Warren Hastings—a +man of dauntless will and indefatigable industry. His family was ancient +and illustrious; but their vicissitudes of fortune and ill-requited +loyalty in the cause of the Stuarts, brought them to poverty, and the +family estate at Daylesford, of which they had been lords of the manor +for hundreds of years, at length passed from their hands. The last +Hastings of Daylesford had, however, presented the parish living to his +second son; and it was in his house, many years later, that Warren +Hastings, his grandson, was born. The boy learnt his letters at the +village school, on the same bench with the children of the peasantry. He +played in the fields which his fathers had owned; and what the loyal and +brave Hastings of Daylesford _had_ been, was ever in the boy’s thoughts. +His young ambition was fired, and it is said that one summer’s day, when +only seven years old, as he laid him down on the bank of the stream which +flowed through the domain, he formed in his mind the resolution that he +would yet recover possession of the family lands. It was the romantic +vision of a boy; yet he lived to realize it. The dream became a passion, +rooted in his very life; and he pursued his determination through youth +up to manhood, with that calm but indomitable force of will which was the +most striking peculiarity of his character. The orphan boy became one of +the most powerful men of his time; he retrieved the fortunes of his line; +bought back the old estate, and rebuilt the family mansion. “When, under +a tropical sun,” says Macaulay, “he ruled fifty millions of Asiatics, his +hopes, amidst all the cares of war, finance, and legislation, still +pointed to Daylesford. And when his long public life, so singularly +chequered with good and evil, with glory and obloquy, had at length +closed for ever, it was to Daylesford that he retired to die.” + +Sir Charles Napier was another Indian leader of extraordinary courage and +determination. He once said of the difficulties with which he was +surrounded in one of his campaigns, “They only make my feet go deeper +into the ground.” His battle of Meeanee was one of the most +extraordinary feats in history. With 2000 men, of whom only 400 were +Europeans, he encountered an army of 35,000 hardy and well-armed +Beloochees. It was an act, apparently, of the most daring temerity, but +the general had faith in himself and in his men. He charged the Belooch +centre up a high bank which formed their rampart in front, and for three +mortal hours the battle raged. Each man of that small force, inspired by +the chief, became for the time a hero. The Beloochees, though twenty to +one, were driven back, but with their faces to the foe. It is this sort +of pluck, tenacity, and determined perseverance which wins soldiers’ +battles, and, indeed, every battle. It is the one neck nearer that wins +the race and shows the blood; it is the one march more that wins the +campaign; the five minutes’ more persistent courage that wins the fight. +Though your force be less than another’s, you equal and outmaster your +opponent if you continue it longer and concentrate it more. The reply of +the Spartan father, who said to his son, when complaining that his sword +was too short, “Add a step to it,” is applicable to everything in life. + +Napier took the right method of inspiring his men with his own heroic +spirit. He worked as hard as any private in the ranks. “The great art +of commanding,” he said, “is to take a fair share of the work. The man +who leads an army cannot succeed unless his whole mind is thrown into his +work. The more trouble, the more labour must be given; the more danger, +the more pluck must be shown, till all is overpowered.” A young officer +who accompanied him in his campaign in the Cutchee Hills, once said, +“When I see that old man incessantly on his horse, how can I be idle who +am young and strong? I would go into a loaded cannon’s mouth if he +ordered me.” This remark, when repeated to Napier, he said was ample +reward for his toils. The anecdote of his interview with the Indian +juggler strikingly illustrates his cool courage as well as his remarkable +simplicity and honesty of character. On one occasion, after the Indian +battles, a famous juggler visited the camp and performed his feats before +the General, his family, and staff. Among other performances, this man +cut in two with a stroke of his sword a lime or lemon placed in the hand +of his assistant. Napier thought there was some collusion between the +juggler and his retainer. To divide by a sweep of the sword on a man’s +hand so small an object without touching the flesh he believed to be +impossible, though a similar incident is related by Scott in his romance +of the ‘Talisman.’ To determine the point, the General offered his own +hand for the experiment, and he stretched out his right arm. The juggler +looked attentively at the hand, and said he would not make the trial. “I +thought I would find you out!” exclaimed Napier. “But stop,” added the +other, “let me see your left hand.” The left hand was submitted, and the +man then said firmly, “If you will hold your arm steady I will perform +the feat.” “But why the left hand and not the right?” “Because the +right hand is hollow in the centre, and there is a risk of cutting off +the thumb; the left is high, and the danger will be less.” Napier was +startled. “I got frightened,” he said; “I saw it was an actual feat of +delicate swordsmanship, and if I had not abused the man as I did before +my staff, and challenged him to the trial, I honestly acknowledge I would +have retired from the encounter. However, I put the lime on my hand, and +held out my arm steadily. The juggler balanced himself, and, with a +swift stroke cut the lime in two pieces. I felt the edge of the sword on +my hand as if a cold thread had been drawn across it. So much (he added) +for the brave swordsmen of India, whom our fine fellows defeated at +Meeanee.” + +The recent terrible struggle in India has served to bring out, perhaps +more prominently than any previous event in our history, the determined +energy and self-reliance of the national character. Although English +officialism may often drift stupidly into gigantic blunders, the men of +the nation generally contrive to work their way out of them with a +heroism almost approaching the sublime. In May, 1857, when the revolt +burst upon India like a thunder-clap, the British forces had been allowed +to dwindle to their extreme minimum, and were scattered over a wide +extent of country, many of them in remote cantonments. The Bengal +regiments, one after another, rose against their officers, broke away, +and rushed to Delhi. Province after province was lapped in mutiny and +rebellion; and the cry for help rose from east to west. Everywhere the +English stood at bay in small detachments, beleaguered and surrounded, +apparently incapable of resistance. Their discomfiture seemed so +complete, and the utter ruin of the British cause in India so certain, +that it might be said of them then, as it had been said before, “These +English never know when they are beaten.” According to rule, they ought +then and there to have succumbed to inevitable fate. + +While the issue of the mutiny still appeared uncertain, Holkar, one of +the native princes, consulted his astrologer for information. The reply +was, “If all the Europeans save one are slain, that one will remain to +fight and reconquer.” In their very darkest moment—even where, as at +Lucknow, a mere handful of British soldiers, civilians, and women, held +out amidst a city and province in arms against them—there was no word of +despair, no thought of surrender. Though cut off from all communication +with their friends for months, and not knowing whether India was lost or +held, they never ceased to have perfect faith in the courage and +devotedness of their countrymen. They knew that while a body of men of +English race held together in India, they would not be left unheeded to +perish. They never dreamt of any other issue but retrieval of their +misfortune and ultimate triumph; and if the worst came to the worst, they +could but fall at their post, and die in the performance of their duty. +Need we remind the reader of the names of Havelock, Inglis, Neill, and +Outram—men of truly heroic mould—of each of whom it might with truth be +said that he had the heart of a chevalier, the soul of a believer, and +the temperament of a martyr. Montalembert has said of them that “they do +honour to the human race.” But throughout that terrible trial almost all +proved equally great—women, civilians and soldiers—from the general down +through all grades to the private and bugleman. The men were not picked: +they belonged to the same ordinary people whom we daily meet at home—in +the streets, in workshops, in the fields, at clubs; yet when sudden +disaster fell upon them, each and all displayed a wealth of personal +resources and energy, and became as it were individually heroic. “Not +one of them,” says Montalembert, “shrank or trembled—all, military and +civilians, young and old, generals and soldiers, resisted, fought, and +perished with a coolness and intrepidity which never faltered. It is in +this circumstance that shines out the immense value of public education, +which invites the Englishman from his youth to make use of his strength +and his liberty, to associate, resist, fear nothing, to be astonished at +nothing, and to save himself, by his own sole exertions, from every sore +strait in life.” + +It has been said that Delhi was taken and India saved by the personal +character of Sir John Lawrence. The very name of “Lawrence” represented +power in the North-West Provinces. His standard of duty, zeal, and +personal effort, was of the highest; and every man who served under him +seemed to be inspired by his spirit. It was declared of him that his +character alone was worth an army. The same might be said of his brother +Sir Henry, who organised the Punjaub force that took so prominent a part +in the capture of Delhi. Both brothers inspired those who were about +them with perfect love and confidence. Both possessed that quality of +tenderness, which is one of the true elements of the heroic character. +Both lived amongst the people, and powerfully influenced them for good. +Above all as Col. Edwardes says, “they drew models on young fellows’ +minds, which they went forth and copied in their several administrations: +they sketched a _faith_, and begot a _school_, which are both living +things at this day.” Sir John Lawrence had by his side such men as +Montgomery, Nicholson, Cotton, and Edwardes, as prompt, decisive, and +high-souled as himself. John Nicholson was one of the finest, manliest, +and noblest of men—“every inch a hakim,” the natives said of him—“a tower +of strength,” as he was characterised by Lord Dalhousie. In whatever +capacity he acted he was great, because he acted with his whole strength +and soul. A brotherhood of fakeers—borne away by their enthusiastic +admiration of the man—even began the worship of Nikkil Seyn: he had some +of them punished for their folly, but they continued their worship +nevertheless. Of his sustained energy and persistency an illustration +may be cited in his pursuit of the 55th Sepoy mutineers, when he was in +the saddle for twenty consecutive hours, and travelled more than seventy +miles. When the enemy set up their standard at Delhi, Lawrence and +Montgomery, relying on the support of the people of the Punjaub, and +compelling their admiration and confidence, strained every nerve to keep +their own province in perfect order, whilst they hurled every available +soldier, European and Sikh, against that city. Sir John wrote to the +commander-in-chief to “hang on to the rebels’ noses before Delhi,” while +the troops pressed on by forced marches under Nicholson, “the tramp of +whose war-horse might be heard miles off,” as was afterwards said of him +by a rough Sikh who wept over his grave. + +The siege and storming of Delhi was the most illustrious event which +occurred in the course of that gigantic struggle, although the leaguer of +Lucknow, during which the merest skeleton of a British regiment—the +32nd—held out, under the heroic Inglis, for six months against two +hundred thousand armed enemies, has perhaps excited more intense +interest. At Delhi, too, the British were really the besieged, though +ostensibly the besiegers; they were a mere handful of men “in the +open”—not more than 3,700 bayonets, European and native—and they were +assailed from day to day by an army of rebels numbering at one time as +many as 75,000 men, trained to European discipline by English officers, +and supplied with all but exhaustless munitions of war. The heroic +little band sat down before the city under the burning rays of a tropical +sun. Death, wounds, and fever failed to turn them from their purpose. +Thirty times they were attacked by overwhelming numbers, and thirty times +did they drive back the enemy behind their defences. As Captain +Hodson—himself one of the bravest there—has said, “I venture to aver that +no other nation in the world would have remained here, or avoided defeat +if they had attempted to do so.” Never for an instant did these heroes +falter at their work; with sublime endurance they held on, fought on, and +never relaxed until, dashing through the “imminent deadly breach,” the +place was won, and the British flag was again unfurled on the walls of +Delhi. All were great—privates, officers, and generals. Common soldiers +who had been inured to a life of hardship, and young officers who had +been nursed in luxurious homes, alike proved their manhood, and emerged +from that terrible trial with equal honour. The native strength and +soundness of the English race, and of manly English training and +discipline, were never more powerfully exhibited; and it was there +emphatically proved that the Men of England are, after all, its greatest +products. A terrible price was paid for this great chapter in our +history, but if those who survive, and those who come after, profit by +the lesson and example, it may not have been purchased at too great a +cost. + +But not less energy and courage have been displayed in India and the East +by men of various nations, in other lines of action more peaceful and +beneficent than that of war. And while the heroes of the sword are +remembered, the heroes of the gospel ought not to be forgotten. From +Xavier to Martyn and Williams, there has been a succession of illustrious +missionary labourers, working in a spirit of sublime self-sacrifice, +without any thought of worldly honour, inspired solely by the hope of +seeking out and rescuing the lost and fallen of their race. Borne up by +invincible courage and never-failing patience, these men have endured +privations, braved dangers, walked through pestilence, and borne all +toils, fatigues, and sufferings, yet held on their way rejoicing, +glorying even in martyrdom itself. Of these one of the first and most +illustrious was Francis Xavier. Born of noble lineage, and with +pleasure, power, and honour within his reach, he proved by his life that +there are higher objects in the world than rank, and nobler aspirations +than the accumulation of wealth. He was a true gentleman in manners and +sentiment; brave, honourable, generous; easily led, yet capable of +leading; easily persuaded, yet himself persuasive; a most patient, +resolute and energetic man. At the age of twenty-two he was earning his +living as a public teacher of philosophy at the University of Paris. +There Xavier became the intimate friend and associate of Loyola, and +shortly afterwards he conducted the pilgrimage of the first little band +of proselytes to Rome. + +When John III. of Portugal resolved to plant Christianity in the Indian +territories subject to his influence, Bobadilla was first selected as his +missionary; but being disabled by illness, it was found necessary to make +another selection, and Xavier was chosen. Repairing his tattered +cassock, and with no other baggage than his breviary, he at once started +for Lisbon and embarked for the East. The ship in which he set sail for +Goa had the Governor on board, with a reinforcement of a thousand men for +the garrison of the place. Though a cabin was placed at his disposal, +Xavier slept on deck throughout the voyage with his head on a coil of +ropes, messing with the sailors. By ministering to their wants, +inventing innocent sports for their amusement, and attending them in +their sickness, he wholly won their hearts, and they regarded him with +veneration. + +Arrived at Goa, Xavier was shocked at the depravity of the people, +settlers as well as natives; for the former had imported the vices +without the restraints of civilization, and the latter had only been too +apt to imitate their bad example. Passing along the streets of the city, +sounding his handbell as he went, he implored the people to send him +their children to be instructed. He shortly succeeded in collecting a +large number of scholars, whom he carefully taught day by day, at the +same time visiting the sick, the lepers, and the wretched of all classes, +with the object of assuaging their miseries, and bringing them to the +Truth. No cry of human suffering which reached him was disregarded. +Hearing of the degradation and misery of the pearl fishers of Manaar, he +set out to visit them, and his bell again rang out the invitation of +mercy. He baptized and he taught, but the latter he could only do +through interpreters. His most eloquent teaching was his ministration to +the wants and the sufferings of the wretched. + +On he went, his hand-bell sounding along the coast of Comorin, among the +towns and villages, the temples and the bazaars, summoning the natives to +gather about him and be instructed. He had translations made of the +Catechism, the Apostles’ Creed, the Commandments, the Lord’s Prayer, and +some of the devotional offices of the Church. Committing these to memory +in their own tongue he recited them to the children, until they had them +by heart; after which he sent them forth to teach the words to their +parents and neighbours. At Cape Comorin, he appointed thirty teachers, +who under himself presided over thirty Christian Churches, though the +Churches were but humble, in most cases consisting only of a cottage +surmounted by a cross. Thence he passed to Travancore, sounding his way +from village to village, baptizing until his hands dropped with +weariness, and repeating his formulas until his voice became almost +inaudible. According to his own account, the success of his mission +surpassed his highest expectations. His pure, earnest, and beautiful +life, and the irresistible eloquence of his deeds, made converts wherever +he went; and by sheer force of sympathy, those who saw him and listened +to him insensibly caught a portion of his ardour. + +Burdened with the thought that “the harvest is great and the labourers +are few,” Xavier next sailed to Malacca and Japan, where he found himself +amongst entirely new races speaking other tongues. The most that he +could do here was to weep and pray, to smooth the pillow and watch by the +sick-bed, sometimes soaking the sleeve of his surplice in water, from +which to squeeze out a few drops and baptize the dying. Hoping all +things, and fearing nothing, this valiant soldier of the truth was borne +onward throughout by faith and energy. “Whatever form of death or +torture,” said he, “awaits me, I am ready to suffer it ten thousand times +for the salvation of a single soul.” He battled with hunger, thirst, +privations and dangers of all kinds, still pursuing his mission of love, +unresting and unwearying. At length, after eleven years’ labour, this +great good man, while striving to find a way into China, was stricken +with fever in the Island of Sanchian, and there received his crown of +glory. A hero of nobler mould, more pure, self-denying, and courageous, +has probably never trod this earth. + +Other missionaries have followed Xavier in the same field of work, such +as Schwartz, Carey, and Marshman in India; Gutzlaff and Morrison in +China; Williams in the South Seas; Campbell, Moffatt and Livingstone in +Africa. John Williams, the martyr of Erromanga, was originally +apprenticed to a furnishing ironmonger. Though considered a dull boy, he +was handy at his trade, in which he acquired so much skill that his +master usually entrusted him with any blacksmiths work that required the +exercise of more than ordinary care. He was also fond of bell-hanging +and other employments which took him away from the shop. A casual sermon +which he heard gave his mind a serious bias, and he became a +Sunday-school teacher. The cause of missions having been brought under +his notice at some of his society’s meetings, he determined to devote +himself to this work. His services were accepted by the London +Missionary Society; and his master allowed him to leave the ironmonger’s +shop before the expiry of his indentures. The islands of the Pacific +Ocean were the principal scene of his labours—more particularly Huahine +in Tahiti, Raiatea, and Rarotonga. Like the Apostles he worked with his +hands,—at blacksmith work, gardening, shipbuilding; and he endeavoured to +teach the islanders the art of civilised life, at the same time that he +instructed them in the truths of religion. It was in the course of his +indefatigable labours that he was massacred by savages on the shore of +Erromanga—none worthier than he to wear the martyr’s crown. + +The career of Dr. Livingstone is one of the most interesting of all. He +has told the story of his life in that modest and unassuming manner which +is so characteristic of the man himself. His ancestors were poor but +honest Highlanders, and it is related of one of them, renowned in his +district for wisdom and prudence, that when on his death-bed he called +his children round him and left them these words, the only legacy he had +to bequeath—“In my life-time,” said he, “I have searched most carefully +through all the traditions I could find of our family, and I never could +discover that there was a dishonest man among our forefathers: if, +therefore, any of you or any of your children should take to dishonest +ways, it will not be because it runs in our blood; it does not belong to +you: I leave this precept with you—Be honest.” At the age of ten +Livingstone was sent to work in a cotton factory near Glasgow as a +“piecer.” With part of his first week’s wages he bought a Latin grammar, +and began to learn that language, pursuing the study for years at a night +school. He would sit up conning his lessons till twelve or later, when +not sent to bed by his mother, for he had to be up and at work in the +factory every morning by six. In this way he plodded through Virgil and +Horace, also reading extensively all books, excepting novels, that came +in his way, but more especially scientific works and books of travels. +He occupied his spare hours, which were but few, in the pursuit of +botany, scouring the neighbourhood to collect plants. He even carried on +his reading amidst the roar of the factory machinery, so placing the book +upon the spinning jenny which he worked that he could catch sentence +after sentence as he passed it. In this way the persevering youth +acquired much useful knowledge; and as he grew older, the desire +possessed him of becoming a missionary to the heathen. With this object +he set himself to obtain a medical education, in order the better to be +qualified for the work. He accordingly economised his earnings, and +saved as much money as enabled him to support himself while attending the +Medical and Greek classes, as well as the Divinity Lectures, at Glasgow, +for several winters, working as a cotton spinner during the remainder of +each year. He thus supported himself, during his college career, +entirely by his own earnings as a factory workman, never having received +a farthing of help from any other source. “Looking back now,” he +honestly says, “at that life of toil, I cannot but feel thankful that it +formed such a material part of my early education; and, were it possible, +I should like to begin life over again in the same lowly style, and to +pass through the same hardy training.” At length he finished his medical +curriculum, wrote his Latin thesis, passed his examinations, and was +admitted a licentiate of the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons. At +first he thought of going to China, but the war then waging with that +country prevented his following out the idea; and having offered his +services to the London Missionary Society, he was by them sent out to +Africa, which he reached in 1840. He had intended to proceed to China by +his own efforts; and he says the only pang he had in going to Africa at +the charge of the London Missionary Society was, because “it was not +quite agreeable to one accustomed to work his own way to become, in a +manner, dependent upon others.” Arrived in Africa he set to work with +great zeal. He could not brook the idea of merely entering upon the +labours of others, but cut out a large sphere of independent work, +preparing himself for it by undertaking manual labour in building and +other handicraft employment, in addition to teaching, which, he says, +“made me generally as much exhausted and unfit for study in the evenings +as ever I had been when a cotton-spinner.” Whilst labouring amongst the +Bechuanas, he dug canals, built houses, cultivated fields, reared cattle, +and taught the natives to work as well as worship. When he first started +with a party of them on foot upon a long journey, he overheard their +observations upon his appearance and powers—“He is not strong,” said +they; “he is quite slim, and only appears stout because he puts himself +into those bags (trowsers): he will soon knock up.” This caused the +missionary’s Highland blood to rise, and made him despise the fatigue of +keeping them all at the top of their speed for days together, until he +heard them expressing proper opinions of his pedestrian powers. What he +did in Africa, and how he worked, may be learnt from his own ‘Missionary +Travels,’ one of the most fascinating books of its kind that has ever +been given to the public. One of his last known acts is thoroughly +characteristic of the man. The ‘Birkenhead’ steam launch, which he took +out with him to Africa, having proved a failure, he sent home orders for +the construction of another vessel at an estimated cost of 2000_l._ This +sum he proposed to defray out of the means which he had set aside for his +children arising from the profits of his books of travels. “The children +must make it up themselves,” was in effect his expression in sending home +the order for the appropriation of the money. + +The career of John Howard was throughout a striking illustration of the +same power of patient purpose. His sublime life proved that even +physical weakness could remove mountains in the pursuit of an end +recommended by duty. The idea of ameliorating the condition of prisoners +engrossed his whole thoughts and possessed him like a passion; and no +toil, nor danger, nor bodily suffering could turn him from that great +object of his life. Though a man of no genius and but moderate talent, +his heart was pure and his will was strong. Even in his own time he +achieved a remarkable degree of success; and his influence did not die +with him, for it has continued powerfully to affect not only the +legislation of England, but of all civilised nations, down to the present +hour. + +Jonas Hanway was another of the many patient and persevering men who have +made England what it is—content simply to do with energy the work they +have been appointed to do, and go to their rest thankfully when it is +done— + + “Leaving no memorial but a world + Made better by their lives.” + +He was born in 1712, at Portsmouth, where his father, a storekeeper in +the dockyard, being killed by an accident, he was left an orphan at an +early age. His mother removed with her children to London, where she had +them put to school, and struggled hard to bring them up respectably. At +seventeen Jonas was sent to Lisbon to be apprenticed to a merchant, where +his close attention to business, his punctuality, and his strict honour +and integrity, gained for him the respect and esteem of all who knew him. +Returning to London in 1743, he accepted the offer of a partnership in an +English mercantile house at St. Petersburg engaged in the Caspian trade, +then in its infancy. Hanway went to Russia for the purpose of extending +the business; and shortly after his arrival at the capital he set out for +Persia, with a caravan of English bales of cloth making twenty carriage +loads. At Astracan he sailed for Astrabad, on the south-eastern shore of +the Caspian; but he had scarcely landed his bales, when an insurrection +broke out, his goods were seized, and though he afterwards recovered the +principal part of them, the fruits of his enterprise were in a great +measure lost. A plot was set on foot to seize himself and his party; so +he took to sea and, after encountering great perils, reached Ghilan in +safety. His escape on this occasion gave him the first idea of the words +which he afterwards adopted as the motto of his life—“_Never Despair_.” +He afterwards resided in St. Petersburg for five years, carrying on a +prosperous business. But a relative having left him some property, and +his own means being considerable, he left Russia, and arrived in his +native country in 1755. His object in returning to England was, as he +himself expressed it, “to consult his own health (which was extremely +delicate), and do as much good to himself and others as he was able.” +The rest of his life was spent in deeds of active benevolence and +usefulness to his fellow men. He lived in a quiet style, in order that +he might employ a larger share of his income in works of benevolence. +One of the first public improvements to which he devoted himself was that +of the highways of the metropolis, in which he succeeded to a large +extent. The rumour of a French invasion being prevalent in 1755, Mr. +Hanway turned his attention to the best mode of keeping up the supply of +seamen. He summoned a meeting of merchants and shipowners at the Royal +Exchange, and there proposed to them to form themselves into a society +for fitting out landsmen volunteers and boys, to serve on board the +king’s ships. The proposal was received with enthusiasm: a society was +formed, and officers were appointed, Mr. Hanway directing its entire +operations. The result was the establishment in 1756 of The Marine +Society, an institution which has proved of much national advantage, and +is to this day of great and substantial utility. Within six years from +its formation, 5451 boys and 4787 landsmen volunteers had been trained +and fitted out by the society and added to the navy, and to this day it +is in active operation, about 600 poor boys, after a careful education, +being annually apprenticed as sailors, principally in the merchant +service. + +Mr. Hanway devoted the other portions of his spare time to improving or +establishing important public institutions in the metropolis. From an +early period he took an active interest in the Foundling Hospital, which +had been started by Thomas Coram many years before, but which, by +encouraging parents to abandon their children to the charge of a charity, +was threatening to do more harm than good. He determined to take steps +to stem the evil, entering upon the work in the face of the fashionable +philanthropy of the time; but by holding to his purpose he eventually +succeeded in bringing the charity back to its proper objects; and time +and experience have proved that he was right. The Magdalen Hospital was +also established in a great measure through Mr. Hanway’s exertions. But +his most laborious and persevering efforts were in behalf of the infant +parish poor. The misery and neglect amidst which the children of the +parish poor then grew up, and the mortality which prevailed amongst them, +were frightful; but there was no fashionable movement on foot to abate +the suffering, as in the case of the foundlings. So Jonas Hanway +summoned his energies to the task. Alone and unassisted he first +ascertained by personal inquiry the extent of the evil. He explored the +dwellings of the poorest classes in London, and visited the poorhouse +sick wards, by which he ascertained the management in detail of every +workhouse in and near the metropolis. He next made a journey into France +and through Holland, visiting the houses for the reception of the poor, +and noting whatever he thought might be adopted at home with advantage. +He was thus employed for five years; and on his return to England he +published the results of his observations. The consequence was that many +of the workhouses were reformed and improved. In 1761 he obtained an Act +obliging every London parish to keep an annual register of all the +infants received, discharged, and dead; and he took care that the Act +should work, for he himself superintended its working with indefatigable +watchfulness. He went about from workhouse to workhouse in the morning, +and from one member of parliament to another in the afternoon, for day +after day, and for year after year, enduring every rebuff, answering +every objection, and accommodating himself to every humour. At length, +after a perseverance hardly to be equalled, and after nearly ten years’ +labour, he obtained another Act, at his sole expense (7 Geo. III. c. 39), +directing that all parish infants belonging to the parishes within the +bills of mortality should not be nursed in the workhouses, but be sent to +nurse a certain number of miles out of town, until they were six years +old, under the care of guardians to be elected triennially. The poor +people called this “the Act for keeping children alive;” and the +registers for the years which followed its passing, as compared with +those which preceded it, showed that thousands of lives had been +preserved through the judicious interference of this good and sensible +man. + +Wherever a philanthropic work was to be done in London, be sure that +Jonas Hanway’s hand was in it. One of the first Acts for the protection +of chimney-sweepers’ boys was obtained through his influence. A +destructive fire at Montreal, and another at Bridgetown, Barbadoes, +afforded him the opportunity for raising a timely subscription for the +relief of the sufferers. His name appeared in every list, and his +disinterestedness and sincerity were universally recognized. But he was +not suffered to waste his little fortune entirely in the service of +others. Five leading citizens of London, headed by Mr. Hoare, the +banker, without Mr. Hanway’s knowledge, waited on Lord Bute, then prime +minister, in a body, and in the names of their fellow-citizens requested +that some notice might be taken of this good man’s disinterested services +to his country. The result was, his appointment shortly after, as one of +the commissioners for victualling the navy. + +Towards the close of his life Mr. Hanway’s health became very feeble, and +although he found it necessary to resign his office at the Victualling +Board, he could not be idle; but laboured at the establishment of Sunday +Schools,—a movement then in its infancy,—or in relieving poor blacks, +many of whom wandered destitute about the streets of the metropolis,—or, +in alleviating the sufferings of some neglected and destitute class of +society. Notwithstanding his familiarity with misery in all its shapes, +he was one of the most cheerful of beings; and, but for his cheerfulness +he could never, with so delicate a frame, have got through so vast an +amount of self-imposed work. He dreaded nothing so much as inactivity. +Though fragile, he was bold and indefatigable; and his moral courage was +of the first order. It may be regarded as a trivial matter to mention +that he was the first who ventured to walk the streets of London with an +umbrella over his head. But let any modern London merchant venture to +walk along Cornhill in a peaked Chinese hat, and he will find it takes +some degree of moral courage to persevere in it. After carrying an +umbrella for thirty years, Mr. Hanway saw the article at length come into +general use. + +Hanway was a man of strict honour, truthfulness, and integrity; and every +word he said might be relied upon. He had so great a respect, amounting +almost to a reverence, for the character of the honest merchant, that it +was the only subject upon which he was ever seduced into a eulogium. He +strictly practised what he professed, and both as a merchant, and +afterwards as a commissioner for victualling the navy, his conduct was +without stain. He would not accept the slightest favour of any sort from +a contractor; and when any present was sent to him whilst at the +Victualling Office, he would politely return it, with the intimation that +“he had made it a rule not to accept anything from any person engaged +with the office.” When he found his powers failing, he prepared for +death with as much cheerfulness as he would have prepared himself for a +journey into the country. He sent round and paid all his tradesmen, took +leave of his friends, arranged his affairs, had his person neatly +disposed of, and parted with life serenely and peacefully in his 74th +year. The property which he left did not amount to two thousand pounds, +and, as he had no relatives who wanted it, he divided it amongst sundry +orphans and poor persons whom he had befriended during his lifetime. +Such, in brief, was the beautiful life of Jonas Hanway,—as honest, +energetic, hard-working, and true-hearted a man as ever lived. + +The life of Granville Sharp is another striking example of the same power +of individual energy—a power which was afterwards transfused into the +noble band of workers in the cause of Slavery Abolition, prominent among +whom were Clarkson, Wilberforce, Buxton, and Brougham. But, giants +though these men were in this cause, Granville Sharp was the first, and +perhaps the greatest of them all, in point of perseverance, energy, and +intrepidity. He began life as apprentice to a linen-draper on Tower +Hill; but, leaving that business after his apprenticeship was out, he +next entered as a clerk in the Ordnance Office; and it was while engaged +in that humble occupation that he carried on in his spare hours the work +of Negro Emancipation. He was always, even when an apprentice, ready to +undertake any amount of volunteer labour where a useful purpose was to be +served. Thus, while learning the linen-drapery business, a fellow +apprentice who lodged in the same house, and was a Unitarian, led him +into frequent discussions on religious subjects. The Unitarian youth +insisted that Granville’s Trinitarian misconception of certain passages +of Scripture arose from his want of acquaintance with the Greek tongue; +on which he immediately set to work in his evening hours, and shortly +acquired an intimate knowledge of Greek. A similar controversy with +another fellow-apprentice, a Jew, as to the interpretation of the +prophecies, led him in like manner to undertake and overcome the +difficulties of Hebrew. + +But the circumstance which gave the bias and direction to the main +labours of his life originated in his generosity and benevolence. His +brother William, a surgeon in Mincing Lane, gave gratuitous advice to the +poor, and amongst the numerous applicants for relief at his surgery was a +poor African named Jonathan Strong. It appeared that the negro had been +brutally treated by his master, a Barbadoes lawyer then in London, and +became lame, almost blind, and unable to work; on which his owner, +regarding him as of no further value as a chattel, cruelly turned him +adrift into the streets to starve. This poor man, a mass of disease, +supported himself by begging for a time, until he found his way to +William Sharp, who gave him some medicine, and shortly after got him +admitted to St. Bartholomew’s hospital, where he was cured. On coming +out of the hospital, the two brothers supported the negro in order to +keep him off the streets, but they had not the least suspicion at the +time that any one had a claim upon his person. They even succeeded in +obtaining a situation for Strong with an apothecary, in whose service he +remained for two years; and it was while he was attending his mistress +behind a hackney coach, that his former owner, the Barbadoes lawyer, +recognized him, and determined to recover possession of the slave, again +rendered valuable by the restoration of his health. The lawyer employed +two of the Lord Mayor’s officers to apprehend Strong, and he was lodged +in the Compter, until he could be shipped off to the West Indies. The +negro, bethinking him in his captivity of the kind services which +Granville Sharp had rendered him in his great distress some years before, +despatched a letter to him requesting his help. Sharp had forgotten the +name of Strong, but he sent a messenger to make inquiries, who returned +saying that the keepers denied having any such person in their charge. +His suspicions were roused, and he went forthwith to the prison, and +insisted upon seeing Jonathan Strong. He was admitted, and recognized +the poor negro, now in custody as a recaptured slave. Mr. Sharp charged +the master of the prison at his own peril not to deliver up Strong to any +person whatever, until he had been carried before the Lord Mayor, to whom +Sharp immediately went, and obtained a summons against those persons who +had seized and imprisoned Strong without a warrant. The parties appeared +before the Lord Mayor accordingly, and it appeared from the proceedings +that Strong’s former master had already sold him to a new one, who +produced the bill of sale and claimed the negro as his property. As no +charge of offence was made against Strong, and as the Lord Mayor was +incompetent to deal with the legal question of Strong’s liberty or +otherwise, he discharged him, and the slave followed his benefactor out +of court, no one daring to touch him. The man’s owner immediately gave +Sharp notice of an action to recover possession of his negro slave, of +whom he declared he had been robbed. + +About that time (1767), the personal liberty of the Englishman, though +cherished as a theory, was subject to grievous infringements, and was +almost daily violated. The impressment of men for the sea service was +constantly practised, and, besides the press-gangs, there were regular +bands of kidnappers employed in London and all the large towns of the +kingdom, to seize men for the East India Company’s service. And when the +men were not wanted for India, they were shipped off to the planters in +the American colonies. Negro slaves were openly advertised for sale in +the London and Liverpool newspapers. Rewards were offered for recovering +and securing fugitive slaves, and conveying them down to certain +specified ships in the river. + +The position of the reputed slave in England was undefined and doubtful. +The judgments which had been given in the courts of law were fluctuating +and various, resting on no settled principle. Although it was a popular +belief that no slave could breathe in England, there were legal men of +eminence who expressed a directly contrary opinion. The lawyers to whom +Mr. Sharp resorted for advice, in defending himself in the action raised +against him in the case of Jonathan Strong, generally concurred in this +view, and he was further told by Jonathan Strong’s owner, that the +eminent Lord Chief Justice Mansfield, and all the leading counsel, were +decidedly of opinion that the slave, by coming into England, did not +become free, but might legally be compelled to return again to the +plantations. Such information would have caused despair in a mind less +courageous and earnest than that of Granville Sharp; but it only served +to stimulate his resolution to fight the battle of the negroes’ freedom, +at least in England. “Forsaken,” he said, “by my professional defenders, +I was compelled, through the want of regular legal assistance, to make a +hopeless attempt at self-defence, though I was totally unacquainted +either with the practice of the law or the foundations of it, having +never opened a law book (except the Bible) in my life, until that time, +when I most reluctantly undertook to search the indexes of a law library, +which my bookseller had lately purchased.” + +The whole of his time during the day was occupied with the business of +the ordnance department, where he held the most laborious post in the +office; he was therefore under the necessity of conducting his new +studies late at night or early in the morning. He confessed that he was +himself becoming a sort of slave. Writing to a clerical friend to excuse +himself for delay in replying to a letter, he said, “I profess myself +entirely incapable of holding a literary correspondence. What little +time I have been able to save from sleep at night, and early in the +morning, has been necessarily employed in the examination of some points +of law, which admitted of no delay, and yet required the most diligent +researches and examination in my study.” + +Mr. Sharp gave up every leisure moment that he could command during the +next two years, to the close study of the laws of England affecting +personal liberty,—wading through an immense mass of dry and repulsive +literature, and making extracts of all the most important Acts of +Parliament, decisions of the courts, and opinions of eminent lawyers, as +he went along. In this tedious and protracted inquiry he had no +instructor, nor assistant, nor adviser. He could not find a single +lawyer whose opinion was favourable to his undertaking. The results of +his inquiries were, however, as gratifying to himself, as they were +surprising to the gentlemen of the law. “God be thanked,” he wrote, +“there is nothing in any English law or statute—at least that I am able +to find out—that can justify the enslaving of others.” He had planted +his foot firm, and now he doubted nothing. He drew up the result of his +studies in a summary form; it was a plain, clear, and manly statement, +entitled, ‘On the Injustice of Tolerating Slavery in England;’ and +numerous copies, made by himself, were circulated by him amongst the most +eminent lawyers of the time. Strong’s owner, finding the sort of man he +had to deal with, invented various pretexts for deferring the suit +against Sharp, and at length offered a compromise, which was rejected. +Granville went on circulating his manuscript tract among the lawyers, +until at length those employed against Jonathan Strong were deterred from +proceeding further, and the result was, that the plaintiff was compelled +to pay treble costs for not bringing forward his action. The tract was +then printed in 1769. + +In the mean time other cases occurred of the kidnapping of negroes in +London, and their shipment to the West Indies for sale. Wherever Sharp +could lay hold of any such case, he at once took proceedings to rescue +the negro. Thus the wife of one Hylas, an African, was seized, and +despatched to Barbadoes; on which Sharp, in the name of Hylas, instituted +legal proceedings against the aggressor, obtained a verdict with damages, +and Hylas’s wife was brought back to England free. + +Another forcible capture of a negro, attended with great cruelty, having +occurred in 1770, he immediately set himself on the track of the +aggressors. An African, named Lewis, was seized one dark night by two +watermen employed by the person who claimed the negro as his property, +dragged into the water, hoisted into a boat, where he was gagged, and his +limbs were tied; and then rowing down river, they put him on board a ship +bound for Jamaica, where he was to be sold for a slave upon his arrival +in the island. The cries of the poor negro had, however, attracted the +attention of some neighbours; one of whom proceeded direct to Mr. +Granville Sharp, now known as the negro’s friend, and informed him of the +outrage. Sharp immediately got a warrant to bring back Lewis, and he +proceeded to Gravesend, but on arrival there the ship had sailed for the +Downs. A writ of Habeas Corpus was obtained, sent down to Spithead, and +before the ship could leave the shores of England the writ was served. +The slave was found chained to the main-mast bathed in tears, casting +mournful looks on the land from which he was about to be torn. He was +immediately liberated, brought back to London, and a warrant was issued +against the author of the outrage. The promptitude of head, heart, and +hand, displayed by Mr. Sharp in this transaction could scarcely have been +surpassed, and yet he accused himself of slowness. The case was tried +before Lord Mansfield—whose opinion, it will be remembered, had already +been expressed as decidedly opposed to that entertained by Granville +Sharp. The judge, however, avoided bringing the question to an issue, or +offering any opinion on the legal question as to the slave’s personal +liberty or otherwise, but discharged the negro because the defendant +could bring no evidence that Lewis was even nominally his property. + +The question of the personal liberty of the negro in England was +therefore still undecided; but in the mean time Mr. Sharp continued +steady in his benevolent course, and by his indefatigable exertions and +promptitude of action, many more were added to the list of the rescued. +At length the important case of James Somerset occurred; a case which is +said to have been selected, at the mutual desire of Lord Mansfield and +Mr. Sharp, in order to bring the great question involved to a clear legal +issue. Somerset had been brought to England by his master, and left +there. Afterwards his master sought to apprehend him and send him off to +Jamaica, for sale. Mr. Sharp, as usual, at once took the negro’s case in +hand, and employed counsel to defend him. Lord Mansfield intimated that +the case was of such general concern, that he should take the opinion of +all the judges upon it. Mr. Sharp now felt that he would have to contend +with all the force that could be brought against him, but his resolution +was in no wise shaken. Fortunately for him, in this severe struggle, his +exertions had already begun to tell: increasing interest was taken in the +question, and many eminent legal gentlemen openly declared themselves to +be upon his side. + +The cause of personal liberty, now at stake, was fairly tried before Lord +Mansfield, assisted by the three justices,—and tried on the broad +principle of the essential and constitutional right of every man in +England to the liberty of his person, unless forfeited by the law. It is +unnecessary here to enter into any account of this great trial; the +arguments extended to a great length, the cause being carried over to +another term,—when it was adjourned and re-adjourned,—but at length +judgment was given by Lord Mansfield, in whose powerful mind so gradual a +change had been worked by the arguments of counsel, based mainly on +Granville Sharp’s tract, that he now declared the court to be so clearly +of one opinion, that there was no necessity for referring the case to the +twelve judges. He then declared that the claim of slavery never can be +supported; that the power claimed never was in use in England, nor +acknowledged by the law; therefore the man James Somerset must be +discharged. By securing this judgment Granville Sharp effectually +abolished the Slave Trade until then carried on openly in the streets of +Liverpool and London. But he also firmly established the glorious axiom, +that as soon as any slave sets his foot on English ground, that moment he +becomes free; and there can be no doubt that this great decision of Lord +Mansfield was mainly owing to Mr. Sharp’s firm, resolute, and intrepid +prosecution of the cause from the beginning to the end. + +It is unnecessary further to follow the career of Granville Sharp. He +continued to labour indefatigably in all good works. He was instrumental +in founding the colony of Sierra Leone as an asylum for rescued negroes. +He laboured to ameliorate the condition of the native Indians in the +American colonies. He agitated the enlargement and extension of the +political rights of the English people; and he endeavoured to effect the +abolition of the impressment of seamen. Granville held that the British +seamen, as well as the African negro, was entitled to the protection of +the law; and that the fact of his choosing a seafaring life did not in +any way cancel his rights and privileges as an Englishman—first amongst +which he ranked personal freedom. Mr. Sharp also laboured, but +ineffectually, to restore amity between England and her colonies in +America; and when the fratricidal war of the American Revolution was +entered on, his sense of integrity was so scrupulous that, resolving not +in any way to be concerned in so unnatural a business, he resigned his +situation at the Ordnance Office. + +To the last he held to the great object of his life—the abolition of +slavery. To carry on this work, and organize the efforts of the growing +friends of the cause, the Society for the Abolition of Slavery was +founded, and new men, inspired by Sharp’s example and zeal, sprang +forward to help him. His energy became theirs, and the self-sacrificing +zeal in which he had so long laboured single-handed, became at length +transfused into the nation itself. His mantle fell upon Clarkson, upon +Wilberforce, upon Brougham, and upon Buxton, who laboured as he had done, +with like energy and stedfastness of purpose, until at length slavery was +abolished throughout the British dominions. But though the names last +mentioned may be more frequently identified with the triumph of this +great cause, the chief merit unquestionably belongs to Granville Sharp. +He was encouraged by none of the world’s huzzas when he entered upon his +work. He stood alone, opposed to the opinion of the ablest lawyers and +the most rooted prejudices of the times; and alone he fought out, by his +single exertions, and at his individual expense, the most memorable +battle for the constitution of this country and the liberties of British +subjects, of which modern times afford a record. What followed was +mainly the consequence of his indefatigable constancy. He lighted the +torch which kindled other minds, and it was handed on until the +illumination became complete. + +Before the death of Granville Sharp, Clarkson had already turned his +attention to the question of Negro Slavery. He had even selected it for +the subject of a college Essay; and his mind became so possessed by it +that he could not shake it off. The spot is pointed out near Wade’s +Mill, in Hertfordshire, where, alighting from his horse one day, he sat +down disconsolate on the turf by the road side, and after long thinking, +determined to devote himself wholly to the work. He translated his Essay +from Latin into English, added fresh illustrations, and published it. +Then fellow labourers gathered round him. The Society for Abolishing the +Slave Trade, unknown to him, had already been formed, and when he heard +of it he joined it. He sacrificed all his prospects in life to prosecute +this cause. Wilberforce was selected to lead in parliament; but upon +Clarkson chiefly devolved the labour of collecting and arranging the +immense mass of evidence offered in support of the abolition. A +remarkable instance of Clarkson’s sleuth-hound sort of perseverance may +be mentioned. The abettors of slavery, in the course of their defence of +the system, maintained that only such negroes as were captured in battle +were sold as slaves, and if not so sold, then they were reserved for a +still more frightful doom in their own country. Clarkson knew of the +slave-hunts conducted by the slave-traders, but had no witnesses to prove +it. Where was one to be found? Accidentally, a gentleman whom he met on +one of his journeys informed him of a young sailor, in whose company he +had been about a year before, who had been actually engaged in one of +such slave-hunting expeditions. The gentleman did not know his name, and +could but indefinitely describe his person. He did not know where he +was, further than that he belonged to a ship of war in ordinary, but at +what port he could not tell. With this mere glimmering of information, +Clarkson determined to produce this man as a witness. He visited +personally all the seaport towns where ships in ordinary lay; boarded and +examined every ship without success, until he came to the very _last_ +port, and found the young man, his prize, in the very _last_ ship that +remained to be visited. The young man proved to be one of his most +valuable and effective witnesses. + +During several years Clarkson conducted a correspondence with upwards of +four hundred persons, travelling more than thirty-five thousand miles +during the same time in search of evidence. He was at length disabled +and exhausted by illness, brought on by his continuous exertions; but he +was not borne from the field until his zeal had fully awakened the public +mind, and excited the ardent sympathies of all good men on behalf of the +slave. + +After years of protracted struggle, the slave trade was abolished. But +still another great achievement remained to be accomplished—the abolition +of slavery itself throughout the British dominions. And here again +determined energy won the day. Of the leaders in the cause, none was +more distinguished than Fowell Buxton, who took the position formerly +occupied by Wilberforce in the House of Commons. Buxton was a dull, +heavy boy, distinguished for his strong self-will, which first exhibited +itself in violent, domineering, and headstrong obstinacy. His father +died when he was a child; but fortunately he had a wise mother, who +trained his will with great care, constraining him to obey, but +encouraging the habit of deciding and acting for himself in matters which +might safely be left to him. His mother believed that a strong will, +directed upon worthy objects, was a valuable manly quality if properly +guided, and she acted accordingly. When others about her commented on +the boy’s self-will, she would merely say, “Never mind—he is self-willed +now—you will see it will turn out well in the end.” Fowell learnt very +little at school, and was regarded as a dunce and an idler. He got other +boys to do his exercises for him, while he romped and scrambled about. +He returned home at fifteen, a great, growing, awkward lad, fond only of +boating, shooting, riding, and field sports,—spending his time +principally with the gamekeeper, a man possessed of a good heart,—an +intelligent observer of life and nature, though he could neither read nor +write. Buxton had excellent raw material in him, but he wanted culture, +training, and development. At this juncture of his life, when his habits +were being formed for good or evil, he was happily thrown into the +society of the Gurney family, distinguished for their fine social +qualities not less than for their intellectual culture and +public-spirited philanthropy. This intercourse with the Gurneys, he used +afterwards to say, gave the colouring to his life. They encouraged his +efforts at self-culture; and when he went to the University of Dublin and +gained high honours there, the animating passion in his mind, he said, +“was to carry back to them the prizes which they prompted and enabled me +to win.” He married one of the daughters of the family, and started in +life, commencing as a clerk to his uncles Hanbury, the London brewers. +His power of will, which made him so difficult to deal with as a boy, now +formed the backbone of his character, and made him most indefatigable and +energetic in whatever he undertook. He threw his whole strength and bulk +right down upon his work; and the great giant—“Elephant Buxton” they +called him, for he stood some six feet four in height—became one of the +most vigorous and practical of men. “I could brew,” he said, “one +hour,—do mathematics the next,—and shoot the next,—and each with my whole +soul.” There was invincible energy and determination in whatever he did. +Admitted a partner, he became the active manager of the concern; and the +vast business which he conducted felt his influence through every fibre, +and prospered far beyond its previous success. Nor did he allow his mind +to lie fallow, for he gave his evenings diligently to self-culture, +studying and digesting Blackstone, Montesquieu, and solid commentaries on +English law. His maxims in reading were, “never to begin a book without +finishing it;” “never to consider a book finished until it is mastered;” +and “to study everything with the whole mind.” + +When only thirty-two, Buxton entered parliament, and at once assumed that +position of influence there, of which every honest, earnest, +well-informed man is secure, who enters that assembly of the first +gentlemen in the world. The principal question to which he devoted +himself was the complete emancipation of the slaves in the British +colonies. He himself used to attribute the interest which he early felt +in this question to the influence of Priscilla Gurney, one of the Earlham +family,—a woman of a fine intellect and warm heart, abounding in +illustrious virtues. When on her deathbed, in 1821, she repeatedly sent +for Buxton, and urged him “to make the cause of the slaves the great +object of his life.” Her last act was to attempt to reiterate the solemn +charge, and she expired in the ineffectual effort. Buxton never forgot +her counsel; he named one of his daughters after her; and on the day on +which she was married from his house, on the 1st of August, 1834,—the day +of Negro emancipation—after his Priscilla had been manumitted from her +filial service, and left her father’s home in the company of her husband, +Buxton sat down and thus wrote to a friend: “The bride is just gone; +everything has passed off to admiration; and _there is not a slave in the +British colonies_!” + +Buxton was no genius—not a great intellectual leader nor discoverer, but +mainly an earnest, straightforward, resolute, energetic man. Indeed, his +whole character is most forcibly expressed in his own words, which every +young man might well stamp upon his soul: “The longer I live,” said he, +“the more I am certain that the great difference between men, between the +feeble and the powerful, the great and the insignificant, is +_energy_—_invincible determination_—a purpose once fixed, and then death +or victory! That quality will do anything that can be done in this +world; and no talents, no circumstances, no opportunities, will make a +two-legged creature a Man without it.” + + + + +CHAPTER IX. +MEN OF BUSINESS. + + + “Seest thou a man diligent in his business? he shall stand before + kings.”—_Proverbs of Solomon_. + + “That man is but of the lower part of the world that is not brought + up to business and affairs.”—_Owen Feltham_. + +HAZLITT, in one of his clever essays, represents the man of business as a +mean sort of person put in a go-cart, yoked to a trade or profession; +alleging that all he has to do is, not to go out of the beaten track, but +merely to let his affairs take their own course. “The great requisite,” +he says, “for the prosperous management of ordinary business is the want +of imagination, or of any ideas but those of custom and interest on the +narrowest scale.” {263} But nothing could be more one-sided, and in +effect untrue, than such a definition. Of course, there are +narrow-minded men of business, as there are narrow-minded scientific men, +literary men, and legislators; but there are also business men of large +and comprehensive minds, capable of action on the very largest scale. As +Burke said in his speech on the India Bill, he knew statesmen who were +pedlers, and merchants who acted in the spirit of statesmen. + +If we take into account the qualities necessary for the successful +conduct of any important undertaking,—that it requires special aptitude, +promptitude of action on emergencies, capacity for organizing the labours +often of large numbers of men, great tact and knowledge of human nature, +constant self-culture, and growing experience in the practical affairs of +life,—it must, we think, be obvious that the school of business is by no +means so narrow as some writers would have us believe. Mr. Helps had +gone much nearer the truth when he said that consummate men of business +are as rare almost as great poets,—rarer, perhaps, than veritable saints +and martyrs. Indeed, of no other pursuit can it so emphatically be said, +as of this, that “Business makes men.” + +It has, however, been a favourite fallacy with dunces in all times, that +men of genius are unfitted for business, as well as that business +occupations unfit men for the pursuits of genius. The unhappy youth who +committed suicide a few years since because he had been “born to be a man +and condemned to be a grocer,” proved by the act that his soul was not +equal even to the dignity of grocery. For it is not the calling that +degrades the man, but the man that degrades the calling. All work that +brings honest gain is honourable, whether it be of hand or mind. The +fingers may be soiled, yet the heart remain pure; for it is not material +so much as moral dirt that defiles—greed far more than grime, and vice +than verdigris. + +The greatest have not disdained to labour honestly and usefully for a +living, though at the same time aiming after higher things. Thales, the +first of the seven sages, Solon, the second founder of Athens, and +Hyperates, the mathematician, were all traders. Plato, called the Divine +by reason of the excellence of his wisdom, defrayed his travelling +expenses in Egypt by the profits derived from the oil which he sold +during his journey. Spinoza maintained himself by polishing glasses +while he pursued his philosophical investigations. Linnæus, the great +botanist, prosecuted his studies while hammering leather and making +shoes. Shakespeare was a successful manager of a theatre—perhaps priding +himself more upon his practical qualities in that capacity than on his +writing of plays and poetry. Pope was of opinion that Shakespeare’s +principal object in cultivating literature was to secure an honest +independence. Indeed he seems to have been altogether indifferent to +literary reputation. It is not known that he superintended the +publication of a single play, or even sanctioned the printing of one; and +the chronology of his writings is still a mystery. It is certain, +however, that he prospered in his business, and realized sufficient to +enable him to retire upon a competency to his native town of +Stratford-upon-Avon. + +Chaucer was in early life a soldier, and afterwards an effective +Commissioner of Customs, and Inspector of Woods and Crown Lands. Spencer +was Secretary to the Lord Deputy of Ireland, was afterwards Sheriff of +Cork, and is said to have been shrewd and attentive in matters of +business. Milton, originally a schoolmaster, was elevated to the post of +Secretary to the Council of State during the Commonwealth; and the extant +Order-book of the Council, as well as many of Milton’s letters which are +preserved, give abundant evidence of his activity and usefulness in that +office. Sir Isaac Newton proved himself an efficient Master of the Mint; +the new coinage of 1694 having been carried on under his immediate +personal superintendence. Cowper prided himself upon his business +punctuality, though he confessed that he “never knew a poet, except +himself, who was punctual in anything.” But against this we may set the +lives of Wordsworth and Scott—the former a distributor of stamps, the +latter a clerk to the Court of Session,—both of whom, though great poets, +were eminently punctual and practical men of business. David Ricardo, +amidst the occupations of his daily business as a London stock-jobber, in +conducting which he acquired an ample fortune, was able to concentrate +his mind upon his favourite subject—on which he was enabled to throw +great light—the principles of political economy; for he united in himself +the sagacious commercial man and the profound philosopher. Baily, the +eminent astronomer, was another stockbroker; and Allen, the chemist, was +a silk manufacturer. + +We have abundant illustrations, in our own day, of the fact that the +highest intellectual power is not incompatible with the active and +efficient performance of routine duties. Grote, the great historian of +Greece, was a London banker. And it is not long since John Stuart Mill, +one of our greatest living thinkers, retired from the Examiner’s +department of the East India Company, carrying with him the admiration +and esteem of his fellow officers, not on account of his high views of +philosophy, but because of the high standard of efficiency which he had +established in his office, and the thoroughly satisfactory manner in +which he had conducted the business of his department. + +The path of success in business is usually the path of common sense. +Patient labour and application are as necessary here as in the +acquisition of knowledge or the pursuit of science. The old Greeks said, +“to become an able man in any profession, three things are +necessary—nature, study, and practice.” In business, practice, wisely +and diligently improved, is the great secret of success. Some may make +what are called “lucky hits,” but like money earned by gambling, such +“hits” may only serve to lure one to ruin. Bacon was accustomed to say +that it was in business as in ways—the nearest way was commonly the +foulest, and that if a man would go the fairest way he must go somewhat +about. The journey may occupy a longer time, but the pleasure of the +labour involved by it, and the enjoyment of the results produced, will be +more genuine and unalloyed. To have a daily appointed task of even +common drudgery to do makes the rest of life feel all the sweeter. + +The fable of the labours of Hercules is the type of all human doing and +success. Every youth should be made to feel that his happiness and +well-doing in life must necessarily rely mainly on himself and the +exercise of his own energies, rather than upon the help and patronage of +others. The late Lord Melbourne embodied a piece of useful advice in a +letter which he wrote to Lord John Russell, in reply to an application +for a provision for one of Moore the poet’s sons: “My dear John,” he +said, “I return you Moore’s letter. I shall be ready to do what you like +about it when we have the means. I think whatever is done should be done +for Moore himself. This is more distinct, direct, and intelligible. +Making a small provision for young men is hardly justifiable; and it is +of all things the most prejudicial to themselves. They think what they +have much larger than it really is; and they make no exertion. The young +should never hear any language but this: ‘You have your own way to make, +and it depends upon your own exertions whether you starve or not.’ +Believe me, &c., MELBOURNE.” + +Practical industry, wisely and vigorously applied, always produces its +due effects. It carries a man onward, brings out his individual +character, and stimulates the action of others. All may not rise +equally, yet each, on the whole, very much according to his deserts. +“Though all cannot live on the piazza,” as the Tuscan proverb has it, +“every one may feel the sun.” + +On the whole, it is not good that human nature should have the road of +life made too easy. Better to be under the necessity of working hard and +faring meanly, than to have everything done ready to our hand and a +pillow of down to repose upon. Indeed, to start in life with +comparatively small means seems so necessary as a stimulus to work, that +it may almost be set down as one of the conditions essential to success +in life. Hence, an eminent judge, when asked what contributed most to +success at the bar, replied, “Some succeed by great talent, some by high +connexions, some by miracle, but the majority by commencing without a +shilling.” + +We have heard of an architect of considerable accomplishments,—a man who +had improved himself by long study, and travel in the classical lands of +the East,—who came home to commence the practice of his profession. He +determined to begin anywhere, provided he could be employed; and he +accordingly undertook a business connected with dilapidations,—one of the +lowest and least remunerative departments of the architect’s calling. +But he had the good sense not to be above his trade, and he had the +resolution to work his way upward, so that he only got a fair start. One +hot day in July a friend found him sitting astride of a house roof +occupied with his dilapidation business. Drawing his hand across his +perspiring countenance, he exclaimed, “Here’s a pretty business for a man +who has been all over Greece!” However, he did his work, such as it was, +thoroughly and well; he persevered until he advanced by degrees to more +remunerative branches of employment, and eventually he rose to the +highest walks of his profession. + +The necessity of labour may, indeed, be regarded as the main root and +spring of all that we call progress in individuals, and civilization in +nations; and it is doubtful whether any heavier curse could be imposed on +man than the complete gratification of all his wishes without effort on +his part, leaving nothing for his hopes, desires or struggles. The +feeling that life is destitute of any motive or necessity for action, +must be of all others the most distressing and insupportable to a +rational being. The Marquis de Spinola asking Sir Horace Vere what his +brother died of, Sir Horace replied, “He died, Sir, of having nothing to +do.” “Alas!” said Spinola, “that is enough to kill any general of us +all.” + +Those who fail in life are however very apt to assume a tone of injured +innocence, and conclude too hastily that everybody excepting themselves +has had a hand in their personal misfortunes. An eminent writer lately +published a book, in which he described his numerous failures in +business, naively admitting, at the same time, that he was ignorant of +the multiplication table; and he came to the conclusion that the real +cause of his ill-success in life was the money-worshipping spirit of the +age. Lamartine also did not hesitate to profess his contempt for +arithmetic; but, had it been less, probably we should not have witnessed +the unseemly spectacle of the admirers of that distinguished personage +engaged in collecting subscriptions for his support in his old age. + +Again, some consider themselves born to ill luck, and make up their minds +that the world invariably goes against them without any fault on their +own part. We have heard of a person of this sort, who went so far as to +declare his belief that if he had been a hatter people would have been +born without heads! There is however a Russian proverb which says that +Misfortune is next door to Stupidity; and it will often be found that men +who are constantly lamenting their luck, are in some way or other reaping +the consequences of their own neglect, mismanagement, improvidence, or +want of application. Dr. Johnson, who came up to London with a single +guinea in his pocket, and who once accurately described himself in his +signature to a letter addressed to a noble lord, as _Impransus_, or +Dinnerless, has honestly said, “All the complaints which are made of the +world are unjust; I never knew a man of merit neglected; it was generally +by his own fault that he failed of success.” + +Washington Irying, the American author, held like views. “As for the +talk,” said he, “about modest merit being neglected, it is too often a +cant, by which indolent and irresolute men seek to lay their want of +success at the door of the public. Modest merit is, however, too apt to +be inactive, or negligent, or uninstructed merit. Well matured and well +disciplined talent is always sure of a market, provided it exerts itself; +but it must not cower at home and expect to be sought for. There is a +good deal of cant too about the success of forward and impudent men, +while men of retiring worth are passed over with neglect. But it usually +happens that those forward men have that valuable quality of promptness +and activity without which worth is a mere inoperative property. A +barking dog is often more useful than a sleeping lion.” + +Attention, application, accuracy, method, punctuality, and despatch, are +the principal qualities required for the efficient conduct of business of +any sort. These, at first sight, may appear to be small matters; and yet +they are of essential importance to human happiness, well-being, and +usefulness. They are little things, it is true; but human life is made +up of comparative trifles. It is the repetition of little acts which +constitute not only the sum of human character, but which determine the +character of nations. And where men or nations have broken down, it will +almost invariably be found that neglect of little things was the rock on +which they split. Every human being has duties to be performed, and, +therefore, has need of cultivating the capacity for doing them; whether +the sphere of action be the management of a household, the conduct of a +trade or profession, or the government of a nation. + +The examples we have already given of great workers in various branches +of industry, art, and science, render it unnecessary further to enforce +the importance of persevering application in any department of life. It +is the result of every-day experience that steady attention to matters of +detail lies at the root of human progress; and that diligence, above all, +is the mother of good luck. Accuracy is also of much importance, and an +invariable mark of good training in a man. Accuracy in observation, +accuracy in speech, accuracy in the transaction of affairs. What is done +in business must be well done; for it is better to accomplish perfectly a +small amount of work, than to half-do ten times as much. A wise man used +to say, “Stay a little, that we may make an end the sooner.” + +Too little attention, however, is paid to this highly important quality +of accuracy. As a man eminent in practical science lately observed to +us, “It is astonishing how few people I have met with in the course of my +experience, who can _define a fact_ accurately.” Yet in business +affairs, it is the manner in which even small matters are transacted, +that often decides men for or against you. With virtue, capacity, and +good conduct in other respects, the person who is habitually inaccurate +cannot be trusted; his work has to be gone over again; and he thus causes +an infinity of annoyance, vexation, and trouble. + +It was one of the characteristic qualities of Charles James Fox, that he +was thoroughly pains-taking in all that he did. When appointed Secretary +of State, being piqued at some observation as to his bad writing, he +actually took a writing-master, and wrote copies like a schoolboy until +he had sufficiently improved himself. Though a corpulent man, he was +wonderfully active at picking up cut tennis balls, and when asked how he +contrived to do so, he playfully replied, “Because I am a very +pains-taking man.” The same accuracy in trifling matters was displayed +by him in things of greater importance; and he acquired his reputation, +like the painter, by “neglecting nothing.” + +Method is essential, and enables a larger amount of work to be got +through with satisfaction. “Method,” said the Reverend Richard Cecil, +“is like packing things in a box; a good packer will get in half as much +again as a bad one.” Cecil’s despatch of business was extraordinary, his +maxim being, “The shortest way to do many things is to do only one thing +at once;” and he never left a thing undone with a view of recurring to it +at a period of more leisure. When business pressed, he rather chose to +encroach on his hours of meals and rest than omit any part of his work. +De Witt’s maxim was like Cecil’s: “One thing at a time.” “If,” said he, +“I have any necessary despatches to make, I think of nothing else till +they are finished; if any domestic affairs require my attention, I give +myself wholly up to them till they are set in order.” + +A French minister, who was alike remarkable for his despatch of business +and his constant attendance at places of amusement, being asked how he +contrived to combine both objects, replied, “Simply by never postponing +till to-morrow what should be done to-day.” Lord Brougham has said that +a certain English statesman reversed the process, and that his maxim was, +never to transact to-day what could be postponed till to-morrow. +Unhappily, such is the practice of many besides that minister, already +almost forgotten; the practice is that of the indolent and the +unsuccessful. Such men, too, are apt to rely upon agents, who are not +always to be relied upon. Important affairs must be attended to in +person. “If you want your business done,” says the proverb, “go and do +it; if you don’t want it done, send some one else.” + +An indolent country gentleman had a freehold estate producing about five +hundred a-year. Becoming involved in debt, he sold half the estate, and +let the remainder to an industrious farmer for twenty years. About the +end of the term the farmer called to pay his rent, and asked the owner +whether he would sell the farm. “Will _you_ buy it?” asked the owner, +surprised. “Yes, if we can agree about the price.” “That is exceedingly +strange,” observed the gentleman; “pray, tell me how it happens that, +while I could not live upon twice as much land for which I paid no rent, +you are regularly paying me two hundred a-year for your farm, and are +able, in a few years, to purchase it.” “The reason is plain,” was the +reply; “you sat still and said _Go_, I got up and said _Come_; you laid +in bed and enjoyed your estate, I rose in the morning and minded my +business.” + +Sir Walter Scott, writing to a youth who had obtained a situation and +asked for his advice, gave him in reply this sound counsel: “Beware of +stumbling over a propensity which easily besets you from not having your +time fully employed—I mean what the women call _dawdling_. Your motto +must be, _Hoc age_. Do instantly whatever is to be done, and take the +hours of recreation after business, never before it. When a regiment is +under march, the rear is often thrown into confusion because the front do +not move steadily and without interruption. It is the same with +business. If that which is first in hand is not instantly, steadily, and +regularly despatched, other things accumulate behind, till affairs begin +to press all at once, and no human brain can stand the confusion.” + +Promptitude in action may be stimulated by a due consideration of the +value of time. An Italian philosopher was accustomed to call time his +estate: an estate which produces nothing of value without cultivation, +but, duly improved, never fails to recompense the labours of the diligent +worker. Allowed to lie waste, the product will be only noxious weeds and +vicious growths of all kinds. One of the minor uses of steady employment +is, that it keeps one out of mischief, for truly an idle brain is the +devil’s workshop, and a lazy man the devil’s bolster. To be occupied is +to be possessed as by a tenant, whereas to be idle is to be empty; and +when the doors of the imagination are opened, temptation finds a ready +access, and evil thoughts come trooping in. It is observed at sea, that +men are never so much disposed to grumble and mutiny as when least +employed. Hence an old captain, when there was nothing else to do, would +issue the order to “scour the anchor!” + +Men of business are accustomed to quote the maxim that Time is money; but +it is more; the proper improvement of it is self-culture, +self-improvement, and growth of character. An hour wasted daily on +trifles or in indolence, would, if devoted to self-improvement, make an +ignorant man wise in a few years, and employed in good works, would make +his life fruitful, and death a harvest of worthy deeds. Fifteen minutes +a day devoted to self-improvement, will be felt at the end of the year. +Good thoughts and carefully gathered experience take up no room, and may +be carried about as our companions everywhere, without cost or +incumbrance. An economical use of time is the true mode of securing +leisure: it enables us to get through business and carry it forward, +instead of being driven by it. On the other hand, the miscalculation of +time involves us in perpetual hurry, confusion, and difficulties; and +life becomes a mere shuffle of expedients, usually followed by disaster. +Nelson once said, “I owe all my success in life to having been always a +quarter of an hour before my time.” + +Some take no thought of the value of money until they have come to an end +of it, and many do the same with their time. The hours are allowed to +flow by unemployed, and then, when life is fast waning, they bethink +themselves of the duty of making a wiser use of it. But the habit of +listlessness and idleness may already have become confirmed, and they are +unable to break the bonds with which they have permitted themselves to +become bound. Lost wealth may be replaced by industry, lost knowledge by +study, lost health by temperance or medicine, but lost time is gone for +ever. + +A proper consideration of the value of time, will also inspire habits of +punctuality. “Punctuality,” said Louis XIV., “is the politeness of +kings.” It is also the duty of gentlemen, and the necessity of men of +business. Nothing begets confidence in a man sooner than the practice of +this virtue, and nothing shakes confidence sooner than the want of it. +He who holds to his appointment and does not keep you waiting for him, +shows that he has regard for your time as well as for his own. Thus +punctuality is one of the modes by which we testify our personal respect +for those whom we are called upon to meet in the business of life. It is +also conscientiousness in a measure; for an appointment is a contract, +express or implied, and he who does not keep it breaks faith, as well as +dishonestly uses other people’s time, and thus inevitably loses +character. We naturally come to the conclusion that the person who is +careless about time will be careless about business, and that he is not +the one to be trusted with the transaction of matters of importance. +When Washington’s secretary excused himself for the lateness of his +attendance and laid the blame upon his watch, his master quietly said, +“Then you must get another watch, or I another secretary.” + +The person who is negligent of time and its employment is usually found +to be a general disturber of others’ peace and serenity. It was wittily +said by Lord Chesterfield of the old Duke of Newcastle—“His Grace loses +an hour in the morning, and is looking for it all the rest of the day.” +Everybody with whom the unpunctual man has to do is thrown from time to +time into a state of fever: he is systematically late; regular only in +his irregularity. He conducts his dawdling as if upon system; arrives at +his appointment after time; gets to the railway station after the train +has started; posts his letter when the box has closed. Thus business is +thrown into confusion, and everybody concerned is put out of temper. It +will generally be found that the men who are thus habitually behind time +are as habitually behind success; and the world generally casts them +aside to swell the ranks of the grumblers and the railers against +fortune. + +In addition to the ordinary working qualities the business man of the +highest class requires quick perception and firmness in the execution of +his plans. Tact is also important; and though this is partly the gift of +nature, it is yet capable of being cultivated and developed by +observation and experience. Men of this quality are quick to see the +right mode of action, and if they have decision of purpose, are prompt to +carry out their undertakings to a successful issue. These qualities are +especially valuable, and indeed indispensable, in those who direct the +action of other men on a large scale, as for instance, in the case of the +commander of an army in the field. It is not merely necessary that the +general should be great as a warrior but also as a man of business. He +must possess great tact, much knowledge of character, and ability to +organize the movements of a large mass of men, whom he has to feed, +clothe, and furnish with whatever may be necessary in order that they may +keep the field and win battles. In these respects Napoleon and +Wellington were both first-rate men of business. + +Though Napoleon had an immense love for details, he had also a vivid +power of imagination, which enabled him to look along extended lines of +action, and deal with those details on a large scale, with judgment and +rapidity. He possessed such knowledge of character as enabled him to +select, almost unerringly, the best agents for the execution of his +designs. But he trusted as little as possible to agents in matters of +great moment, on which important results depended. This feature in his +character is illustrated in a remarkable degree by the ‘Napoleon +Correspondence,’ now in course of publication, and particularly by the +contents of the 15th volume, {277} which include the letters, orders, and +despatches, written by the Emperor at Finkenstein, a little chateau on +the frontier of Poland in the year 1807, shortly after the victory of +Eylau. + +The French army was then lying encamped along the river Passarge with the +Russians before them, the Austrians on their right flank, and the +conquered Prussians in their rear. A long line of communications had to +be maintained with France, through a hostile country; but so carefully, +and with such foresight was this provided for, that it is said Napoleon +never missed a post. The movements of armies, the bringing up of +reinforcements from remote points in France, Spain, Italy, and Germany, +the opening of canals and the levelling of roads to enable the produce of +Poland and Prussia to be readily transported to his encampments, had his +unceasing attention, down to the minutest details. We find him directing +where horses were to be obtained, making arrangements for an adequate +supply of saddles, ordering shoes for the soldiers, and specifying the +number of rations of bread, biscuit, and spirits, that were to be brought +to camp, or stored in magazines for the use of the troops. At the same +time we find him writing to Paris giving directions for the +reorganization of the French College, devising a scheme of public +education, dictating bulletins and articles for the ‘Moniteur,’ revising +the details of the budgets, giving instructions to architects as to +alterations to be made at the Tuileries and the Church of the Madelaine, +throwing an occasional sarcasm at Madame de Stael and the Parisian +journals, interfering to put down a squabble at the Grand Opera, carrying +on a correspondence with the Sultan of Turkey and the Schah of Persia, so +that while his body was at Finkenstein, his mind seemed to be working at +a hundred different places in Paris, in Europe, and throughout the world. + +We find him in one letter asking Ney if he has duly received the muskets +which have been sent him; in another he gives directions to Prince Jerome +as to the shirts, greatcoats, clothes, shoes, shakos, and arms, to be +served out to the Wurtemburg regiments; again he presses Cambacérès to +forward to the army a double stock of corn—“The _ifs_ and the _buts_,” +said he, “are at present out of season, and above all it must be done +with speed.” Then he informs Daru that the army want shirts, and that +they don’t come to hand. To Massena he writes, “Let me know if your +biscuit and bread arrangements are yet completed.” To the Grand due de +Berg, he gives directions as to the accoutrements of the +cuirassiers—“They complain that the men want sabres; send an officer to +obtain them at Posen. It is also said they want helmets; order that they +be made at Ebling. . . . It is not by sleeping that one can accomplish +anything.” Thus no point of detail was neglected, and the energies of +all were stimulated into action with extraordinary power. Though many of +the Emperor’s days were occupied by inspections of his troops,—in the +course of which he sometimes rode from thirty to forty leagues a day,—and +by reviews, receptions, and affairs of state, leaving but little time for +business matters, he neglected nothing on that account; but devoted the +greater part of his nights, when necessary, to examining budgets, +dictating dispatches, and attending to the thousand matters of detail in +the organization and working of the Imperial Government; the machinery of +which was for the most part concentrated in his own head. + +Like Napoleon, the Duke of Wellington was a first-rate man of business; +and it is not perhaps saying too much to aver that it was in no small +degree because of his possession of a business faculty amounting to +genius, that the Duke never lost a battle. + +While a subaltern, he became dissatisfied with the slowness of his +promotion, and having passed from the infantry to the cavalry twice, and +back again, without advancement, he applied to Lord Camden, then Viceroy +of Ireland, for employment in the Revenue or Treasury Board. Had he +succeeded, no doubt he would have made a first-rate head of a department, +as he would have made a first-rate merchant or manufacturer. But his +application failed, and he remained with the army to become the greatest +of British generals. + +The Duke began his active military career under the Duke of York and +General Walmoden, in Flanders and Holland, where he learnt, amidst +misfortunes and defeats, how bad business arrangements and bad +generalship serve to ruin the _morale_ of an army. Ten years after +entering the army we find him a colonel in India, reported by his +superiors as an officer of indefatigable energy and application. He +entered into the minutest details of the service, and sought to raise the +discipline of his men to the highest standard. “The regiment of Colonel +Wellesley,” wrote General Harris in 1799, “is a model regiment; on the +score of soldierly bearing, discipline, instruction, and orderly +behaviour it is above all praise.” Thus qualifying himself for posts of +greater confidence, he was shortly after nominated governor of the +capital of Mysore. In the war with the Mahrattas he was first called +upon to try his hand at generalship; and at thirty-four he won the +memorable battle of Assaye, with an army composed of 1500 British and +5000 sepoys, over 20,000 Mahratta infantry and 30,000 cavalry. But so +brilliant a victory did not in the least disturb his equanimity, or +affect the perfect honesty of his character. + +Shortly after this event the opportunity occurred for exhibiting his +admirable practical qualities as an administrator. Placed in command of +an important district immediately after the capture of Seringapatam, his +first object was to establish rigid order and discipline among his own +men. Flushed with victory, the troops were found riotous and disorderly. +“Send me the provost marshal,” said he, “and put him under my orders: +till some of the marauders are hung, it is impossible to expect order or +safety.” This rigid severity of Wellington in the field, though it was +the dread, proved the salvation of his troops in many campaigns. His +next step was to re-establish the markets and re-open the sources of +supply. General Harris wrote to the Governor-general, strongly +commending Colonel Wellesley for the perfect discipline he had +established, and for his “judicious and masterly arrangements in respect +to supplies, which opened an abundant free market, and inspired +confidence into dealers of every description.” The same close attention +to, and mastery of details, characterized him throughout his Indian +career; and it is remarkable that one of his ablest despatches to Lord +Clive, full of practical information as to the conduct of the campaign, +was written whilst the column he commanded was crossing the Toombuddra, +in the face of the vastly superior army of Dhoondiah, posted on the +opposite bank, and while a thousand matters of the deepest interest were +pressing upon the commander’s mind. But it was one of his most +remarkable characteristics, thus to be able to withdraw himself +temporarily from the business immediately in hand, and to bend his full +powers upon the consideration of matters totally distinct; even the most +difficult circumstances on such occasions failing to embarrass or +intimidate him. + +Returned to England with a reputation for generalship, Sir Arthur +Wellesley met with immediate employment. In 1808 a corps of 10,000 men +destined to liberate Portugal was placed under his charge. He landed, +fought, and won two battles, and signed the Convention of Cintra. After +the death of Sir John Moore he was entrusted with the command of a new +expedition to Portugal. But Wellington was fearfully overmatched +throughout his Peninsular campaigns. From 1809 to 1813 he never had more +than 30,000 British troops under his command, at a time when there stood +opposed to him in the Peninsula some 350,000 French, mostly veterans, led +by some of Napoleon’s ablest generals. How was he to contend against +such immense forces with any fair prospect of success? His clear +discernment and strong common sense soon taught him that he must adopt a +different policy from that of the Spanish generals, who were invariably +beaten and dispersed whenever they ventured to offer battle in the open +plains. He perceived he had yet to create the army that was to contend +against the French with any reasonable chance of success. Accordingly, +after the battle of Talavera in 1809, when he found himself encompassed +on all sides by superior forces of French, he retired into Portugal, +there to carry out the settled policy on which he had by this time +determined. It was, to organise a Portuguese army under British +officers, and teach them to act in combination with his own troops, in +the mean time avoiding the peril of a defeat by declining all +engagements. He would thus, he conceived, destroy the _morale_ of the +French, who could not exist without victories; and when his army was ripe +for action, and the enemy demoralized, he would then fall upon them with +all his might. + +The extraordinary qualities displayed by Lord Wellington throughout these +immortal campaigns, can only be appreciated after a perusal of his +despatches, which contain the unvarnished tale of the manifold ways and +means by which he laid the foundations of his success. Never was man +more tried by difficulty and opposition, arising not less from the +imbecility, falsehoods and intrigues of the British Government of the +day, than from the selfishness, cowardice, and vanity of the people he +went to save. It may, indeed, be said of him, that he sustained the war +in Spain by his individual firmness and self-reliance, which never failed +him even in the midst of his great discouragements. He had not only to +fight Napoleon’s veterans, but also to hold in check the Spanish juntas +and the Portuguese regency. He had the utmost difficulty in obtaining +provisions and clothing for his troops; and it will scarcely be credited +that, while engaged with the enemy in the battle of Talavera, the +Spaniards, who ran away, fell upon the baggage of the British army, and +the ruffians actually plundered it! These and other vexations the Duke +bore with a sublime patience and self-control, and held on his course, in +the face of ingratitude, treachery, and opposition, with indomitable +firmness. He neglected nothing, and attended to every important detail +of business himself. When he found that food for his troops was not to +be obtained from England, and that he must rely upon his own resources +for feeding them, he forthwith commenced business as a corn merchant on a +large scale, in copartnery with the British Minister at Lisbon. +Commissariat bills were created, with which grain was bought in the ports +of the Mediterranean and in South America. When he had thus filled his +magazines, the overplus was sold to the Portuguese, who were greatly in +want of provisions. He left nothing whatever to chance, but provided for +every contingency. He gave his attention to the minutest details of the +service; and was accustomed to concentrate his whole energies, from time +to time, on such apparently ignominious matters as soldiers’ shoes, +camp-kettles, biscuits and horse fodder. His magnificent business +qualities were everywhere felt, and there can be no doubt that, by the +care with which he provided for every contingency, and the personal +attention which he gave to every detail, he laid the foundations of his +great success. {283} By such means he transformed an army of raw levies +into the best soldiers in Europe, with whom he declared it to be possible +to go anywhere and do anything. + +We have already referred to his remarkable power of abstracting himself +from the work, no matter how engrossing, immediately in hand, and +concentrating his energies upon the details of some entirely different +business. Thus Napier relates that it was while he was preparing to +fight the battle of Salamanca that he had to expose to the Ministers at +home the futility of relying upon a loan; it was on the heights of San +Christoval, on the field of battle itself, that he demonstrated the +absurdity of attempting to establish a Portuguese bank; it was in the +trenches of Burgos that he dissected Funchal’s scheme of finance, and +exposed the folly of attempting the sale of church property; and on each +occasion, he showed himself as well acquainted with these subjects as +with the minutest detail in the mechanism of armies. + +Another feature in his character, showing the upright man of business, +was his thorough honesty. Whilst Soult ransacked and carried away with +him from Spain numerous pictures of great value, Wellington did not +appropriate to himself a single farthing’s worth of property. Everywhere +he paid his way, even when in the enemy’s country. When he had crossed +the French frontier, followed by 40,000 Spaniards, who sought to “make +fortunes” by pillage and plunder, he first rebuked their officers, and +then, finding his efforts to restrain them unavailing, he sent them back +into their own country. It is a remarkable fact, that, even in France +the peasantry fled from their own countrymen, and carried their valuables +within the protection of the British lines! At the very same time, +Wellington was writing home to the British Ministry, “We are overwhelmed +with debts, and I can scarcely stir out of my house on account of public +creditors waiting to demand payment of what is due to them.” Jules +Maurel, in his estimate of the Duke’s character, says, “Nothing can be +grander or more nobly original than this admission. This old soldier, +after thirty years’ service, this iron man and victorious general, +established in an enemy’s country at the head of an immense army, is +afraid of his creditors! This is a kind of fear that has seldom troubled +the mind of conquerors and invaders; and I doubt if the annals of war +could present anything comparable to this sublime simplicity.” But the +Duke himself, had the matter been put to him, would most probably have +disclaimed any intention of acting even grandly or nobly in the matter; +merely regarding the punctual payment of his debts as the best and most +honourable mode of conducting his business. + +The truth of the good old maxim, that “Honesty is the best policy,” is +upheld by the daily experience of life; uprightness and integrity being +found as successful in business as in everything else. As Hugh Miller’s +worthy uncle used to advise him, “In all your dealings give your +neighbour the cast of the bank—‘good measure, heaped up, and running +over,’—and you will not lose by it in the end.” A well-known brewer of +beer attributed his success to the liberality with which he used his +malt. Going up to the vat and tasting it, he would say, “Still rather +poor, my lads; give it another cast of the malt.” The brewer put his +character into his beer, and it proved generous accordingly, obtaining a +reputation in England, India, and the colonies, which laid the foundation +of a large fortune. Integrity of word and deed ought to be the very +cornerstone of all business transactions. To the tradesman, the +merchant, and manufacturer, it should be what honour is to the soldier, +and charity to the Christian. In the humblest calling there will always +be found scope for the exercise of this uprightness of character. Hugh +Miller speaks of the mason with whom he served his apprenticeship, as one +who “_put his conscience into every stone that he laid_.” So the true +mechanic will pride himself upon the thoroughness and solidity of his +work, and the high-minded contractor upon the honesty of performance of +his contract in every particular. The upright manufacturer will find not +only honour and reputation, but substantial success, in the genuineness +of the article which he produces, and the merchant in the honesty of what +he sells, and that it really is what it seems to be. Baron Dupin, +speaking of the general probity of Englishmen, which he held to be a +principal cause of their success, observed, “We may succeed for a time by +fraud, by surprise, by violence; but we can succeed permanently only by +means directly opposite. It is not alone the courage, the intelligence, +the activity, of the merchant and manufacturer which maintain the +superiority of their productions and the character of their country; it +is far more their wisdom, their economy, and, above all, their probity. +If ever in the British Islands the useful citizen should lose these +virtues, we may be sure that, for England, as for every other country, +the vessels of a degenerate commerce, repulsed from every shore, would +speedily disappear from those seas whose surface they now cover with the +treasures of the universe, bartered for the treasures of the industry of +the three kingdoms.” + +It must be admitted, that Trade tries character perhaps more severely +than any other pursuit in life. It puts to the severest tests honesty, +self-denial, justice, and truthfulness; and men of business who pass +through such trials unstained are perhaps worthy of as great honour as +soldiers who prove their courage amidst the fire and perils of battle. +And, to the credit of the multitudes of men engaged in the various +departments of trade, we think it must be admitted that on the whole they +pass through their trials nobly. If we reflect but for a moment on the +vast amount of wealth daily entrusted even to subordinate persons, who +themselves probably earn but a bare competency—the loose cash which is +constantly passing through the hands of shopmen, agents, brokers, and +clerks in banking houses,—and note how comparatively few are the breaches +of trust which occur amidst all this temptation, it will probably be +admitted that this steady daily honesty of conduct is most honourable to +human nature, if it do not even tempt us to be proud of it. The same +trust and confidence reposed by men of business in each other, as implied +by the system of Credit, which is mainly based upon the principle of +honour, would be surprising if it were not so much a matter of ordinary +practice in business transactions. Dr. Chalmers has well said, that the +implicit trust with which merchants are accustomed to confide in distant +agents, separated from them perhaps by half the globe—often consigning +vast wealth to persons, recommended only by their character, whom perhaps +they have never seen—is probably the finest act of homage which men can +render to one another. + +Although common honesty is still happily in the ascendant amongst common +people, and the general business community of England is still sound at +heart, putting their honest character into their respective +callings,—there are unhappily, as there have been in all times, but too +many instances of flagrant dishonesty and fraud, exhibited by the +unscrupulous, the over-speculative, and the intensely selfish in their +haste to be rich. There are tradesmen who adulterate, contractors who +“scamp,” manufacturers who give us shoddy instead of wool, “dressing” +instead of cotton, cast-iron tools instead of steel, needles without +eyes, razors made only “to sell,” and swindled fabrics in many shapes. +But these we must hold to be the exceptional cases, of low-minded and +grasping men, who, though they may gain wealth which they probably cannot +enjoy, will never gain an honest character, nor secure that without which +wealth is nothing—a heart at peace. “The rogue cozened not me, but his +own conscience,” said Bishop Latimer of a cutler who made him pay +twopence for a knife not worth a penny. Money, earned by screwing, +cheating, and overreaching, may for a time dazzle the eyes of the +unthinking; but the bubbles blown by unscrupulous rogues, when +full-blown, usually glitter only to burst. The Sadleirs, Dean Pauls, and +Redpaths, for the most part, come to a sad end even in this world; and +though the successful swindles of others may not be “found out,” and the +gains of their roguery may remain with them, it will be as a curse and +not as a blessing. + +It is possible that the scrupulously honest man may not grow rich so fast +as the unscrupulous and dishonest one; but the success will be of a truer +kind, earned without fraud or injustice. And even though a man should +for a time be unsuccessful, still he must be honest: better lose all and +save character. For character is itself a fortune; and if the +high-principled man will but hold on his way courageously, success will +surely come,—nor will the highest reward of all be withheld from him. +Wordsworth well describes the “Happy Warrior,” as he + + “Who comprehends his trust, and to the same + Keeps faithful with a singleness of aim; + And therefore does not stoop, nor lie in wait + For wealth, or honour, or for worldly state; + Whom they must follow, on whose head must fall, + Like showers of manna, if they come at all.” + +As an example of the high-minded mercantile man trained in upright habits +of business, and distinguished for justice, truthfulness, and honesty of +dealing in all things, the career of the well-known David Barclay, +grandson of Robert Barclay, of Ury, the author of the celebrated ‘Apology +for the Quakers,’ may be briefly referred to. For many years he was the +head of an extensive house in Cheapside, chiefly engaged in the American +trade; but like Granville Sharp, he entertained so strong an opinion +against the war with our American colonies, that he determined to retire +altogether from the trade. Whilst a merchant, he was as much +distinguished for his talents, knowledge, integrity, and power, as he +afterwards was for his patriotism and munificent philanthropy. He was a +mirror of truthfulness and honesty; and, as became the good Christian and +true gentleman, his word was always held to be as good as his bond. His +position, and his high character, induced the Ministers of the day on +many occasions to seek his advice; and, when examined before the House of +Commons on the subject of the American dispute, his views were so clearly +expressed, and his advice was so strongly justified by the reasons stated +by him, that Lord North publicly acknowledged that he had derived more +information from David Barclay than from all others east of Temple Bar. +On retiring from business, it was not to rest in luxurious ease, but to +enter upon new labours of usefulness for others. With ample means, he +felt that he still owed to society the duty of a good example. He +founded a house of industry near his residence at Walthamstow, which he +supported at a heavy outlay for several years, until at length he +succeeded in rendering it a source of comfort as well as independence to +the well-disposed families of the poor in that neighbourhood. When an +estate in Jamaica fell to him, he determined, though at a cost of some +10,000_l._, at once to give liberty to the whole of the slaves on the +property. He sent out an agent, who hired a ship, and he had the little +slave community transported to one of the free American states, where +they settled down and prospered. Mr. Barclay had been assured that the +negroes were too ignorant and too barbarous for freedom, and it was thus +that he determined practically to demonstrate the fallacy of the +assertion. In dealing with his accumulated savings, he made himself the +executor of his own will, and instead of leaving a large fortune to be +divided among his relatives at his death, he extended to them his +munificent aid during his life, watched and aided them in their +respective careers, and thus not only laid the foundation, but lived to +see the maturity, of some of the largest and most prosperous business +concerns in the metropolis. We believe that to this day some of our most +eminent merchants—such as the Gurneys, Hanburys, and Buxtons—are proud to +acknowledge with gratitude the obligations they owe to David Barclay for +the means of their first introduction to life, and for the benefits of +his counsel and countenance in the early stages of their career. Such a +man stands as a mark of the mercantile honesty and integrity of his +country, and is a model and example for men of business in all time to +come. + + + + +CHAPTER X. +MONEY—ITS USE AND ABUSE. + + + “Not for to hide it in a hedge, + Nor for a train attendant, + But for the glorious privilege + Of being independent.”—_Burns_. + + “Neither a borrower nor a lender be: + For loan oft loses both itself and friend; + And borrowing dulls the edge of husbandry.”—_Shakepeare_. + + Never treat money affairs with levity—Money is character.—_Sir E. L. + Bulwer Lytton_. + +HOW a man uses money—makes it, saves it, and spends it—is perhaps one of +the best tests of practical wisdom. Although money ought by no means to +be regarded as a chief end of man’s life, neither is it a trifling +matter, to be held in philosophic contempt, representing as it does to so +large an extent, the means of physical comfort and social well-being. +Indeed, some of the finest qualities of human nature are intimately +related to the right use of money; such as generosity, honesty, justice, +and self-sacrifice; as well as the practical virtues of economy and +providence. On the other hand, there are their counterparts of avarice, +fraud, injustice, and selfishness, as displayed by the inordinate lovers +of gain; and the vices of thriftlessness, extravagance, and improvidence, +on the part of those who misuse and abuse the means entrusted to them. +“So that,” as is wisely observed by Henry Taylor in his thoughtful ‘Notes +from Life,’ “a right measure and manner in getting, saving, spending, +giving, taking, lending, borrowing, and bequeathing, would almost argue a +perfect man.” + +Comfort in worldly circumstances is a con ion which every man is +justified in striving to attain by all worthy means. It secures that +physical satisfaction, which is necessary for the culture of the better +part of his nature; and enables him to provide for those of his own +household, without which, says the Apostle, a man is “worse than an +infidel.” Nor ought the duty to be any the less indifferent to us, that +the respect which our fellow-men entertain for us in no slight degree +depends upon the manner in which we exercise the opportunities which +present themselves for our honourable advancement in life. The very +effort required to be made to succeed in life with this object, is of +itself an education; stimulating a man’s sense of self-respect, bringing +out his practical qualities, and disciplining him in the exercise of +patience, perseverance, and such like virtues. The provident and careful +man must necessarily be a thoughtful man, for he lives not merely for the +present, but with provident forecast makes arrangements for the future. +He must also be a temperate man, and exercise the virtue of self-denial, +than which nothing is so much calculated to give strength to the +character. John Sterling says truly, that “the worst education which +teaches self denial, is better than the best which teaches everything +else, and not that.” The Romans rightly employed the same word (virtus) +to designate courage, which is in a physical sense what the other is in a +moral; the highest virtue of all being victory over ourselves. + +Hence the lesson of self-denial—the sacrificing of a present +gratification for a future good—is one of the last that is learnt. Those +classes which work the hardest might naturally be expected to value the +most the money which they earn. Yet the readiness with which so many are +accustomed to eat up and drink up their earnings as they go, renders them +to a great extent helpless and dependent upon the frugal. There are +large numbers of persons among us who, though enjoying sufficient means +of comfort and independence, are often found to be barely a day’s march +ahead of actual want when a time of pressure occurs; and hence a great +cause of social helplessness and suffering. On one occasion a deputation +waited on Lord John Russell, respecting the taxation levied on the +working classes of the country, when the noble lord took the opportunity +of remarking, “You may rely upon it that the Government of this country +durst not tax the working classes to anything like the extent to which +they tax themselves in their expenditure upon intoxicating drinks alone!” +Of all great public questions, there is perhaps none more important than +this,—no great work of reform calling more loudly for labourers. But it +must be admitted that “self-denial and self-help” would make a poor +rallying cry for the hustings; and it is to be feared that the patriotism +of this day has but little regard for such common things as individual +economy and providence, although it is by the practice of such virtues +only that the genuine independence of the industrial classes is to be +secured. “Prudence, frugality, and good management,” said Samuel Drew, +the philosophical shoemaker, “are excellent artists for mending bad +times: they occupy but little room in any dwelling, but would furnish a +more effectual remedy for the evils of life than any Reform Bill that +ever passed the Houses of Parliament.” Socrates said, “Let him that +would move the world move first himself. ” Or as the old rhyme runs— + + “If every one would see + To his own reformation, + How very easily + You might reform a nation.” + +It is, however, generally felt to be a far easier thing to reform the +Church and the State than to reform the least of our own bad habits; and +in such matters it is usually found more agreeable to our tastes, as it +certainly is the common practice, to begin with our neighbours rather +than with ourselves. + +Any class of men that lives from hand to mouth will ever be an inferior +class. They will necessarily remain impotent and helpless, hanging on to +the skirts of society, the sport of times and seasons. Having no respect +for themselves, they will fail in securing the respect of others. In +commercial crises, such men must inevitably go to the wall. Wanting that +husbanded power which a store of savings, no matter how small, invariably +gives them, they will be at every man’s mercy, and, if possessed of right +feelings, they cannot but regard with fear and trembling the future +possible fate of their wives and children. “The world,” once said Mr. +Cobden to the working men of Huddersfield, “has always been divided into +two classes,—those who have saved, and those who have spent—the thrifty +and the extravagant. The building of all the houses, the mills, the +bridges, and the ships, and the accomplishment of all other great works +which have rendered man civilized and happy, has been done by the savers, +the thrifty; and those who have wasted their resources have always been +their slaves. It has been the law of nature and of Providence that this +should be so; and I were an impostor if I promised any class that they +would advance themselves if they were improvident, thoughtless, and +idle.” + +Equally sound was the advice given by Mr. Bright to an assembly of +working men at Rochdale, in 1847, when, after expressing his belief that, +“so far as honesty was concerned, it was to be found in pretty equal +amount among all classes,” he used the following words:—“There is only +one way that is safe for any man, or any number of men, by which they can +maintain their present position if it be a good one, or raise themselves +above it if it be a bad one,—that is, by the practice of the virtues of +industry, frugality, temperance, and honesty. There is no royal road by +which men can raise themselves from a position which they feel to be +uncomfortable and unsatisfactory, as regards their mental or physical +condition, except by the practice of those virtues by which they find +numbers amongst them are continually advancing and bettering themselves.” + +There is no reason why the condition of the average workman should not be +a useful, honourable, respectable, and happy one. The whole body of the +working classes might, (with few exceptions) be as frugal, virtuous, +well-informed, and well-conditioned as many individuals of the same class +have already made themselves. What some men are, all without difficulty +might be. Employ the same means, and the same results will follow. That +there should be a class of men who live by their daily labour in every +state is the ordinance of God, and doubtless is a wise and righteous one; +but that this class should be otherwise than frugal, contented, +intelligent, and happy, is not the design of Providence, but springs +solely from the weakness, self-indulgence, and perverseness of man +himself. The healthy spirit of self-help created amongst working people +would more than any other measure serve to raise them as a class, and +this, not by pulling down others, but by levelling them up to a higher +and still advancing standard of religion, intelligence, and virtue. “All +moral philosophy,” says Montaigne, “is as applicable to a common and +private life as to the most splendid. Every man carries the entire form +of the human condition within him.” + +When a man casts his glance forward, he will find that the three chief +temporal contingencies for which he has to provide are want of +employment, sickness, and death. The two first he may escape, but the +last is inevitable. It is, however, the duty of the prudent man so to +live, and so to arrange, that the pressure of suffering, in event of +either contingency occurring, shall be mitigated to as great an extent as +possible, not only to himself, but also to those who are dependent upon +him for their comfort and subsistence. Viewed in this light the honest +earning and the frugal use of money are of the greatest importance. +Rightly earned, it is the representative of patient industry and untiring +effort, of temptation resisted, and hope rewarded; and rightly used, it +affords indications of prudence, forethought and self-denial—the true +basis of manly character. Though money represents a crowd of objects +without any real worth or utility, it also represents many things of +great value; not only food, clothing, and household satisfaction, but +personal self-respect and independence. Thus a store of savings is to +the working man as a barricade against want; it secures him a footing, +and enables him to wait, it may be in cheerfulness and hope, until better +days come round. The very endeavour to gain a firmer position in the +world has a certain dignity in it, and tends to make a man stronger and +better. At all events it gives him greater freedom of action, and +enables him to husband his strength for future effort. + +But the man who is always hovering on the verge of want is in a state not +far removed from that of slavery. He is in no sense his own master, but +is in constant peril of falling under the bondage of others, and +accepting the terms which they dictate to him. He cannot help being, in +a measure, servile, for he dares not look the world boldly in the face; +and in adverse times he must look either to alms or the poor’s rates. If +work fails him altogether, he has not the means of moving to another +field of employment; he is fixed to his parish like a limpet to its rock, +and can neither migrate nor emigrate. + +To secure independence, the practice of simple economy is all that is +necessary. Economy requires neither superior courage nor eminent virtue; +it is satisfied with ordinary energy, and the capacity of average minds. +Economy, at bottom, is but the spirit of order applied in the +administration of domestic affairs: it means management, regularity, +prudence, and the avoidance of waste. The spirit of economy was +expressed by our Divine Master in the words ‘Gather up the fragments that +remain, so that nothing may be lost.’ His omnipotence did not disdain +the small things of life; and even while revealing His infinite power to +the multitude, he taught the pregnant lesson of carefulness of which all +stand so much in need. + +Economy also means the power of resisting present gratification for the +purpose of securing a future good, and in this light it represents the +ascendancy of reason over the animal instincts. It is altogether +different from penuriousness: for it is economy that can always best +afford to be generous. It does not make money an idol, but regards it as +a useful agent. As Dean Swift observes, “we must carry money in the +head, not in the heart.” Economy may be styled the daughter of Prudence, +the sister of Temperance, and the mother of Liberty. It is evidently +conservative—conservative of character, of domestic happiness, and social +well-being. It is, in short, the exhibition of self-help in one of its +best forms. + +Francis Horner’s father gave him this advice on entering life:—“Whilst I +wish you to be comfortable in every respect, I cannot too strongly +inculcate economy. It is a necessary virtue to all; and however the +shallow part of mankind may despise it, it certainly leads to +independence, which is a grand object to every man of a high spirit.” +Burns’ lines, quoted at the head of this chapter, contain the right idea; +but unhappily his strain of song was higher than his practice; his ideal +better than his habit. When laid on his death-bed he wrote to a friend, +“Alas! Clarke, I begin to feel the worst. Burns’ poor widow, and half a +dozen of his dear little ones helpless orphans;—there I am weak as a +woman’s tear. Enough of this;—’tis half my disease.” + +Every man ought so to contrive as to live within his means. This +practice is of the very essence of honesty. For if a man do not manage +honestly to live within his own means, he must necessarily be living +dishonestly upon the means of somebody else. Those who are careless +about personal expenditure, and consider merely their own gratification, +without regard for the comfort of others, generally find out the real +uses of money when it is too late. Though by nature generous, these +thriftless persons are often driven in the end to do very shabby things. +They waste their money as they do their time; draw bills upon the future; +anticipate their earnings; and are thus under the necessity of dragging +after them a load of debts and obligations which seriously affect their +action as free and independent men. + +It was a maxim of Lord Bacon, that when it was necessary to economize, it +was better to look after petty savings than to descend to petty gettings. +The loose cash which many persons throw away uselessly, and worse, would +often form a basis of fortune and independence for life. These wasters +are their own worst enemies, though generally found amongst the ranks of +those who rail at the injustice of “the world.” But if a man will not be +his own friend, how can he expect that others will? Orderly men of +moderate means have always something left in their pockets to help +others; whereas your prodigal and careless fellows who spend all never +find an opportunity for helping anybody. It is poor economy, however, to +be a scrub. Narrowmindedness in living and in dealing is generally +short-sighted, and leads to failure. The penny soul, it is said, never +came to twopence. Generosity and liberality, like honesty, prove the +best policy after all. Though Jenkinson, in the ‘Vicar of Wakefield,’ +cheated his kind-hearted neighbour Flamborough in one way or another +every year, “Flamborough,” said he, “has been regularly growing in +riches, while I have come to poverty and a gaol.” And practical life +abounds in cases of brilliant results from a course of generous and +honest policy. + +The proverb says that “an empty bag cannot stand upright;” neither can a +man who is in debt. It is also difficult for a man who is in debt to be +truthful; hence it is said that lying rides on debt’s back. The debtor +has to frame excuses to his creditor for postponing payment of the money +he owes him; and probably also to contrive falsehoods. It is easy enough +for a man who will exercise a healthy resolution, to avoid incurring the +first obligation; but the facility with which that has been incurred +often becomes a temptation to a second; and very soon the unfortunate +borrower becomes so entangled that no late exertion of industry can set +him free. The first step in debt is like the first step in falsehood; +almost involving the necessity of proceeding in the same course, debt +following debt, as lie follows lie. Haydon, the painter, dated his +decline from the day on which he first borrowed money. He realized the +truth of the proverb, “Who goes a-borrowing, goes a-sorrowing.” The +significant entry in his diary is: “Here began debt and obligation, out +of which I have never been and never shall be extricated as long as I +live.” His Autobiography shows but too painfully how embarrassment in +money matters produces poignant distress of mind, utter incapacity for +work, and constantly recurring humiliations. The written advice which he +gave to a youth when entering the navy was as follows: “Never purchase +any enjoyment if it cannot be procured without borrowing of others. +Never borrow money: it is degrading. I do not say never lend, but never +lend if by lending you render yourself unable to pay what you owe; but +under any circumstances never borrow.” Fichte, the poor student, refused +to accept even presents from his still poorer parents. + +Dr. Johnson held that early debt is ruin. His words on the subject are +weighty, and worthy of being held in remembrance. “Do not,” said he, +“accustom yourself to consider debt only as an inconvenience; you will +find it a calamity. Poverty takes away so many means of doing good, and +produces so much inability to resist evil, both natural and moral, that +it is by all virtuous means to be avoided. . . . Let it be your first +care, then, not to be in any man’s debt. Resolve not to be poor; +whatever you have spend less. Poverty is a great enemy to human +happiness; it certainly destroys liberty, and it makes some virtues +impracticable and others extremely difficult. Frugality is not only the +basis of quiet, but of beneficence. No man can help others that wants +help himself; we must have enough before we have to spare.” + +It is the bounden duty of every man to look his affairs in the face, and +to keep an account of his incomings and outgoings in money matters. The +exercise of a little simple arithmetic in this way will be found of great +value. Prudence requires that we shall pitch our scale of living a +degree below our means, rather than up to them; but this can only be done +by carrying out faithfully a plan of living by which both ends may be +made to meet. John Locke strongly advised this course: “Nothing,” said +he, “is likelier to keep a man within compass than having constantly +before his eyes the state of his affairs in a regular course of account.” +The Duke of Wellington kept an accurate detailed account of all the +moneys received and expended by him. “I make a point,” said he to Mr. +Gleig, “of paying my own bills, and I advise every one to do the same; +formerly I used to trust a confidential servant to pay them, but I was +cured of that folly by receiving one morning, to my great surprise, duns +of a year or two’s standing. The fellow had speculated with my money, +and left my bills unpaid.” Talking of debt his remark was, “It makes a +slave of a man. I have often known what it was to be in want of money, +but I never got into debt.” Washington was as particular as Wellington +was, in matters of business detail; and it is a remarkable fact, that he +did not disdain to scrutinize the smallest outgoings of his +household—determined as he was to live honestly within his means—even +while holding the high office of President of the American Union. + +Admiral Jervis, Earl St. Vincent, has told the story of his early +struggles, and, amongst other things, of his determination to keep out of +debt. “My father had a very large family,” said he, “with limited means. +He gave me twenty pounds at starting, and that was all he ever gave me. +After I had been a considerable time at the station [at sea], I drew for +twenty more, but the bill came back protested. I was mortified at this +rebuke, and made a promise, which I have ever kept, that I would never +draw another bill without a certainty of its being paid. I immediately +changed my mode of living, quitted my mess, lived alone, and took up the +ship’s allowance, which I found quite sufficient; washed and mended my +own clothes; made a pair of trousers out of the ticking of my bed; and +having by these means saved as much money as would redeem my honour, I +took up my bill, and from that time to this I have taken care to keep +within my means.” Jervis for six years endured pinching privation, but +preserved his integrity, studied his profession with success, and +gradually and steadily rose by merit and bravery to the highest rank. + +Mr. Hume hit the mark when he once stated in the House of Commons—though +his words were followed by “laughter”—that the tone of living in England +is altogether too high. Middle-class people are too apt to live up to +their incomes, if not beyond them: affecting a degree of “style” which is +most unhealthy in its effects upon society at large. There is an +ambition to bring up boys as gentlemen, or rather “genteel” men; though +the result frequently is, only to make them gents. They acquire a taste +for dress, style, luxuries, and amusements, which can never form any +solid foundation for manly or gentlemanly character; and the result is, +that we have a vast number of gingerbread young gentry thrown upon the +world, who remind one of the abandoned hulls sometimes picked up at sea, +with only a monkey on board. + +There is a dreadful ambition abroad for being “genteel.” We keep up +appearances, too often at the expense of honesty; and, though we may not +be rich, yet we must seem to be so. We must be “respectable,” though +only in the meanest sense—in mere vulgar outward show. We have not the +courage to go patiently onward in the condition of life in which it has +pleased God to call us; but must needs live in some fashionable state to +which we ridiculously please to call ourselves, and all to gratify the +vanity of that unsubstantial genteel world of which we form a part. +There is a constant struggle and pressure for front seats in the social +amphitheatre; in the midst of which all noble self-denying resolve is +trodden down, and many fine natures are inevitably crushed to death. +What waste, what misery, what bankruptcy, come from all this ambition to +dazzle others with the glare of apparent worldly success, we need not +describe. The mischievous results show themselves in a thousand ways—in +the rank frauds committed by men who dare to be dishonest, but do not +dare to seem poor; and in the desperate dashes at fortune, in which the +pity is not so much for those who fail, as for the hundreds of innocent +families who are so often involved in their ruin. + +The late Sir Charles Napier, in taking leave of his command in India, did +a bold and honest thing in publishing his strong protest, embodied in his +last General Order to the officers of the Indian army, against the “fast” +life led by so many young officers in that service, involving them in +ignominious obligations. Sir Charles strongly urged, in that famous +document—what had almost been lost sight of that “honesty is inseparable +from the character of a thorough-bred gentleman;” and that “to drink +unpaid-for champagne and unpaid-for beer, and to ride unpaid-for horses, +is to be a cheat, and not a gentleman.” Men who lived beyond their means +and were summoned, often by their own servants, before Courts of Requests +for debts contracted in extravagant living, might be officers by virtue +of their commissions, but they were not gentlemen. The habit of being +constantly in debt, the Commander-in-chief held, made men grow callous to +the proper feelings of a gentleman. It was not enough that an officer +should be able to fight: that any bull-dog could do. But did he hold his +word inviolate?—did he pay his debts? These were among the points of +honour which, he insisted, illuminated the true gentleman’s and soldier’s +career. As Bayard was of old, so would Sir Charles Napier have all +British officers to be. He knew them to be “without fear,” but he would +also have them “without reproach.” There are, however, many gallant +young fellows, both in India and at home, capable of mounting a breach on +an emergency amidst belching fire, and of performing the most desperate +deeds of valour, who nevertheless cannot or will not exercise the moral +courage necessary to enable them to resist a petty temptation presented +to their senses. They cannot utter their valiant “No,” or “I can’t +afford it,” to the invitations of pleasure and self-enjoyment; and they +are found ready to brave death rather than the ridicule of their +companions. + +The young man, as he passes through life, advances through a long line of +tempters ranged on either side of him; and the inevitable effect of +yielding, is degradation in a greater or a less degree. Contact with +them tends insensibly to draw away from him some portion of the divine +electric element with which his nature is charged; and his only mode of +resisting them is to utter and to act out his “no” manfully and +resolutely. He must decide at once, not waiting to deliberate and +balance reasons; for the youth, like “the woman who deliberates, is +lost.” Many deliberate, without deciding; but “not to resolve, _is_ to +resolve.” A perfect knowledge of man is in the prayer, “Lead us not into +temptation.” But temptation will come to try the young man’s strength; +and once yielded to, the power to resist grows weaker and weaker. Yield +once, and a portion of virtue has gone. Resist manfully, and the first +decision will give strength for life; repeated, it will become a habit. +It is in the outworks of the habits formed in early life that the real +strength of the defence must lie; for it has been wisely ordained, that +the machinery of moral existence should be carried on principally through +the medium of the habits, so as to save the wear and tear of the great +principles within. It is good habits, which insinuate themselves into +the thousand inconsiderable acts of life, that really constitute by far +the greater part of man’s moral conduct. + +Hugh Miller has told how, by an act of youthful decision, he saved +himself from one of the strong temptations so peculiar to a life of toil. +When employed as a mason, it was usual for his fellow-workmen to have an +occasional treat of drink, and one day two glasses of whisky fell to his +share, which he swallowed. When he reached home, he found, on opening +his favourite book—‘Bacon’s Essays’—that the letters danced before his +eyes, and that he could no longer master the sense. “The condition,” he +says, “into which I had brought myself was, I felt, one of degradation. +I had sunk, by my own act, for the time, to a lower level of intelligence +than that on which it was my privilege to be placed; and though the state +could have been no very favourable one for forming a resolution, I in +that hour determined that I should never again sacrifice my capacity of +intellectual enjoyment to a drinking usage; and, with God’s help, I was +enabled to hold by the determination.” It is such decisions as this that +often form the turning-points in a man’s life, and furnish the foundation +of his future character. And this rock, on which Hugh Miller might have +been wrecked, if he had not at the right moment put forth his moral +strength to strike away from it, is one that youth and manhood alike need +to be constantly on their guard against. It is about one of the worst +and most deadly, as well as extravagant, temptations which lie in the way +of youth. Sir Walter Scott used to say that “of all vices drinking is +the most incompatible with greatness.” Not only so, but it is +incompatible with economy, decency, health, and honest living. When a +youth cannot restrain, he must abstain. Dr. Johnson’s case is the case +of many. He said, referring to his own habits, “Sir, I can abstain; but +I can’t be moderate.” + +But to wrestle vigorously and successfully with any vicious habit, we +must not merely be satisfied with contending on the low ground of worldly +prudence, though that is of use, but take stand upon a higher moral +elevation. Mechanical aids, such as pledges, may be of service to some, +but the great thing is to set up a high standard of thinking and acting, +and endeavour to strengthen and purify the principles as well as to +reform the habits. For this purpose a youth must study himself, watch +his steps, and compare his thoughts and acts with his rule. The more +knowledge of himself he gains, the more humble will he be, and perhaps +the less confident in his own strength. But the discipline will be +always found most valuable which is acquired by resisting small present +gratifications to secure a prospective greater and higher one. It is the +noblest work in self-education—for + + “Real glory + Springs from the silent conquest of ourselves, + And without that the conqueror is nought + But the first slave.” + +Many popular books have been written for the purpose of communicating to +the public the grand secret of making money. But there is no secret +whatever about it, as the proverbs of every nation abundantly testify. +“Take care of the pennies and the pounds will take care of themselves.” +“Diligence is the mother of good luck.” “No pains no gains.” “No sweat +no sweet.” “Work and thou shalt have.” “The world is his who has +patience and industry.” “Better go to bed supperless than rise in debt.” +Such are specimens of the proverbial philosophy, embodying the hoarded +experience of many generations, as to the best means of thriving in the +world. They were current in people’s mouths long before books were +invented; and like other popular proverbs they were the first codes of +popular morals. Moreover they have stood the test of time, and the +experience of every day still bears witness to their accuracy, force, and +soundness. The proverbs of Solomon are full of wisdom as to the force of +industry, and the use and abuse of money:—“He that is slothful in work is +brother to him that is a great waster.” “Go to the ant, thou sluggard; +consider her ways, and be wise.” Poverty, says the preacher, shall come +upon the idler, “as one that travelleth, and want as an armed man;” but +of the industrious and upright, “the hand of the diligent maketh rich.” +“The drunkard and the glutton shall come to poverty; and drowsiness shall +clothe a man with rags.” “Seest thou a man diligent in his business? he +shall stand before kings.” But above all, “It is better to get wisdom +than gold; for wisdom is better than rubies, and all the things that may +be desired are not to be compared to it.” + +Simple industry and thrift will go far towards making any person of +ordinary working faculty comparatively independent in his means. Even a +working man may be so, provided he will carefully husband his resources, +and watch the little outlets of useless expenditure. A penny is a very +small matter, yet the comfort of thousands of families depends upon the +proper spending and saving of pennies. If a man allows the little +pennies, the results of his hard work, to slip out of his fingers—some to +the beershop, some this way and some that—he will find that his life is +little raised above one of mere animal drudgery. On the other hand, if +he take care of the pennies—putting some weekly into a benefit society or +an insurance fund, others into a savings’ bank, and confiding the rest to +his wife to be carefully laid out, with a view to the comfortable +maintenance and education of his family—he will soon find that this +attention to small matters will abundantly repay him, in increasing +means, growing comfort at home, and a mind comparatively free from fears +as to the future. And if a working man have high ambition and possess +richness in spirit,—a kind of wealth which far transcends all mere +worldly possessions—he may not only help himself, but be a profitable +helper of others in his path through life. That this is no impossible +thing even for a common labourer in a workshop, may be illustrated by the +remarkable career of Thomas Wright of Manchester, who not only attempted +but succeeded in the reclamation of many criminals while working for +weekly wages in a foundry. + +Accident first directed Thomas Wright’s attention to the difficulty +encountered by liberated convicts in returning to habits of honest +industry. His mind was shortly possessed by the subject; and to remedy +the evil became the purpose of his life. Though he worked from six in +the morning till six at night, still there were leisure minutes that he +could call his own—more especially his Sundays—and these he employed in +the service of convicted criminals; a class then far more neglected than +they are now. But a few minutes a day, well employed, can effect a great +deal; and it will scarcely be credited, that in ten years this working +man, by steadfastly holding to his purpose, succeeded in rescuing not +fewer than three hundred felons from continuance in a life of villany! +He came to be regarded as the moral physician of the Manchester Old +Bailey; and where the Chaplain and all others failed, Thomas Wright often +succeeded. Children he thus restored reformed to their parents; sons and +daughters otherwise lost, to their homes; and many a returned convict did +he contrive to settle down to honest and industrious pursuits. The task +was by no means easy. It required money, time, energy, prudence, and +above all, character, and the confidence which character invariably +inspires. The most remarkable circumstance was that Wright relieved many +of these poor outcasts out of the comparatively small wages earned by him +at foundry work. He did all this on an income which did not average, +during his working career, 100_l._ per annum; and yet, while he was able +to bestow substantial aid on criminals, to whom he owed no more than the +service of kindness which every human being owes to another, he also +maintained his family in comfort, and was, by frugality and carefulness, +enabled to lay by a store of savings against his approaching old age. +Every week he apportioned his income with deliberate care; so much for +the indispensable necessaries of food and clothing, so much for the +landlord, so much for the schoolmaster, so much for the poor and needy; +and the lines of distribution were resolutely observed. By such means +did this humble workman pursue his great work, with the results we have +so briefly described. Indeed, his career affords one of the most +remarkable and striking illustrations of the force of purpose in a man, +of the might of small means carefully and sedulously applied, and, above +all, of the power which an energetic and upright character invariably +exercises upon the lives and conduct of others. + +There is no discredit, but honour, in every right walk of industry, +whether it be in tilling the ground, making tools, weaving fabrics, or +selling the products behind a counter. A youth may handle a yard-stick, +or measure a piece of ribbon; and there will be no discredit in doing so, +unless he allows his mind to have no higher range than the stick and +ribbon; to be as short as the one, and as narrow as the other. “Let not +those blush who _have_,” said Fuller, “but those who _have not_ a lawful +calling.” And Bishop Hall said, “Sweet is the destiny of all trades, +whether of the brow or of the mind.” Men who have raised themselves from +a humble calling, need not be ashamed, but rather ought to be proud of +the difficulties they have surmounted. An American President, when asked +what was his coat-of-arms, remembering that he had been a hewer of wood +in his youth, replied, “A pair of shirt sleeves.” A French doctor once +taunted Flechier, Bishop of Nismes, who had been a tallow-chandler in his +youth, with the meanness of his origin, to which Flechier replied, “If +you had been born in the same condition that I was, you would still have +been but a maker of candles.” + +Nothing is more common than energy in money-making, quite independent of +any higher object than its accumulation. A man who devotes himself to +this pursuit, body and soul, can scarcely fail to become rich. Very +little brains will do; spend less than you earn; add guinea to guinea; +scrape and save; and the pile of gold will gradually rise. Osterwald, +the Parisian banker, began life a poor man. He was accustomed every +evening to drink a pint of beer for supper at a tavern which he visited, +during which he collected and pocketed all the corks that he could lay +his hands on. In eight years he had collected as many corks as sold for +eight louis d’ors. With that sum he laid the foundations of his +fortune—gained mostly by stock-jobbing; leaving at his death some three +millions of francs. John Foster has cited a striking illustration of +what this kind of determination will do in money-making. A young man who +ran through his patrimony, spending it in profligacy, was at length +reduced to utter want and despair. He rushed out of his house intending +to put an end to his life, and stopped on arriving at an eminence +overlooking what were once his estates. He sat down, ruminated for a +time, and rose with the determination that he would recover them. He +returned to the streets, saw a load of coals which had been shot out of a +cart on to the pavement before a house, offered to carry them in, and was +employed. He thus earned a few pence, requested some meat and drink as a +gratuity, which was given him, and the pennies were laid by. Pursuing +this menial labour, he earned and saved more pennies; accumulated +sufficient to enable him to purchase some cattle, the value of which he +understood, and these he sold to advantage. He proceeded by degrees to +undertake larger transactions, until at length he became rich. The +result was, that he more than recovered his possessions, and died an +inveterate miser. When he was buried, mere earth went to earth. With a +nobler spirit, the same determination might have enabled such a man to be +a benefactor to others as well as to himself. But the life and its end +in this case were alike sordid. + +To provide for others and for our own comfort and independence in old +age, is honourable, and greatly to be commended; but to hoard for mere +wealth’s sake is the characteristic of the narrow-souled and the miserly. +It is against the growth of this habit of inordinate saving that the wise +man needs most carefully to guard himself: else, what in youth was simple +economy, may in old age grow into avarice, and what was a duty in the one +case, may become a vice in the other. It is the _love_ of money—not +money itself—which is “the root of evil,”—a love which narrows and +contracts the soul, and closes it against generous life and action. +Hence, Sir Walter Scott makes one of his characters declare that “the +penny siller slew more souls than the naked sword slew bodies.” It is +one of the defects of business too exclusively followed, that it +insensibly tends to a mechanism of character. The business man gets into +a rut, and often does not look beyond it. If he lives for himself only, +he becomes apt to regard other human beings only in so far as they +minister to his ends. Take a leaf from such men’s ledger and you have +their life. + +Worldly success, measured by the accumulation of money, is no doubt a +very dazzling thing; and all men are naturally more or less the admirers +of worldly success. But though men of persevering, sharp, dexterous, and +unscrupulous habits, ever on the watch to push opportunities, may and do +“get on” in the world, yet it is quite possible that they may not possess +the slightest elevation of character, nor a particle of real goodness. +He who recognizes no higher logic than that of the shilling, may become a +very rich man, and yet remain all the while an exceedingly poor creature. +For riches are no proof whatever of moral worth; and their glitter often +serves only to draw attention to the worthlessness of their possessor, as +the light of the glowworm reveals the grub. + +The manner in which many allow themselves to be sacrificed to their love +of wealth reminds one of the cupidity of the monkey—that caricature of +our species. In Algiers, the Kabyle peasant attaches a gourd, well +fixed, to a tree, and places within it some rice. The gourd has an +opening merely sufficient to admit the monkey’s paw. The creature comes +to the tree by night, inserts his paw, and grasps his booty. He tries to +draw it back, but it is clenched, and he has not the wisdom to unclench +it. So there he stands till morning, when he is caught, looking as +foolish as may be, though with the prize in his grasp. The moral of this +little story is capable of a very extensive application in life. + +The power of money is on the whole over-estimated. The greatest things +which have been done for the world have not been accomplished by rich +men, nor by subscription lists, but by men generally of small pecuniary +means. Christianity was propagated over half the world by men of the +poorest class; and the greatest thinkers, discoverers, inventors, and +artists, have been men of moderate wealth, many of them little raised +above the condition of manual labourers in point of worldly +circumstances. And it will always be so. Riches are oftener an +impediment than a stimulus to action; and in many cases they are quite as +much a misfortune as a blessing. The youth who inherits wealth is apt to +have life made too easy for him, and he soon grows sated with it, because +he has nothing left to desire. Having no special object to struggle for, +he finds time hang heavy on his hands; he remains morally and spiritually +asleep; and his position in society is often no higher than that of a +polypus over which the tide floats. + + “His only labour is to kill the time, + And labour dire it is, and weary woe.” + +Yet the rich man, inspired by a right spirit, will spurn idleness as +unmanly; and if he bethink himself of the responsibilities which attach +to the possession of wealth and property he will feel even a higher call +to work than men of humbler lot. This, however, must be admitted to be +by no means the practice of life. The golden mean of Agur’s perfect +prayer is, perhaps, the best lot of all, did we but know it: “Give me +neither poverty nor riches; feed me with food convenient for me.” The +late Joseph Brotherton, M.P., left a fine motto to be recorded upon his +monument in the Peel Park at Manchester,—the declaration in his case +being strictly true: “My richness consisted not in the greatness of my +possessions, but in the smallness of my wants.” He rose from the +humblest station, that of a factory boy, to an eminent position of +usefulness, by the simple exercise of homely honesty, industry, +punctuality, and self-denial. Down to the close of his life, when not +attending Parliament, he did duty as minister in a small chapel in +Manchester to which he was attached; and in all things he made it appear, +to those who knew him in private life, that the glory he sought was _not_ +“to be seen of men,” or to excite their praise, but to earn the +consciousness of discharging the every-day duties of life, down to the +smallest and humblest of them, in an honest, upright, truthful, and +loving spirit. + +“Respectability,” in its best sense, is good. The respectable man is one +worthy of regard, literally worth turning to look at. But the +respectability that consists in merely keeping up appearances is not +worth looking at in any sense. Far better and more respectable is the +good poor man than the bad rich one—better the humble silent man than the +agreeable well-appointed rogue who keeps his gig. A well balanced and +well-stored mind, a life full of useful purpose, whatever the position +occupied in it may be, is of far greater importance than average worldly +respectability. The highest object of life we take to be, to form a +manly character, and to work out the best development possible, of body +and spirit—of mind, conscience, heart, and soul. This is the end: all +else ought to be regarded but as the means. Accordingly, that is not the +most successful life in which a man gets the most pleasure, the most +money, the most power or place, honour or fame; but that in which a man +gets the most manhood, and performs the greatest amount of useful work +and of human duty. Money is power after its sort, it is true; but +intelligence, public spirit, and moral virtue, are powers too, and far +nobler ones. “Let others plead for pensions,” wrote Lord Collingwood to +a friend; “I can be rich without money, by endeavouring to be superior to +everything poor. I would have my services to my country unstained by any +interested motive; and old Scott {313} and I can go on in our +cabbage-garden without much greater expense than formerly.” On another +occasion he said, “I have motives for my conduct which I would not give +in exchange for a hundred pensions.” + +The making of a fortune may no doubt enable some people to “enter +society,” as it is called; but to be esteemed there, they must possess +qualities of mind, manners, or heart, else they are merely rich people, +nothing more. There are men “in society” now, as rich as Croesus, who +have no consideration extended towards them, and elicit no respect. For +why? They are but as money-bags: their only power is in their till. The +men of mark in society—the guides and rulers of opinion—the really +successful and useful men—are not necessarily rich men; but men of +sterling character, of disciplined experience, and of moral excellence. +Even the poor man, like Thomas Wright, though he possess but little of +this world’s goods, may, in the enjoyment of a cultivated nature, of +opportunities used and not abused, of a life spent to the best of his +means and ability, look down, without the slightest feeling of envy, upon +the person of mere worldly success, the man of money-bags and acres. + + + + +CHAPTER XI. +SELF-CULTURE—FACILITIES AND DIFFICULTIES. + + + “Every person has two educations, one which he receives from others, + and one, more important, which he gives to himself.”—_Gibbon_. + + “Is there one whom difficulties dishearten—who bends to the storm? + He will do little. Is there one who will conquer? That kind of man + never fails.”—_John Hunter_. + + “The wise and active conquer difficulties, + By daring to attempt them: sloth and folly + Shiver and shrink at sight of toil and danger, + And _make_ the impossibility they fear.”—_Rowe_. + +“THE best part of every man’s education,” said Sir Walter Scott, “is that +which he gives to himself.” The late Sir Benjamin Brodie delighted to +remember this saying, and he used to congratulate himself on the fact +that professionally he was self-taught. But this is necessarily the case +with all men who have acquired distinction in letters, science, or art. +The education received at school or college is but a beginning, and is +valuable mainly inasmuch as it trains the mind and habituates it to +continuous application and study. That which is put into us by others is +always far less ours than that which we acquire by our own diligent and +persevering effort. Knowledge conquered by labour becomes a possession—a +property entirely our own. A greater vividness and permanency of +impression is secured; and facts thus acquired become registered in the +mind in a way that mere imparted information can never effect. This kind +of self-culture also calls forth power and cultivates strength. The +solution of one problem helps the mastery of another; and thus knowledge +is carried into faculty. Our own active effort is the essential thing; +and no facilities, no books, no teachers, no amount of lessons learnt by +rote will enable us to dispense with it. + +The best teachers have been the readiest to recognize the importance of +self-culture, and of stimulating the student to acquire knowledge by the +active exercise of his own faculties. They have relied more upon +_training_ than upon telling, and sought to make their pupils themselves +active parties to the work in which they were engaged; thus making +teaching something far higher than the mere passive reception of the +scraps and details of knowledge. This was the spirit in which the great +Dr. Arnold worked; he strove to teach his pupils to rely upon themselves, +and develop their powers by their own active efforts, himself merely +guiding, directing, stimulating, and encouraging them. “I would far +rather,” he said, “send a boy to Van Diemen’s Land, where he must work +for his bread, than send him to Oxford to live in luxury, without any +desire in his mind to avail himself of his advantages.” “If there be one +thing on earth,” he observed on another occasion, “which is truly +admirable, it is to see God’s wisdom blessing an inferiority of natural +powers, when they have been honestly, truly, and zealously cultivated.” +Speaking of a pupil of this character, he said, “I would stand to that +man hat in hand.” Once at Laleham, when teaching a rather dull boy, +Arnold spoke somewhat sharply to him, on which the pupil looked up in his +face and said, “Why do you speak angrily, sir? _indeed_, I am doing the +best I can.” Years afterwards, Arnold used to tell the story to his +children, and added, “I never felt so much in my life—that look and that +speech I have never forgotten.” + +From the numerous instances already cited of men of humble station who +have risen to distinction in science and literature, it will be obvious +that labour is by no means incompatible with the highest intellectual +culture. Work in moderation is healthy, as well as agreeable to the +human constitution. Work educates the body, as study educates the mind; +and that is the best state of society in which there is some work for +every man’s leisure, and some leisure for every man’s work. Even the +leisure classes are in a measure compelled to work, sometimes as a relief +from _ennui_, but in most cases to gratify an instinct which they cannot +resist. Some go foxhunting in the English counties, others +grouse-shooting on the Scotch hills, while many wander away every summer +to climb mountains in Switzerland. Hence the boating, running, +cricketing, and athletic sports of the public schools, in which our young +men at the same time so healthfully cultivate their strength both of mind +and body. It is said that the Duke of Wellington, when once looking on +at the boys engaged in their sports in the play-ground at Eton, where he +had spent many of his own younger days, made the remark, “It was there +that the battle of Waterloo was won!” + +Daniel Malthus urged his son when at college to be most diligent in the +cultivation of knowledge, but he also enjoined him to pursue manly sports +as the best means of keeping up the full working power of his mind, as +well as of enjoying the pleasures of intellect. “Every kind of +knowledge,” said he, “every acquaintance with nature and art, will amuse +and strengthen your mind, and I am perfectly pleased that cricket should +do the same by your arms and legs; I love to see you excel in exercises +of the body, and I think myself that the better half, and much the most +agreeable part, of the pleasures of the mind is best enjoyed while one is +upon one’s legs.” But a still more important use of active employment is +that referred to by the great divine, Jeremy Taylor. “Avoid idleness,” +he says, “and fill up all the spaces of thy time with severe and useful +employment; for lust easily creeps in at those emptinesses where the soul +is unemployed and the body is at ease; for no easy, healthful, idle +person was ever chaste if he could be tempted; but of all employments +bodily labour is the most useful, and of the greatest benefit for driving +away the devil.” + +Practical success in life depends more upon physical health than is +generally imagined. Hodson, of Hodson’s Horse, writing home to a friend +in England, said, “I believe, if I get on well in India, it will be +owing, physically speaking, to a sound digestion.” The capacity for +continuous working in any calling must necessarily depend in a great +measure upon this; and hence the necessity for attending to health, even +as a means of intellectual labour. It is perhaps to the neglect of +physical exercise that we find amongst students so frequent a tendency +towards discontent, unhappiness, inaction, and reverie,—displaying itself +in contempt for real life and disgust at the beaten tracks of men,—a +tendency which in England has been called Byronism, and in Germany +Wertherism. Dr. Channing noted the same growth in America, which led him +to make the remark, that “too many of our young men grow up in a school +of despair.” The only remedy for this green-sickness in youth is +physical exercise—action, work, and bodily occupation. + +The use of early labour in self-imposed mechanical employments may be +illustrated by the boyhood of Sir Isaac Newton. Though a comparatively +dull scholar, he was very assiduous in the use of his saw, hammer, and +hatchet—“knocking and hammering in his lodging room”—making models of +windmills, carriages, and machines of all sorts; and as he grew older, he +took delight in making little tables and cupboards for his friends. +Smeaton, Watt, and Stephenson, were equally handy with tools when mere +boys; and but for such kind of self-culture in their youth, it is +doubtful whether they would have accomplished so much in their manhood. +Such was also the early training of the great inventors and mechanics +described in the preceding pages, whose contrivance and intelligence were +practically trained by the constant use of their hands in early life. +Even where men belonging to the manual labour class have risen above it, +and become more purely intellectual labourers, they have found the +advantages of their early training in their later pursuits. Elihu +Burritt says he found hard labour _necessary_ to enable him to study with +effect; and more than once he gave up school-teaching and study, and, +taking to his leather-apron again, went back to his blacksmith’s forge +and anvil for his health of body and mind’s sake. + +The training of young men in the use of tools would, at the same time +that it educated them in “common things,” teach them the use of their +hands and arms, familiarize them with healthy work, exercise their +faculties upon things tangible and actual, give them some practical +acquaintance with mechanics, impart to them the ability of being useful, +and implant in them the habit of persevering physical effort. This is an +advantage which the working classes, strictly so called, certainly +possess over the leisure classes,—that they are in early life under the +necessity of applying themselves laboriously to some mechanical pursuit +or other,—thus acquiring manual dexterity and the use of their physical +powers. The chief disadvantage attached to the calling of the laborious +classes is, not that they are employed in physical work, but that they +are too exclusively so employed, often to the neglect of their moral and +intellectual faculties. While the youths of the leisure classes, having +been taught to associate labour with servility, have shunned it, and been +allowed to grow up practically ignorant, the poorer classes, confining +themselves within the circle of their laborious callings, have been +allowed to grow up in a large proportion of cases absolutely illiterate. +It seems possible, however, to avoid both these evils by combining +physical training or physical work with intellectual culture: and there +are various signs abroad which seem to mark the gradual adoption of this +healthier system of education. + +The success of even professional men depends in no slight degree on their +physical health; and a public writer has gone so far as to say that “the +greatness of our great men is quite as much a bodily affair as a mental +one.” {319} A healthy breathing apparatus is as indispensable to the +successful lawyer or politician as a well-cultured intellect. The +thorough aëration of the blood by free exposure to a large breathing +surface in the lungs, is necessary to maintain that full vital power on +which the vigorous working of the brain in so large a measure depends. +The lawyer has to climb the heights of his profession through close and +heated courts, and the political leader has to bear the fatigue and +excitement of long and anxious debates in a crowded House. Hence the +lawyer in full practice and the parliamentary leader in full work are +called upon to display powers of physical endurance and activity even +more extraordinary than those of the intellect,—such powers as have been +exhibited in so remarkable a degree by Brougham, Lyndhurst, and Campbell; +by Peel, Graham, and Palmerston—all full-chested men. + +Though Sir Walter Scott, when at Edinburgh College, went by the name of +“The Greek Blockhead,” he was, notwithstanding his lameness, a remarkably +healthy youth: he could spear a salmon with the best fisher on the Tweed, +and ride a wild horse with any hunter in Yarrow. When devoting himself +in after life to literary pursuits, Sir Walter never lost his taste for +field sports; but while writing ‘Waverley’ in the morning, he would in +the afternoon course hares. Professor Wilson was a very athlete, as +great at throwing the hammer as in his flights of eloquence and poetry; +and Burns, when a youth, was remarkable chiefly for his leaping, putting, +and wrestling. Some of our greatest divines were distinguished in their +youth for their physical energies. Isaac Barrow, when at the +Charterhouse School, was notorious for his pugilistic encounters, in +which he got many a bloody nose; Andrew Fuller, when working as a +farmer’s lad at Soham, was chiefly famous for his skill in boxing; and +Adam Clarke, when a boy, was only remarkable for the strength displayed +by him in “rolling large stones about,”—the secret, possibly, of some of +the power which he subsequently displayed in rolling forth large thoughts +in his manhood. + +While it is necessary, then, in the first place to secure this solid +foundation of physical health, it must also be observed that the +cultivation of the habit of mental application is quite indispensable for +the education of the student. The maxim that “Labour conquers all +things” holds especially true in the case of the conquest of knowledge. +The road into learning is alike free to all who will give the labour and +the study requisite to gather it; nor are there any difficulties so great +that the student of resolute purpose may not surmount and overcome them. +It was one of the characteristic expressions of Chatterton, that God had +sent his creatures into the world with arms long enough to reach anything +if they chose to be at the trouble. In study, as in business, energy is +the great thing. There must be the “fervet opus”: we must not only +strike the iron while it is hot, but strike it till it is made hot. It +is astonishing how much may be accomplished in self-culture by the +energetic and the persevering, who are careful to avail themselves of +opportunities, and use up the fragments of spare time which the idle +permit to run to waste. Thus Ferguson learnt astronomy from the heavens, +while wrapt in a sheep-skin on the highland hills. Thus Stone learnt +mathematics while working as a journeyman gardener; thus Drew studied the +highest philosophy in the intervals of cobbling shoes; and thus Miller +taught himself geology while working as a day labourer in a quarry. + +Sir Joshua Reynolds, as we have already observed, was so earnest a +believer in the force of industry that he held that all men might achieve +excellence if they would but exercise the power of assiduous and patient +working. He held that drudgery lay on the road to genius, and that there +was no limit to the proficiency of an artist except the limit of his own +painstaking. He would not believe in what is called inspiration, but +only in study and labour. “Excellence,” he said, “is never granted to +man but as the reward of labour.” “If you have great talents, industry +will improve them; if you have but moderate abilities, industry will +supply their deficiency. Nothing is denied to well-directed labour; +nothing is to be obtained without it.” Sir Fowell Buxton was an equal +believer in the power of study; and he entertained the modest idea that +he could do as well as other men if he devoted to the pursuit double the +time and labour that they did. He placed his great confidence in +ordinary means and extraordinary application. + +“I have known several men in my life,” says Dr. Ross, “who may be +recognized in days to come as men of genius, and they were all plodders, +hard-working, _intent_ men. Genius is known by its works; genius without +works is a blind faith, a dumb oracle. But meritorious works are the +result of time and labour, and cannot be accomplished by intention or by +a wish. . . . Every great work is the result of vast preparatory +training. Facility comes by labour. Nothing seems easy, not even +walking, that was not difficult at first. The orator whose eye flashes +instantaneous fire, and whose lips pour out a flood of noble thoughts, +startling by their unexpectedness, and elevating by their wisdom and +truth, has learned his secret by patient repetition, and after many +bitter disappointments.” {321} + +Thoroughness and accuracy are two principal points to be aimed at in +study. Francis Horner, in laying down rules for the cultivation of his +mind, placed great stress upon the habit of continuous application to one +subject for the sake of mastering it thoroughly; he confined himself, +with this object, to only a few books, and resisted with the greatest +firmness “every approach to a habit of desultory reading.” The value of +knowledge to any man consists not in its quantity, but mainly in the good +uses to which he can apply it. Hence a little knowledge, of an exact and +perfect character, is always found more valuable for practical purposes +than any extent of superficial learning. + +One of Ignatius Loyola’s maxims was, “He who does well one work at a +time, does more than all.” By spreading our efforts over too large a +surface we inevitably weaken our force, hinder our progress, and acquire +a habit of fitfulness and ineffective working. Lord St. Leonards once +communicated to Sir Fowell Buxton the mode in which he had conducted his +studies, and thus explained the secret of his success. “I resolved,” +said he, “when beginning to read law, to make everything I acquired +perfectly my own, and never to go to a second thing till I had entirely +accomplished the first. Many of my competitors read as much in a day as +I read in a week; but, at the end of twelve months, my knowledge was as +fresh as the day it was acquired, while theirs had glided away from +recollection.” + +It is not the quantity of study that one gets through, or the amount of +reading, that makes a wise man; but the appositeness of the study to the +purpose for which it is pursued; the concentration of the mind for the +time being on the subject under consideration; and the habitual +discipline by which the whole system of mental application is regulated. +Abernethy was even of opinion that there was a point of saturation in his +own mind, and that if he took into it something more than it could hold, +it only had the effect of pushing something else out. Speaking of the +study of medicine, he said, “If a man has a clear idea of what he desires +to do, he will seldom fail in selecting the proper means of accomplishing +it.” + +The most profitable study is that which is conducted with a definite aim +and object. By thoroughly mastering any given branch of knowledge we +render it more available for use at any moment. Hence it is not enough +merely to have books, or to know where to read for information as we want +it. Practical wisdom, for the purposes of life, must be carried about +with us, and be ready for use at call. It is not sufficient that we have +a fund laid up at home, but not a farthing in the pocket: we must carry +about with us a store of the current coin of knowledge ready for exchange +on all occasions, else we are comparatively helpless when the opportunity +for using it occurs. + +Decision and promptitude are as requisite in self-culture as in business. +The growth of these qualities may be encouraged by accustoming young +people to rely upon their own resources, leaving them to enjoy as much +freedom of action in early life as is practicable. Too much guidance and +restraint hinder the formation of habits of self-help. They are like +bladders tied under the arms of one who has not taught himself to swim. +Want of confidence is perhaps a greater obstacle to improvement than is +generally imagined. It has been said that half the failures in life +arise from pulling in one’s horse while he is leaping. Dr. Johnson was +accustomed to attribute his success to confidence in his own powers. +True modesty is quite compatible with a due estimate of one’s own merits, +and does not demand the abnegation of all merit. Though there are those +who deceive themselves by putting a false figure before their ciphers, +the want of confidence, the want of faith in one’s self, and consequently +the want of promptitude in action, is a defect of character which is +found to stand very much in the way of individual progress; and the +reason why so little is done, is generally because so little is +attempted. + +There is usually no want of desire on the part of most persons to arrive +at the results of self-culture, but there is a great aversion to pay the +inevitable price for it, of hard work. Dr. Johnson held that “impatience +of study was the mental disease of the present generation;” and the +remark is still applicable. We may not believe that there is a royal +road to learning, but we seem to believe very firmly in a “popular” one. +In education, we invent labour-saving processes, seek short cuts to +science, learn French and Latin “in twelve lessons,” or “without a +master.” We resemble the lady of fashion, who engaged a master to teach +her on condition that he did not plague her with verbs and participles. +We get our smattering of science in the same way; we learn chemistry by +listening to a short course of lectures enlivened by experiments, and +when we have inhaled laughing gas, seen green water turned to red, and +phosphorus burnt in oxygen, we have got our smattering, of which the most +that can be said is, that though it may be better than nothing, it is yet +good for nothing. Thus we often imagine we are being educated while we +are only being amused. + +The facility with which young people are thus induced to acquire +knowledge, without study and labour, is not education. It occupies but +does not enrich the mind. It imparts a stimulus for the time, and +produces a sort of intellectual keenness and cleverness; but, without an +implanted purpose and a higher object than mere pleasure, it will bring +with it no solid advantage. In such cases knowledge produces but a +passing impression; a sensation, but no more; it is, in fact, the merest +epicurism of intelligence—sensuous, but certainly not intellectual. Thus +the best qualities of many minds, those which are evoked by vigorous +effort and independent action, sleep a deep sleep, and are often never +called to life, except by the rough awakening of sudden calamity or +suffering, which, in such cases, comes as a blessing, if it serves to +rouse up a courageous spirit that, but for it, would have slept on. + +Accustomed to acquire information under the guise of amusement, young +people will soon reject that which is presented to them under the aspect +of study and labour. Learning their knowledge and science in sport, they +will be too apt to make sport of both; while the habit of intellectual +dissipation, thus engendered, cannot fail, in course of time, to produce +a thoroughly emasculating effect both upon their mind and character. +“Multifarious reading,” said Robertson of Brighton, “weakens the mind +like smoking, and is an excuse for its lying dormant. It is the idlest +of all idlenesses, and leaves more of impotency than any other.” + +The evil is a growing one, and operates in various ways. Its least +mischief is shallowness; its greatest, the aversion to steady labour +which it induces, and the low and feeble tone of mind which it +encourages. If we would be really wise, we must diligently apply +ourselves, and confront the same continuous application which our +forefathers did; for labour is still, and ever will be, the inevitable +price set upon everything which is valuable. We must be satisfied to +work with a purpose, and wait the results with patience. All progress, +of the best kind, is slow; but to him who works faithfully and zealously +the reward will, doubtless, be vouchsafed in good time. The spirit of +industry, embodied in a man’s daily life, will gradually lead him to +exercise his powers on objects outside himself, of greater dignity and +more extended usefulness. And still we must labour on; for the work of +self-culture is never finished. “To be employed,” said the poet Gray, +“is to be happy.” “It is better to wear out than rust out,” said Bishop +Cumberland. “Have we not all eternity to rest in?” exclaimed Arnauld. +“Repos ailleurs” was the motto of Marnix de St. Aldegonde, the energetic +and ever-working friend of William the Silent. + +It is the use we make of the powers entrusted to us, which constitutes +our only just claim to respect. He who employs his one talent aright is +as much to be honoured as he to whom ten talents have been given. There +is really no more personal merit attaching to the possession of superior +intellectual powers than there is in the succession to a large estate. +How are those powers used—how is that estate employed? The mind may +accumulate large stores of knowledge without any useful purpose; but the +knowledge must be allied to goodness and wisdom, and embodied in upright +character, else it is naught. Pestalozzi even held intellectual training +by itself to be pernicious; insisting that the roots of all knowledge +must strike and feed in the soil of the rightly-governed will. The +acquisition of knowledge may, it is true, protect a man against the +meaner felonies of life; but not in any degree against its selfish vices, +unless fortified by sound principles and habits. Hence do we find in +daily life so many instances of men who are well-informed in intellect, +but utterly deformed in character; filled with the learning of the +schools, yet possessing little practical wisdom, and offering examples +for warning rather than imitation. An often quoted expression at this +day is that “Knowledge is power;” but so also are fanaticism, despotism, +and ambition. Knowledge of itself, unless wisely directed, might merely +make bad men more dangerous, and the society in which it was regarded as +the highest good, little better than a pandemonium. + +It is possible that at this day we may even exaggerate the importance of +literary culture. We are apt to imagine that because we possess many +libraries, institutes, and museums, we are making great progress. But +such facilities may as often be a hindrance as a help to individual +self-culture of the highest kind. The possession of a library, or the +free use of it, no more constitutes learning, than the possession of +wealth constitutes generosity. Though we undoubtedly possess great +facilities it is nevertheless true, as of old, that wisdom and +understanding can only become the possession of individual men by +travelling the old road of observation, attention, perseverance, and +industry. The possession of the mere materials of knowledge is something +very different from wisdom and understanding, which are reached through a +higher kind of discipline than that of reading,—which is often but a mere +passive reception of other men’s thoughts; there being little or no +active effort of mind in the transaction. Then how much of our reading +is but the indulgence of a sort of intellectual dram-drinking, imparting +a grateful excitement for the moment, without the slightest effect in +improving and enriching the mind or building up the character. Thus many +indulge themselves in the conceit that they are cultivating their minds, +when they are only employed in the humbler occupation of killing time, of +which perhaps the best that can be said is that it keeps them from doing +worse things. + +It is also to be borne in mind that the experience gathered from books, +though often valuable, is but of the nature of _learning_; whereas the +experience gained from actual life is of the nature of _wisdom_; and a +small store of the latter is worth vastly more than any stock of the +former. Lord Bolingbroke truly said that “Whatever study tends neither +directly nor indirectly to make us better men and citizens, is at best +but a specious and ingenious sort of idleness, and the knowledge we +acquire by it, only a creditable kind of ignorance—nothing more.” + +Useful and instructive though good reading may be, it is yet only one +mode of cultivating the mind; and is much less influential than practical +experience and good example in the formation of character. There were +wise, valiant, and true-hearted men bred in England, long before the +existence of a reading public. Magna Charta was secured by men who +signed the deed with their marks. Though altogether unskilled in the art +of deciphering the literary signs by which principles were denominated +upon paper, they yet understood and appreciated, and boldly contended +for, the things themselves. Thus the foundations of English liberty were +laid by men, who, though illiterate, were nevertheless of the very +highest stamp of character. And it must be admitted that the chief +object of culture is, not merely to fill the mind with other men’s +thoughts, and to be the passive recipient of their impressions of things, +but to enlarge our individual intelligence, and render us more useful and +efficient workers in the sphere of life to which we may be called. Many +of our most energetic and useful workers have been but sparing readers. +Brindley and Stephenson did not learn to read and write until they +reached manhood, and yet they did great works and lived manly lives; John +Hunter could barely read or write when he was twenty years old, though he +could make tables and chairs with any carpenter in the trade. “I never +read,” said the great physiologist when lecturing before his class; +“this”—pointing to some part of the subject before him—“this is the work +that you must study if you wish to become eminent in your profession.” +When told that one of his contemporaries had charged him with being +ignorant of the dead languages, he said, “I would undertake to teach him +that on the dead body which he never knew in any language, dead or +living.” + +It is not then how much a man may know, that is of importance, but the +end and purpose for which he knows it. The object of knowledge should be +to mature wisdom and improve character, to render us better, happier, and +more useful; more benevolent, more energetic, and more efficient in the +pursuit of every high purpose in life. “When people once fall into the +habit of admiring and encouraging ability as such, without reference to +moral character—and religious and political opinions are the concrete +form of moral character—they are on the highway to all sorts of +degradation.” {329} We must ourselves _be_ and _do_, and not rest +satisfied merely with reading and meditating over what other men have +been and done. Our best light must be made life, and our best thought +action. At least we ought to be able to say, as Richter did, “I have +made as much out of myself as could be made of the stuff, and no man +should require more;” for it is every man’s duty to discipline and guide +himself, with God’s help, according to his responsibilities and the +faculties with which he has been endowed. + +Self-discipline and self-control are the beginnings of practical wisdom; +and these must have their root in self-respect. Hope springs from +it—hope, which is the companion of power, and the mother of success; for +whoso hopes strongly has within him the gift of miracles. The humblest +may say, “To respect myself, to develop myself—this is my true duty in +life. An integral and responsible part of the great system of society, I +owe it to society and to its Author not to degrade or destroy either my +body, mind, or instincts. On the contrary, I am bound to the best of my +power to give to those parts of my constitution the highest degree of +perfection possible. I am not only to suppress the evil, but to evoke +the good elements in my nature. And as I respect myself, so am I equally +bound to respect others, as they on their part are bound to respect me.” +Hence mutual respect, justice, and order, of which law becomes the +written record and guarantee. + +Self-respect is the noblest garment with which a man may clothe +himself—the most elevating feeling with which the mind can be inspired. +One of Pythagoras’s wisest maxims, in his ‘Golden Verses,’ is that with +which he enjoins the pupil to “reverence himself.” Borne up by this high +idea, he will not defile his body by sensuality, nor his mind by servile +thoughts. This sentiment, carried into daily life, will be found at the +root of all the virtues—cleanliness, sobriety, chastity, morality, and +religion. “The pious and just honouring of ourselves,” said Milton, “may +be thought the radical moisture and fountain-head from whence every +laudable and worthy enterprise issues forth.” To think meanly of one’s +self, is to sink in one’s own estimation as well as in the estimation of +others. And as the thoughts are, so will the acts be. Man cannot aspire +if he look down; if he will rise, he must look up. The very humblest may +be sustained by the proper indulgence of this feeling. Poverty itself +may be lifted and lighted up by self-respect; and it is truly a noble +sight to see a poor man hold himself upright amidst his temptations, and +refuse to demean himself by low actions. + +One way in which self-culture may be degraded is by regarding it too +exclusively as a means of “getting on.” Viewed in this light, it is +unquestionable that education is one of the best investments of time and +labour. In any line of life, intelligence will enable a man to adapt +himself more readily to circumstances, suggest improved methods of +working, and render him more apt, skilled and effective in all respects. +He who works with his head as well as his hands, will come to look at his +business with a clearer eye; and he will become conscious of increasing +power—perhaps the most cheering consciousness the human mind can cherish. +The power of self-help will gradually grow; and in proportion to a man’s +self-respect, will he be armed against the temptation of low indulgences. +Society and its action will be regarded with quite a new interest, his +sympathies will widen and enlarge, and he will thus be attracted to work +for others as well as for himself. + +Self-culture may not, however, end in eminence, as in the numerous +instances above cited. The great majority of men, in all times, however +enlightened, must necessarily be engaged in the ordinary avocations of +industry; and no degree of culture which can be conferred upon the +community at large will ever enable them—even were it desirable, which it +is not—to get rid of the daily work of society, which must be done. But +this, we think, may also be accomplished. We can elevate the condition +of labour by allying it to noble thoughts, which confer a grace upon the +lowliest as well as the highest rank. For no matter how poor or humble a +man may be, the great thinker of this and other days may come in and sit +down with him, and be his companion for the time, though his dwelling be +the meanest hut. It is thus that the habit of well-directed reading may +become a source of the greatest pleasure and self-improvement, and +exercise a gentle coercion, with the most beneficial results, over the +whole tenour of a man’s character and conduct. And even though +self-culture may not bring wealth, it will at all events give one the +companionship of elevated thoughts. A nobleman once contemptuously asked +of a sage, “What have you got by all your philosophy?” “At least I have +got society in myself,” was the wise man’s reply. + +But many are apt to feel despondent, and become discouraged in the work +of self-culture, because they do not “get on” in the world so fast as +they think they deserve to do. Having planted their acorn, they expect +to see it grow into an oak at once. They have perhaps looked upon +knowledge in the light of a marketable commodity, and are consequently +mortified because it does not sell as they expected it would do. Mr. +Tremenheere, in one of his ‘Education Reports’ (for 1840–1), states that +a schoolmaster in Norfolk, finding his school rapidly falling off, made +inquiry into the cause, and ascertained that the reason given by the +majority of the parents for withdrawing their children was, that they had +expected “education was to make them better off than they were before,” +but that having found it had “done them no good,” they had taken their +children from school, and would give themselves no further trouble about +education! + +The same low idea of self-culture is but too prevalent in other classes, +and is encouraged by the false views of life which are always more or +less current in society. But to regard self-culture either as a means of +getting past others in the world, or of intellectual dissipation and +amusement, rather than as a power to elevate the character and expand the +spiritual nature, is to place it on a very low level. To use the words +of Bacon, “Knowledge is not a shop for profit or sale, but a rich +storehouse for the glory of the Creator and the relief of man’s estate.” +It is doubtless most honourable for a man to labour to elevate himself, +and to better his condition in society, but this is not to be done at the +sacrifice of himself. To make the mind the mere drudge of the body, is +putting it to a very servile use; and to go about whining and bemoaning +our pitiful lot because we fail in achieving that success in life which, +after all, depends rather upon habits of industry and attention to +business details than upon knowledge, is the mark of a small, and often +of a sour mind. Such a temper cannot better be reproved than in the +words of Robert Southey, who thus wrote to a friend who sought his +counsel: “I would give you advice if it could be of use; but there is no +curing those who choose to be diseased. A good man and a wise man may at +times be angry with the world, at times grieved for it; but be sure no +man was ever discontented with the world if he did his duty in it. If a +man of education, who has health, eyes, hands, and leisure, wants an +object, it is only because God Almighty has bestowed all those blessings +upon a man who does not deserve them.” + +Another way in which education may be prostituted is by employing it as a +mere means of intellectual dissipation and amusement. Many are the +ministers to this taste in our time. There is almost a mania for +frivolity and excitement, which exhibits itself in many forms in our +popular literature. To meet the public taste, our books and periodicals +must now be highly spiced, amusing, and comic, not disdaining slang, and +illustrative of breaches of all laws, human and divine. Douglas Jerrold +once observed of this tendency, “I am convinced the world will get tired +(at least I hope so) of this eternal guffaw about all things. After all, +life has something serious in it. It cannot be all a comic history of +humanity. Some men would, I believe, write a Comic Sermon on the Mount. +Think of a Comic History of England, the drollery of Alfred, the fun of +Sir Thomas More, the farce of his daughter begging the dead head and +clasping it in her coffin on her bosom. Surely the world will be sick of +this blasphemy.” John Sterling, in a like spirit, said:—“Periodicals and +novels are to all in this generation, but more especially to those whose +minds are still unformed and in the process of formation, a new and more +effectual substitute for the plagues of Egypt, vermin that corrupt the +wholesome waters and infest our chambers.” + +As a rest from toil and a relaxation from graver pursuits, the perusal of +a well-written story, by a writer of genius, is a high intellectual +pleasure; and it is a description of literature to which all classes of +readers, old and young, are attracted as by a powerful instinct; nor +would we have any of them debarred from its enjoyment in a reasonable +degree. But to make it the exclusive literary diet, as some do,—to +devour the garbage with which the shelves of circulating libraries are +filled,—and to occupy the greater portion of the leisure hours in +studying the preposterous pictures of human life which so many of them +present, is worse than waste of time: it is positively pernicious. The +habitual novel-reader indulges in fictitious feelings so much, that there +is great risk of sound and healthy feeling becoming perverted or +benumbed. “I never go to hear a tragedy,” said a gay man once to the +Archbishop of York, “it wears my heart out.” The literary pity evoked by +fiction leads to no corresponding action; the susceptibilities which it +excites involve neither inconvenience nor self-sacrifice; so that the +heart that is touched too often by the fiction may at length become +insensible to the reality. The steel is gradually rubbed out of the +character, and it insensibly loses its vital spring. “Drawing fine +pictures of virtue in one’s mind,” said Bishop Butler, “is so far from +necessarily or certainly conducive to form a _habit_ of it in him who +thus employs himself, that it may even harden the mind in a contrary +course, and render it gradually more insensible.” + +Amusement in moderation is wholesome, and to be commended; but amusement +in excess vitiates the whole nature, and is a thing to be carefully +guarded against. The maxim is often quoted of “All work and no play +makes Jack a dull boy;” but all play and no work makes him something +greatly worse. Nothing can be more hurtful to a youth than to have his +soul sodden with pleasure. The best qualities of his mind are impaired; +common enjoyments become tasteless; his appetite for the higher kind of +pleasures is vitiated; and when he comes to face the work and the duties +of life, the result is usually aversion and disgust. “Fast” men waste +and exhaust the powers of life, and dry up the sources of true happiness. +Having forestalled their spring, they can produce no healthy growth of +either character or intellect. A child without simplicity, a maiden +without innocence, a boy without truthfulness, are not more piteous +sights than the man who has wasted and thrown away his youth in +self-indulgence. Mirabeau said of himself, “My early years have already +in a great measure disinherited the succeeding ones, and dissipated a +great part of my vital powers.” As the wrong done to another to-day +returns upon ourselves to-morrow, so the sins of our youth rise up in our +age to scourge us. When Lord Bacon says that “strength of nature in +youth passeth over many excesses which are owing a man until he is old,” +he exposes a physical as well as a moral fact which cannot be too well +weighed in the conduct of life. “I assure you,” wrote Giusti the Italian +to a friend, “I pay a heavy price for existence. It is true that our +lives are not at our own disposal. Nature pretends to give them gratis +at the beginning, and then sends in her account.” The worst of youthful +indiscretions is, not that they destroy health, so much as that they +sully manhood. The dissipated youth becomes a tainted man; and often he +cannot be pure, even if he would. If cure there be, it is only to be +found in inoculating the mind with a fervent spirit of duty, and in +energetic application to useful work. + +One of the most gifted of Frenchmen, in point of great intellectual +endowments, was Benjamin Constant; but, _blasé_ at twenty, his life was +only a prolonged wail, instead of a harvest of the great deeds which he +was capable of accomplishing with ordinary diligence and self-control. +He resolved upon doing so many things, which he never did, that people +came to speak of him as Constant the Inconstant. He was a fluent and +brilliant writer, and cherished the ambition of writing works, “which the +world would not willingly let die.” But whilst Constant affected the +highest thinking, unhappily he practised the lowest living; nor did the +transcendentalism of his books atone for the meanness of his life. He +frequented the gaming-tables while engaged in preparing his work upon +religion, and carried on a disreputable intrigue while writing his +‘Adolphe.’ With all his powers of intellect, he was powerless, because +he had no faith in virtue. “Bah!” said he, “what are honour and dignity? +The longer I live, the more clearly I see there is nothing in them.” It +was the howl of a miserable man. He described himself as but “ashes and +dust.” “I pass,” said he, “like a shadow over the earth, accompanied by +misery and _ennui_.” He wished for Voltaire’s energy, which he would +rather have possessed than his genius. But he had no strength of +purpose—nothing but wishes: his life, prematurely exhausted, had become +but a heap of broken links. He spoke of himself as a person with one +foot in the air. He admitted that he had no principles, and no moral +consistency. Hence, with his splendid talents, he contrived to do +nothing; and, after living many years miserable, he died worn out and +wretched. + +The career of Augustin Thierry, the author of the ‘History of the Norman +Conquest,’ affords an admirable contrast to that of Constant. His entire +life presented a striking example of perseverance, diligence, self +culture, and untiring devotion to knowledge. In the pursuit he lost his +eyesight, lost his health, but never lost his love of truth. When so +feeble that he was carried from room to room, like a helpless infant, in +the arms of a nurse, his brave spirit never failed him; and blind and +helpless though he was, he concluded his literary career in the following +noble words:—“If, as I think, the interest of science is counted in the +number of great national interests, I have given my country all that the +soldier, mutilated on the field of battle, gives her. Whatever may be +the fate of my labours, this example, I hope, will not be lost. I would +wish it to serve to combat the species of moral weakness which is _the +disease_ of our present generation; to bring back into the straight road +of life some of those enervated souls that complain of wanting faith, +that know not what to do, and seek everywhere, without finding it, an +object of worship and admiration. Why say, with so much bitterness, that +in the world, constituted as it is, there is no air for all lungs—no +employment for all minds? Is not calm and serious study there? and is +not that a refuge, a hope, a field within the reach of all of us? With +it, evil days are passed over without their weight being felt. Every one +can make his own destiny—every one employ his life nobly. This is what I +have done, and would do again if I had to recommence my career; I would +choose that which has brought me where I am. Blind, and suffering +without hope, and almost without intermission, I may give this testimony, +which from me will not appear suspicious. There is something in the +world better than sensual enjoyments, better than fortune, better than +health itself—it is devotion to knowledge.” + +Coleridge, in many respects, resembled Constant. He possessed equally +brilliant powers, but was similarly infirm of purpose. With all his +great intellectual gifts, he wanted the gift of industry, and was averse +to continuous labour. He wanted also the sense of independence, and +thought it no degradation to leave his wife and children to be maintained +by the brain-work of the noble Southey, while he himself retired to +Highgate Grove to discourse transcendentalism to his disciples, looking +down contemptuously upon the honest work going forward beneath him amidst +the din and smoke of London. With remunerative employment at his command +he stooped to accept the charity of friends; and, notwithstanding his +lofty ideas of philosophy, he condescended to humiliations from which +many a day-labourer would have shrunk. How different in spirit was +Southey! labouring not merely at work of his own choice, and at taskwork +often tedious and distasteful, but also unremittingly and with the utmost +eagerness seeking and storing knowledge purely for the love of it. Every +day, every hour had its allotted employment: engagements to publishers +requiring punctual fulfilment; the current expenses of a large household +duty to provide: for Southey had no crop growing while his pen was idle. +“My ways,” he used to say, “are as broad as the king’s high-road, and my +means lie in an inkstand.” + +Robert Nicoll wrote to a friend, after reading the ‘Recollections of +Coleridge,’ “What a mighty intellect was lost in that man for want of a +little energy—a little determination!” Nicoll himself was a true and +brave spirit, who died young, but not before he had encountered and +overcome great difficulties in life. At his outset, while carrying on a +small business as a bookseller, he found himself weighed down with a debt +of only twenty pounds, which he said he felt “weighing like a millstone +round his neck,” and that, “if he had it paid he never would borrow again +from mortal man.” Writing to his mother at the time he said, “Fear not +for me, dear mother, for I feel myself daily growing firmer and more +hopeful in spirit. The more I think and reflect—and thinking, not +reading, is now my occupation—I feel that, whether I be growing richer or +not, I am growing a wiser man, which is far better. Pain, poverty, and +all the other wild beasts of life which so affrighten others, I am so +bold as to think I could look in the face without shrinking, without +losing respect for myself, faith in man’s high destinies, or trust in +God. There is a point which it costs much mental toil and struggling to +gain, but which, when once gained, a man can look down from, as a +traveller from a lofty mountain, on storms raging below, while he is +walking in sunshine. That I have yet gained this point in life I will +not say, but I feel myself daily nearer to it.” + +It is not ease, but effort—not facility, but difficulty, that makes men. +There is, perhaps, no station in life, in which difficulties have not to +be encountered and overcome before any decided measure of success can be +achieved. Those difficulties are, however, our best instructors, as our +mistakes often form our best experience. Charles James Fox was +accustomed to say that he hoped more from a man who failed, and yet went +on in spite of his failure, than from the buoyant career of the +successful. “It is all very well,” said he, “to tell me that a young man +has distinguished himself by a brilliant first speech. He may go on, or +he may be satisfied with his first triumph; but show me a young man who +has _not_ succeeded at first, and nevertheless has gone on, and I will +back that young man to do better than most of those who have succeeded at +the first trial.” + +We learn wisdom from failure much more than from success. We often +discover what _will_ do, by finding out what will not do; and probably he +who never made a mistake never made a discovery. It was the failure in +the attempt to make a sucking-pump act, when the working bucket was more +than thirty-three feet above the surface of the water to be raised, that +led observant men to study the law of atmospheric pressure, and opened a +new field of research to the genius of Galileo, Torrecelli, and Boyle. +John Hunter used to remark that the art of surgery would not advance +until professional men had the courage to publish their failures as well +as their successes. Watt the engineer said, of all things most wanted in +mechanical engineering was a history of failures: “We want,” he said, “a +book of blots.” When Sir Humphry Davy was once shown a dexterously +manipulated experiment, he said—“I thank God I was not made a dexterous +manipulator, for the most important of my discoveries have been suggested +to me by failures.” Another distinguished investigator in physical +science has left it on record that, whenever in the course of his +researches he encountered an apparently insuperable obstacle, he +generally found himself on the brink of some discovery. The very +greatest things—great thoughts, discoveries, inventions—have usually been +nurtured in hardship, often pondered over in sorrow, and at length +established with difficulty. + +Beethoven said of Rossini, that he had in him the stuff to have made a +good musician if he had only, when a boy, been well flogged; but that he +had been spoilt by the facility with which he produced. Men who feel +their strength within them need not fear to encounter adverse opinions; +they have far greater reason to fear undue praise and too friendly +criticism. When Mendelssohn was about to enter the orchestra at +Birmingham, on the first performance of his ‘Elijah,’ he said laughingly +to one of his friends and critics, “Stick your claws into me! Don’t tell +me what you like, but what you don’t like!” + +It has been said, and truly, that it is the defeat that tries the general +more than the victory. Washington lost more battles than he gained; but +he succeeded in the end. The Romans, in their most victorious campaigns, +almost invariably began with defeats. Moreau used to be compared by his +companions to a drum, which nobody hears of except it be beaten. +Wellington’s military genius was perfected by encounter with difficulties +of apparently the most overwhelming character, but which only served to +nerve his resolution, and bring out more prominently his great qualities +as a man and a general. So the skilful mariner obtains his best +experience amidst storms and tempests, which train him to self-reliance, +courage, and the highest discipline; and we probably own to rough seas +and wintry nights the best training of our race of British seamen, who +are, certainly, not surpassed by any in the world. + +Necessity may be a hard schoolmistress, but she is generally found the +best. Though the ordeal of adversity is one from which we naturally +shrink, yet, when it comes, we must bravely and manfully encounter it. +Burns says truly, + + “Though losses and crosses + Be lessons right severe, + There’s wit there, you’ll get there, + You’ll find no other where.” + +“Sweet indeed are the uses of adversity.” They reveal to us our powers, +and call forth our energies. If there be real worth in the character, +like sweet herbs, it will give forth its finest fragrance when pressed. +“Crosses,” says the old proverb, “are the ladders that lead to heaven.” +“What is even poverty itself,” asks Richter, “that a man should murmur +under it? It is but as the pain of piercing a maiden’s ear, and you hang +precious jewels in the wound.” In the experience of life it is found +that the wholesome discipline of adversity in strong natures usually +carries with it a self-preserving influence. Many are found capable of +bravely bearing up under privations, and cheerfully encountering +obstructions, who are afterwards found unable to withstand the more +dangerous influences of prosperity. It is only a weak man whom the wind +deprives of his cloak: a man of average strength is more in danger of +losing it when assailed by the beams of a too genial sun. Thus it often +needs a higher discipline and a stronger character to bear up under good +fortune than under adverse. Some generous natures kindle and warm with +prosperity, but there are many on whom wealth has no such influence. +Base hearts it only hardens, making those who were mean and servile, mean +and proud. But while prosperity is apt to harden the heart to pride, +adversity in a man of resolution will serve to ripen it into fortitude. +To use the words of Burke, “Difficulty is a severe instructor, set over +us by the supreme ordinance of a parental guardian and instructor, who +knows us better than we know ourselves, as He loves us better too. He +that wrestles with us strengthens our nerves, and sharpens our skill: our +antagonist is thus our helper.” Without the necessity of encountering +difficulty, life might be easier, but men would be worth less. For +trials, wisely improved, train the character, and teach self-help; thus +hardship itself may often prove the wholesomest discipline for us, though +we recognise it not. When the gallant young Hodson, unjustly removed +from his Indian command, felt himself sore pressed down by unmerited +calumny and reproach, he yet preserved the courage to say to a friend, “I +strive to look the worst boldly in the face, as I would an enemy in the +field, and to do my appointed work resolutely and to the best of my +ability, satisfied that there is a reason for all; and that even irksome +duties well done bring their own reward, and that, if not, still they +_are_ duties.” + +The battle of life is, in most cases, fought up-hill; and to win it +without a struggle were perhaps to win it without honour. If there were +no difficulties there would be no success; if there were nothing to +struggle for, there would be nothing to be achieved. Difficulties may +intimidate the weak, but they act only as a wholesome stimulus to men of +resolution and valour. All experience of life indeed serves to prove +that the impediments thrown in the way of human advancement may for the +most part be overcome by steady good conduct, honest zeal, activity, +perseverance, and above all by a determined resolution to surmount +difficulties, and stand up manfully against misfortune. + +The school of Difficulty is the best school of moral discipline, for +nations as for individuals. Indeed, the history of difficulty would be +but a history of all the great and good things that have yet been +accomplished by men. It is hard to say how much northern nations owe to +their encounter with a comparatively rude and changeable climate and an +originally sterile soil, which is one of the necessities of their +condition,—involving a perennial struggle with difficulties such as the +natives of sunnier climes know nothing of. And thus it may be, that +though our finest products are exotic, the skill and industry which have +been necessary to rear them, have issued in the production of a native +growth of men not surpassed on the globe. + +Wherever there is difficulty, the individual man must come out for better +for worse. Encounter with it will train his strength, and discipline his +skill; heartening him for future effort, as the racer, by being trained +to run against the hill, at length courses with facility. The road to +success may be steep to climb, and it puts to the proof the energies of +him who would reach the summit. But by experience a man soon learns that +obstacles are to be overcome by grappling with them,—that the nettle +feels as soft as silk when it is boldly grasped,—and that the most +effective help towards realizing the object proposed is the moral +conviction that we can and will accomplish it. Thus difficulties often +fall away of themselves before the determination to overcome them. + +Much will be done if we do but try. Nobody knows what he can do till he +has tried; and few try their best till they have been forced to do it. +“_If_ I could do such and such a thing,” sighs the desponding youth. But +nothing will be done if he only wishes. The desire must ripen into +purpose and effort; and one energetic attempt is worth a thousand +aspirations. It is these thorny “ifs”—the mutterings of impotence and +despair—which so often hedge round the field of possibility, and prevent +anything being done or even attempted. “A difficulty,” said Lord +Lyndhurst, “is a thing to be overcome;” grapple with it at once; facility +will come with practice, and strength and fortitude with repeated effort. +Thus the mind and character may be trained to an almost perfect +discipline, and enabled to act with a grace, spirit, and liberty, almost +incomprehensible to those who have not passed through a similar +experience. + +Everything that we learn is the mastery of a difficulty; and the mastery +of one helps to the mastery of others. Things which may at first sight +appear comparatively valueless in education—such as the study of the dead +languages, and the relations of lines and surfaces which we call +mathematics—are really of the greatest practical value, not so much +because of the information which they yield, as because of the +development which they compel. The mastery of these studies evokes +effort, and cultivates powers of application, which otherwise might have +lain dormant, Thus one thing leads to another, and so the work goes on +through life—encounter with difficulty ending only when life and culture +end. But indulging in the feeling of discouragement never helped any one +over a difficulty, and never will. D’Alembert’s advice to the student +who complained to him about his want of success in mastering the first +elements of mathematics was the right one—“Go on, sir, and faith and +strength will come to you.” + +The danseuse who turns a pirouette, the violinist who plays a sonata, +have acquired their dexterity by patient repetition and after many +failures. Carissimi, when praised for the ease and grace of his +melodies, exclaimed, “Ah! you little know with what difficulty this ease +has been acquired.” Sir Joshua Reynolds, when once asked how long it had +taken him to paint a certain picture, replied, “All my life.” Henry +Clay, the American orator, when giving advice to young men, thus +described to them the secret of his success in the cultivation of his +art: “I owe my success in life,” said he, “chiefly to one +circumstance—that at the age of twenty-seven I commenced, and continued +for years, the process of daily reading and speaking upon the contents of +some historical or scientific book. These off-hand efforts were made, +sometimes in a cornfield, at others in the forest, and not unfrequently +in some distant barn, with the horse and the ox for my auditors. It is +to this early practice of the art of all arts that I am indebted for the +primary and leading impulses that stimulated me onward and have shaped +and moulded my whole subsequent destiny.” + +Curran, the Irish orator, when a youth, had a strong defect in his +articulation, and at school he was known as “stuttering Jack Curran.” +While he was engaged in the study of the law, and still struggling to +overcome his defect, he was stung into eloquence by the sarcasms of a +member of a debating club, who characterised him as “Orator Mum;” for, +like Cowper, when he stood up to speak on a previous occasion, Curran had +not been able to utter a word. The taunt stung him and he replied in a +triumphant speech. This accidental discovery in himself of the gift of +eloquence encouraged him to proceed in his studies with renewed energy. +He corrected his enunciation by reading aloud, emphatically and +distinctly, the best passages in literature, for several hours every day, +studying his features before a mirror, and adopting a method of +gesticulation suited to his rather awkward and ungraceful figure. He +also proposed cases to himself, which he argued with as much care as if +he had been addressing a jury. Curran began business with the +qualification which Lord Eldon stated to be the first requisite for +distinction, that is, “to be not worth a shilling.” While working his +way laboriously at the bar, still oppressed by the diffidence which had +overcome him in his debating club, he was on one occasion provoked by the +Judge (Robinson) into making a very severe retort. In the case under +discussion, Curran observed “that he had never met the law as laid down +by his lordship in any book in his library.” “That may be, sir,” said +the judge, in a contemptuous tone, “but I suspect that _your_ library is +very small.” His lordship was notoriously a furious political partisan, +the author of several anonymous pamphlets characterised by unusual +violence and dogmatism. Curran, roused by the allusion to his straitened +circumstances, replied thus; “It is very true, my lord, that I am poor, +and the circumstance has certainly curtailed my library; my books are not +numerous, but they are select, and I hope they have been perused with +proper dispositions. I have prepared myself for this high profession by +the study of a few good works, rather than by the composition of a great +many bad ones. I am not ashamed of my poverty; but I should be ashamed +of my wealth, could I have stooped to acquire it by servility and +corruption. If I rise not to rank, I shall at least be honest; and +should I ever cease to be so, many an example shows me that an ill-gained +elevation, by making me the more conspicuous, would only make me the more +universally and the more notoriously contemptible.” + +The extremest poverty has been no obstacle in the way of men devoted to +the duty of self-culture. Professor Alexander Murray, the linguist, +learnt to write by scribbling his letters on an old wool-card with the +end of a burnt heather stem. The only book which his father, who was a +poor shepherd, possessed, was a penny Shorter Catechism; but that, being +thought too valuable for common use, was carefully preserved in a +cupboard for the Sunday catechisings. Professor Moor, when a young man, +being too poor to purchase Newton’s ‘Principia,’ borrowed the book, and +copied the whole of it with his own hand. Many poor students, while +labouring daily for their living, have only been able to snatch an atom +of knowledge here and there at intervals, as birds do their food in +winter time when the fields are covered with snow. They have struggled +on, and faith and hope have come to them. A well-known author and +publisher, William Chambers, of Edinburgh, speaking before an assemblage +of young men in that city, thus briefly described to them his humble +beginnings, for their encouragement: “I stand before you,” he said, “a +self-educated man. My education was that which is supplied at the humble +parish schools of Scotland; and it was only when I went to Edinburgh, a +poor boy, that I devoted my evenings, after the labours of the day, to +the cultivation of that intellect which the Almighty has given me. From +seven or eight in the morning till nine or ten at night was I at my +business as a bookseller’s apprentice, and it was only during hours after +these, stolen from sleep, that I could devote myself to study. I did not +read novels: my attention was devoted to physical science, and other +useful matters. I also taught myself French. I look back to those times +with great pleasure, and am almost sorry I have not to go through the +same experience again; for I reaped more pleasure when I had not a +sixpence in my pocket, studying in a garret in Edinburgh, then I now find +when sitting amidst all the elegancies and comforts of a parlour.” + +William Cobbett’s account of how he learnt English Grammar is full of +interest and instruction for all students labouring under difficulties. +“I learned grammar,” said he, “when I was a private soldier on the pay of +sixpence a day. The edge of my berth, or that of my guard-bed, was my +seat to study in; my knapsack was my book-case; a bit of board lying on +my lap was my writing-table; and the task did not demand anything like a +year of my life. I had no money to purchase candle or oil; in winter +time it was rarely that I could get any evening light but that of the +fire, and only my turn even of that. And if I, under such circumstances, +and without parent or friend to advise or encourage me, accomplished this +undertaking, what excuse can there be for any youth, however poor, +however pressed with business, or however circumstanced as to room or +other conveniences? To buy a pen or a sheet of paper I was compelled to +forego some portion of food, though in a state of half-starvation: I had +no moment of time that I could call my own; and I had to read and to +write amidst the talking, laughing, singing, whistling, and brawling of +at least half a score of the most thoughtless of men, and that, too, in +the hours of their freedom from all control. Think not lightly of the +farthing that I had to give, now and then, for ink, pen, or paper! That +farthing was, alas! a great sum to me! I was as tall as I am now; I had +great health and great exercise. The whole of the money, not expended +for us at market, was two-pence a week for each man. I remember, and +well I may! that on one occasion I, after all necessary expenses, had, on +a Friday, made shifts to have a halfpenny in reserve, which I had +destined for the purchase of a redherring in the morning; but, when I +pulled off my clothes at night, so hungry then as to be hardly able to +endure life, I found that I had lost my halfpenny! I buried my head +under the miserable sheet and rug, and cried like a child! And again I +say, if, I, under circumstances like these, could encounter and overcome +this task, is there, can there be, in the whole world, a youth to find an +excuse for the non-performance?” + +We have been informed of an equally striking instance of perseverance and +application in learning on the part of a French political exile in +London. His original occupation was that of a stonemason, at which he +found employment for some time; but work becoming slack, he lost his +place, and poverty stared him in the face. In his dilemma he called upon +a fellow exile profitably engaged in teaching French, and consulted him +what he ought to do to earn a living. The answer was, “Become a +professor!” “A professor?” answered the mason—“I, who am only a workman, +speaking but a patois! Surely you are jesting?” “On the contrary, I am +quite serious,” said the other, “and again I advise you—become a +professor; place yourself under me, and I will undertake to teach you how +to teach others.” “No, no!” replied the mason, “it is impossible; I am +too old to learn; I am too little of a scholar; I cannot be a professor.” +He went away, and again he tried to obtain employment at his trade. From +London he went into the provinces, and travelled several hundred miles in +vain; he could not find a master. Returning to London, he went direct to +his former adviser, and said, “I have tried everywhere for work, and +failed; I will now try to be a professor!” He immediately placed himself +under instruction; and being a man of close application, of quick +apprehension, and vigorous intelligence, he speedily mastered the +elements of grammar, the rules of construction and composition, and (what +he had still in a great measure to learn) the correct pronunciation of +classical French. When his friend and instructor thought him +sufficiently competent to undertake the teaching of others, an +appointment, advertised as vacant, was applied for and obtained; and +behold our artisan at length become professor! It so happened, that the +seminary to which he was appointed was situated in a suburb of London +where he had formerly worked as a stonemason; and every morning the first +thing which met his eyes on looking out of his dressing-room window was a +stack of cottage chimneys which he had himself built! He feared for a +time lest he should be recognised in the village as the quondam workman, +and thus bring discredit on his seminary, which was of high standing. +But he need have been under no such apprehension, as he proved a most +efficient teacher, and his pupils were on more than one occasion publicly +complimented for their knowledge of French. Meanwhile, he secured the +respect and friendship of all who knew him—fellow-professors as well as +pupils; and when the story of his struggles, his difficulties, and his +past history, became known to them, they admired him more than ever. + +Sir Samuel Romilly was not less indefatigable as a self-cultivator. The +son of a jeweller, descended from a French refugee, he received little +education in his early years, but overcame all his disadvantages by +unwearied application, and by efforts constantly directed towards the +same end. “I determined,” he says, in his autobiography, “when I was +between fifteen and sixteen years of age, to apply myself seriously to +learning Latin, of which I, at that time, knew little more than some of +the most familiar rules of grammar. In the course of three or four +years, during which I thus applied myself, I had read almost every prose +writer of the age of pure Latinity, except those who have treated merely +of technical subjects, such as Varro, Columella, and Celsus. I had gone +three times through the whole of Livy, Sallust, and Tacitus. I had +studied the most celebrated orations of Cicero, and translated a great +deal of Homer. Terence, Virgil, Horace, Ovid, and Juvenal, I had read +over and over again.” He also studied geography, natural history, and +natural philosophy, and obtained a considerable acquaintance with general +knowledge. At sixteen he was articled to a clerk in Chancery; worked +hard; was admitted to the bar; and his industry and perseverance ensured +success. He became Solicitor-General under the Fox administration in +1806, and steadily worked his way to the highest celebrity in his +profession. Yet he was always haunted by a painful and almost oppressive +sense of his own disqualifications, and never ceased labouring to remedy +them. His autobiography is a lesson of instructive facts, worth volumes +of sentiment, and well deserves a careful perusal. + +Sir Walter Scott was accustomed to cite the case of his young friend John +Leyden as one of the most remarkable illustrations of the power of +perseverance which he had ever known. The son of a shepherd in one of +the wildest valleys of Roxburghshire, he was almost entirely self +educated. Like many Scotch shepherds’ sons—like Hogg, who taught himself +to write by copying the letters of a printed book as he lay watching his +flock on the hill-side—like Cairns, who from tending sheep on the +Lammermoors, raised himself by dint of application and industry to the +professor’s chair which he now so worthily holds—like Murray, Ferguson, +and many more, Leyden was early inspired by a thirst for knowledge. When +a poor barefooted boy, he walked six or eight miles across the moors +daily to learn reading at the little village schoolhouse of Kirkton; and +this was all the education he received; the rest he acquired for himself. +He found his way to Edinburgh to attend the college there, setting the +extremest penury at defiance. He was first discovered as a frequenter of +a small bookseller’s shop kept by Archibald Constable, afterwards so well +known as a publisher. He would pass hour after hour perched on a ladder +in mid-air, with some great folio in his hand, forgetful of the scanty +meal of bread and water which awaited him at his miserable lodging. +Access to books and lectures comprised all within the bounds of his +wishes. Thus he toiled and battled at the gates of science until his +unconquerable perseverance carried everything before it. Before he had +attained his nineteenth year he had astonished all the professors in +Edinburgh by his profound knowledge of Greek and Latin, and the general +mass of information he had acquired. Having turned his views to India, +he sought employment in the civil service, but failed. He was however +informed that a surgeon’s assistant’s commission was open to him. But he +was no surgeon, and knew no more of the profession than a child. He +could however learn. Then he was told that he must be ready to pass in +six months! Nothing daunted, he set to work, to acquire in six months +what usually required three years. At the end of six months he took his +degree with honour. Scott and a few friends helped to fit him out; and +he sailed for India, after publishing his beautiful poem ‘The Scenes of +Infancy.’ In India he promised to become one of the greatest of oriental +scholars, but was unhappily cut off by fever caught by exposure, and died +at an early age. + +The life of the late Dr. Lee, Professor of Hebrew at Cambridge, furnishes +one of the most remarkable instances in modern times of the power of +patient perseverance and resolute purpose in working out an honourable +career in literature. He received his education at a charity school at +Lognor, near Shrewsbury, but so little distinguished himself there, that +his master pronounced him one of the dullest boys that ever passed +through his hands. He was put apprentice to a carpenter, and worked at +that trade until he arrived at manhood. To occupy his leisure hours he +took to reading; and, some of the books containing Latin quotations, he +became desirous of ascertaining what they meant. He bought a Latin +grammar, and proceeded to learn Latin. As Stone, the Duke of Argyle’s +gardener, said, long before, “Does one need to know anything more than +the twenty-four letters in order to learn everything else that one +wishes?” Lee rose early and sat up late, and he succeeded in mastering +the Latin before his apprenticeship was out. Whilst working one day in +some place of worship, a copy of a Greek Testament fell in his way, and +he was immediately filled with the desire to learn that language. He +accordingly sold some of his Latin books, and purchased a Greek Grammar +and Lexicon. Taking pleasure in learning, he soon mastered the language. +Then he sold his Greek books, and bought Hebrew ones, and learnt that +language, unassisted by any instructor, without any hope of fame or +reward, but simply following the bent of his genius. He next proceeded +to learn the Chaldee, Syriac, and Samaritan dialects. But his studies +began to tell upon his health, and brought on disease in his eyes through +his long night watchings with his books. Having laid them aside for a +time and recovered his health, he went on with his daily work. His +character as a tradesman being excellent, his business improved, and his +means enabled him to marry, which he did when twenty-eight years old. He +determined now to devote himself to the maintenance of his family, and to +renounce the luxury of literature; accordingly he sold all his books. He +might have continued a working carpenter all his life, had not the chest +of tools upon which he depended for subsistence been destroyed by fire, +and destitution stared him in the face. He was too poor to buy new +tools, so he bethought him of teaching children their letters,—a +profession requiring the least possible capital. But though he had +mastered many languages, he was so defective in the common branches of +knowledge, that at first he could not teach them. Resolute of purpose, +however, he assiduously set to work, and taught himself arithmetic and +writing to such a degree as to be able to impart the knowledge of these +branches to little children. His unaffected, simple, and beautiful +character gradually attracted friends, and the acquirements of the +“learned carpenter” became bruited abroad. Dr. Scott, a neighbouring +clergyman, obtained for him the appointment of master of a charity school +in Shrewsbury, and introduced him to a distinguished Oriental scholar. +These friends supplied him with books, and Lee successively mastered +Arabic, Persic, and Hindostanee. He continued to pursue his studies +while on duty as a private in the local militia of the county; gradually +acquiring greater proficiency in languages. At length his kind patron, +Dr. Scott, enabled Lee to enter Queen’s College, Cambridge; and after a +course of study, in which he distinguished himself by his mathematical +acquirements, a vacancy occurring in the professorship of Arabic and +Hebrew, he was worthily elected to fill the honourable office. Besides +ably performing his duties as a professor, he voluntarily gave much of +his time to the instruction of missionaries going forth to preach the +Gospel to eastern tribes in their own tongue. He also made translations +of the Bible into several Asiatic dialects; and having mastered the New +Zealand language, he arranged a grammar and vocabulary for two New +Zealand chiefs who were then in England, which books are now in daily use +in the New Zealand schools. Such, in brief, is the remarkable history of +Dr. Samuel Lee; and it is but the counterpart of numerous similarly +instructive examples of the power of perseverance in self-culture, as +displayed in the lives of many of the most distinguished of our literary +and scientific men. + +There are many other illustrious names which might be cited to prove the +truth of the common saying that “it is never too late to learn.” Even at +advanced years men can do much, if they will determine on making a +beginning. Sir Henry Spelman did not begin the study of science until he +was between fifty and sixty years of age. Franklin was fifty before he +fully entered upon the study of Natural Philosophy. Dryden and Scott +were not known as authors until each was in his fortieth year. Boccaccio +was thirty-five when he commenced his literary career, and Alfieri was +forty-six when he began the study of Greek. Dr. Arnold learnt German at +an advanced age, for the purpose of reading Niebuhr in the original; and +in like manner James Watt, when about forty, while working at his trade +of an instrument maker in Glasgow, learnt French, German, and Italian, to +enable himself to peruse the valuable works on mechanical philosophy +which existed in those languages. Thomas Scott was fifty-six before he +began to learn Hebrew. Robert Hall was once found lying upon the floor, +racked by pain, learning Italian in his old age, to enable him to judge +of the parallel drawn by Macaulay between Milton and Dante. Handel was +forty-eight before he published any of his great works. Indeed hundreds +of instances might be given of men who struck out an entirely new path, +and successfully entered on new studies, at a comparatively advanced time +of life. None but the frivolous or the indolent will say, “I am too old +to learn.” {354} + +And here we would repeat what we have said before, that it is not men of +genius who move the world and take the lead in it, so much as men of +steadfastness, purpose, and indefatigable industry. Notwithstanding the +many undeniable instances of the precocity of men of genius, it is +nevertheless true that early cleverness gives no indication of the height +to which the grown man will reach. Precocity is sometimes a symptom of +disease rather than of intellectual vigour. What becomes of all the +“remarkably clever children?” Where are the duxes and prize boys? Trace +them through life, and it will frequently be found that the dull boys, +who were beaten at school, have shot ahead of them. The clever boys are +rewarded, but the prizes which they gain by their greater quickness and +facility do not always prove of use to them. What ought rather to be +rewarded is the endeavour, the struggle, and the obedience; for it is the +youth who does his best, though endowed with an inferiority of natural +powers, that ought above all others to be encouraged. + +An interesting chapter might be written on the subject of illustrious +dunces—dull boys, but brilliant men. We have room, however, for only a +few instances. Pietro di Cortona, the painter, was thought so stupid +that he was nicknamed “Ass’s Head” when a boy; and Tomaso Guidi was +generally known as “Heavy Tom” (Massaccio Tomasaccio), though by +diligence he afterwards raised himself to the highest eminence. Newton, +when at school, stood at the bottom of the lowest form but one. The boy +above Newton having kicked him, the dunce showed his pluck by challenging +him to a fight, and beat him. Then he set to work with a will, and +determined also to vanquish his antagonist as a scholar, which he did, +rising to the top of his class. Many of our greatest divines have been +anything but precocious. Isaac Barrow, when a boy at the Charterhouse +School, was notorious chiefly for his strong temper, pugnacious habits, +and proverbial idleness as a scholar; and he caused such grief to his +parents that his father used to say that, if it pleased God to take from +him any of his children, he hoped it might be Isaac, the least promising +of them all. Adam Clarke, when a boy, was proclaimed by his father to be +“a grievous dunce;” though he could roll large stones about. Dean Swift +was “plucked” at Dublin University, and only obtained his recommendation +to Oxford “speciali gratia.” The well-known Dr. Chalmers and Dr. Cook +{356a} were boys together at the parish school of St. Andrew’s; and they +were found so stupid and mischievous, that the master, irritated beyond +measure, dismissed them both as incorrigible dunces. + +The brilliant Sheridan showed so little capacity as a boy, that he was +presented to a tutor by his mother with the complimentary accompaniment +that he was an incorrigible dunce. Walter Scott was all but a dunce when +a boy, always much readier for a “bicker,” than apt at his lessons. At +the Edinburgh University, Professor Dalzell pronounced upon him the +sentence that “Dunce he was, and dunce he would remain.” Chatterton was +returned on his mother’s hands as “a fool, of whom nothing could be +made.” Burns was a dull boy, good only at athletic exercises. Goldsmith +spoke of himself, as a plant that flowered late. Alfieri left college no +wiser than he entered it, and did not begin the studies by which he +distinguished himself, until he had run half over Europe. Robert Clive +was a dunce, if not a reprobate, when a youth; but always full of energy, +even in badness. His family, glad to get rid of him, shipped him off to +Madras; and he lived to lay the foundations of the British power in +India. Napoleon and Wellington were both dull boys, not distinguishing +themselves in any way at school. {356b} Of the former the Duchess +d’Abrantes says, “he had good health, but was in other respects like +other boys.” + +Ulysses Grant, the Commander-in-Chief of the United States, was called +“Useless Grant” by his mother—he was so dull and unhandy when a boy; and +Stonewall Jackson, Lee’s greatest lieutenant, was, in his youth, chiefly +noted for his slowness. While a pupil at West Point Military Academy he +was, however, equally remarkable for his indefatigable application and +perseverance. When a task was set him, he never left it until he had +mastered it; nor did he ever feign to possess knowledge which he had not +entirely acquired. “Again and again,” wrote one who knew him, “when +called upon to answer questions in the recitation of the day, he would +reply, ‘I have not yet looked at it; I have been engaged in mastering the +recitation of yesterday or the day before.’ The result was that he +graduated seventeenth in a class of seventy. There was probably in the +whole class not a boy to whom Jackson at the outset was not inferior in +knowledge and attainments; but at the end of the race he had only sixteen +before him, and had outstripped no fewer than fifty-three. It used to be +said of him by his contemporaries, that if the course had been for ten +years instead of four, Jackson would have graduated at the head of his +class.” {357} + +John Howard, the philanthropist, was another illustrious dunce, learning +next to nothing during the seven years that he was at school. +Stephenson, as a youth, was distinguished chiefly for his skill at +putting and wrestling, and attention to his work. The brilliant Sir +Humphry Davy was no cleverer than other boys: his teacher, Dr. Cardew, +once said of him, “While he was with me I could not discern the faculties +by which he was so much distinguished.” Indeed, Davy himself in after +life considered it fortunate that he had been left to “enjoy so much +idleness” at school. Watt was a dull scholar, notwithstanding the +stories told about his precocity; but he was, what was better, patient +and perseverant, and it was by such qualities, and by his carefully +cultivated inventiveness, that he was enabled to perfect his +steam-engine. + +What Dr. Arnold said of boys is equally true of men—that the difference +between one boy and another consists not so much in talent as in energy. +Given perseverance and energy soon becomes habitual. Provided the dunce +has persistency and application he will inevitably head the cleverer +fellow without those qualities. Slow but sure wins the race. It is +perseverance that explains how the position of boys at school is so often +reversed in real life; and it is curious to note how some who were then +so clever have since become so commonplace; whilst others, dull boys, of +whom nothing was expected, slow in their faculties but sure in their +pace, have assumed the position of leaders of men. The author of this +book, when a boy, stood in the same class with one of the greatest of +dunces. One teacher after another had tried his skill upon him and +failed. Corporal punishment, the fool’s cap, coaxing, and earnest +entreaty, proved alike fruitless. Sometimes the experiment was tried of +putting him at the top of his class, and it was curious to note the +rapidity with which he gravitated to the inevitable bottom. The youth +was given up by his teachers as an incorrigible dunce—one of them +pronouncing him to be a “stupendous booby.” Yet, slow though he was, +this dunce had a sort of dull energy of purpose in him, which grew with +his muscles and his manhood; and, strange to say, when he at length came +to take part in the practical business of life, he was found heading most +of his school companions, and eventually left the greater number of them +far behind. The last time the author heard of him, he was chief +magistrate of his native town. + +The tortoise in the right road will beat a racer in the wrong. It +matters not though a youth be slow, if he be but diligent. Quickness of +parts may even prove a defect, inasmuch as the boy who learns readily +will often forget as readily; and also because he finds no need of +cultivating that quality of application and perseverance which the slower +youth is compelled to exercise, and which proves so valuable an element +in the formation of every character. Davy said “What I am I have made +myself;” and the same holds true universally. + +To conclude: the best culture is not obtained from teachers when at +school or college, so much as by our own diligent self-education when we +have become men. Hence parents need not be in too great haste to see +their children’s talents forced into bloom. Let them watch and wait +patiently, letting good example and quiet training do their work, and +leave the rest to Providence. Let them see to it that the youth is +provided, by free exercise of his bodily powers, with a full stock of +physical health; set him fairly on the road of self-culture; carefully +train his habits of application and perseverance; and as he grows older, +if the right stuff be in him, he will be enabled vigorously and +effectively to cultivate himself. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. +EXAMPLE—MODELS. + + + “Ever their phantoms rise before us, + Our loftier brothers, but one in blood; + By bed and table they lord it o’er us, + With looks of beauty and words of good.”—_John Sterling_. + + “Children may be strangled, but Deeds never; they have an + indestructible life, both in and out of our consciousness.”—_George + Eliot_. + + “There is no action of man in this life, which is not the beginning + of so long a chain of consequences, as that no human providence is + high enough to give us a prospect to the end.”—_Thomas of + Malmesbury_. + +EXAMPLE is one of the most potent of instructors, though it teaches +without a tongue. It is the practical school of mankind, working by +action, which is always more forcible than words. Precept may point to +us the way, but it is silent continuous example, conveyed to us by +habits, and living with us in fact, that carries us along. Good advice +has its weight: but without the accompaniment of a good example it is of +comparatively small influence; and it will be found that the common +saying of “Do as I say, not as I do,” is usually reversed in the actual +experience of life. + +All persons are more or less apt to learn through the eye rather than the +ear; and, whatever is seen in fact, makes a far deeper impression than +anything that is merely read or heard. This is especially the case in +early youth, when the eye is the chief inlet of knowledge. Whatever +children see they unconsciously imitate. They insensibly come to +resemble those who are about them—as insects take the colour of the +leaves they feed on. Hence the vast importance of domestic training. +For whatever may be the efficiency of schools, the examples set in our +Homes must always be of vastly greater influence in forming the +characters of our future men and women. The Home is the crystal of +society—the nucleus of national character; and from that source, be it +pure or tainted, issue the habits, principles and maxims, which govern +public as well as private life. The nation comes from the nursery. +Public opinion itself is for the most part the outgrowth of the home; and +the best philanthropy comes from the fireside. “To love the little +platoon we belong to in society,” says Burke, “is the germ of all public +affections.” From this little central spot, the human sympathies may +extend in an ever widening circle, until the world is embraced; for, +though true philanthropy, like charity, begins at home, assuredly it does +not end there. + +Example in conduct, therefore, even in apparently trivial matters, is of +no light moment, inasmuch as it is constantly becoming inwoven with the +lives of others, and contributing to form their natures for better or for +worse. The characters of parents are thus constantly repeated in their +children; and the acts of affection, discipline, industry, and +self-control, which they daily exemplify, live and act when all else +which may have been learned through the ear has long been forgotten. +Hence a wise man was accustomed to speak of his children as his “future +state.” Even the mute action and unconscious look of a parent may give a +stamp to the character which is never effaced; and who can tell how much +evil act has been stayed by the thought of some good parent, whose memory +their children may not sully by the commission of an unworthy deed, or +the indulgence of an impure thought? The veriest trifles thus become of +importance in influencing the characters of men. “A kiss from my +mother,” said West, “made me a painter.” It is on the direction of such +seeming trifles when children that the future happiness and success of +men mainly depend. Fowell Buxton, when occupying an eminent and +influential station in life, wrote to his mother, “I constantly feel, +especially in action and exertion for others, the effects of principles +early implanted by you in my mind.” Buxton was also accustomed to +remember with gratitude the obligations which he owed to an illiterate +man, a gamekeeper, named Abraham Plastow, with whom he played, and rode, +and sported—a man who could neither read nor write, but was full of +natural good sense and mother-wit. “What made him particularly +valuable,” says Buxton, “were his principles of integrity and honour. He +never said or did a thing in the absence of my mother of which she would +have disapproved. He always held up the highest standard of integrity, +and filled our youthful minds with sentiments as pure and as generous as +could be found in the writings of Seneca or Cicero. Such was my first +instructor, and, I must add, my best.” + +Lord Langdale, looking back upon the admirable example set him by his +mother, declared, “If the whole world were put into one scale, and my +mother into the other, the world would kick the beam.” Mrs. Schimmel +Penninck, in her old age, was accustomed to call to mind the personal +influence exercised by her mother upon the society amidst which she +moved. When she entered a room it had the effect of immediately raising +the tone of the conversation, and as if purifying the moral +atmosphere—all seeming to breathe more freely, and stand more erectly. +“In her presence,” says the daughter, “I became for the time transformed +into another person.” So much does she moral health depend upon the +moral atmosphere that is breathed, and so great is the influence daily +exercised by parents over their children by living a life before their +eyes, that perhaps the best system of parental instruction might be +summed up in these two words: “Improve thyself.” + +There is something solemn and awful in the thought that there is not an +act done or a word uttered by a human being but carries with it a train +of consequences, the end of which we may never trace. Not one but, to a +certain extent, gives a colour to our life, and insensibly influences the +lives of those about us. The good deed or word will live, even though we +may not see it fructify, but so will the bad; and no person is so +insignificant as to be sure that his example will not do good on the one +hand, or evil on the other. The spirits of men do not die: they still +live and walk abroad among us. It was a fine and a true thought uttered +by Mr. Disraeli in the House of Commons on the death of Richard Cobden, +that “he was one of those men who, though not present, were still members +of that House, who were independent of dissolutions, of the caprices of +constituencies, and even of the course of time.” + +There is, indeed, an essence of immortality in the life of man, even in +this world. No individual in the universe stands alone; he is a +component part of a system of mutual dependencies; and by his several +acts he either increases or diminishes the sum of human good now and for +ever. As the present is rooted in the past, and the lives and examples +of our forefathers still to a great extent influence us, so are we by our +daily acts contributing to form the condition and character of the +future. Man is a fruit formed and ripened by the culture of all the +foregoing centuries; and the living generation continues the magnetic +current of action and example destined to bind the remotest past with the +most distant future. No man’s acts die utterly; and though his body may +resolve into dust and air, his good or his bad deeds will still be +bringing forth fruit after their kind, and influencing future generations +for all time to come. It is in this momentous and solemn fact that the +great peril and responsibility of human existence lies. + +Mr. Babbage has so powerfully expressed this idea in a noble passage in +one of his writings that we here venture to quote his words: “Every +atom,” he says, “impressed with good or ill, retains at once the motions +which philosophers and sages have imparted to it, mixed and combined in +ten thousand ways with all that is worthless and base; the air itself is +one vast library, on whose pages are written _for ever_ all that man has +ever said or whispered. There, in their immutable but unerring +characters, mixed with the earliest as well as the latest sighs of +mortality, stand for ever recorded vows unredeemed, promises unfulfilled; +perpetuating, in the united movements of each particle, the testimony of +man’s changeful will. But, if the air we breathe is the never-failing +historian of the sentiments we have uttered, earth, air, and ocean, are, +in like manner, the eternal witnesses of the acts we have done; the same +principle of the equality of action and reaction applies to them. No +motion impressed by natural causes, or by human agency, is ever +obliterated. . . . If the Almighty stamped on the brow of the first +murderer the indelible and visible mark of his guilt, He has also +established laws by which every succeeding criminal is not less +irrevocably chained to the testimony of his crime; for every atom of his +mortal frame, through whatever changes its severed particles may migrate, +will still retain adhering to it, through every combination, some +movement derived from that very muscular effort by which the crime itself +was perpetrated.” + +Thus, every act we do or word we utter, as well as every act we witness +or word we hear, carries with it an influence which extends over, and +gives a colour, not only to the whole of our future life, but makes +itself felt upon the whole frame of society. We may not, and indeed +cannot, possibly, trace the influence working itself into action in its +various ramifications amongst our children, our friends, or associates; +yet there it is assuredly, working on for ever. And herein lies the +great significance of setting forth a good example,—a silent teaching +which even the poorest and least significant person can practise in his +daily life. There is no one so humble, but that he owes to others this +simple but priceless instruction. Even the meanest condition may thus be +made useful; for the light set in a low place shines as faithfully as +that set upon a hill. Everywhere, and under almost all circumstances, +however externally adverse—in moorland shielings, in cottage hamlets, in +the close alleys of great towns—the true man may grow. He who tills a +space of earth scarce bigger than is needed for his grave, may work as +faithfully, and to as good purpose, as the heir to thousands. The +commonest workshop may thus be a school of industry, science, and good +morals, on the one hand; or of idleness, folly, and depravity, on the +other. It all depends on the individual men, and the use they make of +the opportunities for good which offer themselves. + +A life well spent, a character uprightly sustained, is no slight legacy +to leave to one’s children, and to the world; for it is the most eloquent +lesson of virtue and the severest reproof of vice, while it continues an +enduring source of the best kind of riches. Well for those who can say, +as Pope did, in rejoinder to the sarcasm of Lord Hervey, “I think it +enough that my parents, such as they were, never cost me a blush, and +that their son, such as he is, never cost them a tear.” + +It is not enough to tell others what they are to do, but to exhibit the +actual example of doing. What Mrs. Chisholm described to Mrs. Stowe as +the secret of her success, applies to all life. “I found,” she said, +“that if we want anything _done_, we must go to work and _do_: it is of +no use merely to talk—none whatever.” It is poor eloquence that only +shows how a person can talk. Had Mrs. Chisholm rested satisfied with +lecturing, her project, she was persuaded, would never have got beyond +the region of talk; but when people saw what she was doing and had +actually accomplished, they fell in with her views and came forward to +help her. Hence the most beneficent worker is not he who says the most +eloquent things, or even who thinks the most loftily, but he who does the +most eloquent acts. + +True-hearted persons, even in the humblest station in life, who are +energetic doers, may thus give an impulse to good works out of all +proportion, apparently, to their actual station in society. Thomas +Wright might have talked about the reclamation of criminals, and John +Pounds about the necessity for Ragged Schools, and yet done nothing; +instead of which they simply set to work without any other idea in their +minds than that of doing, not talking. And how the example of even the +poorest man may tell upon society, hear what Dr. Guthrie, the apostle of +the Ragged School movement, says of the influence which the example of +John Pounds, the humble Portsmouth cobbler, exercised upon his own +working career:— + +“The interest I have been led to take in this cause is an example of how, +in Providence, a man’s destiny—his course of life, like that of a +river—may be determined and affected by very trivial circumstances. It +is rather curious—at least it is interesting to me to remember—that it +was by a picture I was first led to take an interest in ragged schools—by +a picture in an old, obscure, decaying burgh that stands on the shores of +the Frith of Forth, the birthplace of Thomas Chalmers. I went to see +this place many years ago; and, going into an inn for refreshment, I +found the room covered with pictures of shepherdesses with their crooks, +and sailors in holiday attire, not particularly interesting. But above +the chimney-piece there was a large print, more respectable than its +neighbours, which represented a cobbler’s room. The cobbler was there +himself, spectacles on nose, an old shoe between his knees—the massive +forehead and firm mouth indicating great determination of character, and, +beneath his bushy eyebrows, benevolence gleamed out on a number of poor +ragged boys and girls who stood at their lessons round the busy cobbler. +My curiosity was awakened; and in the inscription I read how this man, +John Pounds, a cobbler in Portsmouth, taking pity on the multitude of +poor ragged children left by ministers and magistrates, and ladies and +gentlemen, to go to ruin on the streets—how, like a good shepherd, he +gathered in these wretched outcasts—how he had trained them to God and to +the world—and how, while earning his daily bread by the sweat of his +brow, he had rescued from misery and saved to society not less than five +hundred of these children. I felt ashamed of myself. I felt reproved +for the little I had done. My feelings were touched. I was astonished +at this man’s achievements; and I well remember, in the enthusiasm of the +moment, saying to my companion (and I have seen in my cooler and calmer +moments no reason for unsaying the saying)—‘That man is an honour to +humanity, and deserves the tallest monument ever raised within the shores +of Britain.’ I took up that man’s history, and I found it animated by +the spirit of Him who ‘had compassion on the multitude.’ John Pounds was +a clever man besides; and, like Paul, if he could not win a poor boy any +other way, he won him by art. He would be seen chasing a ragged boy +along the quays, and compelling him to come to school, not by the power +of a policeman, but by the power of a hot potato. He knew the love an +Irishman had for a potato; and John Pounds might be seen running holding +under the boy’s nose a potato, like an Irishman, very hot, and with a +coat as ragged as himself. When the day comes when honour will be done +to whom honour is due, I can fancy the crowd of those whose fame poets +have sung, and to whose memory monuments have been raised, dividing like +the wave, and, passing the great, and the noble, and the mighty of the +land, this poor, obscure old man stepping forward and receiving the +especial notice of Him who said ‘Inasmuch as ye did it to one of the +least of these, ye did it also to Me.’” + +The education of character is very much a question of models; we mould +ourselves so unconsciously after the characters, manners, habits, and +opinions of those who are about us. Good rules may do much, but good +models far more; for in the latter we have instruction in action—wisdom +at work. Good admonition and bad example only build with one hand to +pull down with the other. Hence the vast importance of exercising great +care in the selection of companions, especially in youth. There is a +magnetic affinity in young persons which insensibly tends to assimilate +them to each other’s likeness. Mr. Edgeworth was so strongly convinced +that from sympathy they involuntarily imitated or caught the tone of the +company they frequented, that he held it to be of the most essential +importance that they should be taught to select the very best models. +“No company, or good company,” was his motto. Lord Collingwood, writing +to a young friend, said, “Hold it as a maxim that you had better be alone +than in mean company. Let your companions be such as yourself, or +superior; for the worth of a man will always be ruled by that of his +company.” It was a remark of the famous Dr. Sydenham that everybody some +time or other would be the better or the worse for having but spoken to a +good or a bad man. As Sir Peter Lely made it a rule never to look at a +bad picture if he could help it, believing that whenever he did so his +pencil caught a taint from it, so, whoever chooses to gaze often upon a +debased specimen of humanity and to frequent his society, cannot help +gradually assimilating himself to that sort of model. + +It is therefore advisable for young men to seek the fellowship of the +good, and always to aim at a higher standard than themselves. Francis +Horner, speaking of the advantages to himself of direct personal +intercourse with high-minded, intelligent men, said, “I cannot hesitate +to decide that I have derived more intellectual improvement from them +than from all the books I have turned over.” Lord Shelburne (afterwards +Marquis of Lansdowne), when a young man, paid a visit to the venerable +Malesherbes, and was so much impressed by it, that he said,—“I have +travelled much, but I have never been so influenced by personal contact +with any man; and if I ever accomplish any good in the course of my life, +I am certain that the recollection of M. de Malesherbes will animate my +soul.” So Fowell Buxton was always ready to acknowledge the powerful +influence exercised upon the formation of his character in early life by +the example of the Gurney family: “It has given a colour to my life,” he +used to say. Speaking of his success at the Dublin University, he +confessed, “I can ascribe it to nothing but my Earlham visits.” It was +from the Gurneys he “caught the infection” of self-improvement. + +Contact with the good never fails to impart good, and we carry away with +us some of the blessing, as travellers’ garments retain the odour of the +flowers and shrubs through which they have passed. Those who knew the +late John Sterling intimately, have spoken of the beneficial influence +which he exercised on all with whom he came into personal contact. Many +owed to him their first awakening to a higher being; from him they learnt +what they were, and what they ought to be. Mr. Trench says of him:—“It +was impossible to come in contact with his noble nature without feeling +one’s self in some measure _ennobled_ and _lifted up_, as I ever felt +when I left him, into a higher region of objects and aims than that in +which one is tempted habitually to dwell.” It is thus that the noble +character always acts; we become insensibly elevated by him, and cannot +help feeling as he does and acquiring the habit of looking at things in +the same light. Such is the magical action and reaction of minds upon +each other. + +Artists, also, feel themselves elevated by contact with artists greater +than themselves. Thus Haydn’s genius was first fired by Handel. Hearing +him play, Haydn’s ardour for musical composition was at once excited, and +but for this circumstance, he himself believed that he would never have +written the ‘Creation.’ Speaking of Handel, he said, “When he chooses, +he strikes like the thunderbolt;” and at another time, “There is not a +note of him but draws blood.” Scarlatti was another of Handel’s ardent +admirers, following him all over Italy; afterwards, when speaking of the +great master, he would cross himself in token of admiration. True +artists never fail generously to recognise each other’s greatness. Thus +Beethoven’s admiration for Cherubini was regal: and he ardently hailed +the genius of Schubert: “Truly,” said he, “in Schubert dwells a divine +fire.” When Northcote was a mere youth he had such an admiration for +Reynolds that, when the great painter was once attending a public meeting +down in Devonshire, the boy pushed through the crowd, and got so near +Reynolds as to touch the skirt of his coat, “which I did,” says +Northcote, “with great satisfaction to my mind,”—a true touch of youthful +enthusiasm in its admiration of genius. + +The example of the brave is an inspiration to the timid, their presence +thrilling through every fibre. Hence the miracles of valour so often +performed by ordinary men under the leadership of the heroic. The very +recollection of the deeds of the valiant stirs men’s blood like the sound +of a trumpet. Ziska bequeathed his skin to be used as a drum to inspire +the valour of the Bohemians. When Scanderbeg, prince of Epirus, was +dead, the Turks wished to possess his bones, that each might wear a piece +next his heart, hoping thus to secure some portion of the courage he had +displayed while living, and which they had so often experienced in +battle. When the gallant Douglas, bearing the heart of Bruce to the Holy +Land, saw one of his knights surrounded and sorely pressed by the +Saracens, he took from his neck the silver case containing the hero’s +bequest, and throwing it amidst the thickest press of his foes, cried, +“Pass first in fight, as thou wert wont to do, and Douglas will follow +thee, or die;” and so saying, he rushed forward to the place where it +fell, and was there slain. + +The chief use of biography consists in the noble models of character in +which it abounds. Our great forefathers still live among us in the +records of their lives, as well as in the acts they have done, which live +also; still sit by us at table, and hold us by the hand; furnishing +examples for our benefit, which we may still study, admire and imitate. +Indeed, whoever has left behind him the record of a noble life, has +bequeathed to posterity an enduring source of good, for it serves as a +model for others to form themselves by in all time to come; still +breathing fresh life into men, helping them to reproduce his life anew, +and to illustrate his character in other forms. Hence a book containing +the life of a true man is full of precious seed. It is a still living +voice; it is an intellect. To use Milton’s words, “it is the precious +life-blood of a master spirit, embalmed and treasured up on purpose to a +life beyond life.” Such a book never ceases to exercise an elevating and +ennobling influence. But, above all, there is the Book containing the +very highest Example set before us to shape our lives by in this +world—the most suitable for all the necessities of our mind and heart—an +example which we can only follow afar off and feel after, + + “Like plants or vines which never saw the sun, + But dream of him and guess where he may be, + And do their best to climb and get to him.” + +Again, no young man can rise from the perusal of such lives as those of +Buxton and Arnold, without feeling his mind and heart made better, and +his best resolves invigorated. Such biographies increase a man’s +self-reliance by demonstrating what men can be, and what they can do; +fortifying his hopes and elevating his aims in life. Sometimes a young +man discovers himself in a biography, as Correggio felt within him the +risings of genius on contemplating the works of Michael Angelo: “And I +too, am a painter,” he exclaimed. Sir Samuel Romilly, in his +autobiography, confessed himself to have been powerfully influenced by +the life of the great and noble-minded French Chancellor Daguesseau:—“The +works of Thomas,” says he, “had fallen into my hands, and I had read with +admiration his ‘Eloge of Daguesseau;’ and the career of honour which he +represented that illustrious magistrate to have run, excited to a great +degree my ardour and ambition, and opened to my imagination new paths of +glory.” + +Franklin was accustomed to attribute his usefulness and eminence to his +having early read Cotton Mather’s ‘Essays to do Good’—a book which grew +out of Mather’s own life. And see how good example draws other men after +it, and propagates itself through future generations in all lands. For +Samuel Drew avers that he framed his own life, and especially his +business habits, after the model left on record by Benjamin Franklin. +Thus it is impossible to say where a good example may not reach, or where +it will end, if indeed it have an end. Hence the advantage, in +literature as in life, of keeping the best society, reading the best +books, and wisely admiring and imitating the best things we find in them. +“In literature,” said Lord Dudley, “I am fond of confining myself to the +best company, which consists chiefly of my old acquaintance, with whom I +am desirous of becoming more intimate; and I suspect that nine times out +of ten it is more profitable, if not more agreeable, to read an old book +over again, than to read a new one for the first time.” + +Sometimes a book containing a noble exemplar of life, taken up at random, +merely with the object of reading it as a pastime, has been known to call +forth energies whose existence had not before been suspected. Alfieri +was first drawn with passion to literature by reading ‘Plutarch’s Lives.’ +Loyola, when a soldier serving at the siege of Pampeluna, and laid up by +a dangerous wound in his leg, asked for a book to divert his thoughts: +the ‘Lives of the Saints’ was brought to him, and its perusal so inflamed +his mind, that he determined thenceforth to devote himself to the +founding of a religious order. Luther, in like manner, was inspired to +undertake the great labours of his life by a perusal of the ‘Life and +Writings of John Huss.’ Dr. Wolff was stimulated to enter upon his +missionary career by reading the ‘Life of Francis Xavier;’ and the book +fired his youthful bosom with a passion the most sincere and ardent to +devote himself to the enterprise of his life. William Carey, also, got +the first idea of entering upon his sublime labours as a missionary from +a perusal of the Voyages of Captain Cook. + +Francis Horner was accustomed to note in his diary and letters the books +by which he was most improved and influenced. Amongst these were +Condorcet’s ‘Eloge of Haller,’ Sir Joshua Reynolds’ ‘Discourses,’ the +writings of Bacon, and ‘Burnet’s Account of Sir Matthew Hale.’ The +perusal of the last-mentioned book—the portrait of a prodigy of +labour—Horner says, filled him with enthusiasm. Of Condorcet’s ‘Eloge of +Haller,’ he said: “I never rise from the account of such men without a +sort of thrilling palpitation about me, which I know not whether I should +call admiration, ambition, or despair.” And speaking of the ‘Discourses’ +of Sir Joshua Reynolds, he said: “Next to the writings of Bacon, there is +no book which has more powerfully impelled me to self-culture. He is one +of the first men of genius who has condescended to inform the world of +the steps by which greatness is attained. The confidence with which he +asserts the omnipotence of human labour has the effect of familiarising +his reader with the idea that genius is an acquisition rather than a +gift; whilst with all there is blended so naturally and eloquently the +most elevated and passionate admiration of excellence, that upon the +whole there is no book of a more _inflammatory_ effect.” It is +remarkable that Reynolds himself attributed his first passionate impulse +towards the study of art, to reading Richardson’s account of a great +painter; and Haydon was in like manner afterwards inflamed to follow the +same pursuit by reading of the career of Reynolds. Thus the brave and +aspiring life of one man lights a flame in the minds of others of like +faculties and impulse; and where there is equally vigorous efforts like +distinction and success will almost surely follow. Thus the chain of +example is carried down through time in an endless succession of +links,—admiration exciting imitation, and perpetuating the true +aristocracy of genius. + +One of the most valuable, and one of the most infectious examples which +can be set before the young, is that of cheerful working. Cheerfulness +gives elasticity to the spirit. Spectres fly before it; difficulties +cause no despair, for they are encountered with hope, and the mind +acquires that happy disposition to improve opportunities which rarely +fails of success. The fervent spirit is always a healthy and happy +spirit; working cheerfully itself, and stimulating others to work. It +confers a dignity on even the most ordinary occupations. The most +effective work, also, is usually the full-hearted work—that which passes +through the hands or the head of him whose heart is glad. Hume was +accustomed to say that he would rather possess a cheerful +disposition—inclined always to look at the bright side of things—than +with a gloomy mind to be the master of an estate of ten thousand a year. +Granville Sharp, amidst his indefatigable labours on behalf of the slave, +solaced himself in the evenings by taking part in glees and instrumental +concerts at his brother’s house, singing, or playing on the flute, the +clarionet or the oboe; and, at the Sunday evening oratorios, when Handel +was played, he beat the kettle-drums. He also indulged, though +sparingly, in caricature drawing. Fowell Buxton also was an eminently +cheerful man; taking special pleasure in field sports, in riding about +the country with his children, and in mixing in all their domestic +amusements. + +In another sphere of action, Dr. Arnold was a noble and a cheerful +worker, throwing himself into the great business of his life, the +training and teaching of young men, with his whole heart and soul. It is +stated in his admirable biography, that “the most remarkable thing in the +Laleham circle was the wonderful healthiness of tone which prevailed +there. It was a place where a new comer at once felt that a great and +earnest work was going forward. Every pupil was made to feel that there +was a work for him to do; that his happiness, as well as his duty, lay in +doing that work well. Hence an indescribable zest was communicated to a +young man’s feeling about life; a strange joy came over him on discerning +that he had the means of being useful, and thus of being happy; and a +deep respect and ardent attachment sprang up towards him who had taught +him thus to value life and his own self, and his work and mission in the +world. All this was founded on the breadth and comprehensiveness of +Arnold’s character, as well as its striking truth and reality; on the +unfeigned regard he had for work of all kinds, and the sense he had of +its value, both for the complex aggregate of society and the growth and +protection of the individual. In all this there was no excitement; no +predilection for one class of work above another; no enthusiasm for any +one-sided object: but a humble, profound, and most religious +consciousness that work is the appointed calling of man on earth; the end +for which his various faculties were given; the element in which his +nature is ordained to develop itself, and in which his progressive +advance towards heaven is to lie.” Among the many valuable men trained +for public life and usefulness by Arnold, was the gallant Hodson, of +Hodson’s Horse, who, writing home from India, many years after, thus +spoke of his revered master: “The influence he produced has been most +lasting and striking in its effects. It is felt even in India; I cannot +say more than _that_.” + +The useful influence which a right-hearted man of energy and industry may +exercise amongst his neighbours and dependants, and accomplish for his +country, cannot, perhaps, be better illustrated than by the career of Sir +John Sinclair; characterized by the Abbé Gregoire as “the most +indefatigable man in Europe.” He was originally a country laird, born to +a considerable estate situated near John o’ Groat’s House, almost beyond +the beat of civilization, in a bare wild country fronting the stormy +North Sea. His father dying while he was a youth of sixteen, the +management of the family property thus early devolved upon him; and at +eighteen he began a course of vigorous improvement in the county of +Caithness, which eventually spread all over Scotland. Agriculture then +was in a most backward state; the fields were unenclosed, the lands +undrained; the small farmers of Caithness were so poor that they could +scarcely afford to keep a horse or shelty; the hard work was chiefly +done, and the burdens borne, by the women; and if a cottier lost a horse +it was not unusual for him to marry a wife as the cheapest substitute. +The country was without roads or bridges; and drovers driving their +cattle south had to swim the rivers along with their beasts. The chief +track leading into Caithness lay along a high shelf on a mountain side, +the road being some hundred feet of clear perpendicular height above the +sea which dashed below. Sir John, though a mere youth, determined to +make a new road over the hill of Ben Cheilt, the old let-alone +proprietors, however, regarding his scheme with incredulity and derision. +But he himself laid out the road, assembled some twelve hundred workmen +early one summer’s morning, set them simultaneously to work, +superintending their labours, and stimulating them by his presence and +example; and before night, what had been a dangerous sheep track, six +miles in length, hardly passable for led horses, was made practicable for +wheel-carriages as if by the power of magic. It was an admirable example +of energy and well-directed labour, which could not fail to have a most +salutary influence upon the surrounding population. He then proceeded to +make more roads, to erect mills, to build bridges, and to enclose and +cultivate the waste lands. He introduced improved methods of culture, +and regular rotation of crops, distributing small premiums to encourage +industry; and he thus soon quickened the whole frame of society within +reach of his influence, and infused an entirely new spirit into the +cultivators of the soil. From being one of the most inaccessible +districts of the north—the very _ultima Thule_ of civilization—Caithness +became a pattern county for its roads, its agriculture, and its +fisheries. In Sinclair’s youth, the post was carried by a runner only +once a week, and the young baronet then declared that he would never rest +till a coach drove daily to Thurso. The people of the neighbourhood +could not believe in any such thing, and it became a proverb in the +county to say of an utterly impossible scheme, “Ou, ay, that will come to +pass when Sir John sees the daily mail at Thurso!” But Sir John lived to +see his dream realized, and the daily mail established to Thurso. + +The circle of his benevolent operation gradually widened. Observing the +serious deterioration which had taken place in the quality of British +wool,—one of the staple commodities of the country,—he forthwith, though +but a private and little-known country gentleman, devoted himself to its +improvement. By his personal exertions he established the British Wool +Society for the purpose, and himself led the way to practical improvement +by importing 800 sheep from all countries, at his own expense. The +result was, the introduction into Scotland of the celebrated Cheviot +breed. Sheep farmers scouted the idea of south country flocks being able +to thrive in the far north. But Sir John persevered; and in a few years +there were not fewer than 300,000 Cheviots diffused over the four +northern counties alone. The value of all grazing land was thus +enormously increased; and Scotch estates, which before were comparatively +worthless, began to yield large rentals. + +Returned by Caithness to Parliament, in which he remained for thirty +years, rarely missing a division, his position gave him farther +opportunities of usefulness, which he did not neglect to employ. Mr. +Pitt, observing his persevering energy in all useful public projects, +sent for him to Downing Street, and voluntarily proposed his assistance +in any object he might have in view. Another man might have thought of +himself and his own promotion; but Sir John characteristically replied, +that he desired no favour for himself, but intimated that the reward most +gratifying to his feelings would be Mr. Pitt’s assistance in the +establishment of a National Board of Agriculture. Arthur Young laid a +bet with the baronet that his scheme would never be established, adding, +“Your Board of Agriculture will be in the moon!” But vigorously setting +to work, he roused public attention to the subject, enlisted a majority +of Parliament on his side, and eventually established the Board, of which +he was appointed President. The result of its action need not be +described, but the stimulus which it gave to agriculture and +stock-raising was shortly felt throughout the whole United Kingdom, and +tens of thousands of acres were redeemed from barrenness by its +operation. He was equally indefatigable in encouraging the establishment +of fisheries; and the successful founding of these great branches of +British industry at Thurso and Wick was mainly due to his exertions. He +urged for long years, and at length succeeded in obtaining the enclosure +of a harbour for the latter place, which is perhaps the greatest and most +prosperous fishing town in the world. + +Sir John threw his personal energy into every work in which he engaged, +rousing the inert, stimulating the idle, encouraging the hopeful, and +working with all. When a French invasion was threatened, he offered to +Mr. Pitt to raise a regiment on his own estate, and he was as good as his +word. He went down to the north, and raised a battalion of 600 men, +afterwards increased to 1000; and it was admitted to be one of the finest +volunteer regiments ever raised, inspired throughout by his own noble and +patriotic spirit. While commanding officer of the camp at Aberdeen he +held the offices of a Director of the Bank of Scotland, Chairman of the +British Wool Society, Provost of Wick, Director of the British Fishery +Society, Commissioner for issuing Exchequer Bills, Member of Parliament +for Caithness, and President of the Board of Agriculture. Amidst all +this multifarious and self-imposed work, he even found time to write +books, enough of themselves to establish a reputation. When Mr. Rush, +the American Ambassador, arrived in England, he relates that he inquired +of Mr. Coke of Holkham, what was the best work on Agriculture, and was +referred to Sir John Sinclair’s; and when he further asked of Mr. +Vansittart, Chancellor of the Exchequer, what was the best work on +British Finance, he was again referred to a work by Sir John Sinclair, +his ‘History of the Public Revenue.’ But the great monument of his +indefatigable industry, a work that would have appalled other men, but +only served to rouse and sustain his energy, was his ‘Statistical Account +of Scotland,’ in twenty-one volumes, one of the most valuable practical +works ever published in any age or country. Amid a host of other +pursuits it occupied him nearly eight years of hard labour, during which +he received, and attended to, upwards of 20,000 letters on the subject. +It was a thoroughly patriotic undertaking, from which he derived no +personal advantage whatever, beyond the honour of having completed it. +The whole of the profits were assigned by him to the Society for the Sons +of the Clergy in Scotland. The publication of the book led to great +public improvements; it was followed by the immediate abolition of +several oppressive feudal rights, to which it called attention; the +salaries of schoolmasters and clergymen in many parishes were increased; +and an increased stimulus was given to agriculture throughout Scotland. +Sir John then publicly offered to undertake the much greater labour of +collecting and publishing a similar Statistical Account of England; but +unhappily the then Archbishop of Canterbury refused to sanction it, lest +it should interfere with the tithes of the clergy, and the idea was +abandoned. + +A remarkable illustration of his energetic promptitude was the manner in +which he once provided, on a great emergency, for the relief of the +manufacturing districts. In 1793 the stagnation produced by the war led +to an unusual number of bankruptcies, and many of the first houses in +Manchester and Glasgow were tottering, not so much from want of property, +but because the usual sources of trade and credit were for the time +closed up. A period of intense distress amongst the labouring classes +seemed imminent, when Sir John urged, in Parliament, that Exchequer notes +to the amount of five millions should be issued immediately as a loan to +such merchants as could give security. This suggestion was adopted, and +his offer to carry out his plan, in conjunction with certain members +named by him, was also accepted. The vote was passed late at night, and +early next morning Sir John, anticipating the delays of officialism and +red tape, proceeded to bankers in the city, and borrowed of them, on his +own personal security, the sum of 70,000_l._, which he despatched the +same evening to those merchants who were in the most urgent need of +assistance. Pitt meeting Sir John in the House, expressed his great +regret that the pressing wants of Manchester and Glasgow could not be +supplied so soon as was desirable, adding, “The money cannot be raised +for some days.” “It is already gone! it left London by to-night’s mail!” +was Sir John’s triumphant reply; and in afterwards relating the anecdote +he added, with a smile of pleasure, “Pitt was as much startled as if I +had stabbed him.” To the last this great, good man worked on usefully +and cheerfully, setting a great example for his family and for his +country. In so laboriously seeking others’ good, it might be said that +he found his own—not wealth, for his generosity seriously impaired his +private fortune, but happiness, and self-satisfaction, and the peace that +passes knowledge. A great patriot, with magnificent powers of work, he +nobly did his duty to his country; yet he was not neglectful of his own +household and home. His sons and daughters grew up to honour and +usefulness; and it was one of the proudest things Sir John could say, +when verging on his eightieth year, that he had lived to see seven sons +grown up, not one of whom had incurred a debt he could not pay, or caused +him a sorrow that could have been avoided. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. +CHARACTER—THE TRUE GENTLEMAN. + + + “For who can always act? but he, + To whom a thousand memories call, + Not being less but more than all + The gentleness he seemed to be, + + But seemed the thing he was, and joined + Each office of the social hour + To noble manners, as the flower + And native growth of noble mind; + + And thus he bore without abuse + The grand old name of Gentleman.”—_Tennyson_. + + “Es bildet ein Talent sich in der Stille, + Sich ein Charakter in dem Strom der Welt.”—_Goethe_. + + “That which raises a country, that which strengthens a country, and + that which dignifies a country,—that which spreads her power, creates + her moral influence, and makes her respected and submitted to, bends + the hearts of millions, and bows down the pride of nations to her—the + instrument of obedience, the fountain of supremacy, the true throne, + crown, and sceptre of a nation;—this aristocracy is not an + aristocracy of blood, not an aristocracy of fashion, not an + aristocracy of talent only; it is an aristocracy of Character. That + is the true heraldry of man.”—_The Times_. + +THE crown and glory of life is Character. It is the noblest possession +of a man, constituting a rank in itself, and an estate in the general +goodwill; dignifying every station, and exalting every position in +society. It exercises a greater power than wealth, and secures all the +honour without the jealousies of fame. It carries with it an influence +which always tells; for it is the result of proved honour, rectitude, and +consistency—qualities which, perhaps more than any other, command the +general confidence and respect of mankind. + +Character is human nature in its best form. It is moral order embodied +in the individual. Men of character are not only the conscience of +society, but in every well-governed State they are its best motive power; +for it is moral qualities in the main which rule the world. Even in war, +Napoleon said the moral is to the physical as ten to one. The strength, +the industry, and the civilisation of nations—all depend upon individual +character; and the very foundations of civil security rest upon it. Laws +and institutions are but its outgrowth. In the just balance of nature, +individuals, nations, and races, will obtain just so much as they +deserve, and no more. And as effect finds its cause, so surely does +quality of character amongst a people produce its befitting results. + +Though a man have comparatively little culture, slender abilities, and +but small wealth, yet, if his character be of sterling worth, he will +always command an influence, whether it be in the workshop, the +counting-house, the mart, or the senate. Canning wisely wrote in 1801, +“My road must be through Character to power; I will try no other course; +and I am sanguine enough to believe that this course, though not perhaps +the quickest, is the surest.” You may admire men of intellect; but +something more is necessary before you will trust them. Hence Lord John +Russell once observed in a sentence full of truth, “It is the nature of +party in England to ask the assistance of men of genius, but to follow +the guidance of men of character.” This was strikingly illustrated in +the career of the late Francis Horner—a man of whom Sydney Smith said +that the Ten Commandments were stamped upon his countenance. “The +valuable and peculiar light,” says Lord Cockburn, “in which his history +is calculated to inspire every right-minded youth, is this. He died at +the age of thirty-eight; possessed of greater public influence than any +other private man; and admired, beloved, trusted, and deplored by all, +except the heartless or the base. No greater homage was ever paid in +Parliament to any deceased member. Now let every young man ask—how was +this attained? By rank? He was the son of an Edinburgh merchant. By +wealth? Neither he, nor any of his relations, ever had a superfluous +sixpence. By office? He held but one, and only for a few years, of no +influence, and with very little pay. By talents? His were not splendid, +and he had no genius. Cautious and slow, his only ambition was to be +right. By eloquence? He spoke in calm, good taste, without any of the +oratory that either terrifies or seduces. By any fascination of manner? +His was only correct and agreeable. By what, then, was it? Merely by +sense, industry, good principles, and a good heart—qualities which no +well-constituted mind need ever despair of attaining. It was the force +of his character that raised him; and this character not impressed upon +him by nature, but formed, out of no peculiarly fine elements, by +himself. There were many in the House of Commons of far greater ability +and eloquence. But no one surpassed him in the combination of an +adequate portion of these with moral worth. Horner was born to show what +moderate powers, unaided by anything whatever except culture and +goodness, may achieve, even when these powers are displayed amidst the +competition and jealousy of public life.” + +Franklin, also, attributed his success as a public man, not to his +talents or his powers of speaking—for these were but moderate—but to his +known integrity of character. Hence it was, he says, “that I had so much +weight with my fellow citizens. I was but a bad speaker, never eloquent, +subject to much hesitation in my choice of words, hardly correct in +language, and yet I generally carried my point.” Character creates +confidence in men in high station as well as in humble life. It was said +of the first Emperor Alexander of Russia, that his personal character was +equivalent to a constitution. During the wars of the Fronde, Montaigne +was the only man amongst the French gentry who kept his castle gates +unbarred; and it was said of him, that his personal character was a +better protection for him than a regiment of horse would have been. + +That character is power, is true in a much higher sense than that +knowledge is power. Mind without heart, intelligence without conduct, +cleverness without goodness, are powers in their way, but they may be +powers only for mischief. We may be instructed or amused by them; but it +is sometimes as difficult to admire them as it would be to admire the +dexterity of a pickpocket or the horsemanship of a highwayman. + +Truthfulness, integrity, and goodness—qualities that hang not on any +man’s breath—form the essence of manly character, or, as one of our old +writers has it, “that inbred loyalty unto Virtue which can serve her +without a livery.” He who possesses these qualities, united with +strength of purpose, carries with him a power which is irresistible. He +is strong to do good, strong to resist evil, and strong to bear up under +difficulty and misfortune. When Stephen of Colonna fell into the hands +of his base assailants, and they asked him in derision, “Where is now +your fortress?” “Here,” was his bold reply, placing his hand upon his +heart. It is in misfortune that the character of the upright man shines +forth with the greatest lustre; and when all else fails, he takes stand +upon his integrity and his courage. + +The rules of conduct followed by Lord Erskine—a man of sterling +independence of principle and scrupulous adherence to truth—are worthy of +being engraven on every young man’s heart. “It was a first command and +counsel of my earliest youth,” he said, “always to do what my conscience +told me to be a duty, and to leave the consequence to God. I shall carry +with me the memory, and I trust the practice, of this parental lesson to +the grave. I have hitherto followed it, and I have no reason to complain +that my obedience to it has been a temporal sacrifice. I have found it, +on the contrary, the road to prosperity and wealth, and I shall point out +the same path to my children for their pursuit.” + +Every man is bound to aim at the possession of a good character as one of +the highest objects of life. The very effort to secure it by worthy +means will furnish him with a motive for exertion; and his idea of +manhood, in proportion as it is elevated, will steady and animate his +motive. It is well to have a high standard of life, even though we may +not be able altogether to realize it. “The youth,” says Mr. Disraeli, +“who does not look up will look down; and the spirit that does not soar +is destined perhaps to grovel.” George Herbert wisely writes, + + “Pitch thy behaviour low, thy projects high, + So shall thou humble and magnanimous be. + Sink not in spirit; who aimeth at the sky + Shoots higher much than he that means a tree.” + +He who has a high standard of living and thinking will certainly do +better than he who has none at all. “Pluck at a gown of gold,” says the +Scotch proverb, “and you may get a sleeve o’t.” Whoever tries for the +highest results cannot fail to reach a point far in advance of that from +which he started; and though the end attained may fall short of that +proposed, still, the very effort to rise, of itself cannot fail to prove +permanently beneficial. + +There are many counterfeits of character, but the genuine article is +difficult to be mistaken. Some, knowing its money value, would assume +its disguise for the purpose of imposing upon the unwary. Colonel +Charteris said to a man distinguished for his honesty, “I would give a +thousand pounds for your good name.” “Why?” “Because I could make ten +thousand by it,” was the knave’s reply. + +Integrity in word and deed is the backbone of character; and loyal +adherence to veracity its most prominent characteristic. One of the +finest testimonies to the character of the late Sir Robert Peel was that +borne by the Duke of Wellington in the House of Lords, a few days after +the great statesman’s death. “Your lordships,” he said, “must all feel +the high and honourable character of the late Sir Robert Peel. I was +long connected with him in public life. We were both in the councils of +our Sovereign together, and I had long the honour to enjoy his private +friendship. In all the course of my acquaintance with him I never knew a +man in whose truth and justice I had greater confidence, or in whom I saw +a more invariable desire to promote the public service. In the whole +course of my communication with him, I never knew an instance in which he +did not show the strongest attachment to truth; and I never saw in the +whole course of my life the smallest reason for suspecting that he stated +anything which he did not firmly believe to be the fact.” And this +high-minded truthfulness of the statesman was no doubt the secret of no +small part of his influence and power. + +There is a truthfulness in action as well as in words, which is essential +to uprightness of character. A man must really be what he seems or +purposes to be. When an American gentleman wrote to Granville Sharp, +that from respect for his great virtues he had named one of his sons +after him, Sharp replied: “I must request you to teach him a favourite +maxim of the family whose name you have given him—_Always endeavour to be +really what you would wish to appear_. This maxim, as my father informed +me, was carefully and humbly practised by _his_ father, whose sincerity, +as a plain and honest man, thereby became the principal feature of his +character, both in public and private life.” Every man who respects +himself, and values the respect of others, will carry out the maxim in +act—doing honestly what he proposes to do—putting the highest character +into his work, scamping nothing, but priding himself upon his integrity +and conscientiousness. Once Cromwell said to Bernard,—a clever but +somewhat unscrupulous lawyer, “I understand that you have lately been +vastly wary in your conduct; do not be too confident of this; subtlety +may deceive you, integrity never will.” Men whose acts are at direct +variance with their words, command no respect, and what they say has but +little weight; even truths, when uttered by them, seem to come blasted +from their lips. + +The true character acts rightly, whether in secret or in the sight of +men. That boy was well trained who, when asked why he did not pocket +some pears, for nobody was there to see, replied, “Yes, there was: I was +there to see myself; and I don’t intend ever to see myself do a dishonest +thing.”—This is a simple but not inappropriate illustration of principle, +or conscience, dominating in the character, and exercising a noble +protectorate over it; not merely a passive influence, but an active power +regulating the life. Such a principle goes on moulding the character +hourly and daily, growing with a force that operates every moment. +Without this dominating influence, character has no protection, but is +constantly liable to fall away before temptation; and every such +temptation succumbed to, every act of meanness or dishonesty, however +slight, causes self-degradation. It matters not whether the act be +successful or not, discovered or concealed; the culprit is no longer the +same, but another person; and he is pursued by a secret uneasiness, by +self-reproach, or the workings of what we call conscience, which is the +inevitable doom of the guilty. + +And here it may be observed how greatly the character may be strengthened +and supported by the cultivation of good habits. Man, it has been said, +is a bundle of habits; and habit is second nature. Metastasio +entertained so strong an opinion as to the power of repetition in act and +thought, that he said, “All is habit in mankind, even virtue itself.” +Butler, in his ‘Analogy,’ impresses the importance of careful +self-discipline and firm resistance to temptation, as tending to make +virtue habitual, so that at length it may become more easy to be good +than to give way to sin. “As habits belonging to the body,” he says, +“are produced by external acts, so habits of the mind are produced by the +execution of inward practical purposes, i.e., carrying them into act, or +acting upon them—the principles of obedience, veracity, justice, and +charity.” And again, Lord Brougham says, when enforcing the immense +importance of training and example in youth, “I trust everything under +God to habit, on which, in all ages, the lawgiver, as well as the +schoolmaster, has mainly placed his reliance; habit, which makes +everything easy, and casts the difficulties upon the deviation from a +wonted course.” Thus, make sobriety a habit, and intemperance will be +hateful; make prudence a habit, and reckless profligacy will become +revolting to every principle of conduct which regulates the life of the +individual. Hence the necessity for the greatest care and watchfulness +against the inroad of any evil habit; for the character is always weakest +at that point at which it has once given way; and it is long before a +principle restored can become so firm as one that has never been moved. +It is a fine remark of a Russian writer, that “Habits are a necklace of +pearls: untie the knot, and the whole unthreads.” + +Wherever formed, habit acts involuntarily, and without effort; and, it is +only when you oppose it, that you find how powerful it has become. What +is done once and again, soon gives facility and proneness. The habit at +first may seem to have no more strength than a spider’s web; but, once +formed, it binds as with a chain of iron. The small events of life, +taken singly, may seem exceedingly unimportant, like snow that falls +silently, flake by flake; yet accumulated, these snow-flakes form the +avalanche. + +Self-respect, self-help, application, industry, integrity—all are of the +nature of habits, not beliefs. Principles, in fact, are but the names +which we assign to habits; for the principles are words, but the habits +are the things themselves: benefactors or tyrants, according as they are +good or evil. It thus happens that as we grow older, a portion of our +free activity and individuality becomes suspended in habit; our actions +become of the nature of fate; and we are bound by the chains which we +have woven around ourselves. + +It is indeed scarcely possible to over-estimate the importance of +training the young to virtuous habits. In them they are the easiest +formed, and when formed they last for life; like letters cut on the bark +of a tree they grow and widen with age. “Train up a child in the way he +should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it.” The beginning +holds within it the end; the first start on the road of life determines +the direction and the destination of the journey; _ce n’est que le +premier pas qui coûte_. “Remember,” said Lord Collingwood to a young man +whom he loved, “before you are five-and-twenty you must establish a +character that will serve you all your life.” As habit strengthens with +age, and character becomes formed, any turning into a new path becomes +more and more difficult. Hence, it is often harder to unlearn than to +learn; and for this reason the Grecian flute-player was justified who +charged double fees to those pupils who had been taught by an inferior +master. To uproot an old habit is sometimes a more painful thing, and +vastly more difficult, than to wrench out a tooth. Try and reform a +habitually indolent, or improvident, or drunken person, and in a large +majority of cases you will fail. For the habit in each case has wound +itself in and through the life until it has become an integral part of +it, and cannot be uprooted. Hence, as Mr. Lynch observes, “the wisest +habit of all is the habit of care in the formation of good habits.” + +Even happiness itself may become habitual. There is a habit of looking +at the bright side of things, and also of looking at the dark side. Dr. +Johnson has said that the habit of looking at the best side of a thing is +worth more to a man than a thousand pounds a year. And we possess the +power, to a great extent, of so exercising the will as to direct the +thoughts upon objects calculated to yield happiness and improvement +rather than their opposites. In this way the habit of happy thought may +be made to spring up like any other habit. And to bring up men or women +with a genial nature of this sort, a good temper, and a happy frame of +mind, is perhaps of even more importance, in many cases, than to perfect +them in much knowledge and many accomplishments. + +As daylight can be seen through very small holes, so little things will +illustrate a person’s character. Indeed character consists in little +acts, well and honourably performed; daily life being the quarry from +which we build it up, and rough-hew the habits which form it. One of the +most marked tests of character is the manner in which we conduct +ourselves towards others. A graceful behaviour towards superiors, +inferiors, and equals, is a constant source of pleasure. It pleases +others because it indicates respect for their personality; but it gives +tenfold more pleasure to ourselves. Every man may to a large extent be a +self-educator in good behaviour, as in everything else; he can be civil +and kind, if he will, though he have not a penny in his purse. +Gentleness in society is like the silent influence of light, which gives +colour to all nature; it is far more powerful than loudness or force, and +far more fruitful. It pushes its way quietly and persistently, like the +tiniest daffodil in spring, which raises the clod and thrusts it aside by +the simple persistency of growing. + +Even a kind look will give pleasure and confer happiness. In one of +Robertson of Brighton’s letters, he tells of a lady who related to him +“the delight, the tears of gratitude, which she had witnessed in a poor +girl to whom, in passing, I gave a kind look on going out of church on +Sunday. What a lesson! How cheaply happiness can be given! What +opportunities we miss of doing an angel’s work! I remember doing it, +full of sad feelings, passing on, and thinking no more about it; and it +gave an hour’s sunshine to a human life, and lightened the load of life +to a human heart for a time!” {392} + +Morals and manners, which give colour to life, are of much greater +importance than laws, which are but their manifestations. The law +touches us here and there, but manners are about us everywhere, pervading +society like the air we breathe. Good manners, as we call them, are +neither more nor less than good behaviour; consisting of courtesy and +kindness; benevolence being the preponderating element in all kinds of +mutually beneficial and pleasant intercourse amongst human beings. +“Civility,” said Lady Montague, “costs nothing and buys everything.” The +cheapest of all things is kindness, its exercise requiring the least +possible trouble and self-sacrifice. “Win hearts,” said Burleigh to +Queen Elizabeth, “and you have all men’s hearts and purses.” If we would +only let nature act kindly, free from affectation and artifice, the +results on social good humour and happiness would be incalculable. The +little courtesies which form the small change of life, may separately +appear of little intrinsic value, but they acquire their importance from +repetition and accumulation. They are like the spare minutes, or the +groat a day, which proverbially produce such momentous results in the +course of a twelvemonth, or in a lifetime. + +Manners are the ornament of action; and there is a way of speaking a kind +word, or of doing a kind thing, which greatly enhances their value. What +seems to be done with a grudge, or as an act of condescension, is +scarcely accepted as a favour. Yet there are men who pride themselves +upon their gruffness; and though they may possess virtue and capacity, +their manner is often such as to render them almost insupportable. It is +difficult to like a man who, though he may not pull your nose, habitually +wounds your self-respect, and takes a pride in saying disagreeable things +to you. There are others who are dreadfully condescending, and cannot +avoid seizing upon every small opportunity of making their greatness +felt. When Abernethy was canvassing for the office of surgeon to St. +Bartholomew Hospital, he called upon such a person—a rich grocer, one of +the governors. The great man behind the counter seeing the great surgeon +enter, immediately assumed the grand air towards the supposed suppliant +for his vote. “I presume, Sir, you want my vote and interest at this +momentous epoch of your life?” Abernethy, who hated humbugs, and felt +nettled at the tone, replied: “No, I don’t: I want a pennyworth of figs; +come, look sharp and wrap them up; I want to be off!” + +The cultivation of manner—though in excess it is foppish and foolish—is +highly necessary in a person who has occasion to negociate with others in +matters of business. Affability and good breeding may even be regarded +as essential to the success of a man in any eminent station and enlarged +sphere of life; for the want of it has not unfrequently been found in a +great measure to neutralise the results of much industry, integrity, and +honesty of character. There are, no doubt, a few strong tolerant minds +which can bear with defects and angularities of manner, and look only to +the more genuine qualities; but the world at large is not so forbearant, +and cannot help forming its judgments and likings mainly according to +outward conduct. + +Another mode of displaying true politeness is consideration for the +opinions of others. It has been said of dogmatism, that it is only +puppyism come to its full growth; and certainly the worst form this +quality can assume, is that of opinionativeness and arrogance. Let men +agree to differ, and, when they do differ, bear and forbear. Principles +and opinions may be maintained with perfect suavity, without coming to +blows or uttering hard words; and there are circumstances in which words +are blows, and inflict wounds far less easy to heal. As bearing upon +this point, we quote an instructive little parable spoken some time since +by an itinerant preacher of the Evangelical Alliance on the borders of +Wales:—“As I was going to the hills,” said he, “early one misty morning, +I saw something moving on a mountain side, so strange looking that I took +it for a monster. When I came nearer to it I found it was a man. When I +came up to him I found he was my brother.” + +The inbred politeness which springs from right-heartedness and kindly +feelings, is of no exclusive rank or station. The mechanic who works at +the bench may possess it, as well as the clergyman or the peer. It is by +no means a necessary condition of labour that it should, in any respect, +be either rough or coarse. The politeness and refinement which +distinguish all classes of the people in many continental countries show +that those qualities might become ours too—as doubtless they will become +with increased culture and more general social intercourse—without +sacrificing any of our more genuine qualities as men. From the highest +to the lowest, the richest to the poorest, to no rank or condition in +life has nature denied her highest boon—the great heart. There never yet +existed a gentleman but was lord of a great heart. And this may exhibit +itself under the hodden grey of the peasant as well as under the laced +coat of the noble. Robert Burns was once taken to task by a young +Edinburgh blood, with whom he was walking, for recognising an honest +farmer in the open street. “Why you fantastic gomeral,” exclaimed Burns, +“it was not the great coat, the scone bonnet, and the saunders-boot hose +that I spoke to, but _the man_ that was in them; and the man, sir, for +true worth, would weigh down you and me, and ten more such, any day.” +There may be a homeliness in externals, which may seem vulgar to those +who cannot discern the heart beneath; but, to the right-minded, character +will always have its clear insignia. + +William and Charles Grant were the sons of a farmer in Inverness-shire, +whom a sudden flood stripped of everything, even to the very soil which +he tilled. The farmer and his sons, with the world before them where to +choose, made their way southward in search of employment until they +arrived in the neighbourhood of Bury in Lancashire. From the crown of +the hill near Walmesley they surveyed the wide extent of country which +lay before them, the river Irwell making its circuitous course through +the valley. They were utter strangers in the neighbourhood, and knew not +which way to turn. To decide their course they put up a stick, and +agreed to pursue the direction in which it fell. Thus their decision was +made, and they journeyed on accordingly until they reached the village of +Ramsbotham, not far distant. They found employment in a print-work, in +which William served his apprenticeship; and they commanded themselves to +their employers by their diligence, sobriety, and strict integrity. They +plodded on, rising from one station to another, until at length the two +men themselves became employers, and after many long years of industry, +enterprise, and benevolence, they became rich, honoured, and respected by +all who knew them. Their cotton-mills and print-works gave employment to +a large population. Their well-directed diligence made the valley teem +with activity, joy, health, and opulence. Out of their abundant wealth +they gave liberally to all worthy objects, erecting churches, founding +schools, and in all ways promoting the well-being of the class of +working-men from which they had sprung. They afterwards erected, on the +top of the hill above Walmesley, a lofty tower in commemoration of the +early event in their history which had determined the place of their +settlement. The brothers Grant became widely celebrated for their +benevolence and their various goodness, and it is said that Mr. Dickens +had them in his mind’s eye when delineating the character of the brothers +Cheeryble. One amongst many anecdotes of a similar kind may be cited to +show that the character was by no means exaggerated. A Manchester +warehouseman published an exceedingly scurrilous pamphlet against the +firm of Grant Brothers, holding up the elder partner to ridicule as +“Billy Button.” William was informed by some one of the nature of the +pamphlet, and his observation was that the man would live to repent of +it. “Oh!” said the libeller, when informed of the remark, “he thinks +that some time or other I shall be in his debt; but I will take good care +of that.” It happens, however, that men in business do not always +foresee who shall be their creditor, and it so turned out that the +Grants’ libeller became a bankrupt, and could not complete his +certificate and begin business again without obtaining their signature. +It seemed to him a hopeless case to call upon that firm for any favour, +but the pressing claims of his family forced him to make the application. +He appeared before the man whom he had ridiculed as “Billy Button” +accordingly. He told his tale and produced his certificate. “You wrote +a pamphlet against us once?” said Mr. Grant. The supplicant expected to +see his document thrown into the fire; instead of which Grant signed the +name of the firm, and thus completed the necessary certificate. “We make +it a rule,” said he, handing it back, “never to refuse signing the +certificate of an honest tradesman, and we have never heard that you were +anything else.” The tears started into the man’s eyes. “Ah,” continued +Mr. Grant, “you see my saying was true, that you would live to repent +writing that pamphlet. I did not mean it as a threat—I only meant that +some day you would know us better, and repent having tried to injure us.” +“I do, I do, indeed, repent it.” “Well, well, you know us now. But how +do you get on—what are you going to do?” The poor man stated that he had +friends who would assist him when his certificate was obtained. “But how +are you off in the mean time?” The answer was, that, having given up +every farthing to his creditors, he had been compelled to stint his +family in even the common necessaries of life, that he might be enabled +to pay for his certificate. “My good fellow, this will never do; your +wife and family must not suffer in this way; be kind enough to take this +ten-pound note to your wife from me: there, there, now—don’t cry, it will +be all well with you yet; keep up your spirits, set to work like a man, +and you will raise your head among the best of us yet.” The overpowered +man endeavoured with choking utterance to express his gratitude, but in +vain; and putting his hand to his face, he went out of the room sobbing +like a child. + +The True Gentleman is one whose nature has been fashioned after the +highest models. It is a grand old name, that of Gentleman, and has been +recognized as a rank and power in all stages of society. “The Gentleman +is always the Gentleman,” said the old French General to his regiment of +Scottish gentry at Rousillon, “and invariably proves himself such in need +and in danger.” To possess this character is a dignity of itself, +commanding the instinctive homage of every generous mind, and those who +will not bow to titular rank, will yet do homage to the gentleman. His +qualities depend not upon fashion or manners, but upon moral worth—not on +personal possessions, but on personal qualities. The Psalmist briefly +describes him as one “that walketh uprightly, and worketh righteousness, +and speaketh the truth in his heart.” + +The gentleman is eminently distinguished for his self-respect. He values +his character,—not so much of it only as can be seen of others, but as he +sees it himself; having regard for the approval of his inward monitor. +And, as he respects himself, so, by the same law, does he respect others. +Humanity is sacred in his eyes: and thence proceed politeness and +forbearance, kindness and charity. It is related of Lord Edward +Fitzgerald that, while travelling in Canada, in company with the Indians, +he was shocked by the sight of a poor squaw trudging along laden with her +husband’s trappings, while the chief himself walked on unencumbered. +Lord Edward at once relieved the squaw of her pack by placing it upon his +own shoulders,—a beautiful instance of what the French call _politesse de +cœur_—the inbred politeness of the true gentleman. + +The true gentleman has a keen sense of honour,—scrupulously avoiding mean +actions. His standard of probity in word and action is high. He does +not shuffle or prevaricate, dodge or skulk; but is honest, upright, and +straightforward. His law is rectitude—action in right lines. When he +says _yes_, it is a law: and he dares to say the valiant _no_ at the +fitting season. The gentleman will not be bribed; only the low-minded +and unprincipled will sell themselves to those who are interested in +buying them. When the upright Jonas Hanway officiated as commissioner in +the victualling department, he declined to receive a present of any kind +from a contractor; refusing thus to be biassed in the performance of his +public duty. A fine trait of the same kind is to be noted in the life of +the Duke of Wellington. Shortly after the battle of Assaye, one morning +the Prime Minister of the Court of Hyderabad waited upon him for the +purpose of privately ascertaining what territory and what advantages had +been reserved for his master in the treaty of peace between the Mahratta +princes and the Nizam. To obtain this information the minister offered +the general a very large sum—considerably above 100,000_l._ Looking at +him quietly for a few seconds, Sir Arthur said, “It appears, then, that +you are capable of keeping a secret?” “Yes, certainly,” replied the +minister. “_Then so am I_,” said the English general, smiling, and bowed +the minister out. It was to Wellington’s great honour, that though +uniformly successful in India, and with the power of earning in such +modes as this enormous wealth, he did not add a farthing to his fortune, +and returned to England a comparatively poor man. + +A similar sensitiveness and high-mindedness characterised his noble +relative, the Marquis of Wellesley, who, on one occasion, positively +refused a present of 100,000_l._ proposed to be given him by the +Directors of the East India Company on the conquest of Mysore. “It is +not necessary,” said he, “for me to allude to the independence of my +character, and the proper dignity attaching to my office; other reasons +besides these important considerations lead me to decline this testimony, +which is not suitable to me. _I think of nothing but our army_. I +should be much distressed to curtail the share of those brave soldiers.” +And the Marquis’s resolution to refuse the present remained unalterable. + +Sir Charles Napier exhibited the same noble self-denial in the course of +his Indian career. He rejected all the costly gifts which barbaric +princes were ready to lay at his feet, and said with truth, “Certainly I +could have got 30,000_l._ since my coming to Scinde, but my hands do not +want washing yet. Our dear father’s sword which I wore in both battles +(Meanee and Hyderabad) is unstained.” + +Riches and rank have no necessary connexion with genuine gentlemanly +qualities. The poor man may be a true gentleman,—in spirit and in daily +life. He may be honest, truthful, upright, polite, temperate, +courageous, self-respecting, and self-helping,—that is, be a true +gentleman. The poor man with a rich spirit is in all ways superior to +the rich man with a poor spirit. To borrow St. Paul’s words, the former +is as “having nothing, yet possessing all things,” while the other, +though possessing all things, has nothing. The first hopes everything, +and fears nothing; the last hopes nothing, and fears everything. Only +the poor in spirit are really poor. He who has lost all, but retains his +courage, cheerfulness, hope, virtue, and self-respect, is still rich. +For such a man, the world is, as it were, held in trust; his spirit +dominating over its grosser cares, he can still walk erect, a true +gentleman. + +Occasionally, the brave and gentle character may be found under the +humblest garb. Here is an old illustration, but a fine one. Once on a +time, when the Adige suddenly overflowed its banks, the bridge of Verona +was carried away, with the exception of the centre arch, on which stood a +house, whose inhabitants supplicated help from the windows, while the +foundations were visibly giving way. “I will give a hundred French +louis,” said the Count Spolverini, who stood by, “to any person who will +venture to deliver these unfortunate people.” A young peasant came forth +from the crowd, seized a boat, and pushed into the stream. He gained the +pier, received the whole family into the boat, and made for the shore, +where he landed them in safety. “Here is your money, my brave young +fellow,” said the count. “No,” was the answer of the young man, “I do +not sell my life; give the money to this poor family, who have need of +it.” Here spoke the true spirit of the gentleman, though he was but in +the garb of a peasant. + +Not less touching was the heroic conduct of a party of Deal boatmen in +rescuing the crew of a collier-brig in the Downs but a short time ago. +{400} A sudden storm which set in from the north-east drove several +ships from their anchors, and it being low water, one of them struck the +ground at a considerable distance from the shore, when the sea made a +clean breach over her. There was not a vestige of hope for the vessel, +such was the fury of the wind and the violence of the waves. There was +nothing to tempt the boatmen on shore to risk their lives in saving +either ship or crew, for not a farthing of salvage was to be looked for. +But the daring intrepidity of the Deal boatmen was not wanting at this +critical moment. No sooner had the brig grounded than Simon Pritchard, +one of the many persons assembled along the beach, threw off his coat and +called out, “Who will come with me and try to save that crew?” Instantly +twenty men sprang forward, with “I will,” “and I.” But seven only were +wanted; and running down a galley punt into the surf, they leaped in and +dashed through the breakers, amidst the cheers of those on shore. How +the boat lived in such a sea seemed a miracle; but in a few minutes, +impelled by the strong arms of these gallant men, she flew on and reached +the stranded ship, “catching her on the top of a wave”; and in less than +a quarter of an hour from the time the boat left the shore, the six men +who composed the crew of the collier were landed safe on Walmer Beach. A +nobler instance of indomitable courage and disinterested heroism on the +part of the Deal boatmen—brave though they are always known to be—perhaps +cannot be cited; and we have pleasure in here placing it on record. + +Mr. Turnbull, in his work on ‘Austria,’ relates an anecdote of the late +Emperor Francis, in illustration of the manner in which the Government of +that country has been indebted, for its hold upon the people, to the +personal qualities of its princes. “At the time when the cholera was +raging at Vienna, the emperor, with an aide-de-camp, was strolling about +the streets of the city and suburbs, when a corpse was dragged past on a +litter unaccompanied by a single mourner. The unusual circumstance +attracted his attention, and he learnt, on inquiry, that the deceased was +a poor person who had died of cholera, and that the relatives had not +ventured on what was then considered the very dangerous office of +attending the body to the grave. ‘Then,’ said Francis, ‘we will supply +their place, for none of my poor people should go to the grave without +that last mark of respect;’ and he followed the body to the distant place +of interment, and, bare-headed, stood to see every rite and observance +respectfully performed.” + +Fine though this illustration may be of the qualities of the gentleman, +we can match it by another equally good, of two English navvies in Paris, +as related in a morning paper a few years ago. “One day a hearse was +observed ascending the steep Rue de Clichy on its way to Montmartre, +bearing a coffin of poplar wood with its cold corpse. Not a soul +followed—not even the living dog of the dead man, if he had one. The day +was rainy and dismal; passers by lifted the hat as is usual when a +funeral passes, and that was all. At length it passed two English +navvies, who found themselves in Paris on their way from Spain. A right +feeling spoke from beneath their serge jackets. ‘Poor wretch!’ said the +one to the other, ‘no one follows him; let us two follow!’ And the two +took off their hats, and walked bare-headed after the corpse of a +stranger to the cemetery of Montmartre.” + +Above all, the gentleman is truthful. He feels that truth is the “summit +of being,” and the soul of rectitude in human affairs. Lord Chesterfield +declared that Truth made the success of a gentleman. The Duke of +Wellington, writing to Kellerman, on the subject of prisoners on parole, +when opposed to that general in the peninsula, told him that if there was +one thing on which an English officer prided himself more than another, +excepting his courage, it was his truthfulness. “When English officers,” +said he, “have given their parole of honour not to escape, be sure they +will not break it. Believe me—trust to their word; the word of an +English officer is a surer guarantee than the vigilance of sentinels.” + +True courage and gentleness go hand in hand. The brave man is generous +and forbearant, never unforgiving and cruel. It was finely said of Sir +John Franklin by his friend Parry, that “he was a man who never turned +his back upon a danger, yet of that tenderness that he would not brush +away a mosquito.” A fine trait of character—truly gentle, and worthy of +the spirit of Bayard—was displayed by a French officer in the cavalry +combat of El Bodon in Spain. He had raised his sword to strike Sir +Felton Harvey, but perceiving his antagonist had only one arm, he +instantly stopped, brought down his sword before Sir Felton in the usual +salute, and rode past. To this may be added a noble and gentle deed of +Ney during the same Peninsular War. Charles Napier was taken prisoner at +Corunna, desperately wounded; and his friends at home did not know +whether he was alive or dead. A special messenger was sent out from +England with a frigate to ascertain his fate. Baron Clouet received the +flag, and informed Ney of the arrival. “Let the prisoner see his +friends,” said Ney, “and tell them he is well, and well treated.” Clouet +lingered, and Ney asked, smiling, “what more he wanted”? “He has an old +mother, a widow, and blind.” “Has he? then let him go himself and tell +her he is alive.” As the exchange of prisoners between the countries was +not then allowed, Ney knew that he risked the displeasure of the Emperor +by setting the young officer at liberty; but Napoleon approved the +generous act. + +Notwithstanding the wail which we occasionally hear for the chivalry that +is gone, our own age has witnessed deeds of bravery and gentleness—of +heroic self-denial and manly tenderness—which are unsurpassed in history. +The events of the last few years have shown that our countrymen are as +yet an undegenerate race. On the bleak plateau of Sebastopol, in the +dripping perilous trenches of that twelvemonth’s leaguer, men of all +classes proved themselves worthy of the noble inheritance of character +which their forefathers have bequeathed to them. But it was in the hour +of the great trial in India that the qualities of our countrymen shone +forth the brightest. The march of Neill on Cawnpore, of Havelock on +Lucknow—officers and men alike urged on by the hope of rescuing the women +and the children—are events which the whole history of chivalry cannot +equal. Outram’s conduct to Havelock, in resigning to him, though his +inferior officer, the honour of leading the attack on Lucknow, was a +trait worthy of Sydney, and alone justifies the title which has been +awarded to him of, “the Bayard of India.” The death of Henry +Lawrence—that brave and gentle spirit—his last words before dying, “Let +there be no fuss about me; let me be buried _with the men_,”—the anxious +solicitude of Sir Colin Campbell to rescue the beleaguered of Lucknow, +and to conduct his long train of women and children by night from thence +to Cawnpore, which he reached amidst the all but overpowering assault of +the enemy,—the care with which he led them across the perilous bridge, +never ceasing his charge over them until he had seen the precious convoy +safe on the road to Allahabad, and then burst upon the Gwalior contingent +like a thunder-clap;—such things make us feel proud of our countrymen and +inspire the conviction that the best and purest glow of chivalry is not +dead, but vigorously lives among us yet. + +Even the common soldiers proved themselves gentlemen under their trials. +At Agra, where so many poor fellows had been scorched and wounded in +their encounter with the enemy, they were brought into the fort, and +tenderly nursed by the ladies; and the rough, gallant fellows proved +gentle as any children. During the weeks that the ladies watched over +their charge, never a word was said by any soldier that could shock the +ear of the gentlest. And when all was over—when the mortally-wounded had +died, and the sick and maimed who survived were able to demonstrate their +gratitude—they invited their nurses and the chief people of Agra to an +entertainment in the beautiful gardens of the Taj, where, amidst flowers +and music, the rough veterans, all scarred and mutilated as they were, +stood up to thank their gentle countrywomen who had clothed and fed them, +and ministered to their wants during their time of sore distress. In the +hospitals at Scutari, too, many wounded and sick blessed the kind English +ladies who nursed them; and nothing can be finer than the thought of the +poor sufferers, unable to rest through pain, blessing the shadow of +Florence Nightingale as it fell upon their pillow in the night watches. + +The wreck of the _Birkenhead_ off the coast of Africa on the 27th of +February, 1852, affords another memorable illustration of the chivalrous +spirit of common men acting in this nineteenth century, of which any age +might be proud. The vessel was steaming along the African coast with 472 +men and 166 women and children on board. The men belonged to several +regiments then serving at the Cape, and consisted principally of recruits +who had been only a short time in the service. At two o’clock in the +morning, while all were asleep below, the ship struck with violence upon +a hidden rock which penetrated her bottom; and it was at once felt that +she must go down. The roll of the drums called the soldiers to arms on +the upper deck, and the men mustered as if on parade. The word was +passed to _save the women and children_; and the helpless creatures were +brought from below, mostly undressed, and handed silently into the boats. +When they had all left the ship’s side, the commander of the vessel +thoughtlessly called out, “All those that can swim, jump overboard and +make for the boats.” But Captain Wright, of the 91st Highlanders, said, +“No! if you do that, _the boats with the women must be swamped_;” and the +brave men stood motionless. There was no boat remaining, and no hope of +safety; but not a heart quailed; no one flinched from his duty in that +trying moment. “There was not a murmur nor a cry amongst them,” said +Captain Wright, a survivor, “until the vessel made her final plunge.” +Down went the ship, and down went the heroic band, firing a _feu de joie_ +as they sank beneath the waves. Glory and honour to the gentle and the +brave! The examples of such men never die, but, like their memories, are +immortal. + +There are many tests by which a gentleman may be known; but there is one +that never fails—How does he _exercise power_ over those subordinate to +him? How does he conduct himself towards women and children? How does +the officer treat his men, the employer his servants, the master his +pupils, and man in every station those who are weaker than himself? The +discretion, forbearance, and kindliness, with which power in such cases +is used, may indeed be regarded as the crucial test of gentlemanly +character. When La Motte was one day passing through a crowd, he +accidentally trod upon the foot of a young fellow, who forthwith struck +him on the face: “Ah, sire,” said La Motte, “you will surely be sorry for +what you have done, when you know that _I am blind_.” He who bullies +those who are not in a position to resist may be a snob, but cannot be a +gentleman. He who tyrannizes over the weak and helpless may be a coward, +but no true man. The tyrant, it has been said, is but a slave turned +inside out. Strength, and the consciousness of strength, in a +right-hearted man, imparts a nobleness to his character; but he will be +most careful how he uses it; for + + “It is excellent + To have a giant’s strength; but it is tyrannous + To use it like a giant.” + +Gentleness is indeed the best test of gentlemanliness. A consideration +for the feelings of others, for his inferiors and dependants as well as +his equals, and respect for their self-respect, will pervade the true +gentleman’s whole conduct. He will rather himself suffer a small injury, +than by an uncharitable construction of another’s behaviour, incur the +risk of committing a great wrong. He will be forbearant of the +weaknesses, the failings, and the errors, of those whose advantages in +life have not been equal to his own. He will be merciful even to his +beast. He will not boast of his wealth, or his strength, or his gifts. +He will not be puffed up by success, or unduly depressed by failure. He +will not obtrude his views on others, but speak his mind freely when +occasion calls for it. He will not confer favours with a patronizing +air. Sir Walter Scott once said of Lord Lothian, “He is a man from whom +one may receive a favour, and that’s saying a great deal in these days.” + +Lord Chatham has said that the gentleman is characterised by his +sacrifice of self and preference of others to himself in the little daily +occurrences of life. In illustration of this ruling spirit of +considerateness in a noble character, we may cite the anecdote of the +gallant Sir Ralph Abercromby, of whom it is related, that when mortally +wounded in the battle of Aboukir, he was carried in a litter on board the +‘Foudroyant;’ and, to ease his pain, a soldier’s blanket was placed under +his head, from which he experienced considerable relief. He asked what +it was. “It’s only a soldier’s blanket,” was the reply. “_Whose_ +blanket is it?” said he, half lifting himself up. “Only one of the +men’s.” “I wish to know the name of the man whose blanket this is.” “It +is Duncan Roy’s, of the 42nd, Sir Ralph.” “Then see that Duncan Roy gets +his blanket this very night.” {408} Even to ease his dying agony the +general would not deprive the private soldier of his blanket for one +night. The incident is as good in its way as that of the dying Sydney +handing his cup of water to the private soldier on the field of Zutphen. + +The quaint old Fuller sums up in a few words the character of the true +gentleman and man of action in describing that of the great admiral, Sir +Francis Drake: “Chaste in his life, just in his dealings, true of his +word; merciful to those that were under him, and hating nothing so much +as idlenesse; in matters especially of moment, he was never wont to rely +on other men’s care, how trusty or skilful soever they might seem to be, +but, always contemning danger, and refusing no toyl, he was wont himself +to be one (whoever was a second) at every turn, where courage, skill, or +industry, was to be employed.” + + + + +FOOTNOTES + + +{4} Napoleon III., ‘Life of Cæsar.’ + +{15} Soult received but little education in his youth, and learnt next +to no geography until he became foreign minister of France, when the +study of this branch of knowledge is said to have given him the greatest +pleasure.—‘Œuvres, &c., d’Alexis de Tocqueville. Par G. de Beaumont.’ +Paris, 1861. I. 52 + +{25} ‘Œuvres et Correspondance inédite d’Alexis de Tocqueville. Par +Gustave de Beaumont.’ I. 398. + +{26} “I have seen,” said he, “a hundred times in the course of my life, +a weak man exhibit genuine public virtue, because supported by a wife who +sustained hint in his course, not so much by advising him to such and +such acts, as by exercising a strengthening influence over the manner in +which duty or even ambition was to be regarded. Much oftener, however, +it must be confessed, have I seen private and domestic life gradually +transform a man to whom nature had given generosity, disinterestedness, +and even some capacity for greatness, into an ambitious, mean-spirited, +vulgar, and selfish creature who, in matters relating to his country, +ended by considering them only in so far as they rendered his own +particular condition more comfortable and easy.”—‘Œuvres de Tocqueville.’ +II. 349. + +{31} Since the original publication of this book, the author has in +another work, ‘The Lives of Boulton and Watt,’ endeavoured to portray in +greater detail the character and achievements of these two remarkable +men. + +{43a} The following entry, which occurs in the account of monies +disbursed by the burgesses of Sheffield in 1573 [?] is supposed by some +to refer to the inventor of the stocking frame:—“Item gyven to Willm-Lee, +a poore scholler in Sheafield, towards the settyng him to the Universitie +of Chambrydge, and buying him bookes and other furnyture [which money was +afterwards returned] xiii iiii [13s. 4d.].”—Hunter, ‘History of +Hallamshire,’ 141. + +{43b} ‘History of the Framework Knitters.’ + +{44} There are, however, other and different accounts. One is to the +effect that Lee set about studying the contrivance of the stocking-loom +for the purpose of lessening the labour of a young country-girl to whom +he was attached, whose occupation was knitting; another, that being +married and poor, his wife was under the necessity of contributing to +their joint support by knitting; and that Lee, while watching the motion +of his wife’s fingers, conceived the idea of imitating their movements by +a machine. The latter story seems to have been invented by Aaron Hill, +Esq., in his ‘Account of the Rise and Progress of the Beech Oil +manufacture,’ London, 1715; but his statement is altogether unreliable. +Thus he makes Lee to have been a Fellow of a college at Oxford, from +which he was expelled for marrying an innkeeper’s daughter; whilst Lee +neither studied at Oxford, nor married there, nor was a Fellow of any +college; and he concludes by alleging that the result of his invention +was to “make Lee and his family happy;” whereas the invention brought him +only a heritage of misery, and he died abroad destitute. + +{45} Blackner, ‘History of Nottingham.’ The author adds, “We have +information, handed down in direct succession from father to son, that it +was not till late in the seventeenth century that one man could manage +the working of a frame. The man who was considered the workman employed +a labourer, who stood behind the frame to work the slur and pressing +motions; but the application of traddles and of the feet eventually +rendered the labour unnecessary.” + +{74} Palissy’s own words are:—“Le bois m’ayant failli, je fus contraint +brusler les estapes (étaies) qui soustenoyent les tailles de mon jardin, +lesquelles estant bruslées, je fus constraint brusler les tables et +plancher de la maison, afin de faire fondre la seconde composition. +J’estois en une telle angoisse que je ne sçaurois dire: car j’estois tout +tari et deseché à cause du labeur et de la chaleur du fourneau; il y +avoit plus d’un mois que ma chemise n’avoit seiché sur moy, encores pour +me consoler on se moquoit de moy, et mesme ceux qui me devoient secourir +alloient crier par la ville que je faisois brusler le plancher: et par +tel moyen l’on me faisoit perdre mon credit et m’estimoit-on estre fol. +Les autres disoient que je cherchois à faire la fausse monnoye, qui +estoit un mal qui me faisoit seicher sur les pieds; et m’en allois par +les ruës tout baissé comme un homme honteux: . . . personne ne me +secouroit: Mais au contraire ils se mocquoyent de moy, en disant: Il luy +appartient bien de mourir de faim, par ce qu’il delaisse son mestier. +Toutes ces nouvelles venoyent a mes aureilles quand je passois par la +ruë.” ‘Œuvres Complètes de Palissy. Paris, 1844;’ De l’Art de Terre, p. +315. + +{77} “Toutes ces fautes m’ont causé un tel lasseur et tristesse +d’esprit, qu’auparavant que j’aye rendu mes émaux fusible à un mesme +degré de feu, j’ay cuidé entrer jusques à la porte du sepulchre: aussi en +me travaillant à tels affaires je me suis trouvé l’espace de plus se dix +ans si fort escoulé en ma personne, qu’il n’y avoit aucune forme ny +apparence de bosse aux bras ny aux jambes: ains estoyent mes dites jambes +toutes d’une venue: de sorte que les liens de quoy j’attachois mes bas de +chausses estoyent, soudain que je cheminois, sur les talons avec le +residu de mes chausses.”—‘Œuvres, 319–20. + +{78} At the sale of Mr. Bernal’s articles of vertu in London a few years +since, one of Palissy’s small dishes, 12 inches in diameter, with a +lizard in the centre, sold for 162_l._ + +{79} Within the last few months, Mr. Charles Read, a gentleman curious +in matters of Protestant antiquarianism in France, has discovered one of +the ovens in which Palissy baked his chefs-d’œuvre. Several moulds of +faces, plants, animals, &c., were dug up in a good state of preservation, +bearing his well-known stamp. It is situated under the gallery of the +Louvre, in the Place du Carrousel. + +{80a} D’Aubigné, ‘Histoire Universelle.’ The historian adds, “Voyez +l’impudence de ce bilistre! vous diriez qu’il auroit lu ce vers de +Sénèque: ‘On ne peut contraindre celui qui sait mourir: _Qui mori scit_, +cogi nescit.’” + +{80b} The subject of Palissy’s life and labours has been ably and +elaborately treated by Professor Morley in his well-known work. In the +above brief narrative we have for the most part followed Palissy’s own +account of his experiments as given in his ‘Art de Terre.’ + +{84} “Almighty God, the great Creator, +Has changed a goldmaker to a potter.” + +{85} The whole of the Chinese and Japanese porcelain was formerly known +as Indian porcelain—probably because it was first brought by the +Portuguese from India to Europe, after the discovery of the Cape of Good +Hope by Vasco da Gama. + +{89} ‘Wedgwood: an Address delivered at Burslem, Oct. 26th, 1863.’ By +the Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone, M.P. + +{115} It was characteristic of Mr. Hume, that, during his professional +voyages between England and India, he should diligently apply his spare +time to the study of navigation and seamanship; and many years after, it +proved of use to him in a remarkable manner. In 1825, when on his +passage from London to Leith by a sailing smack, the vessel had scarcely +cleared the mouth of the Thames when a sudden storm came on, she was +driven out of her course, and, in the darkness of the night, she struck +on the Goodwin Sands. The captain, losing his presence of mind, seemed +incapable of giving coherent orders, and it is probable that the vessel +would have become a total wreck, had not one of the passengers suddenly +taken the command and directed the working of the ship, himself taking +the helm while the danger lasted. The vessel was saved, and the stranger +was Mr. Hume. + +{149} ‘Saturday Review,’ July 3rd, 1858. + +{173} Mrs. Grote’s ‘Memoir of the Life of Ary Scheffer,’ p. 67. + +{201} While the sheets of this revised edition are passing through the +press, the announcement appears in the local papers of the death of Mr. +Jackson at the age of fifty. His last work, completed shortly before his +death, was a cantata, entitled ‘The Praise of Music.’ The above +particulars of his early life were communicated by himself to the author +several years since, while he was still carrying on his business of a +tallow-chandler at Masham. + +{216} Mansfield owed nothing to his noble relations, who were poor and +uninfluential. His success was the legitimate and logical result of the +means which he sedulously employed to secure it. When a boy he rode up +from Scotland to London on a pony—taking two months to make the journey. +After a course of school and college, he entered upon the profession of +the law, and he closed a career of patient and ceaseless labour as Lord +Chief Justice of England—the functions of which he is universally +admitted to have performed with unsurpassed ability, justice, and honour. + +{263} On ‘Thought and Action.’ + +{277} ‘Correspondance de Napoléon Ier.,’ publiée par ordre de l’Empereur +Napoléon III, Paris, 1864. + +{283} The recently published correspondence of Napoleon with his brother +Joseph, and the Memoirs of the Duke of Ragusa, abundantly confirm this +view. The Duke overthrew Napoleon’s generals by the superiority of his +routine. He used to say that, if he knew anything at all, he knew how to +feed an army. + +{313} His old gardener. Collingwood’s favourite amusement was +gardening. Shortly after the battle of Trafalgar a brother admiral +called upon him, and, after searching for his lordship all over the +garden, he at last discovered him, with old Scott, in the bottom of a +deep trench which they were busily employed in digging. + +{319} Article in the ‘Times.’ + +{321} ‘Self-Development: an Address to Students,’ by George Ross, M.D., +pp. 1–20, reprinted from the ‘Medical Circular.’ This address, to which +we acknowledge our obligations, contains many admirable thoughts on +self-culture, is thoroughly healthy in its tone, and well deserves +republication in an enlarged form. + +{329} ‘Saturday Review.’ + +{354} See the admirable and well-known book, ‘The Pursuit of Knowledge +under Difficulties.’ + +{356a} Late Professor of Moral Philosophy at St. Andrew’s. + +{356b} A writer in the ‘Edinburgh Review’ (July, 1859) observes that +“the Duke’s talents seem never to have developed themselves until some +active and practical field for their display was placed immediately +before him. He was long described by his Spartan mother, who thought him +a dunce, as only ‘food for powder.’ He gained no sort of distinction, +either at Eton or at the French Military College of Angers.” It is not +improbable that a competitive examination, at this day, might have +excluded him from the army. + +{357} Correspondent of ‘The Times,’ 11th June, 1863. + +{392} Robertson’s ‘Life and Letters,’ i. 258. + +{400} On the 11th January, 1866. + +{408} Brown’s ‘Horæ Subsecivæ.’ + + + + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SELF-HELP *** + +***** This file should be named 935-0.txt or 935-0.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/9/3/935/ + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will +be renamed. + +Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright +law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, +so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the +United States without permission and without paying copyright +royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms +of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online +at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you +are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the +country where you are located before using this eBook. +</div> +<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Self-Help<br /> + with illustrations of Conduct and Perseverance</div> +<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Samuel Smiles</div> +<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 10, 1997 [eBook #935]<br /> +[Most recently updated: January 29, 2021]</div> +<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div> +<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div> +<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: David Price</div> +<div style='margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SELF-HELP ***</div> + +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/coverb.jpg"> +<img alt= +"Cover (somewhat battered)" +title= +"Cover (somewhat battered)" + src="images/covers.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<h1>SELF HELP<br /> +<span class="GutSmall">WITH ILLUSTRATIONS OF</span><br /> +CONDUCT AND PERSEVERANCE.</h1> + +<div class="gapspace"> </div> +<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">By</span> +SAMUEL SMILES, LL.D.,<br /> +<span class="GutSmall">AUTHOR OF “LIVES OF THE +ENGINEERS,” ETC.</span></p> + +<div class="gapspace"> </div> +<blockquote><p>“This above all,—To thine own self be +true;<br /> +And it must follow, as the night the day,<br /> +Then canst not then be false to any man.”</p> +<p style="text-align: right"><span +class="smcap">Shakespeare</span>.</p> + +<p>“Might I give counsel to any young man, I would say to +him, try<br /> +to frequent the company of your betters. In books and in +life,<br /> +that is the most wholesome society; learn to admire rightly; +the<br /> +great pleasure of life is that. Note what great men admired;<br +/> +they admired great things; narrow spirits admire basely and<br /> +worship meanly.”—W. M. <span +class="smcap">Thackeray</span>.</p> +</blockquote> + +<div class="gapspace"> </div> +<p style="text-align: center"><b>POPULAR EDITION</b>.</p> + +<div class="gapspace"> </div> +<p style="text-align: center"><span +class="GutSmall">LONDON:</span><br /> +JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET.<br /> +<span class="GutSmall">1897.</span></p> +<h2><a name="pagev"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +v</span>PREFACE.</h2> + +<p><span class="smcap">This</span> is a revised edition of a book +which has already been received with considerable favour at home +and abroad. It has been reprinted in various forms in +America; translations have appeared in Dutch and French, and +others are about to appear in German and Danish. The book +has, doubtless, proved attractive to readers in different +countries by reason of the variety of anecdotal illustrations of +life and character which it contains, and the interest which all +more or less feel in the labours, the trials, the struggles, and +the achievements of others. No one can be better aware than +the author, of its fragmentary character, arising from the manner +in which it was for the most part originally +composed,—having been put together principally from +jottings made during many years,—intended as readings for +young men, and without any view to publication. The +appearance of this edition has furnished an opportunity for +pruning the volume of some superfluous matter, and introducing +various new illustrations, which will probably be found of +general interest.</p> + +<p>In one respect the title of the book, which it is now too late +to alter, has proved unfortunate, as it has led some, who have +judged it merely by the title, to suppose that it consists of a +eulogy of selfishness: the very opposite of what it really +is,—or at least of what the author intended it to be. +Although its chief object unquestionably is to <a +name="pagevi"></a><span class="pagenum">p. vi</span>stimulate +youths to apply themselves diligently to right +pursuits,—sparing neither labour, pains, nor self-denial in +prosecuting them,—and to rely upon their own efforts in +life, rather than depend upon the help or patronage of others, it +will also be found, from the examples given of literary and +scientific men, artists, inventors, educators, philanthropists, +missionaries, and martyrs, that the duty of helping one’s +self in the highest sense involves the helping of one’s +neighbours.</p> + +<p>It has also been objected to the book that too much notice is +taken in it of men who have succeeded in life by helping +themselves, and too little of the multitude of men who have +failed. “Why should not Failure,” it has been +asked, “have its Plutarch as well as Success?” +There is, indeed, no reason why Failure should not have its +Plutarch, except that a record of mere failure would probably be +found excessively depressing as well as uninstructive +reading. It is, however, shown in the following pages that +Failure is the best discipline of the true worker, by stimulating +him to renewed efforts, evoking his best powers, and carrying him +onward in self-culture, self-control, and growth in knowledge and +wisdom. Viewed in this light, Failure, conquered by +Perseverance, is always full of interest and instruction, and +this we have endeavoured to illustrate by many examples.</p> + +<p>As for Failure <i>per se</i>, although it may be well to find +consolations for it at the close of life, there is reason to +doubt whether it is an object that ought to be set before youth +at the beginning of it. Indeed, “how <i>not</i> to do +it” is of all things the easiest learnt: it needs neither +teaching, effort, self-denial, industry, patience, perseverance, +nor judgment. Besides, readers do not care to know about +the general <a name="pagevii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +vii</span>who lost his battles, the engineer whose engines blew +up, the architect who designed only deformities, the painter who +never got beyond daubs, the schemer who did not invent his +machine, the merchant who could not keep out of the +Gazette. It is true, the best of men may fail, in the best +of causes. But even these best of men did not try to fail, +or regard their failure as meritorious; on the contrary, they +tried to succeed, and looked upon failure as misfortune. +Failure in any good cause is, however, honourable, whilst success +in any bad cause is merely infamous. At the same time +success in the good cause is unquestionably better than +failure. But it is not the result in any case that is to be +regarded so much as the aim and the effort, the patience, the +courage, and the endeavour with which desirable and worthy +objects are pursued;—</p> +<blockquote><p>“’Tis not in mortals to command +success;<br /> +We will do more—deserve it.”</p> +</blockquote> +<p>The object of the book briefly is, to re-inculcate these +old-fashioned but wholesome lessons—which perhaps cannot be +too often urged,—that youth must work in order to +enjoy,—that nothing creditable can be accomplished without +application and diligence,—that the student must not be +daunted by difficulties, but conquer them by patience and +perseverance,—and that, above all, he must seek elevation +of character, without which capacity is worthless and worldly +success is naught. If the author has not succeeded in +illustrating these lessons, he can only say that he has failed in +his object.</p> + +<p>Among the new passages introduced in the present edition, may +be mentioned the following:—Illustrious Foreigners of +humble origin (pp. 10–12), French Generals and Marshals <a +name="pageviii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. viii</span>risen +from the ranks (14), De Tocqueville and Mutual Help (24), William +Lee, M.A., and the Stocking-loom (42), John Heathcoat, M.P., and +the Bobbin-net machine (47), Jacquard and his Loom (55), +Vaucanson (58), Joshua Heilmann and the Combing-machine (62), +Bernard Palissy and his struggles (69), Böttgher, discoverer +of Hard Porcelain (80), Count de Buffon as Student (104), Cuvier +(128), Ambrose Paré (134), Claud Lorraine (160), Jacques +Callot (162), Benvenuto Cellini (164), Nicholas Poussin (168), +Ary Scheffer (171), the Strutts of Belper (214), Francis Xavier +(238), Napoleon as a man of business (276), Intrepidity of Deal +Boatmen (400), besides numerous other passages which it is +unnecessary to specify.</p> + +<p><i>London</i>, <i>May</i>, 1866.</p> +<h2><a name="pageix"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +ix</span>INTRODUCTION TO THE FIRST EDITION.</h2> + +<p><span class="smcap">The</span> origin of this book may be +briefly told.</p> + +<p>Some fifteen years since, the author was requested to deliver +an address before the members of some evening classes, which had +been formed in a northern town for mutual improvement, under the +following circumstances:—</p> + +<p>Two or three young men of the humblest rank resolved to meet +in the winter evenings, for the purpose of improving themselves +by exchanging knowledge with each other. Their first +meetings were held in the room of a cottage in which one of the +members lived; and, as others shortly joined them, the place soon +became inconveniently filled. When summer set in, they +adjourned to the cottage garden outside; and the classes were +then held in the open air, round a little boarded hut used as a +garden-house, in which those who officiated as teachers set the +sums, and gave forth the lessons of the evening. When the +weather was fine, the youths might be seen, until a late hour, +hanging round the door of the hut like a cluster of bees; but +sometimes a sudden shower of rain would dash the sums from their +slates, and disperse them for the evening unsatisfied.</p> + +<p>Winter, with its cold nights, was drawing near, and what were +they to do for shelter? Their numbers had by <a +name="pagex"></a><span class="pagenum">p. x</span>this time so +increased, that no room of an ordinary cottage could accommodate +them. Though they were for the most part young men earning +comparatively small weekly wages, they resolved to incur the risk +of hiring a room; and, on making inquiry, they found a large +dingy apartment to let, which had been used as a temporary +Cholera Hospital. No tenant could be found for the place, +which was avoided as if the plague still clung to it. But +the mutual improvement youths, nothing daunted, hired the cholera +room at so much a week, lit it up, placed a few benches and a +deal table in it, and began their winter classes. The place +soon presented a busy and cheerful appearance in the +evenings. The teaching may have been, as no doubt it was, +of a very rude and imperfect sort; but it was done with a +will. Those who knew a little taught those who knew +less—improving themselves while they improved the others; +and, at all events, setting before them a good working +example. Thus these youths—and there were also grown +men amongst them—proceeded to teach themselves and each +other, reading and writing, arithmetic and geography; and even +mathematics, chemistry, and some of the modern languages.</p> + +<p>About a hundred young men had thus come together, when, +growing ambitious, they desired to have lectures delivered to +them; and then it was that the author became acquainted with +their proceedings. A party of them waited on him, for the +purpose of inviting him to deliver an introductory address, or, +as they expressed it, “to talk to them a bit;” +prefacing the request by a modest statement of what they had done +and what they were doing. He could not fail to be touched +by the admirable self-helping spirit <a name="pagexi"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. xi</span>which they had displayed; and, though +entertaining but slight faith in popular lecturing, he felt that +a few words of encouragement, honestly and sincerely uttered, +might not be without some good effect. And in this spirit +he addressed them on more than one occasion, citing examples of +what other men had done, as illustrations of what each might, in +a greater or less degree, do for himself; and pointing out that +their happiness and well-being as individuals in after life, must +necessarily depend mainly upon themselves—upon their own +diligent self-culture, self-discipline, and +self-control—and, above all, on that honest and upright +performance of individual duty, which is the glory of manly +character.</p> + +<p>There was nothing in the slightest degree new or original in +this counsel, which was as old as the Proverbs of Solomon, and +possibly quite as familiar. But old-fashioned though the +advice may have been, it was welcomed. The youths went +forward in their course; worked on with energy and resolution; +and, reaching manhood, they went forth in various directions into +the world, where many of them now occupy positions of trust and +usefulness. Several years after the incidents referred to, +the subject was unexpectedly recalled to the author’s +recollection by an evening visit from a young +man—apparently fresh from the work of a foundry—who +explained that he was now an employer of labour and a thriving +man; and he was pleased to remember with gratitude the words +spoken in all honesty to him and to his fellow-pupils years +before, and even to attribute some measure of his success in life +to the endeavours which he had made to work up to their +spirit.</p> + +<p><a name="pagexii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. xii</span>The +author’s personal interest having in this way been +attracted to the subject of Self-Help, he was accustomed to add +to the memoranda from which he had addressed these young men; and +to note down occasionally in his leisure evening moments, after +the hours of business, the results of such reading, observation, +and experience of life, as he conceived to bear upon it. +One of the most prominent illustrations cited in his earlier +addresses, was that of George Stephenson, the engineer; and the +original interest of the subject, as well as the special +facilities and opportunities which the author possessed for +illustrating Mr. Stephenson’s life and career, induced him +to prosecute it at his leisure, and eventually to publish his +biography. The present volume is written in a similar +spirit, as it has been similar in its origin. The +illustrative sketches of character introduced, are, however, +necessarily less elaborately treated—being busts rather +than full-length portraits, and, in many of the cases, only some +striking feature has been noted; the lives of individuals, as +indeed of nations, often concentrating their lustre and interest +in a few passages. Such as the book is, the author now +leaves it in the hands of the reader; in the hope that the +lessons of industry, perseverance, and self-culture, which it +contains, will be found useful and instructive, as well as +generally interesting.</p> + +<p><i>London</i>, <i>September</i>, 1859.</p> +<h2><a name="pagexiii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +xiii</span>CONTENTS.</h2> +<table> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER I.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"><span +class="smcap">Self-Help</span>—<span class="smcap">National +and Individual</span>.</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Spirit of Self-Help—Institutions and +men—Government a reflex of the individualism of a +nation—Cæsarism and Self-Help—William Dargan on +Independence—Patient labourers in all ranks—Self-Help +a feature in the English character—Power of example and of +work in practical education—Value of +biographies—Great men belong to no exclusive class or +rank—Illustrious men sprung from the +ranks—Shakespeare—Various humble origin of many +eminent men—Distinguished astronomers—Eminent sons of +clergymen—Of attorneys—Illustrious foreigners of +humble origin—Vauquelin, the chemist—Promotions from +the ranks in the French army—Instances of persevering +application and energy—Joseph Brotherton—W. J. +Fox—W. S. Lindsay—William Jackson—Richard +Cobden—Diligence indispensable to usefulness and +distinction—The wealthier ranks not all +idlers—Examples—Military +men—Philosophers—Men of +science—Politicians—Literary men—Sir Robert +Peel—Lord +Brougham—Lytton—Disraeli—Wordsworth on +self-reliance—De Tocqueville: his industry and recognition +of the help of others—Men their own best helpers</p> +</td> +<td><p style="text-align: right">Page<br /> +<span class="indexpageno"><a +href="#page1">1</a></span>–26</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER II.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Leaders of +Industry</span>—<span class="smcap">Inventors and +Producers</span>.</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Industry of the English people—Work the best +educator—Hugh Miller—Poverty and toil not +insurmountable obstacles—Working men as +inventors—Invention of the steam-engine—<a +name="pagexiv"></a><span class="pagenum">p. xiv</span>James Watt: +his industry and habit of attention—Matthew +Boulton—Applications of the steam-engine—The Cotton +manufacture—The early inventors—Paul and +Highs—Arkwright: his early life—Barber, inventor and +manufacturer—His influence and character—The Peels of +South Lancashire—The founder of the family—The first +Sir Robert Peel, cotton-printer—Lady Peel—Rev. +William Lee, inventor of the stocking-frame—Dies abroad in +misery—James Lee—The Nottingham lace +manufacture—John Heathcoat, inventor of the bobbin-net +machine—His early life, his ingenuity, and plodding +perseverance—Invention of his machine—Anecdote of +Lord Lyndhurst—Progress of the +lace-trade—Heathcoat’s machines destroyed by the +Luddites—His character—Jacquard: his inventions and +adventures—Vaucanson: his mechanical genius, improvements +in silk manufacture—Jacquard improves Vaucanson’s +machine—The Jacquard loom adopted—Joshua Heilmann, +inventor of the combing-machine—History of the +invention—Its value</p> +</td> +<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a +href="#page27">27</a></span>–66</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER III.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Three great +Potters</span>—<span class="smcap">Pallissy, Böttgher, +Wedgwood</span>.</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Ancient pottery—Etruscan ware—Luca della +Robbia, the Florentine sculptor: re-discovers the art of +enamelling—Bernard Pallissy: sketch of his life and +labours—Inflamed by the sight of an Italian cup—His +search after the secret of the enamel—His experiments +during years of unproductive toil—His personal and family +privations—Indomitable perseverance, burns his furniture to +heat the furnace, and success at last—Reduced to +destitution—Condemned to death, and release—His +writings—Dies in the Bastille—John Frederick +Böttgher, the Berlin ‘gold cook’—His trick +in alchemy and consequent troubles—Flight into +Saxony—His detention at Dresden—Discovers how to make +red and white porcelain—The manufacture taken up by the +Saxon Government—Böttgher treated as a prisoner and a +slave—His unhappy end—The Sèvres porcelain +manufactory—Josiah Wedgwood, the English potter—Early +state of English earthenware manufacture—Wedgwood’s +indefatigable <a name="pagexv"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +xv</span>industry, skill, and perseverance—His +success—The Barberini vase—Wedgwood a national +benefactor—Industrial heroes</p> +</td> +<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a +href="#page67">67</a></span>–93</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER IV.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Application and +Perseverance</span>.</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Great results attained by simple means—Fortune +favours the industrious—“Genius is +patience”—Newton and Kepler—Industry of eminent +men—Power acquired by repeated effort—Anecdote of Sir +Robert Peel’s cultivation of memory—Facility comes by +practice—Importance of +patience—Cheerfulness—Sydney Smith—Dr. +Hook—Hope an important element in character—Carey the +missionary—Anecdote of Dr. Young—Anecdote of Audubon +the ornithologist—Anecdote of Mr. Carlyle and his MS. of +the ‘French Revolution’—Perseverance of Watt +and Stephenson—Perseverance displayed in the discovery of +the Nineveh marbles by Rawlinson and Layard—Comte de Buffon +as student—His continuous and unremitting labours—Sir +Walter Scott’s perseverance—John +Britton—Loudon—Samuel Drew—Joseph Hume</p> +</td> +<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a +href="#page94">94</a></span>–117</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER V.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Helps and +Opportunities</span>—<span class="smcap">Scientific +Pursuits</span>.</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>No great result achieved by accident—Newton’s +discoveries—Dr. Young—Habit of observing with +intelligence—Galileo—Inventions of Brown, Watt, and +Brunel, accidentally suggested—Philosophy in little +things—Apollonius Pergæus and conic +sections—Franklin and Galvani—Discovery of steam +power—Opportunities seized or made—Simple and rude +tools of great workers—Lee and Stone’s opportunities +for learning—Sir Walter Scott’s—Dr. +Priestly—Sir Humphry Davy—Faraday—Davy and +Coleridge—Cuvier—Dalton’s +industry—Examples of improvement of time—Daguesseau +and Bentham—Melancthon and Baxter—Writing down +observations—Great note-makers—Dr. Pye +Smith—John Hunter: his patient study of little +things—His great labours—Ambrose Paré the +French surgeon—<a name="pagexvi"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. xvi</span>Harvey—Jenner—Sir +Charles Bell—Dr. Marshall Hall—Sir William +Herschel—William Smith the geologist: his discoveries, his +geological map—Hugh Miller: his observant +faculties—John Brown and Robert Dick, geologists—Sir +Roderick Murchison, his industry and attainments</p> +</td> +<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a +href="#page118">118</a></span>–153</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER VI.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Workers in +Art</span>.</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Sir Joshua Reynolds on the power of industry in +art—Humble origin of eminent artists—Acquisition of +wealth not the ruling motive with artists—Michael Angelo on +riches—Patient labours of Michael Angelo and +Titian—West’s early success a +disadvantage—Richard Wilson and Zuccarelli—Sir Joshua +Reynolds, Blake, Bird, Gainsborough, and Hogarth, as boy +artists—Hogarth a keen observer—Banks and +Mulready—Claude Lorraine and Turner: their indefatigable +industry—Perrier and Jacques Callot and their visits to +Rome—Callot and the gipsies—Benvenuto Cellini, +goldsmith and musician: his ambition to excel—Casting of +his statue of Perseus—Nicolas Poussin, a sedulous student +and worker—Duquesnoi—Poussin’s fame—Ary +Scheffer: his hindrances and success—John Flaxman: his +genius and perseverance—His brave wife—Their visit to +Rome—Francis Chantrey: his industry and energy—David +Wilkie and William Etty, unflagging workers—Privations +endured by artists—Martin—Pugin—George Kemp, +architect of the Scott monument—John Gibson, Robert +Thorburn, Noel Paton—James Sharples the blacksmith artist: +his autobiography—Industry of musicians—Handel, +Haydn, Beethoven, Bach, Meyerbeer—Dr. Arne—William +Jackson the self-taught composer</p> +</td> +<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a +href="#page154">154</a></span>–201</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER VII.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Industry and +the Peerage</span>.</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>The peerage fed from the industrial ranks—Fall of +old families: Bohuns, Mortimers, and Plantagenets—The +peerage comparatively modern—Peerages originating with +traders and merchants—Richard Foley, nailmaker, founder of +the Foley peerage—Adventurous career of William Phipps, +founder of <a name="pagexvii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +xvii</span>the Normanby peerage: his recovery of sunken +treasure—Sir William Petty, founder of the Lansdowne +peerage—Jedediah Strutt, founder of the Belper +peerage—William and Edward Strutt—Naval and Military +peers—Peerages founded by lawyers—Lords Tenterden and +Campbell—Lord Eldon: his early struggles and eventual +success—Baron Langdale—Rewards of perseverance</p> +</td> +<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a +href="#page202">202</a></span>–222</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER VIII.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Energy and +Courage</span>.</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Energy characteristic of the Teutonic race—The +foundations of strength of character—Force of +purpose—Concentration—Courageous working—Words +of Hugh Miller and Fowell Buxton—Power and freedom of +will—Words of Lamennais—Suwarrow—Napoleon and +“glory”—Wellington and +“duty”—Promptitude in action—Energy +displayed by the British in India—Warren Hastings—Sir +Charles Napier: his adventure with the Indian swordsman—The +rebellion in India—The Lawrences—Nicholson—The +siege of Delhi—Captain Hodson—Missionary +labourers—Francis Xavier’s missions in the +East—John Williams—Dr. Livingstone—John +Howard—Jonas Hanway: his career—The philanthropic +labours of Granville Sharp—Position of slaves in +England—Result of Sharp’s +efforts—Clarkson’s labours—Fowell Buxton: his +resolute purpose and energy—Abolition of slavery</p> +</td> +<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a +href="#page223">223</a></span>–262</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER IX.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Men of +Business</span>.</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Hazlitt’s definition of the man of +business—The chief requisite qualities—Men of genius +men of business—Shakespeare, Chaucer, Spenser, Milton, +Newton, Cowper, Wordsworth, Scott, Ricardo, Grote, J. S. +Mill—Labour and application necessary to success—Lord +Melbourne’s advice—The school of difficulty a good +school—Conditions of success in Law—The industrious +architect—The salutary influence of work—Consequences +of contempt for arithmetic—Dr. Johnson on <a +name="pagexviii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. xviii</span>the +alleged injustice of “the world”—Washington +Irving’s views—Practical qualities necessary in +business—Importance of accuracy—Charles James +Fox—Method—Richard Cecil and De Witt: their despatch +of business—Value of time—Sir Walter Scott’s +advice—Promptitude—Economy of +time—Punctuality—Firmness—Tact—Napoleon +and Wellington as men of business—Napoleon’s +attention to details—The ‘Napoleon +Correspondence’—Wellington’s business +faculty—Wellington in the Peninsula—“Honesty +the best policy”—Trade tries +character—Dishonest gains—David Barclay a model man +of business</p> +</td> +<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a +href="#page263">263</a></span>–289</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER X.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"><span +class="smcap">Money</span>—<span class="smcap">Its Use and +Abuse</span>.</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>The right use of money a test of wisdom—The virtue +of self-denial—Self-imposed taxes—Economy necessary +to independence—Helplessness of the +improvident—Frugality an important public +question—Counsels of Richard Cobden and John +Bright—The bondage of the improvident—Independence +attainable by working men—Francis Horner’s advice +from his father—Robert Burns—Living within the +means—Bacon’s maxim—Wasters—Running into +debt—Haydon’s debts—Fichte—Dr. Johnson on +debt—John Locke—The Duke of Wellington on +debt—Washington—Earl St. Vincent: his protested +bill—Joseph Hume on living too high—Ambition after +gentility—Napier’s order to his officers in +India—Resistance to temptation—Hugh Miller’s +case—High standard of life necessary—Proverbs on +money-making and thrift—Thomas Wright and the reclamation +of criminals—Mere money-making—John +Foster—Riches no proof of worth—All honest industry +honourable—The power of money over-estimated—Joseph +Brotherton—True Respectability—Lord Collingwood</p> +</td> +<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a +href="#page290">290</a></span>–313</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XI.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"><span +class="smcap">Self-culture</span>—<span +class="smcap">Facilities and Difficulties</span>.</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Sir W. Scott and Sir B. Brodie on self-culture—Dr. +Arnold’s spirit—Active employment +salutary—Malthus’s advice to <a +name="pagexix"></a><span class="pagenum">p. xix</span>his +son—Importance of physical health—Hodson, of +“Hodson’s Horse”—Dr. Channing—Early +labour—Training in use of tools—Healthiness of great +men—Sir Walter Scott’s athletic sports—Barrow, +Fuller, Clarke—Labour conquers all things—Words of +Chatterton, Ferguson, Stone, Drew—Well-directed +labour—Opinions of Sir Joshua Reynolds, Fowell Buxton, Dr. +Ross, F. Horner, Loyola, and Lord St. +Leonards—Thoroughness, accuracy, decision, and +promptitude—The virtue of patient labour—The +mischievous effects of “cramming” in labour-saving +processes and multifarious reading—The right use of +knowledge—Books may impart learning, but well-applied +knowledge and experience only exhibit wisdom—The Magna +Charta men—Brindley, Stephenson, Hunter, and others, not +book-learned yet great—Self-respect—Jean Paul +Richter—Knowledge as a means of rising—Base views of +the value of knowledge—Ideas of Bacon and +Southey—Douglas Jerrold on comic literature—Danger of +immoderate love of pleasure—Benjamin Constant: his high +thinking and low living—Thierry: his noble +character—Coleridge and Southey—Robert Nicoll on +Coleridge—Charles James Fox on perseverance—The +wisdom and strength acquired through failure—Hunter, +Rossini, Davy, Mendelssohn—The uses of difficulty and +adversity—Lyndhurst, D’Alembert, Carissimi, Reynolds, +and Henry Clay on persistency—Curran on honest +poverty—Struggles with difficulties: Alexander Murray, +William Chambers, Cobbet—The French stonemason turned +Professor—Sir Samuel Romilly as a +self-cultivator—John Leyden’s +perseverance—Professor Lee: his perseverance and his +attainments as a linguist—Late learners: Spelman, Franklin, +Dryden, Scott, Boccaccio, Arnold, and others—Illustrious +dunces: Generals Grant, Stonewall Jackson, John Howard, Davy, and +others—Story of a dunce—Success depends on +perseverance</p> +</td> +<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a +href="#page314">314</a></span>–359</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XII.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"><span +class="smcap">Example</span>—<span +class="smcap">Models</span>.</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Example a potent instructor—Influence of +conduct—Parental example—All acts have their train of +consequences—<a name="pagexx"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +xx</span>Disraeli on Cobden—Words of Babbage—Human +responsibility—Every person owes a good example to +others—Doing, not saying—Mrs. Chisholm—Dr. +Guthrie and John Pounds—Good models of conduct—The +company of our betters—Francis Horner’s views on +personal intercourse—The Marquis of Lansdowne and +Malesherbes—Fowell Buxton and the Gurney +family—Personal influence of John Sterling—Influence +of artistic genius upon others—Example of the brave an +inspiration to the timid—Biography valuable as forming high +models of character—Lives influenced by +biography—Romilly, Franklin, Drew, Alfieri, Loyola, Wolff, +Horner, Reynolds—Examples of cheerfulness—Dr. +Arnold’s influence over others—Career of Sir John +Sinclair</p> +</td> +<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a +href="#page360">360</a></span>–381</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XIII.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"><span +class="smcap">Character</span>—<span class="smcap">The True +Gentleman</span>.</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Character a man’s best possession—Character of +Francis Horner—Franklin—Character is power—The +higher qualities of character—Lord Erskine’s rules of +conduct—A high standard of life +necessary—Truthfulness—Wellington’s character +of Peel—Be what you seem—Integrity and honesty of +action—Importance of habits—Habits constitute +character—Growth of habit in youth—Words of Robertson +of Brighton—Manners and morals—Civility and +kindness—Anecdote of Abernethy—True +politeness—Great-hearted men of no exclusive rank or +class—William and Charles Grant, the “Brothers +Cheeryble”—The true gentleman—Lord Edward +Fitzgerald—Honour, probity, rectitude—The gentleman +will not be bribed—Anecdotes of Hanway, Wellington, +Wellesley, and Sir C. Napier—The poor in purse may be rich +in spirit—A noble peasant—Intrepidity of Deal +boatmen—Anecdotes of the Emperor of Austria and of two +English navvies—Truth makes the success of the +gentleman—Courage and gentleness—Gentlemen in +India—Outram, Henry Lawrence—Lord Clyde—The +private soldiers at Agra—The wreck of the +<i>Birkenhead</i>—Use of power, the test of the +Gentleman—Sir Ralph Abercrombie—Fuller’s +character of Sir Francis Drake</p> +</td> +<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a +href="#page382">382</a></span>–408</p> +</td> +</tr> +</table> +<h2><a name="page1"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 1</span>CHAPTER +I.<br /> +<span class="smcap">Self-Help—National and +Individual</span>.</h2> +<blockquote><p>“The worth of a State, in the long run, is +the worth of the individuals composing it.”—<i>J. S. +Mill</i>.</p> + +<p>“We put too much faith in systems, and look too little +to men.”—<i>B. Disraeli</i>.</p> +</blockquote> +<p>“<span class="smcap">Heaven</span> helps those who help +themselves” is a well-tried maxim, embodying in a small +compass the results of vast human experience. The spirit of +self-help is the root of all genuine growth in the individual; +and, exhibited in the lives of many, it constitutes the true +source of national vigour and strength. Help from without +is often enfeebling in its effects, but help from within +invariably invigorates. Whatever is done <i>for</i> men or +classes, to a certain extent takes away the stimulus and +necessity of doing for themselves; and where men are subjected to +over-guidance and over-government, the inevitable tendency is to +render them comparatively helpless.</p> + +<p>Even the best institutions can give a man no active +help. Perhaps the most they can do is, to leave him free to +develop himself and improve his individual condition. But +in all times men have been prone to believe that their happiness +and well-being were to be secured by means of institutions rather +than by their own conduct. Hence the value of legislation +as an agent in human advancement has usually been much +over-estimated. To constitute the millionth part of a +Legislature, by voting for one or two men once in three or five +years, however conscientiously this duty may be performed, can +exercise but little active influence upon any man’s life +and character. Moreover, it is every day becoming more +clearly understood, that the function of Government is negative +and restrictive, rather than positive and active; being +resolvable principally into protection—protection of life, +liberty, and property. Laws, wisely administered, will +secure men in the enjoyment of the fruits of their labour, +whether of mind or body, at a comparatively small personal +sacrifice; but no laws, however stringent, can make the idle +industrious, the thriftless provident, or the drunken +sober. Such reforms can only be effected by means of +individual action, economy, and self-denial; by better habits, +rather than by greater rights.</p> + +<p>The Government of a nation itself is usually found to be but +the reflex of the individuals composing it. The Government +that is ahead of the people will inevitably be dragged down to +their level, as the Government that is behind them will in the +long run be dragged up. In the order of nature, the +collective character of a nation will as surely find its +befitting results in its law and government, as water finds its +own level. The noble people will be nobly ruled, and the +ignorant and corrupt ignobly. Indeed all experience serves +to prove that the worth and strength of a State depend far less +upon the form of its institutions than upon the character of its +men. For the nation is only an aggregate of individual +conditions, and civilization itself is but a question of the +personal improvement of the men, women, and children of whom +society is composed.</p> + +<p>National progress is the sum of individual industry, energy, +and uprightness, as national decay is of individual idleness, +selfishness, and vice. What we are accustomed to decry as +great social evils, will, for the most part, be found to be but +the outgrowth of man’s own perverted life; and though we +may endeavour to cut them down and extirpate them by means of +Law, they will only spring up again with fresh luxuriance in some +other form, unless the conditions of personal life and character +are radically improved. If this view be correct, then it +follows that the highest patriotism and philanthropy consist, not +so much in altering laws and modifying institutions, as in +helping and stimulating men to elevate and improve themselves by +their own free and independent individual action.</p> + +<p>It may be of comparatively little consequence how a man is +governed from without, whilst everything depends upon how he +governs himself from within. The greatest slave is not he +who is ruled by a despot, great though that evil be, but he who +is the thrall of his own moral ignorance, selfishness, and +vice. Nations who are thus enslaved at heart cannot be +freed by any mere changes of masters or of institutions; and so +long as the fatal delusion prevails, that liberty solely depends +upon and consists in government, so long will such changes, no +matter at what cost they may be effected, have as little +practical and lasting result as the shifting of the figures in a +phantasmagoria. The solid foundations of liberty must rest +upon individual character; which is also the only sure guarantee +for social security and national progress. John Stuart Mill +truly observes that “even despotism does not produce its +worst effects so long as individuality exists under it; and +whatever crushes individuality <i>is</i> despotism, by whatever +name it be called.”</p> + +<p>Old fallacies as to human progress are constantly turning +up. Some call for Cæsars, others for Nationalities, +and others for Acts of Parliament. We are to wait for +Cæsars, and when they are found, “happy the people +who recognise and follow them.” <a name="citation4"></a><a +href="#footnote4" class="citation">[4]</a> This doctrine +shortly means, everything <i>for</i> the people, nothing +<i>by</i> them,—a doctrine which, if taken as a guide, +must, by destroying the free conscience of a community, speedily +prepare the way for any form of despotism. Cæsarism +is human idolatry in its worst form—a worship of mere +power, as degrading in its effects as the worship of mere wealth +would be. A far healthier doctrine to inculcate among the +nations would be that of Self-Help; and so soon as it is +thoroughly understood and carried into action, Cæsarism +will be no more. The two principles are directly +antagonistic; and what Victor Hugo said of the Pen and the Sword +alike applies to them, “Ceci tuera cela.” [This +will kill that.]</p> + +<p>The power of Nationalities and Acts of Parliament is also a +prevalent superstition. What William Dargan, one of +Ireland’s truest patriots, said at the closing of the first +Dublin Industrial Exhibition, may well be quoted now. +“To tell the truth,” he said, “I never heard +the word independence mentioned that my own country and my own +fellow townsmen did not occur to my mind. I have heard a +great deal about the independence that we were to get from this, +that, and the other place, and of the great expectations we were +to have from persons from other countries coming amongst +us. Whilst I value as much as any man the great advantages +that must result to us from that intercourse, I have always been +deeply impressed with the feeling that our industrial +independence is dependent upon ourselves. I believe that +with simple industry and careful exactness in the utilization of +our energies, we never had a fairer chance nor a brighter +prospect than the present. We have made a step, but +perseverance is the great agent of success; and if we but go on +zealously, I believe in my conscience that in a short period we +shall arrive at a position of equal comfort, of equal happiness, +and of equal independence, with that of any other +people.”</p> + +<p>All nations have been made what they are by the thinking and +the working of many generations of men. Patient and +persevering labourers in all ranks and conditions of life, +cultivators of the soil and explorers of the mine, inventors and +discoverers, manufacturers, mechanics and artisans, poets, +philosophers, and politicians, all have contributed towards the +grand result, one generation building upon another’s +labours, and carrying them forward to still higher stages. +This constant succession of noble workers—the artisans of +civilisation—has served to create order out of chaos in +industry, science, and art; and the living race has thus, in the +course of nature, become the inheritor of the rich estate +provided by the skill and industry of our forefathers, which is +placed in our hands to cultivate, and to hand down, not only +unimpaired but improved, to our successors.</p> + +<p>The spirit of self-help, as exhibited in the energetic action +of individuals, has in all times been a marked feature in the +English character, and furnishes the true measure of our power as +a nation. Rising above the heads of the mass, there were +always to be found a series of individuals distinguished beyond +others, who commanded the public homage. But our progress +has also been owing to multitudes of smaller and less known +men. Though only the generals’ names may be +remembered in the history of any great campaign, it has been in a +great measure through the individual valour and heroism of the +privates that victories have been won. And life, too, is +“a soldiers’ battle,”—men in the ranks +having in all times been amongst the greatest of workers. +Many are the lives of men unwritten, which have nevertheless as +powerfully influenced civilisation and progress as the more +fortunate Great whose names are recorded in biography. Even +the humblest person, who sets before his fellows an example of +industry, sobriety, and upright honesty of purpose in life, has a +present as well as a future influence upon the well-being of his +country; for his life and character pass unconsciously into the +lives of others, and propagate good example for all time to +come.</p> + +<p>Daily experience shows that it is energetic individualism +which produces the most powerful effects upon the life and action +of others, and really constitutes the best practical +education. Schools, academies, and colleges, give but the +merest beginnings of culture in comparison with it. Far +more influential is the life-education daily given in our homes, +in the streets, behind counters, in workshops, at the loom and +the plough, in counting-houses and manufactories, and in the busy +haunts of men. This is that finishing instruction as +members of society, which Schiller designated “the +education of the human race,” consisting in action, +conduct, self-culture, self-control,—all that tends to +discipline a man truly, and fit him for the proper performance of +the duties and business of life,—a kind of education not to +be learnt from books, or acquired by any amount of mere literary +training. With his usual weight of words Bacon observes, +that “Studies teach not their own use; but that is a wisdom +without them, and above them, won by observation;” a remark +that holds true of actual life, as well as of the cultivation of +the intellect itself. For all experience serves to +illustrate and enforce the lesson, that a man perfects himself by +work more than by reading,—that it is life rather than +literature, action rather than study, and character rather than +biography, which tend perpetually to renovate mankind.</p> + +<p>Biographies of great, but especially of good men, are +nevertheless most instructive and useful, as helps, guides, and +incentives to others. Some of the best are almost +equivalent to gospels—teaching high living, high thinking, +and energetic action for their own and the world’s +good. The valuable examples which they furnish of the power +of self-help, of patient purpose, resolute working, and steadfast +integrity, issuing in the formation of truly noble and manly +character, exhibit in language not to be misunderstood, what it +is in the power of each to accomplish for himself; and eloquently +illustrate the efficacy of self-respect and self-reliance in +enabling men of even the humblest rank to work out for themselves +an honourable competency and a solid reputation.</p> + +<p>Great men of science, literature, and art—apostles of +great thoughts and lords of the great heart—have belonged +to no exclusive class nor rank in life. They have come +alike from colleges, workshops, and farmhouses,—from the +huts of poor men and the mansions of the rich. Some of +God’s greatest apostles have come from “the +ranks.” The poorest have sometimes taken the highest +places; nor have difficulties apparently the most insuperable +proved obstacles in their way. Those very difficulties, in +many instances, would ever seem to have been their best helpers, +by evoking their powers of labour and endurance, and stimulating +into life faculties which might otherwise have lain +dormant. The instances of obstacles thus surmounted, and of +triumphs thus achieved, are indeed so numerous, as almost to +justify the proverb that “with Will one can do +anything.” Take, for instance, the remarkable fact, +that from the barber’s shop came Jeremy Taylor, the most +poetical of divines; Sir Richard Arkwright, the inventor of the +spinning-jenny and founder of the cotton manufacture; Lord +Tenterden, one of the most distinguished of Lord Chief Justices; +and Turner, the greatest among landscape painters.</p> + +<p>No one knows to a certainty what Shakespeare was; but it is +unquestionable that he sprang from a humble rank. His +father was a butcher and grazier; and Shakespeare himself is +supposed to have been in early life a woolcomber; whilst others +aver that he was an usher in a school and afterwards a +scrivener’s clerk. He truly seems to have been +“not one, but all mankind’s epitome.” For +such is the accuracy of his sea phrases that a naval writer +alleges that he must have been a sailor; whilst a clergyman +infers, from internal evidence in his writings, that he was +probably a parson’s clerk; and a distinguished judge of +horse-flesh insists that he must have been a horse-dealer. +Shakespeare was certainly an actor, and in the course of his life +“played many parts,” gathering his wonderful stores +of knowledge from a wide field of experience and +observation. In any event, he must have been a close +student and a hard worker; and to this day his writings continue +to exercise a powerful influence on the formation of English +character.</p> + +<p>The common class of day labourers has given us Brindley the +engineer, Cook the navigator, and Burns the poet. Masons +and bricklayers can boast of Ben Jonson, who worked at the +building of Lincoln’s Inn, with a trowel in his hand and a +book in his pocket, Edwards and Telford the engineers, Hugh +Miller the geologist, and Allan Cunningham the writer and +sculptor; whilst among distinguished carpenters we find the names +of Inigo Jones the architect, Harrison the chronometer-maker, +John Hunter the physiologist, Romney and Opie the painters, +Professor Lee the Orientalist, and John Gibson the sculptor.</p> + +<p>From the weaver class have sprung Simson the mathematician, +Bacon the sculptor, the two Milners, Adam Walker, John Foster, +Wilson the ornithologist, Dr. Livingstone the missionary +traveller, and Tannahill the poet. Shoemakers have given us +Sir Cloudesley Shovel the great Admiral, Sturgeon the +electrician, Samuel Drew the essayist, Gifford the editor of the +‘Quarterly Review,’ Bloomfield the poet, and William +Carey the missionary; whilst Morrison, another laborious +missionary, was a maker of shoe-lasts. Within the last few +years, a profound naturalist has been discovered in the person of +a shoemaker at Banff, named Thomas Edwards, who, while +maintaining himself by his trade, has devoted his leisure to the +study of natural science in all its branches, his researches in +connexion with the smaller crustaceæ having been rewarded +by the discovery of a new species, to which the name of +“Praniza Edwardsii” has been given by +naturalists.</p> + +<p>Nor have tailors been undistinguished. John Stow, the +historian, worked at the trade during some part of his +life. Jackson, the painter, made clothes until he reached +manhood. The brave Sir John Hawkswood, who so greatly +distinguished himself at Poictiers, and was knighted by Edward +III. for his valour, was in early life apprenticed to a London +tailor. Admiral Hobson, who broke the boom at Vigo in 1702, +belonged to the same calling. He was working as a +tailor’s apprentice near Bonchurch, in the Isle of Wight, +when the news flew through the village that a squadron of +men-of-war was sailing off the island. He sprang from the +shopboard, and ran down with his comrades to the beach, to gaze +upon the glorious sight. The boy was suddenly inflamed with +the ambition to be a sailor; and springing into a boat, he rowed +off to the squadron, gained the admiral’s ship, and was +accepted as a volunteer. Years after, he returned to his +native village full of honours, and dined off bacon and eggs in +the cottage where he had worked as an apprentice. But the +greatest tailor of all is unquestionably Andrew Johnson, the +present President of the United States—a man of +extraordinary force of character and vigour of intellect. +In his great speech at Washington, when describing himself as +having begun his political career as an alderman, and run through +all the branches of the legislature, a voice in the crowd cried, +“From a tailor up.” It was characteristic of +Johnson to take the intended sarcasm in good part, and even to +turn it to account. “Some gentleman says I have been +a tailor. That does not disconcert me in the least; for +when I was a tailor I had the reputation of being a good one, and +making close fits; I was always punctual with my customers, and +always did good work.”</p> + +<p>Cardinal Wolsey, De Foe, Akenside, and Kirke White were the +sons of butchers; Bunyan was a tinker, and Joseph Lancaster a +basket-maker. Among the great names identified with the +invention of the steam-engine are those of Newcomen, Watt, and +Stephenson; the first a blacksmith, the second a maker of +mathematical instruments, and the third an engine-fireman. +Huntingdon the preacher was originally a coalheaver, and Bewick, +the father of wood-engraving, a coalminer. Dodsley was a +footman, and Holcroft a groom. Baffin the navigator began +his seafaring career as a man before the mast, and Sir Cloudesley +Shovel as a cabin-boy. Herschel played the oboe in a +military band. Chantrey was a journeyman carver, Etty a +journeyman printer, and Sir Thomas Lawrence the son of a +tavern-keeper. Michael Faraday, the son of a blacksmith, +was in early life apprenticed to a bookbinder, and worked at that +trade until he reached his twenty-second year: he now occupies +the very first rank as a philosopher, excelling even his master, +Sir Humphry Davy, in the art of lucidly expounding the most +difficult and abstruse points in natural science.</p> + +<p>Among those who have given the greatest impulse to the sublime +science of astronomy, we find Copernicus, the son of a Polish +baker; Kepler, the son of a German public-house keeper, and +himself the “garçon de cabaret;” +d’Alembert, a foundling picked up one winter’s night +on the steps of the church of St. Jean le Rond at Paris, and +brought up by the wife of a glazier; and Newton and Laplace, the +one the son of a small freeholder near Grantham, the other the +son of a poor peasant of Beaumont-en-Auge, near Honfleur. +Notwithstanding their comparatively adverse circumstances in +early life, these distinguished men achieved a solid and enduring +reputation by the exercise of their genius, which all the wealth +in the world could not have purchased. The very possession +of wealth might indeed have proved an obstacle greater even than +the humble means to which they were born. The father of +Lagrange, the astronomer and mathematician, held the office of +Treasurer of War at Turin; but having ruined himself by +speculations, his family were reduced to comparative +poverty. To this circumstance Lagrange was in after life +accustomed partly to attribute his own fame and happiness. +“Had I been rich,” said he, “I should probably +not have become a mathematician.”</p> + +<p>The sons of clergymen and ministers of religion generally, +have particularly distinguished themselves in our country’s +history. Amongst them we find the names of Drake and +Nelson, celebrated in naval heroism; of Wollaston, Young, +Playfair, and Bell, in science; of Wren, Reynolds, Wilson, and +Wilkie, in art; of Thurlow and Campbell, in law; and of Addison, +Thomson, Goldsmith, Coleridge, and Tennyson, in literature. +Lord Hardinge, Colonel Edwardes, and Major Hodson, so honourably +known in Indian warfare, were also the sons of clergymen. +Indeed, the empire of England in India was won and held chiefly +by men of the middle class—such as Clive, Warren Hastings, +and their successors—men for the most part bred in +factories and trained to habits of business.</p> + +<p>Among the sons of attorneys we find Edmund Burke, Smeaton the +engineer, Scott and Wordsworth, and Lords Somers, Hardwick, and +Dunning. Sir William Blackstone was the posthumous son of a +silk-mercer. Lord Gifford’s father was a grocer at +Dover; Lord Denman’s a physician; judge Talfourd’s a +country brewer; and Lord Chief Baron Pollock’s a celebrated +saddler at Charing Cross. Layard, the discoverer of the +monuments of Nineveh, was an articled clerk in a London +solicitor’s office; and Sir William Armstrong, the inventor +of hydraulic machinery and of the Armstrong ordnance, was also +trained to the law and practised for some time as an +attorney. Milton was the son of a London scrivener, and +Pope and Southey were the sons of linendrapers. Professor +Wilson was the son of a Paisley manufacturer, and Lord Macaulay +of an African merchant. Keats was a druggist, and Sir +Humphry Davy a country apothecary’s apprentice. +Speaking of himself, Davy once said, “What I am I have made +myself: I say this without vanity, and in pure simplicity of +heart.” Richard Owen, the Newton of Natural History, +began life as a midshipman, and did not enter upon the line of +scientific research in which he has since become so +distinguished, until comparatively late in life. He laid +the foundations of his great knowledge while occupied in +cataloguing the magnificent museum accumulated by the industry of +John Hunter, a work which occupied him at the College of Surgeons +during a period of about ten years.</p> + +<p>Foreign not less than English biography abounds in +illustrations of men who have glorified the lot of poverty by +their labours and their genius. In Art we find Claude, the +son of a pastrycook; Geefs, of a baker; Leopold Robert, of a +watchmaker; and Haydn, of a wheelwright; whilst Daguerre was a +scene-painter at the Opera. The father of Gregory VII. was +a carpenter; of Sextus V., a shepherd; and of Adrian VI., a poor +bargeman. When a boy, Adrian, unable to pay for a light by +which to study, was accustomed to prepare his lessons by the +light of the lamps in the streets and the church porches, +exhibiting a degree of patience and industry which were the +certain forerunners of his future distinction. Of like +humble origin were Hauy, the mineralogist, who was the son of a +weaver of Saint-Just; Hautefeuille, the mechanician, of a baker +at Orleans; Joseph Fourier, the mathematician, of a tailor at +Auxerre; Durand, the architect, of a Paris shoemaker; and Gesner, +the naturalist, of a skinner or worker in hides, at Zurich. +This last began his career under all the disadvantages attendant +on poverty, sickness, and domestic calamity; none of which, +however, were sufficient to damp his courage or hinder his +progress. His life was indeed an eminent illustration of +the truth of the saying, that those who have most to do and are +willing to work, will find the most time. Pierre Ramus was +another man of like character. He was the son of poor +parents in Picardy, and when a boy was employed to tend +sheep. But not liking the occupation he ran away to +Paris. After encountering much misery, he succeeded in +entering the College of Navarre as a servant. The +situation, however, opened for him the road to learning, and he +shortly became one of the most distinguished men of his time.</p> + +<p>The chemist Vauquelin was the son of a peasant of +Saint-André-d’Herbetot, in the Calvados. When +a boy at school, though poorly clad, he was full of bright +intelligence; and the master, who taught him to read and write, +when praising him for his diligence, used to say, “Go on, +my boy; work, study, Colin, and one day you will go as well +dressed as the parish churchwarden!” A country +apothecary who visited the school, admired the robust boy’s +arms, and offered to take him into his laboratory to pound his +drugs, to which Vauquelin assented, in the hope of being able to +continue his lessons. But the apothecary would not permit +him to spend any part of his time in learning; and on +ascertaining this, the youth immediately determined to quit his +service. He therefore left Saint-André and took the +road for Paris with his havresac on his back. Arrived +there, he searched for a place as apothecary’s boy, but +could not find one. Worn out by fatigue and destitution, +Vauquelin fell ill, and in that state was taken to the hospital, +where he thought he should die. But better things were in +store for the poor boy. He recovered, and again proceeded +in his search of employment, which he at length found with an +apothecary. Shortly after, he became known to Fourcroy the +eminent chemist, who was so pleased with the youth that he made +him his private secretary; and many years after, on the death of +that great philosopher, Vauquelin succeeded him as Professor of +Chemistry. Finally, in 1829, the electors of the district +of Calvados appointed him their representative in the Chamber of +Deputies, and he re-entered in triumph the village which he had +left so many years before, so poor and so obscure.</p> + +<p>England has no parallel instances to show, of promotions from +the ranks of the army to the highest military offices; which have +been so common in France since the first Revolution. +“La carrière ouverte aux talents” has there +received many striking illustrations, which would doubtless be +matched among ourselves were the road to promotion as open. +Hoche, Humbert, and Pichegru, began their respective careers as +private soldiers. Hoche, while in the King’s army, +was accustomed to embroider waistcoats to enable him to earn +money wherewith to purchase books on military science. +Humbert was a scapegrace when a youth; at sixteen he ran away +from home, and was by turns servant to a tradesman at Nancy, a +workman at Lyons, and a hawker of rabbit skins. In 1792, he +enlisted as a volunteer; and in a year he was general of +brigade. Kleber, Lefèvre, Suchet, Victor, Lannes, +Soult, Massena, St. Cyr, D’Erlon, Murat, Augereau, +Bessières, and Ney, all rose from the ranks. In some +cases promotion was rapid, in others it was slow. Saint +Cyr, the son of a tanner of Toul, began life as an actor, after +which he enlisted in the Chasseurs, and was promoted to a +captaincy within a year. Victor, Duc de Belluno, enlisted +in the Artillery in 1781: during the events preceding the +Revolution he was discharged; but immediately on the outbreak of +war he re-enlisted, and in the course of a few months his +intrepidity and ability secured his promotion as Adjutant-Major +and chief of battalion. Murat, “le beau +sabreur,” was the son of a village innkeeper in Perigord, +where he looked after the horses. He first enlisted in a +regiment of Chasseurs, from which he was dismissed for +insubordination: but again enlisting, he shortly rose to the rank +of Colonel. Ney enlisted at eighteen in a hussar regiment, +and gradually advanced step by step: Kleber soon discovered his +merits, surnaming him “The Indefatigable,” and +promoted him to be Adjutant-General when only twenty-five. +On the other hand, Soult <a name="citation15"></a><a +href="#footnote15" class="citation">[15]</a> was six years from +the date of his enlistment before he reached the rank of +sergeant. But Soult’s advancement was rapid compared +with that of Massena, who served for fourteen years before he was +made sergeant; and though he afterwards rose successively, step +by step, to the grades of Colonel, General of Division, and +Marshal, he declared that the post of sergeant was the step which +of all others had cost him the most labour to win. Similar +promotions from the ranks, in the French army, have continued +down to our own day. Changarnier entered the King’s +bodyguard as a private in 1815. Marshal Bugeaud served four +years in the ranks, after which he was made an officer. +Marshal Randon, the present French Minister of War, began his +military career as a drummer boy; and in the portrait of him in +the gallery at Versailles, his hand rests upon a drum-head, the +picture being thus painted at his own request. Instances +such as these inspire French soldiers with enthusiasm for their +service, as each private feels that he may possibly carry the +baton of a marshal in his knapsack.</p> + +<p>The instances of men, in this and other countries, who, by +dint of persevering application and energy, have raised +themselves from the humblest ranks of industry to eminent +positions of usefulness and influence in society, are indeed so +numerous that they have long ceased to be regarded as +exceptional. Looking at some of the more remarkable, it +might almost be said that early encounter with difficulty and +adverse circumstances was the necessary and indispensable +condition of success. The British House of Commons has +always contained a considerable number of such self-raised +men—fitting representatives of the industrial character of +the people; and it is to the credit of our Legislature that they +have been welcomed and honoured there. When the late Joseph +Brotherton, member for Salford, in the course of the discussion +on the Ten Hours Bill, detailed with true pathos the hardships +and fatigues to which he had been subjected when working as a +factory boy in a cotton mill, and described the resolution which +he had then formed, that if ever it was in his power he would +endeavour to ameliorate the condition of that class, Sir James +Graham rose immediately after him, and declared, amidst the +cheers of the House, that he did not before know that Mr. +Brotherton’s origin had been so humble, but that it +rendered him more proud than he had ever before been of the House +of Commons, to think that a person risen from that condition +should be able to sit side by side, on equal terms, with the +hereditary gentry of the land.</p> + +<p>The late Mr. Fox, member for Oldham, was accustomed to +introduce his recollections of past times with the words, +“when I was working as a weaver boy at Norwich;” and +there are other members of parliament, still living, whose origin +has been equally humble. Mr. Lindsay, the well-known ship +owner, until recently member for Sunderland, once told the simple +story of his life to the electors of Weymouth, in answer to an +attack made upon him by his political opponents. He had +been left an orphan at fourteen, and when he left Glasgow for +Liverpool to push his way in the world, not being able to pay the +usual fare, the captain of the steamer agreed to take his labour +in exchange, and the boy worked his passage by trimming the coals +in the coal hole. At Liverpool he remained for seven weeks +before he could obtain employment, during which time he lived in +sheds and fared hardly; until at last he found shelter on board a +West Indiaman. He entered as a boy, and before he was +nineteen, by steady good conduct he had risen to the command of a +ship. At twenty-three he retired from the sea, and settled +on shore, after which his progress was rapid “he had +prospered,” he said, “by steady industry, by constant +work, and by ever keeping in view the great principle of doing to +others as you would be done by.”</p> + +<p>The career of Mr. William Jackson, of Birkenhead, the present +member for North Derbyshire, bears considerable resemblance to +that of Mr. Lindsay. His father, a surgeon at Lancaster, +died, leaving a family of eleven children, of whom William +Jackson was the seventh son. The elder boys had been well +educated while the father lived, but at his death the younger +members had to shift for themselves. William, when under +twelve years old, was taken from school, and put to hard work at +a ship’s side from six in the morning till nine at +night. His master falling ill, the boy was taken into the +counting-house, where he had more leisure. This gave him an +opportunity of reading, and having obtained access to a set of +the ‘Encyclopædia Britannica,’ he read the +volumes through from A to Z, partly by day, but chiefly at +night. He afterwards put himself to a trade, was diligent, +and succeeded in it. Now he has ships sailing on almost +every sea, and holds commercial relations with nearly every +country on the globe.</p> + +<p>Among like men of the same class may be ranked the late +Richard Cobden, whose start in life was equally humble. The +son of a small farmer at Midhurst in Sussex, he was sent at an +early age to London and employed as a boy in a warehouse in the +City. He was diligent, well conducted, and eager for +information. His master, a man of the old school, warned +him against too much reading; but the boy went on in his own +course, storing his mind with the wealth found in books. He +was promoted from one position of trust to another—became a +traveller for his house—secured a large connection, and +eventually started in business as a calico printer at +Manchester. Taking an interest in public questions, more +especially in popular education, his attention was gradually +drawn to the subject of the Corn Laws, to the repeal of which he +may be said to have devoted his fortune and his life. It +may be mentioned as a curious fact that the first speech he +delivered in public was a total failure. But he had great +perseverance, application, and energy; and with persistency and +practice, he became at length one of the most persuasive and +effective of public speakers, extorting the disinterested eulogy +of even Sir Robert Peel himself. M. Drouyn de Lhuys, the +French Ambassador, has eloquently said of Mr. Cobden, that he was +“a living proof of what merit, perseverance, and labour can +accomplish; one of the most complete examples of those men who, +sprung from the humblest ranks of society, raise themselves to +the highest rank in public estimation by the effect of their own +worth and of their personal services; finally, one of the rarest +examples of the solid qualities inherent in the English +character.”</p> + +<p>In all these cases, strenuous individual application was the +price paid for distinction; excellence of any sort being +invariably placed beyond the reach of indolence. It is the +diligent hand and head alone that maketh rich—in +self-culture, growth in wisdom, and in business. Even when +men are born to wealth and high social position, any solid +reputation which they may individually achieve can only be +attained by energetic application; for though an inheritance of +acres may be bequeathed, an inheritance of knowledge and wisdom +cannot. The wealthy man may pay others for doing his work +for him, but it is impossible to get his thinking done for him by +another, or to purchase any kind of self-culture. Indeed, +the doctrine that excellence in any pursuit is only to be +achieved by laborious application, holds as true in the case of +the man of wealth as in that of Drew and Gifford, whose only +school was a cobbler’s stall, or Hugh Miller, whose only +college was a Cromarty stone quarry.</p> + +<p>Riches and ease, it is perfectly clear, are not necessary for +man’s highest culture, else had not the world been so +largely indebted in all times to those who have sprung from the +humbler ranks. An easy and luxurious existence does not +train men to effort or encounter with difficulty; nor does it +awaken that consciousness of power which is so necessary for +energetic and effective action in life. Indeed, so far from +poverty being a misfortune, it may, by vigorous self-help, be +converted even into a blessing; rousing a man to that struggle +with the world in which, though some may purchase ease by +degradation, the right-minded and true-hearted find strength, +confidence, and triumph. Bacon says, “Men seem +neither to understand their riches nor their strength: of the +former they believe greater things than they should; of the +latter much less. Self-reliance and self-denial will teach +a man to drink out of his own cistern, and eat his own sweet +bread, and to learn and labour truly to get his living, and +carefully to expend the good things committed to his +trust.”</p> + +<p>Riches are so great a temptation to ease and self-indulgence, +to which men are by nature prone, that the glory is all the +greater of those who, born to ample fortunes, nevertheless take +an active part in the work of their generation—who +“scorn delights and live laborious days.” It is +to the honour of the wealthier ranks in this country that they +are not idlers; for they do their fair share of the work of the +state, and usually take more than their fair share of its +dangers. It was a fine thing said of a subaltern officer in +the Peninsular campaigns, observed trudging alone through mud and +mire by the side of his regiment, “There goes +15,000<i>l.</i> a year!” and in our own day, the bleak +slopes of Sebastopol and the burning soil of India have borne +witness to the like noble self-denial and devotion on the part of +our gentler classes; many a gallant and noble fellow, of rank and +estate, having risked his life, or lost it, in one or other of +those fields of action, in the service of his country.</p> + +<p>Nor have the wealthier classes been undistinguished in the +more peaceful pursuits of philosophy and science. Take, for +instance, the great names of Bacon, the father of modern +philosophy, and of Worcester, Boyle, Cavendish, Talbot, and +Rosse, in science. The last named may be regarded as the +great mechanic of the peerage; a man who, if he had not been born +a peer, would probably have taken the highest rank as an +inventor. So thorough is his knowledge of smith-work that +he is said to have been pressed on one occasion to accept the +foremanship of a large workshop, by a manufacturer to whom his +rank was unknown. The great Rosse telescope, of his own +fabrication, is certainly the most extraordinary instrument of +the kind that has yet been constructed.</p> + +<p>But it is principally in the departments of politics and +literature that we find the most energetic labourers amongst our +higher classes. Success in these lines of action, as in all +others, can only be achieved through industry, practice, and +study; and the great Minister, or parliamentary leader, must +necessarily be amongst the very hardest of workers. Such +was Palmerston; and such are Derby and Russell, Disraeli and +Gladstone. These men have had the benefit of no Ten Hours +Bill, but have often, during the busy season of Parliament, +worked “double shift,” almost day and night. +One of the most illustrious of such workers in modern times was +unquestionably the late Sir Robert Peel. He possessed in an +extraordinary degree the power of continuous intellectual labour, +nor did he spare himself. His career, indeed, presented a +remarkable example of how much a man of comparatively moderate +powers can accomplish by means of assiduous application and +indefatigable industry. During the forty years that he held +a seat in Parliament, his labours were prodigious. He was a +most conscientious man, and whatever he undertook to do, he did +thoroughly. All his speeches bear evidence of his careful +study of everything that had been spoken or written on the +subject under consideration. He was elaborate almost to +excess; and spared no pains to adapt himself to the various +capacities of his audience. Withal, he possessed much +practical sagacity, great strength of purpose, and power to +direct the issues of action with steady hand and eye. In +one respect he surpassed most men: his principles broadened and +enlarged with time; and age, instead of contracting, only served +to mellow and ripen his nature. To the last he continued +open to the reception of new views, and, though many thought him +cautious to excess, he did not allow himself to fall into that +indiscriminating admiration of the past, which is the palsy of +many minds similarly educated, and renders the old age of many +nothing but a pity.</p> + +<p>The indefatigable industry of Lord Brougham has become almost +proverbial. His public labours have extended over a period +of upwards of sixty years, during which he has ranged over many +fields—of law, literature, politics, and science,—and +achieved distinction in them all. How he contrived it, has +been to many a mystery. Once, when Sir Samuel Romilly was +requested to undertake some new work, he excused himself by +saying that he had no time; “but,” he added, +“go with it to that fellow Brougham, he seems to have time +for everything.” The secret of it was, that he never +left a minute unemployed; withal he possessed a constitution of +iron. When arrived at an age at which most men would have +retired from the world to enjoy their hard-earned leisure, +perhaps to doze away their time in an easy chair, Lord Brougham +commenced and prosecuted a series of elaborate investigations as +to the laws of Light, and he submitted the results to the most +scientific audiences that Paris and London could muster. +About the same time, he was passing through the press his +admirable sketches of the ‘Men of Science and Literature of +the Reign of George III.,’ and taking his full share of the +law business and the political discussions in the House of +Lords. Sydney Smith once recommended him to confine himself +to only the transaction of so much business as three strong men +could get through. But such was Brougham’s love of +work—long become a habit—that no amount of +application seems to have been too great for him; and such was +his love of excellence, that it has been said of him that if his +station in life had been only that of a shoe-black, he would +never have rested satisfied until he had become the best +shoe-black in England.</p> + +<p>Another hard-working man of the same class is Sir E. Bulwer +Lytton. Few writers have done more, or achieved higher +distinction in various walks—as a novelist, poet, +dramatist, historian, essayist, orator, and politician. He +has worked his way step by step, disdainful of ease, and animated +throughout by the ardent desire to excel. On the score of +mere industry, there are few living English writers who have +written so much, and none that have produced so much of high +quality. The industry of Bulwer is entitled to all the +greater praise that it has been entirely self-imposed. To +hunt, and shoot, and live at ease,—to frequent the clubs +and enjoy the opera, with the variety of London visiting and +sight-seeing during the “season,” and then off to the +country mansion, with its well-stocked preserves, and its +thousand delightful out-door pleasures,—to travel abroad, +to Paris, Vienna, or Rome,—all this is excessively +attractive to a lover of pleasure and a man of fortune, and by no +means calculated to make him voluntarily undertake continuous +labour of any kind. Yet these pleasures, all within his +reach, Bulwer must, as compared with men born to similar estate, +have denied himself in assuming the position and pursuing the +career of a literary man. Like Byron, his first effort was +poetical (‘Weeds and Wild Flowers’), and a +failure. His second was a novel (‘Falkland’), +and it proved a failure too. A man of weaker nerve would +have dropped authorship; but Bulwer had pluck and perseverance; +and he worked on, determined to succeed. He was incessantly +industrious, read extensively, and from failure went courageously +onwards to success. ‘Pelham’ followed +‘Falkland’ within a year, and the remainder of +Bulwer’s literary life, now extending over a period of +thirty years, has been a succession of triumphs.</p> + +<p>Mr. Disraeli affords a similar instance of the power of +industry and application in working out an eminent public +career. His first achievements were, like Bulwer’s, +in literature; and he reached success only through a succession +of failures. His ‘Wondrous Tale of Alroy’ and +‘Revolutionary Epic’ were laughed at, and regarded as +indications of literary lunacy. But he worked on in other +directions, and his ‘Coningsby,’ ‘Sybil,’ +and ‘Tancred,’ proved the sterling stuff of which he +was made. As an orator too, his first appearance in the +House of Commons was a failure. It was spoken of as +“more screaming than an Adelphi farce.” Though +composed in a grand and ambitious strain, every sentence was +hailed with “loud laughter.” +‘Hamlet’ played as a comedy were nothing to it. +But he concluded with a sentence which embodied a prophecy. +Writhing under the laughter with which his studied eloquence had +been received, he exclaimed, “I have begun several times +many things, and have succeeded in them at last. I shall +sit down now, but the time will come when you will hear +me.” The time did come; and how Disraeli succeeded in +at length commanding the attention of the first assembly of +gentlemen in the world, affords a striking illustration of what +energy and determination will do; for Disraeli earned his +position by dint of patient industry. He did not, as many +young men do, having once failed, retire dejected, to mope and +whine in a corner, but diligently set himself to work. He +carefully unlearnt his faults, studied the character of his +audience, practised sedulously the art of speech, and +industriously filled his mind with the elements of parliamentary +knowledge. He worked patiently for success; and it came, +but slowly: then the House laughed with him, instead of at +him. The recollection of his early failure was effaced, and +by general consent he was at length admitted to be one of the +most finished and effective of parliamentary speakers.</p> + +<p>Although much may be accomplished by means of individual +industry and energy, as these and other instances set forth in +the following pages serve to illustrate, it must at the same time +be acknowledged that the help which we derive from others in the +journey of life is of very great importance. The poet +Wordsworth has well said that “these two things, +contradictory though they may seem, must go together—manly +dependence and manly independence, manly reliance and manly +self-reliance.” From infancy to old age, all are more +or less indebted to others for nurture and culture; and the best +and strongest are usually found the readiest to acknowledge such +help. Take, for example, the career of the late Alexis de +Tocqueville, a man doubly well-born, for his father was a +distinguished peer of France, and his mother a grand-daughter of +Malesherbes. Through powerful family influence, he was +appointed Judge Auditor at Versailles when only twenty-one; but +probably feeling that he had not fairly won the position by +merit, he determined to give it up and owe his future advancement +in life to himself alone. “A foolish +resolution,” some will say; but De Tocqueville bravely +acted it out. He resigned his appointment, and made +arrangements to leave France for the purpose of travelling +through the United States, the results of which were published in +his great book on ‘Democracy in America.’ His +friend and travelling companion, Gustave de Beaumont, has +described his indefatigable industry during this journey. +“His nature,” he says, “was wholly averse to +idleness, and whether he was travelling or resting, his mind was +always at work. . . . With Alexis, the most agreeable +conversation was that which was the most useful. The worst +day was the lost day, or the day ill spent; the least loss of +time annoyed him.” Tocqueville himself wrote to a +friend—“There is no time of life at which one can +wholly cease from action, for effort without one’s self, +and still more effort within, is equally necessary, if not more +so, when we grow old, as it is in youth. I compare man in +this world to a traveller journeying without ceasing towards a +colder and colder region; the higher he goes, the faster he ought +to walk. The great malady of the soul is cold. And in +resisting this formidable evil, one needs not only to be +sustained by the action of a mind employed, but also by contact +with one’s fellows in the business of life.” <a +name="citation25"></a><a href="#footnote25" +class="citation">[25]</a></p> + +<p>Notwithstanding de Tocqueville’s decided views as to the +necessity of exercising individual energy and self-dependence, no +one could be more ready than he was to recognise the value of +that help and support for which all men are indebted to others in +a greater or less degree. Thus, he often acknowledged, with +gratitude, his obligations to his friends De Kergorlay and +Stofells,—to the former for intellectual assistance, and to +the latter for moral support and sympathy. To De Kergorlay +he wrote—“Thine is the only soul in which I have +confidence, and whose influence exercises a genuine effect upon +my own. Many others have influence upon the details of my +actions, but no one has so much influence as thou on the +origination of fundamental ideas, and of those principles which +are the rule of conduct.” De Tocqueville was not less +ready to confess the great obligations which he owed to his wife, +Marie, for the preservation of that temper and frame of mind +which enabled him to prosecute his studies with success. He +believed that a noble-minded woman insensibly elevated the +character of her husband, while one of a grovelling nature as +certainly tended to degrade it. <a name="citation26"></a><a +href="#footnote26" class="citation">[26]</a></p> + +<p>In fine, human character is moulded by a thousand subtle +influences; by example and precept; by life and literature; by +friends and neighbours; by the world we live in as well as by the +spirits of our forefathers, whose legacy of good words and deeds +we inherit. But great, unquestionably, though these +influences are acknowledged to be, it is nevertheless equally +clear that men must necessarily be the active agents of their own +well-being and well-doing; and that, however much the wise and +the good may owe to others, they themselves must in the very +nature of things be their own best helpers.</p> +<h2><a name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +27</span>CHAPTER II.<br /> +<span class="smcap">Leaders of Industry—Inventors and +Producers</span>.</h2> +<blockquote><p>“Le travail et la Science sont +désormais les maîtres du monde.”—<i>De +Salvandy</i>.</p> + +<p>“Deduct all that men of the humbler classes have done +for England in the way of inventions only, and see where she +would have been but for them.”—<i>Arthur +Helps</i>.</p> +</blockquote> +<p><span class="smcap">One</span> of the most strongly-marked +features of the English people is their spirit of industry, +standing out prominent and distinct in their past history, and as +strikingly characteristic of them now as at any former +period. It is this spirit, displayed by the commons of +England, which has laid the foundations and built up the +industrial greatness of the empire. This vigorous growth of +the nation has been mainly the result of the free energy of +individuals, and it has been contingent upon the number of hands +and minds from time to time actively employed within it, whether +as cultivators of the soil, producers of articles of utility, +contrivers of tools and machines, writers of books, or creators +of works of art. And while this spirit of active industry +has been the vital principle of the nation, it has also been its +saving and remedial one, counteracting from time to time the +effects of errors in our laws and imperfections in our +constitution.</p> + +<p>The career of industry which the nation has pursued, has also +proved its best education. As steady application to work is +the healthiest training for every individual, so is it the best +discipline of a state. Honourable industry travels the same +road with duty; and Providence has closely linked both with +happiness. The gods, says the poet, have placed labour and +toil on the way leading to the Elysian fields. Certain it +is that no bread eaten by man is so sweet as that earned by his +own labour, whether bodily or mental. By labour the earth +has been subdued, and man redeemed from barbarism; nor has a +single step in civilization been made without it. Labour is +not only a necessity and a duty, but a blessing: only the idler +feels it to be a curse. The duty of work is written on the +thews and muscles of the limbs, the mechanism of the hand, the +nerves and lobes of the brain—the sum of whose healthy +action is satisfaction and enjoyment. In the school of +labour is taught the best practical wisdom; nor is a life of +manual employment, as we shall hereafter find, incompatible with +high mental culture.</p> + +<p>Hugh Miller, than whom none knew better the strength and the +weakness belonging to the lot of labour, stated the result of his +experience to be, that Work, even the hardest, is full of +pleasure and materials for self-improvement. He held honest +labour to be the best of teachers, and that the school of toil is +the noblest of schools—save only the Christian +one,—that it is a school in which the ability of being +useful is imparted, the spirit of independence learnt, and the +habit of persevering effort acquired. He was even of +opinion that the training of the mechanic,—by the exercise +which it gives to his observant faculties, from his daily dealing +with things actual and practical, and the close experience of +life which he acquires,—better fits him for picking his way +along the journey of life, and is more favourable to his growth +as a Man, emphatically speaking, than the training afforded by +any other condition.</p> + +<p>The array of great names which we have already cursorily +cited, of men springing from the ranks of the industrial classes, +who have achieved distinction in various walks of life—in +science, commerce, literature, and art—shows that at all +events the difficulties interposed by poverty and labour are not +insurmountable. As respects the great contrivances and +inventions which have conferred so much power and wealth upon the +nation, it is unquestionable that for the greater part of them we +have been indebted to men of the humblest rank. Deduct what +they have done in this particular line of action, and it will be +found that very little indeed remains for other men to have +accomplished.</p> + +<p>Inventors have set in motion some of the greatest industries +of the world. To them society owes many of its chief +necessaries, comforts, and luxuries; and by their genius and +labour daily life has been rendered in all respects more easy as +well as enjoyable. Our food, our clothing, the furniture of +our homes, the glass which admits the light to our dwellings at +the same time that it excludes the cold, the gas which +illuminates our streets, our means of locomotion by land and by +sea, the tools by which our various articles of necessity and +luxury are fabricated, have been the result of the labour and +ingenuity of many men and many minds. Mankind at large are +all the happier for such inventions, and are every day reaping +the benefit of them in an increase of individual well-being as +well as of public enjoyment.</p> + +<p>Though the invention of the working steam-engine—the +king of machines—belongs, comparatively speaking, to our +own epoch, the idea of it was born many centuries ago. Like +other contrivances and discoveries, it was effected step by +step—one man transmitting the result of his labours, at the +time apparently useless, to his successors, who took it up and +carried it forward another stage,—the prosecution of the +inquiry extending over many generations. Thus the idea +promulgated by Hero of Alexandria was never altogether lost; but, +like the grain of wheat hid in the hand of the Egyptian mummy, it +sprouted and again grew vigorously when brought into the full +light of modern science. The steam-engine was nothing, +however, until it emerged from the state of theory, and was taken +in hand by practical mechanics; and what a noble story of +patient, laborious investigation, of difficulties encountered and +overcome by heroic industry, does not that marvellous machine +tell of! It is indeed, in itself, a monument of the power +of self-help in man. Grouped around it we find Savary, the +military engineer; Newcomen, the Dartmouth blacksmith; Cawley, +the glazier; Potter, the engine-boy; Smeaton, the civil engineer; +and, towering above all, the laborious, patient, never-tiring +James Watt, the mathematical-instrument maker.</p> + +<p>Watt was one of the most industrious of men; and the story of +his life proves, what all experience confirms, that it is not the +man of the greatest natural vigour and capacity who achieves the +highest results, but he who employs his powers with the greatest +industry and the most carefully disciplined skill—the skill +that comes by labour, application, and experience. Many men +in his time knew far more than Watt, but none laboured so +assiduously as he did to turn all that he did know to useful +practical purposes. He was, above all things, most +persevering in the pursuit of facts. He cultivated +carefully that habit of active attention on which all the higher +working qualities of the mind mainly depend. Indeed, Mr. +Edgeworth entertained the opinion, that the difference of +intellect in men depends more upon the early cultivation of this +<i>habit of attention</i>, than upon any great disparity between +the powers of one individual and another.</p> + +<p>Even when a boy, Watt found science in his toys. The +quadrants lying about his father’s carpenter’s shop +led him to the study of optics and astronomy; his ill health +induced him to pry into the secrets of physiology; and his +solitary walks through the country attracted him to the study of +botany and history. While carrying on the business of a +mathematical-instrument maker, he received an order to build an +organ; and, though without an ear for music, he undertook the +study of harmonics, and successfully constructed the +instrument. And, in like manner, when the little model of +Newcomen’s steam-engine, belonging to the University of +Glasgow, was placed in his hands to repair, he forthwith set +himself to learn all that was then known about heat, evaporation, +and condensation,—at the same time plodding his way in +mechanics and the science of construction,—the results of +which he at length embodied in his condensing steam-engine.</p> + +<p>For ten years he went on contriving and inventing—with +little hope to cheer him, and with few friends to encourage +him. He went on, meanwhile, earning bread for his family by +making and selling quadrants, making and mending fiddles, flutes, +and musical instruments; measuring mason-work, surveying roads, +superintending the construction of canals, or doing anything that +turned up, and offered a prospect of honest gain. At +length, Watt found a fit partner in another eminent leader of +industry—Matthew Boulton, of Birmingham; a skilful, +energetic, and far-seeing man, who vigorously undertook the +enterprise of introducing the condensing-engine into general use +as a working power; and the success of both is now matter of +history. <a name="citation31"></a><a href="#footnote31" +class="citation">[31]</a></p> + +<p>Many skilful inventors have from time to time added new power +to the steam-engine; and, by numerous modifications, rendered it +capable of being applied to nearly all the purposes of +manufacture—driving machinery, impelling ships, grinding +corn, printing books, stamping money, hammering, planing, and +turning iron; in short, of performing every description of +mechanical labour where power is required. One of the most +useful modifications in the engine was that devised by +Trevithick, and eventually perfected by George Stephenson and his +son, in the form of the railway locomotive, by which social +changes of immense importance have been brought about, of even +greater consequence, considered in their results on human +progress and civilization, than the condensing-engine of +Watt.</p> + +<p>One of the first grand results of Watt’s +invention,—which placed an almost unlimited power at the +command of the producing classes,—was the establishment of +the cotton-manufacture. The person most closely identified +with the foundation of this great branch of industry was +unquestionably Sir Richard Arkwright, whose practical energy and +sagacity were perhaps even more remarkable than his mechanical +inventiveness. His originality as an inventor has indeed +been called in question, like that of Watt and Stephenson. +Arkwright probably stood in the same relation to the +spinning-machine that Watt did to the steam-engine and Stephenson +to the locomotive. He gathered together the scattered +threads of ingenuity which already existed, and wove them, after +his own design, into a new and original fabric. Though +Lewis Paul, of Birmingham, patented the invention of spinning by +rollers thirty years before Arkwright, the machines constructed +by him were so imperfect in their details, that they could not be +profitably worked, and the invention was practically a +failure. Another obscure mechanic, a reed-maker of Leigh, +named Thomas Highs, is also said to have invented the water-frame +and spinning-jenny; but they, too, proved unsuccessful.</p> + +<p>When the demands of industry are found to press upon the +resources of inventors, the same idea is usually found floating +about in many minds;—such has been the case with the +steam-engine, the safety-lamp, the electric telegraph, and other +inventions. Many ingenious minds are found labouring in the +throes of invention, until at length the master mind, the strong +practical man, steps forward, and straightway delivers them of +their idea, applies the principle successfully, and the thing is +done. Then there is a loud outcry among all the smaller +contrivers, who see themselves distanced in the race; and hence +men such as Watt, Stephenson, and Arkwright, have usually to +defend their reputation and their rights as practical and +successful inventors.</p> + +<p>Richard Arkwright, like most of our great mechanicians, sprang +from the ranks. He was born in Preston in 1732. His +parents were very poor, and he was the youngest of thirteen +children. He was never at school: the only education he +received he gave to himself; and to the last he was only able to +write with difficulty. When a boy, he was apprenticed to a +barber, and after learning the business, he set up for himself in +Bolton, where he occupied an underground cellar, over which he +put up the sign, “Come to the subterraneous barber—he +shaves for a penny.” The other barbers found their +customers leaving them, and reduced their prices to his standard, +when Arkwright, determined to push his trade, announced his +determination to give “A clean shave for a +halfpenny.” After a few years he quitted his cellar, +and became an itinerant dealer in hair. At that time wigs +were worn, and wig-making formed an important branch of the +barbering business. Arkwright went about buying hair for +the wigs. He was accustomed to attend the hiring fairs +throughout Lancashire resorted to by young women, for the purpose +of securing their long tresses; and it is said that in +negotiations of this sort he was very successful. He also +dealt in a chemical hair dye, which he used adroitly, and thereby +secured a considerable trade. But he does not seem, +notwithstanding his pushing character, to have done more than +earn a bare living.</p> + +<p>The fashion of wig-wearing having undergone a change, distress +fell upon the wig-makers; and Arkwright, being of a mechanical +turn, was consequently induced to turn machine inventor or +“conjurer,” as the pursuit was then popularly +termed. Many attempts were made about that time to invent a +spinning-machine, and our barber determined to launch his little +bark on the sea of invention with the rest. Like other +self-taught men of the same bias, he had already been devoting +his spare time to the invention of a perpetual-motion machine; +and from that the transition to a spinning-machine was +easy. He followed his experiments so assiduously that he +neglected his business, lost the little money he had saved, and +was reduced to great poverty. His wife—for he had by +this time married—was impatient at what she conceived to be +a wanton waste of time and money, and in a moment of sudden wrath +she seized upon and destroyed his models, hoping thus to remove +the cause of the family privations. Arkwright was a +stubborn and enthusiastic man, and he was provoked beyond measure +by this conduct of his wife, from whom he immediately +separated.</p> + +<p>In travelling about the country, Arkwright had become +acquainted with a person named Kay, a clockmaker at Warrington, +who assisted him in constructing some of the parts of his +perpetual-motion machinery. It is supposed that he was +informed by Kay of the principle of spinning by rollers; but it +is also said that the idea was first suggested to him by +accidentally observing a red-hot piece of iron become elongated +by passing between iron rollers. However this may be, the +idea at once took firm possession of his mind, and he proceeded +to devise the process by which it was to be accomplished, Kay +being able to tell him nothing on this point. Arkwright now +abandoned his business of hair collecting, and devoted himself to +the perfecting of his machine, a model of which, constructed by +Kay under his directions, he set up in the parlour of the Free +Grammar School at Preston. Being a burgess of the town, he +voted at the contested election at which General Burgoyne was +returned; but such was his poverty, and such the tattered state +of his dress, that a number of persons subscribed a sum +sufficient to have him put in a state fit to appear in the +poll-room. The exhibition of his machine in a town where so +many workpeople lived by the exercise of manual labour proved a +dangerous experiment; ominous growlings were heard outside the +school-room from time to time, and Arkwright,—remembering +the fate of Kay, who was mobbed and compelled to fly from +Lancashire because of his invention of the fly-shuttle, and of +poor Hargreaves, whose spinning-jenny had been pulled to pieces +only a short time before by a Blackburn mob,—wisely +determined on packing up his model and removing to a less +dangerous locality. He went accordingly to Nottingham, +where he applied to some of the local bankers for pecuniary +assistance; and the Messrs. Wright consented to advance him a sum +of money on condition of sharing in the profits of the +invention. The machine, however, not being perfected so +soon as they had anticipated, the bankers recommended Arkwright +to apply to Messrs. Strutt and Need, the former of whom was the +ingenious inventor and patentee of the stocking-frame. Mr. +Strutt at once appreciated the merits of the invention, and a +partnership was entered into with Arkwright, whose road to +fortune was now clear. The patent was secured in the name +of “Richard Arkwright, of Nottingham, clockmaker,” +and it is a circumstance worthy of note, that it was taken out in +1769, the same year in which Watt secured the patent for his +steam-engine. A cotton-mill was first erected at +Nottingham, driven by horses; and another was shortly after +built, on a much larger scale, at Cromford, in Derbyshire, turned +by a water-wheel, from which circumstance the spinning-machine +came to be called the water-frame.</p> + +<p>Arkwright’s labours, however, were, comparatively +speaking, only begun. He had still to perfect all the +working details of his machine. It was in his hands the +subject of constant modification and improvement, until +eventually it was rendered practicable and profitable in an +eminent degree. But success was only secured by long and +patient labour: for some years, indeed, the speculation was +disheartening and unprofitable, swallowing up a very large amount +of capital without any result. When success began to appear +more certain, then the Lancashire manufacturers fell upon +Arkwright’s patent to pull it in pieces, as the Cornish +miners fell upon Boulton and Watt to rob them of the profits of +their steam-engine. Arkwright was even denounced as the +enemy of the working people; and a mill which he built near +Chorley was destroyed by a mob in the presence of a strong force +of police and military. The Lancashire men refused to buy +his materials, though they were confessedly the best in the +market. Then they refused to pay patent-right for the use +of his machines, and combined to crush him in the courts of +law. To the disgust of right-minded people, +Arkwright’s patent was upset. After the trial, when +passing the hotel at which his opponents were staying, one of +them said, loud enough to be heard by him, “Well, +we’ve done the old shaver at last;” to which he +coolly replied, “Never mind, I’ve a razor left that +will shave you all.” He established new mills in +Lancashire, Derbyshire, and at New Lanark, in Scotland. The +mills at Cromford also came into his hands at the expiry of his +partnership with Strutt, and the amount and the excellence of his +products were such, that in a short time he obtained so complete +a control of the trade, that the prices were fixed by him, and he +governed the main operations of the other cotton-spinners.</p> + +<p>Arkwright was a man of great force of character, indomitable +courage, much worldly shrewdness, with a business faculty almost +amounting to genius. At one period his time was engrossed +by severe and continuous labour, occasioned by the organising and +conducting of his numerous manufactories, sometimes from four in +the morning till nine at night. At fifty years of age he +set to work to learn English grammar, and improve himself in +writing and orthography. After overcoming every obstacle, +he had the satisfaction of reaping the reward of his +enterprise. Eighteen years after he had constructed his +first machine, he rose to such estimation in Derbyshire that he +was appointed High Sheriff of the county, and shortly after +George III. conferred upon him the honour of knighthood. He +died in 1792. Be it for good or for evil, Arkwright was the +founder in England of the modern factory system, a branch of +industry which has unquestionably proved a source of immense +wealth to individuals and to the nation.</p> + +<p>All the other great branches of industry in Britain furnish +like examples of energetic men of business, the source of much +benefit to the neighbourhoods in which they have laboured, and of +increased power and wealth to the community at large. +Amongst such might be cited the Strutts of Belper; the Tennants +of Glasgow; the Marshalls and Gotts of Leeds; the Peels, +Ashworths, Birleys, Fieldens, Ashtons, Heywoods, and Ainsworths +of South Lancashire, some of whose descendants have since become +distinguished in connection with the political history of +England. Such pre-eminently were the Peels of South +Lancashire.</p> + +<p>The founder of the Peel family, about the middle of last +century, was a small yeoman, occupying the Hole House Farm, near +Blackburn, from which he afterwards removed to a house situated +in Fish Lane in that town. Robert Peel, as he advanced in +life, saw a large family of sons and daughters growing up about +him; but the land about Blackburn being somewhat barren, it did +not appear to him that agricultural pursuits offered a very +encouraging prospect for their industry. The place had, +however, long been the seat of a domestic manufacture—the +fabric called “Blackburn greys,” consisting of linen +weft and cotton warp, being chiefly made in that town and its +neighbourhood. It was then customary—previous to the +introduction of the factory system—for industrious yeomen +with families to employ the time not occupied in the fields in +weaving at home; and Robert Peel accordingly began the domestic +trade of calico-making. He was honest, and made an honest +article; thrifty and hardworking, and his trade prospered. +He was also enterprising, and was one of the first to adopt the +carding cylinder, then recently invented.</p> + +<p>But Robert Peel’s attention was principally directed to +the <i>printing</i> of calico—then a comparatively unknown +art—and for some time he carried on a series of experiments +with the object of printing by machinery. The experiments +were secretly conducted in his own house, the cloth being ironed +for the purpose by one of the women of the family. It was +then customary, in such houses as the Peels, to use pewter plates +at dinner. Having sketched a figure or pattern on one of +the plates, the thought struck him that an impression might be +got from it in reverse, and printed on calico with colour. +In a cottage at the end of the farm-house lived a woman who kept +a calendering machine, and going into her cottage, he put the +plate with colour rubbed into the figured part and some calico +over it, through the machine, when it was found to leave a +satisfactory impression. Such is said to have been the +origin of roller printing on calico. Robert Peel shortly +perfected his process, and the first pattern he brought out was a +parsley leaf; hence he is spoken of in the neighbourhood of +Blackburn to this day as “Parsley Peel.” The +process of calico printing by what is called the mule +machine—that is, by means of a wooden cylinder in relief, +with an engraved copper cylinder—was afterwards brought to +perfection by one of his sons, the head of the firm of Messrs. +Peel and Co., of Church. Stimulated by his success, Robert +Peel shortly gave up farming, and removing to Brookside, a +village about two miles from Blackburn, he devoted himself +exclusively to the printing business. There, with the aid +of his sons, who were as energetic as himself, he successfully +carried on the trade for several years; and as the young men grew +up towards manhood, the concern branched out into various firms +of Peels, each of which became a centre of industrial activity +and a source of remunerative employment to large numbers of +people.</p> + +<p>From what can now be learnt of the character of the original +and untitled Robert Peel, he must have been a remarkable +man—shrewd, sagacious, and far-seeing. But little is +known of him excepting from traditions and the sons of those who +knew him are fast passing away. His son, Sir Robert, thus +modestly spoke of him:—“My father may be truly said +to have been the founder of our family; and he so accurately +appreciated the importance of commercial wealth in a national +point of view, that he was often heard to say that the gains to +individuals were small compared with the national gains arising +from trade.”</p> + +<p>Sir Robert Peel, the first baronet and the second manufacturer +of the name, inherited all his father’s enterprise, +ability, and industry. His position, at starting in life, +was little above that of an ordinary working man; for his father, +though laying the foundations of future prosperity, was still +struggling with the difficulties arising from insufficient +capital. When Robert was only twenty years of age, he +determined to begin the business of cotton-printing, which he had +by this time learnt from his father, on his own account. +His uncle, James Haworth, and William Yates of Blackburn, joined +him in his enterprise; the whole capital which they could raise +amongst them amounting to only about 500<i>l.</i>, the principal +part of which was supplied by William Yates. The father of +the latter was a householder in Blackburn, where he was well +known and much respected; and having saved money by his business, +he was willing to advance sufficient to give his son a start in +the lucrative trade of cotton-printing, then in its +infancy. Robert Peel, though comparatively a mere youth, +supplied the practical knowledge of the business; but it was said +of him, and proved true, that he “carried an old head on +young shoulders.” A ruined corn-mill, with its +adjoining fields, was purchased for a comparatively small sum, +near the then insignificant town of Bury, where the works long +after continued to be known as “The Ground;” and a +few wooden sheds having been run up, the firm commenced their +cotton-printing business in a very humble way in the year 1770, +adding to it that of cotton-spinning a few years later. The +frugal style in which the partners lived may be inferred from the +following incident in their early career. William Yates, +being a married man with a family, commenced housekeeping on a +small scale, and, to oblige Peel, who was single, he agreed to +take him as a lodger. The sum which the latter first paid +for board and lodging was only 8<i>s.</i> a week; but Yates, +considering this too little, insisted on the weekly payment being +increased a shilling, to which Peel at first demurred, and a +difference between the partners took place, which was eventually +compromised by the lodger paying an advance of sixpence a +week. William Yates’s eldest child was a girl named +Ellen, and she very soon became an especial favourite with the +young lodger. On returning from his hard day’s work +at “The Ground,” he would take the little girl upon +his knee, and say to her, “Nelly, thou bonny little dear, +wilt be my wife?” to which the child would readily answer +“Yes,” as any child would do. “Then +I’ll wait for thee, Nelly; I’ll wed thee, and none +else.” And Robert Peel did wait. As the girl +grew in beauty towards womanhood, his determination to wait for +her was strengthened; and after the lapse of ten +years—years of close application to business and rapidly +increasing prosperity—Robert Peel married Ellen Yates when +she had completed her seventeenth year; and the pretty child, +whom her mother’s lodger and father’s partner had +nursed upon his knee, became Mrs. Peel, and eventually Lady Peel, +the mother of the future Prime Minister of England. Lady +Peel was a noble and beautiful woman, fitted to grace any station +in life. She possessed rare powers of mind, and was, on +every emergency, the high-souled and faithful counsellor of her +husband. For many years after their marriage, she acted as +his amanuensis, conducting the principal part of his business +correspondence, for Mr. Peel himself was an indifferent and +almost unintelligible writer. She died in 1803, only three +years after the Baronetcy had been conferred upon her +husband. It is said that London fashionable life—so +unlike what she had been accustomed to at home—proved +injurious to her health; and old Mr. Yates afterwards used to +say, “if Robert hadn’t made our Nelly a +‘Lady,’ she might ha’ been living +yet.”</p> + +<p>The career of Yates, Peel, & Co., was throughout one of +great and uninterrupted prosperity. Sir Robert Peel himself +was the soul of the firm; to great energy and application uniting +much practical sagacity, and first-rate mercantile +abilities—qualities in which many of the early +cotton-spinners were exceedingly deficient. He was a man of +iron mind and frame, and toiled unceasingly. In short, he +was to cotton printing what Arkwright was to cotton-spinning, and +his success was equally great. The excellence of the +articles produced by the firm secured the command of the market, +and the character of the firm stood pre-eminent in +Lancashire. Besides greatly benefiting Bury, the +partnership planted similar extensive works in the neighbourhood, +on the Irwell and the Roch; and it was cited to their honour, +that, while they sought to raise to the highest perfection the +quality of their manufactures, they also endeavoured, in all +ways, to promote the well-being and comfort of their workpeople; +for whom they contrived to provide remunerative employment even +in the least prosperous times.</p> + +<p>Sir Robert Peel readily appreciated the value of all new +processes and inventions; in illustration of which we may allude +to his adoption of the process for producing what is called +<i>resist work</i> in calico printing. This is accomplished +by the use of a paste, or resist, on such parts of the cloth as +were intended to remain white. The person who discovered +the paste was a traveller for a London house, who sold it to Mr. +Peel for an inconsiderable sum. It required the experience +of a year or two to perfect the system and make it practically +useful; but the beauty of its effect, and the extreme precision +of outline in the pattern produced, at once placed the Bury +establishment at the head of all the factories for calico +printing in the country. Other firms, conducted with like +spirit, were established by members of the same family at +Burnley, Foxhill bank, and Altham, in Lancashire; Salley Abbey, +in Yorkshire; and afterwards at Burton-on-Trent, in +Staffordshire; these various establishments, whilst they brought +wealth to their proprietors, setting an example to the whole +cotton trade, and training up many of the most successful +printers and manufacturers in Lancashire.</p> + +<p>Among other distinguished founders of industry, the Rev. +William Lee, inventor of the Stocking Frame, and John Heathcoat, +inventor of the Bobbin-net Machine, are worthy of notice, as men +of great mechanical skill and perseverance, through whose labours +a vast amount of remunerative employment has been provided for +the labouring population of Nottingham and the adjacent +districts. The accounts which have been preserved of the +circumstances connected with the invention of the Stocking Frame +are very confused, and in many respects contradictory, though +there is no doubt as to the name of the inventor. This was +William Lee, born at Woodborough, a village some seven miles from +Nottingham, about the year 1563. According to some +accounts, he was the heir to a small freehold, while according to +others he was a poor scholar, <a name="citation43a"></a><a +href="#footnote43a" class="citation">[43a]</a> and had to +struggle with poverty from his earliest years. He entered +as a sizar at Christ College, Cambridge, in May, 1579, and +subsequently removed to St. John’s, taking his degree of +B.A. in 1582–3. It is believed that he commenced M.A. +in 1586; but on this point there appears to be some confusion in +the records of the University. The statement usually made +that he was expelled for marrying contrary to the statutes, is +incorrect, as he was never a Fellow of the University, and +therefore could not be prejudiced by taking such a step.</p> + +<p>At the time when Lee invented the Stocking Frame he was +officiating as curate of Calverton, near Nottingham; and it is +alleged by some writers that the invention had its origin in +disappointed affection. The curate is said to have fallen +deeply in love with a young lady of the village, who failed to +reciprocate his affections; and when he visited her, she was +accustomed to pay much more attention to the process of knitting +stockings and instructing her pupils in the art, than to the +addresses of her admirer. This slight is said to have +created in his mind such an aversion to knitting by hand, that he +formed the determination to invent a machine that should +supersede it and render it a gainless employment. For three +years he devoted himself to the prosecution of the invention, +sacrificing everything to his new idea. At the prospect of +success opened before him, he abandoned his curacy, and devoted +himself to the art of stocking making by machinery. This is +the version of the story given by Henson <a +name="citation43b"></a><a href="#footnote43b" +class="citation">[43b]</a> on the authority of an old +stocking-maker, who died in Collins’s Hospital, Nottingham, +aged ninety-two, and was apprenticed in the town during the reign +of Queen Anne. It is also given by Deering and Blackner as +the traditional account in the neighbourhood, and it is in some +measure borne out by the arms of the London Company of Frame-Work +Knitters, which consists of a stocking frame without the +wood-work, with a clergyman on one side and a woman on the other +as supporters. <a name="citation44"></a><a href="#footnote44" +class="citation">[44]</a></p> + +<p>Whatever may have been the actual facts as to the origin of +the invention of the Stocking Loom, there can be no doubt as to +the extraordinary mechanical genius displayed by its +inventor. That a clergyman living in a remote village, +whose life had for the most part been spent with books, should +contrive a machine of such delicate and complicated movements, +and at once advance the art of knitting from the tedious process +of linking threads in a chain of loops by three skewers in the +fingers of a woman, to the beautiful and rapid process of weaving +by the stocking frame, was indeed an astonishing achievement, +which may be pronounced almost unequalled in the history of +mechanical invention. Lee’s merit was all the +greater, as the handicraft arts were then in their infancy, and +little attention had as yet been given to the contrivance of +machinery for the purposes of manufacture. He was under the +necessity of extemporising the parts of his machine as he best +could, and adopting various expedients to overcome difficulties +as they arose. His tools were imperfect, and his materials +imperfect; and he had no skilled workmen to assist him. +According to tradition, the first frame he made was a twelve +gauge, without lead sinkers, and it was almost wholly of wood; +the needles being also stuck in bits of wood. One of +Lee’s principal difficulties consisted in the formation of +the stitch, for want of needle eyes; but this he eventually +overcame by forming eyes to the needles with a three-square file. +<a name="citation45"></a><a href="#footnote45" +class="citation">[45]</a> At length, one difficulty after +another was successfully overcome, and after three years’ +labour the machine was sufficiently complete to be fit for +use. The quondam curate, full of enthusiasm for his art, +now began stocking weaving in the village of Calverton, and he +continued to work there for several years, instructing his +brother James and several of his relations in the practice of the +art.</p> + +<p>Having brought his frame to a considerable degree of +perfection, and being desirous of securing the patronage of Queen +Elizabeth, whose partiality for knitted silk stockings was well +known, Lee proceeded to London to exhibit the loom before her +Majesty. He first showed it to several members of the +court, among others to Sir William (afterwards Lord) Hunsdon, +whom he taught to work it with success; and Lee was, through +their instrumentality, at length admitted to an interview with +the Queen, and worked the machine in her presence. +Elizabeth, however, did not give him the encouragement that he +had expected; and she is said to have opposed the invention on +the ground that it was calculated to deprive a large number of +poor people of their employment of hand knitting. Lee was +no more successful in finding other patrons, and considering +himself and his invention treated with contempt, he embraced the +offer made to him by Sully, the sagacious minister of Henry IV., +to proceed to Rouen and instruct the operatives of that +town—then one of the most important manufacturing centres +of France—in the construction and use of the +stocking-frame. Lee accordingly transferred himself and his +machines to France, in 1605, taking with him his brother and +seven workmen. He met with a cordial reception at Rouen, +and was proceeding with the manufacture of stockings on a large +scale—having nine of his frames in full work,—when +unhappily ill fortune again overtook him. Henry IV., his +protector, on whom he had relied for the rewards, honours, and +promised grant of privileges, which had induced Lee to settle in +France, was murdered by the fanatic Ravaillac; and the +encouragement and protection which had heretofore been extended +to him were at once withdrawn. To press his claims at +court, Lee proceeded to Paris; but being a protestant as well as +a foreigner, his representations were treated with neglect; and +worn out with vexation and grief, this distinguished inventor +shortly after died at Paris, in a state of extreme poverty and +distress.</p> + +<p>Lee’s brother, with seven of the workmen, succeeded in +escaping from France with their frames, leaving two behind. +On James Lee’s return to Nottinghamshire, he was joined by +one Ashton, a miller of Thoroton, who had been instructed in the +art of frame-work knitting by the inventor himself before he left +England. These two, with the workmen and their frames, +began the stocking manufacture at Thoroton, and carried it on +with considerable success. The place was favourably +situated for the purpose, as the sheep pastured in the +neighbouring district of Sherwood yielded a kind of wool of the +longest staple. Ashton is said to have introduced the +method of making the frames with lead sinkers, which was a great +improvement. The number of looms employed in different +parts of England gradually increased; and the machine manufacture +of stockings eventually became an important branch of the +national industry.</p> + +<p>One of the most important modifications in the Stocking-Frame +was that which enabled it to be applied to the manufacture of +lace on a large scale. In 1777, two workmen, Frost and +Holmes, were both engaged in making point-net by means of the +modifications they had introduced in the stocking-frame; and in +the course of about thirty years, so rapid was the growth of this +branch of production that 1500 point-net frames were at work, +giving employment to upwards of 15,000 people. Owing, +however, to the war, to change of fashion, and to other +circumstances, the Nottingham lace manufacture rapidly fell off; +and it continued in a decaying state until the invention of the +Bobbin-net Machine by John Heathcoat, late M.P. for Tiverton, +which had the effect of at once re-establishing the manufacture +on solid foundations.</p> + +<p>John Heathcoat was the youngest son of a respectable small +farmer at Duffield, Derbyshire, where he was born in 1783. +When at school he made steady and rapid progress, but was early +removed from it to be apprenticed to a frame-smith near +Loughborough. The boy soon learnt to handle tools with +dexterity, and he acquired a minute knowledge of the parts of +which the stocking-frame was composed, as well as of the more +intricate warp-machine. At his leisure he studied how to +introduce improvements in them, and his friend, Mr. Bazley, M.P., +states that as early as the age of sixteen, he conceived the idea +of inventing a machine by which lace might be made similar to +Buckingham or French lace, then all made by hand. The first +practical improvement he succeeded in introducing was in the +warp-frame, when, by means of an ingenious apparatus, he +succeeded in producing “mitts” of a lacy appearance, +and it was this success which determined him to pursue the study +of mechanical lace-making. The stocking-frame had already, +in a modified form, been applied to the manufacture of point-net +lace, in which the mesh was <i>looped</i> as in a stocking, but +the work was slight and frail, and therefore +unsatisfactory. Many ingenious Nottingham mechanics had, +during a long succession of years, been labouring at the problem +of inventing a machine by which the mesh of threads should be +<i>twisted</i> round each other on the formation of the +net. Some of these men died in poverty, some were driven +insane, and all alike failed in the object of their search. +The old warp-machine held its ground.</p> + +<p>When a little over twenty-one years of age, Heathcoat went to +Nottingham, where he readily found employment, for which he soon +received the highest remuneration, as a setter-up of hosiery and +warp-frames, and was much respected for his talent for invention, +general intelligence, and the sound and sober principles that +governed his conduct. He also continued to pursue the +subject on which his mind had before been occupied, and laboured +to compass the contrivance of a twist traverse-net machine. +He first studied the art of making the Buckingham or pillow-lace +by hand, with the object of effecting the same motions by +mechanical means. It was a long and laborious task, +requiring the exercise of great perseverance and ingenuity. +His master, Elliot, described him at that time as inventive, +patient, self-denying, and taciturn, undaunted by failures and +mistakes, full of resources and expedients, and entertaining the +most perfect confidence that his application of mechanical +principles would eventually be crowned with success.</p> + +<p>It is difficult to describe in words an invention so +complicated as the bobbin-net machine. It was, indeed, a +mechanical pillow for making lace, imitating in an ingenious +manner the motions of the lace-maker’s fingers in +intersecting or tying the meshes of the lace upon her +pillow. On analysing the component parts of a piece of +hand-made lace, Heathcoat was enabled to classify the threads +into longitudinal and diagonal. He began his experiments by +fixing common pack-threads lengthwise on a sort of frame for the +warp, and then passing the weft threads between them by common +plyers, delivering them to other plyers on the opposite side; +then, after giving them a sideways motion and twist, the threads +were repassed back between the next adjoining cords, the meshes +being thus tied in the same way as upon pillows by hand. He +had then to contrive a mechanism that should accomplish all these +nice and delicate movements, and to do this cost him no small +amount of mental toil. Long after he said, “The +single difficulty of getting the diagonal threads to twist in the +allotted space was so great that if it had now to be done, I +should probably not attempt its accomplishment.” His +next step was to provide thin metallic discs, to be used as +bobbins for conducting the threads backwards and forwards through +the warp. These discs, being arranged in carrier-frames +placed on each side of the warp, were moved by suitable machinery +so as to conduct the threads from side to side in forming the +lace. He eventually succeeded in working out his principle +with extraordinary skill and success; and, at the age of +twenty-four, he was enabled to secure his invention by a +patent.</p> + +<p>During this time his wife was kept in almost as great anxiety +as himself, for she well knew of his trials and difficulties +while he was striving to perfect his invention. Many years +after they had been successfully overcome, the conversation which +took place one eventful evening was vividly remembered. +“Well,” said the anxious wife, “will it +work?” “No,” was the sad answer; “I +have had to take it all to pieces again.” Though he +could still speak hopefully and cheerfully, his poor wife could +restrain her feelings no longer, but sat down and cried +bitterly. She had, however, only a few more weeks to wait, +for success long laboured for and richly deserved, came at last, +and a proud and happy man was John Heathcoat when he brought home +the first narrow strip of bobbin-net made by his machine, and +placed it in the hands of his wife.</p> + +<p>As in the case of nearly all inventions which have proved +productive, Heathcoat’s rights as a patentee were disputed, +and his claims as an inventor called in question. On the +supposed invalidity of the patent, the lace-makers boldly adopted +the bobbin-net machine, and set the inventor at defiance. +But other patents were taken out for alleged improvements and +adaptations; and it was only when these new patentees fell out +and went to law with each other that Heathcoat’s rights +became established. One lace-manufacturer having brought an +action against another for an alleged infringement of his patent, +the jury brought in a verdict for the defendant, in which the +judge concurred, on the ground that <i>both</i> the machines in +question were infringements of Heathcoat’s patent. It +was on the occasion of this trial, “Boville v. +Moore,” that Sir John Copley (afterwards Lord Lyndhurst), +who was retained for the defence in the interest of Mr. +Heathcoat, learnt to work the bobbin-net machine in order that he +might master the details of the invention. On reading over +his brief, he confessed that he did not quite understand the +merits of the case; but as it seemed to him to be one of great +importance, he offered to go down into the country forthwith and +study the machine until he understood it; “and then,” +said he, “I will defend you to the best of my +ability.” He accordingly put himself into that +night’s mail, and went down to Nottingham to get up his +case as perhaps counsel never got it up before. Next +morning the learned sergeant placed himself in a lace-loom, and +he did not leave it until he could deftly make a piece of +bobbin-net with his own hands, and thoroughly understood the +principle as well as the details of the machine. When the +case came on for trial, the learned sergeant was enabled to work +the model on the table with such case and skill, and to explain +the precise nature of the invention with such felicitous +clearness, as to astonish alike judge, jury, and spectators; and +the thorough conscientiousness and mastery with which he handled +the case had no doubt its influence upon the decision of the +court.</p> + +<p>After the trial was over, Mr. Heathcoat, on inquiry, found +about six hundred machines at work after his patent, and he +proceeded to levy royalty upon the owners of them, which amounted +to a large sum. But the profits realised by the +manufacturers of lace were very great, and the use of the +machines rapidly extended; while the price of the article was +reduced from five pounds the square yard to about five pence in +the course of twenty-five years. During the same period the +average annual returns of the lace-trade have been at least four +millions sterling, and it gives remunerative employment to about +150,000 workpeople.</p> + +<p>To return to the personal history of Mr. Heathcoat. In +1809 we find him established as a lace-manufacturer at +Loughborough, in Leicestershire. There he carried on a +prosperous business for several years, giving employment to a +large number of operatives, at wages varying from 5<i>l.</i> to +10<i>l.</i> a week. Notwithstanding the great increase in +the number of hands employed in lace-making through the +introduction of the new machines, it began to be whispered about +among the workpeople that they were superseding labour, and an +extensive conspiracy was formed for the purpose of destroying +them wherever found. As early as the year 1811 disputes +arose between the masters and men engaged in the stocking and +lace trades in the south-western parts of Nottinghamshire and the +adjacent parts of Derbyshire and Leicestershire, the result of +which was the assembly of a mob at Sutton, in Ashfield, who +proceeded in open day to break the stocking and lace-frames of +the manufacturers. Some of the ringleaders having been +seized and punished, the disaffected learnt caution; but the +destruction of the machines was nevertheless carried on secretly +wherever a safe opportunity presented itself. As the +machines were of so delicate a construction that a single blow of +a hammer rendered them useless, and as the manufacture was +carried on for the most part in detached buildings, often in +private dwellings remote from towns, the opportunities of +destroying them were unusually easy. In the neighbourhood +of Nottingham, which was the focus of turbulence, the +machine-breakers organized themselves in regular bodies, and held +nocturnal meetings at which their plans were arranged. +Probably with the view of inspiring confidence, they gave out +that they were under the command of a leader named Ned Ludd, or +General Ludd, and hence their designation of Luddites. +Under this organization machine-breaking was carried on with +great vigour during the winter of 1811, occasioning great +distress, and throwing large numbers of workpeople out of +employment. Meanwhile, the owners of the frames proceeded +to remove them from the villages and lone dwellings in the +country, and brought them into warehouses in the towns for their +better protection.</p> + +<p>The Luddites seem to have been encouraged by the lenity of the +sentences pronounced on such of their confederates as had been +apprehended and tried; and, shortly after, the mania broke out +afresh, and rapidly extended over the northern and midland +manufacturing districts. The organization became more +secret; an oath was administered to the members binding them to +obedience to the orders issued by the heads of the confederacy; +and the betrayal of their designs was decreed to be death. +All machines were doomed by them to destruction, whether employed +in the manufacture of cloth, calico, or lace; and a reign of +terror began which lasted for years. In Yorkshire and +Lancashire mills were boldly attacked by armed rioters, and in +many cases they were wrecked or burnt; so that it became +necessary to guard them by soldiers and yeomanry. The +masters themselves were doomed to death; many of them were +assaulted, and some were murdered. At length the law was +vigorously set in motion; numbers of the misguided Luddites were +apprehended; some were executed; and after several years’ +violent commotion from this cause, the machine-breaking riots +were at length quelled.</p> + +<p>Among the numerous manufacturers whose works were attacked by +the Luddites, was the inventor of the bobbin-net machine +himself. One bright sunny day, in the summer of 1816, a +body of rioters entered his factory at Loughborough with torches, +and set fire to it, destroying thirty-seven lace-machines, and +above 10,000<i>l.</i> worth of property. Ten of the men +were apprehended for the felony, and eight of them were +executed. Mr. Heathcoat made a claim upon the county for +compensation, and it was resisted; but the Court of Queen’s +Bench decided in his favour, and decreed that the county must +make good his loss of 10,000<i>l.</i> The magistrates +sought to couple with the payment of the damage the condition +that Mr. Heathcoat should expend the money in the county of +Leicester; but to this he would not assent, having already +resolved on removing his manufacture elsewhere. At +Tiverton, in Devonshire, he found a large building which had been +formerly used as a woollen manufactory; but the Tiverton cloth +trade having fallen into decay, the building remained unoccupied, +and the town itself was generally in a very poverty-stricken +condition. Mr. Heathcoat bought the old mill, renovated and +enlarged it, and there recommenced the manufacture of lace upon a +larger scale than before; keeping in full work as many as three +hundred machines, and employing a large number of artisans at +good wages. Not only did he carry on the manufacture of +lace, but the various branches of business connected with +it—yarn-doubling, silk-spinning, net-making, and +finishing. He also established at Tiverton an iron-foundry +and works for the manufacture of agricultural implements, which +proved of great convenience to the district. It was a +favourite idea of his that steam power was capable of being +applied to perform all the heavy drudgery of life, and he +laboured for a long time at the invention of a +steam-plough. In 1832 he so far completed his invention as +to be enabled to take out a patent for it; and Heathcoat’s +steam-plough, though it has since been superseded by +Fowler’s, was considered the best machine of the kind that +had up to that time been invented.</p> + +<p>Mr. Heathcoat was a man of great natural gifts. He +possessed a sound understanding, quick perception, and a genius +for business of the highest order. With these he combined +uprightness, honesty, and integrity—qualities which are the +true glory of human character. Himself a diligent +self-educator, he gave ready encouragement to deserving youths in +his employment, stimulating their talents and fostering their +energies. During his own busy life, he contrived to save +time to master French and Italian, of which he acquired an +accurate and grammatical knowledge. His mind was largely +stored with the results of a careful study of the best +literature, and there were few subjects on which he had not +formed for himself shrewd and accurate views. The two +thousand workpeople in his employment regarded him almost as a +father, and he carefully provided for their comfort and +improvement. Prosperity did not spoil him, as it does so +many; nor close his heart against the claims of the poor and +struggling, who were always sure of his sympathy and help. +To provide for the education of the children of his workpeople, +he built schools for them at a cost of about 6000<i>l.</i> +He was also a man of singularly cheerful and buoyant disposition, +a favourite with men of all classes and most admired and beloved +by those who knew him best.</p> + +<p>In 1831 the electors of Tiverton, of which town Mr. Heathcoat +had proved himself so genuine a benefactor, returned him to +represent them in Parliament, and he continued their member for +nearly thirty years. During a great part of that time he +had Lord Palmerston for his colleague, and the noble lord, on +more than one public occasion, expressed the high regard which he +entertained for his venerable friend. On retiring from the +representation in 1859, owing to advancing age and increasing +infirmities, thirteen hundred of his workmen presented him with a +silver inkstand and gold pen, in token of their esteem. He +enjoyed his leisure for only two more years, dying in January, +1861, at the age of seventy-seven, and leaving behind him a +character for probity, virtue, manliness, and mechanical genius, +of which his descendants may well be proud.</p> + +<p>We next turn to a career of a very different kind, that of the +illustrious but unfortunate Jacquard, whose life also illustrates +in a remarkable manner the influence which ingenious men, even of +the humblest rank, may exercise upon the industry of a +nation. Jacquard was the son of a hard-working couple of +Lyons, his father being a weaver, and his mother a pattern +reader. They were too poor to give him any but the most +meagre education. When he was of age to learn a trade, his +father placed him with a book-binder. An old clerk, who +made up the master’s accounts, gave Jacquard some lessons +in mathematics. He very shortly began to display a +remarkable turn for mechanics, and some of his contrivances quite +astonished the old clerk, who advised Jacquard’s father to +put him to some other trade, in which his peculiar abilities +might have better scope than in bookbinding. He was +accordingly put apprentice to a cutler; but was so badly treated +by his master, that he shortly afterwards left his employment, on +which he was placed with a type-founder.</p> + +<p>His parents dying, Jacquard found himself in a measure +compelled to take to his father’s two looms, and carry on +the trade of a weaver. He immediately proceeded to improve +the looms, and became so engrossed with his inventions that he +forgot his work, and very soon found himself at the end of his +means. He then sold the looms to pay his debts, at the same +time that he took upon himself the burden of supporting a +wife. He became still poorer, and to satisfy his creditors, +he next sold his cottage. He tried to find employment, but +in vain, people believing him to be an idler, occupied with mere +dreams about his inventions. At length he obtained +employment with a line-maker of Bresse, whither he went, his wife +remaining at Lyons, earning a precarious living by making straw +bonnets.</p> + +<p>We hear nothing further of Jacquard for some years, but in the +interval he seems to have prosecuted his improvement in the +drawloom for the better manufacture of figured fabrics; for, in +1790, he brought out his contrivance for selecting the warp +threads, which, when added to the loom, superseded the services +of a draw-boy. The adoption of this machine was slow but +steady, and in ten years after its introduction, 4000 of them +were found at work in Lyons. Jacquard’s pursuits were +rudely interrupted by the Revolution, and, in 1792, we find him +fighting in the ranks of the Lyonnaise Volunteers against the +Army of the Convention under the command of Dubois +Crancé. The city was taken; Jacquard fled and joined +the Army of the Rhine, where he rose to the rank of +sergeant. He might have remained a soldier, but that, his +only son having been shot dead at his side, he deserted and +returned to Lyons to recover his wife. He found her in a +garret still employed at her old trade of straw-bonnet +making. While living in concealment with her, his mind +reverted to the inventions over which he had so long brooded in +former years; but he had no means wherewith to prosecute +them. Jacquard found it necessary, however, to emerge from +his hiding-place and try to find some employment. He +succeeded in obtaining it with an intelligent manufacturer, and +while working by day he went on inventing by night. It had +occurred to him that great improvements might still be introduced +in looms for figured goods, and he incidentally mentioned the +subject one day to his master, regretting at the same time that +his limited means prevented him from carrying out his +ideas. Happily his master appreciated the value of the +suggestions, and with laudable generosity placed a sum of money +at his disposal, that he might prosecute the proposed +improvements at his leisure.</p> + +<p>In three months Jacquard had invented a loom to substitute +mechanical action for the irksome and toilsome labour of the +workman. The loom was exhibited at the Exposition of +National Industry at Paris in 1801, and obtained a bronze +medal. Jacquard was further honoured by a visit at Lyons +from the Minister Carnot, who desired to congratulate him in +person on the success of his invention. In the following +year the Society of Arts in London offered a prize for the +invention of a machine for manufacturing fishing-nets and +boarding-netting for ships. Jacquard heard of this, and +while walking one day in the fields according to his custom, he +turned the subject over in his mind, and contrived the plan of a +machine for the purpose. His friend, the manufacturer, +again furnished him with the means of carrying out his idea, and +in three weeks Jacquard had completed his invention.</p> + +<p>Jacquard’s achievement having come to the knowledge of +the Prefect of the Department, he was summoned before that +functionary, and, on his explanation of the working of the +machine, a report on the subject was forwarded to the +Emperor. The inventor was forthwith summoned to Paris with +his machine, and brought into the presence of the Emperor, who +received him with the consideration due to his genius. The +interview lasted two hours, during which Jacquard, placed at his +ease by the Emperor’s affability, explained to him the +improvements which he proposed to make in the looms for weaving +figured goods. The result was, that he was provided with +apartments in the Conservatoire des Arts et Métiers, where +he had the use of the workshop during his stay, and was provided +with a suitable allowance for his maintenance.</p> + +<p>Installed in the Conservatoire, Jacquard proceeded to complete +the details of his improved loom. He had the advantage of +minutely inspecting the various exquisite pieces of mechanism +contained in that great treasury of human ingenuity. Among +the machines which more particularly attracted his attention, and +eventually set him upon the track of his discovery, was a loom +for weaving flowered silk, made by Vaucanson the celebrated +automaton-maker.</p> + +<p>Vaucanson was a man of the highest order of constructive +genius. The inventive faculty was so strong in him that it +may almost be said to have amounted to a passion, and could not +be restrained. The saying that the poet is born, not made, +applies with equal force to the inventor, who, though indebted, +like the other, to culture and improved opportunities, +nevertheless contrives and constructs new combinations of +machinery mainly to gratify his own instinct. This was +peculiarly the case with Vaucanson; for his most elaborate works +were not so much distinguished for their utility as for the +curious ingenuity which they displayed. While a mere boy +attending Sunday conversations with his mother, he amused himself +by watching, through the chinks of a partition wall, part of the +movements of a clock in the adjoining apartment. He +endeavoured to understand them, and by brooding over the subject, +after several months he discovered the principle of the +escapement.</p> + +<p>From that time the subject of mechanical invention took +complete possession of him. With some rude tools which he +contrived, he made a wooden clock that marked the hours with +remarkable exactness; while he made for a miniature chapel the +figures of some angels which waved their wings, and some priests +that made several ecclesiastical movements. With the view +of executing some other automata he had designed, he proceeded to +study anatomy, music, and mechanics, which occupied him for +several years. The sight of the Flute-player in the Gardens +of the Tuileries inspired him with the resolution to invent a +similar figure that should <i>play</i>; and after several +years’ study and labour, though struggling with illness, he +succeeded in accomplishing his object. He next produced a +Flageolet-player, which was succeeded by a Duck—the most +ingenious of his contrivances,—which swam, dabbled, drank, +and quacked like a real duck. He next invented an asp, +employed in the tragedy of ‘Cléopâtre,’ +which hissed and darted at the bosom of the actress.</p> + +<p>Vaucanson, however, did not confine himself merely to the +making of automata. By reason of his ingenuity, Cardinal de +Fleury appointed him inspector of the silk manufactories of +France; and he was no sooner in office, than with his usual +irrepressible instinct to invent, he proceeded to introduce +improvements in silk machinery. One of these was his mill +for thrown silk, which so excited the anger of the Lyons +operatives, who feared the loss of employment through its means, +that they pelted him with stones and had nearly killed him. +He nevertheless went on inventing, and next produced a machine +for weaving flowered silks, with a contrivance for giving a +dressing to the thread, so as to render that of each bobbin or +skein of an equal thickness.</p> + +<p>When Vaucanson died in 1782, after a long illness, he +bequeathed his collection of machines to the Queen, who seems to +have set but small value on them, and they were shortly after +dispersed. But his machine for weaving flowered silks was +happily preserved in the Conservatoire des Arts et +Métiers, and there Jacquard found it among the many +curious and interesting articles in the collection. It +proved of the utmost value to him, for it immediately set him on +the track of the principal modification which he introduced in +his improved loom.</p> + +<p>One of the chief features of Vaucanson’s machine was a +pierced cylinder which, according to the holes it presented when +revolved, regulated the movement of certain needles, and caused +the threads of the warp to deviate in such a manner as to produce +a given design, though only of a simple character. Jacquard +seized upon the suggestion with avidity, and, with the genius of +the true inventor, at once proceeded to improve upon it. At +the end of a month his weaving-machine was completed. To +the cylinder of Vancanson, he added an endless piece of +pasteboard pierced with a number of holes, through which the +threads of the warp were presented to the weaver; while another +piece of mechanism indicated to the workman the colour of the +shuttle which he ought to throw. Thus the drawboy and the +reader of designs were both at once superseded. The first +use Jacquard made of his new loom was to weave with it several +yards of rich stuff which he presented to the Empress +Josephine. Napoleon was highly gratified with the result of +the inventor’s labours, and ordered a number of the looms +to be constructed by the best workmen, after Jacquard’s +model, and presented to him; after which he returned to +Lyons.</p> + +<p>There he experienced the frequent fate of inventors. He +was regarded by his townsmen as an enemy, and treated by them as +Kay, Hargreaves, and Arkwright had been in Lancashire. The +workmen looked upon the new loom as fatal to their trade, and +feared lest it should at once take the bread from their +mouths. A tumultuous meeting was held on the Place des +Terreaux, when it was determined to destroy the machines. +This was however prevented by the military. But Jacquard +was denounced and hanged in effigy. The ‘Conseil des +prud’hommes’ in vain endeavoured to allay the +excitement, and they were themselves denounced. At length, +carried away by the popular impulse, the prud’hommes, most +of whom had been workmen and sympathized with the class, had one +of Jacquard’s looms carried off and publicly broken in +pieces. Riots followed, in one of which Jacquard was +dragged along the quay by an infuriated mob intending to drown +him, but he was rescued.</p> + +<p>The great value of the Jacquard loom, however, could not be +denied, and its success was only a question of time. +Jacquard was urged by some English silk manufacturers to pass +over into England and settle there. But notwithstanding the +harsh and cruel treatment he had received at the hands of his +townspeople, his patriotism was too strong to permit him to +accept their offer. The English manufacturers, however, +adopted his loom. Then it was, and only then, that Lyons, +threatened to be beaten out of the field, adopted it with +eagerness; and before long the Jacquard machine was employed in +nearly all kinds of weaving. The result proved that the +fears of the workpeople had been entirely unfounded. +Instead of diminishing employment, the Jacquard loom increased it +at least tenfold. The number of persons occupied in the +manufacture of figured goods in Lyons, was stated by M. Leon +Faucher to have been 60,000 in 1833; and that number has since +been considerably increased.</p> + +<p>As for Jacquard himself, the rest of his life passed +peacefully, excepting that the workpeople who dragged him along +the quay to drown him were shortly after found eager to bear him +in triumph along the same route in celebration of his +birthday. But his modesty would not permit him to take part +in such a demonstration. The Municipal Council of Lyons +proposed to him that he should devote himself to improving his +machine for the benefit of the local industry, to which Jacquard +agreed in consideration of a moderate pension, the amount of +which was fixed by himself. After perfecting his invention +accordingly, he retired at sixty to end his days at Oullins, his +father’s native place. It was there that he received, +in 1820, the decoration of the Legion of Honour; and it was there +that he died and was buried in 1834. A statue was erected +to his memory, but his relatives remained in poverty; and twenty +years after his death, his two nieces were under the necessity of +selling for a few hundred francs the gold medal bestowed upon +their uncle by Louis XVIII. “Such,” says a +French writer, “was the gratitude of the manufacturing +interests of Lyons to the man to whom it owes so large a portion +of its splendour.”</p> + +<p>It would be easy to extend the martyrology of inventors, and +to cite the names of other equally distinguished men who have, +without any corresponding advantage to themselves, contributed to +the industrial progress of the age,—for it has too often +happened that genius has planted the tree, of which patient +dulness has gathered the fruit; but we will confine ourselves for +the present to a brief account of an inventor of comparatively +recent date, by way of illustration of the difficulties and +privations which it is so frequently the lot of mechanical genius +to surmount. We allude to Joshua Heilmann, the inventor of +the Combing Machine.</p> + +<p>Heilmann was born in 1796 at Mulhouse, the principal seat of +the Alsace cotton manufacture. His father was engaged in +that business; and Joshua entered his office at fifteen. He +remained there for two years, employing his spare time in +mechanical drawing. He afterwards spent two years in his +uncle’s banking-house in Paris, prosecuting the study of +mathematics in the evenings. Some of his relatives having +established a small cotton-spinning factory at Mulhouse, young +Heilmann was placed with Messrs. Tissot and Rey, at Paris, to +learn the practice of that firm. At the same time he became +a student at the Conservatoire des Arts et Métiers, where +he attended the lectures, and studied the machines in the +museum. He also took practical lessons in turning from a +toymaker. After some time, thus diligently occupied, he +returned to Alsace, to superintend the construction of the +machinery for the new factory at Vieux-Thann, which was shortly +finished and set to work. The operations of the manufactory +were, however, seriously affected by a commercial crisis which +occurred, and it passed into other hands, on which Heilmann +returned to his family at Mulhouse.</p> + +<p>He had in the mean time been occupying much of his leisure +with inventions, more particularly in connection with the weaving +of cotton and the preparation of the staple for spinning. +One of his earliest contrivances was an embroidering-machine, in +which twenty needles were employed, working simultaneously; and +he succeeded in accomplishing his object after about six +months’ labour. For this invention, which he +exhibited at the Exposition of 1834, he received a gold medal, +and was decorated with the Legion of Honour. Other +inventions quickly followed—an improved loom, a machine for +measuring and folding fabrics, an improvement of the +“bobbin and fly frames” of the English spinners, and +a weft winding-machine, with various improvements in the +machinery for preparing, spinning, and weaving silk and +cotton. One of his most ingenious contrivances was his loom +for weaving simultaneously two pieces of velvet or other piled +fabric, united by the pile common to both, with a knife and +traversing apparatus for separating the two fabrics when +woven. But by far the most beautiful and ingenious of his +inventions was the combing-machine, the history of which we now +proceed shortly to describe.</p> + +<p>Heilmann had for some years been diligently studying the +contrivance of a machine for combing long-stapled cotton, the +ordinary carding-machine being found ineffective in preparing the +raw material for spinning, especially the finer sorts of yarn, +besides causing considerable waste. To avoid these +imperfections, the cotton-spinners of Alsace offered a prize of +5000 francs for an improved combing-machine, and Heilmann +immediately proceeded to compete for the reward. He was not +stimulated by the desire of gain, for he was comparatively rich, +having acquired a considerable fortune by his wife. It was +a saying of his that “one will never accomplish great +things who is constantly asking himself, how much gain will this +bring me?” What mainly impelled him was the +irrepressible instinct of the inventor, who no sooner has a +mechanical problem set before him than he feels impelled to +undertake its solution. The problem in this case was, +however, much more difficult than he had anticipated. The +close study of the subject occupied him for several years, and +the expenses in which he became involved in connection with it +were so great, that his wife’s fortune was shortly +swallowed up, and he was reduced to poverty, without being able +to bring his machine to perfection. From that time he was +under the necessity of relying mainly on the help of his friends +to enable him to prosecute the invention.</p> + +<p>While still struggling with poverty and difficulties, +Heilmann’s wife died, believing her husband ruined; and +shortly after he proceeded to England and settled for a time at +Manchester, still labouring at his machine. He had a model +made for him by the eminent machine-makers, Sharpe, Roberts, and +Company; but still he could not make it work satisfactorily, and +he was at length brought almost to the verge of despair. He +returned to France to visit his family, still pursuing his idea, +which had obtained complete possession of his mind. While +sitting by his hearth one evening, meditating upon the hard fate +of inventors and the misfortunes in which their families so often +become involved, he found himself almost unconsciously watching +his daughters coming their long hair and drawing it out at full +length between their fingers. The thought suddenly struck +him that if he could successfully imitate in a machine the +process of combing out the longest hair and forcing back the +short by reversing the action of the comb, it might serve to +extricate him from his difficulty. It may be remembered +that this incident in the life of Heilmann has been made the +subject of a beautiful picture by Mr. Elmore, R.A., which was +exhibited at the Royal Academy Exhibition of 1862.</p> + +<p>Upon this idea he proceeded, introduced the apparently simple +but really most intricate process of machine-combing, and after +great labour he succeeded in perfecting the invention. The +singular beauty of the process can only be appreciated by those +who have witnessed the machine at work, when the similarity of +its movements to that of combing the hair, which suggested the +invention, is at once apparent. The machine has been +described as “acting with almost the delicacy of touch of +the human fingers.” It combs the lock of cotton <i>at +both ends</i>, places the fibres exactly parallel with each +other, separates the long from the short, and unites the long +fibres in one sliver and the short ones in another. In +fine, the machine not only acts with the delicate accuracy of the +human fingers, but apparently with the delicate intelligence of +the human mind.</p> + +<p>The chief commercial value of the invention consisted in its +rendering the commoner sorts of cotton available for fine +spinning. The manufacturers were thereby enabled to select +the most suitable fibres for high-priced fabrics, and to produce +the finer sorts of yarn in much larger quantities. It +became possible by its means to make thread so fine that a length +of 334 miles might be spun from a single pound weight of the +prepared cotton, and, worked up into the finer sorts of lace, the +original shilling’s worth of cotton-wool, before it passed +into the hands of the consumer, might thus be increased to the +value of between 300<i>l.</i> and 400<i>l.</i> sterling.</p> + +<p>The beauty and utility of Heilmann’s invention were at +once appreciated by the English cotton-spinners. Six +Lancashire firms united and purchased the patent for +cotton-spinning for England for the sum of 30,000<i>l.</i>; the +wool-spinners paid the same sum for the privilege of applying the +process to wool; and the Messrs. Marshall, of Leeds, +20,000<i>l.</i> for the privilege of applying it to flax. +Thus wealth suddenly flowed in upon poor Heilmann at last. +But he did not live to enjoy it. Scarcely had his long +labours been crowned by success than he died, and his son, who +had shared in his privations, shortly followed him.</p> + +<p>It is at the price of lives such as these that the wonders of +civilisation are achieved.</p> +<h2><a name="page67"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +67</span>CHAPTER III.<br /> +<span class="smcap">The Great Potters—Palissy, +Böttgher, Wedgwood</span>.</h2> +<blockquote><p>“Patience is the finest and worthiest part +of fortitude, and the rarest too . . . Patience lies at the root +of all pleasures, as well as of all powers. Hope herself +ceases to be happiness when Impatience companions +her.”—<i>John Ruskin</i>.</p> + +<p>“Il y a vingt et cinq ans passez qu’il ne me fut +monstré une coupe de terre, tournée et +esmaillée d’une telle beauté que . . . +dèslors, sans avoir esgard que je n’avois nulle +connoissance des terres argileuses, je me mis a chercher les +émaux, comme un homme qui taste en +ténèbres.”—<i>Bernard Palissy</i>.</p> +</blockquote> +<p><span class="smcap">It</span> so happens that the history of +Pottery furnishes some of the most remarkable instances of +patient perseverance to be found in the whole range of +biography. Of these we select three of the most striking, +as exhibited in the lives of Bernard Palissy, the Frenchman; +Johann Friedrich Böttgher, the German; and Josiah Wedgwood, +the Englishman.</p> + +<p>Though the art of making common vessels of clay was known to +most of the ancient nations, that of manufacturing enamelled +earthenware was much less common. It was, however, +practised by the ancient Etruscans, specimens of whose ware are +still to be found in antiquarian collections. But it became +a lost art, and was only recovered at a comparatively recent +date. The Etruscan ware was very valuable in ancient times, +a vase being worth its weight in gold in the time of +Augustus. The Moors seem to have preserved amongst them a +knowledge of the art, which they were found practising in the +island of Majorca when it was taken by the Pisans in 1115. Among +the spoil carried away were many plates of Moorish earthenware, +which, in token of triumph, were embedded in the walls of several +of the ancient churches of Pisa, where they are to be seen to +this day. About two centuries later the Italians began to +make an imitation enamelled ware, which they named Majolica, +after the Moorish place of manufacture.</p> + +<p>The reviver or re-discoverer of the art of enamelling in Italy +was Luca della Robbia, a Florentine sculptor. Vasari +describes him as a man of indefatigable perseverance, working +with his chisel all day and practising drawing during the greater +part of the night. He pursued the latter art with so much +assiduity, that when working late, to prevent his feet from +freezing with the cold, he was accustomed to provide himself with +a basket of shavings, in which he placed them to keep himself +warm and enable him to proceed with his drawings. +“Nor,” says Vasari, “am I in the least +astonished at this, since no man ever becomes distinguished in +any art whatsoever who does not early begin to acquire the power +of supporting heat, cold, hunger, thirst, and other discomforts; +whereas those persons deceive themselves altogether who suppose +that when taking their ease and surrounded by all the enjoyments +of the world they may still attain to honourable +distinction,—for it is not by sleeping, but by waking, +watching, and labouring continually, that proficiency is attained +and reputation acquired.”</p> + +<p>But Luca, notwithstanding all his application and industry, +did not succeed in earning enough money by sculpture to enable +him to live by the art, and the idea occurred to him that he +might nevertheless be able to pursue his modelling in some +material more facile and less dear than marble. Hence it +was that he began to make his models in clay, and to endeavour by +experiment so to coat and bake the clay as to render those models +durable. After many trials he at length discovered a method +of covering the clay with a material, which, when exposed to the +intense heat of a furnace, became converted into an almost +imperishable enamel. He afterwards made the further +discovery of a method of imparting colour to the enamel, thus +greatly adding to its beauty.</p> + +<p>The fame of Luca’s work extended throughout Europe, and +specimens of his art became widely diffused. Many of them +were sent into France and Spain, where they were greatly +prized. At that time coarse brown jars and pipkins were +almost the only articles of earthenware produced in France; and +this continued to be the case, with comparatively small +improvement, until the time of Palissy—a man who toiled and +fought against stupendous difficulties with a heroism that sheds +a glow almost of romance over the events of his chequered +life.</p> + +<p>Bernard Palissy is supposed to have been born in the south of +France, in the diocese of Agen, about the year 1510. His +father was probably a worker in glass, to which trade Bernard was +brought up. His parents were poor people—too poor to +give him the benefit of any school education. “I had +no other books,” said he afterwards, “than heaven and +earth, which are open to all.” He learnt, however, +the art of glass-painting, to which he added that of drawing, and +afterwards reading and writing.</p> + +<p>When about eighteen years old, the glass trade becoming +decayed, Palissy left his father’s house, with his wallet +on his back, and went out into the world to search whether there +was any place in it for him. He first travelled towards +Gascony, working at his trade where he could find employment, and +occasionally occupying part of his time in land-measuring. +Then he travelled northwards, sojourning for various periods at +different places in France, Flanders, and Lower Germany.</p> + +<p>Thus Palissy occupied about ten more years of his life, after +which he married, and ceased from his wanderings, settling down +to practise glass-painting and land-measuring at the small town +of Saintes, in the Lower Charente. There children were born +to him; and not only his responsibilities but his expenses +increased, while, do what he could, his earnings remained too +small for his needs. It was therefore necessary for him to +bestir himself. Probably he felt capable of better things +than drudging in an employment so precarious as glass-painting; +and hence he was induced to turn his attention to the kindred art +of painting and enamelling earthenware. Yet on this subject +he was wholly ignorant; for he had never seen earth baked before +he began his operations. He had therefore everything to +learn by himself, without any helper. But he was full of +hope, eager to learn, of unbounded perseverance and inexhaustible +patience.</p> + +<p>It was the sight of an elegant cup of Italian +manufacture—most probably one of Luca della Robbia’s +make—which first set Palissy a-thinking about the new +art. A circumstance so apparently insignificant would have +produced no effect upon an ordinary mind, or even upon Palissy +himself at an ordinary time; but occurring as it did when he was +meditating a change of calling, he at once became inflamed with +the desire of imitating it. The sight of this cup disturbed +his whole existence; and the determination to discover the enamel +with which it was glazed thenceforward possessed him like a +passion. Had he been a single man he might have travelled +into Italy in search of the secret; but he was bound to his wife +and his children, and could not leave them; so he remained by +their side groping in the dark in the hope of finding out the +process of making and enamelling earthenware.</p> + +<p>At first he could merely guess the materials of which the +enamel was composed; and he proceeded to try all manner of +experiments to ascertain what they really were. He pounded +all the substances which he supposed were likely to produce +it. Then he bought common earthen pots, broke them into +pieces, and, spreading his compounds over them, subjected them to +the heat of a furnace which he erected for the purpose of baking +them. His experiments failed; and the results were broken +pots and a waste of fuel, drugs, time, and labour. Women do +not readily sympathise with experiments whose only tangible +effect is to dissipate the means of buying clothes and food for +their children; and Palissy’s wife, however dutiful in +other respects, could not be reconciled to the purchase of more +earthen pots, which seemed to her to be bought only to be +broken. Yet she must needs submit; for Palissy had become +thoroughly possessed by the determination to master the secret of +the enamel, and would not leave it alone.</p> + +<p>For many successive months and years Palissy pursued his +experiments. The first furnace having proved a failure, he +proceeded to erect another out of doors. There he burnt +more wood, spoiled more drugs and pots, and lost more time, until +poverty stared him and his family in the face. +“Thus,” said he, “I fooled away several years, +with sorrow and sighs, because I could not at all arrive at my +intention.” In the intervals of his experiments he +occasionally worked at his former callings, painting on glass, +drawing portraits, and measuring land; but his earnings from +these sources were very small. At length he was no longer +able to carry on his experiments in his own furnace because of +the heavy cost of fuel; but he bought more potsherds, broke them +up as before into three or four hundred pieces, and, covering +them with chemicals, carried them to a tile-work a league and a +half distant from Saintes, there to be baked in an ordinary +furnace. After the operation he went to see the pieces +taken out; and, to his dismay, the whole of the experiments were +failures. But though disappointed, he was not yet defeated; +for he determined on the very spot to “begin +afresh.”</p> + +<p>His business as a land-measurer called him away for a brief +season from the pursuit of his experiments. In conformity +with an edict of the State, it became necessary to survey the +salt-marshes in the neighbourhood of Saintes for the purpose of +levying the land-tax. Palissy was employed to make this +survey, and prepare the requisite map. The work occupied +him some time, and he was doubtless well paid for it; but no +sooner was it completed than he proceeded, with redoubled zeal, +to follow up his old investigations “in the track of the +enamels.” He began by breaking three dozen new +earthen pots, the pieces of which he covered with different +materials which he had compounded, and then took them to a +neighbouring glass-furnace to be baked. The results gave +him a glimmer of hope. The greater heat of the +glass-furnace had melted some of the compounds; but though +Palissy searched diligently for the white enamel he could find +none.</p> + +<p>For two more years he went on experimenting without any +satisfactory result, until the proceeds of his survey of the +salt-marshes having become nearly spent, he was reduced to +poverty again. But he resolved to make a last great effort; +and he began by breaking more pots than ever. More than +three hundred pieces of pottery covered with his compounds were +sent to the glass-furnace; and thither he himself went to watch +the results of the baking. Four hours passed, during which +he watched; and then the furnace was opened. The material +on <i>one</i> only of the three hundred pieces of potsherd had +melted, and it was taken out to cool. As it hardened, it +grew white-white and polished! The piece of potsherd was +covered with white enamel, described by Palissy as +“singularly beautiful!” And beautiful it must +no doubt have been in his eyes after all his weary waiting. +He ran home with it to his wife, feeling himself, as he expressed +it, quite a new creature. But the prize was not yet +won—far from it. The partial success of this intended +last effort merely had the effect of luring him on to a +succession of further experiments and failures.</p> + +<p>In order that he might complete the invention, which he now +believed to be at hand, he resolved to build for himself a +glass-furnace near his dwelling, where he might carry on his +operations in secret. He proceeded to build the furnace +with his own hands, carrying the bricks from the brick-field upon +his back. He was bricklayer, labourer, and all. From +seven to eight more months passed. At last the furnace was +built and ready for use. Palissy had in the mean time +fashioned a number of vessels of clay in readiness for the laying +on of the enamel. After being subjected to a preliminary +process of baking, they were covered with the enamel compound, +and again placed in the furnace for the grand crucial +experiment. Although his means were nearly exhausted, +Palissy had been for some time accumulating a great store of fuel +for the final effort; and he thought it was enough. At last +the fire was lit, and the operation proceeded. All day he +sat by the furnace, feeding it with fuel. He sat there +watching and feeding all through the long night. But the +enamel did not melt. The sun rose upon his labours. +His wife brought him a portion of the scanty morning +meal,—for he would not stir from the furnace, into which he +continued from time to time to heave more fuel. The second +day passed, and still the enamel did not melt. The sun set, +and another night passed. The pale, haggard, unshorn, +baffled yet not beaten Palissy sat by his furnace eagerly looking +for the melting of the enamel. A third day and night +passed—a fourth, a fifth, and even a sixth,—yes, for +six long days and nights did the unconquerable Palissy watch and +toil, fighting against hope; and still the enamel would not +melt.</p> + +<p>It then occurred to him that there might be some defect in the +materials for the enamel—perhaps something wanting in the +flux; so he set to work to pound and compound fresh materials for +a new experiment. Thus two or three more weeks +passed. But how to buy more pots?—for those which he +had made with his own hands for the purposes of the first +experiment were by long baking irretrievably spoilt for the +purposes of a second. His money was now all spent; but he +could borrow. His character was still good, though his wife +and the neighbours thought him foolishly wasting his means in +futile experiments. Nevertheless he succeeded. He +borrowed sufficient from a friend to enable him to buy more fuel +and more pots, and he was again ready for a further +experiment. The pots were covered with the new compound, +placed in the furnace, and the fire was again lit.</p> + +<p>It was the last and most desperate experiment of the +whole. The fire blazed up; the heat became intense; but +still the enamel did not melt. The fuel began to run +short! How to keep up the fire? There were the garden +palings: these would burn. They must be sacrificed rather +than that the great experiment should fail. The garden +palings were pulled up and cast into the furnace. They were +burnt in vain! The enamel had not yet melted. Ten +minutes more heat might do it. Fuel must be had at whatever +cost. There remained the household furniture and +shelving. A crashing noise was heard in the house; and +amidst the screams of his wife and children, who now feared +Palissy’s reason was giving way, the tables were seized, +broken up, and heaved into the furnace. The enamel had not +melted yet! There remained the shelving. Another +noise of the wrenching of timber was heard within the house; and +the shelves were torn down and hurled after the furniture into +the fire. Wife and children then rushed from the house, and +went frantically through the town, calling out that poor Palissy +had gone mad, and was breaking up his very furniture for +firewood! <a name="citation74"></a><a href="#footnote74" +class="citation">[74]</a></p> + +<p>For an entire month his shirt had not been off his back, and +he was utterly worn out—wasted with toil, anxiety, +watching, and want of food. He was in debt, and seemed on +the verge of ruin. But he had at length mastered the +secret; for the last great burst of heat had melted the +enamel. The common brown household jars, when taken out of +the furnace after it had become cool, were found covered with a +white glaze! For this he could endure reproach, contumely, +and scorn, and wait patiently for the opportunity of putting his +discovery into practice as better days came round.</p> + +<p>Palissy next hired a potter to make some earthen vessels after +designs which he furnished; while he himself proceeded to model +some medallions in clay for the purpose of enamelling them. +But how to maintain himself and his family until the wares were +made and ready for sale? Fortunately there remained one man +in Saintes who still believed in the integrity, if not in the +judgment, of Palissy—an inn-keeper, who agreed to feed and +lodge him for six months, while he went on with his +manufacture. As for the working potter whom he had hired, +Palissy soon found that he could not pay him the stipulated +wages. Having already stripped his dwelling, he could but +strip himself; and he accordingly parted with some of his clothes +to the potter, in part payment of the wages which he owed +him.</p> + +<p>Palissy next erected an improved furnace, but he was so +unfortunate as to build part of the inside with flints. +When it was heated, these flints cracked and burst, and the +spiculæ were scattered over the pieces of pottery, sticking +to them. Though the enamel came out right, the work was +irretrievably spoilt, and thus six more months’ labour was +lost. Persons were found willing to buy the articles at a +low price, notwithstanding the injury they had sustained; but +Palissy would not sell them, considering that to have done so +would be to “decry and abate his honour;” and so he +broke in pieces the entire batch. +“Nevertheless,” says he, “hope continued to +inspire me, and I held on manfully; sometimes, when visitors +called, I entertained them with pleasantry, while I was really +sad at heart. . . . Worst of all the sufferings I had to endure, +were the mockeries and persecutions of those of my own household, +who were so unreasonable as to expect me to execute work without +the means of doing so. For years my furnaces were without +any covering or protection, and while attending them I have been +for nights at the mercy of the wind and the rain, without help or +consolation, save it might be the wailing of cats on the one side +and the howling of dogs on the other. Sometimes the tempest +would beat so furiously against the furnaces that I was compelled +to leave them and seek shelter within doors. Drenched by +rain, and in no better plight than if I had been dragged through +mire, I have gone to lie down at midnight or at daybreak, +stumbling into the house without a light, and reeling from one +side to another as if I had been drunken, but really weary with +watching and filled with sorrow at the loss of my labour after +such long toiling. But alas! my home proved no refuge; for, +drenched and besmeared as I was, I found in my chamber a second +persecution worse than the first, which makes me even now marvel +that I was not utterly consumed by my many sorrows.”</p> + +<p>At this stage of his affairs, Palissy became melancholy and +almost hopeless, and seems to have all but broken down. He +wandered gloomily about the fields near Saintes, his clothes +hanging in tatters, and himself worn to a skeleton. In a +curious passage in his writings he describes how that the calves +of his legs had disappeared and were no longer able with the help +of garters to hold up his stockings, which fell about his heels +when he walked. <a name="citation77"></a><a href="#footnote77" +class="citation">[77]</a> The family continued to reproach +him for his recklessness, and his neighbours cried shame upon him +for his obstinate folly. So he returned for a time to his +former calling; and after about a year’s diligent labour, +during which he earned bread for his household and somewhat +recovered his character among his neighbours, he again resumed +his darling enterprise. But though he had already spent +about ten years in the search for the enamel, it cost him nearly +eight more years of experimental plodding before he perfected his +invention. He gradually learnt dexterity and certainty of +result by experience, gathering practical knowledge out of many +failures. Every mishap was a fresh lesson to him, teaching +him something new about the nature of enamels, the qualities of +argillaceous earths, the tempering of clays, and the construction +and management of furnaces.</p> + +<p>At last, after about sixteen years’ labour, Palissy took +heart and called himself Potter. These sixteen years had +been his term of apprenticeship to the art; during which he had +wholly to teach himself, beginning at the very beginning. +He was now able to sell his wares and thereby maintain his family +in comfort. But he never rested satisfied with what he had +accomplished. He proceeded from one step of improvement to +another; always aiming at the greatest perfection possible. +He studied natural objects for patterns, and with such success +that the great Buffon spoke of him as “so great a +naturalist as Nature only can produce.” His +ornamental pieces are now regarded as rare gems in the cabinets +of virtuosi, and sell at almost fabulous prices. <a +name="citation78"></a><a href="#footnote78" +class="citation">[78]</a> The ornaments on them are for the +most part accurate models from life, of wild animals, lizards, +and plants, found in the fields about Saintes, and tastefully +combined as ornaments into the texture of a plate or vase. +When Palissy had reached the height of his art he styled himself +“Ouvrier de Terre et Inventeur des Rustics +Figulines.”</p> + +<p>We have not, however, come to an end of the sufferings of +Palissy, respecting which a few words remain to be said. +Being a Protestant, at a time when religious persecution waxed +hot in the south of France, and expressing his views without +fear, he was regarded as a dangerous heretic. His enemies +having informed against him, his house at Saintes was entered by +the officers of “justice,” and his workshop was +thrown open to the rabble, who entered and smashed his pottery, +while he himself was hurried off by night and cast into a dungeon +at Bordeaux, to wait his turn at the stake or the scaffold. +He was condemned to be burnt; but a powerful noble, the Constable +de Montmorency, interposed to save his life—not because he +had any special regard for Palissy or his religion, but because +no other artist could be found capable of executing the enamelled +pavement for his magnificent château then in course of +erection at Ecouen, about four leagues from Paris. By his +influence an edict was issued appointing Palissy Inventor of +Rustic Figulines to the King and to the Constable, which had the +effect of immediately removing him from the jurisdiction of +Bourdeaux. He was accordingly liberated, and returned to +his home at Saintes only to find it devastated and broken up. His +workshop was open to the sky, and his works lay in ruins. +Shaking the dust of Saintes from his feet he left the place never +to return to it, and removed to Paris to carry on the works +ordered of him by the Constable and the Queen Mother, being +lodged in the Tuileries <a name="citation79"></a><a +href="#footnote79" class="citation">[79]</a> while so +occupied.</p> + +<p>Besides carrying on the manufacture of pottery, with the aid +of his two sons, Palissy, during the latter part of his life, +wrote and published several books on the potter’s art, with +a view to the instruction of his countrymen, and in order that +they might avoid the many mistakes which he himself had +made. He also wrote on agriculture, on fortification, and +natural history, on which latter subject he even delivered +lectures to a limited number of persons. He waged war +against astrology, alchemy, witchcraft, and like +impostures. This stirred up against him many enemies, who +pointed the finger at him as a heretic, and he was again arrested +for his religion and imprisoned in the Bastille. He was now +an old man of seventy-eight, trembling on the verge of the grave, +but his spirit was as brave as ever. He was threatened with +death unless he recanted; but he was as obstinate in holding to +his religion as he had been in hunting out the secret of the +enamel. The king, Henry III., even went to see him in +prison to induce him to abjure his faith. “My good +man,” said the King, “you have now served my mother +and myself for forty-five years. We have put up with your +adhering to your religion amidst fires and massacres: now I am so +pressed by the Guise party as well as by my own people, that I am +constrained to leave you in the hands of your enemies, and +to-morrow you will be burnt unless you become +converted.” “Sire,” answered the +unconquerable old man, “I am ready to give my life for the +glory of God. You have said many times that you have pity +on me; and now I have pity on you, who have pronounced the words +<i>I am constrained</i>! It is not spoken like a king, +sire; it is what you, and those who constrain you, the Guisards +and all your people, can never effect upon me, for I know how to +die.” <a name="citation80a"></a><a href="#footnote80a" +class="citation">[80a]</a> Palissy did indeed die shortly +after, a martyr, though not at the stake. He died in the +Bastille, after enduring about a year’s +imprisonment,—there peacefully terminating a life +distinguished for heroic labour, extraordinary endurance, +inflexible rectitude, and the exhibition of many rare and noble +virtues. <a name="citation80b"></a><a href="#footnote80b" +class="citation">[80b]</a></p> + +<p>The life of John Frederick Böttgher, the inventor of hard +porcelain, presents a remarkable contrast to that of Palissy; +though it also contains many points of singular and almost +romantic interest. Böttgher was born at Schleiz, in +the Voightland, in 1685, and at twelve years of age was placed +apprentice with an apothecary at Berlin. He seems to have +been early fascinated by chemistry, and occupied most of his +leisure in making experiments. These for the most part +tended in one direction—the art of converting common on +metals into gold. At the end of several years, +Böttgher pretended to have discovered the universal solvent +of the alchemists, and professed that he had made gold by its +means. He exhibited its powers before his master, the +apothecary Zörn, and by some trick or other succeeded in +making him and several other witnesses believe that he had +actually converted copper into gold.</p> + +<p>The news spread abroad that the apothecary’s apprentice +had discovered the grand secret, and crowds collected about the +shop to get a sight of the wonderful young +“gold-cook.” The king himself expressed a wish +to see and converse with him, and when Frederick I. was presented +with a piece of the gold pretended to have been converted from +copper, he was so dazzled with the prospect of securing an +infinite quantity of it—Prussia being then in great straits +for money—that he determined to secure Böttgher and +employ him to make gold for him within the strong fortress of +Spandau. But the young apothecary, suspecting the +king’s intention, and probably fearing detection, at once +resolved on flight, and he succeeded in getting across the +frontier into Saxony.</p> + +<p>A reward of a thousand thalers was offered for +Böttgher’s apprehension, but in vain. He arrived +at Wittenberg, and appealed for protection to the Elector of +Saxony, Frederick Augustus I. (King of Poland), surnamed +“the Strong.” Frederick was himself very much +in want of money at the time, and he was overjoyed at the +prospect of obtaining gold in any quantity by the aid of the +young alchemist. Böttgher was accordingly conveyed in +secret to Dresden, accompanied by a royal escort. He had +scarcely left Wittenberg when a battalion of Prussian grenadiers +appeared before the gates demanding the gold-maker’s +extradition. But it was too late: Böttgher had already +arrived in Dresden, where he was lodged in the Golden House, and +treated with every consideration, though strictly watched and +kept under guard.</p> + +<p>The Elector, however, must needs leave him there for a time, +having to depart forthwith to Poland, then almost in a state of +anarchy. But, impatient for gold, he wrote Böttgher +from Warsaw, urging him to communicate the secret, so that he +himself might practise the art of commutation. The young +“gold-cook,” thus pressed, forwarded to Frederick a +small phial containing “a reddish fluid,” which, it +was asserted, changed all metals, when in a molten state, into +gold. This important phial was taken in charge by the +Prince Fürst von Fürstenburg, who, accompanied by a +regiment of Guards, hurried with it to Warsaw. Arrived +there, it was determined to make immediate trial of the +process. The King and the Prince locked themselves up in a +secret chamber of the palace, girt themselves about with leather +aprons, and like true “gold-cooks” set to work +melting copper in a crucible and afterwards applying to it the +red fluid of Böttgher. But the result was +unsatisfactory; for notwithstanding all that they could do, the +copper obstinately remained copper. On referring to the +alchemist’s instructions, however, the King found that, to +succeed with the process, it was necessary that the fluid should +be used “in great purity of heart;” and as his +Majesty was conscious of having spent the evening in very bad +company he attributed the failure of the experiment to that +cause. A second trial was followed by no better results, +and then the King became furious; for he had confessed and +received absolution before beginning the second experiment.</p> + +<p>Frederick Augustus now resolved on forcing Böttgher to +disclose the golden secret, as the only means of relief from his +urgent pecuniary difficulties. The alchemist, hearing of +the royal intention, again determined to fly. He succeeded +in escaping his guard, and, after three days’ travel, +arrived at Ens in Austria, where he thought himself safe. +The agents of the Elector were, however, at his heels; they had +tracked him to the “Golden Stag,” which they +surrounded, and seizing him in his bed, notwithstanding his +resistance and appeals to the Austrian authorities for help, they +carried him by force to Dresden. From this time he was more +strictly watched than ever, and he was shortly after transferred +to the strong fortress of Köningstein. It was +communicated to him that the royal exchequer was completely +empty, and that ten regiments of Poles in arrears of pay were +waiting for his gold. The King himself visited him, and +told him in a severe tone that if he did not at once proceed to +make gold, he would be hung! (“<i>Thu mir +zurecht</i>, <i>Böttgher</i>, <i>sonst lass ich dich +hangen</i>”).</p> + +<p>Years passed, and still Böttgher made no gold; but he was +not hung. It was reserved for him to make a far more +important discovery than the conversion of copper into gold, +namely, the conversion of clay into porcelain. Some rare +specimens of this ware had been brought by the Portuguese from +China, which were sold for more than their weight in gold. +Böttgher was first induced to turn his attention to the +subject by Walter von Tschirnhaus, a maker of optical +instruments, also an alchemist. Tschirnhaus was a man of +education and distinction, and was held in much esteem by Prince +Fürstenburg as well as by the Elector. He very +sensibly said to Böttgher, still in fear of the +gallows—“If you can’t make gold, try and do +something else; make porcelain.”</p> + +<p>The alchemist acted on the hint, and began his experiments, +working night and day. He prosecuted his investigations for +a long time with great assiduity, but without success. At +length some red clay, brought to him for the purpose of making +his crucibles, set him on the right track. He found that +this clay, when submitted to a high temperature, became vitrified +and retained its shape; and that its texture resembled that of +porcelain, excepting in colour and opacity. He had in fact +accidentally discovered red porcelain, and he proceeded to +manufacture it and sell it as porcelain.</p> + +<p>Böttgher was, however, well aware that the white colour +was an essential property of true porcelain; and he therefore +prosecuted his experiments in the hope of discovering the +secret. Several years thus passed, but without success; +until again accident stood his friend, and helped him to a +knowledge of the art of making white porcelain. One day, in +the year 1707, he found his perruque unusually heavy, and asked +of his valet the reason. The answer was, that it was owing +to the powder with which the wig was dressed, which consisted of +a kind of earth then much used for hair powder. +Böttgher’s quick imagination immediately seized upon +the idea. This white earthy powder might possibly be the +very earth of which he was in search—at all events the +opportunity must not be let slip of ascertaining what it really +was. He was rewarded for his painstaking care and +watchfulness; for he found, on experiment, that the principal +ingredient of the hair-powder consisted of <i>kaolin</i>, the +want of which had so long formed an insuperable difficulty in the +way of his inquiries.</p> + +<p>The discovery, in Böttgher’s intelligent hands, led +to great results, and proved of far greater importance than the +discovery of the philosopher’s stone would have been. +In October, 1707, he presented his first piece of porcelain to +the Elector, who was greatly pleased with it; and it was resolved +that Böttgher should be furnished with the means necessary +for perfecting his invention. Having obtained a skilled +workman from Delft, he began to <i>turn</i> porcelain with great +success. He now entirely abandoned alchemy for pottery, and +inscribed over the door of his workshop this distich:—</p> +<blockquote><p>“<i>Es machte Gott</i>, <i>der grosse +Schöpfer</i>,<br /> +<i>Aus einem Goldmacher einen Töpfer</i>.” <a +name="citation84"></a><a href="#footnote84" +class="citation">[84]</a></p> +</blockquote> +<p>Böttgher, however, was still under strict surveillance, +for fear lest he should communicate his secret to others or +escape the Elector’s control. The new workshops and +furnaces which were erected for him, were guarded by troops night +and day, and six superior officers were made responsible for the +personal security of the potter.</p> + +<p>Böttgher’s further experiments with his new +furnaces proving very successful, and the porcelain which he +manufactured being found to fetch large prices, it was next +determined to establish a Royal Manufactory of porcelain. +The manufacture of delft ware was known to have greatly enriched +Holland. Why should not the manufacture of porcelain +equally enrich the Elector? Accordingly, a decree went +forth, dated the 23rd of January, 1710, for the establishment of +“a large manufactory of porcelain” at the +Albrechtsburg in Meissen. In this decree, which was +translated into Latin, French, and Dutch, and distributed by the +Ambassadors of the Elector at all the European Courts, Frederick +Augustus set forth that to promote the welfare of Saxony, which +had suffered much through the Swedish invasion, he had +“directed his attention to the subterranean treasures +(<i>unterirdischen Schätze</i>)” of the country, and +having employed some able persons in the investigation, they had +succeeded in manufacturing “a sort of red vessels (<i>eine +Art rother Gefässe</i>) far superior to the Indian terra +sigillata;” <a name="citation85"></a><a href="#footnote85" +class="citation">[85]</a> as also “coloured ware and plates +(<i>buntes Geschirr und Tafeln</i>) which may be cut, ground, and +polished, and are quite equal to Indian vessels,” and +finally that “specimens of white porcelain (<i>Proben von +weissem Porzellan</i>)” had already been obtained, and it +was hoped that this quality, too, would soon be manufactured in +considerable quantities. The royal decree concluded by +inviting “foreign artists and handicraftmen” to come +to Saxony and engage as assistants in the new factory, at high +wages, and under the patronage of the King. This royal +edict probably gives the best account of the actual state of +Böttgher’s invention at the time.</p> + +<p>It has been stated in German publications that Böttgher, +for the great services rendered by him to the Elector and to +Saxony, was made Manager of the Royal Porcelain Works, and +further promoted to the dignity of Baron. Doubtless he +deserved these honours; but his treatment was of an altogether +different character, for it was shabby, cruel, and inhuman. +Two royal officials, named Matthieu and Nehmitz, were put over +his head as directors of the factory, while he himself only held +the position of foreman of potters, and at the same time was +detained the King’s prisoner. During the erection of +the factory at Meissen, while his assistance was still +indispensable, he was conducted by soldiers to and from Dresden; +and even after the works were finished, he was locked up nightly +in his room. All this preyed upon his mind, and in repeated +letters to the King he sought to obtain mitigation of his +fate. Some of these letters are very touching. +“I will devote my whole soul to the art of making +porcelain,” he writes on one occasion, “I will do +more than any inventor ever did before; only give me liberty, +liberty!”</p> + +<p>To these appeals, the King turned a deaf ear. He was +ready to spend money and grant favours; but liberty he would not +give. He regarded Böttgher as his slave. In this +position, the persecuted man kept on working for some time, till, +at the end of a year or two, he grew negligent. Disgusted +with the world and with himself, he took to drinking. Such +is the force of example, that it no sooner became known that +Böttgher had betaken himself to this vice, than the greater +number of the workmen at the Meissen factory became drunkards +too. Quarrels and fightings without end were the +consequence, so that the troops were frequently called upon to +interfere and keep peace among the “Porzellanern,” as +they were nicknamed. After a while, the whole of them, more +than three hundred, were shut up in the Albrechtsburg, and +treated as prisoners of state.</p> + +<p>Böttgher at last fell seriously ill, and in May, 1713, +his dissolution was hourly expected. The King, alarmed at +losing so valuable a slave, now gave him permission to take +carriage exercise under a guard; and, having somewhat recovered, +he was allowed occasionally to go to Dresden. In a letter +written by the King in April, 1714, Böttgher was promised +his full liberty; but the offer came too late. Broken in +body and mind, alternately working and drinking, though with +occasional gleams of nobler intention, and suffering under +constant ill-health, the result of his enforced confinement, +Böttgher lingered on for a few years more, until death freed +him from his sufferings on the 13th March, 1719, in the +thirty-fifth year of his age. He was buried <i>at +night</i>—as if he had been a dog—in the Johannis +Cemetery of Meissen. Such was the treatment and such the +unhappy end, of one of Saxony’s greatest benefactors.</p> + +<p>The porcelain manufacture immediately opened up an important +source of public revenue, and it became so productive to the +Elector of Saxony, that his example was shortly after followed by +most European monarchs. Although soft porcelain had been +made at St. Cloud fourteen years before Böttgher’s +discovery, the superiority of the hard porcelain soon became +generally recognised. Its manufacture was begun at +Sèvres in 1770, and it has since almost entirely +superseded the softer material. This is now one of the most +thriving branches of French industry, of which the high quality +of the articles produced is certainly indisputable.</p> + +<p>The career of Josiah Wedgwood, the English potter, was less +chequered and more prosperous than that of either Palissy or +Böttgher, and his lot was cast in happier times. Down +to the middle of last century England was behind most other +nations of the first order in Europe in respect of skilled +industry. Although there were many potters in +Staffordshire—and Wedgwood himself belonged to a numerous +clan of potters of the same name—their productions were of +the rudest kind, for the most part only plain brown ware, with +the patterns scratched in while the clay was wet. The +principal supply of the better articles of earthenware came from +Delft in Holland, and of drinking stone pots from Cologne. +Two foreign potters, the brothers Elers from Nuremberg, settled +for a time in Staffordshire, and introduced an improved +manufacture, but they shortly after removed to Chelsea, where +they confined themselves to the manufacture of ornamental +pieces. No porcelain capable of resisting a scratch with a +hard point had yet been made in England; and for a long time the +“white ware” made in Staffordshire was not white, but +of a dirty cream colour. Such, in a few words, was the +condition of the pottery manufacture when Josiah Wedgwood was +born at Burslem in 1730. By the time that he died, +sixty-four years later, it had become completely changed. +By his energy, skill, and genius, he established the trade upon a +new and solid foundation; and, in the words of his epitaph, +“converted a rude and inconsiderable manufacture into an +elegant art and an important branch of national +commerce.”</p> + +<p>Josiah Wedgwood was one of those indefatigable men who from +time to time spring from the ranks of the common people, and by +their energetic character not only practically educate the +working population in habits of industry, but by the example of +diligence and perseverance which they set before them, largely +influence the public activity in all directions, and contribute +in a great degree to form the national character. He was, +like Arkwright, the youngest of a family of thirteen +children. His grandfather and granduncle were both potters, +as was also his father who died when he was a mere boy, leaving +him a patrimony of twenty pounds. He had learned to read +and write at the village school; but on the death of his father +he was taken from it and set to work as a “thrower” +in a small pottery carried on by his elder brother. There +he began life, his working life, to use his own words, “at +the lowest round of the ladder,” when only eleven years +old. He was shortly after seized by an attack of virulent +smallpox, from the effects of which he suffered during the rest +of his life, for it was followed by a disease in the right knee, +which recurred at frequent intervals, and was only got rid of by +the amputation of the limb many years later. Mr. Gladstone, +in his eloquent Éloge on Wedgwood recently delivered at +Burslem, well observed that the disease from which he suffered +was not improbably the occasion of his subsequent +excellence. “It prevented him from growing up to be +the active, vigorous English workman, possessed of all his limbs, +and knowing right well the use of them; but it put him upon +considering whether, as he could not be that, he might not be +something else, and something greater. It sent his mind +inwards; it drove him to meditate upon the laws and secrets of +his art. The result was, that he arrived at a perception +and a grasp of them which might, perhaps, have been envied, +certainly have been owned, by an Athenian potter.” <a +name="citation89"></a><a href="#footnote89" +class="citation">[89]</a></p> + +<p>When he had completed his apprenticeship with his brother, +Josiah joined partnership with another workman, and carried on a +small business in making knife-hafts, boxes, and sundry articles +for domestic use. Another partnership followed, when he +proceeded to make melon table plates, green pickle leaves, +candlesticks, snuffboxes, and such like articles; but he made +comparatively little progress until he began business on his own +account at Burslem in the year 1759. There he diligently +pursued his calling, introducing new articles to the trade, and +gradually extending his business. What he chiefly aimed at +was to manufacture cream-coloured ware of a better quality than +was then produced in Staffordshire as regarded shape, colour, +glaze, and durability. To understand the subject +thoroughly, he devoted his leisure to the study of chemistry; and +he made numerous experiments on fluxes, glazes, and various sorts +of clay. Being a close inquirer and accurate observer, he +noticed that a certain earth containing silica, which was black +before calcination, became white after exposure to the heat of a +furnace. This fact, observed and pondered on, led to the +idea of mixing silica with the red powder of the potteries, and +to the discovery that the mixture becomes white when +calcined. He had but to cover this material with a +vitrification of transparent glaze, to obtain one of the most +important products of fictile art—that which, under the +name of English earthenware, was to attain the greatest +commercial value and become of the most extensive utility.</p> + +<p>Wedgwood was for some time much troubled by his furnaces, +though nothing like to the same extent that Palissy was; and he +overcame his difficulties in the same way—by repeated +experiments and unfaltering perseverance. His first +attempts at making porcelain for table use was a succession of +disastrous failures,—the labours of months being often +destroyed in a day. It was only after a long series of +trials, in the course of which he lost time, money, and labour, +that he arrived at the proper sort of glaze to be used; but he +would not be denied, and at last he conquered success through +patience. The improvement of pottery became his passion, +and was never lost sight of for a moment. Even when he had +mastered his difficulties, and become a prosperous +man—manufacturing white stone ware and cream-coloured ware +in large quantities for home and foreign use—he went +forward perfecting his manufactures, until, his example extending +in all directions, the action of the entire district was +stimulated, and a great branch of British industry was eventually +established on firm foundations. He aimed throughout at the +highest excellence, declaring his determination “to give +over manufacturing any article, whatsoever it might be, rather +than to degrade it.”</p> + +<p>Wedgwood was cordially helped by many persons of rank and +influence; for, working in the truest spirit, he readily +commanded the help and encouragement of other true workers. +He made for Queen Charlotte the first royal table-service of +English manufacture, of the kind afterwards called +“Queen’s-ware,” and was appointed Royal Potter; +a title which he prized more than if he had been made a +baron. Valuable sets of porcelain were entrusted to him for +imitation, in which he succeeded to admiration. Sir William +Hamilton lent him specimens of ancient art from Herculaneum, of +which he produced accurate and beautiful copies. The +Duchess of Portland outbid him for the Barberini Vase when that +article was offered for sale. He bid as high as seventeen +hundred guineas for it: her grace secured it for eighteen +hundred; but when she learnt Wedgwood’s object she at once +generously lent him the vase to copy. He produced fifty +copies at a cost of about 2500<i>l.</i>, and his expenses were +not covered by their sale; but he gained his object, which was to +show that whatever had been done, that English skill and energy +could and would accomplish.</p> + +<p>Wedgwood called to his aid the crucible of the chemist, the +knowledge of the antiquary, and the skill of the artist. He +found out Flaxman when a youth, and while he liberally nurtured +his genius drew from him a large number of beautiful designs for +his pottery and porcelain; converting them by his manufacture +into objects of taste and excellence, and thus making them +instrumental in the diffusion of classical art amongst the +people. By careful experiment and study he was even enabled +to rediscover the art of painting on porcelain or earthenware +vases and similar articles—an art practised by the ancient +Etruscans, but which had been lost since the time of Pliny. +He distinguished himself by his own contributions to science, and +his name is still identified with the Pyrometer which he +invented. He was an indefatigable supporter of all measures +of public utility; and the construction of the Trent and Mersey +Canal, which completed the navigable communication between the +eastern and western sides of the island, was mainly due to his +public-spirited exertions, allied to the engineering skill of +Brindley. The road accommodation of the district being of +an execrable character, he planned and executed a turnpike-road +through the Potteries, ten miles in length. The reputation +he achieved was such that his works at Burslem, and subsequently +those at Etruria, which he founded and built, became a point of +attraction to distinguished visitors from all parts of +Europe.</p> + +<p>The result of Wedgwood’s labours was, that the +manufacture of pottery, which he found in the very lowest +condition, became one of the staples of England; and instead of +importing what we needed for home use from abroad, we became +large exporters to other countries, supplying them with +earthenware even in the face of enormous prohibitory duties on +articles of British produce. Wedgwood gave evidence as to +his manufactures before Parliament in 1785, only some thirty +years after he had begun his operations; from which it appeared, +that instead of providing only casual employment to a small +number of inefficient and badly remunerated workmen, about 20,000 +persons then derived their bread directly from the manufacture of +earthenware, without taking into account the increased numbers to +which it gave employment in coal-mines, and in the carrying trade +by land and sea, and the stimulus which it gave to employment in +many ways in various parts of the country. Yet, important +as had been the advances made in his time, Mr. Wedgwood was of +opinion that the manufacture was but in its infancy, and that the +improvements which he had effected were of but small amount +compared with those to which the art was capable of attaining, +through the continued industry and growing intelligence of the +manufacturers, and the natural facilities and political +advantages enjoyed by Great Britain; an opinion which has been +fully borne out by the progress which has since been effected in +this important branch of industry. In 1852 not fewer than +84,000,000 pieces of pottery were exported from England to other +countries, besides what were made for home use. But it is +not merely the quantity and value of the produce that is entitled +to consideration, but the improvement of the condition of the +population by whom this great branch of industry is +conducted. When Wedgwood began his labours, the +Staffordshire district was only in a half-civilized state. +The people were poor, uncultivated, and few in number. When +Wedgwood’s manufacture was firmly established, there was +found ample employment at good wages for three times the number +of population; while their moral advancement had kept pace with +their material improvement.</p> + +<p>Men such as these are fairly entitled to take rank as the +Industrial Heroes of the civilized world. Their patient +self-reliance amidst trials and difficulties, their courage and +perseverance in the pursuit of worthy objects, are not less +heroic of their kind than the bravery and devotion of the soldier +and the sailor, whose duty and pride it is heroically to defend +what these valiant leaders of industry have so heroically +achieved.</p> +<h2><a name="page94"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +94</span>CHAPTER IV.<br /> +<span class="smcap">Application and Perseverance</span>.</h2> +<blockquote><p>“Rich are the diligent, who can command<br +/> +Time, nature’s stock! and could his hour-glass fall,<br /> +Would, as for seed of stars, stoop for the sand,<br /> +And, by incessant labour, gather +all.”—<i>D’Avenant</i>.</p> + +<p>“Allez en avant, et la foi vous +viendra!”—<i>D’Alembert</i>.</p> +</blockquote> +<p><span class="smcap">The</span> greatest results in life are +usually attained by simple means, and the exercise of ordinary +qualities. The common life of every day, with its cares, +necessities, and duties, affords ample opportunity for acquiring +experience of the best kind; and its most beaten paths provide +the true worker with abundant scope for effort and room for +self-improvement. The road of human welfare lies along the +old highway of steadfast well-doing; and they who are the most +persistent, and work in the truest spirit, will usually be the +most successful.</p> + +<p>Fortune has often been blamed for her blindness; but fortune +is not so blind as men are. Those who look into practical +life will find that fortune is usually on the side of the +industrious, as the winds and waves are on the side of the best +navigators. In the pursuit of even the highest branches of +human inquiry, the commoner qualities are found the most +useful—such as common sense, attention, application, and +perseverance. Genius may not be necessary, though even +genius of the highest sort does not disdain the use of these +ordinary qualities. The very greatest men have been among +the least believers in the power of genius, and as worldly wise +and persevering as successful men of the commoner sort. +Some have even defined genius to be only common sense +intensified. A distinguished teacher and president of a +college spoke of it as the power of making efforts. John +Foster held it to be the power of lighting one’s own +fire. Buffon said of genius “it is +patience.”</p> + +<p>Newton’s was unquestionably a mind of the very highest +order, and yet, when asked by what means he had worked out his +extraordinary discoveries, he modestly answered, “By always +thinking unto them.” At another time he thus +expressed his method of study: “I keep the subject +continually before me, and wait till the first dawnings open +slowly by little and little into a full and clear +light.” It was in Newton’s case, as in every +other, only by diligent application and perseverance that his +great reputation was achieved. Even his recreation +consisted in change of study, laying down one subject to take up +another. To Dr. Bentley he said: “If I have done the +public any service, it is due to nothing but industry and patient +thought.” So Kepler, another great philosopher, +speaking of his studies and his progress, said: “As in +Virgil, ‘Fama mobilitate viget, vires acquirit +eundo,’ so it was with me, that the diligent thought on +these things was the occasion of still further thinking; until at +last I brooded with the whole energy of my mind upon the +subject.”</p> + +<p>The extraordinary results effected by dint of sheer industry +and perseverance, have led many distinguished men to doubt +whether the gift of genius be so exceptional an endowment as it +is usually supposed to be. Thus Voltaire held that it is +only a very slight line of separation that divides the man of +genius from the man of ordinary mould. Beccaria was even of +opinion that all men might be poets and orators, and Reynolds +that they might be painters and sculptors. If this were +really so, that stolid Englishman might not have been so very far +wrong after all, who, on Canova’s death, inquired of his +brother whether it was “his intention to carry on the +business!” Locke, Helvetius, and Diderot believed +that all men have an equal aptitude for genius, and that what +some are able to effect, under the laws which regulate the +operations of the intellect, must also be within the reach of +others who, under like circumstances, apply themselves to like +pursuits. But while admitting to the fullest extent the +wonderful achievements of labour, and recognising the fact that +men of the most distinguished genius have invariably been found +the most indefatigable workers, it must nevertheless be +sufficiently obvious that, without the original endowment of +heart and brain, no amount of labour, however well applied, could +have produced a Shakespeare, a Newton, a Beethoven, or a Michael +Angelo.</p> + +<p>Dalton, the chemist, repudiated the notion of his being +“a genius,” attributing everything which he had +accomplished to simple industry and accumulation. John +Hunter said of himself, “My mind is like a beehive; but +full as it is of buzz and apparent confusion, it is yet full of +order and regularity, and food collected with incessant industry +from the choicest stores of nature.” We have, indeed, +but to glance at the biographies of great men to find that the +most distinguished inventors, artists, thinkers, and workers of +all kinds, owe their success, in a great measure, to their +indefatigable industry and application. They were men who +turned all things to gold—even time itself. Disraeli +the elder held that the secret of success consisted in being +master of your subject, such mastery being attainable only +through continuous application and study. Hence it happens +that the men who have most moved the world, have not been so much +men of genius, strictly so called, as men of intense mediocre +abilities, and untiring perseverance; not so often the gifted, of +naturally bright and shining qualities, as those who have applied +themselves diligently to their work, in whatsoever line that +might lie. “Alas!” said a widow, speaking of +her brilliant but careless son, “he has not the gift of +continuance.” Wanting in perseverance, such volatile +natures are outstripped in the race of life by the diligent and +even the dull. “Che va piano, va longano, e va +lontano,” says the Italian proverb: Who goes slowly, goes +long, and goes far.</p> + +<p>Hence, a great point to be aimed at is to get the working +quality well trained. When that is done, the race will be +found comparatively easy. We must repeat and again repeat; +facility will come with labour. Not even the simplest art +can be accomplished without it; and what difficulties it is found +capable of achieving! It was by early discipline and +repetition that the late Sir Robert Peel cultivated those +remarkable, though still mediocre powers, which rendered him so +illustrious an ornament of the British Senate. When a boy +at Drayton Manor, his father was accustomed to set him up at +table to practise speaking extempore; and he early accustomed him +to repeat as much of the Sunday’s sermon as he could +remember. Little progress was made at first, but by steady +perseverance the habit of attention became powerful, and the +sermon was at length repeated almost verbatim. When +afterwards replying in succession to the arguments of his +parliamentary opponents—an art in which he was perhaps +unrivalled—it was little surmised that the extraordinary +power of accurate remembrance which he displayed on such +occasions had been originally trained under the discipline of his +father in the parish church of Drayton.</p> + +<p>It is indeed marvellous what continuous application will +effect in the commonest of things. It may seem a simple +affair to play upon a violin; yet what a long and laborious +practice it requires! Giardini said to a youth who asked +him how long it would take to learn it, “Twelve hours a day +for twenty years together.” Industry, it is said, +<i>fait l’ours danser</i>. The poor figurante must +devote years of incessant toil to her profitless task before she +can shine in it. When Taglioni was preparing herself for +her evening exhibition, she would, after a severe two +hours’ lesson from her father, fall down exhausted, and had +to be undressed, sponged, and resuscitated totally +unconscious. The agility and bounds of the evening were +insured only at a price like this.</p> + +<p>Progress, however, of the best kind, is comparatively +slow. Great results cannot be achieved at once; and we must +be satisfied to advance in life as we walk, step by step. +De Maistre says that “to know <i>how to wait</i> is the +great secret of success.” We must sow before we can +reap, and often have to wait long, content meanwhile to look +patiently forward in hope; the fruit best worth waiting for often +ripening the slowest. But “time and patience,” +says the Eastern proverb, “change the mulberry leaf to +satin.”</p> + +<p>To wait patiently, however, men must work cheerfully. +Cheerfulness is an excellent working quality, imparting great +elasticity to the character. As a bishop has said, +“Temper is nine-tenths of Christianity;” so are +cheerfulness and diligence nine-tenths of practical wisdom. +They are the life and soul of success, as well as of happiness; +perhaps the very highest pleasure in life consisting in clear, +brisk, conscious working; energy, confidence, and every other +good quality mainly depending upon it. Sydney Smith, when +labouring as a parish priest at Foston-le-Clay, in +Yorkshire,—though he did not feel himself to be in his +proper element,—went cheerfully to work in the firm +determination to do his best. “I am resolved,” +he said, “to like it, and reconcile myself to it, which is +more manly than to feign myself above it, and to send up +complaints by the post of being thrown away, and being desolate, +and such like trash.” So Dr. Hook, when leaving Leeds +for a new sphere of labour said, “Wherever I may be, I +shall, by God’s blessing, do with my might what my hand +findeth to do; and if I do not find work, I shall make +it.”</p> + +<p>Labourers for the public good especially, have to work long +and patiently, often uncheered by the prospect of immediate +recompense or result. The seeds they sow sometimes lie +hidden under the winter’s snow, and before the spring comes +the husbandman may have gone to his rest. It is not every +public worker who, like Rowland Hill, sees his great idea bring +forth fruit in his life-time. Adam Smith sowed the seeds of +a great social amelioration in that dingy old University of +Glasgow where he so long laboured, and laid the foundations of +his ‘Wealth of Nations;’ but seventy years passed +before his work bore substantial fruits, nor indeed are they all +gathered in yet.</p> + +<p>Nothing can compensate for the loss of hope in a man: it +entirely changes the character. “How can I +work—how can I be happy,” said a great but miserable +thinker, “when I have lost all hope?” One of +the most cheerful and courageous, because one of the most hopeful +of workers, was Carey, the missionary. When in India, it +was no uncommon thing for him to weary out three pundits, who +officiated as his clerks, in one day, he himself taking rest only +in change of employment. Carey, the son of a shoe-maker, +was supported in his labours by Ward, the son of a carpenter, and +Marsham, the son of a weaver. By their labours, a +magnificent college was erected at Serampore; sixteen flourishing +stations were established; the Bible was translated into sixteen +languages, and the seeds were sown of a beneficent moral +revolution in British India. Carey was never ashamed of the +humbleness of his origin. On one occasion, when at the +Governor-General’s table he over-heard an officer opposite +him asking another, loud enough to be heard, whether Carey had +not once been a shoemaker: “No, sir,” exclaimed Carey +immediately; “only a cobbler.” An eminently +characteristic anecdote has been told of his perseverance as a +boy. When climbing a tree one day, his foot slipped, and he +fell to the ground, breaking his leg by the fall. He was +confined to his bed for weeks, but when he recovered and was able +to walk without support, the very first thing he did was to go +and climb that tree. Carey had need of this sort of +dauntless courage for the great missionary work of his life, and +nobly and resolutely he did it.</p> + +<p>It was a maxim of Dr. Young, the philosopher, that “Any +man can do what any other man has done;” and it is +unquestionable that he himself never recoiled from any trials to +which he determined to subject himself. It is related of +him, that the first time he mounted a horse, he was in company +with the grandson of Mr. Barclay of Ury, the well-known +sportsman; when the horseman who preceded them leapt a high +fence. Young wished to imitate him, but fell off his horse +in the attempt. Without saying a word, he remounted, made a +second effort, and was again unsuccessful, but this time he was +not thrown further than on to the horse’s neck, to which he +clung. At the third trial, he succeeded, and cleared the +fence.</p> + +<p>The story of Timour the Tartar learning a lesson of +perseverance under adversity from the spider is well known. +Not less interesting is the anecdote of Audubon, the American +ornithologist, as related by himself: “An accident,” +he says, “which happened to two hundred of my original +drawings, nearly put a stop to my researches in +ornithology. I shall relate it, merely to show how far +enthusiasm—for by no other name can I call my +perseverance—may enable the preserver of nature to surmount +the most disheartening difficulties. I left the village of +Henderson, in Kentucky, situated on the banks of the Ohio, where +I resided for several years, to proceed to Philadelphia on +business. I looked to my drawings before my departure, +placed them carefully in a wooden box, and gave them in charge of +a relative, with injunctions to see that no injury should happen +to them. My absence was of several months; and when I +returned, after having enjoyed the pleasures of home for a few +days, I inquired after my box, and what I was pleased to call my +treasure. The box was produced and opened; but reader, feel +for me—a pair of Norway rats had taken possession of the +whole, and reared a young family among the gnawed bits of paper, +which, but a month previous, represented nearly a thousand +inhabitants of air! The burning beat which instantly rushed +through my brain was too great to be endured without affecting my +whole nervous system. I slept for several nights, and the +days passed like days of oblivion—until the animal powers +being recalled into action through the strength of my +constitution, I took up my gun, my notebook, and my pencils, and +went forth to the woods as gaily as if nothing had +happened. I felt pleased that I might now make better +drawings than before; and, ere a period not exceeding three years +had elapsed, my portfolio was again filled.”</p> + +<p>The accidental destruction of Sir Isaac Newton’s papers, +by his little dog ‘Diamond’ upsetting a lighted taper +upon his desk, by which the elaborate calculations of many years +were in a moment destroyed, is a well-known anecdote, and need +not be repeated: it is said that the loss caused the philosopher +such profound grief that it seriously injured his health, and +impaired his understanding. An accident of a somewhat +similar kind happened to the MS. of Mr. Carlyle’s first +volume of his ‘French Revolution.’ He had lent +the MS. to a literary neighbour to peruse. By some +mischance, it had been left lying on the parlour floor, and +become forgotten. Weeks ran on, and the historian sent for +his work, the printers being loud for “copy.” +Inquiries were made, and it was found that the maid-of-all-work, +finding what she conceived to be a bundle of waste paper on the +floor, had used it to light the kitchen and parlour fires +with! Such was the answer returned to Mr. Carlyle; and his +feelings may be imagined. There was, however, no help for +him but to set resolutely to work to re-write the book; and he +turned to and did it. He had no draft, and was compelled to +rake up from his memory facts, ideas, and expressions, which had +been long since dismissed. The composition of the book in +the first instance had been a work of pleasure; the re-writing of +it a second time was one of pain and anguish almost beyond +belief. That he persevered and finished the volume under +such circumstances, affords an instance of determination of +purpose which has seldom been surpassed.</p> + +<p>The lives of eminent inventors are eminently illustrative of +the same quality of perseverance. George Stephenson, when +addressing young men, was accustomed to sum up his best advice to +them, in the words, “Do as I have +done—persevere.” He had worked at the +improvement of his locomotive for some fifteen years before +achieving his decisive victory at Rainhill; and Watt was engaged +for some thirty years upon the condensing-engine before he +brought it to perfection. But there are equally striking +illustrations of perseverance to be found in every other branch +of science, art, and industry. Perhaps one of the most +interesting is that connected with the disentombment of the +Nineveh marbles, and the discovery of the long-lost cuneiform or +arrow-headed character in which the inscriptions on them are +written—a kind of writing which had been lost to the world +since the period of the Macedonian conquest of Persia.</p> + +<p>An intelligent cadet of the East India Company, stationed at +Kermanshah, in Persia, had observed the curious cuneiform +inscriptions on the old monuments in the neighbourhood—so +old that all historical traces of them had been lost,—and +amongst the inscriptions which he copied was that on the +celebrated rock of Behistun—a perpendicular rock rising +abruptly some 1700 feet from the plain, the lower part bearing +inscriptions for the space of about 300 feet in three +languages—Persian, Scythian, and Assyrian. Comparison +of the known with the unknown, of the language which survived +with the language that had been lost, enabled this cadet to +acquire some knowledge of the cuneiform character, and even to +form an alphabet. Mr. (afterwards Sir Henry) Rawlinson sent +his tracings home for examination. No professors in +colleges as yet knew anything of the cuneiform character; but +there was a ci-devant clerk of the East India House—a +modest unknown man of the name of Norris—who had made this +little-understood subject his study, to whom the tracings were +submitted; and so accurate was his knowledge, that, though he had +never seen the Behistun rock, he pronounced that the cadet had +not copied the puzzling inscription with proper exactness. +Rawlinson, who was still in the neighbourhood of the rock, +compared his copy with the original, and found that Norris was +right; and by further comparison and careful study the knowledge +of the cuneiform writing was thus greatly advanced.</p> + +<p>But to make the learning of these two self-taught men of +avail, a third labourer was necessary in order to supply them +with material for the exercise of their skill. Such a +labourer presented himself in the person of Austen Layard, +originally an articled clerk in the office of a London +solicitor. One would scarcely have expected to find in +these three men, a cadet, an India-House clerk, and a +lawyer’s clerk, the discoverers of a forgotten language, +and of the buried history of Babylon; yet it was so. Layard +was a youth of only twenty-two, travelling in the East, when he +was possessed with a desire to penetrate the regions beyond the +Euphrates. Accompanied by a single companion, trusting to +his arms for protection, and, what was better, to his +cheerfulness, politeness, and chivalrous bearing, he passed +safely amidst tribes at deadly war with each other; and, after +the lapse of many years, with comparatively slender means at his +command, but aided by application and perseverance, resolute will +and purpose, and almost sublime patience,—borne up +throughout by his passionate enthusiasm for discovery and +research,—he succeeded in laying bare and digging up an +amount of historical treasures, the like of which has probably +never before been collected by the industry of any one man. +Not less than two miles of bas-reliefs were thus brought to light +by Mr. Layard. The selection of these valuable antiquities, +now placed in the British Museum, was found so curiously +corroborative of the scriptural records of events which occurred +some three thousand years ago, that they burst upon the world +almost like a new revelation. And the story of the +disentombment of these remarkable works, as told by Mr. Layard +himself in his ‘Monuments of Nineveh,’ will always be +regarded as one of the most charming and unaffected records which +we possess of individual enterprise, industry, and energy.</p> + +<p>The career of the Comte de Buffon presents another remarkable +illustration of the power of patient industry as well as of his +own saying, that “Genius is patience.” +Notwithstanding the great results achieved by him in natural +history, Buffon, when a youth, was regarded as of mediocre +talents. His mind was slow in forming itself, and slow in +reproducing what it had acquired. He was also +constitutionally indolent; and being born to good estate, it +might be supposed that he would indulge his liking for ease and +luxury. Instead of which, he early formed the resolution of +denying himself pleasure, and devoting himself to study and +self-culture. Regarding time as a treasure that was +limited, and finding that he was losing many hours by lying a-bed +in the mornings, he determined to break himself of the +habit. He struggled hard against it for some time, but +failed in being able to rise at the hour he had fixed. He +then called his servant, Joseph, to his help, and promised him +the reward of a crown every time that he succeeded in getting him +up before six. At first, when called, Buffon declined to +rise—pleaded that he was ill, or pretended anger at being +disturbed; and on the Count at length getting up, Joseph found +that he had earned nothing but reproaches for having permitted +his master to lie a-bed contrary to his express orders. At +length the valet determined to earn his crown; and again and +again he forced Buffon to rise, notwithstanding his entreaties, +expostulations, and threats of immediate discharge from his +service. One morning Buffon was unusually obstinate, and +Joseph found it necessary to resort to the extreme measure of +dashing a basin of ice-cold water under the bed-clothes, the +effect of which was instantaneous. By the persistent use of +such means, Buffon at length conquered his habit; and he was +accustomed to say that he owed to Joseph three or four volumes of +his Natural History.</p> + +<p>For forty years of his life, Buffon worked every morning at +his desk from nine till two, and again in the evening from five +till nine. His diligence was so continuous and so regular +that it became habitual. His biographer has said of him, +“Work was his necessity; his studies were the charm of his +life; and towards the last term of his glorious career he +frequently said that he still hoped to be able to consecrate to +them a few more years.” He was a most conscientious +worker, always studying to give the reader his best thoughts, +expressed in the very best manner. He was never wearied +with touching and retouching his compositions, so that his style +may be pronounced almost perfect. He wrote the +‘Epoques de la Nature’ not fewer than eleven times +before he was satisfied with it; although he had thought over the +work about fifty years. He was a thorough man of business, +most orderly in everything; and he was accustomed to say that +genius without order lost three-fourths of its power. His +great success as a writer was the result mainly of his +painstaking labour and diligent application. +“Buffon,” observed Madame Necker, “strongly +persuaded that genius is the result of a profound attention +directed to a particular subject, said that he was thoroughly +wearied out when composing his first writings, but compelled +himself to return to them and go over them carefully again, even +when he thought he had already brought them to a certain degree +of perfection; and that at length he found pleasure instead of +weariness in this long and elaborate correction.” It +ought also to be added that Buffon wrote and published all his +great works while afflicted by one of the most painful diseases +to which the human frame is subject.</p> + +<p>Literary life affords abundant illustrations of the same power +of perseverance; and perhaps no career is more instructive, +viewed in this light, than that of Sir Walter Scott. His +admirable working qualities were trained in a lawyer’s +office, where he pursued for many years a sort of drudgery +scarcely above that of a copying clerk. His daily dull +routine made his evenings, which were his own, all the more +sweet; and he generally devoted them to reading and study. +He himself attributed to his prosaic office discipline that habit +of steady, sober diligence, in which mere literary men are so +often found wanting. As a copying clerk he was allowed +3<i>d.</i> for every page containing a certain number of words; +and he sometimes, by extra work, was able to copy as many as 120 +pages in twenty-four hours, thus earning some 30<i>s.</i>; out of +which he would occasionally purchase an odd volume, otherwise +beyond his means.</p> + +<p>During his after-life Scott was wont to pride himself upon +being a man of business, and he averred, in contradiction to what +he called the cant of sonneteers, that there was no necessary +connection between genius and an aversion or contempt for the +common duties of life. On the contrary, he was of opinion +that to spend some fair portion of every day in any +matter-of-fact occupation was good for the higher faculties +themselves in the upshot. While afterwards acting as clerk +to the Court of Session in Edinburgh, he performed his literary +work chiefly before breakfast, attending the court during the +day, where he authenticated registered deeds and writings of +various kinds. On the whole, says Lockhart, “it forms +one of the most remarkable features in his history, that +throughout the most active period of his literary career, he must +have devoted a large proportion of his hours, during half at +least of every year, to the conscientious discharge of +professional duties.” It was a principle of action +which he laid down for himself, that he must earn his living by +business, and not by literature. On one occasion he said, +“I determined that literature should be my staff, not my +crutch, and that the profits of my literary labour, however +convenient otherwise, should not, if I could help it, become +necessary to my ordinary expenses.”</p> + +<p>His punctuality was one of the most carefully cultivated of +his habits, otherwise it had not been possible for him to get +through so enormous an amount of literary labour. He made +it a rule to answer every letter received by him on the same day, +except where inquiry and deliberation were requisite. +Nothing else could have enabled him to keep abreast with the +flood of communications that poured in upon him and sometimes put +his good nature to the severest test. It was his practice +to rise by five o’clock, and light his own fire. He +shaved and dressed with deliberation, and was seated at his desk +by six o’clock, with his papers arranged before him in the +most accurate order, his works of reference marshalled round him +on the floor, while at least one favourite dog lay watching his +eye, outside the line of books. Thus by the time the family +assembled for breakfast, between nine and ten, he had done +enough—to use his own words—to break the neck of the +day’s work. But with all his diligent and +indefatigable industry, and his immense knowledge, the result of +many years’ patient labour, Scott always spoke with the +greatest diffidence of his own powers. On one occasion he +said, “Throughout every part of my career I have felt +pinched and hampered by my own ignorance.”</p> + +<p>Such is true wisdom and humility; for the more a man really +knows, the less conceited he will be. The student at +Trinity College who went up to his professor to take leave of him +because he had “finished his education,” was wisely +rebuked by the professor’s reply, “Indeed! I am +only beginning mine.” The superficial person who has +obtained a smattering of many things, but knows nothing well, may +pride himself upon his gifts; but the sage humbly confesses that +“all he knows is, that he knows nothing,” or like +Newton, that he has been only engaged in picking shells by the +sea shore, while the great ocean of truth lies all unexplored +before him.</p> + +<p>The lives of second-rate literary men furnish equally +remarkable illustrations of the power of perseverance. The +late John Britton, author of ‘The Beauties of England and +Wales,’ and of many valuable architectural works, was born +in a miserable cot in Kingston, Wiltshire. His father had +been a baker and maltster, but was ruined in trade and became +insane while Britton was yet a child. The boy received very +little schooling, but a great deal of bad example, which happily +did not corrupt him. He was early in life set to labour +with an uncle, a tavern-keeper in Clerkenwell, under whom he +bottled, corked, and binned wine for more than five years. +His health failing him, his uncle turned him adrift in the world, +with only two guineas, the fruits of his five years’ +service, in his pocket. During the next seven years of his +life he endured many vicissitudes and hardships. Yet he +says, in his autobiography, “in my poor and obscure +lodgings, at eighteenpence a week, I indulged in study, and often +read in bed during the winter evenings, because I could not +afford a fire.” Travelling on foot to Bath, he there +obtained an engagement as a cellarman, but shortly after we find +him back in the metropolis again almost penniless, shoeless, and +shirtless. He succeeded, however, in obtaining employment +as a cellarman at the London Tavern, where it was his duty to be +in the cellar from seven in the morning until eleven at +night. His health broke down under this confinement in the +dark, added to the heavy work; and he then engaged himself, at +fifteen shillings a week, to an attorney,—for he had been +diligently cultivating the art of writing during the few spare +minutes that he could call his own. While in this +employment, he devoted his leisure principally to perambulating +the bookstalls, where he read books by snatches which he could +not buy, and thus picked up a good deal of odd knowledge. +Then he shifted to another office, at the advanced wages of +twenty shillings a week, still reading and studying. At +twenty-eight he was able to write a book, which he published +under the title of ‘The Enterprising Adventures of +Pizarro;’ and from that time until his death, during a +period of about fifty-five years, Britton was occupied in +laborious literary occupation. The number of his published +works is not fewer than eighty-seven; the most important being +‘The Cathedral Antiquities of England,’ in fourteen +volumes, a truly magnificent work; itself the best monument of +John Britton’s indefatigable industry.</p> + +<p>London, the landscape gardener, was a man of somewhat similar +character, possessed of an extraordinary working power. The +son of a farmer near Edinburgh, he was early inured to +work. His skill in drawing plans and making sketches of +scenery induced his father to train him for a landscape +gardener. During his apprenticeship he sat up two whole +nights every week to study; yet he worked harder during the day +than any labourer. In the course of his night studies he +learnt French, and before he was eighteen he translated a life of +Abelard for an Encyclopædia. He was so eager to make +progress in life, that when only twenty, while working as a +gardener in England, he wrote down in his note-book, “I am +now twenty years of age, and perhaps a third part of my life has +passed away, and yet what have I done to benefit my fellow +men?” an unusual reflection for a youth of only +twenty. From French he proceeded to learn German, and +rapidly mastered that language. Having taken a large farm, +for the purpose of introducing Scotch improvements in the art of +agriculture, he shortly succeeded in realising a considerable +income. The continent being thrown open at the end of the +war, he travelled abroad for the purpose of inquiring into the +system of gardening and agriculture in other countries. He +twice repeated his journeys, and the results were published in +his Encyclopædias, which are among the most remarkable +works of their kind,—distinguished for the immense mass of +useful matter which they contain, collected by an amount of +industry and labour which has rarely been equalled.</p> + +<p>The career of Samuel Drew is not less remarkable than any of +those which we have cited. His father was a hard-working +labourer of the parish of St. Austell, in Cornwall. Though +poor, he contrived to send his two sons to a penny-a-week school +in the neighbourhood. Jabez, the elder, took delight in +learning, and made great progress in his lessons; but Samuel, the +younger, was a dunce, notoriously given to mischief and playing +truant. When about eight years old he was put to manual +labour, earning three-halfpence a day as a buddle-boy at a tin +mine. At ten he was apprenticed to a shoemaker, and while +in this employment he endured much hardship,—living, as he +used to say, “like a toad under a harrow.” He +often thought of running away and becoming a pirate, or something +of the sort, and he seems to have grown in recklessness as he +grew in years. In robbing orchards he was usually a leader; +and, as he grew older, he delighted to take part in any poaching +or smuggling adventure. When about seventeen, before his +apprenticeship was out, he ran away, intending to enter on board +a man-of-war; but, sleeping in a hay-field at night cooled him a +little, and he returned to his trade.</p> + +<p>Drew next removed to the neighbourhood of Plymouth to work at +his shoemaking business, and while at Cawsand he won a prize for +cudgel-playing, in which he seems to have been an adept. +While living there, he had nearly lost his life in a smuggling +exploit which he had joined, partly induced by the love of +adventure, and partly by the love of gain, for his regular wages +were not more than eight shillings a-week. One night, +notice was given throughout Crafthole, that a smuggler was off +the coast, ready to land her cargo; on which the male population +of the place—nearly all smugglers—made for the +shore. One party remained on the rocks to make signals and +dispose of the goods as they were landed; and another manned the +boats, Drew being of the latter party. The night was +intensely dark, and very little of the cargo had been landed, +when the wind rose, with a heavy sea. The men in the boats, +however, determined to persevere, and several trips were made +between the smuggler, now standing farther out to sea, and the +shore. One of the men in the boat in which Drew was, had +his hat blown off by the wind, and in attempting to recover it, +the boat was upset. Three of the men were immediately +drowned; the others clung to the boat for a time, but finding it +drifting out to sea, they took to swimming. They were two +miles from land, and the night was intensely dark. After +being about three hours in the water, Drew reached a rock near +the shore, with one or two others, where he remained benumbed +with cold till morning, when he and his companions were +discovered and taken off, more dead than alive. A keg of +brandy from the cargo just landed was brought, the head knocked +in with a hatchet, and a bowlfull of the liquid presented to the +survivors; and, shortly after, Drew was able to walk two miles +through deep snow, to his lodgings.</p> + +<p>This was a very unpromising beginning of a life; and yet this +same Drew, scapegrace, orchard-robber, shoemaker, cudgel-player, +and smuggler, outlived the recklessness of his youth and became +distinguished as a minister of the Gospel and a writer of good +books. Happily, before it was too late, the energy which +characterised him was turned into a more healthy direction, and +rendered him as eminent in usefulness as he had before been in +wickedness. His father again took him back to St. Austell, +and found employment for him as a journeyman shoemaker. +Perhaps his recent escape from death had tended to make the young +man serious, as we shortly find him attracted by the forcible +preaching of Dr. Adam Clarke, a minister of the Wesleyan +Methodists. His brother having died about the same time, +the impression of seriousness was deepened; and thenceforward he +was an altered man. He began anew the work of education, +for he had almost forgotten how to read and write; and even after +several years’ practice, a friend compared his writing to +the traces of a spider dipped in ink set to crawl upon +paper. Speaking of himself, about that time, Drew +afterwards said, “The more I read, the more I felt my own +ignorance; and the more I felt my ignorance, the more invincible +became my energy to surmount it. Every leisure moment was +now employed in reading one thing or another. Having to +support myself by manual labour, my time for reading was but +little, and to overcome this disadvantage, my usual method was to +place a book before me while at meat, and at every repast I read +five or six pages.” The perusal of Locke’s +‘Essay on the Understanding’ gave the first +metaphysical turn to his mind. “It awakened me from +my stupor,” said he, “and induced me to form a +resolution to abandon the grovelling views which I had been +accustomed to entertain.”</p> + +<p>Drew began business on his own account, with a capital of a +few shillings; but his character for steadiness was such that a +neighbouring miller offered him a loan, which was accepted, and, +success attending his industry, the debt was repaid at the end of +a year. He started with a determination to “owe no +man anything,” and he held to it in the midst of many +privations. Often he went to bed supperless, to avoid +rising in debt. His ambition was to achieve independence by +industry and economy, and in this he gradually succeeded. +In the midst of incessant labour, he sedulously strove to improve +his mind, studying astronomy, history, and metaphysics. He +was induced to pursue the latter study chiefly because it +required fewer books to consult than either of the others. +“It appeared to be a thorny path,” he said, +“but I determined, nevertheless, to enter, and accordingly +began to tread it.”</p> + +<p>Added to his labours in shoemaking and metaphysics, Drew +became a local preacher and a class leader. He took an +eager interest in politics, and his shop became a favourite +resort with the village politicians. And when they did not +come to him, he went to them to talk over public affairs. +This so encroached upon his time that he found it necessary +sometimes to work until midnight to make up for the hours lost +during the day. His political fervour become the talk of +the village. While busy one night hammering away at a +shoe-sole, a little boy, seeing a light in the shop, put his +mouth to the keyhole of the door, and called out in a shrill +pipe, “Shoemaker! shoe-maker! work by night and run about +by day!” A friend, to whom Drew afterwards told the +story, asked, “And did not you run after the boy, and strap +him?” “No, no,” was the reply; “had +a pistol been fired off at my ear, I could not have been more +dismayed or confounded. I dropped my work, and said to +myself, ‘True, true! but you shall never have that to say +of me again.’ To me that cry was as the voice of God, +and it has been a word in season throughout my life. I +learnt from it not to leave till to-morrow the work of to-day, or +to idle when I ought to be working.”</p> + +<p>From that moment Drew dropped politics, and stuck to his work, +reading and studying in his spare hours: but he never allowed the +latter pursuit to interfere with his business, though it +frequently broke in upon his rest. He married, and thought +of emigrating to America; but he remained working on. His +literary taste first took the direction of poetical composition; +and from some of the fragments which have been preserved, it +appears that his speculations as to the immateriality and +immortality of the soul had their origin in these poetical +musings. His study was the kitchen, where his wife’s +bellows served him for a desk; and he wrote amidst the cries and +cradlings of his children. Paine’s ‘Age of +Reason’ having appeared about this time and excited much +interest, he composed a pamphlet in refutation of its arguments, +which was published. He used afterwards to say that it was +the ‘Age of Reason’ that made him an author. +Various pamphlets from his pen shortly appeared in rapid +succession, and a few years later, while still working at +shoemaking, he wrote and published his admirable ‘Essay on +the Immateriality and Immortality of the Human Soul,’ which +he sold for twenty pounds, a great sum in his estimation at the +time. The book went through many editions, and is still +prized.</p> + +<p>Drew was in no wise puffed up by his success, as many young +authors are, but, long after he had become celebrated as a +writer, used to be seen sweeping the street before his door, or +helping his apprentices to carry in the winter’s +coals. Nor could he, for some time, bring himself to regard +literature as a profession to live by. His first care was, +to secure an honest livelihood by his business, and to put into +the “lottery of literary success,” as he termed it, +only the surplus of his time. At length, however, he +devoted himself wholly to literature, more particularly in +connection with the Wesleyan body; editing one of their +magazines, and superintending the publication of several of their +denominational works. He also wrote in the ‘Eclectic +Review,’ and compiled and published a valuable history of +his native county, Cornwall, with numerous other works. +Towards the close of his career, he said of +himself,—“Raised from one of the lowest stations in +society, I have endeavoured through life to bring my family into +a state of respectability, by honest industry, frugality, and a +high regard for my moral character. Divine providence has +smiled on my exertions, and crowned my wishes with +success.”</p> + +<p>The late Joseph Hume pursued a very different career, but +worked in an equally persevering spirit. He was a man of +moderate parts, but of great industry and unimpeachable honesty +of purpose. The motto of his life was +“Perseverance,” and well, he acted up to it. +His father dying while he was a mere child, his mother opened a +small shop in Montrose, and toiled hard to maintain her family +and bring them up respectably. Joseph she put apprentice to +a surgeon, and educated for the medical profession. Having +got his diploma, he made several voyages to India as ship’s +surgeon, <a name="citation115"></a><a href="#footnote115" +class="citation">[115]</a> and afterwards obtained a cadetship in +the Company’s service. None worked harder, or lived +more temperately, than he did, and, securing the confidence of +his superiors, who found him a capable man in the performance of +his duty, they gradually promoted him to higher offices. In +1803 he was with the division of the army under General Powell, +in the Mahratta war; and the interpreter having died, Hume, who +had meanwhile studied and mastered the native languages, was +appointed in his stead. He was next made chief of the +medical staff. But as if this were not enough to occupy his +full working power, he undertook in addition the offices of +paymaster and post-master, and filled them satisfactorily. +He also contracted to supply the commissariat, which he did with +advantage to the army and profit to himself. After about +ten years’ unremitting labour, he returned to England with +a competency; and one of his first acts was to make provision for +the poorer members of his family.</p> + +<p>But Joseph Hume was not a man to enjoy the fruits of his +industry in idleness. Work and occupation had become +necessary for his comfort and happiness. To make himself +fully acquainted with the actual state of his own country, and +the condition of the people, he visited every town in the kingdom +which then enjoyed any degree of manufacturing celebrity. +He afterwards travelled abroad for the purpose of obtaining a +knowledge of foreign states. Returned to England, he entered +Parliament in 1812, and continued a member of that assembly, with +a short interruption, for a period of about thirty-four +years. His first recorded speech was on the subject of +public education, and throughout his long and honourable career +he took an active and earnest interest in that and all other +questions calculated to elevate and improve the condition of the +people—criminal reform, savings-banks, free trade, economy +and retrenchment, extended representation, and such like +measures, all of which he indefatigably promoted. Whatever +subject he undertook, he worked at with all his might. He +was not a good speaker, but what he said was believed to proceed +from the lips of an honest, single-minded, accurate man. If +ridicule, as Shaftesbury says, be the test of truth, Joseph Hume +stood the test well. No man was more laughed at, but there +he stood perpetually, and literally, “at his +post.” He was usually beaten on a division, but the +influence which he exercised was nevertheless felt, and many +important financial improvements were effected by him even with +the vote directly against him. The amount of hard work +which he contrived to get through was something +extraordinary. He rose at six, wrote letters and arranged +his papers for parliament; then, after breakfast, he received +persons on business, sometimes as many as twenty in a +morning. The House rarely assembled without him, and though +the debate might be prolonged to two or three o’clock in +the morning, his name was seldom found absent from the +division. In short, to perform the work which he did, +extending over so long a period, in the face of so many +Administrations, week after week, year after year,—to be +outvoted, beaten, laughed at, standing on many occasions almost +alone,—to persevere in the face of every discouragement, +preserving his temper unruffled, never relaxing in his energy or +his hope, and living to see the greater number of his measures +adopted with acclamation, must be regarded as one of the most +remarkable illustrations of the power of human perseverance that +biography can exhibit.</p> +<h2><a name="page118"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +118</span>CHAPTER V.<br /> +<span class="smcap">Helps and Opportunities—Scientific +Pursuits</span>.</h2> +<blockquote><p>“Neither the naked hand, nor the +understanding, left to itself, can do much; the work is +accomplished by instruments and helps, of which the need is not +less for the understanding than the +hand.”—<i>Bacon</i>.</p> + +<p>“Opportunity has hair in front, behind she is bald; if +you seize her by the forelock you may hold her, but, if suffered +to escape, not Jupiter himself can catch her +again.”—<i>From the Latin</i>.</p> +</blockquote> +<p><span class="smcap">Accident</span> does very little towards +the production of any great result in life. Though +sometimes what is called “a happy hit” may be made by +a bold venture, the common highway of steady industry and +application is the only safe road to travel. It is said of +the landscape painter Wilson, that when he had nearly finished a +picture in a tame, correct manner, he would step back from it, +his pencil fixed at the end of a long stick, and after gazing +earnestly on the work, he would suddenly walk up and by a few +bold touches give a brilliant finish to the painting. But +it will not do for every one who would produce an effect, to +throw his brush at the canvas in the hope of producing a +picture. The capability of putting in these last vital +touches is acquired only by the labour of a life; and the +probability is, that the artist who has not carefully trained +himself beforehand, in attempting to produce a brilliant effect +at a dash, will only produce a blotch.</p> + +<p>Sedulous attention and painstaking industry always mark the +true worker. The greatest men are not those who +“despise the day of small things,” but those who +improve them the most carefully. Michael Angelo was one day +explaining to a visitor at his studio, what he had been doing at +a statue since his previous visit. “I have retouched +this part—polished that—softened this +feature—brought out that muscle—given some expression +to this lip, and more energy to that limb.” +“But these are trifles,” remarked the visitor. +“It may be so,” replied the sculptor, “but +recollect that trifles make perfection, and perfection is no +trifle.” So it was said of Nicholas Poussin, the +painter, that the rule of his conduct was, that “whatever +was worth doing at all was worth doing well;” and when +asked, late in life, by his friend Vigneul de Marville, by what +means he had gained so high a reputation among the painters of +Italy, Poussin emphatically answered, “Because I have +neglected nothing.”</p> + +<p>Although there are discoveries which are said to have been +made by accident, if carefully inquired into, it will be found +that there has really been very little that was accidental about +them. For the most part, these so-called accidents have +only been opportunities, carefully improved by genius. The +fall of the apple at Newton’s feet has often been quoted in +proof of the accidental character of some discoveries. But +Newton’s whole mind had already been devoted for years to +the laborious and patient investigation of the subject of +gravitation; and the circumstance of the apple falling before his +eyes was suddenly apprehended only as genius could apprehend it, +and served to flash upon him the brilliant discovery then opening +to his sight. In like manner, the brilliantly-coloured +soap-bubbles blown from a common tobacco pipe—though +“trifles light as air” in most eyes—suggested +to Dr. Young his beautiful theory of “interferences,” +and led to his discovery relating to the diffraction of +light. Although great men are popularly supposed only to +deal with great things, men such as Newton and Young were ready +to detect the significance of the most familiar and simple facts; +their greatness consisting mainly in their wise interpretation of +them.</p> + +<p>The difference between men consists, in a great measure, in +the intelligence of their observation. The Russian proverb +says of the non-observant man, “He goes through the forest +and sees no firewood.” “The wise man’s +eyes are in his head,” says Solomon, “but the fool +walketh in darkness.” “Sir,” said +Johnson, on one occasion, to a fine gentleman just returned from +Italy, “some men will learn more in the Hampstead stage +than others in the tour of Europe.” It is the mind +that sees as well as the eye. Where unthinking gazers +observe nothing, men of intelligent vision penetrate into the +very fibre of the phenomena presented to them, attentively noting +differences, making comparisons, and recognizing their underlying +idea. Many before Galileo had seen a suspended weight swing +before their eyes with a measured beat; but he was the first to +detect the value of the fact. One of the vergers in the +cathedral at Pisa, after replenishing with oil a lamp which hung +from the roof, left it swinging to and fro; and Galileo, then a +youth of only eighteen, noting it attentively, conceived the idea +of applying it to the measurement of time. Fifty years of +study and labour, however, elapsed, before he completed the +invention of his Pendulum,—the importance of which, in the +measurement of time and in astronomical calculations, can +scarcely be overrated. In like manner, Galileo, having +casually heard that one Lippershey, a Dutch spectacle-maker, had +presented to Count Maurice of Nassau an instrument by means of +which distant objects appeared nearer to the beholder, addressed +himself to the cause of such a phenomenon, which led to the +invention of the telescope, and proved the beginning of the +modern science of astronomy. Discoveries such as these +could never have been made by a negligent observer, or by a mere +passive listener.</p> + +<p>While Captain (afterwards Sir Samuel) Brown was occupied in +studying the construction of bridges, with the view of contriving +one of a cheap description to be thrown across the Tweed, near +which he lived, he was walking in his garden one dewy autumn +morning, when he saw a tiny spider’s net suspended across +his path. The idea immediately occurred to him, that a +bridge of iron ropes or chains might be constructed in like +manner, and the result was the invention of his Suspension +Bridge. So James Watt, when consulted about the mode of +carrying water by pipes under the Clyde, along the unequal bed of +the river, turned his attention one day to the shell of a lobster +presented at table; and from that model he invented an iron tube, +which, when laid down, was found effectually to answer the +purpose. Sir Isambert Brunel took his first lessons in +forming the Thames Tunnel from the tiny shipworm: he saw how the +little creature perforated the wood with its well-armed head, +first in one direction and then in another, till the archway was +complete, and then daubed over the roof and sides with a kind of +varnish; and by copying this work exactly on a large scale, +Brunel was at length enabled to construct his shield and +accomplish his great engineering work.</p> + +<p>It is the intelligent eye of the careful observer which gives +these apparently trivial phenomena their value. So trifling +a matter as the sight of seaweed floating past his ship, enabled +Columbus to quell the mutiny which arose amongst his sailors at +not discovering land, and to assure them that the eagerly sought +New World was not far off. There is nothing so small that +it should remain forgotten; and no fact, however trivial, but may +prove useful in some way or other if carefully interpreted. +Who could have imagined that the famous “chalk cliffs of +Albion” had been built up by tiny insects—detected +only by the help of the microscope—of the same order of +creatures that have gemmed the sea with islands of coral! +And who that contemplates such extraordinary results, arising +from infinitely minute operations, will venture to question the +power of little things?</p> + +<p>It is the close observation of little things which is the +secret of success in business, in art, in science, and in every +pursuit in life. Human knowledge is but an accumulation of +small facts, made by successive generations of men, the little +bits of knowledge and experience carefully treasured up by them +growing at length into a mighty pyramid. Though many of +these facts and observations seemed in the first instance to have +but slight significance, they are all found to have their +eventual uses, and to fit into their proper places. Even +many speculations seemingly remote, turn out to be the basis of +results the most obviously practical. In the case of the +conic sections discovered by Apollonius Pergæus, twenty +centuries elapsed before they were made the basis of +astronomy—a science which enables the modern navigator to +steer his way through unknown seas and traces for him in the +heavens an unerring path to his appointed haven. And had +not mathematicians toiled for so long, and, to uninstructed +observers, apparently so fruitlessly, over the abstract relations +of lines and surfaces, it is probable that but few of our +mechanical inventions would have seen the light.</p> + +<p>When Franklin made his discovery of the identity of lightning +and electricity, it was sneered at, and people asked, “Of +what use is it?” To which his reply was, “What +is the use of a child? It may become a man!” +When Galvani discovered that a frog’s leg twitched when +placed in contact with different metals, it could scarcely have +been imagined that so apparently insignificant a fact could have +led to important results. Yet therein lay the germ of the +Electric Telegraph, which binds the intelligence of continents +together, and, probably before many years have elapsed, will +“put a girdle round the globe.” So too, little +bits of stone and fossil, dug out of the earth, intelligently +interpreted, have issued in the science of geology and the +practical operations of mining, in which large capitals are +invested and vast numbers of persons profitably employed.</p> + +<p>The gigantic machinery employed in pumping our mines, working +our mills and manufactures, and driving our steam-ships and +locomotives, in like manner depends for its supply of power upon +so slight an agency as little drops of water expanded by +heat,—that familiar agency called steam, which we see +issuing from that common tea-kettle spout, but which, when put up +within an ingeniously contrived mechanism, displays a force equal +to that of millions of horses, and contains a power to rebuke the +waves and set even the hurricane at defiance. The same +power at work within the bowels of the earth has been the cause +of those volcanoes and earthquakes which have played so mighty a +part in the history of the globe.</p> + +<p>It is said that the Marquis of Worcester’s attention was +first accidentally directed to the subject of steam power, by the +tight cover of a vessel containing hot water having been blown +off before his eyes, when confined a prisoner in the Tower. +He published the result of his observations in his ‘Century +of Inventions,’ which formed a sort of text-book for +inquirers into the powers of steam for a time, until Savary, +Newcomen, and others, applying it to practical purposes, brought +the steam-engine to the state in which Watt found it when called +upon to repair a model of Newcomen’s engine, which belonged +to the University of Glasgow. This accidental circumstance +was an opportunity for Watt, which he was not slow to improve; +and it was the labour of his life to bring the steam-engine to +perfection.</p> + +<p>This art of seizing opportunities and turning even accidents +to account, bending them to some purpose is a great secret of +success. Dr. Johnson has defined genius to be “a mind +of large general powers accidentally determined in some +particular direction.” Men who are resolved to find a +way for themselves, will always find opportunities enough; and if +they do not lie ready to their hand, they will make them. +It is not those who have enjoyed the advantages of colleges, +museums, and public galleries, that have accomplished the most +for science and art; nor have the greatest mechanics and +inventors been trained in mechanics’ institutes. +Necessity, oftener than facility, has been the mother of +invention; and the most prolific school of all has been the +school of difficulty. Some of the very best workmen have +had the most indifferent tools to work with. But it is not +tools that make the workman, but the trained skill and +perseverance of the man himself. Indeed it is proverbial +that the bad workman never yet had a good tool. Some one +asked Opie by what wonderful process he mixed his colours. +“I mix them with my brains, sir,” was his +reply. It is the same with every workman who would +excel. Ferguson made marvellous things—such as his +wooden clock, that accurately measured the hours—by means +of a common penknife, a tool in everybody’s hand; but then +everybody is not a Ferguson. A pan of water and two +thermometers were the tools by which Dr. Black discovered latent +heat; and a prism, a lens, and a sheet of pasteboard enabled +Newton to unfold the composition of light and the origin of +colours. An eminent foreign <i>savant</i> once called upon +Dr. Wollaston, and requested to be shown over his laboratories in +which science had been enriched by so many important discoveries, +when the doctor took him into a little study, and, pointing to an +old tea-tray on the table, containing a few watch-glasses, test +papers, a small balance, and a blowpipe, said, “There is +all the laboratory that I have!”</p> + +<p>Stothard learnt the art of combining colours by closely +studying butterflies’ wings: he would often say that no one +knew what he owed to these tiny insects. A burnt stick and +a barn door served Wilkie in lieu of pencil and canvas. +Bewick first practised drawing on the cottage walls of his native +village, which he covered with his sketches in chalk; and +Benjamin West made his first brushes out of the cat’s +tail. Ferguson laid himself down in the fields at night in +a blanket, and made a map of the heavenly bodies by means of a +thread with small beads on it stretched between his eye and the +stars. Franklin first robbed the thundercloud of its +lightning by means of a kite made with two cross sticks and a +silk handkerchief. Watt made his first model of the +condensing steam-engine out of an old anatomist’s syringe, +used to inject the arteries previous to dissection. Gifford +worked his first problems in mathematics, when a cobbler’s +apprentice, upon small scraps of leather, which he beat smooth +for the purpose; whilst Rittenhouse, the astronomer, first +calculated eclipses on his plough handle.</p> + +<p>The most ordinary occasions will furnish a man with +opportunities or suggestions for improvement, if he be but prompt +to take advantage of them. Professor Lee was attracted to +the study of Hebrew by finding a Bible in that tongue in a +synagogue, while working as a common carpenter at the repairs of +the benches. He became possessed with a desire to read the +book in the original, and, buying a cheap second-hand copy of a +Hebrew grammar, he set to work and learnt the language for +himself. As Edmund Stone said to the Duke of Argyle, in +answer to his grace’s inquiry how he, a poor +gardener’s boy, had contrived to be able to read +Newton’s Principia in Latin, “One needs only to know +the twenty-four letters of the alphabet in order to learn +everything else that one wishes.” Application and +perseverance, and the diligent improvement of opportunities, will +do the rest.</p> + +<p>Sir Walter Scott found opportunities for self-improvement in +every pursuit, and turned even accidents to account. Thus +it was in the discharge of his functions as a writer’s +apprentice that he first visited the Highlands, and formed those +friendships among the surviving heroes of 1745 which served to +lay the foundation of a large class of his works. Later in +life, when employed as quartermaster of the Edinburgh Light +Cavalry, he was accidentally disabled by the kick of a horse, and +confined for some time to his house; but Scott was a sworn enemy +to idleness, and he forthwith set his mind to work. In +three days he had composed the first canto of ‘The Lay of +the Last Minstrel,’ which he shortly after +finished,—his first great original work.</p> + +<p>The attention of Dr. Priestley, the discoverer of so many +gases, was accidentally drawn to the subject of chemistry through +his living in the neighbourhood of a brewery. When visiting +the place one day, he noted the peculiar appearances attending +the extinction of lighted chips in the gas floating over the +fermented liquor. He was forty years old at the time, and +knew nothing of chemistry. He consulted books to ascertain +the cause, but they told him little, for as yet nothing was known +on the subject. Then he began to experiment, with some rude +apparatus of his own contrivance. The curious results of +his first experiments led to others, which in his hands shortly +became the science of pneumatic chemistry. About the same +time, Scheele was obscurely working in the same direction in a +remote Swedish village; and he discovered several new gases, with +no more effective apparatus at his command than a few +apothecaries’ phials and pigs’ bladders.</p> + +<p>Sir Humphry Davy, when an apothecary’s apprentice, +performed his first experiments with instruments of the rudest +description. He extemporised the greater part of them +himself, out of the motley materials which chance threw in his +way,—the pots and pans of the kitchen, and the phials and +vessels of his master’s surgery. It happened that a +French ship was wrecked off the Land’s End, and the surgeon +escaped, bearing with him his case of instruments, amongst which +was an old-fashioned glyster apparatus; this article he presented +to Davy, with whom he had become acquainted. The +apothecary’s apprentice received it with great exultation, +and forthwith employed it as a part of a pneumatic apparatus +which he contrived, afterwards using it to perform the duties of +an air-pump in one of his experiments on the nature and sources +of heat.</p> + +<p>In like manner Professor Faraday, Sir Humphry Davy’s +scientific successor, made his first experiments in electricity +by means of an old bottle, while he was still a working +bookbinder. And it is a curious fact that Faraday was first +attracted to the study of chemistry by hearing one of Sir Humphry +Davy’s lectures on the subject at the Royal +Institution. A gentleman, who was a member, calling one day +at the shop where Faraday was employed in binding books, found +him poring over the article “Electricity” in an +Encyclopædia placed in his hands to bind. The +gentleman, having made inquiries, found that the young bookbinder +was curious about such subjects, and gave him an order of +admission to the Royal Institution, where he attended a course of +four lectures delivered by Sir Humphry. He took notes of +them, which he showed to the lecturer, who acknowledged their +scientific accuracy, and was surprised when informed of the +humble position of the reporter. Faraday then expressed his +desire to devote himself to the prosecution of chemical studies, +from which Sir Humphry at first endeavoured to dissuade him: but +the young man persisting, he was at length taken into the Royal +Institution as an assistant; and eventually the mantle of the +brilliant apothecary’s boy fell upon the worthy shoulders +of the equally brilliant bookbinder’s apprentice.</p> + +<p>The words which Davy entered in his note-book, when about +twenty years of age, working in Dr. Beddoes’ laboratory at +Bristol, were eminently characteristic of him: “I have +neither riches, nor power, nor birth to recommend me; yet if I +live, I trust I shall not be of less service to mankind and my +friends, than if I had been born with all these +advantages.” Davy possessed the capability, as +Faraday does, of devoting the whole power of his mind to the +practical and experimental investigation of a subject in all its +bearings; and such a mind will rarely fail, by dint of mere +industry and patient thinking, in producing results of the +highest order. Coleridge said of Davy, “There is an +energy and elasticity in his mind, which enables him to seize on +and analyze all questions, pushing them to their legitimate +consequences. Every subject in Davy’s mind has the +principle of vitality. Living thoughts spring up like turf +under his feet.” Davy, on his part, said of +Coleridge, whose abilities he greatly admired, “With the +most exalted genius, enlarged views, sensitive heart, and +enlightened mind, he will be the victim of a want of order, +precision, and regularity.”</p> + +<p>The great Cuvier was a singularly accurate, careful, and +industrious observer. When a boy, he was attracted to the +subject of natural history by the sight of a volume of Buffon +which accidentally fell in his way. He at once proceeded to +copy the drawings, and to colour them after the descriptions +given in the text. While still at school, one of his +teachers made him a present of ‘Linnæus’s +System of Nature;’ and for more than ten years this +constituted his library of natural history. At eighteen he +was offered the situation of tutor in a family residing near +Fécamp, in Normandy. Living close to the sea-shore, +he was brought face to face with the wonders of marine +life. Strolling along the sands one day, he observed a +stranded cuttlefish. He was attracted by the curious +object, took it home to dissect, and thus began the study of the +molluscæ, in the pursuit of which he achieved so +distinguished a reputation. He had no books to refer to, +excepting only the great book of Nature which lay open before +him. The study of the novel and interesting objects which +it daily presented to his eyes made a much deeper impression on +his mind than any written or engraved descriptions could possibly +have done. Three years thus passed, during which he +compared the living species of marine animals with the fossil +remains found in the neighbourhood, dissected the specimens of +marine life that came under his notice, and, by careful +observation, prepared the way for a complete reform in the +classification of the animal kingdom. About this time +Cuvier became known to the learned Abbé Teissier, who +wrote to Jussieu and other friends in Paris on the subject of the +young naturalist’s inquiries, in terms of such high +commendation, that Cuvier was requested to send some of his +papers to the Society of Natural History; and he was shortly +after appointed assistant-superintendent at the Jardin des +Plantes. In the letter written by Teissier to Jussieu, +introducing the young naturalist to his notice, he said, +“You remember that it was I who gave Delambre to the +Academy in another branch of science: this also will be a +Delambre.” We need scarcely add that the prediction +of Teissier was more than fulfilled.</p> + +<p>It is not accident, then, that helps a man in the world so +much as purpose and persistent industry. To the feeble, the +sluggish and purposeless, the happiest accidents avail +nothing,—they pass them by, seeing no meaning in +them. But it is astonishing how much can be accomplished if +we are prompt to seize and improve the opportunities for action +and effort which are constantly presenting themselves. Watt +taught himself chemistry and mechanics while working at his trade +of a mathematical-instrument maker, at the same time that he was +learning German from a Swiss dyer. Stephenson taught +himself arithmetic and mensuration while working as an engineman +during the night shifts; and when he could snatch a few moments +in the intervals allowed for meals during the day, he worked his +sums with a bit of chalk upon the sides of the colliery +waggons. Dalton’s industry was the habit of his +life. He began from his boyhood, for he taught a little +village-school when he was only about twelve years +old,—keeping the school in winter, and working upon his +father’s farm in summer. He would sometimes urge +himself and companions to study by the stimulus of a bet, though +bred a Quaker; and on one occasion, by his satisfactory solution +of a problem, he won as much as enabled him to buy a +winter’s store of candles. He continued his +meteorological observations until a day or two before he +died,—having made and recorded upwards of 200,000 in the +course of his life.</p> + +<p>With perseverance, the very odds and ends of time may be +worked up into results of the greatest value. An hour in +every day withdrawn from frivolous pursuits would, if profitably +employed, enable a person of ordinary capacity to go far towards +mastering a science. It would make an ignorant man a +well-informed one in less than ten years. Time should not +be allowed to pass without yielding fruits, in the form of +something learnt worthy of being known, some good principle +cultivated, or some good habit strengthened. Dr. Mason Good +translated Lucretius while riding in his carriage in the streets +of London, going the round of his patients. Dr. Darwin +composed nearly all his works in the same way while driving about +in his “sulky” from house to house in the +country,—writing down his thoughts on little scraps of +paper, which he carried about with him for the purpose. +Hale wrote his ‘Contemplations’ while travelling on +circuit. Dr. Burney learnt French and Italian while +travelling on horseback from one musical pupil to another in the +course of his profession. Kirke White learnt Greek while +walking to and from a lawyer’s office; and we personally +know a man of eminent position who learnt Latin and French while +going messages as an errand-boy in the streets of Manchester.</p> + +<p>Daguesseau, one of the great Chancellors of France, by +carefully working up his odd bits of time, wrote a bulky and able +volume in the successive intervals of waiting for dinner, and +Madame de Genlis composed several of her charming volumes while +waiting for the princess to whom she gave her daily +lessons. Elihu Burritt attributed his first success in +self-improvement, not to genius, which he disclaimed, but simply +to the careful employment of those invaluable fragments of time, +called “odd moments.” While working and earning +his living as a blacksmith, he mastered some eighteen ancient and +modern languages, and twenty-two European dialects.</p> + +<p>What a solemn and striking admonition to youth is that +inscribed on the dial at All Souls, Oxford—“Pereunt +et imputantur”—the hours perish, and are laid to our +charge. Time is the only little fragment of Eternity that +belongs to man; and, like life, it can never be recalled. +“In the dissipation of worldly treasure,” says +Jackson of Exeter, “the frugality of the future may balance +the extravagance of the past; but who can say, ‘I will take +from minutes to-morrow to compensate for those I have lost +to-day’?” Melancthon noted down the time lost +by him, that he might thereby reanimate his industry, and not +lose an hour. An Italian scholar put over his door an +inscription intimating that whosoever remained there should join +in his labours. “We are afraid,” said some +visitors to Baxter, “that we break in upon your +time.” “To be sure you do,” replied the +disturbed and blunt divine. Time was the estate out of +which these great workers, and all other workers, formed that +rich treasury of thoughts and deeds which they have left to their +successors.</p> + +<p>The mere drudgery undergone by some men in carrying on their +undertakings has been something extraordinary, but the drudgery +they regarded as the price of success. Addison amassed as +much as three folios of manuscript materials before he began his +‘Spectator.’ Newton wrote his +‘Chronology’ fifteen times over before he was +satisfied with it; and Gibbon wrote out his ‘Memoir’ +nine times. Hale studied for many years at the rate of +sixteen hours a day, and when wearied with the study of the law, +he would recreate himself with philosophy and the study of the +mathematics. Hume wrote thirteen hours a day while +preparing his ‘History of England.’ +Montesquieu, speaking of one part of his writings, said to a +friend, “You will read it in a few hours; but I assure you +it has cost me so much labour that it has whitened my +hair.”</p> + +<p>The practice of writing down thoughts and facts for the +purpose of holding them fast and preventing their escape into the +dim region of forgetfulness, has been much resorted to by +thoughtful and studious men. Lord Bacon left behind him +many manuscripts entitled “Sudden thoughts set down for +use.” Erskine made great extracts from Burke; and +Eldon copied Coke upon Littleton twice over with his own hand, so +that the book became, as it were, part of his own mind. The +late Dr. Pye Smith, when apprenticed to his father as a +bookbinder, was accustomed to make copious memoranda of all the +books he read, with extracts and criticisms. This +indomitable industry in collecting materials distinguished him +through life, his biographer describing him as “always at +work, always in advance, always accumulating.” These +note-books afterwards proved, like Richter’s +“quarries,” the great storehouse from which he drew +his illustrations.</p> + +<p>The same practice characterized the eminent John Hunter, who +adopted it for the purpose of supplying the defects of memory; +and he was accustomed thus to illustrate the advantages which one +derives from putting one’s thoughts in writing: “It +resembles,” he said, “a tradesman taking stock, +without which he never knows either what he possesses or in what +he is deficient.” John Hunter—whose observation +was so keen that Abernethy was accustomed to speak of him as +“the Argus-eyed”—furnished an illustrious +example of the power of patient industry. He received +little or no education till he was about twenty years of age, and +it was with difficulty that he acquired the arts of reading and +writing. He worked for some years as a common carpenter at +Glasgow, after which he joined his brother William, who had +settled in London as a lecturer and anatomical +demonstrator. John entered his dissecting-room as an +assistant, but soon shot ahead of his brother, partly by virtue +of his great natural ability, but mainly by reason of his patient +application and indefatigable industry. He was one of the +first in this country to devote himself assiduously to the study +of comparative anatomy, and the objects he dissected and +collected took the eminent Professor Owen no less than ten years +to arrange. The collection contains some twenty thousand +specimens, and is the most precious treasure of the kind that has +ever been accumulated by the industry of one man. Hunter +used to spend every morning from sunrise until eight +o’clock in his museum; and throughout the day he carried on +his extensive private practice, performed his laborious duties as +surgeon to St. George’s Hospital and deputy surgeon-general +to the army; delivered lectures to students, and superintended a +school of practical anatomy at his own house; finding leisure, +amidst all, for elaborate experiments on the animal economy, and +the composition of various works of great scientific +importance. To find time for this gigantic amount of work, +he allowed himself only four hours of sleep at night, and an hour +after dinner. When once asked what method he had adopted to +insure success in his undertakings, he replied, “My rule +is, deliberately to consider, before I commence, whether the +thing be practicable. If it be not practicable, I do not +attempt it. If it be practicable, I can accomplish it if I +give sufficient pains to it; and having begun, I never stop till +the thing is done. To this rule I owe all my +success.”</p> + +<p>Hunter occupied a great deal of his time in collecting +definite facts respecting matters which, before his day, were +regarded as exceedingly trivial. Thus it was supposed by +many of his contemporaries that he was only wasting his time and +thought in studying so carefully as he did the growth of a +deer’s horn. But Hunter was impressed with the +conviction that no accurate knowledge of scientific facts is +without its value. By the study referred to, he learnt how +arteries accommodate themselves to circumstances, and enlarge as +occasion requires; and the knowledge thus acquired emboldened +him, in a case of aneurism in a branch artery, to tie the main +trunk where no surgeon before him had dared to tie it, and the +life of his patient was saved. Like many original men, he +worked for a long time as it were underground, digging and laying +foundations. He was a solitary and self-reliant genius, +holding on his course without the solace of sympathy or +approbation,—for but few of his contemporaries perceived +the ultimate object of his pursuits. But like all true +workers, he did not fail in securing his best reward—that +which depends less upon others than upon one’s +self—the approval of conscience, which in a right-minded +man invariably follows the honest and energetic performance of +duty.</p> + +<p>Ambrose Paré, the great French surgeon, was another +illustrious instance of close observation, patient application, +and indefatigable perseverance. He was the son of a barber +at Laval, in Maine, where he was born in 1509. His parents +were too poor to send him to school, but they placed him as +foot-boy with the curé of the village, hoping that under +that learned man he might pick up an education for himself. +But the curé kept him so busily employed in grooming his +mule and in other menial offices that the boy found no time for +learning. While in his service, it happened that the +celebrated lithotomist, Cotot, came to Laval to operate on one of +the curé’s ecclesiastical brethren. +Paré was present at the operation, and was so much +interested by it that he is said to have from that time formed +the determination of devoting himself to the art of surgery.</p> + +<p>Leaving the curé’s household service, Paré +apprenticed himself to a barber-surgeon named Vialot, under whom +he learnt to let blood, draw teeth, and perform the minor +operations. After four years’ experience of this +kind, he went to Paris to study at the school of anatomy and +surgery, meanwhile maintaining himself by his trade of a +barber. He afterwards succeeded in obtaining an appointment +as assistant at the Hôtel Dieu, where his conduct was so +exemplary, and his progress so marked, that the chief surgeon, +Goupil, entrusted him with the charge of the patients whom he +could not himself attend to. After the usual course of +instruction, Paré was admitted a master barber-surgeon, +and shortly after was appointed to a charge with the French army +under Montmorenci in Piedmont. Paré was not a man to +follow in the ordinary ruts of his profession, but brought the +resources of an ardent and original mind to bear upon his daily +work, diligently thinking out for himself the <i>rationale</i> of +diseases and their befitting remedies. Before his time the +wounded suffered much more at the hands of their surgeons than +they did at those of their enemies. To stop bleeding from +gunshot wounds, the barbarous expedient was resorted to of +dressing them with boiling oil. Hæmorrhage was also +stopped by searing the wounds with a red-hot iron; and when +amputation was necessary, it was performed with a red-hot +knife. At first Paré treated wounds according to the +approved methods; but, fortunately, on one occasion, running +short of boiling oil, he substituted a mild and emollient +application. He was in great fear all night lest he should +have done wrong in adopting this treatment; but was greatly +relieved next morning on finding his patients comparatively +comfortable, while those whose wounds had been treated in the +usual way were writhing in torment. Such was the casual +origin of one of Paré’s greatest improvements in the +treatment of gun-shot wounds; and he proceeded to adopt the +emollient treatment in all future cases. Another still more +important improvement was his employment of the ligature in tying +arteries to stop hæmorrhage, instead of the actual +cautery. Paré, however, met with the usual fate of +innovators and reformers. His practice was denounced by his +surgical brethren as dangerous, unprofessional, and empirical; +and the older surgeons banded themselves together to resist its +adoption. They reproached him for his want of education, +more especially for his ignorance of Latin and Greek; and they +assailed him with quotations from ancient writers, which he was +unable either to verify or refute. But the best answer to +his assailants was the success of his practice. The wounded +soldiers called out everywhere for Paré, and he was always +at their service: he tended them carefully and affectionately; +and he usually took leave of them with the words, “I have +dressed you; may God cure you.”</p> + +<p>After three years’ active service as army-surgeon, +Paré returned to Paris with such a reputation that he was +at once appointed surgeon in ordinary to the King. When +Metz was besieged by the Spanish army, under Charles V., the +garrison suffered heavy loss, and the number of wounded was very +great. The surgeons were few and incompetent, and probably +slew more by their bad treatment than the Spaniards did by the +sword. The Duke of Guise, who commanded the garrison, wrote +to the King imploring him to send Paré to his help. +The courageous surgeon at once set out, and, after braving many +dangers (to use his own words, “d’estre pendu, +estranglé ou mis en pièces”), he succeeded in +passing the enemy’s lines, and entered Metz in +safety. The Duke, the generals, and the captains gave him +an affectionate welcome; while the soldiers, when they heard of +his arrival, cried, “We no longer fear dying of our wounds; +our friend is among us.” In the following year +Paré was in like manner with the besieged in the town of +Hesdin, which shortly fell before the Duke of Savoy, and he was +taken prisoner. But having succeeded in curing one of the +enemy’s chief officers of a serious wound, he was +discharged without ransom, and returned in safety to Paris.</p> + +<p>The rest of his life was occupied in study, in +self-improvement, in piety, and in good deeds. Urged by +some of the most learned among his contemporaries, he placed on +record the results of his surgical experience, in twenty-eight +books, which were published by him at different times. His +writings are valuable and remarkable chiefly on account of the +great number of facts and cases contained in them, and the care +with which he avoids giving any directions resting merely upon +theory unsupported by observation. Paré continued, +though a Protestant, to hold the office of surgeon in ordinary to +the King; and during the Massacre of St. Bartholomew he owed his +life to the personal friendship of Charles IX., whom he had on +one occasion saved from the dangerous effects of a wound +inflicted by a clumsy surgeon in performing the operation of +venesection. Brantôme, in his +‘Mémoires,’ thus speaks of the King’s +rescue of Paré on the night of Saint +Bartholomew—“He sent to fetch him, and to remain +during the night in his chamber and wardrobe-room, commanding him +not to stir, and saying that it was not reasonable that a man who +had preserved the lives of so many people should himself be +massacred.” Thus Paré escaped the horrors of +that fearful night, which he survived for many years, and was +permitted to die in peace, full of age and honours.</p> + +<p>Harvey was as indefatigable a labourer as any we have +named. He spent not less than eight long years of +investigation and research before he published his views of the +circulation of the blood. He repeated and verified his +experiments again and again, probably anticipating the opposition +he would have to encounter from the profession on making known +his discovery. The tract in which he at length announced +his views, was a most modest one,—but simple, perspicuous, +and conclusive. It was nevertheless received with ridicule, +as the utterance of a crack-brained impostor. For some +time, he did not make a single convert, and gained nothing but +contumely and abuse. He had called in question the revered +authority of the ancients; and it was even averred that his views +were calculated to subvert the authority of the Scriptures and +undermine the very foundations of morality and religion. +His little practice fell away, and he was left almost without a +friend. This lasted for some years, until the great truth, +held fast by Harvey amidst all his adversity, and which had +dropped into many thoughtful minds, gradually ripened by further +observation, and after a period of about twenty-five years, it +became generally recognised as an established scientific +truth.</p> + +<p>The difficulties encountered by Dr. Jenner in promulgating and +establishing his discovery of vaccination as a preventive of +small-pox, were even greater than those of Harvey. Many, +before him, had witnessed the cow-pox, and had heard of the +report current among the milkmaids in Gloucestershire, that +whoever had taken that disease was secure against +small-pox. It was a trifling, vulgar rumour, supposed to +have no significance whatever; and no one had thought it worthy +of investigation, until it was accidentally brought under the +notice of Jenner. He was a youth, pursuing his studies at +Sodbury, when his attention was arrested by the casual +observation made by a country girl who came to his master’s +shop for advice. The small-pox was mentioned, when the girl +said, “I can’t take that disease, for I have had +cow-pox.” The observation immediately riveted +Jenner’s attention, and he forthwith set about inquiring +and making observations on the subject. His professional +friends, to whom he mentioned his views as to the prophylactic +virtues of cow-pox, laughed at him, and even threatened to expel +him from their society, if he persisted in harassing them with +the subject. In London he was so fortunate as to study +under John Hunter, to whom he communicated his views. The +advice of the great anatomist was thoroughly characteristic: +“Don’t think, but <i>try</i>; be patient, be +accurate.” Jenner’s courage was supported by +the advice, which conveyed to him the true art of philosophical +investigation. He went back to the country to practise his +profession and make observations and experiments, which he +continued to pursue for a period of twenty years. His faith +in his discovery was so implicit that he vaccinated his own son +on three several occasions. At length he published his +views in a quarto of about seventy pages, in which he gave the +details of twenty-three cases of successful vaccination of +individuals, to whom it was found afterwards impossible to +communicate the small-pox either by contagion or +inoculation. It was in 1798 that this treatise was +published; though he had been working out his ideas since the +year 1775, when they had begun to assume a definite form.</p> + +<p>How was the discovery received? First with indifference, +then with active hostility. Jenner proceeded to London to +exhibit to the profession the process of vaccination and its +results; but not a single medical man could be induced to make +trial of it, and after fruitlessly waiting for nearly three +months, he returned to his native village. He was even +caricatured and abused for his attempt to +“bestialize” his species by the introduction into +their systems of diseased matter from the cow’s +udder. Vaccination was denounced from the pulpit as +“diabolical.” It was averred that vaccinated +children became “ox-faced,” that abscesses broke out +to “indicate sprouting horns,” and that the +countenance was gradually “transmuted into the visage of a +cow, the voice into the bellowing of bulls.” +Vaccination, however, was a truth, and notwithstanding the +violence of the opposition, belief in it spread slowly. In +one village, where a gentleman tried to introduce the practice, +the first persons who permitted themselves to be vaccinated were +absolutely pelted and driven into their houses if they appeared +out of doors. Two ladies of title—Lady Ducie and the +Countess of Berkeley—to their honour be it +remembered—had the courage to vaccinate their children; and +the prejudices of the day were at once broken through. The +medical profession gradually came round, and there were several +who even sought to rob Dr. Jenner of the merit of the discovery, +when its importance came to be recognised. Jenner’s +cause at last triumphed, and he was publicly honoured and +rewarded. In his prosperity he was as modest as he had been +in his obscurity. He was invited to settle in London, and +told that he might command a practice of 10,000<i>l.</i> a +year. But his answer was, “No! In the morning +of my days I have sought the sequestered and lowly paths of +life—the valley, and not the mountain,—and now, in +the evening of my days, it is not meet for me to hold myself up +as an object for fortune and for fame.” During +Jenner’s own life-time the practice of vaccination became +adopted all over the civilized world; and when he died, his title +as a Benefactor of his kind was recognised far and wide. +Cuvier has said, “If vaccine were the only discovery of the +epoch, it would serve to render it illustrious for ever; yet it +knocked twenty times in vain at the doors of the +Academies.”</p> + +<p>Not less patient, resolute, and persevering was Sir Charles +Bell in the prosecution of his discoveries relating to the +nervous system. Previous to his time, the most confused +notions prevailed as to the functions of the nerves, and this +branch of study was little more advanced than it had been in the +times of Democritus and Anaxagoras three thousand years +before. Sir Charles Bell, in the valuable series of papers +the publication of which was commenced in 1821, took an entirely +original view of the subject, based upon a long series of +careful, accurate, and oft-repeated experiments. +Elaborately tracing the development of the nervous system up from +the lowest order of animated being, to man—the lord of the +animal kingdom,—he displayed it, to use his own words, +“as plainly as if it were written in our +mother-tongue.” His discovery consisted in the fact, +that the spinal nerves are double in their function, and arise by +double roots from the spinal marrow,—volition being +conveyed by that part of the nerves springing from the one root, +and sensation by the other. The subject occupied the mind +of Sir Charles Bell for a period of forty years, when, in 1840, +he laid his last paper before the Royal Society. As in the +cases of Harvey and Jenner, when he had lived down the ridicule +and opposition with which his views were first received, and +their truth came to be recognised, numerous claims for priority +in making the discovery were set up at home and abroad. +Like them, too, he lost practice by the publication of his +papers; and he left it on record that, after every step in his +discovery, he was obliged to work harder than ever to preserve +his reputation as a practitioner. The great merits of Sir +Charles Bell were, however, at length fully recognised; and +Cuvier himself, when on his death-bed, finding his face distorted +and drawn to one side, pointed out the symptom to his attendants +as a proof of the correctness of Sir Charles Bell’s +theory.</p> + +<p>An equally devoted pursuer of the same branch of science was +the late Dr. Marshall Hall, whose name posterity will rank with +those of Harvey, Hunter, Jenner, and Bell. During the whole +course of his long and useful life he was a most careful and +minute observer; and no fact, however apparently insignificant, +escaped his attention. His important discovery of the +diastaltic nervous system, by which his name will long be known +amongst scientific men, originated in an exceedingly simple +circumstance. When investigating the pneumonic circulation +in the Triton, the decapitated object lay upon the table; and on +separating the tail and accidentally pricking the external +integument, he observed that it moved with energy, and became +contorted into various forms. He had not touched a muscle +or a muscular nerve; what then was the nature of these +movements? The same phenomena had probably been often +observed before, but Dr. Hall was the first to apply himself +perseveringly to the investigation of their causes; and he +exclaimed on the occasion, “I will never rest satisfied +until I have found all this out, and made it clear.” +His attention to the subject was almost incessant; and it is +estimated that in the course of his life he devoted not less than +25,000 hours to its experimental and chemical +investigation. He was at the same time carrying on an +extensive private practice, and officiating as lecturer at St. +Thomas’s Hospital and other Medical Schools. It will +scarcely be credited that the paper in which he embodied his +discovery was rejected by the Royal Society, and was only +accepted after the lapse of seventeen years, when the truth of +his views had become acknowledged by scientific men both at home +and abroad.</p> + +<p>The life of Sir William Herschel affords another remarkable +illustration of the force of perseverance in another branch of +science. His father was a poor German musician, who brought +up his four sons to the same calling. William came over to +England to seek his fortune, and he joined the band of the Durham +Militia, in which he played the oboe. The regiment was +lying at Doncaster, where Dr. Miller first became acquainted with +Herschel, having heard him perform a solo on the violin in a +surprising manner. The Doctor entered into conversation +with the youth, and was so pleased with him, that he urged him to +leave the militia and take up his residence at his house for a +time. Herschel did so, and while at Doncaster was +principally occupied in violin-playing at concerts, availing +himself of the advantages of Dr. Miller’s library to study +at his leisure hours. A new organ having been built for the +parish church of Halifax, an organist was advertised for, on +which Herschel applied for the office, and was selected. +Leading the wandering life of an artist, he was next attracted to +Bath, where he played in the Pump-room band, and also officiated +as organist in the Octagon chapel. Some recent discoveries +in astronomy having arrested his mind, and awakened in him a +powerful spirit of curiosity, he sought and obtained from a +friend the loan of a two-foot Gregorian telescope. So +fascinated was the poor musician by the science, that he even +thought of purchasing a telescope, but the price asked by the +London optician was so alarming, that he determined to make +one. Those who know what a reflecting telescope is, and the +skill which is required to prepare the concave metallic speculum +which forms the most important part of the apparatus, will be +able to form some idea of the difficulty of this +undertaking. Nevertheless, Herschel succeeded, after long +and painful labour, in completing a five-foot reflector, with +which he had the gratification of observing the ring and +satellites of Saturn. Not satisfied with his triumph, he +proceeded to make other instruments in succession, of seven, ten, +and even twenty feet. In constructing the seven-foot +reflector, he finished no fewer than two hundred specula before +he produced one that would bear any power that was applied to +it,—a striking instance of the persevering laboriousness of +the man. While gauging the heavens with his instruments, he +continued patiently to earn his bread by piping to the +fashionable frequenters of the Pump-room. So eager was he +in his astronomical observations, that he would steal away from +the room during an interval of the performance, give a little +turn at his telescope, and contentedly return to his oboe. +Thus working away, Herschel discovered the Georgium Sidus, the +orbit and rate of motion of which he carefully calculated, and +sent the result to the Royal Society; when the humble oboe player +found himself at once elevated from obscurity to fame. He +was shortly after appointed Astronomer Royal, and by the kindness +of George III. was placed in a position of honourable competency +for life. He bore his honours with the same meekness and +humility which had distinguished him in the days of his +obscurity. So gentle and patient, and withal so +distinguished and successful a follower of science under +difficulties, perhaps cannot be found in the entire history of +biography.</p> + +<p>The career of William Smith, the father of English geology, +though perhaps less known, is not less interesting and +instructive as an example of patient and laborious effort, and +the diligent cultivation of opportunities. He was born in +1769, the son of a yeoman farmer at Churchill, in +Oxfordshire. His father dying when he was but a child, he +received a very sparing education at the village school, and even +that was to a considerable extent interfered with by his +wandering and somewhat idle habits as a boy. His mother +having married a second time, he was taken in charge by an uncle, +also a farmer, by whom he was brought up. Though the uncle +was by no means pleased with the boy’s love of wandering +about, collecting “poundstones,” +“pundips,” and other stony curiosities which lay +scattered about the adjoining land, he yet enabled him to +purchase a few of the necessary books wherewith to instruct +himself in the rudiments of geometry and surveying; for the boy +was already destined for the business of a land-surveyor. +One of his marked characteristics, even as a youth, was the +accuracy and keenness of his observation; and what he once +clearly saw he never forgot. He began to draw, attempted to +colour, and practised the arts of mensuration and surveying, all +without regular instruction; and by his efforts in self-culture, +he shortly became so proficient, that he was taken on as +assistant to a local surveyor of ability in the +neighbourhood. In carrying on his business he was +constantly under the necessity of traversing Oxfordshire and the +adjoining counties. One of the first things he seriously +pondered over, was the position of the various soils and strata +that came under his notice on the lands which he surveyed or +travelled over; more especially the position of the red earth in +regard to the lias and superincumbent rocks. The surveys of +numerous collieries which he was called upon to make, gave him +further experience; and already, when only twenty-three years of +age, he contemplated making a model of the strata of the +earth.</p> + +<p>While engaged in levelling for a proposed canal in +Gloucestershire, the idea of a general law occurred to him +relating to the strata of that district. He conceived that +the strata lying above the coal were not laid horizontally, but +inclined, and in one direction, towards the east; resembling, on +a large scale, “the ordinary appearance of superposed +slices of bread and butter.” The correctness of this +theory he shortly after confirmed by observations of the strata +in two parallel valleys, the “red ground,” +“lias,” and “freestone” or +“oolite,” being found to come down in an eastern +direction, and to sink below the level, yielding place to the +next in succession. He was shortly enabled to verify the +truth of his views on a larger scale, having been appointed to +examine personally into the management of canals in England and +Wales. During his journeys, which extended from Bath to +Newcastle-on-Tyne, returning by Shropshire and Wales, his keen +eyes were never idle for a moment. He rapidly noted the +aspect and structure of the country through which he passed with +his companions, treasuring up his observations for future +use. His geologic vision was so acute, that though the road +along which he passed from York to Newcastle in the post chaise +was from five to fifteen miles distant from the hills of chalk +and oolite on the east, he was satisfied as to their nature, by +their contours and relative position, and their ranges on the +surface in relation to the lias and “red ground” +occasionally seen on the road.</p> + +<p>The general results of his observation seem to have been +these. He noted that the rocky masses of country in the +western parts of England generally inclined to the east and +south-east; that the red sandstones and marls above the coal +measures passed beneath the lias, clay, and limestone, that these +again passed beneath the sands, yellow limestones and clays, +forming the table-land of the Cotswold Hills, while these in turn +passed beneath the great chalk deposits occupying the eastern +parts of England. He further observed, that each layer of +clay, sand, and limestone held its own peculiar classes of +fossils; and pondering much on these things, he at length came to +the then unheard-of conclusion, that each distinct deposit of +marine animals, in these several strata, indicated a distinct +sea-bottom, and that each layer of clay, sand, chalk, and stone, +marked a distinct epoch of time in the history of the earth.</p> + +<p>This idea took firm possession of his mind, and he could talk +and think of nothing else. At canal boards, at +sheep-shearings, at county meetings, and at agricultural +associations, ‘Strata Smith,’ as he came to be +called, was always running over with the subject that possessed +him. He had indeed made a great discovery, though he was as +yet a man utterly unknown in the scientific world. He +proceeded to project a map of the stratification of England; but +was for some time deterred from proceeding with it, being fully +occupied in carrying out the works of the Somersetshire coal +canal, which engaged him for a period of about six years. +He continued, nevertheless, to be unremitting in his observation +of facts; and he became so expert in apprehending the internal +structure of a district and detecting the lie of the strata from +its external configuration, that he was often consulted +respecting the drainage of extensive tracts of land, in which, +guided by his geological knowledge, he proved remarkably +successful, and acquired an extensive reputation.</p> + +<p>One day, when looking over the cabinet collection of fossils +belonging to the Rev. Samuel Richardson, at Bath, Smith +astonished his friend by suddenly disarranging his +classification, and re-arranging the fossils in their +stratigraphical order, saying—“These came from the +blue lias, these from the over-lying sand and freestone, these +from the fuller’s earth, and these from the Bath building +stone.” A new light flashed upon Mr. +Richardson’s mind, and he shortly became a convert to and +believer in William Smith’s doctrine. The geologists +of the day were not, however, so easily convinced; and it was +scarcely to be tolerated that an unknown land-surveyor should +pretend to teach them the science of geology. But William +Smith had an eye and mind to penetrate deep beneath the skin of +the earth; he saw its very fibre and skeleton, and, as it were, +divined its organization. His knowledge of the strata in +the neighbourhood of Bath was so accurate, that one evening, when +dining at the house of the Rev. Joseph Townsend, he dictated to +Mr. Richardson the different strata according to their order of +succession in descending order, twenty-three in number, +commencing with the chalk and descending in continuous series +down to the coal, below which the strata were not then +sufficiently determined. To this was added a list of the +more remarkable fossils which had been gathered in the several +layers of rock. This was printed and extensively circulated +in 1801.</p> + +<p>He next determined to trace out the strata through districts +as remote from Bath as his means would enable him to reach. +For years he journeyed to and fro, sometimes on foot, sometimes +on horseback, riding on the tops of stage coaches, often making +up by night-travelling the time he had lost by day, so as not to +fail in his ordinary business engagements. When he was +professionally called away to any distance from home—as, +for instance, when travelling from Bath to Holkham, in Norfolk, +to direct the irrigation and drainage of Mr. Coke’s land in +that county—he rode on horseback, making frequent detours +from the road to note the geological features of the country +which he traversed.</p> + +<p>For several years he was thus engaged in his journeys to +distant quarters in England and Ireland, to the extent of upwards +of ten thousand miles yearly; and it was amidst this incessant +and laborious travelling, that he contrived to commit to paper +his fast-growing generalizations on what he rightly regarded as a +new science. No observation, howsoever trivial it might +appear, was neglected, and no opportunity of collecting fresh +facts was overlooked. Whenever he could, he possessed +himself of records of borings, natural and artificial sections, +drew them to a constant scale of eight yards to the inch, and +coloured them up. Of his keenness of observation take the +following illustration. When making one of his geological +excursions about the country near Woburn, as he was drawing near +to the foot of the Dunstable chalk hills, he observed to his +companion, “If there be any broken ground about the foot of +these hills, we may find <i>shark’s teeth</i>;” and +they had not proceeded far, before they picked up six from the +white bank of a new fence-ditch. As he afterwards said of +himself, “The habit of observation crept on me, gained a +settlement in my mind, became a constant associate of my life, +and started up in activity at the first thought of a journey; so +that I generally went off well prepared with maps, and sometimes +with contemplations on its objects, or on those on the road, +reduced to writing before it commenced. My mind was, +therefore, like the canvas of a painter, well prepared for the +first and best impressions.”</p> + +<p>Notwithstanding his courageous and indefatigable industry, +many circumstances contributed to prevent the promised +publication of William Smith’s ‘Map of the Strata of +England and Wales,’ and it was not until 1814 that he was +enabled, by the assistance of some friends, to give to the world +the fruits of his twenty years’ incessant labour. To +prosecute his inquiries, and collect the extensive series of +facts and observations requisite for his purpose, he had to +expend the whole of the profits of his professional labours +during that period; and he even sold off his small property to +provide the means of visiting remoter parts of the island. +Meanwhile he had entered on a quarrying speculation near Bath, +which proved unsuccessful, and he was under the necessity of +selling his geological collection (which was purchased by the +British Museum), his furniture and library, reserving only his +papers, maps, and sections, which were useless save to +himself. He bore his losses and misfortunes with exemplary +fortitude; and amidst all, he went on working with cheerful +courage and untiring patience. He died at Northampton, in +August, 1839, while on his way to attend the meeting of the +British Association at Birmingham.</p> + +<p>It is difficult to speak in terms of too high praise of the +first geological map of England, which we owe to the industry of +this courageous man of science. An accomplished writer says +of it, “It was a work so masterly in conception and so +correct in general outline, that in principle it served as a +basis not only for the production of later maps of the British +Islands, but for geological maps of all other parts of the world, +wherever they have been undertaken. In the apartments of +the Geological Society Smith’s map may yet be seen—a +great historical document, old and worn, calling for renewal of +its faded tints. Let any one conversant with the subject +compare it with later works on a similar scale, and he will find +that in all essential features it will not suffer by the +comparison—the intricate anatomy of the Silurian rocks of +Wales and the north of England by Murchison and Sedgwick being +the chief additions made to his great generalizations.” <a +name="citation149"></a><a href="#footnote149" +class="citation">[149]</a> The genius of the Oxfordshire +surveyor did not fail to be duly recognised and honoured by men +of science during his lifetime. In 1831 the Geological +Society of London awarded to him the Wollaston medal, “in +consideration of his being a great original discoverer in English +geology, and especially for his being the first in this country +to discover and to teach the identification of strata, and to +determine their succession by means of their imbedded +fossils.” William Smith, in his simple, earnest way, +gained for himself a name as lasting as the science he loved so +well. To use the words of the writer above quoted, +“Till the manner as well as the fact of the first +appearance of successive forms of life shall be solved, it is not +easy to surmise how any discovery can be made in geology equal in +value to that which we owe to the genius of William +Smith.”</p> + +<p>Hugh Miller was a man of like observant faculties, who studied +literature as well as science with zeal and success. The +book in which he has told the story of his life, (‘My +Schools and Schoolmasters’), is extremely interesting, and +calculated to be eminently useful. It is the history of the +formation of a truly noble character in the humblest condition of +life; and inculcates most powerfully the lessons of self-help, +self-respect, and self-dependence. While Hugh was but a +child, his father, who was a sailor, was drowned at sea, and he +was brought up by his widowed mother. He had a school +training after a sort, but his best teachers were the boys with +whom he played, the men amongst whom he worked, the friends and +relatives with whom he lived. He read much and +miscellaneously, and picked up odd sorts of knowledge from many +quarters,—from workmen, carpenters, fishermen and sailors, +and above all, from the old boulders strewed along the shores of +the Cromarty Frith. With a big hammer which had belonged to +his great-grandfather, an old buccaneer, the boy went about +chipping the stones, and accumulating specimens of mica, +porphyry, garnet, and such like. Sometimes he had a day in +the woods, and there, too, the boy’s attention was excited +by the peculiar geological curiosities which came in his +way. While searching among the rocks on the beach, he was +sometimes asked, in irony, by the farm servants who came to load +their carts with sea-weed, whether he “was gettin’ +siller in the stanes,” but was so unlucky as never to be +able to answer in the affirmative. When of a suitable age +he was apprenticed to the trade of his choice—that of a +working stonemason; and he began his labouring career in a quarry +looking out upon the Cromarty Frith. This quarry proved one +of his best schools. The remarkable geological formations +which it displayed awakened his curiosity. The bar of +deep-red stone beneath, and the bar of pale-red clay above, were +noted by the young quarryman, who even in such unpromising +subjects found matter for observation and reflection. Where +other men saw nothing, he detected analogies, differences, and +peculiarities, which set him a-thinking. He simply kept his +eyes and his mind open; was sober, diligent, and persevering; and +this was the secret of his intellectual growth.</p> + +<p>His curiosity was excited and kept alive by the curious +organic remains, principally of old and extinct species of +fishes, ferns, and ammonites, which were revealed along the coast +by the washings of the waves, or were exposed by the stroke of +his mason’s hammer. He never lost sight of the +subject; but went on accumulating observations and comparing +formations, until at length, many years afterwards, when no +longer a working mason, he gave to the world his highly +interesting work on the Old Red Sandstone, which at once +established his reputation as a scientific geologist. But +this work was the fruit of long years of patient observation and +research. As he modestly states in his autobiography, +“the only merit to which I lay claim in the case is that of +patient research—a merit in which whoever wills may rival +or surpass me; and this humble faculty of patience, when rightly +developed, may lead to more extraordinary developments of idea +than even genius itself.”</p> + +<p>The late John Brown, the eminent English geologist, was, like +Miller, a stonemason in his early life, serving an apprenticeship +to the trade at Colchester, and afterwards working as a +journeyman mason at Norwich. He began business as a builder +on his own account at Colchester, where by frugality and industry +he secured a competency. It was while working at his trade +that his attention was first drawn to the study of fossils and +shells; and he proceeded to make a collection of them, which +afterwards grew into one of the finest in England. His +researches along the coasts of Essex, Kent, and Sussex brought to +light some magnificent remains of the elephant and rhinoceros, +the most valuable of which were presented by him to the British +Museum. During the last few years of his life he devoted +considerable attention to the study of the Foraminifera in chalk, +respecting which he made several interesting discoveries. +His life was useful, happy, and honoured; and he died at Stanway, +in Essex, in November 1859, at the ripe age of eighty years.</p> + +<p>Not long ago, Sir Roderick Murchison discovered at Thurso, in +the far north of Scotland, a profound geologist, in the person of +a baker there, named Robert Dick. When Sir Roderick called +upon him at the bakehouse in which he baked and earned his bread, +Robert Dick delineated to him, by means of flour upon the board, +the geographical features and geological phenomena of his native +county, pointing out the imperfections in the existing maps, +which he had ascertained by travelling over the country in his +leisure hours. On further inquiry, Sir Roderick ascertained +that the humble individual before him was not only a capital +baker and geologist, but a first-rate botanist. “I +found,” said the President of the Geographical Society, +“to my great humiliation that the baker knew infinitely +more of botanical science, ay, ten times more, than I did; and +that there were only some twenty or thirty specimens of flowers +which he had not collected. Some he had obtained as +presents, some he had purchased, but the greater portion had been +accumulated by his industry, in his native county of Caithness; +and the specimens were all arranged in the most beautiful order, +with their scientific names affixed.”</p> + +<p>Sir Roderick Murchison himself is an illustrious follower of +these and kindred branches of science. A writer in the +‘Quarterly Review’ cites him as a “singular +instance of a man who, having passed the early part of his life +as a soldier, never having had the advantage, or disadvantage as +the case might have been, of a scientific training, instead of +remaining a fox-hunting country gentleman, has succeeded by his +own native vigour and sagacity, untiring industry and zeal, in +making for himself a scientific reputation that is as wide as it +is likely to be lasting. He took first of all an unexplored +and difficult district at home, and, by the labour of many years, +examined its rock-formations, classed them in natural groups, +assigned to each its characteristic assemblage of fossils, and +was the first to decipher two great chapters in the world’s +geological history, which must always henceforth carry his name +on their title-page. Not only so, but he applied the +knowledge thus acquired to the dissection of large districts, +both at home and abroad, so as to become the geological +discoverer of great countries which had formerly been +‘terræ incognitæ.’” But Sir +Roderick Murchison is not merely a geologist. His +indefatigable labours in many branches of knowledge have +contributed to render him among the most accomplished and +complete of scientific men.</p> +<h2><a name="page154"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +154</span>CHAPTER VI.<br /> +<span class="smcap">Workers in Art</span>.</h2> +<blockquote><p>“If what shone afar so grand,<br /> +Turn to nothing in thy hand,<br /> +On again; the virtue lies<br /> +In struggle, not the prize.”—<i>R. M. Milnes</i>.</p> + +<p>“Excelle, et tu vivras.”—<i>Joubert</i>.</p> +</blockquote> +<p><span class="smcap">Excellence</span> in art, as in everything +else, can only be achieved by dint of painstaking labour.</p> + +<p>There is nothing less accidental than the painting of a fine +picture or the chiselling of a noble statue. Every skilled +touch of the artist’s brush or chisel, though guided by +genius, is the product of unremitting study.</p> + +<p>Sir Joshua Reynolds was such a believer in the force of +industry, that he held that artistic excellence, “however +expressed by genius, taste, or the gift of heaven, may be +acquired.” Writing to Barry he said, “Whoever +is resolved to excel in painting, or indeed any other art, must +bring all his mind to bear upon that one object from the moment +that he rises till he goes to bed.” And on another +occasion he said, “Those who are resolved to excel must go +to their work, willing or unwilling, morning, noon, and night: +they will find it no play, but very hard labour.” But +although diligent application is no doubt absolutely necessary +for the achievement of the highest distinction in art, it is +equally true that without the inborn genius, no amount of mere +industry, however well applied, will make an artist. The +gift comes by nature, but is perfected by self-culture, which is +of more avail than all the imparted education of the schools.</p> + +<p>Some of the greatest artists have had to force their way +upward in the face of poverty and manifold obstructions. +Illustrious instances will at once flash upon the reader’s +mind. Claude Lorraine, the pastrycook; Tintoretto, the +dyer; the two Caravaggios, the one a colour-grinder, the other a +mortar-carrier at the Vatican; Salvator Rosa, the associate of +bandits; Giotto, the peasant boy; Zingaro, the gipsy; Cavedone, +turned out of doors to beg by his father; Canova, the +stone-cutter; these, and many other well-known artists, succeeded +in achieving distinction by severe study and labour, under +circumstances the most adverse.</p> + +<p>Nor have the most distinguished artists of our own country +been born in a position of life more than ordinarily favourable +to the culture of artistic genius. Gainsborough and Bacon +were the sons of cloth-workers; Barry was an Irish sailor boy, +and Maclise a banker’s apprentice at Cork; Opie and Romney, +like Inigo Jones, were carpenters; West was the son of a small +Quaker farmer in Pennsylvania; Northcote was a watchmaker, +Jackson a tailor, and Etty a printer; Reynolds, Wilson, and +Wilkie, were the sons of clergymen; Lawrence was the son of a +publican, and Turner of a barber. Several of our painters, +it is true, originally had some connection with art, though in a +very humble way,—such as Flaxman, whose father sold plaster +casts; Bird, who ornamented tea-trays; Martin, who was a +coach-painter; Wright and Gilpin, who were ship-painters; +Chantrey, who was a carver and gilder; and David Cox, Stanfield, +and Roberts, who were scene-painters.</p> + +<p>It was not by luck or accident that these men achieved +distinction, but by sheer industry and hard work. Though +some achieved wealth, yet this was rarely, if ever, the ruling +motive. Indeed, no mere love of money could sustain the +efforts of the artist in his early career of self-denial and +application. The pleasure of the pursuit has always been +its best reward; the wealth which followed but an accident. +Many noble-minded artists have preferred following the bent of +their genius, to chaffering with the public for terms. +Spagnoletto verified in his life the beautiful fiction of +Xenophon, and after he had acquired the means of luxury, +preferred withdrawing himself from their influence, and +voluntarily returned to poverty and labour. When Michael +Angelo was asked his opinion respecting a work which a painter +had taken great pains to exhibit for profit, he said, “I +think that he will be a poor fellow so long as he shows such an +extreme eagerness to become rich.”</p> + +<p>Like Sir Joshua Reynolds, Michael Angelo was a great believer +in the force of labour; and he held that there was nothing which +the imagination conceived, that could not be embodied in marble, +if the hand were made vigorously to obey the mind. He was +himself one of the most indefatigable of workers; and he +attributed his power of studying for a greater number of hours +than most of his contemporaries, to his spare habits of +living. A little bread and wine was all he required for the +chief part of the day when employed at his work; and very +frequently he rose in the middle of the night to resume his +labours. On these occasions, it was his practice to fix the +candle, by the light of which he chiselled, on the summit of a +paste-board cap which he wore. Sometimes he was too wearied +to undress, and he slept in his clothes, ready to spring to his +work so soon as refreshed by sleep. He had a favourite +device of an old man in a go-cart, with an hour-glass upon it +bearing the inscription, <i>Ancora imparo</i>! Still I am +learning.</p> + +<p>Titian, also, was an indefatigable worker. His +celebrated “Pietro Martire” was eight years in hand, +and his “Last Supper” seven. In his letter to +Charles V. he said, “I send your Majesty the ‘Last +Supper’ after working at it almost daily for seven +years—<i>dopo sette anni lavorandovi quasi +continuamente</i>.” Few think of the patient labour +and long training involved in the greatest works of the +artist. They seem easy and quickly accomplished, yet with +how great difficulty has this ease been acquired. +“You charge me fifty sequins,” said the Venetian +nobleman to the sculptor, “for a bust that cost you only +ten days’ labour.” “You forget,” +said the artist, “that I have been thirty years learning to +make that bust in ten days.” Once when Domenichino +was blamed for his slowness in finishing a picture which was +bespoken, he made answer, “I am continually painting it +within myself.” It was eminently characteristic of +the industry of the late Sir Augustus Callcott, that he made not +fewer than forty separate sketches in the composition of his +famous picture of “Rochester.” This constant +repetition is one of the main conditions of success in art, as in +life itself.</p> + +<p>No matter how generous nature has been in bestowing the gift +of genius, the pursuit of art is nevertheless a long and +continuous labour. Many artists have been precocious, but +without diligence their precocity would have come to +nothing. The anecdote related of West is well known. +When only seven years old, struck with the beauty of the sleeping +infant of his eldest sister whilst watching by its cradle, he ran +to seek some paper and forthwith drew its portrait in red and +black ink. The little incident revealed the artist in him, +and it was found impossible to draw him from his bent. West +might have been a greater painter, had he not been injured by too +early success: his fame, though great, was not purchased by +study, trials, and difficulties, and it has not been +enduring.</p> + +<p>Richard Wilson, when a mere child, indulged himself with +tracing figures of men and animals on the walls of his +father’s house, with a burnt stick. He first directed +his attention to portrait painting; but when in Italy, calling +one day at the house of Zucarelli, and growing weary with +waiting, he began painting the scene on which his friend’s +chamber window looked. When Zucarelli arrived, he was so +charmed with the picture, that he asked if Wilson had not studied +landscape, to which he replied that he had not. +“Then, I advise you,” said the other, “to try; +for you are sure of great success.” Wilson adopted +the advice, studied and worked hard, and became our first great +English landscape painter.</p> + +<p>Sir Joshua Reynolds, when a boy, forgot his lessons, and took +pleasure only in drawing, for which his father was accustomed to +rebuke him. The boy was destined for the profession of +physic, but his strong instinct for art could not be repressed, +and he became a painter. Gainsborough went sketching, when +a schoolboy, in the woods of Sudbury; and at twelve he was a +confirmed artist: he was a keen observer and a hard +worker,—no picturesque feature of any scene he had once +looked upon, escaping his diligent pencil. William Blake, a +hosier’s son, employed himself in drawing designs on the +backs of his father’s shop-bills, and making sketches on +the counter. Edward Bird, when a child only three or four +years old, would mount a chair and draw figures on the walls, +which he called French and English soldiers. A box of +colours was purchased for him, and his father, desirous of +turning his love of art to account, put him apprentice to a maker +of tea-trays! Out of this trade he gradually raised +himself, by study and labour, to the rank of a Royal +Academician.</p> + +<p>Hogarth, though a very dull boy at his lessons, took pleasure +in making drawings of the letters of the alphabet, and his school +exercises were more remarkable for the ornaments with which he +embellished them, than for the matter of the exercises +themselves. In the latter respect he was beaten by all the +blockheads of the school, but in his adornments he stood +alone. His father put him apprentice to a silversmith, +where he learnt to draw, and also to engrave spoons and forks +with crests and ciphers. From silver-chasing, he went on to +teach himself engraving on copper, principally griffins and +monsters of heraldry, in the course of which practice he became +ambitious to delineate the varieties of human character. +The singular excellence which he reached in this art, was mainly +the result of careful observation and study. He had the +gift, which he sedulously cultivated, of committing to memory the +precise features of any remarkable face, and afterwards +reproducing them on paper; but if any singularly fantastic form +or <i>outré</i> face came in his way, he would make a +sketch of it on the spot, upon his thumb-nail, and carry it home +to expand at his leisure. Everything fantastical and +original had a powerful attraction for him, and he wandered into +many out-of-the-way places for the purpose of meeting with +character. By this careful storing of his mind, he was +afterwards enabled to crowd an immense amount of thought and +treasured observation into his works. Hence it is that +Hogarth’s pictures are so truthful a memorial of the +character, the manners, and even the very thoughts of the times +in which he lived. True painting, he himself observed, can +only be learnt in one school, and that is kept by Nature. +But he was not a highly cultivated man, except in his own +walk. His school education had been of the slenderest kind, +scarcely even perfecting him in the art of spelling; his +self-culture did the rest. For a long time he was in very +straitened circumstances, but nevertheless worked on with a +cheerful heart. Poor though he was, he contrived to live +within his small means, and he boasted, with becoming pride, that +he was “a punctual paymaster.” When he had +conquered all his difficulties and become a famous and thriving +man, he loved to dwell upon his early labours and privations, and +to fight over again the battle which ended so honourably to him +as a man and so gloriously as an artist. “I remember +the time,” said he on one occasion, “when I have gone +moping into the city with scarce a shilling, but as soon as I +have received ten guineas there for a plate, I have returned +home, put on my sword, and sallied out with all the confidence of +a man who had thousands in his pockets.”</p> + +<p>“Industry and perseverance” was the motto of the +sculptor Banks, which he acted on himself, and strongly +recommended to others. His well-known kindness induced many +aspiring youths to call upon him and ask for his advice and +assistance; and it is related that one day a boy called at his +door to see him with this object, but the servant, angry at the +loud knock he had given, scolded him, and was about sending him +away, when Banks overhearing her, himself went out. The +little boy stood at the door with some drawings in his +hand. “What do you want with me?” asked the +sculptor. “I want, sir, if you please, to be admitted +to draw at the Academy.” Banks explained that he +himself could not procure his admission, but he asked to look at +the boy’s drawings. Examining them, he said, +“Time enough for the Academy, my little man! go +home—mind your schooling—try to make a better drawing +of the Apollo—and in a month come again and let me see +it.” The boy went home—sketched and worked with +redoubled diligence—and, at the end of the month, called +again on the sculptor. The drawing was better; but again +Banks sent him back, with good advice, to work and study. +In a week the boy was again at his door, his drawing much +improved; and Banks bid him be of good cheer, for if spared he +would distinguish himself. The boy was Mulready; and the +sculptor’s augury was amply fulfilled.</p> + +<p>The fame of Claude Lorraine is partly explained by his +indefatigable industry. Born at Champagne, in Lorraine, of +poor parents, he was first apprenticed to a pastrycook. His +brother, who was a wood-carver, afterwards took him into his shop +to learn that trade. Having there shown indications of +artistic skill, a travelling dealer persuaded the brother to +allow Claude to accompany him to Italy. He assented, and +the young man reached Rome, where he was shortly after engaged by +Agostino Tassi, the landscape painter, as his +house-servant. In that capacity Claude first learnt +landscape painting, and in course of time he began to produce +pictures. We next find him making the tour of Italy, +France, and Germany, occasionally resting by the way to paint +landscapes, and thereby replenish his purse. On returning +to Rome he found an increasing demand for his works, and his +reputation at length became European. He was unwearied in +the study of nature in her various aspects. It was his +practice to spend a great part of his time in closely copying +buildings, bits of ground, trees, leaves, and such like, which he +finished in detail, keeping the drawings by him in store for the +purpose of introducing them in his studied landscapes. He +also gave close attention to the sky, watching it for whole days +from morning till night, and noting the various changes +occasioned by the passing clouds and the increasing and waning +light. By this constant practice he acquired, although it +is said very slowly, such a mastery of hand and eye as eventually +secured for him the first rank among landscape painters.</p> + +<p>Turner, who has been styled “the English Claude,” +pursued a career of like laborious industry. He was +destined by his father for his own trade of a barber, which he +carried on in London, until one day the sketch which the boy had +made of a coat of arms on a silver salver having attracted the +notice of a customer whom his father was shaving, the latter was +urged to allow his son to follow his bias, and he was eventually +permitted to follow art as a profession. Like all young +artists, Turner had many difficulties to encounter, and they were +all the greater that his circumstances were so straitened. +But he was always willing to work, and to take pains with his +work, no matter how humble it might be. He was glad to hire +himself out at half-a-crown a night to wash in skies in Indian +ink upon other people’s drawings, getting his supper into +the bargain. Thus he earned money and acquired +expertness. Then he took to illustrating guide-books, +almanacs, and any sort of books that wanted cheap +frontispieces. “What could I have done better?” +said he afterwards; “it was first-rate +practice.” He did everything carefully and +conscientiously, never slurring over his work because he was +ill-remunerated for it. He aimed at learning as well as +living; always doing his best, and never leaving a drawing +without having made a step in advance upon his previous +work. A man who thus laboured was sure to do much; and his +growth in power and grasp of thought was, to use Ruskin’s +words, “as steady as the increasing light of +sunrise.” But Turner’s genius needs no +panegyric; his best monument is the noble gallery of pictures +bequeathed by him to the nation, which will ever be the most +lasting memorial of his fame.</p> + +<p>To reach Rome, the capital of the fine arts, is usually the +highest ambition of the art student. But the journey to +Rome is costly, and the student is often poor. With a will +resolute to overcome difficulties, Rome may however at last be +reached. Thus François Perrier, an early French +painter, in his eager desire to visit the Eternal City, consented +to act as guide to a blind vagrant. After long wanderings +he reached the Vatican, studied and became famous. Not less +enthusiasm was displayed by Jacques Callot in his determination +to visit Rome. Though opposed by his father in his wish to +be an artist, the boy would not be baulked, but fled from home to +make his way to Italy. Having set out without means, he was +soon reduced to great straits; but falling in with a band of +gipsies, he joined their company, and wandered about with them +from one fair to another, sharing in their numerous +adventures. During this remarkable journey Callot picked up +much of that extraordinary knowledge of figure, feature, and +character which he afterwards reproduced, sometimes in such +exaggerated forms, in his wonderful engravings.</p> + +<p>When Callot at length reached Florence, a gentleman, pleased +with his ingenious ardour, placed him with an artist to study; +but he was not satisfied to stop short of Rome, and we find him +shortly on his way thither. At Rome he made the +acquaintance of Porigi and Thomassin, who, on seeing his crayon +sketches, predicted for him a brilliant career as an +artist. But a friend of Callot’s family having +accidentally encountered him, took steps to compel the fugitive +to return home. By this time he had acquired such a love of +wandering that he could not rest; so he ran away a second time, +and a second time he was brought back by his elder brother, who +caught him at Turin. At last the father, seeing resistance +was in vain, gave his reluctant consent to Callot’s +prosecuting his studies at Rome. Thither he went +accordingly; and this time he remained, diligently studying +design and engraving for several years, under competent +masters. On his way back to France, he was encouraged by +Cosmo II. to remain at Florence, where he studied and worked for +several years more. On the death of his patron he returned +to his family at Nancy, where, by the use of his burin and +needle, he shortly acquired both wealth and fame. When +Nancy was taken by siege during the civil wars, Callot was +requested by Richelieu to make a design and engraving of the +event, but the artist would not commemorate the disaster which +had befallen his native place, and he refused point-blank. +Richelieu could not shake his resolution, and threw him into +prison. There Callot met with some of his old friends the +gipsies, who had relieved his wants on his first journey to +Rome. When Louis XIII. heard of his imprisonment, he not +only released him, but offered to grant him any favour he might +ask. Callot immediately requested that his old companions, +the gipsies, might be set free and permitted to beg in Paris +without molestation. This odd request was granted on +condition that Callot should engrave their portraits, and hence +his curious book of engravings entitled “The +Beggars.” Louis is said to have offered Callot a +pension of 3000 livres provided he would not leave Paris; but the +artist was now too much of a Bohemian, and prized his liberty too +highly to permit him to accept it; and he returned to Nancy, +where he worked till his death. His industry may be +inferred from the number of his engravings and etchings, of which +he left not fewer than 1600. He was especially fond of +grotesque subjects, which he treated with great skill; his free +etchings, touched with the graver, being executed with especial +delicacy and wonderful minuteness.</p> + +<p>Still more romantic and adventurous was the career of +Benvenuto Cellini, the marvellous gold worker, painter, sculptor, +engraver, engineer, and author. His life, as told by +himself, is one of the most extraordinary autobiographies ever +written. Giovanni Cellini, his father, was one of the Court +musicians to Lorenzo de Medici at Florence; and his highest +ambition concerning his son Benvenuto was that he should become +an expert player on the flute. But Giovanni having lost his +appointment, found it necessary to send his son to learn some +trade, and he was apprenticed to a goldsmith. The boy had +already displayed a love of drawing and of art; and, applying +himself to his business, he soon became a dexterous +workman. Having got mixed up in a quarrel with some of the +townspeople, he was banished for six months, during which period +he worked with a goldsmith at Sienna, gaining further experience +in jewellery and gold-working.</p> + +<p>His father still insisting on his becoming a flute-player, +Benvenuto continued to practise on the instrument, though he +detested it. His chief pleasure was in art, which he +pursued with enthusiasm. Returning to Florence, he +carefully studied the designs of Leonardo da Vinci and Michael +Angelo; and, still further to improve himself in gold-working, he +went on foot to Rome, where he met with a variety of +adventures. He returned to Florence with the reputation of +being a most expert worker in the precious metals, and his skill +was soon in great request. But being of an irascible +temper, he was constantly getting into scrapes, and was +frequently under the necessity of flying for his life. Thus +he fled from Florence in the disguise of a friar, again taking +refuge at Sienna, and afterwards at Rome.</p> + +<p>During his second residence in Rome, Cellini met with +extensive patronage, and he was taken into the Pope’s +service in the double capacity of goldsmith and musician. +He was constantly studying and improving himself by acquaintance +with the works of the best masters. He mounted jewels, +finished enamels, engraved seals, and designed and executed works +in gold, silver, and bronze, in such a style as to excel all +other artists. Whenever he heard of a goldsmith who was +famous in any particular branch, he immediately determined to +surpass him. Thus it was that he rivalled the medals of +one, the enamels of another, and the jewellery of a third; in +fact, there was not a branch of his business that he did not feel +impelled to excel in.</p> + +<p>Working in this spirit, it is not so wonderful that Cellini +should have been able to accomplish so much. He was a man +of indefatigable activity, and was constantly on the move. +At one time we find him at Florence, at another at Rome; then he +is at Mantua, at Rome, at Naples, and back to Florence again; +then at Venice, and in Paris, making all his long journeys on +horseback. He could not carry much luggage with him; so, +wherever he went, he usually began by making his own tools. +He not only designed his works, but executed them +himself,—hammered and carved, and cast and shaped them with +his own hands. Indeed, his works have the impress of genius +so clearly stamped upon them, that they could never have been +designed by one person, and executed by another. The +humblest article—a buckle for a lady’s girdle, a +seal, a locket, a brooch, a ring, or a button—became in his +hands a beautiful work of art.</p> + +<p>Cellini was remarkable for his readiness and dexterity in +handicraft. One day a surgeon entered the shop of Raffaello +del Moro, the goldsmith, to perform an operation on his +daughter’s hand. On looking at the surgeon’s +instruments, Cellini, who was present, found them rude and +clumsy, as they usually were in those days, and he asked the +surgeon to proceed no further with the operation for a quarter of +an hour. He then ran to his shop, and taking a piece of the +finest steel, wrought out of it a beautifully finished knife, +with which the operation was successfully performed.</p> + +<p>Among the statues executed by Cellini, the most important are +the silver figure of Jupiter, executed at Paris for Francis I., +and the Perseus, executed in bronze for the Grand Duke Cosmo of +Florence. He also executed statues in marble of Apollo, +Hyacinthus, Narcissus, and Neptune. The extraordinary +incidents connected with the casting of the Perseus were +peculiarly illustrative of the remarkable character of the +man.</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke having expressed a decided opinion that the +model, when shown to him in wax, could not possibly be cast in +bronze, Cellini was immediately stimulated by the predicted +impossibility, not only to attempt, but to do it. He first +made the clay model, baked it, and covered it with wax, which he +shaped into the perfect form of a statue. Then coating the +wax with a sort of earth, he baked the second covering, during +which the wax dissolved and escaped, leaving the space between +the two layers for the reception of the metal. To avoid +disturbance, the latter process was conducted in a pit dug +immediately under the furnace, from which the liquid metal was to +be introduced by pipes and apertures into the mould prepared for +it.</p> + +<p>Cellini had purchased and laid in several loads of pine-wood, +in anticipation of the process of casting, which now began. +The furnace was filled with pieces of brass and bronze, and the +fire was lit. The resinous pine-wood was soon in such a +furious blaze, that the shop took fire, and part of the roof was +burnt; while at the same time the wind blowing and the rain +filling on the furnace, kept down the heat, and prevented the +metals from melting. For hours Cellini struggled to keep up +the heat, continually throwing in more wood, until at length he +became so exhausted and ill, that he feared he should die before +the statue could be cast. He was forced to leave to his +assistants the pouring in of the metal when melted, and betook +himself to his bed. While those about him were condoling +with him in his distress, a workman suddenly entered the room, +lamenting that “Poor Benvenuto’s work was +irretrievably spoiled!” On hearing this, Cellini +immediately sprang from his bed and rushed to the workshop, where +he found the fire so much gone down that the metal had again +become hard.</p> + +<p>Sending across to a neighbour for a load of young oak which +had been more than a year in drying, he soon had the fire blazing +again and the metal melting and glittering. The wind was, +however, still blowing with fury, and the rain falling heavily; +so, to protect himself, Cellini had some tables with pieces of +tapestry and old clothes brought to him, behind which he went on +hurling the wood into the furnace. A mass of pewter was +thrown in upon the other metal, and by stirring, sometimes with +iron and sometimes with long poles, the whole soon became +completely melted. At this juncture, when the trying moment +was close at hand, a terrible noise as of a thunderbolt was +heard, and a glittering of fire flashed before Cellini’s +eyes. The cover of the furnace had burst, and the metal +began to flow! Finding that it did not run with the proper +velocity, Cellini rushed into the kitchen, bore away every piece +of copper and pewter that it contained—some two hundred +porringers, dishes, and kettles of different kinds—and +threw them into the furnace. Then at length the metal +flowed freely, and thus the splendid statue of Perseus was +cast.</p> + +<p>The divine fury of genius in which Cellini rushed to his +kitchen and stripped it of its utensils for the purposes of his +furnace, will remind the reader of the like act of Pallissy in +breaking up his furniture for the purpose of baking his +earthenware. Excepting, however, in their enthusiasm, no +two men could be less alike in character. Cellini was an +Ishmael against whom, according to his own account, every +man’s hand was turned. But about his extraordinary +skill as a workman, and his genius as an artist, there cannot be +two opinions.</p> + +<p>Much less turbulent was the career of Nicolas Poussin, a man +as pure and elevated in his ideas of art as he was in his daily +life, and distinguished alike for his vigour of intellect, his +rectitude of character, and his noble simplicity. He was +born in a very humble station, at Andeleys, near Rouen, where his +father kept a small school. The boy had the benefit of his +parent’s instruction, such as it was, but of that he is +said to have been somewhat negligent, preferring to spend his +time in covering his lesson-books and his slate with +drawings. A country painter, much pleased with his +sketches, besought his parents not to thwart him in his +tastes. The painter agreed to give Poussin lessons, and he +soon made such progress that his master had nothing more to teach +him. Becoming restless, and desirous of further improving +himself, Poussin, at the age of 18, set out for Paris, painting +signboards on his way for a maintenance.</p> + +<p>At Paris a new world of art opened before him, exciting his +wonder and stimulating his emulation. He worked diligently +in many studios, drawing, copying, and painting pictures. +After a time, he resolved, if possible, to visit Rome, and set +out on his journey; but he only succeeded in getting as far as +Florence, and again returned to Paris. A second attempt +which he made to reach Rome was even less successful; for this +time he only got as far as Lyons. He was, nevertheless, +careful to take advantage of all opportunities for improvement +which came in his way, and continued as sedulous as before in +studying and working.</p> + +<p>Thus twelve years passed, years of obscurity and toil, of +failures and disappointments, and probably of privations. +At length Poussin succeeded in reaching Rome. There he +diligently studied the old masters, and especially the ancient +statues, with whose perfection he was greatly impressed. +For some time he lived with the sculptor Duquesnoi, as poor as +himself, and assisted him in modelling figures after the +antique. With him he carefully measured some of the most +celebrated statues in Rome, more particularly the +‘Antinous:’ and it is supposed that this practice +exercised considerable influence on the formation of his future +style. At the same time he studied anatomy, practised +drawing from the life, and made a great store of sketches of +postures and attitudes of people whom he met, carefully reading +at his leisure such standard books on art as he could borrow from +his friends.</p> + +<p>During all this time he remained very poor, satisfied to be +continually improving himself. He was glad to sell his +pictures for whatever they would bring. One, of a prophet, +he sold for eight livres; and another, the ‘Plague of the +Philistines,’ he sold for 60 crowns—a picture +afterwards bought by Cardinal de Richelieu for a thousand. +To add to his troubles, he was stricken by a cruel malady, during +the helplessness occasioned by which the Chevalier del Posso +assisted him with money. For this gentleman Poussin +afterwards painted the ‘Rest in the Desert,’ a fine +picture, which far more than repaid the advances made during his +illness.</p> + +<p>The brave man went on toiling and learning through +suffering. Still aiming at higher things, he went to +Florence and Venice, enlarging the range of his studies. +The fruits of his conscientious labour at length appeared in the +series of great pictures which he now began to produce,—his +‘Death of Germanicus,’ followed by ‘Extreme +Unction,’ the ‘Testament of Eudamidas,’ the +‘Manna,’ and the ‘Abduction of the +Sabines.’</p> + +<p>The reputation of Poussin, however, grew but slowly. He +was of a retiring disposition and shunned society. People +gave him credit for being a thinker much more than a +painter. When not actually employed in painting, he took +long solitary walks in the country, meditating the designs of +future pictures. One of his few friends while at Rome was +Claude Lorraine, with whom he spent many hours at a time on the +terrace of La Trinité-du-Mont, conversing about art and +antiquarianism. The monotony and the quiet of Rome were +suited to his taste, and, provided he could earn a moderate +living by his brush, he had no wish to leave it.</p> + +<p>But his fame now extended beyond Rome, and repeated +invitations were sent him to return to Paris. He was +offered the appointment of principal painter to the King. +At first he hesitated; quoted the Italian proverb, <i>Chi sta +bene non si muove</i>; said he had lived fifteen years in Rome, +married a wife there, and looked forward to dying and being +buried there. Urged again, he consented, and returned to +Paris. But his appearance there awakened much professional +jealousy, and he soon wished himself back in Rome again. +While in Paris he painted some of his greatest works—his +‘Saint Xavier,’ the ‘Baptism,’ and the +‘Last Supper.’ He was kept constantly at +work. At first he did whatever he was asked to do, such as +designing frontispieces for the royal books, more particularly a +Bible and a Virgil, cartoons for the Louvre, and designs for +tapestry; but at length he expostulated:—“It is +impossible for me,” he said to M. de Chanteloup, “to +work at the same time at frontispieces for books, at a Virgin, at +a picture of the Congregation of St. Louis, at the various +designs for the gallery, and, finally, at designs for the royal +tapestry. I have only one pair of hands and a feeble head, +and can neither be helped nor can my labours be lightened by +another.”</p> + +<p>Annoyed by the enemies his success had provoked and whom he +was unable to conciliate, he determined, at the end of less than +two years’ labour in Paris, to return to Rome. Again +settled there in his humble dwelling on Mont Pincio, he employed +himself diligently in the practice of his art during the +remaining years of his life, living in great simplicity and +privacy. Though suffering much from the disease which +afflicted him, he solaced himself by study, always striving after +excellence. “In growing old,” he said, “I +feel myself becoming more and more inflamed with the desire of +surpassing myself and reaching the highest degree of +perfection.” Thus toiling, struggling, and suffering, +Poussin spent his later years. He had no children; his wife +died before him; all his friends were gone: so that in his old +age he was left absolutely alone in Rome, so full of tombs, and +died there in 1665, bequeathing to his relatives at Andeleys the +savings of his life, amounting to about 1000 crowns; and leaving +behind him, as a legacy to his race, the great works of his +genius.</p> + +<p>The career of Ary Scheffer furnishes one of the best examples +in modern times of a like high-minded devotion to art. Born +at Dordrecht, the son of a German artist, he early manifested an +aptitude for drawing and painting, which his parents +encouraged. His father dying while he was still young, his +mother resolved, though her means were but small, to remove the +family to Paris, in order that her son might obtain the best +opportunities for instruction. There young Scheffer was +placed with Guérin the painter. But his +mother’s means were too limited to permit him to devote +himself exclusively to study. She had sold the few jewels +she possessed, and refused herself every indulgence, in order to +forward the instruction of her other children. Under such +circumstances, it was natural that Ary should wish to help her; +and by the time he was eighteen years of age he began to paint +small pictures of simple subjects, which met with a ready sale at +moderate prices. He also practised portrait painting, at +the same time gathering experience and earning honest +money. He gradually improved in drawing, colouring, and +composition. The ‘Baptism’ marked a new epoch +in his career, and from that point he went on advancing, until +his fame culminated in his pictures illustrative of +‘Faust,’ his ‘Francisca de Rimini,’ +‘Christ the Consoler,’ the ‘Holy Women,’ +‘St. Monica and St. Augustin,’ and many other noble +works.</p> + +<p>“The amount of labour, thought, and attention,” +says Mrs. Grote, “which Scheffer brought to the production +of the ‘Francisca,’ must have been enormous. In +truth, his technical education having been so imperfect, he was +forced to climb the steep of art by drawing upon his own +resources, and thus, whilst his hand was at work, his mind was +engaged in meditation. He had to try various processes of +handling, and experiments in colouring; to paint and repaint, +with tedious and unremitting assiduity. But Nature had +endowed him with that which proved in some sort an equivalent for +shortcomings of a professional kind. His own elevation of +character, and his profound sensibility, aided him in acting upon +the feelings of others through the medium of the pencil.” +<a name="citation173"></a><a href="#footnote173" +class="citation">[173]</a></p> + +<p>One of the artists whom Scheffer most admired was Flaxman; and +he once said to a friend, “If I have unconsciously borrowed +from any one in the design of the ‘Francisca,’ it +must have been from something I had seen among Flaxman’s +drawings.” John Flaxman was the son of a humble +seller of plaster casts in New Street, Covent Garden. When +a child, he was such an invalid that it was his custom to sit +behind his father’s shop counter propped by pillows, +amusing himself with drawing and reading. A benevolent +clergyman, the Rev. Mr. Matthews, calling at the shop one day, +saw the boy trying to read a book, and on inquiring what it was, +found it to be a Cornelius Nepos, which his father had picked up +for a few pence at a bookstall. The gentleman, after some +conversation with the boy, said that was not the proper book for +him to read, but that he would bring him one. The next day +he called with translations of Homer and ‘Don +Quixote,’ which the boy proceeded to read with great +avidity. His mind was soon filled with the heroism which +breathed through the pages of the former, and, with the stucco +Ajaxes and Achilleses about him, ranged along the shop shelves, +the ambition took possession of him, that he too would design and +embody in poetic forms those majestic heroes.</p> + +<p>Like all youthful efforts, his first designs were crude. +The proud father one day showed some of them to Roubilliac the +sculptor, who turned from them with a contemptuous +“pshaw!” But the boy had the right stuff in +him; he had industry and patience; and he continued to labour +incessantly at his books and drawings. He then tried his +young powers in modelling figures in plaster of Paris, wax, and +clay. Some of these early works are still preserved, not +because of their merit, but because they are curious as the first +healthy efforts of patient genius. It was long before the +boy could walk, and he only learnt to do so by hobbling along +upon crutches. At length he became strong enough to walk +without them.</p> + +<p>The kind Mr. Matthews invited him to his house, where his wife +explained Homer and Milton to him. They helped him also in +his self-culture—giving him lessons in Greek and Latin, the +study of which he prosecuted at home. By dint of patience +and perseverance, his drawing improved so much that he obtained a +commission from a lady, to execute six original drawings in black +chalk of subjects in Homer. His first commission! +What an event in the artist’s life! A surgeon’s +first fee, a lawyer’s first retainer, a legislator’s +first speech, a singer’s first appearance behind the +foot-lights, an author’s first book, are not any of them +more full of interest to the aspirant for fame than the +artist’s first commission. The boy at once proceeded +to execute the order, and he was both well praised and well paid +for his work.</p> + +<p>At fifteen Flaxman entered a pupil at the Royal Academy. +Notwithstanding his retiring disposition, he soon became known +among the students, and great things were expected of him. +Nor were their expectations disappointed: in his fifteenth year +he gained the silver prize, and next year he became a candidate +for the gold one. Everybody prophesied that he would carry +off the medal, for there was none who surpassed him in ability +and industry. Yet he lost it, and the gold medal was +adjudged to a pupil who was not afterwards heard of. This +failure on the part of the youth was really of service to him; +for defeats do not long cast down the resolute-hearted, but only +serve to call forth their real powers. “Give me +time,” said he to his father, “and I will yet produce +works that the Academy will be proud to recognise.” +He redoubled his efforts, spared no pains, designed and modelled +incessantly, and made steady if not rapid progress. But +meanwhile poverty threatened his father’s household; the +plaster-cast trade yielded a very bare living; and young Flaxman, +with resolute self-denial, curtailed his hours of study, and +devoted himself to helping his father in the humble details of +his business. He laid aside his Homer to take up the +plaster-trowel. He was willing to work in the humblest +department of the trade so that his father’s family might +be supported, and the wolf kept from the door. To this +drudgery of his art he served a long apprenticeship; but it did +him good. It familiarised him with steady work, and +cultivated in him the spirit of patience. The discipline +may have been hard, but it was wholesome.</p> + +<p>Happily, young Flaxman’s skill in design had reached the +knowledge of Josiah Wedgwood, who sought him out for the purpose +of employing him to design improved patterns of china and +earthenware. It may seem a humble department of art for +such a genius as Flaxman to work in; but it really was not +so. An artist may be labouring truly in his vocation while +designing a common teapot or water-jug. Articles in daily +use amongst the people, which are before their eyes at every +meal, may be made the vehicles of education to all, and minister +to their highest culture. The most ambitious artist way +thus confer a greater practical benefit on his countrymen than by +executing an elaborate work which he may sell for thousands of +pounds to be placed in some wealthy man’s gallery where it +is hidden away from public sight. Before Wedgwood’s +time the designs which figured upon our china and stoneware were +hideous both in drawing and execution, and he determined to +improve both. Flaxman did his best to carry out the +manufacturer’s views. He supplied him from time to +time with models and designs of various pieces of earthenware, +the subjects of which were principally from ancient verse and +history. Many of them are still in existence, and some are +equal in beauty and simplicity to his after designs for +marble. The celebrated Etruscan vases, specimens of which +were to be found in public museums and in the cabinets of the +curious, furnished him with the best examples of form, and these +he embellished with his own elegant devices. Stuart’s +‘Athens,’ then recently published, furnished him with +specimens of the purest-shaped Greek utensils; of these he +adopted the best, and worked them into new shapes of elegance and +beauty. Flaxman then saw that he was labouring in a great +work—no less than the promotion of popular education; and +he was proud, in after life, to allude to his early labours in +this walk, by which he was enabled at the same time to cultivate +his love of the beautiful, to diffuse a taste for art among the +people, and to replenish his own purse, while he promoted the +prosperity of his friend and benefactor.</p> + +<p>At length, in the year 1782, when twenty-seven years of age, +he quitted his father’s roof and rented a small house and +studio in Wardour Street, Soho; and what was more, he +married—Ann Denman was the name of his wife—and a +cheerful, bright-souled, noble woman she was. He believed +that in marrying her he should be able to work with an intenser +spirit; for, like him, she had a taste for poetry and art; and +besides was an enthusiastic admirer of her husband’s +genius. Yet when Sir Joshua Reynolds—himself a +bachelor—met Flaxman shortly after his marriage, he said to +him, “So, Flaxman, I am told you are married; if so, sir, I +tell you you are ruined for an artist.” Flaxman went +straight home, sat down beside his wife, took her hand in his, +and said, “Ann, I am ruined for an artist.” +“How so, John? How has it happened? and who has done +it?” “It happened,” he replied, “in +the church, and Ann Denman has done it.” He then told +her of Sir Joshua’s remark—whose opinion was well +known, and had often been expressed, that if students would excel +they must bring the whole powers of their mind to bear upon their +art, from the moment they rose until they went to bed; and also, +that no man could be a <i>great</i> artist unless he studied the +grand works of Raffaelle, Michael Angelo, and others, at Rome and +Florence. “And I,” said Flaxman, drawing up his +little figure to its full height, “<i>I</i> would be a +great artist.” “And a great artist you shall +be,” said his wife, “and visit Rome too, if that be +really necessary to make you great.” “But +how?” asked Flaxman. “<i>Work and +economise</i>,” rejoined the brave wife; “I will +never have it said that Ann Denman ruined John Flaxman for an +artist.” And so it was determined by the pair that +the journey to Rome was to be made when their means would +admit. “I will go to Rome,” said Flaxman, +“and show the President that wedlock is for a man’s +good rather than his harm; and you, Ann, shall accompany +me.”</p> + +<p>Patiently and happily the affectionate couple plodded on +during five years in their humble little home in Wardour Street, +always with the long journey to Rome before them. It was +never lost sight of for a moment, and not a penny was uselessly +spent that could be saved towards the necessary expenses. +They said no word to any one about their project; solicited no +aid from the Academy; but trusted only to their own patient +labour and love to pursue and achieve their object. During +this time Flaxman exhibited very few works. He could not +afford marble to experiment in original designs; but he obtained +frequent commissions for monuments, by the profits of which he +maintained himself. He still worked for Wedgwood, who was a +prompt paymaster; and, on the whole, he was thriving, happy, and +hopeful. His local respectability was even such as to bring +local honours and local work upon him; for he was elected by the +ratepayers to collect the watch-rate for the Parish of St. Anne, +when he might be seen going about with an ink-bottle suspended +from his button-hole, collecting the money.</p> + +<p>At length Flaxman and his wife having accumulated a sufficient +store of savings, set out for Rome. Arrived there, he +applied himself diligently to study, maintaining himself, like +other poor artists, by making copies from the antique. +English visitors sought his studio, and gave him commissions; and +it was then that he composed his beautiful designs illustrative +of Homer, Æschylus, and Dante. The price paid for +them was moderate—only fifteen shillings a-piece; but +Flaxman worked for art as well as money; and the beauty of the +designs brought him other friends and patrons. He executed +Cupid and Aurora for the munificent Thomas Hope, and the Fury of +Athamas for the Earl of Bristol. He then prepared to return +to England, his taste improved and cultivated by careful study; +but before he left Italy, the Academies of Florence and Carrara +recognised his merit by electing him a member.</p> + +<p>His fame had preceded him to London, where he soon found +abundant employment. While at Rome he had been commissioned +to execute his famous monument in memory of Lord Mansfield, and +it was erected in the north transept of Westminster Abbey shortly +after his return. It stands there in majestic grandeur, a +monument to the genius of Flaxman himself—calm, simple, and +severe. No wonder that Banks, the sculptor, then in the +heyday of his fame, exclaimed when he saw it, “This little +man cuts us all out!”</p> + +<p>When the members of the Royal Academy heard of Flaxman’s +return, and especially when they had an opportunity of seeing and +admiring his portrait-statue of Mansfield, they were eager to +have him enrolled among their number. He allowed his name +to be proposed in the candidates’ list of associates, and +was immediately elected. Shortly after, he appeared in an +entirely new character. The little boy who had begun his +studies behind the plaster-cast-seller’s shop-counter in +New Street, Covent Garden, was now a man of high intellect and +recognised supremacy in art, to instruct students, in the +character of Professor of Sculpture to the Royal Academy! +And no man better deserved to fill that distinguished office; for +none is so able to instruct others as he who, for himself and by +his own efforts, has learnt to grapple with and overcome +difficulties.</p> + +<p>After a long, peaceful, and happy life, Flaxman found himself +growing old. The loss which he sustained by the death of +his affectionate wife Ann, was a severe shock to him; but he +survived her several years, during which he executed his +celebrated “Shield of Achilles,” and his noble +“Archangel Michael vanquishing Satan,”—perhaps +his two greatest works.</p> + +<p>Chantrey was a more robust man;—somewhat rough, but +hearty in his demeanour; proud of his successful struggle with +the difficulties which beset him in early life; and, above all, +proud of his independence. He was born a poor man’s +child, at Norton, near Sheffield. His father dying when he +was a mere boy, his mother married again. Young Chantrey +used to drive an ass laden with milk-cans across its back into +the neighbouring town of Sheffield, and there serve his +mother’s customers with milk. Such was the humble +beginning of his industrial career; and it was by his own +strength that he rose from that position, and achieved the +highest eminence as an artist. Not taking kindly to his +step-father, the boy was sent to trade, and was first placed with +a grocer in Sheffield. The business was very distasteful to +him; but, passing a carver’s shop window one day, his eye +was attracted by the glittering articles it contained, and, +charmed with the idea of being a carver, he begged to be released +from the grocery business with that object. His friends +consented, and he was bound apprentice to the carver and gilder +for seven years. His new master, besides being a carver in +wood, was also a dealer in prints and plaster models; and +Chantrey at once set about imitating both, studying with great +industry and energy. All his spare hours were devoted to +drawing, modelling, and self-improvement, and he often carried +his labours far into the night. Before his apprenticeship +was out—at the ace of twenty-one—he paid over to his +master the whole wealth which he was able to muster—a sum +of 50<i>l.</i>—to cancel his indentures, determined to +devote himself to the career of an artist. He then made the +best of his way to London, and with characteristic good sense, +sought employment as an assistant carver, studying painting and +modelling at his bye-hours. Among the jobs on which he was +first employed as a journeyman carver, was the decoration of the +dining-room of Mr. Rogers, the poet—a room in which he was +in after years a welcome visitor; and he usually took pleasure in +pointing out his early handywork to the guests whom he met at his +friend’s table.</p> + +<p>Returning to Sheffield on a professional visit, he advertised +himself in the local papers as a painter of portraits in crayons +and miniatures, and also in oil. For his first crayon +portrait he was paid a guinea by a cutler; and for a portrait in +oil, a confectioner paid him as much as 5<i>l.</i> and a pair of +top boots! Chantrey was soon in London again to study at +the Royal Academy; and next time he returned to Sheffield he +advertised himself as ready to model plaster busts of his +townsmen, as well as paint portraits of them. He was even +selected to design a monument to a deceased vicar of the town, +and executed it to the general satisfaction. When in London +he used a room over a stable as a studio, and there he modelled +his first original work for exhibition. It was a gigantic +head of Satan. Towards the close of Chantrey’s life, +a friend passing through his studio was struck by this model +lying in a corner. “That head,” said the +sculptor, “was the first thing that I did after I came to +London. I worked at it in a garret with a paper cap on my +head; and as I could then afford only one candle, I stuck that +one in my cap that it might move along with me, and give me light +whichever way I turned.” Flaxman saw and admired this +head at the Academy Exhibition, and recommended Chantrey for the +execution of the busts of four admirals, required for the Naval +Asylum at Greenwich. This commission led to others, and +painting was given up. But for eight years before, he had +not earned 5<i>l.</i> by his modelling. His famous head of +Horne Tooke was such a success that, according to his own +account, it brought him commissions amounting to +12,000<i>l.</i></p> + +<p>Chantrey had now succeeded, but he had worked hard, and fairly +earned his good fortune. He was selected from amongst +sixteen competitors to execute the statue of George III. for the +city of London. A few years later, he produced the +exquisite monument of the Sleeping Children, now in Lichfield +Cathedral,—a work of great tenderness and beauty; and +thenceforward his career was one of increasing honour, fame, and +prosperity. His patience, industry, and steady perseverance +were the means by which he achieved his greatness. Nature +endowed him with genius, and his sound sense enabled him to +employ the precious gift as a blessing. He was prudent and +shrewd, like the men amongst whom he was born; the pocket-book +which accompanied him on his Italian tour containing mingled +notes on art, records of daily expenses, and the current prices +of marble. His tastes were simple, and he made his finest +subjects great by the mere force of simplicity. His statue +of Watt, in Handsworth church, seems to us the very consummation +of art; yet it is perfectly artless and simple. His +generosity to brother artists in need was splendid, but quiet and +unostentatious. He left the principal part of his fortune +to the Royal Academy for the promotion of British art.</p> + +<p>The same honest and persistent industry was throughout +distinctive of the career of David Wilkie. The son of a +Scotch minister, he gave early indications of an artistic turn; +and though he was a negligent and inapt scholar, he was a +sedulous drawer of faces and figures. A silent boy, he +already displayed that quiet concentrated energy of character +which distinguished him through life. He was always on the +look-out for an opportunity to draw,—and the walls of the +manse, or the smooth sand by the river side, were alike +convenient for his purpose. Any sort of tool would serve +him; like Giotto, he found a pencil in a burnt stick, a prepared +canvas in any smooth stone, and the subject for a picture in +every ragged mendicant he met. When he visited a house, he +generally left his mark on the walls as an indication of his +presence, sometimes to the disgust of cleanly housewives. +In short, notwithstanding the aversion of his father, the +minister, to the “sinful” profession of painting, +Wilkie’s strong propensity was not to be thwarted, and he +became an artist, working his way manfully up the steep of +difficulty. Though rejected on his first application as a +candidate for admission to the Scottish Academy, at Edinburgh, on +account of the rudeness and inaccuracy of his introductory +specimens, he persevered in producing better, until he was +admitted. But his progress was slow. He applied +himself diligently to the drawing of the human figure, and held +on with the determination to succeed, as if with a resolute +confidence in the result. He displayed none of the +eccentric humour and fitful application of many youths who +conceive themselves geniuses, but kept up the routine of steady +application to such an extent that he himself was afterwards +accustomed to attribute his success to his dogged perseverance +rather than to any higher innate power. “The single +element,” he said, “in all the progressive movements +of my pencil was persevering industry.” At Edinburgh +he gained a few premiums, thought of turning his attention to +portrait painting, with a view to its higher and more certain +remuneration, but eventually went boldly into the line in which +he earned his fame,—and painted his Pitlessie Fair. +What was bolder still, he determined to proceed to London, on +account of its presenting so much wider a field for study and +work; and the poor Scotch lad arrived in town, and painted his +Village Politicians while living in a humble lodging on eighteen +shillings a week.</p> + +<p>Notwithstanding the success of this picture, and the +commissions which followed it, Wilkie long continued poor. +The prices which his works realized were not great, for he +bestowed upon them so much time and labour, that his earnings +continued comparatively small for many years. Every picture +was carefully studied and elaborated beforehand; nothing was +struck off at a heat; many occupied him for years—touching, +retouching, and improving them until they finally passed out of +his hands. As with Reynolds, his motto was “Work! +work! work!” and, like him, he expressed great dislike for +talking artists. Talkers may sow, but the silent +reap. “Let us be <i>doing</i> something,” was +his oblique mode of rebuking the loquacious and admonishing the +idle. He once related to his friend Constable that when he +studied at the Scottish Academy, Graham, the master of it, was +accustomed to say to the students, in the words of Reynolds, +“If you have genius, industry will improve it; if you have +none, industry will supply its place.” +“So,” said Wilkie, “I was determined to be very +industrious, for I knew I had no genius.” He also +told Constable that when Linnell and Burnett, his fellow-students +in London, were talking about art, he always contrived to get as +close to them as he could to hear all they said, +“for,” said he, “they know a great deal, and I +know very little.” This was said with perfect +sincerity, for Wilkie was habitually modest. One of the +first things that he did with the sum of thirty pounds which he +obtained from Lord Mansfield for his Village Politicians, was to +buy a present—of bonnets, shawls, and dresses—for his +mother and sister at home, though but little able to afford it at +the time. Wilkie’s early poverty had trained him in +habits of strict economy, which were, however, consistent with a +noble liberality, as appears from sundry passages in the +Autobiography of Abraham Raimbach the engraver.</p> + +<p>William Etty was another notable instance of unflagging +industry and indomitable perseverance in art. His father +was a ginger-bread and spicemaker at York, and his mother—a +woman of considerable force and originality of +character—was the daughter of a ropemaker. The boy +early displayed a love of drawing, covering walls, floors, and +tables with specimens of his skill; his first crayon being a +farthing’s worth of chalk, and this giving place to a piece +of coal or a bit of charred stick. His mother, knowing +nothing of art, put the boy apprentice to a trade—that of a +printer. But in his leisure hours he went on with the +practice of drawing; and when his time was out he determined to +follow his bent—he would be a painter and nothing +else. Fortunately his uncle and elder brother were able and +willing to help him on in his new career, and they provided him +with the means of entering as pupil at the Royal Academy. +We observe, from Leslie’s Autobiography, that Etty was +looked upon by his fellow students as a worthy but dull, plodding +person, who would never distinguish himself. But he had in +him the divine faculty of work, and diligently plodded his way +upward to eminence in the highest walks of art.</p> + +<p>Many artists have had to encounter privations which have tried +their courage and endurance to the utmost before they +succeeded. What number may have sunk under them we can +never know. Martin encountered difficulties in the course +of his career such as perhaps fall to the lot of few. More +than once he found himself on the verge of starvation while +engaged on his first great picture. It is related of him +that on one occasion he found himself reduced to his last +shilling—a <i>bright</i> shilling—which he had kept +because of its very brightness, but at length he found it +necessary to exchange it for bread. He went to a +baker’s shop, bought a loaf, and was taking it away, when +the baker snatched it from him, and tossed back the shilling to +the starving painter. The bright shilling had failed him in +his hour of need—it was a bad one! Returning to his +lodgings, he rummaged his trunk for some remaining crust to +satisfy his hunger. Upheld throughout by the victorious +power of enthusiasm, he pursued his design with unsubdued +energy. He had the courage to work on and to wait; and +when, a few days after, he found an opportunity to exhibit his +picture, he was from that time famous. Like many other +great artists, his life proves that, in despite of outward +circumstances, genius, aided by industry, will be its own +protector, and that fame, though she comes late, will never +ultimately refuse her favours to real merit.</p> + +<p>The most careful discipline and training after academic +methods will fail in making an artist, unless he himself take an +active part in the work. Like every highly cultivated man, +he must be mainly self-educated. When Pugin, who was +brought up in his father’s office, had learnt all that he +could learn of architecture according to the usual formulas, he +still found that he had learned but little; and that he must +begin at the beginning, and pass through the discipline of +labour. Young Pugin accordingly hired himself out as a +common carpenter at Covent Garden Theatre—first working +under the stage, then behind the flys, then upon the stage +itself. He thus acquired a familiarity with work, and +cultivated an architectural taste, to which the diversity of the +mechanical employment about a large operatic establishment is +peculiarly favourable. When the theatre closed for the +season, he worked a sailing-ship between London and some of the +French ports, carrying on at the same time a profitable +trade. At every opportunity he would land and make drawings +of any old building, and especially of any ecclesiastical +structure which fell in his way. Afterwards he would make +special journeys to the Continent for the same purpose, and +returned home laden with drawings. Thus he plodded and +laboured on, making sure of the excellence and distinction which +he eventually achieved.</p> + +<p>A similar illustration of plodding industry in the same walk +is presented in the career of George Kemp, the architect of the +beautiful Scott Monument at Edinburgh. He was the son of a +poor shepherd, who pursued his calling on the southern slope of +the Pentland Hills. Amidst that pastoral solitude the boy +had no opportunity of enjoying the contemplation of works of +art. It happened, however, that in his tenth year he was +sent on a message to Roslin, by the farmer for whom his father +herded sheep, and the sight of the beautiful castle and chapel +there seems to have made a vivid and enduring impression on his +mind. Probably to enable him to indulge his love of +architectural construction, the boy besought his father to let +him be a joiner; and he was accordingly put apprentice to a +neighbouring village carpenter. Having served his time, he +went to Galashiels to seek work. As he was plodding along +the valley of the Tweed with his tools upon his back, a carriage +overtook him near Elibank Tower; and the coachman, doubtless at +the suggestion of his master, who was seated inside, having asked +the youth how far he had to walk, and learning that he was on his +way to Galashiels, invited him to mount the box beside him, and +thus to ride thither. It turned out that the kindly +gentleman inside was no other than Sir Walter Scott, then +travelling on his official duty as Sheriff of Selkirkshire. +Whilst working at Galashiels, Kemp had frequent opportunities of +visiting Melrose, Dryburgh, and Jedburgh Abbeys, which he studied +carefully. Inspired by his love of architecture, he worked +his way as a carpenter over the greater part of the north of +England, never omitting an opportunity of inspecting and making +sketches of any fine Gothic building. On one occasion, when +working in Lancashire, he walked fifty miles to York, spent a +week in carefully examining the Minster, and returned in like +manner on foot. We next find him in Glasgow, where he +remained four years, studying the fine cathedral there during his +spare time. He returned to England again, this time working +his way further south; studying Canterbury, Winchester, Tintern, +and other well-known structures. In 1824 he formed the +design of travelling over Europe with the same object, supporting +himself by his trade. Reaching Boulogne, he proceeded by +Abbeville and Beauvais to Paris, spending a few weeks making +drawings and studies at each place. His skill as a +mechanic, and especially his knowledge of mill-work, readily +secured him employment wherever he went; and he usually chose the +site of his employment in the neighbourhood of some fine old +Gothic structure, in studying which he occupied his +leisure. After a year’s working, travel, and study +abroad, he returned to Scotland. He continued his studies, +and became a proficient in drawing and perspective: Melrose was +his favourite ruin; and he produced several elaborate drawings of +the building, one of which, exhibiting it in a +“restored” state, was afterwards engraved. He +also obtained employment as a modeller of architectural designs; +and made drawings for a work begun by an Edinburgh engraver, +after the plan of Britton’s ‘Cathedral +Antiquities.’ This was a task congenial to his +tastes, and he laboured at it with an enthusiasm which ensured +its rapid advance; walking on foot for the purpose over half +Scotland, and living as an ordinary mechanic, whilst executing +drawings which would have done credit to the best masters in the +art. The projector of the work having died suddenly, the +publication was however stopped, and Kemp sought other +employment. Few knew of the genius of this man—for he +was exceedingly taciturn and habitually modest—when the +Committee of the Scott Monument offered a prize for the best +design. The competitors were numerous—including some +of the greatest names in classical architecture; but the design +unanimously selected was that of George Kemp, who was working at +Kilwinning Abbey in Ayrshire, many miles off, when the letter +reached him intimating the decision of the committee. Poor +Kemp! Shortly after this event he met an untimely death, +and did not live to see the first result of his indefatigable +industry and self-culture embodied in stone,—one of the +most beautiful and appropriate memorials ever erected to literary +genius.</p> + +<p>John Gibson was another artist full of a genuine enthusiasm +and love for his art, which placed him high above those sordid +temptations which urge meaner natures to make time the measure of +profit. He was born at Gyffn, near Conway, in North +Wales—the son of a gardener. He early showed +indications of his talent by the carvings in wood which he made +by means of a common pocket knife; and his father, noting the +direction of his talent, sent him to Liverpool and bound him +apprentice to a cabinet-maker and wood-carver. He rapidly +improved at his trade, and some of his carvings were much +admired. He was thus naturally led to sculpture, and when +eighteen years old he modelled a small figure of Time in wax, +which attracted considerable notice. The Messrs. Franceys, +sculptors, of Liverpool, having purchased the boy’s +indentures, took him as their apprentice for six years, during +which his genius displayed itself in many original works. +From thence he proceeded to London, and afterwards to Rome; and +his fame became European.</p> + +<p>Robert Thorburn, the Royal Academician, like John Gibson, was +born of poor parents. His father was a shoe-maker at +Dumfries. Besides Robert there were two other sons; one of +whom is a skilful carver in wood. One day a lady called at +the shoemaker’s and found Robert, then a mere boy, engaged +in drawing upon a stool which served him for a table. She +examined his work, and observing his abilities, interested +herself in obtaining for him some employment in drawing, and +enlisted in his behalf the services of others who could assist +him in prosecuting the study of art. The boy was diligent, +pains-taking, staid, and silent, mixing little with his +companions, and forming but few intimacies. About the year +1830, some gentlemen of the town provided him with the means of +proceeding to Edinburgh, where he was admitted a student at the +Scottish Academy. There he had the advantage of studying +under competent masters, and the progress which he made was +rapid. From Edinburgh he removed to London, where, we +understand, he had the advantage of being introduced to notice +under the patronage of the Duke of Buccleuch. We need +scarcely say, however, that of whatever use patronage may have +been to Thorburn in giving him an introduction to the best +circles, patronage of no kind could have made him the great +artist that he unquestionably is, without native genius and +diligent application.</p> + +<p>Noel Paton, the well-known painter, began his artistic career +at Dunfermline and Paisley, as a drawer of patterns for +table-cloths and muslin embroidered by hand; meanwhile working +diligently at higher subjects, including the drawing of the human +figure. He was, like Turner, ready to turn his hand to any +kind of work, and in 1840, when a mere youth, we find him +engaged, among his other labours, in illustrating the +‘Renfrewshire Annual.’ He worked his way step +by step, slowly yet surely; but he remained unknown until the +exhibition of the prize cartoons painted for the houses of +Parliament, when his picture of the Spirit of Religion (for which +he obtained one of the first prizes) revealed him to the world as +a genuine artist; and the works which he has since +exhibited—such as the ‘Reconciliation of Oberon and +Titania,’ ‘Home,’ and ‘The bluidy +Tryste’—have shown a steady advance in artistic power +and culture.</p> + +<p>Another striking exemplification of perseverance and industry +in the cultivation of art in humble life is presented in the +career of James Sharples, a working blacksmith at +Blackburn. He was born at Wakefield in Yorkshire, in 1825, +one of a family of thirteen children. His father was a +working ironfounder, and removed to Bury to follow his +business. The boys received no school education, but were +all sent to work as soon as they were able; and at about ten +James was placed in a foundry, where he was employed for about +two years as smithy-boy. After that he was sent into the +engine-shop where his father worked as engine-smith. The +boy’s employment was to heat and carry rivets for the +boiler-makers. Though his hours of labour were very +long—often from six in the morning until eight at +night—his father contrived to give him some little teaching +after working hours; and it was thus that he partially learned +his letters. An incident occurred in the course of his +employment among the boiler-makers, which first awakened in him +the desire to learn drawing. He had occasionally been +employed by the foreman to hold the chalked line with which he +made the designs of boilers upon the floor of the workshop; and +on such occasions the foreman was accustomed to hold the line, +and direct the boy to make the necessary dimensions. James +soon became so expert at this as to be of considerable service to +the foreman; and at his leisure hours at home his great delight +was to practise drawing designs of boilers upon his +mother’s floor. On one occasion, when a female +relative was expected from Manchester to pay the family a visit, +and the house had been made as decent as possible for her +reception, the boy, on coming in from the foundry in the evening, +began his usual operations upon the floor. He had proceeded +some way with his design of a large boiler in chalk, when his +mother arrived with the visitor, and to her dismay found the boy +unwashed and the floor chalked all over. The relative, +however, professed to be pleased with the boy’s industry, +praised his design, and recommended his mother to provide +“the little sweep,” as she called him, with paper and +pencils.</p> + +<p>Encouraged by his elder brother, he began to practise figure +and landscape drawing, making copies of lithographs, but as yet +without any knowledge of the rules of perspective and the +principles of light and shade. He worked on, however, and +gradually acquired expertness in copying. At sixteen, he +entered the Bury Mechanic’s Institution in order to attend +the drawing class, taught by an amateur who followed the trade of +a barber. There he had a lesson a week during three +months. The teacher recommended him to obtain from the +library Burnet’s ‘Practical Treatise on +Painting;’ but as he could not yet read with ease, he was +under the necessity of getting his mother, and sometimes his +elder brother, to read passages from the book for him while he +sat by and listened. Feeling hampered by his ignorance of +the art of reading, and eager to master the contents of +Burnet’s book, he ceased attending the drawing class at the +Institute after the first quarter, and devoted himself to +learning reading and writing at home. In this he soon +succeeded; and when he again entered the Institute and took out +‘Burnet’ a second time, he was not only able to read +it, but to make written extracts for further use. So +ardently did he study the volume, that he used to rise at four +o’clock in the morning to read it and copy out passages; +after which he went to the foundry at six, worked until six and +sometimes eight in the evening; and returned home to enter with +fresh zest upon the study of Burnet, which he continued often +until a late hour. Parts of his nights were also occupied +in drawing and making copies of drawings. On one of +these—a copy of Leonardo da Vinci’s “Last +Supper”—he spent an entire night. He went to +bed indeed, but his mind was so engrossed with the subject that +he could not sleep, and rose again to resume his pencil.</p> + +<p>He next proceeded to try his hand at painting in oil, for +which purpose he procured some canvas from a draper, stretched it +on a frame, coated it over with white lead, and began painting on +it with colours bought from a house-painter. But his work +proved a total failure; for the canvas was rough and knotty, and +the paint would not dry. In his extremity he applied to his +old teacher, the barber, from whom he first learnt that prepared +canvas was to be had, and that there were colours and varnishes +made for the special purpose of oil-painting. As soon +therefore, as his means would allow, he bought a small stock of +the necessary articles and began afresh,—his amateur master +showing him how to paint; and the pupil succeeded so well that he +excelled the master’s copy. His first picture was a +copy from an engraving called “Sheep-shearing,” and +was afterwards sold by him for half-a-crown. Aided by a +shilling Guide to Oil-painting, he went on working at his leisure +hours, and gradually acquired a better knowledge of his +materials. He made his own easel and palette, +palette-knife, and paint-chest; he bought his paint, brushes, and +canvas, as he could raise the money by working over-time. +This was the slender fund which his parents consented to allow +him for the purpose; the burden of supporting a very large family +precluding them from doing more. Often he would walk to +Manchester and back in the evenings to buy two or three +shillings’ worth of paint and canvas, returning almost at +midnight, after his eighteen miles’ walk, sometimes wet +through and completely exhausted, but borne up throughout by his +inexhaustible hope and invincible determination. The +further progress of the self-taught artist is best narrated in +his own words, as communicated by him in a letter to the +author:—</p> + +<p>“The next pictures I painted,” he says, +“were a Landscape by Moonlight, a Fruitpiece, and one or +two others; after which I conceived the idea of painting +‘The Forge.’ I had for some time thought about +it, but had not attempted to embody the conception in a +drawing. I now, however, made a sketch of the subject upon +paper, and then proceeded to paint it on canvas. The +picture simply represents the interior of a large workshop such +as I have been accustomed to work in, although not of any +particular shop. It is, therefore, to this extent, an +original conception. Having made an outline of the subject, +I found that, before I could proceed with it successfully, a +knowledge of anatomy was indispensable to enable me accurately to +delineate the muscles of the figures. My brother Peter came +to my assistance at this juncture, and kindly purchased for me +Flaxman’s ‘Anatomical studies,’—a work +altogether beyond my means at the time, for it cost twenty-four +shillings. This book I looked upon as a great treasure, and +I studied it laboriously, rising at three o’clock in the +morning to draw after it, and occasionally getting my brother +Peter to stand for me as a model at that untimely hour. +Although I gradually improved myself by this practice, it was +some time before I felt sufficient confidence to go on with my +picture. I also felt hampered by my want of knowledge of +perspective, which I endeavoured to remedy by carefully studying +Brook Taylor’s ‘Principles;’ and shortly after +I resumed my painting. While engaged in the study of +perspective at home, I used to apply for and obtain leave to work +at the heavier kinds of smith work at the foundry, and for this +reason—the time required for heating the heaviest iron work +is so much longer than that required for heating the lighter, +that it enabled me to secure a number of spare minutes in the +course of the day, which I carefully employed in making diagrams +in perspective upon the sheet iron casing in front of the hearth +at which I worked.”</p> + +<p>Thus assiduously working and studying, James Sharples steadily +advanced in his knowledge of the principles of art, and acquired +greater facility in its practice. Some eighteen months +after the expiry of his apprenticeship he painted a portrait of +his father, which attracted considerable notice in the town; as +also did the picture of “The Forge,” which he +finished soon after. His success in portrait-painting +obtained for him a commission from the foreman of the shop to +paint a family group, and Sharples executed it so well that the +foreman not only paid him the agreed price of eighteen pounds, +but thirty shillings to boot. While engaged on this group +he ceased to work at the foundry, and he had thoughts of giving +up his trade altogether and devoting himself exclusively to +painting. He proceeded to paint several pictures, amongst +others a head of Christ, an original conception, life-size, and a +view of Bury; but not obtaining sufficient employment at +portraits to occupy his time, or give him the prospect of a +steady income, he had the good sense to resume his leather apron, +and go on working at his honest trade of a blacksmith; employing +his leisure hours in engraving his picture of “The +Forge,” since published. He was induced to commence +the engraving by the following circumstance. A Manchester +picture-dealer, to whom he showed the painting, let drop the +observation, that in the hands of a skilful engraver it would +make a very good print. Sharples immediately conceived the +idea of engraving it himself, though altogether ignorant of the +art. The difficulties which he encountered and successfully +overcame in carrying out his project are thus described by +himself:—</p> + +<p>“I had seen an advertisement of a Sheffield steel-plate +maker, giving a list of the prices at which he supplied plates of +various sizes, and, fixing upon one of suitable dimensions, I +remitted the amount, together with a small additional sum for +which I requested him to send me a few engraving tools. I +could not specify the articles wanted, for I did not then know +anything about the process of engraving. However, there +duly arrived with the plate three or four gravers and an etching +needle; the latter I spoiled before I knew its use. While +working at the plate, the Amalgamated Society of Engineers +offered a premium for the best design for an emblematical +picture, for which I determined to compete, and I was so +fortunate as to win the prize. Shortly after this I removed +to Blackburn, where I obtained employment at Messrs. +Yates’, engineers, as an engine-smith; and continued to +employ my leisure time in drawing, painting, and engraving, as +before. With the engraving I made but very slow progress, +owing to the difficulties I experienced from not possessing +proper tools. I then determined to try to make some that +would suit my purpose, and after several failures I succeeded in +making many that I have used in the course of my engraving. +I was also greatly at a loss for want of a proper magnifying +glass, and part of the plate was executed with no other +assistance of this sort than what my father’s spectacles +afforded, though I afterwards succeeded in obtaining a proper +magnifier, which was of the utmost use to me. An incident +occurred while I was engraving the plate, which had almost caused +me to abandon it altogether. It sometimes happened that I +was obliged to lay it aside for a considerable time, when other +work pressed; and in order to guard it against rust, I was +accustomed to rub over the graven parts with oil. But on +examining the plate after one of such intervals, I found that the +oil had become a dark sticky substance extremely difficult to get +out. I tried to pick it out with a needle, but found that +it would almost take as much time as to engrave the parts +afresh. I was in great despair at this, but at length hit +upon the expedient of boiling it in water containing soda, and +afterwards rubbing the engraved parts with a tooth-brush; and to +my delight found the plan succeeded perfectly. My greatest +difficulties now over, patience and perseverance were all that +were needed to bring my labours to a successful issue. I +had neither advice nor assistance from any one in finishing the +plate. If, therefore, the work possess any merit, I can +claim it as my own; and if in its accomplishment I have +contributed to show what can be done by persevering industry and +determination, it is all the honour I wish to lay claim +to.”</p> + +<p>It would be beside our purpose to enter upon any criticism of +“The Forge” as an engraving; its merits having been +already fully recognised by the art journals. The execution +of the work occupied Sharples’s leisure evening hours +during a period of five years; and it was only when he took the +plate to the printer that he for the first time saw an engraved +plate produced by any other man. To this unvarnished +picture of industry and genius, we add one other trait, and it is +a domestic one. “I have been married seven +years,” says he, “and during that time my greatest +pleasure, after I have finished my daily labour at the foundry, +has been to resume my pencil or graver, frequently until a late +hour of the evening, my wife meanwhile sitting by my side and +reading to me from some interesting book,”—a simple +but beautiful testimony to the thorough common sense as well as +the genuine right-heartedness of this most interesting and +deserving workman.</p> + +<p>The same industry and application which we have found to be +necessary in order to acquire excellence in painting and +sculpture, are equally required in the sister art of +music—the one being the poetry of form and colour, the +other of the sounds of nature. Handel was an indefatigable +and constant worker; he was never cast down by defeat, but his +energy seemed to increase the more that adversity struck +him. When a prey to his mortifications as an insolvent +debtor, he did not give way for a moment, but in one year +produced his ‘Saul,’ ‘Israel,’ the music +for Dryden’s ‘Ode,’ his ‘Twelve Grand +Concertos,’ and the opera of ‘Jupiter in +Argos,’ among the finest of his works. As his +biographer says of him, “He braved everything, and, by his +unaided self, accomplished the work of twelve men.”</p> + +<p>Haydn, speaking of his art, said, “It consists in taking +up a subject and pursuing it.” “Work,” +said Mozart, “is my chief pleasure.” +Beethoven’s favourite maxim was, “The barriers are +not erected which can say to aspiring talents and industry, +‘Thus far and no farther.’” When +Moscheles submitted his score of ‘Fidelio’ for the +pianoforte to Beethoven, the latter found written at the bottom +of the last page, “Finis, with God’s +help.” Beethoven immediately wrote underneath, +“O man! help thyself!” This was the motto of +his artistic life. John Sebastian Bach said of himself, +“I was industrious; whoever is equally sedulous, will be +equally successful.” But there is no doubt that Bach +was born with a passion for music, which formed the mainspring of +his industry, and was the true secret of his success. When +a mere youth, his elder brother, wishing to turn his abilities in +another direction, destroyed a collection of studies which the +young Sebastian, being denied candles, had copied by moonlight; +proving the strong natural bent of the boy’s genius. +Of Meyerbeer, Bayle thus wrote from Milan in +1820:—“He is a man of some talent, but no genius; he +lives solitary, working fifteen hours a day at +music.” Years passed, and Meyerbeer’s hard work +fully brought out his genius, as displayed in his +‘Roberto,’ ‘Huguenots,’ +‘Prophète,’ and other works, confessedly +amongst the greatest operas which have been produced in modern +times.</p> + +<p>Although musical composition is not an art in which Englishmen +have as yet greatly distinguished themselves, their energies +having for the most part taken other and more practical +directions, we are not without native illustrations of the power +of perseverance in this special pursuit. Arne was an +upholsterer’s son, intended by his father for the legal +profession; but his love of music was so great, that he could not +be withheld from pursuing it. While engaged in an +attorney’s office, his means were very limited, but, to +gratify his tastes, he was accustomed to borrow a livery and go +into the gallery of the Opera, then appropriated to +domestics. Unknown to his father he made great progress +with the violin, and the first knowledge his father had of the +circumstance was when accidentally calling at the house of a +neighbouring gentleman, to his surprise and consternation he +found his son playing the leading instrument with a party of +musicians. This incident decided the fate of Arne. +His father offered no further opposition to his wishes; and the +world thereby lost a lawyer, but gained a musician of much taste +and delicacy of feeling, who added many valuable works to our +stores of English music.</p> + +<p>The career of the late William Jackson, author of ‘The +Deliverance of Israel,’ an oratorio which has been +successfully performed in the principal towns of his native +county of York, furnishes an interesting illustration of the +triumph of perseverance over difficulties in the pursuit of +musical science. He was the son of a miller at Masham, a +little town situated in the valley of the Yore, in the north-west +corner of Yorkshire. Musical taste seems to have been +hereditary in the family, for his father played the fife in the +band of the Masham Volunteers, and was a singer in the parish +choir. His grandfather also was leading singer and ringer +at Masham Church; and one of the boy’s earliest musical +treats was to be present at the bell pealing on Sunday +mornings. During the service, his wonder was still more +excited by the organist’s performance on the barrel-organ, +the doors of which were thrown open behind to let the sound fully +into the church, by which the stops, pipes, barrels, staples, +keyboard, and jacks, were fully exposed, to the wonderment of the +little boys sitting in the gallery behind, and to none more than +our young musician. At eight years of age he began to play +upon his father’s old fife, which, however, would not sound +D; but his mother remedied the difficulty by buying for him a +one-keyed flute; and shortly after, a gentleman of the +neighbourhood presented him with a flute with four silver +keys. As the boy made no progress with his “book +learning,” being fonder of cricket, fives, and boxing, than +of his school lessons—the village schoolmaster giving him +up as “a bad job”—his parents sent him off to a +school at Pateley Bridge. While there he found congenial +society in a club of village choral singers at Brighouse Gate, +and with them he learnt the sol-fa-ing gamut on the old English +plan. He was thus well drilled in the reading of music, in +which he soon became a proficient. His progress astonished +the club, and he returned home full of musical ambition. He +now learnt to play upon his father’s old piano, but with +little melodious result; and he became eager to possess a +finger-organ, but had no means of procuring one. About this +time, a neighbouring parish clerk had purchased, for an +insignificant sum, a small disabled barrel-organ, which had gone +the circuit of the northern counties with a show. The clerk +tried to revive the tones of the instrument, but failed; at last +he bethought him that he would try the skill of young Jackson, +who had succeeded in making some alterations and improvements in +the hand-organ of the parish church. He accordingly brought +it to the lad’s house in a donkey cart, and in a short time +the instrument was repaired, and played over its old tunes again, +greatly to the owner’s satisfaction.</p> + +<p>The thought now haunted the youth that he could make a +barrel-organ, and he determined to do so. His father and he +set to work, and though without practice in carpentering, yet, by +dint of hard labour and after many failures, they at last +succeeded; and an organ was constructed which played ten tunes +very decently, and the instrument was generally regarded as a +marvel in the neighbourhood. Young Jackson was now +frequently sent for to repair old church organs, and to put new +music upon the barrels which he added to them. All this he +accomplished to the satisfaction of his employers, after which he +proceeded with the construction of a four-stop finger-organ, +adapting to it the keys of an old harpsichord. This he +learnt to play upon,—studying ‘Callcott’s +Thorough Bass’ in the evening, and working at his trade of +a miller during the day; occasionally also tramping about the +country as a “cadger,” with an ass and a cart. +During summer he worked in the fields, at turnip-time, hay-time, +and harvest, but was never without the solace of music in his +leisure evening hours. He next tried his hand at musical +composition, and twelve of his anthems were shown to the late Mr. +Camidge, of York, as “the production of a miller’s +lad of fourteen.” Mr. Camidge was pleased with them, +marked the objectionable passages, and returned them with the +encouraging remark, that they did the youth great credit, and +that he must “go on writing.”</p> + +<p>A village band having been set on foot at Masham, young +Jackson joined it, and was ultimately appointed leader. He +played all the instruments by turns, and thus acquired a +considerable practical knowledge of his art: he also composed +numerous tunes for the band. A new finger-organ having been +presented to the parish church, he was appointed the +organist. He now gave up his employment as a journeyman +miller, and commenced tallow-chandling, still employing his spare +hours in the study of music. In 1839 he published his first +anthem—‘For joy let fertile valleys sing;’ and +in the following year he gained the first prize from the +Huddersfield Glee Club, for his ‘Sisters of the +Lea.’ His other anthem ‘God be merciful to +us,’ and the 103rd Psalm, written for a double chorus and +orchestra, are well known. In the midst of these minor +works, Jackson proceeded with the composition of his +oratorio,—‘The Deliverance of Israel from +Babylon.’ His practice was, to jot down a sketch of +the ideas as they presented themselves to his mind, and to write +them out in score in the evenings, after he had left his work in +the candle-shop. His oratorio was published in parts, in +the course of 1844–5, and he published the last chorus on +his twenty-ninth birthday. The work was exceedingly well +received, and has been frequently performed with much success in +the northern towns. Mr. Jackson eventually settled as a +professor of music at Bradford, where he contributed in no small +degree to the cultivation of the musical taste of that town and +its neighbourhood. Some years since he had the honour of +leading his fine company of Bradford choral singers before Her +Majesty at Buckingham Palace; on which occasion, as well as at +the Crystal Palace, some choral pieces of his composition, were +performed with great effect. <a name="citation201"></a><a +href="#footnote201" class="citation">[201]</a></p> + +<p>Such is a brief outline of the career of a self-taught +musician, whose life affords but another illustration of the +power of self-help, and the force of courage and industry in +enabling a man to surmount and overcome early difficulties and +obstructions of no ordinary kind.</p> +<h2><a name="page202"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +202</span>CHAPTER VII.<br /> +<span class="smcap">Industry and the Peerage</span>.</h2> +<blockquote><p>“He either fears his fate too much,<br /> +Or his deserts are small,<br /> +That dares not put it to the touch,<br /> +To gain or lose it all.”—<i>Marquis of +Montrose</i>.</p> + +<p>“He hath put down the mighty from their seats; and +exalted them of low degree.”—<i>St. Luke</i>.</p> +</blockquote> +<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have already referred to some +illustrious Commoners raised from humble to elevated positions by +the power of application and industry; and we might point to even +the Peerage itself as affording equally instructive +examples. One reason why the Peerage of England has +succeeded so well in holding its own, arises from the fact that, +unlike the peerages of other countries, it has been fed, from +time to time, by the best industrial blood of the +country—the very “liver, heart, and brain of +Britain.” Like the fabled Antæus, it has been +invigorated and refreshed by touching its mother earth, and +mingling with that most ancient order of nobility—the +working order.</p> + +<p>The blood of all men flows from equally remote sources; and +though some are unable to trace their line directly beyond their +grandfathers, all are nevertheless justified in placing at the +head of their pedigree the great progenitors of the race, as Lord +Chesterfield did when he wrote, “<span +class="smcap">Adam</span> <i>de Stanhope</i>—<span +class="smcap">Eve</span> <i>de Stanhope</i>.” No +class is ever long stationary. The mighty fall, and the +humble are exalted. New families take the place of the old, +who disappear among the ranks of the common people. +Burke’s ‘Vicissitudes of Families’ strikingly +exhibit this rise and fall of families, and show that the +misfortunes which overtake the rich and noble are greater in +proportion than those which overwhelm the poor. This author +points out that of the twenty-five barons selected to enforce the +observance of Magna Charta, there is not now in the House of +Peers a single male descendant. Civil wars and rebellions +ruined many of the old nobility and dispersed their +families. Yet their descendants in many cases survive, and +are to be found among the ranks of the people. Fuller wrote +in his ‘Worthies,’ that “some who justly hold +the surnames of Bohuns, Mortimers, and Plantagenets, are hid in +the heap of common men.” Thus Burke shows that two of +the lineal descendants of the Earl of Kent, sixth son of Edward +I., were discovered in a butcher and a toll-gatherer; that the +great grandson of Margaret Plantagenet, daughter of the Duke of +Clarance, sank to the condition of a cobbler at Newport, in +Shropshire; and that among the lineal descendants of the Duke of +Gloucester, son of Edward III., was the late sexton of St. +George’s, Hanover Square. It is understood that the +lineal descendant of Simon de Montfort, England’s premier +baron, is a saddler in Tooley Street. One of the +descendants of the “Proud Percys,” a claimant of the +title of Duke of Northumberland, was a Dublin trunk-maker; and +not many years since one of the claimants for the title of Earl +of Perth presented himself in the person of a labourer in a +Northumberland coal-pit. Hugh Miller, when working as a +stone-mason near Edinburgh, was served by a hodman, who was one +of the numerous claimants for the earldom of Crauford—all +that was wanted to establish his claim being a missing marriage +certificate; and while the work was going on, the cry resounded +from the walls many times in the day, of—“John, Yearl +Crauford, bring us anither hod o’lime.” One of +Oliver Cromwell’s great grandsons was a grocer on Snow +Hill, and others of his descendants died in great poverty. +Many barons of proud names and titles have perished, like the +sloth, upon their family tree, after eating up all the leaves; +while others have been overtaken by adversities which they have +been unable to retrieve, and sunk at last into poverty and +obscurity. Such are the mutabilities of rank and +fortune.</p> + +<p>The great bulk of our peerage is comparatively modern, so far +as the titles go; but it is not the less noble that it has been +recruited to so large an extent from the ranks of honourable +industry. In olden times, the wealth and commerce of +London, conducted as it was by energetic and enterprising men, +was a prolific source of peerages. Thus, the earldom of +Cornwallis was founded by Thomas Cornwallis, the Cheapside +merchant; that of Essex by William Capel, the draper; and that of +Craven by William Craven, the merchant tailor. The modern +Earl of Warwick is not descended from the +“King-maker,” but from William Greville, the +woolstapler; whilst the modern dukes of Northumberland find their +head, not in the Percies, but in Hugh Smithson, a respectable +London apothecary. The founders of the families of +Dartmouth, Radnor, Ducie, and Pomfret, were respectively a +skinner, a silk manufacturer, a merchant tailor, and a Calais +merchant; whilst the founders of the peerages of Tankerville, +Dormer, and Coventry, were mercers. The ancestors of Earl +Romney, and Lord Dudley and Ward, were goldsmiths and jewellers; +and Lord Dacres was a banker in the reign of Charles I., as Lord +Overstone is in that of Queen Victoria. Edward Osborne, the +founder of the Dukedom of Leeds, was apprentice to William Hewet, +a rich clothworker on London Bridge, whose only daughter he +courageously rescued from drowning, by leaping into the Thames +after her, and eventually married. Among other peerages +founded by trade are those of Fitzwilliam, Leigh, Petre, Cowper, +Darnley, Hill, and Carrington. The founders of the houses +of Foley and Normanby were remarkable men in many respects, and, +as furnishing striking examples of energy of character, the story +of their lives is worthy of preservation.</p> + +<p>The father of Richard Foley, the founder of the family, was a +small yeoman living in the neighbourhood of Stourbridge in the +time of Charles I. That place was then the centre of the +iron manufacture of the midland districts, and Richard was +brought up to work at one of the branches of the trade—that +of nail-making. He was thus a daily observer of the great +labour and loss of time caused by the clumsy process then adopted +for dividing the rods of iron in the manufacture of nails. +It appeared that the Stourbridge nailers were gradually losing +their trade in consequence of the importation of nails from +Sweden, by which they were undersold in the market. It +became known that the Swedes were enabled to make their nails so +much cheaper, by the use of splitting mills and machinery, which +had completely superseded the laborious process of preparing the +rods for nail-making then practised in England.</p> + +<p>Richard Foley, having ascertained this much, determined to +make himself master of the new process. He suddenly +disappeared from the neighbourhood of Stourbridge, and was not +heard of for several years. No one knew whither he had +gone, not even his own family; for he had not informed them of +his intention, lest he should fail. He had little or no +money in his pocket, but contrived to get to Hull, where he +engaged himself on board a ship bound for a Swedish port, and +worked his passage there. The only article of property +which he possessed was his fiddle, and on landing in Sweden he +begged and fiddled his way to the Dannemora mines, near +Upsala. He was a capital musician, as well as a pleasant +fellow, and soon ingratiated himself with the iron-workers. +He was received into the works, to every part of which he had +access; and he seized the opportunity thus afforded him of +storing his mind with observations, and mastering, as he thought, +the mechanism of iron splitting. After a continued stay for +this purpose, he suddenly disappeared from amongst his kind +friends the miners—no one knew whither.</p> + +<p>Returned to England, he communicated the results of his voyage +to Mr. Knight and another person at Stourbridge, who had +sufficient confidence in him to advance the requisite funds for +the purpose of erecting buildings and machinery for splitting +iron by the new process. But when set to work, to the great +vexation and disappointment of all, and especially of Richard +Foley, it was found that the machinery would not act—at all +events it would not split the bars of iron. Again Foley +disappeared. It was thought that shame and mortification at +his failure had driven him away for ever. Not so! +Foley had determined to master this secret of iron-splitting, and +he would yet do it. He had again set out for Sweden, +accompanied by his fiddle as before, and found his way to the +iron works, where he was joyfully welcomed by the miners; and, to +make sure of their fiddler, they this time lodged him in the very +splitting-mill itself. There was such an apparent absence +of intelligence about the man, except in fiddle-playing, that the +miners entertained no suspicions as to the object of their +minstrel, whom they thus enabled to attain the very end and aim +of his life. He now carefully examined the works, and soon +discovered the cause of his failure. He made drawings or +tracings of the machinery as well as he could, though this was a +branch of art quite new to him; and after remaining at the place +long enough to enable him to verify his observations, and to +impress the mechanical arrangements clearly and vividly on his +mind, he again left the miners, reached a Swedish port, and took +ship for England. A man of such purpose could not but +succeed. Arrived amongst his surprised friends, he now +completed his arrangements, and the results were entirely +successful. By his skill and his industry he soon laid the +foundations of a large fortune, at the same time that he restored +the business of an extensive district. He himself +continued, during his life, to carry on his trade, aiding and +encouraging all works of benevolence in his neighbourhood. +He founded and endowed a school at Stourbridge; and his son +Thomas (a great benefactor of Kidderminster), who was High +Sheriff of Worcestershire in the time of “The Rump,” +founded and endowed an hospital, still in existence, for the free +education of children at Old Swinford. All the early Foleys +were Puritans. Richard Baxter seems to have been on +familiar and intimate terms with various members of the family, +and makes frequent mention of them in his ‘Life and +Times.’ Thomas Foley, when appointed high sheriff of +the county, requested Baxter to preach the customary sermon +before him; and Baxter in his ‘Life’ speaks of him as +“of so just and blameless dealing, that all men he ever had +to do with magnified his great integrity and honesty, which were +questioned by none.” The family was ennobled in the +reign of Charles the Second.</p> + +<p>William Phipps, the founder of the Mulgrave or Normanby +family, was a man quite as remarkable in his way as Richard +Foley. His father was a gunsmith—a robust Englishman +settled at Woolwich, in Maine, then forming part of our English +colonies in America. He was born in 1651, one of a family +of not fewer than twenty-six children (of whom twenty-one were +sons), whose only fortune lay in their stout hearts and strong +arms. William seems to have had a dash of the Danish-sea +blood in his veins, and did not take kindly to the quiet life of +a shepherd in which he spent his early years. By nature +bold and adventurous, he longed to become a sailor and roam +through the world. He sought to join some ship; but not +being able to find one, he apprenticed himself to a shipbuilder, +with whom he thoroughly learnt his trade, acquiring the arts of +reading and writing during his leisure hours. Having +completed his apprenticeship and removed to Boston, he wooed and +married a widow of some means, after which he set up a little +shipbuilding yard of his own, built a ship, and, putting to sea +in her, he engaged in the lumber trade, which he carried on in a +plodding and laborious way for the space of about ten years.</p> + +<p>It happened that one day, whilst passing through the crooked +streets of old Boston, he overheard some sailors talking to each +other of a wreck which had just taken place off the Bahamas; that +of a Spanish ship, supposed to have much money on board. +His adventurous spirit was at once kindled, and getting together +a likely crew without loss of time, he set sail for the +Bahamas. The wreck being well in-shore, he easily found it, +and succeeded in recovering a great deal of its cargo, but very +little money; and the result was, that he barely defrayed his +expenses. His success had been such, however, as to +stimulate his enterprising spirit; and when he was told of +another and far more richly laden vessel which had been wrecked +near Port de la Plata more than half a century before, he +forthwith formed the resolution of raising the wreck, or at all +events of fishing up the treasure.</p> + +<p>Being too poor, however, to undertake such an enterprise +without powerful help, he set sail for England in the hope that +he might there obtain it. The fame of his success in +raising the wreck off the Bahamas had already preceded him. +He applied direct to the Government. By his urgent +enthusiasm, he succeeded in overcoming the usual inertia of +official minds; and Charles II. eventually placed at his disposal +the “Rose Algier,” a ship of eighteen guns and +ninety-five men, appointing him to the chief command.</p> + +<p>Phipps then set sail to find the Spanish ship and fish up the +treasure. He reached the coast of Hispaniola in safety; but +how to find the sunken ship was the great difficulty. The +fact of the wreck was more than fifty years old; and Phipps had +only the traditionary rumours of the event to work upon. +There was a wide coast to explore, and an outspread ocean without +any trace whatever of the argosy which lay somewhere at its +bottom. But the man was stout in heart and full of +hope. He set his seamen to work to drag along the coast, +and for weeks they went on fishing up sea-weed, shingle, and bits +of rock. No occupation could be more trying to seamen, and +they began to grumble one to another, and to whisper that the man +in command had brought them on a fool’s errand.</p> + +<p>At length the murmurers gained head, and the men broke into +open mutiny. A body of them rushed one day on to the +quarter-deck, and demanded that the voyage should be +relinquished. Phipps, however, was not a man to be +intimidated; he seized the ringleaders, and sent the others back +to their duty. It became necessary to bring the ship to +anchor close to a small island for the purpose of repairs; and, +to lighten her, the chief part of the stores was landed. +Discontent still increasing amongst the crew, a new plot was laid +amongst the men on shore to seize the ship, throw Phipps +overboard, and start on a piratical cruize against the Spaniards +in the South Seas. But it was necessary to secure the +services of the chief ship carpenter, who was consequently made +privy to the pilot. This man proved faithful, and at once +told the captain of his danger. Summoning about him those +whom he knew to be loyal, Phipps had the ship’s guns loaded +which commanded the shore, and ordered the bridge communicating +with the vessel to be drawn up. When the mutineers made +their appearance, the captain hailed them, and told the men he +would fire upon them if they approached the stores (still on +land),—when they drew back; on which Phipps had the stores +reshipped under cover of his guns. The mutineers, fearful +of being left upon the barren island, threw down their arms and +implored to be permitted to return to their duty. The +request was granted, and suitable precautions were taken against +future mischief. Phipps, however, took the first +opportunity of landing the mutinous part of the crew, and +engaging other men in their places; but, by the time that he +could again proceed actively with his explorations, he found it +absolutely necessary to proceed to England for the purpose of +repairing the ship. He had now, however, gained more +precise information as to the spot where the Spanish treasure +ship had sunk; and, though as yet baffled, he was more confident +than ever of the eventual success of his enterprise.</p> + +<p>Returned to London, Phipps reported the result of his voyage +to the Admiralty, who professed to be pleased with his exertions; +but he had been unsuccessful, and they would not entrust him with +another king’s ship. James II. was now on the throne, +and the Government was in trouble; so Phipps and his golden +project appealed to them in vain. He next tried to raise +the requisite means by a public subscription. At first he +was laughed at; but his ceaseless importunity at length +prevailed, and after four years’ dinning of his project +into the ears of the great and influential—during which +time he lived in poverty—he at length succeeded. A +company was formed in twenty shares, the Duke of Albermarle, son +of General Monk, taking the chief interest in it, and subscribing +the principal part of the necessary fund for the prosecution of +the enterprise.</p> + +<p>Like Foley, Phipps proved more fortunate in his second voyage +than in his first. The ship arrived without accident at +Port de la Plata, in the neighbourhood of the reef of rocks +supposed to have been the scene of the wreck. His first +object was to build a stout boat capable of carrying eight or ten +oars, in constructing which Phipps used the adze himself. +It is also said that he constructed a machine for the purpose of +exploring the bottom of the sea similar to what is now known as +the Diving Bell. Such a machine was found referred to in +books, but Phipps knew little of books, and may be said to have +re-invented the apparatus for his own use. He also engaged +Indian divers, whose feats of diving for pearls, and in submarine +operations, were very remarkable. The tender and boat +having been taken to the reef, the men were set to work, the +diving bell was sunk, and the various modes of dragging the +bottom of the sea were employed continuously for many weeks, but +without any prospect of success. Phipps, however, held on +valiantly, hoping almost against hope. At length, one day, +a sailor, looking over the boat’s side down into the clear +water, observed a curious sea-plant growing in what appeared to +be a crevice of the rock; and he called upon an Indian diver to +go down and fetch it for him. On the red man coming up with +the weed, he reported that a number of ships guns were lying in +the same place. The intelligence was at first received with +incredulity, but on further investigation it proved to be +correct. Search was made, and presently a diver came up +with a solid bar of silver in his arms. When Phipps was +shown it, he exclaimed, “Thanks be to God! we are all made +men.” Diving bell and divers now went to work with a +will, and in a few days, treasure was brought up to the value of +about £300,000, with which Phipps set sail for +England. On his arrival, it was urged upon the king that he +should seize the ship and its cargo, under the pretence that +Phipps, when soliciting his Majesty’s permission, had not +given accurate information respecting the business. But the +king replied, that he knew Phipps to be an honest man, and that +he and his friends should divide the whole treasure amongst them, +even though he had returned with double the value. +Phipps’s share was about £20,000, and the king, to +show his approval of his energy and honesty in conducting the +enterprise, conferred upon him the honour of knighthood. He +was also made High Sheriff of New England; and during the time he +held the office, he did valiant service for the mother country +and the colonists against the French, by expeditions against Port +Royal and Quebec. He also held the post of Governor of +Massachusetts, from which he returned to England, and died in +London in 1695.</p> + +<p>Phipps throughout the latter part of his career, was not +ashamed to allude to the lowness of his origin, and it was matter +of honest pride to him that he had risen from the condition of +common ship carpenter to the honours of knighthood and the +government of a province. When perplexed with public +business, he would often declare that it would be easier for him +to go back to his broad axe again. He left behind him a +character for probity, honesty, patriotism, and courage, which is +certainly not the least noble inheritance of the house of +Normanby.</p> + +<p>William Petty, the founder of the house of Lansdowne, was a +man of like energy and public usefulness in his day. He was +the son of a clothier in humble circumstances, at Romsey, in +Hampshire, where he was born in 1623. In his boyhood he +obtained a tolerable education at the grammar school of his +native town; after which he determined to improve himself by +study at the University of Caen, in Normandy. Whilst there +he contrived to support himself unassisted by his father, +carrying on a sort of small pedler’s trade with “a +little stock of merchandise.” Returning to England, +he had himself bound apprentice to a sea captain, who +“drubbed him with a rope’s end” for the badness +of his sight. He left the navy in disgust, taking to the +study of medicine. When at Paris he engaged in dissection, +during which time he also drew diagrams for Hobbes, who was then +writing his treatise on Optics. He was reduced to such +poverty that he subsisted for two or three weeks entirely on +walnuts. But again he began to trade in a small way, +turning an honest penny, and he was enabled shortly to return to +England with money in his pocket. Being of an ingenious +mechanical turn, we find him taking out a patent for a +letter-copying machine. He began to write upon the arts and +sciences, and practised chemistry and physic with such success +that his reputation shortly became considerable. +Associating with men of science, the project of forming a Society +for its prosecution was discussed, and the first meetings of the +infant Royal Society were held at his lodgings. At Oxford +he acted for a time as deputy to the anatomical professor there, +who had a great repugnance to dissection. In 1652 his +industry was rewarded by the appointment of physician to the army +in Ireland, whither he went; and whilst there he was the medical +attendant of three successive lords-lieutenant, Lambert, +Fleetwood, and Henry Cromwell. Large grants of forfeited +land having been awarded to the Puritan soldiery, Petty observed +that the lands were very inaccurately measured; and in the midst +of his many avocations he undertook to do the work himself. +His appointments became so numerous and lucrative that he was +charged by the envious with corruption, and removed from them +all; but he was again taken into favour at the Restoration.</p> + +<p>Petty was a most indefatigable contriver, inventor, and +organizer of industry. One of his inventions was a +double-bottomed ship, to sail against wind and tide. He +published treatises on dyeing, on naval philosophy, on woollen +cloth manufacture, on political arithmetic, and many other +subjects. He founded iron works, opened lead mines, and +commenced a pilchard fishery and a timber trade; in the midst of +which he found time to take part in the discussions of the Royal +Society, to which he largely contributed. He left an ample +fortune to his sons, the eldest of whom was created Baron +Shelburne. His will was a curious document, singularly +illustrative of his character; containing a detail of the +principal events of his life, and the gradual advancement of his +fortune. His sentiments on pauperism are characteristic: +“As for legacies for the poor,” said he, “I am +at a stand; as for beggars by trade and election, I give them +nothing; as for impotents by the hand of God, the public ought to +maintain them; as for those who have been bred to no calling nor +estate, they should be put upon their kindred;” . . . +“wherefore I am contented that I have assisted all my poor +relations, and put many into a way of getting their own bread; +have laboured in public works; and by inventions have sought out +real objects of charity; and I do hereby conjure all who partake +of my estate, from time to time, to do the same at their +peril. Nevertheless to answer custom, and to take the surer +side, I give 20<i>l.</i> to the most wanting of the parish +wherein I die.” He was interred in the fine old +Norman church of Romsey—the town wherein he was born a poor +man’s son—and on the south side of the choir is still +to be seen a plain slab, with the inscription, cut by an +illiterate workman, “Here Layes Sir William +Petty.”</p> + +<p>Another family, ennobled by invention and trade in our own +day, is that of Strutt of Belper. Their patent of nobility +was virtually secured by Jedediah Strutt in 1758, when he +invented his machine for making ribbed stockings, and thereby +laid the foundations of a fortune which the subsequent bearers of +the name have largely increased and nobly employed. The +father of Jedediah was a farmer and malster, who did but little +for the education of his children; yet they all prospered. +Jedediah was the second son, and when a boy assisted his father +in the work of the farm. At an early age he exhibited a +taste for mechanics, and introduced several improvements in the +rude agricultural implements of the period. On the death of +his uncle he succeeded to a farm at Blackwall, near Normanton, +long in the tenancy of the family, and shortly after he married +Miss Wollatt, the daughter of a Derby hosier. Having +learned from his wife’s brother that various unsuccessful +attempts had been made to manufacture ribbed-stockings, he +proceeded to study the subject with a view to effect what others +had failed in accomplishing. He accordingly obtained a +stocking-frame, and after mastering its construction and mode of +action, he proceeded to introduce new combinations, by means of +which he succeeded in effecting a variation in the plain +looped-work of the frame, and was thereby enabled to turn out +“ribbed” hosiery. Having secured a patent for +the improved machine, he removed to Derby, and there entered +largely on the manufacture of ribbed-stockings, in which he was +very successful. He afterwards joined Arkwright, of the +merits of whose invention he fully satisfied himself, and found +the means of securing his patent, as well as erecting a large +cotton-mill at Cranford, in Derbyshire. After the expiry of +the partnership with Arkwright, the Strutts erected extensive +cotton-mills at Milford, near Belper, which worthily gives its +title to the present head of the family. The sons of the +founder were, like their father, distinguished for their +mechanical ability. Thus William Strutt, the eldest, is +said to have invented a self-acting mule, the success of which +was only prevented by the mechanical skill of that day being +unequal to its manufacture. Edward, the son of William, was +a man of eminent mechanical genius, having early discovered the +principle of suspension-wheels for carriages: he had a +wheelbarrow and two carts made on the principle, which were used +on his farm near Belper. It may be added that the Strutts +have throughout been distinguished for their noble employment of +the wealth which their industry and skill have brought them; that +they have sought in all ways to improve the moral and social +condition of the work-people in their employment; and that they +have been liberal donors in every good cause—of which the +presentation, by Mr. Joseph Strutt, of the beautiful park or +Arboretum at Derby, as a gift to the townspeople for ever, +affords only one of many illustrations. The concluding +words of the short address which he delivered on presenting this +valuable gift are worthy of being quoted and +remembered:—“As the sun has shone brightly on me +through life, it would be ungrateful in me not to employ a +portion of the fortune I possess in promoting the welfare of +those amongst whom I live, and by whose industry I have been +aided in its organisation.”</p> + +<p>No less industry and energy have been displayed by the many +brave men, both in present and past times, who have earned the +peerage by their valour on land and at sea. Not to mention +the older feudal lords, whose tenure depended upon military +service, and who so often led the van of the English armies in +great national encounters, we may point to Nelson, St. Vincent, +and Lyons—to Wellington, Hill, Hardinge, Clyde, and many +more in recent times, who have nobly earned their rank by their +distinguished services. But plodding industry has far +oftener worked its way to the peerage by the honourable pursuit +of the legal profession, than by any other. No fewer than +seventy British peerages, including two dukedoms, have been +founded by successful lawyers. Mansfield and Erskine were, +it is true, of noble family; but the latter used to thank God +that out of his own family he did not know a lord. <a +name="citation216"></a><a href="#footnote216" +class="citation">[216]</a> The others were, for the most +part, the sons of attorneys, grocers, clergymen, merchants, and +hardworking members of the middle class. Out of this +profession have sprung the peerages of Howard and Cavendish, the +first peers of both families having been judges; those of +Aylesford, Ellenborough, Guildford, Shaftesbury, Hardwicke, +Cardigan, Clarendon, Camden, Ellesmere, Rosslyn; and others +nearer our own day, such as Tenterden, Eldon, Brougham, Denman, +Truro, Lyndhurst, St. Leonards, Cranworth, Campbell, and +Chelmsford.</p> + +<p>Lord Lyndhurst’s father was a portrait painter, and that +of St. Leonards a perfumer and hairdresser in Burlington +Street. Young Edward Sugden was originally an errand-boy in +the office of the late Mr. Groom, of Henrietta Street, Cavendish +Square, a certificated conveyancer; and it was there that the +future Lord Chancellor of Ireland obtained his first notions of +law. The origin of the late Lord Tenterden was perhaps the +humblest of all, nor was he ashamed of it; for he felt that the +industry, study, and application, by means of which he achieved +his eminent position, were entirely due to himself. It is +related of him, that on one occasion he took his son Charles to a +little shed, then standing opposite the western front of +Canterbury Cathedral, and pointing it out to him, said, +“Charles, you see this little shop; I have brought you here +on purpose to show it you. In that shop your grandfather +used to shave for a penny: that is the proudest reflection of my +life.” When a boy, Lord Tenterden was a singer in the +Cathedral, and it is a curious circumstance that his destination +in life was changed by a disappointment. When he and Mr. +Justice Richards were going the Home Circuit together, they went +to service in the cathedral; and on Richards commending the voice +of a singing man in the choir, Lord Tenterden said, “Ah! +that is the only man I ever envied! When at school in this +town, we were candidates for a chorister’s place, and he +obtained it.”</p> + +<p>Not less remarkable was the rise to the same distinguished +office of Lord Chief Justice, of the rugged Kenyon and the robust +Ellenborough; nor was he a less notable man who recently held the +same office—the astute Lord Campbell, late Lord Chancellor +of England, son of a parish minister in Fifeshire. For many +years he worked hard as a reporter for the press, while +diligently preparing himself for the practice of his +profession. It is said of him, that at the beginning of his +career, he was accustomed to walk from county town to county town +when on circuit, being as yet too poor to afford the luxury of +posting. But step by step he rose slowly but surely to that +eminence and distinction which ever follow a career of industry +honourably and energetically pursued, in the legal, as in every +other profession.</p> + +<p>There have been other illustrious instances of Lords +Chancellors who have plodded up the steep of fame and honour with +equal energy and success. The career of the late Lord Eldon +is perhaps one of the most remarkable examples. He was the +son of a Newcastle coal-fitter; a mischievous rather than a +studious boy; a great scapegrace at school, and the subject of +many terrible thrashings,—for orchard-robbing was one of +the favourite exploits of the future Lord Chancellor. His +father first thought of putting him apprentice to a grocer, and +afterwards had almost made up his mind to bring him up to his own +trade of a coal-fitter. But by this time his eldest son +William (afterwards Lord Stowell) who had gained a scholarship at +Oxford, wrote to his father, “Send Jack up to me, I can do +better for him.” John was sent up to Oxford +accordingly, where, by his brother’s influence and his own +application, he succeeded in obtaining a fellowship. But +when at home during the vacation, he was so unfortunate—or +rather so fortunate, as the issue proved—as to fall in +love; and running across the Border with his eloped bride, he +married, and as his friends thought, ruined himself for +life. He had neither house nor home when he married, and +had not yet earned a penny. He lost his fellowship, and at +the same time shut himself out from preferment in the Church, for +which he had been destined. He accordingly turned his +attention to the study of the law. To a friend he wrote, +“I have married rashly; but it is my determination to work +hard to provide for the woman I love.”</p> + +<p>John Scott came up to London, and took a small house in +Cursitor Lane, where he settled down to the study of the +law. He worked with great diligence and resolution; rising +at four every morning and studying till late at night, binding a +wet towel round his head to keep himself awake. Too poor to +study under a special pleader, he copied out three folio volumes +from a manuscript collection of precedents. Long after, +when Lord Chancellor, passing down Cursitor Lane one day, he said +to his secretary, “Here was my first perch: many a time do +I recollect coming down this street with sixpence in my hand to +buy sprats for supper.” When at length called to the +bar, he waited long for employment. His first year’s +earnings amounted to only nine shillings. For four years he +assiduously attended the London Courts and the Northern Circuit, +with little better success. Even in his native town, he +seldom had other than pauper cases to defend. The results +were indeed so discouraging, that he had almost determined to +relinquish his chance of London business, and settle down in some +provincial town as a country barrister. His brother William +wrote home, “Business is dull with poor Jack, very dull +indeed!” But as he had escaped being a grocer, a +coal-fitter, and a country parson so did he also escape being a +country lawyer.</p> + +<p>An opportunity at length occurred which enabled John Scott to +exhibit the large legal knowledge which he had so laboriously +acquired. In a case in which he was engaged, he urged a +legal point against the wishes both of the attorney and client +who employed him. The Master of the Rolls decided against +him, but on an appeal to the House of Lords, Lord Thurlow +reversed the decision on the very point that Scott had +urged. On leaving the House that day, a solicitor tapped +him on the shoulder and said, “Young man, your bread and +butter’s cut for life.” And the prophecy proved +a true one. Lord Mansfield used to say that he knew no +interval between no business and 3000<i>l.</i> a-year, and Scott +might have told the same story; for so rapid was his progress, +that in 1783, when only thirty-two, he was appointed King’s +Counsel, was at the head of the Northern Circuit, and sat in +Parliament for the borough of Weobley. It was in the dull +but unflinching drudgery of the early part of his career that he +laid the foundation of his future success. He won his spurs +by perseverance, knowledge, and ability, diligently +cultivated. He was successively appointed to the offices of +solicitor and attorney-general, and rose steadily upwards to the +highest office that the Crown had to bestow—that of Lord +Chancellor of England, which he held for a quarter of a +century.</p> + +<p>Henry Bickersteth was the son of a surgeon at Kirkby Lonsdale, +in Westmoreland, and was himself educated to that +profession. As a student at Edinburgh, he distinguished +himself by the steadiness with which he worked, and the +application which he devoted to the science of medicine. +Returned to Kirkby Lonsdale, he took an active part in his +father’s practice; but he had no liking for the profession, +and grew discontented with the obscurity of a country town. +He went on, nevertheless, diligently improving himself, and +engaged on speculations in the higher branches of +physiology. In conformity with his own wish, his father +consented to send him to Cambridge, where it was his intention to +take a medical degree with the view of practising in the +metropolis. Close application to his studies, however, +threw him out of health, and with a view to re-establishing his +strength he accepted the appointment of travelling physician to +Lord Oxford. While abroad he mastered Italian, and acquired +a great admiration for Italian literature, but no greater liking +for medicine than before. On the contrary, he determined to +abandon it; but returning to Cambridge, he took his degree; and +that he worked hard may be inferred from the fact that he was +senior wrangler of his year. Disappointed in his desire to +enter the army, he turned to the bar, and entered a student of +the Inner Temple. He worked as hard at law as he had done +at medicine. Writing to his father, he said, +“Everybody says to me, ‘You are certain of success in +the end—only persevere;’ and though I don’t +well understand how this is to happen, I try to believe it as +much as I can, and I shall not fail to do everything in my +power.” At twenty-eight he was called to the bar, and +had every step in life yet to make. His means were +straitened, and he lived upon the contributions of his +friends. For years he studied and waited. Still no +business came. He stinted himself in recreation, in +clothes, and even in the necessaries of life; struggling on +indefatigably through all. Writing home, he +“confessed that he hardly knew how he should be able to +struggle on till he had fair time and opportunity to establish +himself.” After three years’ waiting, still +without success, he wrote to his friends that rather than be a +burden upon them longer, he was willing to give the matter up and +return to Cambridge, “where he was sure of support and some +profit.” The friends at home sent him another small +remittance, and he persevered. Business gradually came +in. Acquitting himself creditably in small matters, he was +at length entrusted with cases of greater importance. He +was a man who never missed an opportunity, nor allowed a +legitimate chance of improvement to escape him. His +unflinching industry soon began to tell upon his fortunes; a few +more years and he was not only enabled to do without assistance +from home, but he was in a position to pay back with interest the +debts which he had incurred. The clouds had dispersed, and +the after career of Henry Bickersteth was one of honour, of +emolument, and of distinguished fame. He ended his career +as Master of the Rolls, sitting in the House of Peers as Baron +Langdale. His life affords only another illustration of the +power of patience, perseverance, and conscientious working, in +elevating the character of the individual, and crowning his +labours with the most complete success.</p> + +<p>Such are a few of the distinguished men who have honourably +worked their way to the highest position, and won the richest +rewards of their profession, by the diligent exercise of +qualities in many respects of an ordinary character, but made +potent by the force of application and industry.</p> +<h2><a name="page223"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +223</span>CHAPTER VIII.<br /> +<span class="smcap">Energy and Courage</span>.</h2> +<blockquote><p>“A cœur vaillant rien +d’impossible.”—<i>Jacques Cœur</i>.</p> + +<p>“Den Muthigen gehört die +Welt.”—<i>German Proverb</i>.</p> + +<p>“In every work that he began . . . he did it with all +his heart, and prospered.”—<i>II. Chron.</i> xxxi. +21.</p> +</blockquote> +<p><span class="smcap">There</span> is a famous speech recorded +of an old Norseman, thoroughly characteristic of the +Teuton. “I believe neither in idols nor +demons,” said he, “I put my sole trust in my own +strength of body and soul.” The ancient crest of a +pickaxe with the motto of “Either I will find a way or make +one,” was an expression of the same sturdy independence +which to this day distinguishes the descendants of the +Northmen. Indeed nothing could be more characteristic of +the Scandinavian mythology, than that it had a god with a +hammer. A man’s character is seen in small matters; +and from even so slight a test as the mode in which a man wields +a hammer, his energy may in some measure be inferred. Thus +an eminent Frenchman hit off in a single phrase the +characteristic quality of the inhabitants of a particular +district, in which a friend of his proposed to settle and buy +land. “Beware,” said he, “of making a +purchase there; I know the men of that department; the pupils who +come from it to our veterinary school at Paris <i>do nor strike +hard upon the anvil</i>; they want energy; and you will not get a +satisfactory return on any capital you may invest +there.” A fine and just appreciation of character, +indicating the thoughtful observer; and strikingly illustrative +of the fact that it is the energy of the individual men that +gives strength to a State, and confers a value even upon the very +soil which they cultivate. As the French proverb has it: +“Tant vaut l’homme, tant vaut sa terre.”</p> + +<p>The cultivation of this quality is of the greatest importance; +resolute determination in the pursuit of worthy objects being the +foundation of all true greatness of character. Energy +enables a man to force his way through irksome drudgery and dry +details, and carries him onward and upward in every station in +life. It accomplishes more than genius, with not one-half +the disappointment and peril. It is not eminent talent that +is required to ensure success in any pursuit, so much as +purpose,—not merely the power to achieve, but the will to +labour energetically and perseveringly. Hence energy of +will may be defined to be the very central power of character in +a man—in a word, it is the Man himself. It gives +impulse to his every action, and soul to every effort. True +hope is based on it,—and it is hope that gives the real +perfume to life. There is a fine heraldic motto on a broken +helmet in Battle Abbey, “L’espoir est ma +force,” which might be the motto of every man’s +life. “Woe unto him that is fainthearted,” says +the son of Sirach. There is, indeed, no blessing equal to +the possession of a stout heart. Even if a man fail in his +efforts, it will be a satisfaction to him to enjoy the +consciousness of having done his best. In humble life +nothing can be more cheering and beautiful than to see a man +combating suffering by patience, triumphing in his integrity, and +who, when his feet are bleeding and his limbs failing him, still +walks upon his courage.</p> + +<p>Mere wishes and desires but engender a sort of green sickness +in young minds, unless they are promptly embodied in act and +deed. It will not avail merely to wait as so many do, +“until Blucher comes up,” but they must struggle on +and persevere in the mean time, as Wellington did. The good +purpose once formed must be carried out with alacrity and without +swerving. In most conditions of life, drudgery and toil are +to be cheerfully endured as the best and most wholesome +discipline. “In life,” said Ary Scheffer, +“nothing bears fruit except by labour of mind or +body. To strive and still strive—such is life; and in +this respect mine is fulfilled; but I dare to say, with just +pride, that nothing has ever shaken my courage. With a +strong soul, and a noble aim, one can do what one wills, morally +speaking.”</p> + +<p>Hugh Miller said the only school in which he was properly +taught was “that world-wide school in which toil and +hardship are the severe but noble teachers.” He who +allows his application to falter, or shirks his work on frivolous +pretexts, is on the sure road to ultimate failure. Let any +task be undertaken as a thing not possible to be evaded, and it +will soon come to be performed with alacrity and +cheerfulness. Charles IX. of Sweden was a firm believer in +the power of will, even in youth. Laying his hand on the +head of his youngest son when engaged on a difficult task, he +exclaimed, “He <i>shall</i> do it! he <i>shall</i> do +it!” The habit of application becomes easy in time, +like every other habit. Thus persons with comparatively +moderate powers will accomplish much, if they apply themselves +wholly and indefatigably to one thing at a time. Fowell +Buxton placed his confidence in ordinary means and extraordinary +application; realizing the scriptural injunction, +“Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with all thy +might;” and he attributed his own success in life to his +practice of “being a whole man to one thing at a +time.”</p> + +<p>Nothing that is of real worth can be achieved without +courageous working. Man owes his growth chiefly to that +active striving of the will, that encounter with difficulty, +which we call effort; and it is astonishing to find how often +results apparently impracticable are thus made possible. An +intense anticipation itself transforms possibility into reality; +our desires being often but the precursors of the things which we +are capable of performing. On the contrary, the timid and +hesitating find everything impossible, chiefly because it seems +so. It is related of a young French officer, that he used +to walk about his apartment exclaiming, “I <i>will</i> be +Marshal of France and a great general.” His ardent +desire was the presentiment of his success; for the young officer +did become a distinguished commander, and he died a Marshal of +France.</p> + +<p>Mr. Walker, author of the ‘Original,’ had so great +a faith in the power of will, that he says on one occasion he +<i>determined</i> to be well, and he was so. This may +answer once; but, though safer to follow than many prescriptions, +it will not always succeed. The power of mind over body is +no doubt great, but it may be strained until the physical power +breaks down altogether. It is related of Muley Moluc, the +Moorish leader, that, when lying ill, almost worn out by an +incurable disease, a battle took place between his troops and the +Portuguese; when, starting from his litter at the great crisis of +the fight, he rallied his army, led them to victory, and +instantly afterwards sank exhausted and expired.</p> + +<p>It is will,—force of purpose,—that enables a man +to do or be whatever he sets his mind on being or doing. A +holy man was accustomed to say, “Whatever you wish, that +you are: for such is the force of our will, joined to the Divine, +that whatever we wish to be, seriously, and with a true +intention, that we become. No one ardently wishes to be +submissive, patient, modest, or liberal, who does not become what +he wishes.” The story is told of a working carpenter, +who was observed one day planing a magistrate’s bench which +he was repairing, with more than usual carefulness; and when +asked the reason, he replied, “Because I wish to make it +easy against the time when I come to sit upon it +myself.” And singularly enough, the man actually +lived to sit upon that very bench as a magistrate.</p> + +<p>Whatever theoretical conclusions logicians may have formed as +to the freedom of the will, each individual feels that +practically he is free to choose between good and evil—that +he is not as a mere straw thrown upon the water to mark the +direction of the current, but that he has within him the power of +a strong swimmer, and is capable of striking out for himself, of +buffeting with the waves, and directing to a great extent his own +independent course. There is no absolute constraint upon +our volitions, and we feel and know that we are not bound, as by +a spell, with reference to our actions. It would paralyze +all desire of excellence were we to think otherwise. The +entire business and conduct of life, with its domestic rules, its +social arrangements, and its public institutions, proceed upon +the practical conviction that the will is free. Without +this where would be responsibility?—and what the advantage +of teaching, advising, preaching, reproof, and correction? +What were the use of laws, were it not the universal belief, as +it is the universal fact, that men obey them or not, very much as +they individually determine? In every moment of our life, +conscience is proclaiming that our will is free. It is the +only thing that is wholly ours, and it rests solely with +ourselves individually, whether we give it the right or the wrong +direction. Our habits or our temptations are not our +masters, but we of them. Even in yielding, conscience tells +us we might resist; and that were we determined to master them, +there would not be required for that purpose a stronger +resolution than we know ourselves to be capable of +exercising.</p> + +<p>“You are now at the age,” said Lamennais once, +addressing a gay youth, “at which a decision must be formed +by you; a little later, and you may have to groan within the tomb +which you yourself have dug, without the power of rolling away +the stone. That which the easiest becomes a habit in us is +the will. Learn then to will strongly and decisively; thus +fix your floating life, and leave it no longer to be carried +hither and thither, like a withered leaf, by every wind that +blows.”</p> + +<p>Buxton held the conviction that a young man might be very much +what he pleased, provided he formed a strong resolution and held +to it. Writing to one of his sons, he said to him, +“You are now at that period of life, in which you must make +a turn to the right or the left. You must now give proofs +of principle, determination, and strength of mind; or you must +sink into idleness, and acquire the habits and character of a +desultory, ineffective young man; and if once you fall to that +point, you will find it no easy matter to rise again. I am +sure that a young man may be very much what he pleases. In +my own case it was so. . . . Much of my happiness, and all my +prosperity in life, have resulted from the change I made at your +age. If you seriously resolve to be energetic and +industrious, depend upon it that you will for your whole life +have reason to rejoice that you were wise enough to form and to +act upon that determination.” As will, considered +without regard to direction, is simply constancy, firmness, +perseverance, it will be obvious that everything depends upon +right direction and motives. Directed towards the enjoyment +of the senses, the strong will may be a demon, and the intellect +merely its debased slave; but directed towards good, the strong +will is a king, and the intellect the minister of man’s +highest well-being.</p> + +<p>“Where there is a will there is a way,” is an old +and true saying. He who resolves upon doing a thing, by +that very resolution often scales the barriers to it, and secures +its achievement. To think we are able, is almost to be +so—to determine upon attainment is frequently attainment +itself. Thus, earnest resolution has often seemed to have +about it almost a savour of omnipotence. The strength of +Suwarrow’s character lay in his power of willing, and, like +most resolute persons, he preached it up as a system. +“You can only half will,” he would say to people who +failed. Like Richelieu and Napoleon, he would have the word +“impossible” banished from the dictionary. +“I don’t know,” “I can’t,” +and “impossible,” were words which he detested above +all others. “Learn! Do! Try!” he +would exclaim. His biographer has said of him, that he +furnished a remarkable illustration of what may be effected by +the energetic development and exercise of faculties, the germs of +which at least are in every human heart.</p> + +<p>One of Napoleon’s favourite maxims was, “The +truest wisdom is a resolute determination.” His life, +beyond most others, vividly showed what a powerful and +unscrupulous will could accomplish. He threw his whole +force of body and mind direct upon his work. Imbecile +rulers and the nations they governed went down before him in +succession. He was told that the Alps stood in the way of +his armies—“There shall be no Alps,” he said, +and the road across the Simplon was constructed, through a +district formerly almost inaccessible. +“Impossible,” said he, “is a word only to be +found in the dictionary of fools.” He was a man who +toiled terribly; sometimes employing and exhausting four +secretaries at a time. He spared no one, not even +himself. His influence inspired other men, and put a new +life into them. “I made my generals out of +mud,” he said. But all was of no avail; for +Napoleon’s intense selfishness was his ruin, and the ruin +of France, which he left a prey to anarchy. His life taught +the lesson that power, however energetically wielded, without +beneficence, is fatal to its possessor and its subjects; and that +knowledge, or knowingness, without goodness, is but the incarnate +principle of Evil.</p> + +<p>Our own Wellington was a far greater man. Not less +resolute, firm, and persistent, but more self-denying, +conscientious, and truly patriotic. Napoleon’s aim +was “Glory;” Wellington’s watchword, like +Nelson’s, was “Duty.” The former word, it +is said, does not once occur in his despatches; the latter often, +but never accompanied by any high-sounding professions. The +greatest difficulties could neither embarrass nor intimidate +Wellington; his energy invariably rising in proportion to the +obstacles to be surmounted. The patience, the firmness, the +resolution, with which he bore through the maddening vexations +and gigantic difficulties of the Peninsular campaigns, is, +perhaps, one of the sublimest things to be found in +history. In Spain, Wellington not only exhibited the genius +of the general, but the comprehensive wisdom of the +statesman. Though his natural temper was irritable in the +extreme, his high sense of duty enabled him to restrain it; and +to those about him his patience seemed absolutely +inexhaustible. His great character stands untarnished by +ambition, by avarice, or any low passion. Though a man of +powerful individuality, he yet displayed a great variety of +endowment. The equal of Napoleon in generalship, he was as +prompt, vigorous, and daring as Clive; as wise a statesman as +Cromwell; and as pure and high-minded as Washington. The +great Wellington left behind him an enduring reputation, founded +on toilsome campaigns won by skilful combination, by fortitude +which nothing could exhaust, by sublime daring, and perhaps by +still sublimer patience.</p> + +<p>Energy usually displays itself in promptitude and +decision. When Ledyard the traveller was asked by the +African Association when he would be ready to set out for Africa, +he immediately answered, “To-morrow morning.” +Blucher’s promptitude obtained for him the cognomen of +“Marshal Forwards” throughout the Prussian +army. When John Jervis, afterwards Earl St. Vincent, was +asked when he would be ready to join his ship, he replied, +“Directly.” And when Sir Colin Campbell, +appointed to the command of the Indian army, was asked when he +could set out, his answer was, “To-morrow,”—an +earnest of his subsequent success. For it is rapid +decision, and a similar promptitude in action, such as taking +instant advantage of an enemy’s mistakes, that so often +wins battles. “At Arcola,” said Napoleon, +“I won the battle with twenty-five horsemen. I seized +a moment of lassitude, gave every man a trumpet, and gained the +day with this handful. Two armies are two bodies which meet +and endeavour to frighten each other: a moment of panic occurs, +and <i>that moment</i> must be turned to advantage.” +“Every moment lost,” said he at another time, +“gives an opportunity for misfortune;” and he +declared that he beat the Austrians because they never knew the +value of time: while they dawdled, he overthrew them.</p> + +<p>India has, during the last century, been a great field for the +display of British energy. From Clive to Havelock and Clyde +there is a long and honourable roll of distinguished names in +Indian legislation and warfare,—such as Wellesley, +Metcalfe, Outram, Edwardes, and the Lawrences. Another +great but sullied name is that of Warren Hastings—a man of +dauntless will and indefatigable industry. His family was +ancient and illustrious; but their vicissitudes of fortune and +ill-requited loyalty in the cause of the Stuarts, brought them to +poverty, and the family estate at Daylesford, of which they had +been lords of the manor for hundreds of years, at length passed +from their hands. The last Hastings of Daylesford had, +however, presented the parish living to his second son; and it +was in his house, many years later, that Warren Hastings, his +grandson, was born. The boy learnt his letters at the +village school, on the same bench with the children of the +peasantry. He played in the fields which his fathers had +owned; and what the loyal and brave Hastings of Daylesford +<i>had</i> been, was ever in the boy’s thoughts. His +young ambition was fired, and it is said that one summer’s +day, when only seven years old, as he laid him down on the bank +of the stream which flowed through the domain, he formed in his +mind the resolution that he would yet recover possession of the +family lands. It was the romantic vision of a boy; yet he +lived to realize it. The dream became a passion, rooted in +his very life; and he pursued his determination through youth up +to manhood, with that calm but indomitable force of will which +was the most striking peculiarity of his character. The +orphan boy became one of the most powerful men of his time; he +retrieved the fortunes of his line; bought back the old estate, +and rebuilt the family mansion. “When, under a +tropical sun,” says Macaulay, “he ruled fifty +millions of Asiatics, his hopes, amidst all the cares of war, +finance, and legislation, still pointed to Daylesford. And +when his long public life, so singularly chequered with good and +evil, with glory and obloquy, had at length closed for ever, it +was to Daylesford that he retired to die.”</p> + +<p>Sir Charles Napier was another Indian leader of extraordinary +courage and determination. He once said of the difficulties +with which he was surrounded in one of his campaigns, “They +only make my feet go deeper into the ground.” His +battle of Meeanee was one of the most extraordinary feats in +history. With 2000 men, of whom only 400 were Europeans, he +encountered an army of 35,000 hardy and well-armed +Beloochees. It was an act, apparently, of the most daring +temerity, but the general had faith in himself and in his +men. He charged the Belooch centre up a high bank which +formed their rampart in front, and for three mortal hours the +battle raged. Each man of that small force, inspired by the +chief, became for the time a hero. The Beloochees, though +twenty to one, were driven back, but with their faces to the +foe. It is this sort of pluck, tenacity, and determined +perseverance which wins soldiers’ battles, and, indeed, +every battle. It is the one neck nearer that wins the race +and shows the blood; it is the one march more that wins the +campaign; the five minutes’ more persistent courage that +wins the fight. Though your force be less than +another’s, you equal and outmaster your opponent if you +continue it longer and concentrate it more. The reply of +the Spartan father, who said to his son, when complaining that +his sword was too short, “Add a step to it,” is +applicable to everything in life.</p> + +<p>Napier took the right method of inspiring his men with his own +heroic spirit. He worked as hard as any private in the +ranks. “The great art of commanding,” he said, +“is to take a fair share of the work. The man who +leads an army cannot succeed unless his whole mind is thrown into +his work. The more trouble, the more labour must be given; +the more danger, the more pluck must be shown, till all is +overpowered.” A young officer who accompanied him in +his campaign in the Cutchee Hills, once said, “When I see +that old man incessantly on his horse, how can I be idle who am +young and strong? I would go into a loaded cannon’s +mouth if he ordered me.” This remark, when repeated +to Napier, he said was ample reward for his toils. The +anecdote of his interview with the Indian juggler strikingly +illustrates his cool courage as well as his remarkable simplicity +and honesty of character. On one occasion, after the Indian +battles, a famous juggler visited the camp and performed his +feats before the General, his family, and staff. Among +other performances, this man cut in two with a stroke of his +sword a lime or lemon placed in the hand of his assistant. +Napier thought there was some collusion between the juggler and +his retainer. To divide by a sweep of the sword on a +man’s hand so small an object without touching the flesh he +believed to be impossible, though a similar incident is related +by Scott in his romance of the ‘Talisman.’ To +determine the point, the General offered his own hand for the +experiment, and he stretched out his right arm. The juggler +looked attentively at the hand, and said he would not make the +trial. “I thought I would find you out!” +exclaimed Napier. “But stop,” added the other, +“let me see your left hand.” The left hand was +submitted, and the man then said firmly, “If you will hold +your arm steady I will perform the feat.” “But +why the left hand and not the right?” “Because +the right hand is hollow in the centre, and there is a risk of +cutting off the thumb; the left is high, and the danger will be +less.” Napier was startled. “I got +frightened,” he said; “I saw it was an actual feat of +delicate swordsmanship, and if I had not abused the man as I did +before my staff, and challenged him to the trial, I honestly +acknowledge I would have retired from the encounter. +However, I put the lime on my hand, and held out my arm +steadily. The juggler balanced himself, and, with a swift +stroke cut the lime in two pieces. I felt the edge of the +sword on my hand as if a cold thread had been drawn across +it. So much (he added) for the brave swordsmen of India, +whom our fine fellows defeated at Meeanee.”</p> + +<p>The recent terrible struggle in India has served to bring out, +perhaps more prominently than any previous event in our history, +the determined energy and self-reliance of the national +character. Although English officialism may often drift +stupidly into gigantic blunders, the men of the nation generally +contrive to work their way out of them with a heroism almost +approaching the sublime. In May, 1857, when the revolt +burst upon India like a thunder-clap, the British forces had been +allowed to dwindle to their extreme minimum, and were scattered +over a wide extent of country, many of them in remote +cantonments. The Bengal regiments, one after another, rose +against their officers, broke away, and rushed to Delhi. +Province after province was lapped in mutiny and rebellion; and +the cry for help rose from east to west. Everywhere the +English stood at bay in small detachments, beleaguered and +surrounded, apparently incapable of resistance. Their +discomfiture seemed so complete, and the utter ruin of the +British cause in India so certain, that it might be said of them +then, as it had been said before, “These English never know +when they are beaten.” According to rule, they ought +then and there to have succumbed to inevitable fate.</p> + +<p>While the issue of the mutiny still appeared uncertain, +Holkar, one of the native princes, consulted his astrologer for +information. The reply was, “If all the Europeans +save one are slain, that one will remain to fight and +reconquer.” In their very darkest moment—even +where, as at Lucknow, a mere handful of British soldiers, +civilians, and women, held out amidst a city and province in arms +against them—there was no word of despair, no thought of +surrender. Though cut off from all communication with their +friends for months, and not knowing whether India was lost or +held, they never ceased to have perfect faith in the courage and +devotedness of their countrymen. They knew that while a +body of men of English race held together in India, they would +not be left unheeded to perish. They never dreamt of any +other issue but retrieval of their misfortune and ultimate +triumph; and if the worst came to the worst, they could but fall +at their post, and die in the performance of their duty. +Need we remind the reader of the names of Havelock, Inglis, +Neill, and Outram—men of truly heroic mould—of each +of whom it might with truth be said that he had the heart of a +chevalier, the soul of a believer, and the temperament of a +martyr. Montalembert has said of them that “they do +honour to the human race.” But throughout that +terrible trial almost all proved equally great—women, +civilians and soldiers—from the general down through all +grades to the private and bugleman. The men were not +picked: they belonged to the same ordinary people whom we daily +meet at home—in the streets, in workshops, in the fields, +at clubs; yet when sudden disaster fell upon them, each and all +displayed a wealth of personal resources and energy, and became +as it were individually heroic. “Not one of +them,” says Montalembert, “shrank or +trembled—all, military and civilians, young and old, +generals and soldiers, resisted, fought, and perished with a +coolness and intrepidity which never faltered. It is in +this circumstance that shines out the immense value of public +education, which invites the Englishman from his youth to make +use of his strength and his liberty, to associate, resist, fear +nothing, to be astonished at nothing, and to save himself, by his +own sole exertions, from every sore strait in life.”</p> + +<p>It has been said that Delhi was taken and India saved by the +personal character of Sir John Lawrence. The very name of +“Lawrence” represented power in the North-West +Provinces. His standard of duty, zeal, and personal effort, +was of the highest; and every man who served under him seemed to +be inspired by his spirit. It was declared of him that his +character alone was worth an army. The same might be said +of his brother Sir Henry, who organised the Punjaub force that +took so prominent a part in the capture of Delhi. Both +brothers inspired those who were about them with perfect love and +confidence. Both possessed that quality of tenderness, +which is one of the true elements of the heroic character. +Both lived amongst the people, and powerfully influenced them for +good. Above all as Col. Edwardes says, “they drew +models on young fellows’ minds, which they went forth and +copied in their several administrations: they sketched a +<i>faith</i>, and begot a <i>school</i>, which are both living +things at this day.” Sir John Lawrence had by his +side such men as Montgomery, Nicholson, Cotton, and Edwardes, as +prompt, decisive, and high-souled as himself. John +Nicholson was one of the finest, manliest, and noblest of +men—“every inch a hakim,” the natives said of +him—“a tower of strength,” as he was +characterised by Lord Dalhousie. In whatever capacity he +acted he was great, because he acted with his whole strength and +soul. A brotherhood of fakeers—borne away by their +enthusiastic admiration of the man—even began the worship +of Nikkil Seyn: he had some of them punished for their folly, but +they continued their worship nevertheless. Of his sustained +energy and persistency an illustration may be cited in his +pursuit of the 55th Sepoy mutineers, when he was in the saddle +for twenty consecutive hours, and travelled more than seventy +miles. When the enemy set up their standard at Delhi, +Lawrence and Montgomery, relying on the support of the people of +the Punjaub, and compelling their admiration and confidence, +strained every nerve to keep their own province in perfect order, +whilst they hurled every available soldier, European and Sikh, +against that city. Sir John wrote to the commander-in-chief +to “hang on to the rebels’ noses before Delhi,” +while the troops pressed on by forced marches under Nicholson, +“the tramp of whose war-horse might be heard miles +off,” as was afterwards said of him by a rough Sikh who +wept over his grave.</p> + +<p>The siege and storming of Delhi was the most illustrious event +which occurred in the course of that gigantic struggle, although +the leaguer of Lucknow, during which the merest skeleton of a +British regiment—the 32nd—held out, under the heroic +Inglis, for six months against two hundred thousand armed +enemies, has perhaps excited more intense interest. At +Delhi, too, the British were really the besieged, though +ostensibly the besiegers; they were a mere handful of men +“in the open”—not more than 3,700 bayonets, +European and native—and they were assailed from day to day +by an army of rebels numbering at one time as many as 75,000 men, +trained to European discipline by English officers, and supplied +with all but exhaustless munitions of war. The heroic +little band sat down before the city under the burning rays of a +tropical sun. Death, wounds, and fever failed to turn them +from their purpose. Thirty times they were attacked by +overwhelming numbers, and thirty times did they drive back the +enemy behind their defences. As Captain +Hodson—himself one of the bravest there—has said, +“I venture to aver that no other nation in the world would +have remained here, or avoided defeat if they had attempted to do +so.” Never for an instant did these heroes falter at +their work; with sublime endurance they held on, fought on, and +never relaxed until, dashing through the “imminent deadly +breach,” the place was won, and the British flag was again +unfurled on the walls of Delhi. All were +great—privates, officers, and generals. Common +soldiers who had been inured to a life of hardship, and young +officers who had been nursed in luxurious homes, alike proved +their manhood, and emerged from that terrible trial with equal +honour. The native strength and soundness of the English +race, and of manly English training and discipline, were never +more powerfully exhibited; and it was there emphatically proved +that the Men of England are, after all, its greatest +products. A terrible price was paid for this great chapter +in our history, but if those who survive, and those who come +after, profit by the lesson and example, it may not have been +purchased at too great a cost.</p> + +<p>But not less energy and courage have been displayed in India +and the East by men of various nations, in other lines of action +more peaceful and beneficent than that of war. And while +the heroes of the sword are remembered, the heroes of the gospel +ought not to be forgotten. From Xavier to Martyn and +Williams, there has been a succession of illustrious missionary +labourers, working in a spirit of sublime self-sacrifice, without +any thought of worldly honour, inspired solely by the hope of +seeking out and rescuing the lost and fallen of their race. +Borne up by invincible courage and never-failing patience, these +men have endured privations, braved dangers, walked through +pestilence, and borne all toils, fatigues, and sufferings, yet +held on their way rejoicing, glorying even in martyrdom +itself. Of these one of the first and most illustrious was +Francis Xavier. Born of noble lineage, and with pleasure, +power, and honour within his reach, he proved by his life that +there are higher objects in the world than rank, and nobler +aspirations than the accumulation of wealth. He was a true +gentleman in manners and sentiment; brave, honourable, generous; +easily led, yet capable of leading; easily persuaded, yet himself +persuasive; a most patient, resolute and energetic man. At +the age of twenty-two he was earning his living as a public +teacher of philosophy at the University of Paris. There +Xavier became the intimate friend and associate of Loyola, and +shortly afterwards he conducted the pilgrimage of the first +little band of proselytes to Rome.</p> + +<p>When John III. of Portugal resolved to plant Christianity in +the Indian territories subject to his influence, Bobadilla was +first selected as his missionary; but being disabled by illness, +it was found necessary to make another selection, and Xavier was +chosen. Repairing his tattered cassock, and with no other +baggage than his breviary, he at once started for Lisbon and +embarked for the East. The ship in which he set sail for +Goa had the Governor on board, with a reinforcement of a thousand +men for the garrison of the place. Though a cabin was +placed at his disposal, Xavier slept on deck throughout the +voyage with his head on a coil of ropes, messing with the +sailors. By ministering to their wants, inventing innocent +sports for their amusement, and attending them in their sickness, +he wholly won their hearts, and they regarded him with +veneration.</p> + +<p>Arrived at Goa, Xavier was shocked at the depravity of the +people, settlers as well as natives; for the former had imported +the vices without the restraints of civilization, and the latter +had only been too apt to imitate their bad example. Passing +along the streets of the city, sounding his handbell as he went, +he implored the people to send him their children to be +instructed. He shortly succeeded in collecting a large +number of scholars, whom he carefully taught day by day, at the +same time visiting the sick, the lepers, and the wretched of all +classes, with the object of assuaging their miseries, and +bringing them to the Truth. No cry of human suffering which +reached him was disregarded. Hearing of the degradation and +misery of the pearl fishers of Manaar, he set out to visit them, +and his bell again rang out the invitation of mercy. He +baptized and he taught, but the latter he could only do through +interpreters. His most eloquent teaching was his +ministration to the wants and the sufferings of the wretched.</p> + +<p>On he went, his hand-bell sounding along the coast of Comorin, +among the towns and villages, the temples and the bazaars, +summoning the natives to gather about him and be +instructed. He had translations made of the Catechism, the +Apostles’ Creed, the Commandments, the Lord’s Prayer, +and some of the devotional offices of the Church. +Committing these to memory in their own tongue he recited them to +the children, until they had them by heart; after which he sent +them forth to teach the words to their parents and +neighbours. At Cape Comorin, he appointed thirty teachers, +who under himself presided over thirty Christian Churches, though +the Churches were but humble, in most cases consisting only of a +cottage surmounted by a cross. Thence he passed to +Travancore, sounding his way from village to village, baptizing +until his hands dropped with weariness, and repeating his +formulas until his voice became almost inaudible. According +to his own account, the success of his mission surpassed his +highest expectations. His pure, earnest, and beautiful +life, and the irresistible eloquence of his deeds, made converts +wherever he went; and by sheer force of sympathy, those who saw +him and listened to him insensibly caught a portion of his +ardour.</p> + +<p>Burdened with the thought that “the harvest is great and +the labourers are few,” Xavier next sailed to Malacca and +Japan, where he found himself amongst entirely new races speaking +other tongues. The most that he could do here was to weep +and pray, to smooth the pillow and watch by the sick-bed, +sometimes soaking the sleeve of his surplice in water, from which +to squeeze out a few drops and baptize the dying. Hoping +all things, and fearing nothing, this valiant soldier of the +truth was borne onward throughout by faith and energy. +“Whatever form of death or torture,” said he, +“awaits me, I am ready to suffer it ten thousand times for +the salvation of a single soul.” He battled with +hunger, thirst, privations and dangers of all kinds, still +pursuing his mission of love, unresting and unwearying. At +length, after eleven years’ labour, this great good man, +while striving to find a way into China, was stricken with fever +in the Island of Sanchian, and there received his crown of +glory. A hero of nobler mould, more pure, self-denying, and +courageous, has probably never trod this earth.</p> + +<p>Other missionaries have followed Xavier in the same field of +work, such as Schwartz, Carey, and Marshman in India; Gutzlaff +and Morrison in China; Williams in the South Seas; Campbell, +Moffatt and Livingstone in Africa. John Williams, the +martyr of Erromanga, was originally apprenticed to a furnishing +ironmonger. Though considered a dull boy, he was handy at +his trade, in which he acquired so much skill that his master +usually entrusted him with any blacksmiths work that required the +exercise of more than ordinary care. He was also fond of +bell-hanging and other employments which took him away from the +shop. A casual sermon which he heard gave his mind a +serious bias, and he became a Sunday-school teacher. The +cause of missions having been brought under his notice at some of +his society’s meetings, he determined to devote himself to +this work. His services were accepted by the London +Missionary Society; and his master allowed him to leave the +ironmonger’s shop before the expiry of his +indentures. The islands of the Pacific Ocean were the +principal scene of his labours—more particularly Huahine in +Tahiti, Raiatea, and Rarotonga. Like the Apostles he worked +with his hands,—at blacksmith work, gardening, +shipbuilding; and he endeavoured to teach the islanders the art +of civilised life, at the same time that he instructed them in +the truths of religion. It was in the course of his +indefatigable labours that he was massacred by savages on the +shore of Erromanga—none worthier than he to wear the +martyr’s crown.</p> + +<p>The career of Dr. Livingstone is one of the most interesting +of all. He has told the story of his life in that modest +and unassuming manner which is so characteristic of the man +himself. His ancestors were poor but honest Highlanders, +and it is related of one of them, renowned in his district for +wisdom and prudence, that when on his death-bed he called his +children round him and left them these words, the only legacy he +had to bequeath—“In my life-time,” said he, +“I have searched most carefully through all the traditions +I could find of our family, and I never could discover that there +was a dishonest man among our forefathers: if, therefore, any of +you or any of your children should take to dishonest ways, it +will not be because it runs in our blood; it does not belong to +you: I leave this precept with you—Be honest.” +At the age of ten Livingstone was sent to work in a cotton +factory near Glasgow as a “piecer.” With part +of his first week’s wages he bought a Latin grammar, and +began to learn that language, pursuing the study for years at a +night school. He would sit up conning his lessons till +twelve or later, when not sent to bed by his mother, for he had +to be up and at work in the factory every morning by six. +In this way he plodded through Virgil and Horace, also reading +extensively all books, excepting novels, that came in his way, +but more especially scientific works and books of travels. +He occupied his spare hours, which were but few, in the pursuit +of botany, scouring the neighbourhood to collect plants. He +even carried on his reading amidst the roar of the factory +machinery, so placing the book upon the spinning jenny which he +worked that he could catch sentence after sentence as he passed +it. In this way the persevering youth acquired much useful +knowledge; and as he grew older, the desire possessed him of +becoming a missionary to the heathen. With this object he +set himself to obtain a medical education, in order the better to +be qualified for the work. He accordingly economised his +earnings, and saved as much money as enabled him to support +himself while attending the Medical and Greek classes, as well as +the Divinity Lectures, at Glasgow, for several winters, working +as a cotton spinner during the remainder of each year. He +thus supported himself, during his college career, entirely by +his own earnings as a factory workman, never having received a +farthing of help from any other source. “Looking back +now,” he honestly says, “at that life of toil, I +cannot but feel thankful that it formed such a material part of +my early education; and, were it possible, I should like to begin +life over again in the same lowly style, and to pass through the +same hardy training.” At length he finished his +medical curriculum, wrote his Latin thesis, passed his +examinations, and was admitted a licentiate of the Faculty of +Physicians and Surgeons. At first he thought of going to +China, but the war then waging with that country prevented his +following out the idea; and having offered his services to the +London Missionary Society, he was by them sent out to Africa, +which he reached in 1840. He had intended to proceed to +China by his own efforts; and he says the only pang he had in +going to Africa at the charge of the London Missionary Society +was, because “it was not quite agreeable to one accustomed +to work his own way to become, in a manner, dependent upon +others.” Arrived in Africa he set to work with great +zeal. He could not brook the idea of merely entering upon +the labours of others, but cut out a large sphere of independent +work, preparing himself for it by undertaking manual labour in +building and other handicraft employment, in addition to +teaching, which, he says, “made me generally as much +exhausted and unfit for study in the evenings as ever I had been +when a cotton-spinner.” Whilst labouring amongst the +Bechuanas, he dug canals, built houses, cultivated fields, reared +cattle, and taught the natives to work as well as worship. +When he first started with a party of them on foot upon a long +journey, he overheard their observations upon his appearance and +powers—“He is not strong,” said they; “he +is quite slim, and only appears stout because he puts himself +into those bags (trowsers): he will soon knock up.” +This caused the missionary’s Highland blood to rise, and +made him despise the fatigue of keeping them all at the top of +their speed for days together, until he heard them expressing +proper opinions of his pedestrian powers. What he did in +Africa, and how he worked, may be learnt from his own +‘Missionary Travels,’ one of the most fascinating +books of its kind that has ever been given to the public. +One of his last known acts is thoroughly characteristic of the +man. The ‘Birkenhead’ steam launch, which he +took out with him to Africa, having proved a failure, he sent +home orders for the construction of another vessel at an +estimated cost of 2000<i>l.</i> This sum he proposed to +defray out of the means which he had set aside for his children +arising from the profits of his books of travels. +“The children must make it up themselves,” was in +effect his expression in sending home the order for the +appropriation of the money.</p> + +<p>The career of John Howard was throughout a striking +illustration of the same power of patient purpose. His +sublime life proved that even physical weakness could remove +mountains in the pursuit of an end recommended by duty. The +idea of ameliorating the condition of prisoners engrossed his +whole thoughts and possessed him like a passion; and no toil, nor +danger, nor bodily suffering could turn him from that great +object of his life. Though a man of no genius and but +moderate talent, his heart was pure and his will was +strong. Even in his own time he achieved a remarkable +degree of success; and his influence did not die with him, for it +has continued powerfully to affect not only the legislation of +England, but of all civilised nations, down to the present +hour.</p> + +<p>Jonas Hanway was another of the many patient and persevering +men who have made England what it is—content simply to do +with energy the work they have been appointed to do, and go to +their rest thankfully when it is done—</p> +<blockquote><p>“Leaving no memorial but a world<br /> +Made better by their lives.”</p> +</blockquote> +<p>He was born in 1712, at Portsmouth, where his father, a +storekeeper in the dockyard, being killed by an accident, he was +left an orphan at an early age. His mother removed with her +children to London, where she had them put to school, and +struggled hard to bring them up respectably. At seventeen +Jonas was sent to Lisbon to be apprenticed to a merchant, where +his close attention to business, his punctuality, and his strict +honour and integrity, gained for him the respect and esteem of +all who knew him. Returning to London in 1743, he accepted +the offer of a partnership in an English mercantile house at St. +Petersburg engaged in the Caspian trade, then in its +infancy. Hanway went to Russia for the purpose of extending +the business; and shortly after his arrival at the capital he set +out for Persia, with a caravan of English bales of cloth making +twenty carriage loads. At Astracan he sailed for Astrabad, +on the south-eastern shore of the Caspian; but he had scarcely +landed his bales, when an insurrection broke out, his goods were +seized, and though he afterwards recovered the principal part of +them, the fruits of his enterprise were in a great measure +lost. A plot was set on foot to seize himself and his +party; so he took to sea and, after encountering great perils, +reached Ghilan in safety. His escape on this occasion gave +him the first idea of the words which he afterwards adopted as +the motto of his life—“<i>Never +Despair</i>.” He afterwards resided in St. Petersburg +for five years, carrying on a prosperous business. But a +relative having left him some property, and his own means being +considerable, he left Russia, and arrived in his native country +in 1755. His object in returning to England was, as he +himself expressed it, “to consult his own health (which was +extremely delicate), and do as much good to himself and others as +he was able.” The rest of his life was spent in deeds +of active benevolence and usefulness to his fellow men. He +lived in a quiet style, in order that he might employ a larger +share of his income in works of benevolence. One of the +first public improvements to which he devoted himself was that of +the highways of the metropolis, in which he succeeded to a large +extent. The rumour of a French invasion being prevalent in +1755, Mr. Hanway turned his attention to the best mode of keeping +up the supply of seamen. He summoned a meeting of merchants +and shipowners at the Royal Exchange, and there proposed to them +to form themselves into a society for fitting out landsmen +volunteers and boys, to serve on board the king’s +ships. The proposal was received with enthusiasm: a society +was formed, and officers were appointed, Mr. Hanway directing its +entire operations. The result was the establishment in 1756 +of The Marine Society, an institution which has proved of much +national advantage, and is to this day of great and substantial +utility. Within six years from its formation, 5451 boys and +4787 landsmen volunteers had been trained and fitted out by the +society and added to the navy, and to this day it is in active +operation, about 600 poor boys, after a careful education, being +annually apprenticed as sailors, principally in the merchant +service.</p> + +<p>Mr. Hanway devoted the other portions of his spare time to +improving or establishing important public institutions in the +metropolis. From an early period he took an active interest +in the Foundling Hospital, which had been started by Thomas Coram +many years before, but which, by encouraging parents to abandon +their children to the charge of a charity, was threatening to do +more harm than good. He determined to take steps to stem +the evil, entering upon the work in the face of the fashionable +philanthropy of the time; but by holding to his purpose he +eventually succeeded in bringing the charity back to its proper +objects; and time and experience have proved that he was +right. The Magdalen Hospital was also established in a +great measure through Mr. Hanway’s exertions. But his +most laborious and persevering efforts were in behalf of the +infant parish poor. The misery and neglect amidst which the +children of the parish poor then grew up, and the mortality which +prevailed amongst them, were frightful; but there was no +fashionable movement on foot to abate the suffering, as in the +case of the foundlings. So Jonas Hanway summoned his +energies to the task. Alone and unassisted he first +ascertained by personal inquiry the extent of the evil. He +explored the dwellings of the poorest classes in London, and +visited the poorhouse sick wards, by which he ascertained the +management in detail of every workhouse in and near the +metropolis. He next made a journey into France and through +Holland, visiting the houses for the reception of the poor, and +noting whatever he thought might be adopted at home with +advantage. He was thus employed for five years; and on his +return to England he published the results of his +observations. The consequence was that many of the +workhouses were reformed and improved. In 1761 he obtained +an Act obliging every London parish to keep an annual register of +all the infants received, discharged, and dead; and he took care +that the Act should work, for he himself superintended its +working with indefatigable watchfulness. He went about from +workhouse to workhouse in the morning, and from one member of +parliament to another in the afternoon, for day after day, and +for year after year, enduring every rebuff, answering every +objection, and accommodating himself to every humour. At +length, after a perseverance hardly to be equalled, and after +nearly ten years’ labour, he obtained another Act, at his +sole expense (7 Geo. III. c. 39), directing that all parish +infants belonging to the parishes within the bills of mortality +should not be nursed in the workhouses, but be sent to nurse a +certain number of miles out of town, until they were six years +old, under the care of guardians to be elected triennially. +The poor people called this “the Act for keeping children +alive;” and the registers for the years which followed its +passing, as compared with those which preceded it, showed that +thousands of lives had been preserved through the judicious +interference of this good and sensible man.</p> + +<p>Wherever a philanthropic work was to be done in London, be +sure that Jonas Hanway’s hand was in it. One of the +first Acts for the protection of chimney-sweepers’ boys was +obtained through his influence. A destructive fire at +Montreal, and another at Bridgetown, Barbadoes, afforded him the +opportunity for raising a timely subscription for the relief of +the sufferers. His name appeared in every list, and his +disinterestedness and sincerity were universally +recognized. But he was not suffered to waste his little +fortune entirely in the service of others. Five leading +citizens of London, headed by Mr. Hoare, the banker, without Mr. +Hanway’s knowledge, waited on Lord Bute, then prime +minister, in a body, and in the names of their fellow-citizens +requested that some notice might be taken of this good +man’s disinterested services to his country. The +result was, his appointment shortly after, as one of the +commissioners for victualling the navy.</p> + +<p>Towards the close of his life Mr. Hanway’s health became +very feeble, and although he found it necessary to resign his +office at the Victualling Board, he could not be idle; but +laboured at the establishment of Sunday Schools,—a movement +then in its infancy,—or in relieving poor blacks, many of +whom wandered destitute about the streets of the +metropolis,—or, in alleviating the sufferings of some +neglected and destitute class of society. Notwithstanding +his familiarity with misery in all its shapes, he was one of the +most cheerful of beings; and, but for his cheerfulness he could +never, with so delicate a frame, have got through so vast an +amount of self-imposed work. He dreaded nothing so much as +inactivity. Though fragile, he was bold and indefatigable; +and his moral courage was of the first order. It may be +regarded as a trivial matter to mention that he was the first who +ventured to walk the streets of London with an umbrella over his +head. But let any modern London merchant venture to walk +along Cornhill in a peaked Chinese hat, and he will find it takes +some degree of moral courage to persevere in it. After +carrying an umbrella for thirty years, Mr. Hanway saw the article +at length come into general use.</p> + +<p>Hanway was a man of strict honour, truthfulness, and +integrity; and every word he said might be relied upon. He +had so great a respect, amounting almost to a reverence, for the +character of the honest merchant, that it was the only subject +upon which he was ever seduced into a eulogium. He strictly +practised what he professed, and both as a merchant, and +afterwards as a commissioner for victualling the navy, his +conduct was without stain. He would not accept the +slightest favour of any sort from a contractor; and when any +present was sent to him whilst at the Victualling Office, he +would politely return it, with the intimation that “he had +made it a rule not to accept anything from any person engaged +with the office.” When he found his powers failing, +he prepared for death with as much cheerfulness as he would have +prepared himself for a journey into the country. He sent +round and paid all his tradesmen, took leave of his friends, +arranged his affairs, had his person neatly disposed of, and +parted with life serenely and peacefully in his 74th year. +The property which he left did not amount to two thousand pounds, +and, as he had no relatives who wanted it, he divided it amongst +sundry orphans and poor persons whom he had befriended during his +lifetime. Such, in brief, was the beautiful life of Jonas +Hanway,—as honest, energetic, hard-working, and +true-hearted a man as ever lived.</p> + +<p>The life of Granville Sharp is another striking example of the +same power of individual energy—a power which was +afterwards transfused into the noble band of workers in the cause +of Slavery Abolition, prominent among whom were Clarkson, +Wilberforce, Buxton, and Brougham. But, giants though these +men were in this cause, Granville Sharp was the first, and +perhaps the greatest of them all, in point of perseverance, +energy, and intrepidity. He began life as apprentice to a +linen-draper on Tower Hill; but, leaving that business after his +apprenticeship was out, he next entered as a clerk in the +Ordnance Office; and it was while engaged in that humble +occupation that he carried on in his spare hours the work of +Negro Emancipation. He was always, even when an apprentice, +ready to undertake any amount of volunteer labour where a useful +purpose was to be served. Thus, while learning the +linen-drapery business, a fellow apprentice who lodged in the +same house, and was a Unitarian, led him into frequent +discussions on religious subjects. The Unitarian youth +insisted that Granville’s Trinitarian misconception of +certain passages of Scripture arose from his want of acquaintance +with the Greek tongue; on which he immediately set to work in his +evening hours, and shortly acquired an intimate knowledge of +Greek. A similar controversy with another +fellow-apprentice, a Jew, as to the interpretation of the +prophecies, led him in like manner to undertake and overcome the +difficulties of Hebrew.</p> + +<p>But the circumstance which gave the bias and direction to the +main labours of his life originated in his generosity and +benevolence. His brother William, a surgeon in Mincing +Lane, gave gratuitous advice to the poor, and amongst the +numerous applicants for relief at his surgery was a poor African +named Jonathan Strong. It appeared that the negro had been +brutally treated by his master, a Barbadoes lawyer then in +London, and became lame, almost blind, and unable to work; on +which his owner, regarding him as of no further value as a +chattel, cruelly turned him adrift into the streets to +starve. This poor man, a mass of disease, supported himself +by begging for a time, until he found his way to William Sharp, +who gave him some medicine, and shortly after got him admitted to +St. Bartholomew’s hospital, where he was cured. On +coming out of the hospital, the two brothers supported the negro +in order to keep him off the streets, but they had not the least +suspicion at the time that any one had a claim upon his +person. They even succeeded in obtaining a situation for +Strong with an apothecary, in whose service he remained for two +years; and it was while he was attending his mistress behind a +hackney coach, that his former owner, the Barbadoes lawyer, +recognized him, and determined to recover possession of the +slave, again rendered valuable by the restoration of his +health. The lawyer employed two of the Lord Mayor’s +officers to apprehend Strong, and he was lodged in the Compter, +until he could be shipped off to the West Indies. The +negro, bethinking him in his captivity of the kind services which +Granville Sharp had rendered him in his great distress some years +before, despatched a letter to him requesting his help. +Sharp had forgotten the name of Strong, but he sent a messenger +to make inquiries, who returned saying that the keepers denied +having any such person in their charge. His suspicions were +roused, and he went forthwith to the prison, and insisted upon +seeing Jonathan Strong. He was admitted, and recognized the +poor negro, now in custody as a recaptured slave. Mr. Sharp +charged the master of the prison at his own peril not to deliver +up Strong to any person whatever, until he had been carried +before the Lord Mayor, to whom Sharp immediately went, and +obtained a summons against those persons who had seized and +imprisoned Strong without a warrant. The parties appeared +before the Lord Mayor accordingly, and it appeared from the +proceedings that Strong’s former master had already sold +him to a new one, who produced the bill of sale and claimed the +negro as his property. As no charge of offence was made +against Strong, and as the Lord Mayor was incompetent to deal +with the legal question of Strong’s liberty or otherwise, +he discharged him, and the slave followed his benefactor out of +court, no one daring to touch him. The man’s owner +immediately gave Sharp notice of an action to recover possession +of his negro slave, of whom he declared he had been robbed.</p> + +<p>About that time (1767), the personal liberty of the +Englishman, though cherished as a theory, was subject to grievous +infringements, and was almost daily violated. The +impressment of men for the sea service was constantly practised, +and, besides the press-gangs, there were regular bands of +kidnappers employed in London and all the large towns of the +kingdom, to seize men for the East India Company’s +service. And when the men were not wanted for India, they +were shipped off to the planters in the American colonies. +Negro slaves were openly advertised for sale in the London and +Liverpool newspapers. Rewards were offered for recovering +and securing fugitive slaves, and conveying them down to certain +specified ships in the river.</p> + +<p>The position of the reputed slave in England was undefined and +doubtful. The judgments which had been given in the courts +of law were fluctuating and various, resting on no settled +principle. Although it was a popular belief that no slave +could breathe in England, there were legal men of eminence who +expressed a directly contrary opinion. The lawyers to whom +Mr. Sharp resorted for advice, in defending himself in the action +raised against him in the case of Jonathan Strong, generally +concurred in this view, and he was further told by Jonathan +Strong’s owner, that the eminent Lord Chief Justice +Mansfield, and all the leading counsel, were decidedly of opinion +that the slave, by coming into England, did not become free, but +might legally be compelled to return again to the +plantations. Such information would have caused despair in +a mind less courageous and earnest than that of Granville Sharp; +but it only served to stimulate his resolution to fight the +battle of the negroes’ freedom, at least in England. +“Forsaken,” he said, “by my professional +defenders, I was compelled, through the want of regular legal +assistance, to make a hopeless attempt at self-defence, though I +was totally unacquainted either with the practice of the law or +the foundations of it, having never opened a law book (except the +Bible) in my life, until that time, when I most reluctantly +undertook to search the indexes of a law library, which my +bookseller had lately purchased.”</p> + +<p>The whole of his time during the day was occupied with the +business of the ordnance department, where he held the most +laborious post in the office; he was therefore under the +necessity of conducting his new studies late at night or early in +the morning. He confessed that he was himself becoming a +sort of slave. Writing to a clerical friend to excuse +himself for delay in replying to a letter, he said, “I +profess myself entirely incapable of holding a literary +correspondence. What little time I have been able to save +from sleep at night, and early in the morning, has been +necessarily employed in the examination of some points of law, +which admitted of no delay, and yet required the most diligent +researches and examination in my study.”</p> + +<p>Mr. Sharp gave up every leisure moment that he could command +during the next two years, to the close study of the laws of +England affecting personal liberty,—wading through an +immense mass of dry and repulsive literature, and making extracts +of all the most important Acts of Parliament, decisions of the +courts, and opinions of eminent lawyers, as he went along. +In this tedious and protracted inquiry he had no instructor, nor +assistant, nor adviser. He could not find a single lawyer +whose opinion was favourable to his undertaking. The +results of his inquiries were, however, as gratifying to himself, +as they were surprising to the gentlemen of the law. +“God be thanked,” he wrote, “there is nothing +in any English law or statute—at least that I am able to +find out—that can justify the enslaving of +others.” He had planted his foot firm, and now he +doubted nothing. He drew up the result of his studies in a +summary form; it was a plain, clear, and manly statement, +entitled, ‘On the Injustice of Tolerating Slavery in +England;’ and numerous copies, made by himself, were +circulated by him amongst the most eminent lawyers of the +time. Strong’s owner, finding the sort of man he had +to deal with, invented various pretexts for deferring the suit +against Sharp, and at length offered a compromise, which was +rejected. Granville went on circulating his manuscript +tract among the lawyers, until at length those employed against +Jonathan Strong were deterred from proceeding further, and the +result was, that the plaintiff was compelled to pay treble costs +for not bringing forward his action. The tract was then +printed in 1769.</p> + +<p>In the mean time other cases occurred of the kidnapping of +negroes in London, and their shipment to the West Indies for +sale. Wherever Sharp could lay hold of any such case, he at +once took proceedings to rescue the negro. Thus the wife of +one Hylas, an African, was seized, and despatched to Barbadoes; +on which Sharp, in the name of Hylas, instituted legal +proceedings against the aggressor, obtained a verdict with +damages, and Hylas’s wife was brought back to England +free.</p> + +<p>Another forcible capture of a negro, attended with great +cruelty, having occurred in 1770, he immediately set himself on +the track of the aggressors. An African, named Lewis, was +seized one dark night by two watermen employed by the person who +claimed the negro as his property, dragged into the water, +hoisted into a boat, where he was gagged, and his limbs were +tied; and then rowing down river, they put him on board a ship +bound for Jamaica, where he was to be sold for a slave upon his +arrival in the island. The cries of the poor negro had, +however, attracted the attention of some neighbours; one of whom +proceeded direct to Mr. Granville Sharp, now known as the +negro’s friend, and informed him of the outrage. +Sharp immediately got a warrant to bring back Lewis, and he +proceeded to Gravesend, but on arrival there the ship had sailed +for the Downs. A writ of Habeas Corpus was obtained, sent +down to Spithead, and before the ship could leave the shores of +England the writ was served. The slave was found chained to +the main-mast bathed in tears, casting mournful looks on the land +from which he was about to be torn. He was immediately +liberated, brought back to London, and a warrant was issued +against the author of the outrage. The promptitude of head, +heart, and hand, displayed by Mr. Sharp in this transaction could +scarcely have been surpassed, and yet he accused himself of +slowness. The case was tried before Lord +Mansfield—whose opinion, it will be remembered, had already +been expressed as decidedly opposed to that entertained by +Granville Sharp. The judge, however, avoided bringing the +question to an issue, or offering any opinion on the legal +question as to the slave’s personal liberty or otherwise, +but discharged the negro because the defendant could bring no +evidence that Lewis was even nominally his property.</p> + +<p>The question of the personal liberty of the negro in England +was therefore still undecided; but in the mean time Mr. Sharp +continued steady in his benevolent course, and by his +indefatigable exertions and promptitude of action, many more were +added to the list of the rescued. At length the important +case of James Somerset occurred; a case which is said to have +been selected, at the mutual desire of Lord Mansfield and Mr. +Sharp, in order to bring the great question involved to a clear +legal issue. Somerset had been brought to England by his +master, and left there. Afterwards his master sought to +apprehend him and send him off to Jamaica, for sale. Mr. +Sharp, as usual, at once took the negro’s case in hand, and +employed counsel to defend him. Lord Mansfield intimated +that the case was of such general concern, that he should take +the opinion of all the judges upon it. Mr. Sharp now felt +that he would have to contend with all the force that could be +brought against him, but his resolution was in no wise +shaken. Fortunately for him, in this severe struggle, his +exertions had already begun to tell: increasing interest was +taken in the question, and many eminent legal gentlemen openly +declared themselves to be upon his side.</p> + +<p>The cause of personal liberty, now at stake, was fairly tried +before Lord Mansfield, assisted by the three justices,—and +tried on the broad principle of the essential and constitutional +right of every man in England to the liberty of his person, +unless forfeited by the law. It is unnecessary here to +enter into any account of this great trial; the arguments +extended to a great length, the cause being carried over to +another term,—when it was adjourned and +re-adjourned,—but at length judgment was given by Lord +Mansfield, in whose powerful mind so gradual a change had been +worked by the arguments of counsel, based mainly on Granville +Sharp’s tract, that he now declared the court to be so +clearly of one opinion, that there was no necessity for referring +the case to the twelve judges. He then declared that the +claim of slavery never can be supported; that the power claimed +never was in use in England, nor acknowledged by the law; +therefore the man James Somerset must be discharged. By +securing this judgment Granville Sharp effectually abolished the +Slave Trade until then carried on openly in the streets of +Liverpool and London. But he also firmly established the +glorious axiom, that as soon as any slave sets his foot on +English ground, that moment he becomes free; and there can be no +doubt that this great decision of Lord Mansfield was mainly owing +to Mr. Sharp’s firm, resolute, and intrepid prosecution of +the cause from the beginning to the end.</p> + +<p>It is unnecessary further to follow the career of Granville +Sharp. He continued to labour indefatigably in all good +works. He was instrumental in founding the colony of Sierra +Leone as an asylum for rescued negroes. He laboured to +ameliorate the condition of the native Indians in the American +colonies. He agitated the enlargement and extension of the +political rights of the English people; and he endeavoured to +effect the abolition of the impressment of seamen. +Granville held that the British seamen, as well as the African +negro, was entitled to the protection of the law; and that the +fact of his choosing a seafaring life did not in any way cancel +his rights and privileges as an Englishman—first amongst +which he ranked personal freedom. Mr. Sharp also laboured, +but ineffectually, to restore amity between England and her +colonies in America; and when the fratricidal war of the American +Revolution was entered on, his sense of integrity was so +scrupulous that, resolving not in any way to be concerned in so +unnatural a business, he resigned his situation at the Ordnance +Office.</p> + +<p>To the last he held to the great object of his life—the +abolition of slavery. To carry on this work, and organize +the efforts of the growing friends of the cause, the Society for +the Abolition of Slavery was founded, and new men, inspired by +Sharp’s example and zeal, sprang forward to help him. +His energy became theirs, and the self-sacrificing zeal in which +he had so long laboured single-handed, became at length +transfused into the nation itself. His mantle fell upon +Clarkson, upon Wilberforce, upon Brougham, and upon Buxton, who +laboured as he had done, with like energy and stedfastness of +purpose, until at length slavery was abolished throughout the +British dominions. But though the names last mentioned may +be more frequently identified with the triumph of this great +cause, the chief merit unquestionably belongs to Granville +Sharp. He was encouraged by none of the world’s +huzzas when he entered upon his work. He stood alone, +opposed to the opinion of the ablest lawyers and the most rooted +prejudices of the times; and alone he fought out, by his single +exertions, and at his individual expense, the most memorable +battle for the constitution of this country and the liberties of +British subjects, of which modern times afford a record. +What followed was mainly the consequence of his indefatigable +constancy. He lighted the torch which kindled other minds, +and it was handed on until the illumination became complete.</p> + +<p>Before the death of Granville Sharp, Clarkson had already +turned his attention to the question of Negro Slavery. He +had even selected it for the subject of a college Essay; and his +mind became so possessed by it that he could not shake it +off. The spot is pointed out near Wade’s Mill, in +Hertfordshire, where, alighting from his horse one day, he sat +down disconsolate on the turf by the road side, and after long +thinking, determined to devote himself wholly to the work. +He translated his Essay from Latin into English, added fresh +illustrations, and published it. Then fellow labourers +gathered round him. The Society for Abolishing the Slave +Trade, unknown to him, had already been formed, and when he heard +of it he joined it. He sacrificed all his prospects in life +to prosecute this cause. Wilberforce was selected to lead +in parliament; but upon Clarkson chiefly devolved the labour of +collecting and arranging the immense mass of evidence offered in +support of the abolition. A remarkable instance of +Clarkson’s sleuth-hound sort of perseverance may be +mentioned. The abettors of slavery, in the course of their +defence of the system, maintained that only such negroes as were +captured in battle were sold as slaves, and if not so sold, then +they were reserved for a still more frightful doom in their own +country. Clarkson knew of the slave-hunts conducted by the +slave-traders, but had no witnesses to prove it. Where was +one to be found? Accidentally, a gentleman whom he met on +one of his journeys informed him of a young sailor, in whose +company he had been about a year before, who had been actually +engaged in one of such slave-hunting expeditions. The +gentleman did not know his name, and could but indefinitely +describe his person. He did not know where he was, further +than that he belonged to a ship of war in ordinary, but at what +port he could not tell. With this mere glimmering of +information, Clarkson determined to produce this man as a +witness. He visited personally all the seaport towns where +ships in ordinary lay; boarded and examined every ship without +success, until he came to the very <i>last</i> port, and found +the young man, his prize, in the very <i>last</i> ship that +remained to be visited. The young man proved to be one of +his most valuable and effective witnesses.</p> + +<p>During several years Clarkson conducted a correspondence with +upwards of four hundred persons, travelling more than thirty-five +thousand miles during the same time in search of evidence. +He was at length disabled and exhausted by illness, brought on by +his continuous exertions; but he was not borne from the field +until his zeal had fully awakened the public mind, and excited +the ardent sympathies of all good men on behalf of the slave.</p> + +<p>After years of protracted struggle, the slave trade was +abolished. But still another great achievement remained to +be accomplished—the abolition of slavery itself throughout +the British dominions. And here again determined energy won +the day. Of the leaders in the cause, none was more +distinguished than Fowell Buxton, who took the position formerly +occupied by Wilberforce in the House of Commons. Buxton was +a dull, heavy boy, distinguished for his strong self-will, which +first exhibited itself in violent, domineering, and headstrong +obstinacy. His father died when he was a child; but +fortunately he had a wise mother, who trained his will with great +care, constraining him to obey, but encouraging the habit of +deciding and acting for himself in matters which might safely be +left to him. His mother believed that a strong will, +directed upon worthy objects, was a valuable manly quality if +properly guided, and she acted accordingly. When others +about her commented on the boy’s self-will, she would +merely say, “Never mind—he is self-willed +now—you will see it will turn out well in the +end.” Fowell learnt very little at school, and was +regarded as a dunce and an idler. He got other boys to do +his exercises for him, while he romped and scrambled about. +He returned home at fifteen, a great, growing, awkward lad, fond +only of boating, shooting, riding, and field +sports,—spending his time principally with the gamekeeper, +a man possessed of a good heart,—an intelligent observer of +life and nature, though he could neither read nor write. +Buxton had excellent raw material in him, but he wanted culture, +training, and development. At this juncture of his life, +when his habits were being formed for good or evil, he was +happily thrown into the society of the Gurney family, +distinguished for their fine social qualities not less than for +their intellectual culture and public-spirited +philanthropy. This intercourse with the Gurneys, he used +afterwards to say, gave the colouring to his life. They +encouraged his efforts at self-culture; and when he went to the +University of Dublin and gained high honours there, the animating +passion in his mind, he said, “was to carry back to them +the prizes which they prompted and enabled me to +win.” He married one of the daughters of the family, +and started in life, commencing as a clerk to his uncles Hanbury, +the London brewers. His power of will, which made him so +difficult to deal with as a boy, now formed the backbone of his +character, and made him most indefatigable and energetic in +whatever he undertook. He threw his whole strength and bulk +right down upon his work; and the great +giant—“Elephant Buxton” they called him, for he +stood some six feet four in height—became one of the most +vigorous and practical of men. “I could brew,” +he said, “one hour,—do mathematics the +next,—and shoot the next,—and each with my whole +soul.” There was invincible energy and determination +in whatever he did. Admitted a partner, he became the +active manager of the concern; and the vast business which he +conducted felt his influence through every fibre, and prospered +far beyond its previous success. Nor did he allow his mind +to lie fallow, for he gave his evenings diligently to +self-culture, studying and digesting Blackstone, Montesquieu, and +solid commentaries on English law. His maxims in reading +were, “never to begin a book without finishing it;” +“never to consider a book finished until it is +mastered;” and “to study everything with the whole +mind.”</p> + +<p>When only thirty-two, Buxton entered parliament, and at once +assumed that position of influence there, of which every honest, +earnest, well-informed man is secure, who enters that assembly of +the first gentlemen in the world. The principal question to +which he devoted himself was the complete emancipation of the +slaves in the British colonies. He himself used to +attribute the interest which he early felt in this question to +the influence of Priscilla Gurney, one of the Earlham +family,—a woman of a fine intellect and warm heart, +abounding in illustrious virtues. When on her deathbed, in +1821, she repeatedly sent for Buxton, and urged him “to +make the cause of the slaves the great object of his +life.” Her last act was to attempt to reiterate the +solemn charge, and she expired in the ineffectual effort. +Buxton never forgot her counsel; he named one of his daughters +after her; and on the day on which she was married from his +house, on the 1st of August, 1834,—the day of Negro +emancipation—after his Priscilla had been manumitted from +her filial service, and left her father’s home in the +company of her husband, Buxton sat down and thus wrote to a +friend: “The bride is just gone; everything has passed off +to admiration; and <i>there is not a slave in the British +colonies</i>!”</p> + +<p>Buxton was no genius—not a great intellectual leader nor +discoverer, but mainly an earnest, straightforward, resolute, +energetic man. Indeed, his whole character is most forcibly +expressed in his own words, which every young man might well +stamp upon his soul: “The longer I live,” said he, +“the more I am certain that the great difference between +men, between the feeble and the powerful, the great and the +insignificant, is <i>energy</i>—<i>invincible +determination</i>—a purpose once fixed, and then death or +victory! That quality will do anything that can be done in +this world; and no talents, no circumstances, no opportunities, +will make a two-legged creature a Man without it.”</p> +<h2><a name="page263"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +263</span>CHAPTER IX.<br /> +<span class="smcap">Men of Business</span>.</h2> +<blockquote><p>“Seest thou a man diligent in his business? +he shall stand before kings.”—<i>Proverbs of +Solomon</i>.</p> + +<p>“That man is but of the lower part of the world that is +not brought up to business and affairs.”—<i>Owen +Feltham</i>.</p> +</blockquote> +<p><span class="smcap">Hazlitt</span>, in one of his clever +essays, represents the man of business as a mean sort of person +put in a go-cart, yoked to a trade or profession; alleging that +all he has to do is, not to go out of the beaten track, but +merely to let his affairs take their own course. “The +great requisite,” he says, “for the prosperous +management of ordinary business is the want of imagination, or of +any ideas but those of custom and interest on the narrowest +scale.” <a name="citation263"></a><a href="#footnote263" +class="citation">[263]</a> But nothing could be more +one-sided, and in effect untrue, than such a definition. Of +course, there are narrow-minded men of business, as there are +narrow-minded scientific men, literary men, and legislators; but +there are also business men of large and comprehensive minds, +capable of action on the very largest scale. As Burke said +in his speech on the India Bill, he knew statesmen who were +pedlers, and merchants who acted in the spirit of statesmen.</p> + +<p>If we take into account the qualities necessary for the +successful conduct of any important undertaking,—that it +requires special aptitude, promptitude of action on emergencies, +capacity for organizing the labours often of large numbers of +men, great tact and knowledge of human nature, constant +self-culture, and growing experience in the practical affairs of +life,—it must, we think, be obvious that the school of +business is by no means so narrow as some writers would have us +believe. Mr. Helps had gone much nearer the truth when he +said that consummate men of business are as rare almost as great +poets,—rarer, perhaps, than veritable saints and +martyrs. Indeed, of no other pursuit can it so emphatically +be said, as of this, that “Business makes men.”</p> + +<p>It has, however, been a favourite fallacy with dunces in all +times, that men of genius are unfitted for business, as well as +that business occupations unfit men for the pursuits of +genius. The unhappy youth who committed suicide a few years +since because he had been “born to be a man and condemned +to be a grocer,” proved by the act that his soul was not +equal even to the dignity of grocery. For it is not the +calling that degrades the man, but the man that degrades the +calling. All work that brings honest gain is honourable, +whether it be of hand or mind. The fingers may be soiled, +yet the heart remain pure; for it is not material so much as +moral dirt that defiles—greed far more than grime, and vice +than verdigris.</p> + +<p>The greatest have not disdained to labour honestly and +usefully for a living, though at the same time aiming after +higher things. Thales, the first of the seven sages, Solon, +the second founder of Athens, and Hyperates, the mathematician, +were all traders. Plato, called the Divine by reason of the +excellence of his wisdom, defrayed his travelling expenses in +Egypt by the profits derived from the oil which he sold during +his journey. Spinoza maintained himself by polishing +glasses while he pursued his philosophical investigations. +Linnæus, the great botanist, prosecuted his studies while +hammering leather and making shoes. Shakespeare was a +successful manager of a theatre—perhaps priding himself +more upon his practical qualities in that capacity than on his +writing of plays and poetry. Pope was of opinion that +Shakespeare’s principal object in cultivating literature +was to secure an honest independence. Indeed he seems to +have been altogether indifferent to literary reputation. It +is not known that he superintended the publication of a single +play, or even sanctioned the printing of one; and the chronology +of his writings is still a mystery. It is certain, however, +that he prospered in his business, and realized sufficient to +enable him to retire upon a competency to his native town of +Stratford-upon-Avon.</p> + +<p>Chaucer was in early life a soldier, and afterwards an +effective Commissioner of Customs, and Inspector of Woods and +Crown Lands. Spencer was Secretary to the Lord Deputy of +Ireland, was afterwards Sheriff of Cork, and is said to have been +shrewd and attentive in matters of business. Milton, +originally a schoolmaster, was elevated to the post of Secretary +to the Council of State during the Commonwealth; and the extant +Order-book of the Council, as well as many of Milton’s +letters which are preserved, give abundant evidence of his +activity and usefulness in that office. Sir Isaac Newton +proved himself an efficient Master of the Mint; the new coinage +of 1694 having been carried on under his immediate personal +superintendence. Cowper prided himself upon his business +punctuality, though he confessed that he “never knew a +poet, except himself, who was punctual in anything.” +But against this we may set the lives of Wordsworth and +Scott—the former a distributor of stamps, the latter a +clerk to the Court of Session,—both of whom, though great +poets, were eminently punctual and practical men of +business. David Ricardo, amidst the occupations of his +daily business as a London stock-jobber, in conducting which he +acquired an ample fortune, was able to concentrate his mind upon +his favourite subject—on which he was enabled to throw +great light—the principles of political economy; for he +united in himself the sagacious commercial man and the profound +philosopher. Baily, the eminent astronomer, was another +stockbroker; and Allen, the chemist, was a silk manufacturer.</p> + +<p>We have abundant illustrations, in our own day, of the fact +that the highest intellectual power is not incompatible with the +active and efficient performance of routine duties. Grote, +the great historian of Greece, was a London banker. And it +is not long since John Stuart Mill, one of our greatest living +thinkers, retired from the Examiner’s department of the +East India Company, carrying with him the admiration and esteem +of his fellow officers, not on account of his high views of +philosophy, but because of the high standard of efficiency which +he had established in his office, and the thoroughly satisfactory +manner in which he had conducted the business of his +department.</p> + +<p>The path of success in business is usually the path of common +sense. Patient labour and application are as necessary here +as in the acquisition of knowledge or the pursuit of +science. The old Greeks said, “to become an able man +in any profession, three things are necessary—nature, +study, and practice.” In business, practice, wisely +and diligently improved, is the great secret of success. +Some may make what are called “lucky hits,” but like +money earned by gambling, such “hits” may only serve +to lure one to ruin. Bacon was accustomed to say that it +was in business as in ways—the nearest way was commonly the +foulest, and that if a man would go the fairest way he must go +somewhat about. The journey may occupy a longer time, but +the pleasure of the labour involved by it, and the enjoyment of +the results produced, will be more genuine and unalloyed. +To have a daily appointed task of even common drudgery to do +makes the rest of life feel all the sweeter.</p> + +<p>The fable of the labours of Hercules is the type of all human +doing and success. Every youth should be made to feel that +his happiness and well-doing in life must necessarily rely mainly +on himself and the exercise of his own energies, rather than upon +the help and patronage of others. The late Lord Melbourne +embodied a piece of useful advice in a letter which he wrote to +Lord John Russell, in reply to an application for a provision for +one of Moore the poet’s sons: “My dear John,” +he said, “I return you Moore’s letter. I shall +be ready to do what you like about it when we have the +means. I think whatever is done should be done for Moore +himself. This is more distinct, direct, and +intelligible. Making a small provision for young men is +hardly justifiable; and it is of all things the most prejudicial +to themselves. They think what they have much larger than +it really is; and they make no exertion. The young should +never hear any language but this: ‘You have your own way to +make, and it depends upon your own exertions whether you starve +or not.’ Believe me, &c., <span +class="smcap">Melbourne</span>.”</p> + +<p>Practical industry, wisely and vigorously applied, always +produces its due effects. It carries a man onward, brings +out his individual character, and stimulates the action of +others. All may not rise equally, yet each, on the whole, +very much according to his deserts. “Though all +cannot live on the piazza,” as the Tuscan proverb has it, +“every one may feel the sun.”</p> + +<p>On the whole, it is not good that human nature should have the +road of life made too easy. Better to be under the +necessity of working hard and faring meanly, than to have +everything done ready to our hand and a pillow of down to repose +upon. Indeed, to start in life with comparatively small +means seems so necessary as a stimulus to work, that it may +almost be set down as one of the conditions essential to success +in life. Hence, an eminent judge, when asked what +contributed most to success at the bar, replied, “Some +succeed by great talent, some by high connexions, some by +miracle, but the majority by commencing without a +shilling.”</p> + +<p>We have heard of an architect of considerable +accomplishments,—a man who had improved himself by long +study, and travel in the classical lands of the East,—who +came home to commence the practice of his profession. He +determined to begin anywhere, provided he could be employed; and +he accordingly undertook a business connected with +dilapidations,—one of the lowest and least remunerative +departments of the architect’s calling. But he had +the good sense not to be above his trade, and he had the +resolution to work his way upward, so that he only got a fair +start. One hot day in July a friend found him sitting +astride of a house roof occupied with his dilapidation +business. Drawing his hand across his perspiring +countenance, he exclaimed, “Here’s a pretty business +for a man who has been all over Greece!” However, he +did his work, such as it was, thoroughly and well; he persevered +until he advanced by degrees to more remunerative branches of +employment, and eventually he rose to the highest walks of his +profession.</p> + +<p>The necessity of labour may, indeed, be regarded as the main +root and spring of all that we call progress in individuals, and +civilization in nations; and it is doubtful whether any heavier +curse could be imposed on man than the complete gratification of +all his wishes without effort on his part, leaving nothing for +his hopes, desires or struggles. The feeling that life is +destitute of any motive or necessity for action, must be of all +others the most distressing and insupportable to a rational +being. The Marquis de Spinola asking Sir Horace Vere what +his brother died of, Sir Horace replied, “He died, Sir, of +having nothing to do.” “Alas!” said +Spinola, “that is enough to kill any general of us +all.”</p> + +<p>Those who fail in life are however very apt to assume a tone +of injured innocence, and conclude too hastily that everybody +excepting themselves has had a hand in their personal +misfortunes. An eminent writer lately published a book, in +which he described his numerous failures in business, naively +admitting, at the same time, that he was ignorant of the +multiplication table; and he came to the conclusion that the real +cause of his ill-success in life was the money-worshipping spirit +of the age. Lamartine also did not hesitate to profess his +contempt for arithmetic; but, had it been less, probably we +should not have witnessed the unseemly spectacle of the admirers +of that distinguished personage engaged in collecting +subscriptions for his support in his old age.</p> + +<p>Again, some consider themselves born to ill luck, and make up +their minds that the world invariably goes against them without +any fault on their own part. We have heard of a person of +this sort, who went so far as to declare his belief that if he +had been a hatter people would have been born without +heads! There is however a Russian proverb which says that +Misfortune is next door to Stupidity; and it will often be found +that men who are constantly lamenting their luck, are in some way +or other reaping the consequences of their own neglect, +mismanagement, improvidence, or want of application. Dr. +Johnson, who came up to London with a single guinea in his +pocket, and who once accurately described himself in his +signature to a letter addressed to a noble lord, as +<i>Impransus</i>, or Dinnerless, has honestly said, “All +the complaints which are made of the world are unjust; I never +knew a man of merit neglected; it was generally by his own fault +that he failed of success.”</p> + +<p>Washington Irying, the American author, held like views. +“As for the talk,” said he, “about modest merit +being neglected, it is too often a cant, by which indolent and +irresolute men seek to lay their want of success at the door of +the public. Modest merit is, however, too apt to be +inactive, or negligent, or uninstructed merit. Well matured +and well disciplined talent is always sure of a market, provided +it exerts itself; but it must not cower at home and expect to be +sought for. There is a good deal of cant too about the +success of forward and impudent men, while men of retiring worth +are passed over with neglect. But it usually happens that +those forward men have that valuable quality of promptness and +activity without which worth is a mere inoperative +property. A barking dog is often more useful than a +sleeping lion.”</p> + +<p>Attention, application, accuracy, method, punctuality, and +despatch, are the principal qualities required for the efficient +conduct of business of any sort. These, at first sight, may +appear to be small matters; and yet they are of essential +importance to human happiness, well-being, and usefulness. +They are little things, it is true; but human life is made up of +comparative trifles. It is the repetition of little acts +which constitute not only the sum of human character, but which +determine the character of nations. And where men or +nations have broken down, it will almost invariably be found that +neglect of little things was the rock on which they split. +Every human being has duties to be performed, and, therefore, has +need of cultivating the capacity for doing them; whether the +sphere of action be the management of a household, the conduct of +a trade or profession, or the government of a nation.</p> + +<p>The examples we have already given of great workers in various +branches of industry, art, and science, render it unnecessary +further to enforce the importance of persevering application in +any department of life. It is the result of every-day +experience that steady attention to matters of detail lies at the +root of human progress; and that diligence, above all, is the +mother of good luck. Accuracy is also of much importance, +and an invariable mark of good training in a man. Accuracy +in observation, accuracy in speech, accuracy in the transaction +of affairs. What is done in business must be well done; for +it is better to accomplish perfectly a small amount of work, than +to half-do ten times as much. A wise man used to say, +“Stay a little, that we may make an end the +sooner.”</p> + +<p>Too little attention, however, is paid to this highly +important quality of accuracy. As a man eminent in +practical science lately observed to us, “It is astonishing +how few people I have met with in the course of my experience, +who can <i>define a fact</i> accurately.” Yet in +business affairs, it is the manner in which even small matters +are transacted, that often decides men for or against you. +With virtue, capacity, and good conduct in other respects, the +person who is habitually inaccurate cannot be trusted; his work +has to be gone over again; and he thus causes an infinity of +annoyance, vexation, and trouble.</p> + +<p>It was one of the characteristic qualities of Charles James +Fox, that he was thoroughly pains-taking in all that he +did. When appointed Secretary of State, being piqued at +some observation as to his bad writing, he actually took a +writing-master, and wrote copies like a schoolboy until he had +sufficiently improved himself. Though a corpulent man, he +was wonderfully active at picking up cut tennis balls, and when +asked how he contrived to do so, he playfully replied, +“Because I am a very pains-taking man.” The +same accuracy in trifling matters was displayed by him in things +of greater importance; and he acquired his reputation, like the +painter, by “neglecting nothing.”</p> + +<p>Method is essential, and enables a larger amount of work to be +got through with satisfaction. “Method,” said +the Reverend Richard Cecil, “is like packing things in a +box; a good packer will get in half as much again as a bad +one.” Cecil’s despatch of business was +extraordinary, his maxim being, “The shortest way to do +many things is to do only one thing at once;” and he never +left a thing undone with a view of recurring to it at a period of +more leisure. When business pressed, he rather chose to +encroach on his hours of meals and rest than omit any part of his +work. De Witt’s maxim was like Cecil’s: +“One thing at a time.” “If,” said +he, “I have any necessary despatches to make, I think of +nothing else till they are finished; if any domestic affairs +require my attention, I give myself wholly up to them till they +are set in order.”</p> + +<p>A French minister, who was alike remarkable for his despatch +of business and his constant attendance at places of amusement, +being asked how he contrived to combine both objects, replied, +“Simply by never postponing till to-morrow what should be +done to-day.” Lord Brougham has said that a certain +English statesman reversed the process, and that his maxim was, +never to transact to-day what could be postponed till +to-morrow. Unhappily, such is the practice of many besides +that minister, already almost forgotten; the practice is that of +the indolent and the unsuccessful. Such men, too, are apt +to rely upon agents, who are not always to be relied upon. +Important affairs must be attended to in person. “If +you want your business done,” says the proverb, “go +and do it; if you don’t want it done, send some one +else.”</p> + +<p>An indolent country gentleman had a freehold estate producing +about five hundred a-year. Becoming involved in debt, he +sold half the estate, and let the remainder to an industrious +farmer for twenty years. About the end of the term the +farmer called to pay his rent, and asked the owner whether he +would sell the farm. “Will <i>you</i> buy it?” +asked the owner, surprised. “Yes, if we can agree +about the price.” “That is exceedingly +strange,” observed the gentleman; “pray, tell me how +it happens that, while I could not live upon twice as much land +for which I paid no rent, you are regularly paying me two hundred +a-year for your farm, and are able, in a few years, to purchase +it.” “The reason is plain,” was the +reply; “you sat still and said <i>Go</i>, I got up and said +<i>Come</i>; you laid in bed and enjoyed your estate, I rose in +the morning and minded my business.”</p> + +<p>Sir Walter Scott, writing to a youth who had obtained a +situation and asked for his advice, gave him in reply this sound +counsel: “Beware of stumbling over a propensity which +easily besets you from not having your time fully +employed—I mean what the women call <i>dawdling</i>. +Your motto must be, <i>Hoc age</i>. Do instantly whatever +is to be done, and take the hours of recreation after business, +never before it. When a regiment is under march, the rear +is often thrown into confusion because the front do not move +steadily and without interruption. It is the same with +business. If that which is first in hand is not instantly, +steadily, and regularly despatched, other things accumulate +behind, till affairs begin to press all at once, and no human +brain can stand the confusion.”</p> + +<p>Promptitude in action may be stimulated by a due consideration +of the value of time. An Italian philosopher was accustomed +to call time his estate: an estate which produces nothing of +value without cultivation, but, duly improved, never fails to +recompense the labours of the diligent worker. Allowed to +lie waste, the product will be only noxious weeds and vicious +growths of all kinds. One of the minor uses of steady +employment is, that it keeps one out of mischief, for truly an +idle brain is the devil’s workshop, and a lazy man the +devil’s bolster. To be occupied is to be possessed as +by a tenant, whereas to be idle is to be empty; and when the +doors of the imagination are opened, temptation finds a ready +access, and evil thoughts come trooping in. It is observed +at sea, that men are never so much disposed to grumble and mutiny +as when least employed. Hence an old captain, when there +was nothing else to do, would issue the order to “scour the +anchor!”</p> + +<p>Men of business are accustomed to quote the maxim that Time is +money; but it is more; the proper improvement of it is +self-culture, self-improvement, and growth of character. An +hour wasted daily on trifles or in indolence, would, if devoted +to self-improvement, make an ignorant man wise in a few years, +and employed in good works, would make his life fruitful, and +death a harvest of worthy deeds. Fifteen minutes a day +devoted to self-improvement, will be felt at the end of the +year. Good thoughts and carefully gathered experience take +up no room, and may be carried about as our companions +everywhere, without cost or incumbrance. An economical use +of time is the true mode of securing leisure: it enables us to +get through business and carry it forward, instead of being +driven by it. On the other hand, the miscalculation of time +involves us in perpetual hurry, confusion, and difficulties; and +life becomes a mere shuffle of expedients, usually followed by +disaster. Nelson once said, “I owe all my success in +life to having been always a quarter of an hour before my +time.”</p> + +<p>Some take no thought of the value of money until they have +come to an end of it, and many do the same with their time. +The hours are allowed to flow by unemployed, and then, when life +is fast waning, they bethink themselves of the duty of making a +wiser use of it. But the habit of listlessness and idleness +may already have become confirmed, and they are unable to break +the bonds with which they have permitted themselves to become +bound. Lost wealth may be replaced by industry, lost +knowledge by study, lost health by temperance or medicine, but +lost time is gone for ever.</p> + +<p>A proper consideration of the value of time, will also inspire +habits of punctuality. “Punctuality,” said +Louis XIV., “is the politeness of kings.” It is +also the duty of gentlemen, and the necessity of men of +business. Nothing begets confidence in a man sooner than +the practice of this virtue, and nothing shakes confidence sooner +than the want of it. He who holds to his appointment and +does not keep you waiting for him, shows that he has regard for +your time as well as for his own. Thus punctuality is one +of the modes by which we testify our personal respect for those +whom we are called upon to meet in the business of life. It +is also conscientiousness in a measure; for an appointment is a +contract, express or implied, and he who does not keep it breaks +faith, as well as dishonestly uses other people’s time, and +thus inevitably loses character. We naturally come to the +conclusion that the person who is careless about time will be +careless about business, and that he is not the one to be trusted +with the transaction of matters of importance. When +Washington’s secretary excused himself for the lateness of +his attendance and laid the blame upon his watch, his master +quietly said, “Then you must get another watch, or I +another secretary.”</p> + +<p>The person who is negligent of time and its employment is +usually found to be a general disturber of others’ peace +and serenity. It was wittily said by Lord Chesterfield of +the old Duke of Newcastle—“His Grace loses an hour in +the morning, and is looking for it all the rest of the +day.” Everybody with whom the unpunctual man has to +do is thrown from time to time into a state of fever: he is +systematically late; regular only in his irregularity. He +conducts his dawdling as if upon system; arrives at his +appointment after time; gets to the railway station after the +train has started; posts his letter when the box has +closed. Thus business is thrown into confusion, and +everybody concerned is put out of temper. It will generally +be found that the men who are thus habitually behind time are as +habitually behind success; and the world generally casts them +aside to swell the ranks of the grumblers and the railers against +fortune.</p> + +<p>In addition to the ordinary working qualities the business man +of the highest class requires quick perception and firmness in +the execution of his plans. Tact is also important; and +though this is partly the gift of nature, it is yet capable of +being cultivated and developed by observation and +experience. Men of this quality are quick to see the right +mode of action, and if they have decision of purpose, are prompt +to carry out their undertakings to a successful issue. +These qualities are especially valuable, and indeed +indispensable, in those who direct the action of other men on a +large scale, as for instance, in the case of the commander of an +army in the field. It is not merely necessary that the +general should be great as a warrior but also as a man of +business. He must possess great tact, much knowledge of +character, and ability to organize the movements of a large mass +of men, whom he has to feed, clothe, and furnish with whatever +may be necessary in order that they may keep the field and win +battles. In these respects Napoleon and Wellington were +both first-rate men of business.</p> + +<p>Though Napoleon had an immense love for details, he had also a +vivid power of imagination, which enabled him to look along +extended lines of action, and deal with those details on a large +scale, with judgment and rapidity. He possessed such +knowledge of character as enabled him to select, almost +unerringly, the best agents for the execution of his +designs. But he trusted as little as possible to agents in +matters of great moment, on which important results +depended. This feature in his character is illustrated in a +remarkable degree by the ‘Napoleon Correspondence,’ +now in course of publication, and particularly by the contents of +the 15th volume, <a name="citation277"></a><a href="#footnote277" +class="citation">[277]</a> which include the letters, orders, and +despatches, written by the Emperor at Finkenstein, a little +chateau on the frontier of Poland in the year 1807, shortly after +the victory of Eylau.</p> + +<p>The French army was then lying encamped along the river +Passarge with the Russians before them, the Austrians on their +right flank, and the conquered Prussians in their rear. A +long line of communications had to be maintained with France, +through a hostile country; but so carefully, and with such +foresight was this provided for, that it is said Napoleon never +missed a post. The movements of armies, the bringing up of +reinforcements from remote points in France, Spain, Italy, and +Germany, the opening of canals and the levelling of roads to +enable the produce of Poland and Prussia to be readily +transported to his encampments, had his unceasing attention, down +to the minutest details. We find him directing where horses +were to be obtained, making arrangements for an adequate supply +of saddles, ordering shoes for the soldiers, and specifying the +number of rations of bread, biscuit, and spirits, that were to be +brought to camp, or stored in magazines for the use of the +troops. At the same time we find him writing to Paris +giving directions for the reorganization of the French College, +devising a scheme of public education, dictating bulletins and +articles for the ‘Moniteur,’ revising the details of +the budgets, giving instructions to architects as to alterations +to be made at the Tuileries and the Church of the Madelaine, +throwing an occasional sarcasm at Madame de Stael and the +Parisian journals, interfering to put down a squabble at the +Grand Opera, carrying on a correspondence with the Sultan of +Turkey and the Schah of Persia, so that while his body was at +Finkenstein, his mind seemed to be working at a hundred different +places in Paris, in Europe, and throughout the world.</p> + +<p>We find him in one letter asking Ney if he has duly received +the muskets which have been sent him; in another he gives +directions to Prince Jerome as to the shirts, greatcoats, +clothes, shoes, shakos, and arms, to be served out to the +Wurtemburg regiments; again he presses Cambacérès +to forward to the army a double stock of corn—“The +<i>ifs</i> and the <i>buts</i>,” said he, “are at +present out of season, and above all it must be done with +speed.” Then he informs Daru that the army want +shirts, and that they don’t come to hand. To Massena +he writes, “Let me know if your biscuit and bread +arrangements are yet completed.” To the Grand due de +Berg, he gives directions as to the accoutrements of the +cuirassiers—“They complain that the men want sabres; +send an officer to obtain them at Posen. It is also said +they want helmets; order that they be made at Ebling. . . . It is +not by sleeping that one can accomplish anything.” +Thus no point of detail was neglected, and the energies of all +were stimulated into action with extraordinary power. +Though many of the Emperor’s days were occupied by +inspections of his troops,—in the course of which he +sometimes rode from thirty to forty leagues a day,—and by +reviews, receptions, and affairs of state, leaving but little +time for business matters, he neglected nothing on that account; +but devoted the greater part of his nights, when necessary, to +examining budgets, dictating dispatches, and attending to the +thousand matters of detail in the organization and working of the +Imperial Government; the machinery of which was for the most part +concentrated in his own head.</p> + +<p>Like Napoleon, the Duke of Wellington was a first-rate man of +business; and it is not perhaps saying too much to aver that it +was in no small degree because of his possession of a business +faculty amounting to genius, that the Duke never lost a +battle.</p> + +<p>While a subaltern, he became dissatisfied with the slowness of +his promotion, and having passed from the infantry to the cavalry +twice, and back again, without advancement, he applied to Lord +Camden, then Viceroy of Ireland, for employment in the Revenue or +Treasury Board. Had he succeeded, no doubt he would have +made a first-rate head of a department, as he would have made a +first-rate merchant or manufacturer. But his application +failed, and he remained with the army to become the greatest of +British generals.</p> + +<p>The Duke began his active military career under the Duke of +York and General Walmoden, in Flanders and Holland, where he +learnt, amidst misfortunes and defeats, how bad business +arrangements and bad generalship serve to ruin the <i>morale</i> +of an army. Ten years after entering the army we find him a +colonel in India, reported by his superiors as an officer of +indefatigable energy and application. He entered into the +minutest details of the service, and sought to raise the +discipline of his men to the highest standard. “The +regiment of Colonel Wellesley,” wrote General Harris in +1799, “is a model regiment; on the score of soldierly +bearing, discipline, instruction, and orderly behaviour it is +above all praise.” Thus qualifying himself for posts +of greater confidence, he was shortly after nominated governor of +the capital of Mysore. In the war with the Mahrattas he was +first called upon to try his hand at generalship; and at +thirty-four he won the memorable battle of Assaye, with an army +composed of 1500 British and 5000 sepoys, over 20,000 Mahratta +infantry and 30,000 cavalry. But so brilliant a victory did +not in the least disturb his equanimity, or affect the perfect +honesty of his character.</p> + +<p>Shortly after this event the opportunity occurred for +exhibiting his admirable practical qualities as an +administrator. Placed in command of an important district +immediately after the capture of Seringapatam, his first object +was to establish rigid order and discipline among his own +men. Flushed with victory, the troops were found riotous +and disorderly. “Send me the provost marshal,” +said he, “and put him under my orders: till some of the +marauders are hung, it is impossible to expect order or +safety.” This rigid severity of Wellington in the +field, though it was the dread, proved the salvation of his +troops in many campaigns. His next step was to re-establish +the markets and re-open the sources of supply. General +Harris wrote to the Governor-general, strongly commending Colonel +Wellesley for the perfect discipline he had established, and for +his “judicious and masterly arrangements in respect to +supplies, which opened an abundant free market, and inspired +confidence into dealers of every description.” The +same close attention to, and mastery of details, characterized +him throughout his Indian career; and it is remarkable that one +of his ablest despatches to Lord Clive, full of practical +information as to the conduct of the campaign, was written whilst +the column he commanded was crossing the Toombuddra, in the face +of the vastly superior army of Dhoondiah, posted on the opposite +bank, and while a thousand matters of the deepest interest were +pressing upon the commander’s mind. But it was one of +his most remarkable characteristics, thus to be able to withdraw +himself temporarily from the business immediately in hand, and to +bend his full powers upon the consideration of matters totally +distinct; even the most difficult circumstances on such occasions +failing to embarrass or intimidate him.</p> + +<p>Returned to England with a reputation for generalship, Sir +Arthur Wellesley met with immediate employment. In 1808 a +corps of 10,000 men destined to liberate Portugal was placed +under his charge. He landed, fought, and won two battles, +and signed the Convention of Cintra. After the death of Sir +John Moore he was entrusted with the command of a new expedition +to Portugal. But Wellington was fearfully overmatched +throughout his Peninsular campaigns. From 1809 to 1813 he +never had more than 30,000 British troops under his command, at a +time when there stood opposed to him in the Peninsula some +350,000 French, mostly veterans, led by some of Napoleon’s +ablest generals. How was he to contend against such immense +forces with any fair prospect of success? His clear +discernment and strong common sense soon taught him that he must +adopt a different policy from that of the Spanish generals, who +were invariably beaten and dispersed whenever they ventured to +offer battle in the open plains. He perceived he had yet to +create the army that was to contend against the French with any +reasonable chance of success. Accordingly, after the battle +of Talavera in 1809, when he found himself encompassed on all +sides by superior forces of French, he retired into Portugal, +there to carry out the settled policy on which he had by this +time determined. It was, to organise a Portuguese army +under British officers, and teach them to act in combination with +his own troops, in the mean time avoiding the peril of a defeat +by declining all engagements. He would thus, he conceived, +destroy the <i>morale</i> of the French, who could not exist +without victories; and when his army was ripe for action, and the +enemy demoralized, he would then fall upon them with all his +might.</p> + +<p>The extraordinary qualities displayed by Lord Wellington +throughout these immortal campaigns, can only be appreciated +after a perusal of his despatches, which contain the unvarnished +tale of the manifold ways and means by which he laid the +foundations of his success. Never was man more tried by +difficulty and opposition, arising not less from the imbecility, +falsehoods and intrigues of the British Government of the day, +than from the selfishness, cowardice, and vanity of the people he +went to save. It may, indeed, be said of him, that he +sustained the war in Spain by his individual firmness and +self-reliance, which never failed him even in the midst of his +great discouragements. He had not only to fight +Napoleon’s veterans, but also to hold in check the Spanish +juntas and the Portuguese regency. He had the utmost +difficulty in obtaining provisions and clothing for his troops; +and it will scarcely be credited that, while engaged with the +enemy in the battle of Talavera, the Spaniards, who ran away, +fell upon the baggage of the British army, and the ruffians +actually plundered it! These and other vexations the Duke +bore with a sublime patience and self-control, and held on his +course, in the face of ingratitude, treachery, and opposition, +with indomitable firmness. He neglected nothing, and +attended to every important detail of business himself. +When he found that food for his troops was not to be obtained +from England, and that he must rely upon his own resources for +feeding them, he forthwith commenced business as a corn merchant +on a large scale, in copartnery with the British Minister at +Lisbon. Commissariat bills were created, with which grain +was bought in the ports of the Mediterranean and in South +America. When he had thus filled his magazines, the +overplus was sold to the Portuguese, who were greatly in want of +provisions. He left nothing whatever to chance, but +provided for every contingency. He gave his attention to +the minutest details of the service; and was accustomed to +concentrate his whole energies, from time to time, on such +apparently ignominious matters as soldiers’ shoes, +camp-kettles, biscuits and horse fodder. His magnificent +business qualities were everywhere felt, and there can be no +doubt that, by the care with which he provided for every +contingency, and the personal attention which he gave to every +detail, he laid the foundations of his great success. <a +name="citation283"></a><a href="#footnote283" +class="citation">[283]</a> By such means he transformed an +army of raw levies into the best soldiers in Europe, with whom he +declared it to be possible to go anywhere and do anything.</p> + +<p>We have already referred to his remarkable power of +abstracting himself from the work, no matter how engrossing, +immediately in hand, and concentrating his energies upon the +details of some entirely different business. Thus Napier +relates that it was while he was preparing to fight the battle of +Salamanca that he had to expose to the Ministers at home the +futility of relying upon a loan; it was on the heights of San +Christoval, on the field of battle itself, that he demonstrated +the absurdity of attempting to establish a Portuguese bank; it +was in the trenches of Burgos that he dissected Funchal’s +scheme of finance, and exposed the folly of attempting the sale +of church property; and on each occasion, he showed himself as +well acquainted with these subjects as with the minutest detail +in the mechanism of armies.</p> + +<p>Another feature in his character, showing the upright man of +business, was his thorough honesty. Whilst Soult ransacked +and carried away with him from Spain numerous pictures of great +value, Wellington did not appropriate to himself a single +farthing’s worth of property. Everywhere he paid his +way, even when in the enemy’s country. When he had +crossed the French frontier, followed by 40,000 Spaniards, who +sought to “make fortunes” by pillage and plunder, he +first rebuked their officers, and then, finding his efforts to +restrain them unavailing, he sent them back into their own +country. It is a remarkable fact, that, even in France the +peasantry fled from their own countrymen, and carried their +valuables within the protection of the British lines! At +the very same time, Wellington was writing home to the British +Ministry, “We are overwhelmed with debts, and I can +scarcely stir out of my house on account of public creditors +waiting to demand payment of what is due to them.” +Jules Maurel, in his estimate of the Duke’s character, +says, “Nothing can be grander or more nobly original than +this admission. This old soldier, after thirty years’ +service, this iron man and victorious general, established in an +enemy’s country at the head of an immense army, is afraid +of his creditors! This is a kind of fear that has seldom +troubled the mind of conquerors and invaders; and I doubt if the +annals of war could present anything comparable to this sublime +simplicity.” But the Duke himself, had the matter +been put to him, would most probably have disclaimed any +intention of acting even grandly or nobly in the matter; merely +regarding the punctual payment of his debts as the best and most +honourable mode of conducting his business.</p> + +<p>The truth of the good old maxim, that “Honesty is the +best policy,” is upheld by the daily experience of life; +uprightness and integrity being found as successful in business +as in everything else. As Hugh Miller’s worthy uncle +used to advise him, “In all your dealings give your +neighbour the cast of the bank—‘good measure, heaped +up, and running over,’—and you will not lose by it in +the end.” A well-known brewer of beer attributed his +success to the liberality with which he used his malt. +Going up to the vat and tasting it, he would say, “Still +rather poor, my lads; give it another cast of the +malt.” The brewer put his character into his beer, +and it proved generous accordingly, obtaining a reputation in +England, India, and the colonies, which laid the foundation of a +large fortune. Integrity of word and deed ought to be the +very cornerstone of all business transactions. To the +tradesman, the merchant, and manufacturer, it should be what +honour is to the soldier, and charity to the Christian. In +the humblest calling there will always be found scope for the +exercise of this uprightness of character. Hugh Miller +speaks of the mason with whom he served his apprenticeship, as +one who “<i>put his conscience into every stone that he +laid</i>.” So the true mechanic will pride himself +upon the thoroughness and solidity of his work, and the +high-minded contractor upon the honesty of performance of his +contract in every particular. The upright manufacturer will +find not only honour and reputation, but substantial success, in +the genuineness of the article which he produces, and the +merchant in the honesty of what he sells, and that it really is +what it seems to be. Baron Dupin, speaking of the general +probity of Englishmen, which he held to be a principal cause of +their success, observed, “We may succeed for a time by +fraud, by surprise, by violence; but we can succeed permanently +only by means directly opposite. It is not alone the +courage, the intelligence, the activity, of the merchant and +manufacturer which maintain the superiority of their productions +and the character of their country; it is far more their wisdom, +their economy, and, above all, their probity. If ever in +the British Islands the useful citizen should lose these virtues, +we may be sure that, for England, as for every other country, the +vessels of a degenerate commerce, repulsed from every shore, +would speedily disappear from those seas whose surface they now +cover with the treasures of the universe, bartered for the +treasures of the industry of the three kingdoms.”</p> + +<p>It must be admitted, that Trade tries character perhaps more +severely than any other pursuit in life. It puts to the +severest tests honesty, self-denial, justice, and truthfulness; +and men of business who pass through such trials unstained are +perhaps worthy of as great honour as soldiers who prove their +courage amidst the fire and perils of battle. And, to the +credit of the multitudes of men engaged in the various +departments of trade, we think it must be admitted that on the +whole they pass through their trials nobly. If we reflect +but for a moment on the vast amount of wealth daily entrusted +even to subordinate persons, who themselves probably earn but a +bare competency—the loose cash which is constantly passing +through the hands of shopmen, agents, brokers, and clerks in +banking houses,—and note how comparatively few are the +breaches of trust which occur amidst all this temptation, it will +probably be admitted that this steady daily honesty of conduct is +most honourable to human nature, if it do not even tempt us to be +proud of it. The same trust and confidence reposed by men +of business in each other, as implied by the system of Credit, +which is mainly based upon the principle of honour, would be +surprising if it were not so much a matter of ordinary practice +in business transactions. Dr. Chalmers has well said, that +the implicit trust with which merchants are accustomed to confide +in distant agents, separated from them perhaps by half the +globe—often consigning vast wealth to persons, recommended +only by their character, whom perhaps they have never +seen—is probably the finest act of homage which men can +render to one another.</p> + +<p>Although common honesty is still happily in the ascendant +amongst common people, and the general business community of +England is still sound at heart, putting their honest character +into their respective callings,—there are unhappily, as +there have been in all times, but too many instances of flagrant +dishonesty and fraud, exhibited by the unscrupulous, the +over-speculative, and the intensely selfish in their haste to be +rich. There are tradesmen who adulterate, contractors who +“scamp,” manufacturers who give us shoddy instead of +wool, “dressing” instead of cotton, cast-iron tools +instead of steel, needles without eyes, razors made only +“to sell,” and swindled fabrics in many shapes. +But these we must hold to be the exceptional cases, of low-minded +and grasping men, who, though they may gain wealth which they +probably cannot enjoy, will never gain an honest character, nor +secure that without which wealth is nothing—a heart at +peace. “The rogue cozened not me, but his own +conscience,” said Bishop Latimer of a cutler who made him +pay twopence for a knife not worth a penny. Money, earned +by screwing, cheating, and overreaching, may for a time dazzle +the eyes of the unthinking; but the bubbles blown by unscrupulous +rogues, when full-blown, usually glitter only to burst. The +Sadleirs, Dean Pauls, and Redpaths, for the most part, come to a +sad end even in this world; and though the successful swindles of +others may not be “found out,” and the gains of their +roguery may remain with them, it will be as a curse and not as a +blessing.</p> + +<p>It is possible that the scrupulously honest man may not grow +rich so fast as the unscrupulous and dishonest one; but the +success will be of a truer kind, earned without fraud or +injustice. And even though a man should for a time be +unsuccessful, still he must be honest: better lose all and save +character. For character is itself a fortune; and if the +high-principled man will but hold on his way courageously, +success will surely come,—nor will the highest reward of +all be withheld from him. Wordsworth well describes the +“Happy Warrior,” as he</p> +<blockquote><p>“Who comprehends his trust, and to the +same<br /> +Keeps faithful with a singleness of aim;<br /> +And therefore does not stoop, nor lie in wait<br /> +For wealth, or honour, or for worldly state;<br /> +Whom they must follow, on whose head must fall,<br /> +Like showers of manna, if they come at all.”</p> +</blockquote> +<p>As an example of the high-minded mercantile man trained in +upright habits of business, and distinguished for justice, +truthfulness, and honesty of dealing in all things, the career of +the well-known David Barclay, grandson of Robert Barclay, of Ury, +the author of the celebrated ‘Apology for the +Quakers,’ may be briefly referred to. For many years +he was the head of an extensive house in Cheapside, chiefly +engaged in the American trade; but like Granville Sharp, he +entertained so strong an opinion against the war with our +American colonies, that he determined to retire altogether from +the trade. Whilst a merchant, he was as much distinguished +for his talents, knowledge, integrity, and power, as he +afterwards was for his patriotism and munificent +philanthropy. He was a mirror of truthfulness and honesty; +and, as became the good Christian and true gentleman, his word +was always held to be as good as his bond. His position, +and his high character, induced the Ministers of the day on many +occasions to seek his advice; and, when examined before the House +of Commons on the subject of the American dispute, his views were +so clearly expressed, and his advice was so strongly justified by +the reasons stated by him, that Lord North publicly acknowledged +that he had derived more information from David Barclay than from +all others east of Temple Bar. On retiring from business, +it was not to rest in luxurious ease, but to enter upon new +labours of usefulness for others. With ample means, he felt +that he still owed to society the duty of a good example. +He founded a house of industry near his residence at Walthamstow, +which he supported at a heavy outlay for several years, until at +length he succeeded in rendering it a source of comfort as well +as independence to the well-disposed families of the poor in that +neighbourhood. When an estate in Jamaica fell to him, he +determined, though at a cost of some 10,000<i>l.</i>, at once to +give liberty to the whole of the slaves on the property. He +sent out an agent, who hired a ship, and he had the little slave +community transported to one of the free American states, where +they settled down and prospered. Mr. Barclay had been +assured that the negroes were too ignorant and too barbarous for +freedom, and it was thus that he determined practically to +demonstrate the fallacy of the assertion. In dealing with +his accumulated savings, he made himself the executor of his own +will, and instead of leaving a large fortune to be divided among +his relatives at his death, he extended to them his munificent +aid during his life, watched and aided them in their respective +careers, and thus not only laid the foundation, but lived to see +the maturity, of some of the largest and most prosperous business +concerns in the metropolis. We believe that to this day +some of our most eminent merchants—such as the Gurneys, +Hanburys, and Buxtons—are proud to acknowledge with +gratitude the obligations they owe to David Barclay for the means +of their first introduction to life, and for the benefits of his +counsel and countenance in the early stages of their +career. Such a man stands as a mark of the mercantile +honesty and integrity of his country, and is a model and example +for men of business in all time to come.</p> +<h2><a name="page290"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +290</span>CHAPTER X.<br /> +<span class="smcap">Money—Its Use and Abuse</span>.</h2> +<blockquote><p>“Not for to hide it in a hedge,<br /> + Nor for a train attendant,<br /> +But for the glorious privilege<br /> + Of being independent.”—<i>Burns</i>.</p> + +<p>“Neither a borrower nor a lender be:<br /> +For loan oft loses both itself and friend;<br /> +And borrowing dulls the edge of +husbandry.”—<i>Shakepeare</i>.</p> + +<p>Never treat money affairs with levity—Money is +character.—<i>Sir E. L. Bulwer Lytton</i>.</p> +</blockquote> +<p><span class="smcap">How</span> a man uses money—makes +it, saves it, and spends it—is perhaps one of the best +tests of practical wisdom. Although money ought by no means +to be regarded as a chief end of man’s life, neither is it +a trifling matter, to be held in philosophic contempt, +representing as it does to so large an extent, the means of +physical comfort and social well-being. Indeed, some of the +finest qualities of human nature are intimately related to the +right use of money; such as generosity, honesty, justice, and +self-sacrifice; as well as the practical virtues of economy and +providence. On the other hand, there are their counterparts +of avarice, fraud, injustice, and selfishness, as displayed by +the inordinate lovers of gain; and the vices of thriftlessness, +extravagance, and improvidence, on the part of those who misuse +and abuse the means entrusted to them. “So +that,” as is wisely observed by Henry Taylor in his +thoughtful ‘Notes from Life,’ “a right measure +and manner in getting, saving, spending, giving, taking, lending, +borrowing, and bequeathing, would almost argue a perfect +man.”</p> + +<p>Comfort in worldly circumstances is a con ion which every man +is justified in striving to attain by all worthy means. It +secures that physical satisfaction, which is necessary for the +culture of the better part of his nature; and enables him to +provide for those of his own household, without which, says the +Apostle, a man is “worse than an infidel.” Nor +ought the duty to be any the less indifferent to us, that the +respect which our fellow-men entertain for us in no slight degree +depends upon the manner in which we exercise the opportunities +which present themselves for our honourable advancement in +life. The very effort required to be made to succeed in +life with this object, is of itself an education; stimulating a +man’s sense of self-respect, bringing out his practical +qualities, and disciplining him in the exercise of patience, +perseverance, and such like virtues. The provident and +careful man must necessarily be a thoughtful man, for he lives +not merely for the present, but with provident forecast makes +arrangements for the future. He must also be a temperate +man, and exercise the virtue of self-denial, than which nothing +is so much calculated to give strength to the character. +John Sterling says truly, that “the worst education which +teaches self denial, is better than the best which teaches +everything else, and not that.” The Romans rightly +employed the same word (virtus) to designate courage, which is in +a physical sense what the other is in a moral; the highest virtue +of all being victory over ourselves.</p> + +<p>Hence the lesson of self-denial—the sacrificing of a +present gratification for a future good—is one of the last +that is learnt. Those classes which work the hardest might +naturally be expected to value the most the money which they +earn. Yet the readiness with which so many are accustomed +to eat up and drink up their earnings as they go, renders them to +a great extent helpless and dependent upon the frugal. +There are large numbers of persons among us who, though enjoying +sufficient means of comfort and independence, are often found to +be barely a day’s march ahead of actual want when a time of +pressure occurs; and hence a great cause of social helplessness +and suffering. On one occasion a deputation waited on Lord +John Russell, respecting the taxation levied on the working +classes of the country, when the noble lord took the opportunity +of remarking, “You may rely upon it that the Government of +this country durst not tax the working classes to anything like +the extent to which they tax themselves in their expenditure upon +intoxicating drinks alone!” Of all great public +questions, there is perhaps none more important than +this,—no great work of reform calling more loudly for +labourers. But it must be admitted that “self-denial +and self-help” would make a poor rallying cry for the +hustings; and it is to be feared that the patriotism of this day +has but little regard for such common things as individual +economy and providence, although it is by the practice of such +virtues only that the genuine independence of the industrial +classes is to be secured. “Prudence, frugality, and +good management,” said Samuel Drew, the philosophical +shoemaker, “are excellent artists for mending bad times: +they occupy but little room in any dwelling, but would furnish a +more effectual remedy for the evils of life than any Reform Bill +that ever passed the Houses of Parliament.” Socrates +said, “Let him that would move the world move first +himself. ” Or as the old rhyme runs—</p> +<blockquote><p>“If every one would see<br /> +To his own reformation,<br /> +How very easily<br /> +You might reform a nation.”</p> +</blockquote> +<p>It is, however, generally felt to be a far easier thing to +reform the Church and the State than to reform the least of our +own bad habits; and in such matters it is usually found more +agreeable to our tastes, as it certainly is the common practice, +to begin with our neighbours rather than with ourselves.</p> + +<p>Any class of men that lives from hand to mouth will ever be an +inferior class. They will necessarily remain impotent and +helpless, hanging on to the skirts of society, the sport of times +and seasons. Having no respect for themselves, they will +fail in securing the respect of others. In commercial +crises, such men must inevitably go to the wall. Wanting +that husbanded power which a store of savings, no matter how +small, invariably gives them, they will be at every man’s +mercy, and, if possessed of right feelings, they cannot but +regard with fear and trembling the future possible fate of their +wives and children. “The world,” once said Mr. +Cobden to the working men of Huddersfield, “has always been +divided into two classes,—those who have saved, and those +who have spent—the thrifty and the extravagant. The +building of all the houses, the mills, the bridges, and the +ships, and the accomplishment of all other great works which have +rendered man civilized and happy, has been done by the savers, +the thrifty; and those who have wasted their resources have +always been their slaves. It has been the law of nature and +of Providence that this should be so; and I were an impostor if I +promised any class that they would advance themselves if they +were improvident, thoughtless, and idle.”</p> + +<p>Equally sound was the advice given by Mr. Bright to an +assembly of working men at Rochdale, in 1847, when, after +expressing his belief that, “so far as honesty was +concerned, it was to be found in pretty equal amount among all +classes,” he used the following words:—“There +is only one way that is safe for any man, or any number of men, +by which they can maintain their present position if it be a good +one, or raise themselves above it if it be a bad one,—that +is, by the practice of the virtues of industry, frugality, +temperance, and honesty. There is no royal road by which +men can raise themselves from a position which they feel to be +uncomfortable and unsatisfactory, as regards their mental or +physical condition, except by the practice of those virtues by +which they find numbers amongst them are continually advancing +and bettering themselves.”</p> + +<p>There is no reason why the condition of the average workman +should not be a useful, honourable, respectable, and happy +one. The whole body of the working classes might, (with few +exceptions) be as frugal, virtuous, well-informed, and +well-conditioned as many individuals of the same class have +already made themselves. What some men are, all without +difficulty might be. Employ the same means, and the same +results will follow. That there should be a class of men +who live by their daily labour in every state is the ordinance of +God, and doubtless is a wise and righteous one; but that this +class should be otherwise than frugal, contented, intelligent, +and happy, is not the design of Providence, but springs solely +from the weakness, self-indulgence, and perverseness of man +himself. The healthy spirit of self-help created amongst +working people would more than any other measure serve to raise +them as a class, and this, not by pulling down others, but by +levelling them up to a higher and still advancing standard of +religion, intelligence, and virtue. “All moral +philosophy,” says Montaigne, “is as applicable to a +common and private life as to the most splendid. Every man +carries the entire form of the human condition within +him.”</p> + +<p>When a man casts his glance forward, he will find that the +three chief temporal contingencies for which he has to provide +are want of employment, sickness, and death. The two first +he may escape, but the last is inevitable. It is, however, +the duty of the prudent man so to live, and so to arrange, that +the pressure of suffering, in event of either contingency +occurring, shall be mitigated to as great an extent as possible, +not only to himself, but also to those who are dependent upon him +for their comfort and subsistence. Viewed in this light the +honest earning and the frugal use of money are of the greatest +importance. Rightly earned, it is the representative of +patient industry and untiring effort, of temptation resisted, and +hope rewarded; and rightly used, it affords indications of +prudence, forethought and self-denial—the true basis of +manly character. Though money represents a crowd of objects +without any real worth or utility, it also represents many things +of great value; not only food, clothing, and household +satisfaction, but personal self-respect and independence. +Thus a store of savings is to the working man as a barricade +against want; it secures him a footing, and enables him to wait, +it may be in cheerfulness and hope, until better days come +round. The very endeavour to gain a firmer position in the +world has a certain dignity in it, and tends to make a man +stronger and better. At all events it gives him greater +freedom of action, and enables him to husband his strength for +future effort.</p> + +<p>But the man who is always hovering on the verge of want is in +a state not far removed from that of slavery. He is in no +sense his own master, but is in constant peril of falling under +the bondage of others, and accepting the terms which they dictate +to him. He cannot help being, in a measure, servile, for he +dares not look the world boldly in the face; and in adverse times +he must look either to alms or the poor’s rates. If +work fails him altogether, he has not the means of moving to +another field of employment; he is fixed to his parish like a +limpet to its rock, and can neither migrate nor emigrate.</p> + +<p>To secure independence, the practice of simple economy is all +that is necessary. Economy requires neither superior +courage nor eminent virtue; it is satisfied with ordinary energy, +and the capacity of average minds. Economy, at bottom, is +but the spirit of order applied in the administration of domestic +affairs: it means management, regularity, prudence, and the +avoidance of waste. The spirit of economy was expressed by +our Divine Master in the words ‘Gather up the fragments +that remain, so that nothing may be lost.’ His +omnipotence did not disdain the small things of life; and even +while revealing His infinite power to the multitude, he taught +the pregnant lesson of carefulness of which all stand so much in +need.</p> + +<p>Economy also means the power of resisting present +gratification for the purpose of securing a future good, and in +this light it represents the ascendancy of reason over the animal +instincts. It is altogether different from penuriousness: +for it is economy that can always best afford to be +generous. It does not make money an idol, but regards it as +a useful agent. As Dean Swift observes, “we must +carry money in the head, not in the heart.” Economy +may be styled the daughter of Prudence, the sister of Temperance, +and the mother of Liberty. It is evidently +conservative—conservative of character, of domestic +happiness, and social well-being. It is, in short, the +exhibition of self-help in one of its best forms.</p> + +<p>Francis Horner’s father gave him this advice on entering +life:—“Whilst I wish you to be comfortable in every +respect, I cannot too strongly inculcate economy. It is a +necessary virtue to all; and however the shallow part of mankind +may despise it, it certainly leads to independence, which is a +grand object to every man of a high spirit.” +Burns’ lines, quoted at the head of this chapter, contain +the right idea; but unhappily his strain of song was higher than +his practice; his ideal better than his habit. When laid on +his death-bed he wrote to a friend, “Alas! Clarke, I begin +to feel the worst. Burns’ poor widow, and half a +dozen of his dear little ones helpless orphans;—there I am +weak as a woman’s tear. Enough of +this;—’tis half my disease.”</p> + +<p>Every man ought so to contrive as to live within his +means. This practice is of the very essence of +honesty. For if a man do not manage honestly to live within +his own means, he must necessarily be living dishonestly upon the +means of somebody else. Those who are careless about +personal expenditure, and consider merely their own +gratification, without regard for the comfort of others, +generally find out the real uses of money when it is too +late. Though by nature generous, these thriftless persons +are often driven in the end to do very shabby things. They +waste their money as they do their time; draw bills upon the +future; anticipate their earnings; and are thus under the +necessity of dragging after them a load of debts and obligations +which seriously affect their action as free and independent +men.</p> + +<p>It was a maxim of Lord Bacon, that when it was necessary to +economize, it was better to look after petty savings than to +descend to petty gettings. The loose cash which many +persons throw away uselessly, and worse, would often form a basis +of fortune and independence for life. These wasters are +their own worst enemies, though generally found amongst the ranks +of those who rail at the injustice of “the +world.” But if a man will not be his own friend, how +can he expect that others will? Orderly men of moderate +means have always something left in their pockets to help others; +whereas your prodigal and careless fellows who spend all never +find an opportunity for helping anybody. It is poor +economy, however, to be a scrub. Narrowmindedness in living +and in dealing is generally short-sighted, and leads to +failure. The penny soul, it is said, never came to +twopence. Generosity and liberality, like honesty, prove +the best policy after all. Though Jenkinson, in the +‘Vicar of Wakefield,’ cheated his kind-hearted +neighbour Flamborough in one way or another every year, +“Flamborough,” said he, “has been regularly +growing in riches, while I have come to poverty and a +gaol.” And practical life abounds in cases of +brilliant results from a course of generous and honest +policy.</p> + +<p>The proverb says that “an empty bag cannot stand +upright;” neither can a man who is in debt. It is +also difficult for a man who is in debt to be truthful; hence it +is said that lying rides on debt’s back. The debtor +has to frame excuses to his creditor for postponing payment of +the money he owes him; and probably also to contrive +falsehoods. It is easy enough for a man who will exercise a +healthy resolution, to avoid incurring the first obligation; but +the facility with which that has been incurred often becomes a +temptation to a second; and very soon the unfortunate borrower +becomes so entangled that no late exertion of industry can set +him free. The first step in debt is like the first step in +falsehood; almost involving the necessity of proceeding in the +same course, debt following debt, as lie follows lie. +Haydon, the painter, dated his decline from the day on which he +first borrowed money. He realized the truth of the proverb, +“Who goes a-borrowing, goes a-sorrowing.” The +significant entry in his diary is: “Here began debt and +obligation, out of which I have never been and never shall be +extricated as long as I live.” His Autobiography +shows but too painfully how embarrassment in money matters +produces poignant distress of mind, utter incapacity for work, +and constantly recurring humiliations. The written advice +which he gave to a youth when entering the navy was as follows: +“Never purchase any enjoyment if it cannot be procured +without borrowing of others. Never borrow money: it is +degrading. I do not say never lend, but never lend if by +lending you render yourself unable to pay what you owe; but under +any circumstances never borrow.” Fichte, the poor +student, refused to accept even presents from his still poorer +parents.</p> + +<p>Dr. Johnson held that early debt is ruin. His words on +the subject are weighty, and worthy of being held in +remembrance. “Do not,” said he, “accustom +yourself to consider debt only as an inconvenience; you will find +it a calamity. Poverty takes away so many means of doing +good, and produces so much inability to resist evil, both natural +and moral, that it is by all virtuous means to be avoided. . . . +Let it be your first care, then, not to be in any man’s +debt. Resolve not to be poor; whatever you have spend +less. Poverty is a great enemy to human happiness; it +certainly destroys liberty, and it makes some virtues +impracticable and others extremely difficult. Frugality is +not only the basis of quiet, but of beneficence. No man can +help others that wants help himself; we must have enough before +we have to spare.”</p> + +<p>It is the bounden duty of every man to look his affairs in the +face, and to keep an account of his incomings and outgoings in +money matters. The exercise of a little simple arithmetic +in this way will be found of great value. Prudence requires +that we shall pitch our scale of living a degree below our means, +rather than up to them; but this can only be done by carrying out +faithfully a plan of living by which both ends may be made to +meet. John Locke strongly advised this course: +“Nothing,” said he, “is likelier to keep a man +within compass than having constantly before his eyes the state +of his affairs in a regular course of account.” The +Duke of Wellington kept an accurate detailed account of all the +moneys received and expended by him. “I make a +point,” said he to Mr. Gleig, “of paying my own +bills, and I advise every one to do the same; formerly I used to +trust a confidential servant to pay them, but I was cured of that +folly by receiving one morning, to my great surprise, duns of a +year or two’s standing. The fellow had speculated +with my money, and left my bills unpaid.” Talking of +debt his remark was, “It makes a slave of a man. I +have often known what it was to be in want of money, but I never +got into debt.” Washington was as particular as +Wellington was, in matters of business detail; and it is a +remarkable fact, that he did not disdain to scrutinize the +smallest outgoings of his household—determined as he was to +live honestly within his means—even while holding the high +office of President of the American Union.</p> + +<p>Admiral Jervis, Earl St. Vincent, has told the story of his +early struggles, and, amongst other things, of his determination +to keep out of debt. “My father had a very large +family,” said he, “with limited means. He gave +me twenty pounds at starting, and that was all he ever gave +me. After I had been a considerable time at the station [at +sea], I drew for twenty more, but the bill came back +protested. I was mortified at this rebuke, and made a +promise, which I have ever kept, that I would never draw another +bill without a certainty of its being paid. I immediately +changed my mode of living, quitted my mess, lived alone, and took +up the ship’s allowance, which I found quite sufficient; +washed and mended my own clothes; made a pair of trousers out of +the ticking of my bed; and having by these means saved as much +money as would redeem my honour, I took up my bill, and from that +time to this I have taken care to keep within my +means.” Jervis for six years endured pinching +privation, but preserved his integrity, studied his profession +with success, and gradually and steadily rose by merit and +bravery to the highest rank.</p> + +<p>Mr. Hume hit the mark when he once stated in the House of +Commons—though his words were followed by +“laughter”—that the tone of living in England +is altogether too high. Middle-class people are too apt to +live up to their incomes, if not beyond them: affecting a degree +of “style” which is most unhealthy in its effects +upon society at large. There is an ambition to bring up +boys as gentlemen, or rather “genteel” men; though +the result frequently is, only to make them gents. They +acquire a taste for dress, style, luxuries, and amusements, which +can never form any solid foundation for manly or gentlemanly +character; and the result is, that we have a vast number of +gingerbread young gentry thrown upon the world, who remind one of +the abandoned hulls sometimes picked up at sea, with only a +monkey on board.</p> + +<p>There is a dreadful ambition abroad for being +“genteel.” We keep up appearances, too often at +the expense of honesty; and, though we may not be rich, yet we +must seem to be so. We must be “respectable,” +though only in the meanest sense—in mere vulgar outward +show. We have not the courage to go patiently onward in the +condition of life in which it has pleased God to call us; but +must needs live in some fashionable state to which we +ridiculously please to call ourselves, and all to gratify the +vanity of that unsubstantial genteel world of which we form a +part. There is a constant struggle and pressure for front +seats in the social amphitheatre; in the midst of which all noble +self-denying resolve is trodden down, and many fine natures are +inevitably crushed to death. What waste, what misery, what +bankruptcy, come from all this ambition to dazzle others with the +glare of apparent worldly success, we need not describe. +The mischievous results show themselves in a thousand +ways—in the rank frauds committed by men who dare to be +dishonest, but do not dare to seem poor; and in the desperate +dashes at fortune, in which the pity is not so much for those who +fail, as for the hundreds of innocent families who are so often +involved in their ruin.</p> + +<p>The late Sir Charles Napier, in taking leave of his command in +India, did a bold and honest thing in publishing his strong +protest, embodied in his last General Order to the officers of +the Indian army, against the “fast” life led by so +many young officers in that service, involving them in +ignominious obligations. Sir Charles strongly urged, in +that famous document—what had almost been lost sight of +that “honesty is inseparable from the character of a +thorough-bred gentleman;” and that “to drink +unpaid-for champagne and unpaid-for beer, and to ride unpaid-for +horses, is to be a cheat, and not a gentleman.” Men +who lived beyond their means and were summoned, often by their +own servants, before Courts of Requests for debts contracted in +extravagant living, might be officers by virtue of their +commissions, but they were not gentlemen. The habit of +being constantly in debt, the Commander-in-chief held, made men +grow callous to the proper feelings of a gentleman. It was +not enough that an officer should be able to fight: that any +bull-dog could do. But did he hold his word +inviolate?—did he pay his debts? These were among the +points of honour which, he insisted, illuminated the true +gentleman’s and soldier’s career. As Bayard was +of old, so would Sir Charles Napier have all British officers to +be. He knew them to be “without fear,” but he +would also have them “without reproach.” There +are, however, many gallant young fellows, both in India and at +home, capable of mounting a breach on an emergency amidst +belching fire, and of performing the most desperate deeds of +valour, who nevertheless cannot or will not exercise the moral +courage necessary to enable them to resist a petty temptation +presented to their senses. They cannot utter their valiant +“No,” or “I can’t afford it,” to +the invitations of pleasure and self-enjoyment; and they are +found ready to brave death rather than the ridicule of their +companions.</p> + +<p>The young man, as he passes through life, advances through a +long line of tempters ranged on either side of him; and the +inevitable effect of yielding, is degradation in a greater or a +less degree. Contact with them tends insensibly to draw +away from him some portion of the divine electric element with +which his nature is charged; and his only mode of resisting them +is to utter and to act out his “no” manfully and +resolutely. He must decide at once, not waiting to +deliberate and balance reasons; for the youth, like “the +woman who deliberates, is lost.” Many deliberate, +without deciding; but “not to resolve, <i>is</i> to +resolve.” A perfect knowledge of man is in the +prayer, “Lead us not into temptation.” But +temptation will come to try the young man’s strength; and +once yielded to, the power to resist grows weaker and +weaker. Yield once, and a portion of virtue has gone. +Resist manfully, and the first decision will give strength for +life; repeated, it will become a habit. It is in the +outworks of the habits formed in early life that the real +strength of the defence must lie; for it has been wisely +ordained, that the machinery of moral existence should be carried +on principally through the medium of the habits, so as to save +the wear and tear of the great principles within. It is +good habits, which insinuate themselves into the thousand +inconsiderable acts of life, that really constitute by far the +greater part of man’s moral conduct.</p> + +<p>Hugh Miller has told how, by an act of youthful decision, he +saved himself from one of the strong temptations so peculiar to a +life of toil. When employed as a mason, it was usual for +his fellow-workmen to have an occasional treat of drink, and one +day two glasses of whisky fell to his share, which he +swallowed. When he reached home, he found, on opening his +favourite book—‘Bacon’s +Essays’—that the letters danced before his eyes, and +that he could no longer master the sense. “The +condition,” he says, “into which I had brought myself +was, I felt, one of degradation. I had sunk, by my own act, +for the time, to a lower level of intelligence than that on which +it was my privilege to be placed; and though the state could have +been no very favourable one for forming a resolution, I in that +hour determined that I should never again sacrifice my capacity +of intellectual enjoyment to a drinking usage; and, with +God’s help, I was enabled to hold by the +determination.” It is such decisions as this that +often form the turning-points in a man’s life, and furnish +the foundation of his future character. And this rock, on +which Hugh Miller might have been wrecked, if he had not at the +right moment put forth his moral strength to strike away from it, +is one that youth and manhood alike need to be constantly on +their guard against. It is about one of the worst and most +deadly, as well as extravagant, temptations which lie in the way +of youth. Sir Walter Scott used to say that “of all +vices drinking is the most incompatible with +greatness.” Not only so, but it is incompatible with +economy, decency, health, and honest living. When a youth +cannot restrain, he must abstain. Dr. Johnson’s case +is the case of many. He said, referring to his own habits, +“Sir, I can abstain; but I can’t be +moderate.”</p> + +<p>But to wrestle vigorously and successfully with any vicious +habit, we must not merely be satisfied with contending on the low +ground of worldly prudence, though that is of use, but take stand +upon a higher moral elevation. Mechanical aids, such as +pledges, may be of service to some, but the great thing is to set +up a high standard of thinking and acting, and endeavour to +strengthen and purify the principles as well as to reform the +habits. For this purpose a youth must study himself, watch +his steps, and compare his thoughts and acts with his rule. +The more knowledge of himself he gains, the more humble will he +be, and perhaps the less confident in his own strength. But +the discipline will be always found most valuable which is +acquired by resisting small present gratifications to secure a +prospective greater and higher one. It is the noblest work +in self-education—for</p> +<blockquote><p>“Real glory<br /> +Springs from the silent conquest of ourselves,<br /> +And without that the conqueror is nought<br /> +But the first slave.”</p> +</blockquote> +<p>Many popular books have been written for the purpose of +communicating to the public the grand secret of making +money. But there is no secret whatever about it, as the +proverbs of every nation abundantly testify. “Take +care of the pennies and the pounds will take care of +themselves.” “Diligence is the mother of good +luck.” “No pains no gains.” +“No sweat no sweet.” “Work and thou shalt +have.” “The world is his who has patience and +industry.” “Better go to bed supperless than +rise in debt.” Such are specimens of the proverbial +philosophy, embodying the hoarded experience of many generations, +as to the best means of thriving in the world. They were +current in people’s mouths long before books were invented; +and like other popular proverbs they were the first codes of +popular morals. Moreover they have stood the test of time, +and the experience of every day still bears witness to their +accuracy, force, and soundness. The proverbs of Solomon are +full of wisdom as to the force of industry, and the use and abuse +of money:—“He that is slothful in work is brother to +him that is a great waster.” “Go to the ant, +thou sluggard; consider her ways, and be wise.” +Poverty, says the preacher, shall come upon the idler, “as +one that travelleth, and want as an armed man;” but of the +industrious and upright, “the hand of the diligent maketh +rich.” “The drunkard and the glutton shall come +to poverty; and drowsiness shall clothe a man with +rags.” “Seest thou a man diligent in his +business? he shall stand before kings.” But above +all, “It is better to get wisdom than gold; for wisdom is +better than rubies, and all the things that may be desired are +not to be compared to it.”</p> + +<p>Simple industry and thrift will go far towards making any +person of ordinary working faculty comparatively independent in +his means. Even a working man may be so, provided he will +carefully husband his resources, and watch the little outlets of +useless expenditure. A penny is a very small matter, yet +the comfort of thousands of families depends upon the proper +spending and saving of pennies. If a man allows the little +pennies, the results of his hard work, to slip out of his +fingers—some to the beershop, some this way and some +that—he will find that his life is little raised above one +of mere animal drudgery. On the other hand, if he take care +of the pennies—putting some weekly into a benefit society +or an insurance fund, others into a savings’ bank, and +confiding the rest to his wife to be carefully laid out, with a +view to the comfortable maintenance and education of his +family—he will soon find that this attention to small +matters will abundantly repay him, in increasing means, growing +comfort at home, and a mind comparatively free from fears as to +the future. And if a working man have high ambition and +possess richness in spirit,—a kind of wealth which far +transcends all mere worldly possessions—he may not only +help himself, but be a profitable helper of others in his path +through life. That this is no impossible thing even for a +common labourer in a workshop, may be illustrated by the +remarkable career of Thomas Wright of Manchester, who not only +attempted but succeeded in the reclamation of many criminals +while working for weekly wages in a foundry.</p> + +<p>Accident first directed Thomas Wright’s attention to the +difficulty encountered by liberated convicts in returning to +habits of honest industry. His mind was shortly possessed +by the subject; and to remedy the evil became the purpose of his +life. Though he worked from six in the morning till six at +night, still there were leisure minutes that he could call his +own—more especially his Sundays—and these he employed +in the service of convicted criminals; a class then far more +neglected than they are now. But a few minutes a day, well +employed, can effect a great deal; and it will scarcely be +credited, that in ten years this working man, by steadfastly +holding to his purpose, succeeded in rescuing not fewer than +three hundred felons from continuance in a life of villany! +He came to be regarded as the moral physician of the Manchester +Old Bailey; and where the Chaplain and all others failed, Thomas +Wright often succeeded. Children he thus restored reformed +to their parents; sons and daughters otherwise lost, to their +homes; and many a returned convict did he contrive to settle down +to honest and industrious pursuits. The task was by no +means easy. It required money, time, energy, prudence, and +above all, character, and the confidence which character +invariably inspires. The most remarkable circumstance was +that Wright relieved many of these poor outcasts out of the +comparatively small wages earned by him at foundry work. He +did all this on an income which did not average, during his +working career, 100<i>l.</i> per annum; and yet, while he was +able to bestow substantial aid on criminals, to whom he owed no +more than the service of kindness which every human being owes to +another, he also maintained his family in comfort, and was, by +frugality and carefulness, enabled to lay by a store of savings +against his approaching old age. Every week he apportioned +his income with deliberate care; so much for the indispensable +necessaries of food and clothing, so much for the landlord, so +much for the schoolmaster, so much for the poor and needy; and +the lines of distribution were resolutely observed. By such +means did this humble workman pursue his great work, with the +results we have so briefly described. Indeed, his career +affords one of the most remarkable and striking illustrations of +the force of purpose in a man, of the might of small means +carefully and sedulously applied, and, above all, of the power +which an energetic and upright character invariably exercises +upon the lives and conduct of others.</p> + +<p>There is no discredit, but honour, in every right walk of +industry, whether it be in tilling the ground, making tools, +weaving fabrics, or selling the products behind a counter. +A youth may handle a yard-stick, or measure a piece of ribbon; +and there will be no discredit in doing so, unless he allows his +mind to have no higher range than the stick and ribbon; to be as +short as the one, and as narrow as the other. “Let +not those blush who <i>have</i>,” said Fuller, “but +those who <i>have not</i> a lawful calling.” And +Bishop Hall said, “Sweet is the destiny of all trades, +whether of the brow or of the mind.” Men who have +raised themselves from a humble calling, need not be ashamed, but +rather ought to be proud of the difficulties they have +surmounted. An American President, when asked what was his +coat-of-arms, remembering that he had been a hewer of wood in his +youth, replied, “A pair of shirt sleeves.” A +French doctor once taunted Flechier, Bishop of Nismes, who had +been a tallow-chandler in his youth, with the meanness of his +origin, to which Flechier replied, “If you had been born in +the same condition that I was, you would still have been but a +maker of candles.”</p> + +<p>Nothing is more common than energy in money-making, quite +independent of any higher object than its accumulation. A +man who devotes himself to this pursuit, body and soul, can +scarcely fail to become rich. Very little brains will do; +spend less than you earn; add guinea to guinea; scrape and save; +and the pile of gold will gradually rise. Osterwald, the +Parisian banker, began life a poor man. He was accustomed +every evening to drink a pint of beer for supper at a tavern +which he visited, during which he collected and pocketed all the +corks that he could lay his hands on. In eight years he had +collected as many corks as sold for eight louis +d’ors. With that sum he laid the foundations of his +fortune—gained mostly by stock-jobbing; leaving at his +death some three millions of francs. John Foster has cited +a striking illustration of what this kind of determination will +do in money-making. A young man who ran through his +patrimony, spending it in profligacy, was at length reduced to +utter want and despair. He rushed out of his house +intending to put an end to his life, and stopped on arriving at +an eminence overlooking what were once his estates. He sat +down, ruminated for a time, and rose with the determination that +he would recover them. He returned to the streets, saw a +load of coals which had been shot out of a cart on to the +pavement before a house, offered to carry them in, and was +employed. He thus earned a few pence, requested some meat +and drink as a gratuity, which was given him, and the pennies +were laid by. Pursuing this menial labour, he earned and +saved more pennies; accumulated sufficient to enable him to +purchase some cattle, the value of which he understood, and these +he sold to advantage. He proceeded by degrees to undertake +larger transactions, until at length he became rich. The +result was, that he more than recovered his possessions, and died +an inveterate miser. When he was buried, mere earth went to +earth. With a nobler spirit, the same determination might +have enabled such a man to be a benefactor to others as well as +to himself. But the life and its end in this case were +alike sordid.</p> + +<p>To provide for others and for our own comfort and independence +in old age, is honourable, and greatly to be commended; but to +hoard for mere wealth’s sake is the characteristic of the +narrow-souled and the miserly. It is against the growth of +this habit of inordinate saving that the wise man needs most +carefully to guard himself: else, what in youth was simple +economy, may in old age grow into avarice, and what was a duty in +the one case, may become a vice in the other. It is the +<i>love</i> of money—not money itself—which is +“the root of evil,”—a love which narrows and +contracts the soul, and closes it against generous life and +action. Hence, Sir Walter Scott makes one of his characters +declare that “the penny siller slew more souls than the +naked sword slew bodies.” It is one of the defects of +business too exclusively followed, that it insensibly tends to a +mechanism of character. The business man gets into a rut, +and often does not look beyond it. If he lives for himself +only, he becomes apt to regard other human beings only in so far +as they minister to his ends. Take a leaf from such +men’s ledger and you have their life.</p> + +<p>Worldly success, measured by the accumulation of money, is no +doubt a very dazzling thing; and all men are naturally more or +less the admirers of worldly success. But though men of +persevering, sharp, dexterous, and unscrupulous habits, ever on +the watch to push opportunities, may and do “get on” +in the world, yet it is quite possible that they may not possess +the slightest elevation of character, nor a particle of real +goodness. He who recognizes no higher logic than that of +the shilling, may become a very rich man, and yet remain all the +while an exceedingly poor creature. For riches are no proof +whatever of moral worth; and their glitter often serves only to +draw attention to the worthlessness of their possessor, as the +light of the glowworm reveals the grub.</p> + +<p>The manner in which many allow themselves to be sacrificed to +their love of wealth reminds one of the cupidity of the +monkey—that caricature of our species. In Algiers, +the Kabyle peasant attaches a gourd, well fixed, to a tree, and +places within it some rice. The gourd has an opening merely +sufficient to admit the monkey’s paw. The creature +comes to the tree by night, inserts his paw, and grasps his +booty. He tries to draw it back, but it is clenched, and he +has not the wisdom to unclench it. So there he stands till +morning, when he is caught, looking as foolish as may be, though +with the prize in his grasp. The moral of this little story +is capable of a very extensive application in life.</p> + +<p>The power of money is on the whole over-estimated. The +greatest things which have been done for the world have not been +accomplished by rich men, nor by subscription lists, but by men +generally of small pecuniary means. Christianity was +propagated over half the world by men of the poorest class; and +the greatest thinkers, discoverers, inventors, and artists, have +been men of moderate wealth, many of them little raised above the +condition of manual labourers in point of worldly +circumstances. And it will always be so. Riches are +oftener an impediment than a stimulus to action; and in many +cases they are quite as much a misfortune as a blessing. +The youth who inherits wealth is apt to have life made too easy +for him, and he soon grows sated with it, because he has nothing +left to desire. Having no special object to struggle for, +he finds time hang heavy on his hands; he remains morally and +spiritually asleep; and his position in society is often no +higher than that of a polypus over which the tide floats.</p> +<blockquote><p>“His only labour is to kill the time,<br /> +And labour dire it is, and weary woe.”</p> +</blockquote> +<p>Yet the rich man, inspired by a right spirit, will spurn +idleness as unmanly; and if he bethink himself of the +responsibilities which attach to the possession of wealth and +property he will feel even a higher call to work than men of +humbler lot. This, however, must be admitted to be by no +means the practice of life. The golden mean of Agur’s +perfect prayer is, perhaps, the best lot of all, did we but know +it: “Give me neither poverty nor riches; feed me with food +convenient for me.” The late Joseph Brotherton, M.P., +left a fine motto to be recorded upon his monument in the Peel +Park at Manchester,—the declaration in his case being +strictly true: “My richness consisted not in the greatness +of my possessions, but in the smallness of my wants.” +He rose from the humblest station, that of a factory boy, to an +eminent position of usefulness, by the simple exercise of homely +honesty, industry, punctuality, and self-denial. Down to +the close of his life, when not attending Parliament, he did duty +as minister in a small chapel in Manchester to which he was +attached; and in all things he made it appear, to those who knew +him in private life, that the glory he sought was <i>not</i> +“to be seen of men,” or to excite their praise, but +to earn the consciousness of discharging the every-day duties of +life, down to the smallest and humblest of them, in an honest, +upright, truthful, and loving spirit.</p> + +<p>“Respectability,” in its best sense, is +good. The respectable man is one worthy of regard, +literally worth turning to look at. But the respectability +that consists in merely keeping up appearances is not worth +looking at in any sense. Far better and more respectable is +the good poor man than the bad rich one—better the humble +silent man than the agreeable well-appointed rogue who keeps his +gig. A well balanced and well-stored mind, a life full of +useful purpose, whatever the position occupied in it may be, is +of far greater importance than average worldly +respectability. The highest object of life we take to be, +to form a manly character, and to work out the best development +possible, of body and spirit—of mind, conscience, heart, +and soul. This is the end: all else ought to be regarded +but as the means. Accordingly, that is not the most +successful life in which a man gets the most pleasure, the most +money, the most power or place, honour or fame; but that in which +a man gets the most manhood, and performs the greatest amount of +useful work and of human duty. Money is power after its +sort, it is true; but intelligence, public spirit, and moral +virtue, are powers too, and far nobler ones. “Let +others plead for pensions,” wrote Lord Collingwood to a +friend; “I can be rich without money, by endeavouring to be +superior to everything poor. I would have my services to my +country unstained by any interested motive; and old Scott <a +name="citation313"></a><a href="#footnote313" +class="citation">[313]</a> and I can go on in our cabbage-garden +without much greater expense than formerly.” On +another occasion he said, “I have motives for my conduct +which I would not give in exchange for a hundred +pensions.”</p> + +<p>The making of a fortune may no doubt enable some people to +“enter society,” as it is called; but to be esteemed +there, they must possess qualities of mind, manners, or heart, +else they are merely rich people, nothing more. There are +men “in society” now, as rich as Croesus, who have no +consideration extended towards them, and elicit no respect. +For why? They are but as money-bags: their only power is in +their till. The men of mark in society—the guides and +rulers of opinion—the really successful and useful +men—are not necessarily rich men; but men of sterling +character, of disciplined experience, and of moral +excellence. Even the poor man, like Thomas Wright, though +he possess but little of this world’s goods, may, in the +enjoyment of a cultivated nature, of opportunities used and not +abused, of a life spent to the best of his means and ability, +look down, without the slightest feeling of envy, upon the person +of mere worldly success, the man of money-bags and acres.</p> +<h2><a name="page314"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +314</span>CHAPTER XI.<br /> +<span class="smcap">Self-Culture—Facilities and +Difficulties</span>.</h2> +<blockquote><p>“Every person has two educations, one which +he receives from others, and one, more important, which he gives +to himself.”—<i>Gibbon</i>.</p> + +<p>“Is there one whom difficulties dishearten—who +bends to the storm? He will do little. Is there one +who will conquer? That kind of man never +fails.”—<i>John Hunter</i>.</p> + +<p>“The wise and active conquer difficulties,<br /> +By daring to attempt them: sloth and folly<br /> +Shiver and shrink at sight of toil and danger,<br /> +And <i>make</i> the impossibility they +fear.”—<i>Rowe</i>.</p> +</blockquote> +<p>“<span class="smcap">The</span> best part of every +man’s education,” said Sir Walter Scott, “is +that which he gives to himself.” The late Sir +Benjamin Brodie delighted to remember this saying, and he used to +congratulate himself on the fact that professionally he was +self-taught. But this is necessarily the case with all men +who have acquired distinction in letters, science, or art. +The education received at school or college is but a beginning, +and is valuable mainly inasmuch as it trains the mind and +habituates it to continuous application and study. That +which is put into us by others is always far less ours than that +which we acquire by our own diligent and persevering +effort. Knowledge conquered by labour becomes a +possession—a property entirely our own. A greater +vividness and permanency of impression is secured; and facts thus +acquired become registered in the mind in a way that mere +imparted information can never effect. This kind of +self-culture also calls forth power and cultivates +strength. The solution of one problem helps the mastery of +another; and thus knowledge is carried into faculty. Our +own active effort is the essential thing; and no facilities, no +books, no teachers, no amount of lessons learnt by rote will +enable us to dispense with it.</p> + +<p>The best teachers have been the readiest to recognize the +importance of self-culture, and of stimulating the student to +acquire knowledge by the active exercise of his own +faculties. They have relied more upon <i>training</i> than +upon telling, and sought to make their pupils themselves active +parties to the work in which they were engaged; thus making +teaching something far higher than the mere passive reception of +the scraps and details of knowledge. This was the spirit in +which the great Dr. Arnold worked; he strove to teach his pupils +to rely upon themselves, and develop their powers by their own +active efforts, himself merely guiding, directing, stimulating, +and encouraging them. “I would far rather,” he +said, “send a boy to Van Diemen’s Land, where he must +work for his bread, than send him to Oxford to live in luxury, +without any desire in his mind to avail himself of his +advantages.” “If there be one thing on +earth,” he observed on another occasion, “which is +truly admirable, it is to see God’s wisdom blessing an +inferiority of natural powers, when they have been honestly, +truly, and zealously cultivated.” Speaking of a pupil +of this character, he said, “I would stand to that man hat +in hand.” Once at Laleham, when teaching a rather +dull boy, Arnold spoke somewhat sharply to him, on which the +pupil looked up in his face and said, “Why do you speak +angrily, sir? <i>indeed</i>, I am doing the best I +can.” Years afterwards, Arnold used to tell the story +to his children, and added, “I never felt so much in my +life—that look and that speech I have never +forgotten.”</p> + +<p>From the numerous instances already cited of men of humble +station who have risen to distinction in science and literature, +it will be obvious that labour is by no means incompatible with +the highest intellectual culture. Work in moderation is +healthy, as well as agreeable to the human constitution. +Work educates the body, as study educates the mind; and that is +the best state of society in which there is some work for every +man’s leisure, and some leisure for every man’s +work. Even the leisure classes are in a measure compelled +to work, sometimes as a relief from <i>ennui</i>, but in most +cases to gratify an instinct which they cannot resist. Some +go foxhunting in the English counties, others grouse-shooting on +the Scotch hills, while many wander away every summer to climb +mountains in Switzerland. Hence the boating, running, +cricketing, and athletic sports of the public schools, in which +our young men at the same time so healthfully cultivate their +strength both of mind and body. It is said that the Duke of +Wellington, when once looking on at the boys engaged in their +sports in the play-ground at Eton, where he had spent many of his +own younger days, made the remark, “It was there that the +battle of Waterloo was won!”</p> + +<p>Daniel Malthus urged his son when at college to be most +diligent in the cultivation of knowledge, but he also enjoined +him to pursue manly sports as the best means of keeping up the +full working power of his mind, as well as of enjoying the +pleasures of intellect. “Every kind of +knowledge,” said he, “every acquaintance with nature +and art, will amuse and strengthen your mind, and I am perfectly +pleased that cricket should do the same by your arms and legs; I +love to see you excel in exercises of the body, and I think +myself that the better half, and much the most agreeable part, of +the pleasures of the mind is best enjoyed while one is upon +one’s legs.” But a still more important use of +active employment is that referred to by the great divine, Jeremy +Taylor. “Avoid idleness,” he says, “and +fill up all the spaces of thy time with severe and useful +employment; for lust easily creeps in at those emptinesses where +the soul is unemployed and the body is at ease; for no easy, +healthful, idle person was ever chaste if he could be tempted; +but of all employments bodily labour is the most useful, and of +the greatest benefit for driving away the devil.”</p> + +<p>Practical success in life depends more upon physical health +than is generally imagined. Hodson, of Hodson’s +Horse, writing home to a friend in England, said, “I +believe, if I get on well in India, it will be owing, physically +speaking, to a sound digestion.” The capacity for +continuous working in any calling must necessarily depend in a +great measure upon this; and hence the necessity for attending to +health, even as a means of intellectual labour. It is +perhaps to the neglect of physical exercise that we find amongst +students so frequent a tendency towards discontent, unhappiness, +inaction, and reverie,—displaying itself in contempt for +real life and disgust at the beaten tracks of men,—a +tendency which in England has been called Byronism, and in +Germany Wertherism. Dr. Channing noted the same growth in +America, which led him to make the remark, that “too many +of our young men grow up in a school of despair.” The +only remedy for this green-sickness in youth is physical +exercise—action, work, and bodily occupation.</p> + +<p>The use of early labour in self-imposed mechanical employments +may be illustrated by the boyhood of Sir Isaac Newton. +Though a comparatively dull scholar, he was very assiduous in the +use of his saw, hammer, and hatchet—“knocking and +hammering in his lodging room”—making models of +windmills, carriages, and machines of all sorts; and as he grew +older, he took delight in making little tables and cupboards for +his friends. Smeaton, Watt, and Stephenson, were equally +handy with tools when mere boys; and but for such kind of +self-culture in their youth, it is doubtful whether they would +have accomplished so much in their manhood. Such was also +the early training of the great inventors and mechanics described +in the preceding pages, whose contrivance and intelligence were +practically trained by the constant use of their hands in early +life. Even where men belonging to the manual labour class +have risen above it, and become more purely intellectual +labourers, they have found the advantages of their early training +in their later pursuits. Elihu Burritt says he found hard +labour <i>necessary</i> to enable him to study with effect; and +more than once he gave up school-teaching and study, and, taking +to his leather-apron again, went back to his blacksmith’s +forge and anvil for his health of body and mind’s sake.</p> + +<p>The training of young men in the use of tools would, at the +same time that it educated them in “common things,” +teach them the use of their hands and arms, familiarize them with +healthy work, exercise their faculties upon things tangible and +actual, give them some practical acquaintance with mechanics, +impart to them the ability of being useful, and implant in them +the habit of persevering physical effort. This is an +advantage which the working classes, strictly so called, +certainly possess over the leisure classes,—that they are +in early life under the necessity of applying themselves +laboriously to some mechanical pursuit or other,—thus +acquiring manual dexterity and the use of their physical +powers. The chief disadvantage attached to the calling of +the laborious classes is, not that they are employed in physical +work, but that they are too exclusively so employed, often to the +neglect of their moral and intellectual faculties. While +the youths of the leisure classes, having been taught to +associate labour with servility, have shunned it, and been +allowed to grow up practically ignorant, the poorer classes, +confining themselves within the circle of their laborious +callings, have been allowed to grow up in a large proportion of +cases absolutely illiterate. It seems possible, however, to +avoid both these evils by combining physical training or physical +work with intellectual culture: and there are various signs +abroad which seem to mark the gradual adoption of this healthier +system of education.</p> + +<p>The success of even professional men depends in no slight +degree on their physical health; and a public writer has gone so +far as to say that “the greatness of our great men is quite +as much a bodily affair as a mental one.” <a +name="citation319"></a><a href="#footnote319" +class="citation">[319]</a> A healthy breathing apparatus is +as indispensable to the successful lawyer or politician as a +well-cultured intellect. The thorough aëration of the +blood by free exposure to a large breathing surface in the lungs, +is necessary to maintain that full vital power on which the +vigorous working of the brain in so large a measure +depends. The lawyer has to climb the heights of his +profession through close and heated courts, and the political +leader has to bear the fatigue and excitement of long and anxious +debates in a crowded House. Hence the lawyer in full +practice and the parliamentary leader in full work are called +upon to display powers of physical endurance and activity even +more extraordinary than those of the intellect,—such powers +as have been exhibited in so remarkable a degree by Brougham, +Lyndhurst, and Campbell; by Peel, Graham, and +Palmerston—all full-chested men.</p> + +<p>Though Sir Walter Scott, when at Edinburgh College, went by +the name of “The Greek Blockhead,” he was, +notwithstanding his lameness, a remarkably healthy youth: he +could spear a salmon with the best fisher on the Tweed, and ride +a wild horse with any hunter in Yarrow. When devoting +himself in after life to literary pursuits, Sir Walter never lost +his taste for field sports; but while writing +‘Waverley’ in the morning, he would in the afternoon +course hares. Professor Wilson was a very athlete, as great +at throwing the hammer as in his flights of eloquence and poetry; +and Burns, when a youth, was remarkable chiefly for his leaping, +putting, and wrestling. Some of our greatest divines were +distinguished in their youth for their physical energies. +Isaac Barrow, when at the Charterhouse School, was notorious for +his pugilistic encounters, in which he got many a bloody nose; +Andrew Fuller, when working as a farmer’s lad at Soham, was +chiefly famous for his skill in boxing; and Adam Clarke, when a +boy, was only remarkable for the strength displayed by him in +“rolling large stones about,”—the secret, +possibly, of some of the power which he subsequently displayed in +rolling forth large thoughts in his manhood.</p> + +<p>While it is necessary, then, in the first place to secure this +solid foundation of physical health, it must also be observed +that the cultivation of the habit of mental application is quite +indispensable for the education of the student. The maxim +that “Labour conquers all things” holds especially +true in the case of the conquest of knowledge. The road +into learning is alike free to all who will give the labour and +the study requisite to gather it; nor are there any difficulties +so great that the student of resolute purpose may not surmount +and overcome them. It was one of the characteristic +expressions of Chatterton, that God had sent his creatures into +the world with arms long enough to reach anything if they chose +to be at the trouble. In study, as in business, energy is +the great thing. There must be the “fervet +opus”: we must not only strike the iron while it is hot, +but strike it till it is made hot. It is astonishing how +much may be accomplished in self-culture by the energetic and the +persevering, who are careful to avail themselves of +opportunities, and use up the fragments of spare time which the +idle permit to run to waste. Thus Ferguson learnt astronomy +from the heavens, while wrapt in a sheep-skin on the highland +hills. Thus Stone learnt mathematics while working as a +journeyman gardener; thus Drew studied the highest philosophy in +the intervals of cobbling shoes; and thus Miller taught himself +geology while working as a day labourer in a quarry.</p> + +<p>Sir Joshua Reynolds, as we have already observed, was so +earnest a believer in the force of industry that he held that all +men might achieve excellence if they would but exercise the power +of assiduous and patient working. He held that drudgery lay +on the road to genius, and that there was no limit to the +proficiency of an artist except the limit of his own +painstaking. He would not believe in what is called +inspiration, but only in study and labour. +“Excellence,” he said, “is never granted to man +but as the reward of labour.” “If you have +great talents, industry will improve them; if you have but +moderate abilities, industry will supply their deficiency. +Nothing is denied to well-directed labour; nothing is to be +obtained without it.” Sir Fowell Buxton was an equal +believer in the power of study; and he entertained the modest +idea that he could do as well as other men if he devoted to the +pursuit double the time and labour that they did. He placed +his great confidence in ordinary means and extraordinary +application.</p> + +<p>“I have known several men in my life,” says Dr. +Ross, “who may be recognized in days to come as men of +genius, and they were all plodders, hard-working, <i>intent</i> +men. Genius is known by its works; genius without works is +a blind faith, a dumb oracle. But meritorious works are the +result of time and labour, and cannot be accomplished by +intention or by a wish. . . . Every great work is the result of +vast preparatory training. Facility comes by labour. +Nothing seems easy, not even walking, that was not difficult at +first. The orator whose eye flashes instantaneous fire, and +whose lips pour out a flood of noble thoughts, startling by their +unexpectedness, and elevating by their wisdom and truth, has +learned his secret by patient repetition, and after many bitter +disappointments.” <a name="citation321"></a><a +href="#footnote321" class="citation">[321]</a></p> + +<p>Thoroughness and accuracy are two principal points to be aimed +at in study. Francis Horner, in laying down rules for the +cultivation of his mind, placed great stress upon the habit of +continuous application to one subject for the sake of mastering +it thoroughly; he confined himself, with this object, to only a +few books, and resisted with the greatest firmness “every +approach to a habit of desultory reading.” The value +of knowledge to any man consists not in its quantity, but mainly +in the good uses to which he can apply it. Hence a little +knowledge, of an exact and perfect character, is always found +more valuable for practical purposes than any extent of +superficial learning.</p> + +<p>One of Ignatius Loyola’s maxims was, “He who does +well one work at a time, does more than all.” By +spreading our efforts over too large a surface we inevitably +weaken our force, hinder our progress, and acquire a habit of +fitfulness and ineffective working. Lord St. Leonards once +communicated to Sir Fowell Buxton the mode in which he had +conducted his studies, and thus explained the secret of his +success. “I resolved,” said he, “when +beginning to read law, to make everything I acquired perfectly my +own, and never to go to a second thing till I had entirely +accomplished the first. Many of my competitors read as much +in a day as I read in a week; but, at the end of twelve months, +my knowledge was as fresh as the day it was acquired, while +theirs had glided away from recollection.”</p> + +<p>It is not the quantity of study that one gets through, or the +amount of reading, that makes a wise man; but the appositeness of +the study to the purpose for which it is pursued; the +concentration of the mind for the time being on the subject under +consideration; and the habitual discipline by which the whole +system of mental application is regulated. Abernethy was +even of opinion that there was a point of saturation in his own +mind, and that if he took into it something more than it could +hold, it only had the effect of pushing something else out. +Speaking of the study of medicine, he said, “If a man has a +clear idea of what he desires to do, he will seldom fail in +selecting the proper means of accomplishing it.”</p> + +<p>The most profitable study is that which is conducted with a +definite aim and object. By thoroughly mastering any given +branch of knowledge we render it more available for use at any +moment. Hence it is not enough merely to have books, or to +know where to read for information as we want it. Practical +wisdom, for the purposes of life, must be carried about with us, +and be ready for use at call. It is not sufficient that we +have a fund laid up at home, but not a farthing in the pocket: we +must carry about with us a store of the current coin of knowledge +ready for exchange on all occasions, else we are comparatively +helpless when the opportunity for using it occurs.</p> + +<p>Decision and promptitude are as requisite in self-culture as +in business. The growth of these qualities may be +encouraged by accustoming young people to rely upon their own +resources, leaving them to enjoy as much freedom of action in +early life as is practicable. Too much guidance and +restraint hinder the formation of habits of self-help. They +are like bladders tied under the arms of one who has not taught +himself to swim. Want of confidence is perhaps a greater +obstacle to improvement than is generally imagined. It has +been said that half the failures in life arise from pulling in +one’s horse while he is leaping. Dr. Johnson was +accustomed to attribute his success to confidence in his own +powers. True modesty is quite compatible with a due +estimate of one’s own merits, and does not demand the +abnegation of all merit. Though there are those who deceive +themselves by putting a false figure before their ciphers, the +want of confidence, the want of faith in one’s self, and +consequently the want of promptitude in action, is a defect of +character which is found to stand very much in the way of +individual progress; and the reason why so little is done, is +generally because so little is attempted.</p> + +<p>There is usually no want of desire on the part of most persons +to arrive at the results of self-culture, but there is a great +aversion to pay the inevitable price for it, of hard work. +Dr. Johnson held that “impatience of study was the mental +disease of the present generation;” and the remark is still +applicable. We may not believe that there is a royal road +to learning, but we seem to believe very firmly in a +“popular” one. In education, we invent +labour-saving processes, seek short cuts to science, learn French +and Latin “in twelve lessons,” or “without a +master.” We resemble the lady of fashion, who engaged +a master to teach her on condition that he did not plague her +with verbs and participles. We get our smattering of +science in the same way; we learn chemistry by listening to a +short course of lectures enlivened by experiments, and when we +have inhaled laughing gas, seen green water turned to red, and +phosphorus burnt in oxygen, we have got our smattering, of which +the most that can be said is, that though it may be better than +nothing, it is yet good for nothing. Thus we often imagine +we are being educated while we are only being amused.</p> + +<p>The facility with which young people are thus induced to +acquire knowledge, without study and labour, is not +education. It occupies but does not enrich the mind. +It imparts a stimulus for the time, and produces a sort of +intellectual keenness and cleverness; but, without an implanted +purpose and a higher object than mere pleasure, it will bring +with it no solid advantage. In such cases knowledge +produces but a passing impression; a sensation, but no more; it +is, in fact, the merest epicurism of intelligence—sensuous, +but certainly not intellectual. Thus the best qualities of +many minds, those which are evoked by vigorous effort and +independent action, sleep a deep sleep, and are often never +called to life, except by the rough awakening of sudden calamity +or suffering, which, in such cases, comes as a blessing, if it +serves to rouse up a courageous spirit that, but for it, would +have slept on.</p> + +<p>Accustomed to acquire information under the guise of +amusement, young people will soon reject that which is presented +to them under the aspect of study and labour. Learning +their knowledge and science in sport, they will be too apt to +make sport of both; while the habit of intellectual dissipation, +thus engendered, cannot fail, in course of time, to produce a +thoroughly emasculating effect both upon their mind and +character. “Multifarious reading,” said +Robertson of Brighton, “weakens the mind like smoking, and +is an excuse for its lying dormant. It is the idlest of all +idlenesses, and leaves more of impotency than any +other.”</p> + +<p>The evil is a growing one, and operates in various ways. +Its least mischief is shallowness; its greatest, the aversion to +steady labour which it induces, and the low and feeble tone of +mind which it encourages. If we would be really wise, we +must diligently apply ourselves, and confront the same continuous +application which our forefathers did; for labour is still, and +ever will be, the inevitable price set upon everything which is +valuable. We must be satisfied to work with a purpose, and +wait the results with patience. All progress, of the best +kind, is slow; but to him who works faithfully and zealously the +reward will, doubtless, be vouchsafed in good time. The +spirit of industry, embodied in a man’s daily life, will +gradually lead him to exercise his powers on objects outside +himself, of greater dignity and more extended usefulness. +And still we must labour on; for the work of self-culture is +never finished. “To be employed,” said the poet +Gray, “is to be happy.” “It is better to +wear out than rust out,” said Bishop Cumberland. +“Have we not all eternity to rest in?” exclaimed +Arnauld. “Repos ailleurs” was the motto of +Marnix de St. Aldegonde, the energetic and ever-working friend of +William the Silent.</p> + +<p>It is the use we make of the powers entrusted to us, which +constitutes our only just claim to respect. He who employs +his one talent aright is as much to be honoured as he to whom ten +talents have been given. There is really no more personal +merit attaching to the possession of superior intellectual powers +than there is in the succession to a large estate. How are +those powers used—how is that estate employed? The +mind may accumulate large stores of knowledge without any useful +purpose; but the knowledge must be allied to goodness and wisdom, +and embodied in upright character, else it is naught. +Pestalozzi even held intellectual training by itself to be +pernicious; insisting that the roots of all knowledge must strike +and feed in the soil of the rightly-governed will. The +acquisition of knowledge may, it is true, protect a man against +the meaner felonies of life; but not in any degree against its +selfish vices, unless fortified by sound principles and +habits. Hence do we find in daily life so many instances of +men who are well-informed in intellect, but utterly deformed in +character; filled with the learning of the schools, yet +possessing little practical wisdom, and offering examples for +warning rather than imitation. An often quoted expression +at this day is that “Knowledge is power;” but so also +are fanaticism, despotism, and ambition. Knowledge of +itself, unless wisely directed, might merely make bad men more +dangerous, and the society in which it was regarded as the +highest good, little better than a pandemonium.</p> + +<p>It is possible that at this day we may even exaggerate the +importance of literary culture. We are apt to imagine that +because we possess many libraries, institutes, and museums, we +are making great progress. But such facilities may as often +be a hindrance as a help to individual self-culture of the +highest kind. The possession of a library, or the free use +of it, no more constitutes learning, than the possession of +wealth constitutes generosity. Though we undoubtedly +possess great facilities it is nevertheless true, as of old, that +wisdom and understanding can only become the possession of +individual men by travelling the old road of observation, +attention, perseverance, and industry. The possession of +the mere materials of knowledge is something very different from +wisdom and understanding, which are reached through a higher kind +of discipline than that of reading,—which is often but a +mere passive reception of other men’s thoughts; there being +little or no active effort of mind in the transaction. Then +how much of our reading is but the indulgence of a sort of +intellectual dram-drinking, imparting a grateful excitement for +the moment, without the slightest effect in improving and +enriching the mind or building up the character. Thus many +indulge themselves in the conceit that they are cultivating their +minds, when they are only employed in the humbler occupation of +killing time, of which perhaps the best that can be said is that +it keeps them from doing worse things.</p> + +<p>It is also to be borne in mind that the experience gathered +from books, though often valuable, is but of the nature of +<i>learning</i>; whereas the experience gained from actual life +is of the nature of <i>wisdom</i>; and a small store of the +latter is worth vastly more than any stock of the former. +Lord Bolingbroke truly said that “Whatever study tends +neither directly nor indirectly to make us better men and +citizens, is at best but a specious and ingenious sort of +idleness, and the knowledge we acquire by it, only a creditable +kind of ignorance—nothing more.”</p> + +<p>Useful and instructive though good reading may be, it is yet +only one mode of cultivating the mind; and is much less +influential than practical experience and good example in the +formation of character. There were wise, valiant, and +true-hearted men bred in England, long before the existence of a +reading public. Magna Charta was secured by men who signed +the deed with their marks. Though altogether unskilled in +the art of deciphering the literary signs by which principles +were denominated upon paper, they yet understood and appreciated, +and boldly contended for, the things themselves. Thus the +foundations of English liberty were laid by men, who, though +illiterate, were nevertheless of the very highest stamp of +character. And it must be admitted that the chief object of +culture is, not merely to fill the mind with other men’s +thoughts, and to be the passive recipient of their impressions of +things, but to enlarge our individual intelligence, and render us +more useful and efficient workers in the sphere of life to which +we may be called. Many of our most energetic and useful +workers have been but sparing readers. Brindley and +Stephenson did not learn to read and write until they reached +manhood, and yet they did great works and lived manly lives; John +Hunter could barely read or write when he was twenty years old, +though he could make tables and chairs with any carpenter in the +trade. “I never read,” said the great +physiologist when lecturing before his class; +“this”—pointing to some part of the subject +before him—“this is the work that you must study if +you wish to become eminent in your profession.” When +told that one of his contemporaries had charged him with being +ignorant of the dead languages, he said, “I would undertake +to teach him that on the dead body which he never knew in any +language, dead or living.”</p> + +<p>It is not then how much a man may know, that is of importance, +but the end and purpose for which he knows it. The object +of knowledge should be to mature wisdom and improve character, to +render us better, happier, and more useful; more benevolent, more +energetic, and more efficient in the pursuit of every high +purpose in life. “When people once fall into the +habit of admiring and encouraging ability as such, without +reference to moral character—and religious and political +opinions are the concrete form of moral character—they are +on the highway to all sorts of degradation.” <a +name="citation329"></a><a href="#footnote329" +class="citation">[329]</a> We must ourselves <i>be</i> and +<i>do</i>, and not rest satisfied merely with reading and +meditating over what other men have been and done. Our best +light must be made life, and our best thought action. At +least we ought to be able to say, as Richter did, “I have +made as much out of myself as could be made of the stuff, and no +man should require more;” for it is every man’s duty +to discipline and guide himself, with God’s help, according +to his responsibilities and the faculties with which he has been +endowed.</p> + +<p>Self-discipline and self-control are the beginnings of +practical wisdom; and these must have their root in +self-respect. Hope springs from it—hope, which is the +companion of power, and the mother of success; for whoso hopes +strongly has within him the gift of miracles. The humblest +may say, “To respect myself, to develop myself—this +is my true duty in life. An integral and responsible part +of the great system of society, I owe it to society and to its +Author not to degrade or destroy either my body, mind, or +instincts. On the contrary, I am bound to the best of my +power to give to those parts of my constitution the highest +degree of perfection possible. I am not only to suppress +the evil, but to evoke the good elements in my nature. And +as I respect myself, so am I equally bound to respect others, as +they on their part are bound to respect me.” Hence +mutual respect, justice, and order, of which law becomes the +written record and guarantee.</p> + +<p>Self-respect is the noblest garment with which a man may +clothe himself—the most elevating feeling with which the +mind can be inspired. One of Pythagoras’s wisest +maxims, in his ‘Golden Verses,’ is that with which he +enjoins the pupil to “reverence himself.” Borne +up by this high idea, he will not defile his body by sensuality, +nor his mind by servile thoughts. This sentiment, carried +into daily life, will be found at the root of all the +virtues—cleanliness, sobriety, chastity, morality, and +religion. “The pious and just honouring of +ourselves,” said Milton, “may be thought the radical +moisture and fountain-head from whence every laudable and worthy +enterprise issues forth.” To think meanly of +one’s self, is to sink in one’s own estimation as +well as in the estimation of others. And as the thoughts +are, so will the acts be. Man cannot aspire if he look +down; if he will rise, he must look up. The very humblest +may be sustained by the proper indulgence of this feeling. +Poverty itself may be lifted and lighted up by self-respect; and +it is truly a noble sight to see a poor man hold himself upright +amidst his temptations, and refuse to demean himself by low +actions.</p> + +<p>One way in which self-culture may be degraded is by regarding +it too exclusively as a means of “getting on.” +Viewed in this light, it is unquestionable that education is one +of the best investments of time and labour. In any line of +life, intelligence will enable a man to adapt himself more +readily to circumstances, suggest improved methods of working, +and render him more apt, skilled and effective in all +respects. He who works with his head as well as his hands, +will come to look at his business with a clearer eye; and he will +become conscious of increasing power—perhaps the most +cheering consciousness the human mind can cherish. The +power of self-help will gradually grow; and in proportion to a +man’s self-respect, will he be armed against the temptation +of low indulgences. Society and its action will be regarded +with quite a new interest, his sympathies will widen and enlarge, +and he will thus be attracted to work for others as well as for +himself.</p> + +<p>Self-culture may not, however, end in eminence, as in the +numerous instances above cited. The great majority of men, +in all times, however enlightened, must necessarily be engaged in +the ordinary avocations of industry; and no degree of culture +which can be conferred upon the community at large will ever +enable them—even were it desirable, which it is +not—to get rid of the daily work of society, which must be +done. But this, we think, may also be accomplished. +We can elevate the condition of labour by allying it to noble +thoughts, which confer a grace upon the lowliest as well as the +highest rank. For no matter how poor or humble a man may +be, the great thinker of this and other days may come in and sit +down with him, and be his companion for the time, though his +dwelling be the meanest hut. It is thus that the habit of +well-directed reading may become a source of the greatest +pleasure and self-improvement, and exercise a gentle coercion, +with the most beneficial results, over the whole tenour of a +man’s character and conduct. And even though +self-culture may not bring wealth, it will at all events give one +the companionship of elevated thoughts. A nobleman once +contemptuously asked of a sage, “What have you got by all +your philosophy?” “At least I have got society +in myself,” was the wise man’s reply.</p> + +<p>But many are apt to feel despondent, and become discouraged in +the work of self-culture, because they do not “get +on” in the world so fast as they think they deserve to +do. Having planted their acorn, they expect to see it grow +into an oak at once. They have perhaps looked upon +knowledge in the light of a marketable commodity, and are +consequently mortified because it does not sell as they expected +it would do. Mr. Tremenheere, in one of his +‘Education Reports’ (for 1840–1), states that a +schoolmaster in Norfolk, finding his school rapidly falling off, +made inquiry into the cause, and ascertained that the reason +given by the majority of the parents for withdrawing their +children was, that they had expected “education was to make +them better off than they were before,” but that having +found it had “done them no good,” they had taken +their children from school, and would give themselves no further +trouble about education!</p> + +<p>The same low idea of self-culture is but too prevalent in +other classes, and is encouraged by the false views of life which +are always more or less current in society. But to regard +self-culture either as a means of getting past others in the +world, or of intellectual dissipation and amusement, rather than +as a power to elevate the character and expand the spiritual +nature, is to place it on a very low level. To use the +words of Bacon, “Knowledge is not a shop for profit or +sale, but a rich storehouse for the glory of the Creator and the +relief of man’s estate.” It is doubtless most +honourable for a man to labour to elevate himself, and to better +his condition in society, but this is not to be done at the +sacrifice of himself. To make the mind the mere drudge of +the body, is putting it to a very servile use; and to go about +whining and bemoaning our pitiful lot because we fail in +achieving that success in life which, after all, depends rather +upon habits of industry and attention to business details than +upon knowledge, is the mark of a small, and often of a sour +mind. Such a temper cannot better be reproved than in the +words of Robert Southey, who thus wrote to a friend who sought +his counsel: “I would give you advice if it could be of +use; but there is no curing those who choose to be +diseased. A good man and a wise man may at times be angry +with the world, at times grieved for it; but be sure no man was +ever discontented with the world if he did his duty in it. +If a man of education, who has health, eyes, hands, and leisure, +wants an object, it is only because God Almighty has bestowed all +those blessings upon a man who does not deserve them.”</p> + +<p>Another way in which education may be prostituted is by +employing it as a mere means of intellectual dissipation and +amusement. Many are the ministers to this taste in our +time. There is almost a mania for frivolity and excitement, +which exhibits itself in many forms in our popular +literature. To meet the public taste, our books and +periodicals must now be highly spiced, amusing, and comic, not +disdaining slang, and illustrative of breaches of all laws, human +and divine. Douglas Jerrold once observed of this tendency, +“I am convinced the world will get tired (at least I hope +so) of this eternal guffaw about all things. After all, +life has something serious in it. It cannot be all a comic +history of humanity. Some men would, I believe, write a +Comic Sermon on the Mount. Think of a Comic History of +England, the drollery of Alfred, the fun of Sir Thomas More, the +farce of his daughter begging the dead head and clasping it in +her coffin on her bosom. Surely the world will be sick of +this blasphemy.” John Sterling, in a like spirit, +said:—“Periodicals and novels are to all in this +generation, but more especially to those whose minds are still +unformed and in the process of formation, a new and more +effectual substitute for the plagues of Egypt, vermin that +corrupt the wholesome waters and infest our chambers.”</p> + +<p>As a rest from toil and a relaxation from graver pursuits, the +perusal of a well-written story, by a writer of genius, is a high +intellectual pleasure; and it is a description of literature to +which all classes of readers, old and young, are attracted as by +a powerful instinct; nor would we have any of them debarred from +its enjoyment in a reasonable degree. But to make it the +exclusive literary diet, as some do,—to devour the garbage +with which the shelves of circulating libraries are +filled,—and to occupy the greater portion of the leisure +hours in studying the preposterous pictures of human life which +so many of them present, is worse than waste of time: it is +positively pernicious. The habitual novel-reader indulges +in fictitious feelings so much, that there is great risk of sound +and healthy feeling becoming perverted or benumbed. +“I never go to hear a tragedy,” said a gay man once +to the Archbishop of York, “it wears my heart +out.” The literary pity evoked by fiction leads to no +corresponding action; the susceptibilities which it excites +involve neither inconvenience nor self-sacrifice; so that the +heart that is touched too often by the fiction may at length +become insensible to the reality. The steel is gradually +rubbed out of the character, and it insensibly loses its vital +spring. “Drawing fine pictures of virtue in +one’s mind,” said Bishop Butler, “is so far +from necessarily or certainly conducive to form a <i>habit</i> of +it in him who thus employs himself, that it may even harden the +mind in a contrary course, and render it gradually more +insensible.”</p> + +<p>Amusement in moderation is wholesome, and to be commended; but +amusement in excess vitiates the whole nature, and is a thing to +be carefully guarded against. The maxim is often quoted of +“All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy;” but all +play and no work makes him something greatly worse. Nothing +can be more hurtful to a youth than to have his soul sodden with +pleasure. The best qualities of his mind are impaired; +common enjoyments become tasteless; his appetite for the higher +kind of pleasures is vitiated; and when he comes to face the work +and the duties of life, the result is usually aversion and +disgust. “Fast” men waste and exhaust the +powers of life, and dry up the sources of true happiness. +Having forestalled their spring, they can produce no healthy +growth of either character or intellect. A child without +simplicity, a maiden without innocence, a boy without +truthfulness, are not more piteous sights than the man who has +wasted and thrown away his youth in self-indulgence. +Mirabeau said of himself, “My early years have already in a +great measure disinherited the succeeding ones, and dissipated a +great part of my vital powers.” As the wrong done to +another to-day returns upon ourselves to-morrow, so the sins of +our youth rise up in our age to scourge us. When Lord Bacon +says that “strength of nature in youth passeth over many +excesses which are owing a man until he is old,” he exposes +a physical as well as a moral fact which cannot be too well +weighed in the conduct of life. “I assure you,” +wrote Giusti the Italian to a friend, “I pay a heavy price +for existence. It is true that our lives are not at our own +disposal. Nature pretends to give them gratis at the +beginning, and then sends in her account.” The worst +of youthful indiscretions is, not that they destroy health, so +much as that they sully manhood. The dissipated youth +becomes a tainted man; and often he cannot be pure, even if he +would. If cure there be, it is only to be found in +inoculating the mind with a fervent spirit of duty, and in +energetic application to useful work.</p> + +<p>One of the most gifted of Frenchmen, in point of great +intellectual endowments, was Benjamin Constant; but, +<i>blasé</i> at twenty, his life was only a prolonged +wail, instead of a harvest of the great deeds which he was +capable of accomplishing with ordinary diligence and +self-control. He resolved upon doing so many things, which +he never did, that people came to speak of him as Constant the +Inconstant. He was a fluent and brilliant writer, and +cherished the ambition of writing works, “which the world +would not willingly let die.” But whilst Constant +affected the highest thinking, unhappily he practised the lowest +living; nor did the transcendentalism of his books atone for the +meanness of his life. He frequented the gaming-tables while +engaged in preparing his work upon religion, and carried on a +disreputable intrigue while writing his +‘Adolphe.’ With all his powers of intellect, he +was powerless, because he had no faith in virtue. +“Bah!” said he, “what are honour and +dignity? The longer I live, the more clearly I see there is +nothing in them.” It was the howl of a miserable +man. He described himself as but “ashes and +dust.” “I pass,” said he, “like a +shadow over the earth, accompanied by misery and +<i>ennui</i>.” He wished for Voltaire’s energy, +which he would rather have possessed than his genius. But +he had no strength of purpose—nothing but wishes: his life, +prematurely exhausted, had become but a heap of broken +links. He spoke of himself as a person with one foot in the +air. He admitted that he had no principles, and no moral +consistency. Hence, with his splendid talents, he contrived +to do nothing; and, after living many years miserable, he died +worn out and wretched.</p> + +<p>The career of Augustin Thierry, the author of the +‘History of the Norman Conquest,’ affords an +admirable contrast to that of Constant. His entire life +presented a striking example of perseverance, diligence, self +culture, and untiring devotion to knowledge. In the pursuit +he lost his eyesight, lost his health, but never lost his love of +truth. When so feeble that he was carried from room to +room, like a helpless infant, in the arms of a nurse, his brave +spirit never failed him; and blind and helpless though he was, he +concluded his literary career in the following noble +words:—“If, as I think, the interest of science is +counted in the number of great national interests, I have given +my country all that the soldier, mutilated on the field of +battle, gives her. Whatever may be the fate of my labours, +this example, I hope, will not be lost. I would wish it to +serve to combat the species of moral weakness which is <i>the +disease</i> of our present generation; to bring back into the +straight road of life some of those enervated souls that complain +of wanting faith, that know not what to do, and seek everywhere, +without finding it, an object of worship and admiration. +Why say, with so much bitterness, that in the world, constituted +as it is, there is no air for all lungs—no employment for +all minds? Is not calm and serious study there? and is not +that a refuge, a hope, a field within the reach of all of +us? With it, evil days are passed over without their weight +being felt. Every one can make his own destiny—every +one employ his life nobly. This is what I have done, and +would do again if I had to recommence my career; I would choose +that which has brought me where I am. Blind, and suffering +without hope, and almost without intermission, I may give this +testimony, which from me will not appear suspicious. There +is something in the world better than sensual enjoyments, better +than fortune, better than health itself—it is devotion to +knowledge.”</p> + +<p>Coleridge, in many respects, resembled Constant. He +possessed equally brilliant powers, but was similarly infirm of +purpose. With all his great intellectual gifts, he wanted +the gift of industry, and was averse to continuous labour. +He wanted also the sense of independence, and thought it no +degradation to leave his wife and children to be maintained by +the brain-work of the noble Southey, while he himself retired to +Highgate Grove to discourse transcendentalism to his disciples, +looking down contemptuously upon the honest work going forward +beneath him amidst the din and smoke of London. With +remunerative employment at his command he stooped to accept the +charity of friends; and, notwithstanding his lofty ideas of +philosophy, he condescended to humiliations from which many a +day-labourer would have shrunk. How different in spirit was +Southey! labouring not merely at work of his own choice, and at +taskwork often tedious and distasteful, but also unremittingly +and with the utmost eagerness seeking and storing knowledge +purely for the love of it. Every day, every hour had its +allotted employment: engagements to publishers requiring punctual +fulfilment; the current expenses of a large household duty to +provide: for Southey had no crop growing while his pen was +idle. “My ways,” he used to say, “are as +broad as the king’s high-road, and my means lie in an +inkstand.”</p> + +<p>Robert Nicoll wrote to a friend, after reading the +‘Recollections of Coleridge,’ “What a mighty +intellect was lost in that man for want of a little +energy—a little determination!” Nicoll himself +was a true and brave spirit, who died young, but not before he +had encountered and overcome great difficulties in life. At +his outset, while carrying on a small business as a bookseller, +he found himself weighed down with a debt of only twenty pounds, +which he said he felt “weighing like a millstone round his +neck,” and that, “if he had it paid he never would +borrow again from mortal man.” Writing to his mother +at the time he said, “Fear not for me, dear mother, for I +feel myself daily growing firmer and more hopeful in +spirit. The more I think and reflect—and thinking, +not reading, is now my occupation—I feel that, whether I be +growing richer or not, I am growing a wiser man, which is far +better. Pain, poverty, and all the other wild beasts of +life which so affrighten others, I am so bold as to think I could +look in the face without shrinking, without losing respect for +myself, faith in man’s high destinies, or trust in +God. There is a point which it costs much mental toil and +struggling to gain, but which, when once gained, a man can look +down from, as a traveller from a lofty mountain, on storms raging +below, while he is walking in sunshine. That I have yet +gained this point in life I will not say, but I feel myself daily +nearer to it.”</p> + +<p>It is not ease, but effort—not facility, but difficulty, +that makes men. There is, perhaps, no station in life, in +which difficulties have not to be encountered and overcome before +any decided measure of success can be achieved. Those +difficulties are, however, our best instructors, as our mistakes +often form our best experience. Charles James Fox was +accustomed to say that he hoped more from a man who failed, and +yet went on in spite of his failure, than from the buoyant career +of the successful. “It is all very well,” said +he, “to tell me that a young man has distinguished himself +by a brilliant first speech. He may go on, or he may be +satisfied with his first triumph; but show me a young man who has +<i>not</i> succeeded at first, and nevertheless has gone on, and +I will back that young man to do better than most of those who +have succeeded at the first trial.”</p> + +<p>We learn wisdom from failure much more than from +success. We often discover what <i>will</i> do, by finding +out what will not do; and probably he who never made a mistake +never made a discovery. It was the failure in the attempt +to make a sucking-pump act, when the working bucket was more than +thirty-three feet above the surface of the water to be raised, +that led observant men to study the law of atmospheric pressure, +and opened a new field of research to the genius of Galileo, +Torrecelli, and Boyle. John Hunter used to remark that the +art of surgery would not advance until professional men had the +courage to publish their failures as well as their +successes. Watt the engineer said, of all things most +wanted in mechanical engineering was a history of failures: +“We want,” he said, “a book of +blots.” When Sir Humphry Davy was once shown a +dexterously manipulated experiment, he said—“I thank +God I was not made a dexterous manipulator, for the most +important of my discoveries have been suggested to me by +failures.” Another distinguished investigator in +physical science has left it on record that, whenever in the +course of his researches he encountered an apparently insuperable +obstacle, he generally found himself on the brink of some +discovery. The very greatest things—great thoughts, +discoveries, inventions—have usually been nurtured in +hardship, often pondered over in sorrow, and at length +established with difficulty.</p> + +<p>Beethoven said of Rossini, that he had in him the stuff to +have made a good musician if he had only, when a boy, been well +flogged; but that he had been spoilt by the facility with which +he produced. Men who feel their strength within them need +not fear to encounter adverse opinions; they have far greater +reason to fear undue praise and too friendly criticism. +When Mendelssohn was about to enter the orchestra at Birmingham, +on the first performance of his ‘Elijah,’ he said +laughingly to one of his friends and critics, “Stick your +claws into me! Don’t tell me what you like, but what +you don’t like!”</p> + +<p>It has been said, and truly, that it is the defeat that tries +the general more than the victory. Washington lost more +battles than he gained; but he succeeded in the end. The +Romans, in their most victorious campaigns, almost invariably +began with defeats. Moreau used to be compared by his +companions to a drum, which nobody hears of except it be +beaten. Wellington’s military genius was perfected by +encounter with difficulties of apparently the most overwhelming +character, but which only served to nerve his resolution, and +bring out more prominently his great qualities as a man and a +general. So the skilful mariner obtains his best experience +amidst storms and tempests, which train him to self-reliance, +courage, and the highest discipline; and we probably own to rough +seas and wintry nights the best training of our race of British +seamen, who are, certainly, not surpassed by any in the +world.</p> + +<p>Necessity may be a hard schoolmistress, but she is generally +found the best. Though the ordeal of adversity is one from +which we naturally shrink, yet, when it comes, we must bravely +and manfully encounter it. Burns says truly,</p> +<blockquote><p>“Though losses and crosses<br /> +Be lessons right severe,<br /> +There’s wit there, you’ll get there,<br /> +You’ll find no other where.”</p> +</blockquote> +<p>“Sweet indeed are the uses of adversity.” +They reveal to us our powers, and call forth our energies. +If there be real worth in the character, like sweet herbs, it +will give forth its finest fragrance when pressed. +“Crosses,” says the old proverb, “are the +ladders that lead to heaven.” “What is even +poverty itself,” asks Richter, “that a man should +murmur under it? It is but as the pain of piercing a +maiden’s ear, and you hang precious jewels in the +wound.” In the experience of life it is found that +the wholesome discipline of adversity in strong natures usually +carries with it a self-preserving influence. Many are found +capable of bravely bearing up under privations, and cheerfully +encountering obstructions, who are afterwards found unable to +withstand the more dangerous influences of prosperity. It +is only a weak man whom the wind deprives of his cloak: a man of +average strength is more in danger of losing it when assailed by +the beams of a too genial sun. Thus it often needs a higher +discipline and a stronger character to bear up under good fortune +than under adverse. Some generous natures kindle and warm +with prosperity, but there are many on whom wealth has no such +influence. Base hearts it only hardens, making those who +were mean and servile, mean and proud. But while prosperity +is apt to harden the heart to pride, adversity in a man of +resolution will serve to ripen it into fortitude. To use +the words of Burke, “Difficulty is a severe instructor, set +over us by the supreme ordinance of a parental guardian and +instructor, who knows us better than we know ourselves, as He +loves us better too. He that wrestles with us strengthens +our nerves, and sharpens our skill: our antagonist is thus our +helper.” Without the necessity of encountering +difficulty, life might be easier, but men would be worth +less. For trials, wisely improved, train the character, and +teach self-help; thus hardship itself may often prove the +wholesomest discipline for us, though we recognise it not. +When the gallant young Hodson, unjustly removed from his Indian +command, felt himself sore pressed down by unmerited calumny and +reproach, he yet preserved the courage to say to a friend, +“I strive to look the worst boldly in the face, as I would +an enemy in the field, and to do my appointed work resolutely and +to the best of my ability, satisfied that there is a reason for +all; and that even irksome duties well done bring their own +reward, and that, if not, still they <i>are</i> +duties.”</p> + +<p>The battle of life is, in most cases, fought up-hill; and to +win it without a struggle were perhaps to win it without +honour. If there were no difficulties there would be no +success; if there were nothing to struggle for, there would be +nothing to be achieved. Difficulties may intimidate the +weak, but they act only as a wholesome stimulus to men of +resolution and valour. All experience of life indeed serves +to prove that the impediments thrown in the way of human +advancement may for the most part be overcome by steady good +conduct, honest zeal, activity, perseverance, and above all by a +determined resolution to surmount difficulties, and stand up +manfully against misfortune.</p> + +<p>The school of Difficulty is the best school of moral +discipline, for nations as for individuals. Indeed, the +history of difficulty would be but a history of all the great and +good things that have yet been accomplished by men. It is +hard to say how much northern nations owe to their encounter with +a comparatively rude and changeable climate and an originally +sterile soil, which is one of the necessities of their +condition,—involving a perennial struggle with difficulties +such as the natives of sunnier climes know nothing of. And +thus it may be, that though our finest products are exotic, the +skill and industry which have been necessary to rear them, have +issued in the production of a native growth of men not surpassed +on the globe.</p> + +<p>Wherever there is difficulty, the individual man must come out +for better for worse. Encounter with it will train his +strength, and discipline his skill; heartening him for future +effort, as the racer, by being trained to run against the hill, +at length courses with facility. The road to success may be +steep to climb, and it puts to the proof the energies of him who +would reach the summit. But by experience a man soon learns +that obstacles are to be overcome by grappling with +them,—that the nettle feels as soft as silk when it is +boldly grasped,—and that the most effective help towards +realizing the object proposed is the moral conviction that we can +and will accomplish it. Thus difficulties often fall away +of themselves before the determination to overcome them.</p> + +<p>Much will be done if we do but try. Nobody knows what he +can do till he has tried; and few try their best till they have +been forced to do it. “<i>If</i> I could do such and +such a thing,” sighs the desponding youth. But +nothing will be done if he only wishes. The desire must +ripen into purpose and effort; and one energetic attempt is worth +a thousand aspirations. It is these thorny +“ifs”—the mutterings of impotence and +despair—which so often hedge round the field of +possibility, and prevent anything being done or even +attempted. “A difficulty,” said Lord Lyndhurst, +“is a thing to be overcome;” grapple with it at once; +facility will come with practice, and strength and fortitude with +repeated effort. Thus the mind and character may be trained +to an almost perfect discipline, and enabled to act with a grace, +spirit, and liberty, almost incomprehensible to those who have +not passed through a similar experience.</p> + +<p>Everything that we learn is the mastery of a difficulty; and +the mastery of one helps to the mastery of others. Things +which may at first sight appear comparatively valueless in +education—such as the study of the dead languages, and the +relations of lines and surfaces which we call +mathematics—are really of the greatest practical value, not +so much because of the information which they yield, as because +of the development which they compel. The mastery of these +studies evokes effort, and cultivates powers of application, +which otherwise might have lain dormant, Thus one thing leads to +another, and so the work goes on through life—encounter +with difficulty ending only when life and culture end. But +indulging in the feeling of discouragement never helped any one +over a difficulty, and never will. D’Alembert’s +advice to the student who complained to him about his want of +success in mastering the first elements of mathematics was the +right one—“Go on, sir, and faith and strength will +come to you.”</p> + +<p>The danseuse who turns a pirouette, the violinist who plays a +sonata, have acquired their dexterity by patient repetition and +after many failures. Carissimi, when praised for the ease +and grace of his melodies, exclaimed, “Ah! you little know +with what difficulty this ease has been acquired.” +Sir Joshua Reynolds, when once asked how long it had taken him to +paint a certain picture, replied, “All my +life.” Henry Clay, the American orator, when giving +advice to young men, thus described to them the secret of his +success in the cultivation of his art: “I owe my success in +life,” said he, “chiefly to one +circumstance—that at the age of twenty-seven I commenced, +and continued for years, the process of daily reading and +speaking upon the contents of some historical or scientific +book. These off-hand efforts were made, sometimes in a +cornfield, at others in the forest, and not unfrequently in some +distant barn, with the horse and the ox for my auditors. It +is to this early practice of the art of all arts that I am +indebted for the primary and leading impulses that stimulated me +onward and have shaped and moulded my whole subsequent +destiny.”</p> + +<p>Curran, the Irish orator, when a youth, had a strong defect in +his articulation, and at school he was known as “stuttering +Jack Curran.” While he was engaged in the study of +the law, and still struggling to overcome his defect, he was +stung into eloquence by the sarcasms of a member of a debating +club, who characterised him as “Orator Mum;” for, +like Cowper, when he stood up to speak on a previous occasion, +Curran had not been able to utter a word. The taunt stung +him and he replied in a triumphant speech. This accidental +discovery in himself of the gift of eloquence encouraged him to +proceed in his studies with renewed energy. He corrected +his enunciation by reading aloud, emphatically and distinctly, +the best passages in literature, for several hours every day, +studying his features before a mirror, and adopting a method of +gesticulation suited to his rather awkward and ungraceful +figure. He also proposed cases to himself, which he argued +with as much care as if he had been addressing a jury. +Curran began business with the qualification which Lord Eldon +stated to be the first requisite for distinction, that is, +“to be not worth a shilling.” While working his +way laboriously at the bar, still oppressed by the diffidence +which had overcome him in his debating club, he was on one +occasion provoked by the Judge (Robinson) into making a very +severe retort. In the case under discussion, Curran +observed “that he had never met the law as laid down by his +lordship in any book in his library.” “That may +be, sir,” said the judge, in a contemptuous tone, +“but I suspect that <i>your</i> library is very +small.” His lordship was notoriously a furious +political partisan, the author of several anonymous pamphlets +characterised by unusual violence and dogmatism. Curran, +roused by the allusion to his straitened circumstances, replied +thus; “It is very true, my lord, that I am poor, and the +circumstance has certainly curtailed my library; my books are not +numerous, but they are select, and I hope they have been perused +with proper dispositions. I have prepared myself for this +high profession by the study of a few good works, rather than by +the composition of a great many bad ones. I am not ashamed +of my poverty; but I should be ashamed of my wealth, could I have +stooped to acquire it by servility and corruption. If I +rise not to rank, I shall at least be honest; and should I ever +cease to be so, many an example shows me that an ill-gained +elevation, by making me the more conspicuous, would only make me +the more universally and the more notoriously +contemptible.”</p> + +<p>The extremest poverty has been no obstacle in the way of men +devoted to the duty of self-culture. Professor Alexander +Murray, the linguist, learnt to write by scribbling his letters +on an old wool-card with the end of a burnt heather stem. +The only book which his father, who was a poor shepherd, +possessed, was a penny Shorter Catechism; but that, being thought +too valuable for common use, was carefully preserved in a +cupboard for the Sunday catechisings. Professor Moor, when +a young man, being too poor to purchase Newton’s +‘Principia,’ borrowed the book, and copied the whole +of it with his own hand. Many poor students, while +labouring daily for their living, have only been able to snatch +an atom of knowledge here and there at intervals, as birds do +their food in winter time when the fields are covered with +snow. They have struggled on, and faith and hope have come +to them. A well-known author and publisher, William +Chambers, of Edinburgh, speaking before an assemblage of young +men in that city, thus briefly described to them his humble +beginnings, for their encouragement: “I stand before +you,” he said, “a self-educated man. My +education was that which is supplied at the humble parish schools +of Scotland; and it was only when I went to Edinburgh, a poor +boy, that I devoted my evenings, after the labours of the day, to +the cultivation of that intellect which the Almighty has given +me. From seven or eight in the morning till nine or ten at +night was I at my business as a bookseller’s apprentice, +and it was only during hours after these, stolen from sleep, that +I could devote myself to study. I did not read novels: my +attention was devoted to physical science, and other useful +matters. I also taught myself French. I look back to +those times with great pleasure, and am almost sorry I have not +to go through the same experience again; for I reaped more +pleasure when I had not a sixpence in my pocket, studying in a +garret in Edinburgh, then I now find when sitting amidst all the +elegancies and comforts of a parlour.”</p> + +<p>William Cobbett’s account of how he learnt English +Grammar is full of interest and instruction for all students +labouring under difficulties. “I learned +grammar,” said he, “when I was a private soldier on +the pay of sixpence a day. The edge of my berth, or that of +my guard-bed, was my seat to study in; my knapsack was my +book-case; a bit of board lying on my lap was my writing-table; +and the task did not demand anything like a year of my +life. I had no money to purchase candle or oil; in winter +time it was rarely that I could get any evening light but that of +the fire, and only my turn even of that. And if I, under +such circumstances, and without parent or friend to advise or +encourage me, accomplished this undertaking, what excuse can +there be for any youth, however poor, however pressed with +business, or however circumstanced as to room or other +conveniences? To buy a pen or a sheet of paper I was +compelled to forego some portion of food, though in a state of +half-starvation: I had no moment of time that I could call my +own; and I had to read and to write amidst the talking, laughing, +singing, whistling, and brawling of at least half a score of the +most thoughtless of men, and that, too, in the hours of their +freedom from all control. Think not lightly of the farthing +that I had to give, now and then, for ink, pen, or paper! +That farthing was, alas! a great sum to me! I was as tall +as I am now; I had great health and great exercise. The +whole of the money, not expended for us at market, was two-pence +a week for each man. I remember, and well I may! that on +one occasion I, after all necessary expenses, had, on a Friday, +made shifts to have a halfpenny in reserve, which I had destined +for the purchase of a redherring in the morning; but, when I +pulled off my clothes at night, so hungry then as to be hardly +able to endure life, I found that I had lost my halfpenny! +I buried my head under the miserable sheet and rug, and cried +like a child! And again I say, if, I, under circumstances +like these, could encounter and overcome this task, is there, can +there be, in the whole world, a youth to find an excuse for the +non-performance?”</p> + +<p>We have been informed of an equally striking instance of +perseverance and application in learning on the part of a French +political exile in London. His original occupation was that +of a stonemason, at which he found employment for some time; but +work becoming slack, he lost his place, and poverty stared him in +the face. In his dilemma he called upon a fellow exile +profitably engaged in teaching French, and consulted him what he +ought to do to earn a living. The answer was, “Become +a professor!” “A professor?” answered the +mason—“I, who am only a workman, speaking but a +patois! Surely you are jesting?” “On the +contrary, I am quite serious,” said the other, “and +again I advise you—become a professor; place yourself under +me, and I will undertake to teach you how to teach +others.” “No, no!” replied the mason, +“it is impossible; I am too old to learn; I am too little +of a scholar; I cannot be a professor.” He went away, +and again he tried to obtain employment at his trade. From +London he went into the provinces, and travelled several hundred +miles in vain; he could not find a master. Returning to +London, he went direct to his former adviser, and said, “I +have tried everywhere for work, and failed; I will now try to be +a professor!” He immediately placed himself under +instruction; and being a man of close application, of quick +apprehension, and vigorous intelligence, he speedily mastered the +elements of grammar, the rules of construction and composition, +and (what he had still in a great measure to learn) the correct +pronunciation of classical French. When his friend and +instructor thought him sufficiently competent to undertake the +teaching of others, an appointment, advertised as vacant, was +applied for and obtained; and behold our artisan at length become +professor! It so happened, that the seminary to which he +was appointed was situated in a suburb of London where he had +formerly worked as a stonemason; and every morning the first +thing which met his eyes on looking out of his dressing-room +window was a stack of cottage chimneys which he had himself +built! He feared for a time lest he should be recognised in +the village as the quondam workman, and thus bring discredit on +his seminary, which was of high standing. But he need have +been under no such apprehension, as he proved a most efficient +teacher, and his pupils were on more than one occasion publicly +complimented for their knowledge of French. Meanwhile, he +secured the respect and friendship of all who knew +him—fellow-professors as well as pupils; and when the story +of his struggles, his difficulties, and his past history, became +known to them, they admired him more than ever.</p> + +<p>Sir Samuel Romilly was not less indefatigable as a +self-cultivator. The son of a jeweller, descended from a +French refugee, he received little education in his early years, +but overcame all his disadvantages by unwearied application, and +by efforts constantly directed towards the same end. +“I determined,” he says, in his autobiography, +“when I was between fifteen and sixteen years of age, to +apply myself seriously to learning Latin, of which I, at that +time, knew little more than some of the most familiar rules of +grammar. In the course of three or four years, during which +I thus applied myself, I had read almost every prose writer of +the age of pure Latinity, except those who have treated merely of +technical subjects, such as Varro, Columella, and Celsus. I +had gone three times through the whole of Livy, Sallust, and +Tacitus. I had studied the most celebrated orations of +Cicero, and translated a great deal of Homer. Terence, +Virgil, Horace, Ovid, and Juvenal, I had read over and over +again.” He also studied geography, natural history, +and natural philosophy, and obtained a considerable acquaintance +with general knowledge. At sixteen he was articled to a +clerk in Chancery; worked hard; was admitted to the bar; and his +industry and perseverance ensured success. He became +Solicitor-General under the Fox administration in 1806, and +steadily worked his way to the highest celebrity in his +profession. Yet he was always haunted by a painful and +almost oppressive sense of his own disqualifications, and never +ceased labouring to remedy them. His autobiography is a +lesson of instructive facts, worth volumes of sentiment, and well +deserves a careful perusal.</p> + +<p>Sir Walter Scott was accustomed to cite the case of his young +friend John Leyden as one of the most remarkable illustrations of +the power of perseverance which he had ever known. The son +of a shepherd in one of the wildest valleys of Roxburghshire, he +was almost entirely self educated. Like many Scotch +shepherds’ sons—like Hogg, who taught himself to +write by copying the letters of a printed book as he lay watching +his flock on the hill-side—like Cairns, who from tending +sheep on the Lammermoors, raised himself by dint of application +and industry to the professor’s chair which he now so +worthily holds—like Murray, Ferguson, and many more, Leyden +was early inspired by a thirst for knowledge. When a poor +barefooted boy, he walked six or eight miles across the moors +daily to learn reading at the little village schoolhouse of +Kirkton; and this was all the education he received; the rest he +acquired for himself. He found his way to Edinburgh to +attend the college there, setting the extremest penury at +defiance. He was first discovered as a frequenter of a +small bookseller’s shop kept by Archibald Constable, +afterwards so well known as a publisher. He would pass hour +after hour perched on a ladder in mid-air, with some great folio +in his hand, forgetful of the scanty meal of bread and water +which awaited him at his miserable lodging. Access to books +and lectures comprised all within the bounds of his wishes. +Thus he toiled and battled at the gates of science until his +unconquerable perseverance carried everything before it. +Before he had attained his nineteenth year he had astonished all +the professors in Edinburgh by his profound knowledge of Greek +and Latin, and the general mass of information he had +acquired. Having turned his views to India, he sought +employment in the civil service, but failed. He was however +informed that a surgeon’s assistant’s commission was +open to him. But he was no surgeon, and knew no more of the +profession than a child. He could however learn. Then +he was told that he must be ready to pass in six months! +Nothing daunted, he set to work, to acquire in six months what +usually required three years. At the end of six months he +took his degree with honour. Scott and a few friends helped +to fit him out; and he sailed for India, after publishing his +beautiful poem ‘The Scenes of Infancy.’ In +India he promised to become one of the greatest of oriental +scholars, but was unhappily cut off by fever caught by exposure, +and died at an early age.</p> + +<p>The life of the late Dr. Lee, Professor of Hebrew at +Cambridge, furnishes one of the most remarkable instances in +modern times of the power of patient perseverance and resolute +purpose in working out an honourable career in literature. +He received his education at a charity school at Lognor, near +Shrewsbury, but so little distinguished himself there, that his +master pronounced him one of the dullest boys that ever passed +through his hands. He was put apprentice to a carpenter, +and worked at that trade until he arrived at manhood. To +occupy his leisure hours he took to reading; and, some of the +books containing Latin quotations, he became desirous of +ascertaining what they meant. He bought a Latin grammar, +and proceeded to learn Latin. As Stone, the Duke of +Argyle’s gardener, said, long before, “Does one need +to know anything more than the twenty-four letters in order to +learn everything else that one wishes?” Lee rose +early and sat up late, and he succeeded in mastering the Latin +before his apprenticeship was out. Whilst working one day +in some place of worship, a copy of a Greek Testament fell in his +way, and he was immediately filled with the desire to learn that +language. He accordingly sold some of his Latin books, and +purchased a Greek Grammar and Lexicon. Taking pleasure in +learning, he soon mastered the language. Then he sold his +Greek books, and bought Hebrew ones, and learnt that language, +unassisted by any instructor, without any hope of fame or reward, +but simply following the bent of his genius. He next +proceeded to learn the Chaldee, Syriac, and Samaritan +dialects. But his studies began to tell upon his health, +and brought on disease in his eyes through his long night +watchings with his books. Having laid them aside for a time +and recovered his health, he went on with his daily work. +His character as a tradesman being excellent, his business +improved, and his means enabled him to marry, which he did when +twenty-eight years old. He determined now to devote himself +to the maintenance of his family, and to renounce the luxury of +literature; accordingly he sold all his books. He might +have continued a working carpenter all his life, had not the +chest of tools upon which he depended for subsistence been +destroyed by fire, and destitution stared him in the face. +He was too poor to buy new tools, so he bethought him of teaching +children their letters,—a profession requiring the least +possible capital. But though he had mastered many +languages, he was so defective in the common branches of +knowledge, that at first he could not teach them. Resolute +of purpose, however, he assiduously set to work, and taught +himself arithmetic and writing to such a degree as to be able to +impart the knowledge of these branches to little children. +His unaffected, simple, and beautiful character gradually +attracted friends, and the acquirements of the “learned +carpenter” became bruited abroad. Dr. Scott, a +neighbouring clergyman, obtained for him the appointment of +master of a charity school in Shrewsbury, and introduced him to a +distinguished Oriental scholar. These friends supplied him +with books, and Lee successively mastered Arabic, Persic, and +Hindostanee. He continued to pursue his studies while on +duty as a private in the local militia of the county; gradually +acquiring greater proficiency in languages. At length his +kind patron, Dr. Scott, enabled Lee to enter Queen’s +College, Cambridge; and after a course of study, in which he +distinguished himself by his mathematical acquirements, a vacancy +occurring in the professorship of Arabic and Hebrew, he was +worthily elected to fill the honourable office. Besides +ably performing his duties as a professor, he voluntarily gave +much of his time to the instruction of missionaries going forth +to preach the Gospel to eastern tribes in their own tongue. +He also made translations of the Bible into several Asiatic +dialects; and having mastered the New Zealand language, he +arranged a grammar and vocabulary for two New Zealand chiefs who +were then in England, which books are now in daily use in the New +Zealand schools. Such, in brief, is the remarkable history +of Dr. Samuel Lee; and it is but the counterpart of numerous +similarly instructive examples of the power of perseverance in +self-culture, as displayed in the lives of many of the most +distinguished of our literary and scientific men.</p> + +<p>There are many other illustrious names which might be cited to +prove the truth of the common saying that “it is never too +late to learn.” Even at advanced years men can do +much, if they will determine on making a beginning. Sir +Henry Spelman did not begin the study of science until he was +between fifty and sixty years of age. Franklin was fifty +before he fully entered upon the study of Natural +Philosophy. Dryden and Scott were not known as authors +until each was in his fortieth year. Boccaccio was +thirty-five when he commenced his literary career, and Alfieri +was forty-six when he began the study of Greek. Dr. Arnold +learnt German at an advanced age, for the purpose of reading +Niebuhr in the original; and in like manner James Watt, when +about forty, while working at his trade of an instrument maker in +Glasgow, learnt French, German, and Italian, to enable himself to +peruse the valuable works on mechanical philosophy which existed +in those languages. Thomas Scott was fifty-six before he +began to learn Hebrew. Robert Hall was once found lying +upon the floor, racked by pain, learning Italian in his old age, +to enable him to judge of the parallel drawn by Macaulay between +Milton and Dante. Handel was forty-eight before he +published any of his great works. Indeed hundreds of +instances might be given of men who struck out an entirely new +path, and successfully entered on new studies, at a comparatively +advanced time of life. None but the frivolous or the +indolent will say, “I am too old to learn.” <a +name="citation354"></a><a href="#footnote354" +class="citation">[354]</a></p> + +<p>And here we would repeat what we have said before, that it is +not men of genius who move the world and take the lead in it, so +much as men of steadfastness, purpose, and indefatigable +industry. Notwithstanding the many undeniable instances of +the precocity of men of genius, it is nevertheless true that +early cleverness gives no indication of the height to which the +grown man will reach. Precocity is sometimes a symptom of +disease rather than of intellectual vigour. What becomes of +all the “remarkably clever children?” Where are +the duxes and prize boys? Trace them through life, and it +will frequently be found that the dull boys, who were beaten at +school, have shot ahead of them. The clever boys are +rewarded, but the prizes which they gain by their greater +quickness and facility do not always prove of use to them. +What ought rather to be rewarded is the endeavour, the struggle, +and the obedience; for it is the youth who does his best, though +endowed with an inferiority of natural powers, that ought above +all others to be encouraged.</p> + +<p>An interesting chapter might be written on the subject of +illustrious dunces—dull boys, but brilliant men. We +have room, however, for only a few instances. Pietro di +Cortona, the painter, was thought so stupid that he was nicknamed +“Ass’s Head” when a boy; and Tomaso Guidi was +generally known as “Heavy Tom” (Massaccio +Tomasaccio), though by diligence he afterwards raised himself to +the highest eminence. Newton, when at school, stood at the +bottom of the lowest form but one. The boy above Newton +having kicked him, the dunce showed his pluck by challenging him +to a fight, and beat him. Then he set to work with a will, +and determined also to vanquish his antagonist as a scholar, +which he did, rising to the top of his class. Many of our +greatest divines have been anything but precocious. Isaac +Barrow, when a boy at the Charterhouse School, was notorious +chiefly for his strong temper, pugnacious habits, and proverbial +idleness as a scholar; and he caused such grief to his parents +that his father used to say that, if it pleased God to take from +him any of his children, he hoped it might be Isaac, the least +promising of them all. Adam Clarke, when a boy, was +proclaimed by his father to be “a grievous dunce;” +though he could roll large stones about. Dean Swift was +“plucked” at Dublin University, and only obtained his +recommendation to Oxford “speciali gratia.” The +well-known Dr. Chalmers and Dr. Cook <a +name="citation356a"></a><a href="#footnote356a" +class="citation">[356a]</a> were boys together at the parish +school of St. Andrew’s; and they were found so stupid and +mischievous, that the master, irritated beyond measure, dismissed +them both as incorrigible dunces.</p> + +<p>The brilliant Sheridan showed so little capacity as a boy, +that he was presented to a tutor by his mother with the +complimentary accompaniment that he was an incorrigible +dunce. Walter Scott was all but a dunce when a boy, always +much readier for a “bicker,” than apt at his +lessons. At the Edinburgh University, Professor Dalzell +pronounced upon him the sentence that “Dunce he was, and +dunce he would remain.” Chatterton was returned on +his mother’s hands as “a fool, of whom nothing could +be made.” Burns was a dull boy, good only at athletic +exercises. Goldsmith spoke of himself, as a plant that +flowered late. Alfieri left college no wiser than he +entered it, and did not begin the studies by which he +distinguished himself, until he had run half over Europe. +Robert Clive was a dunce, if not a reprobate, when a youth; but +always full of energy, even in badness. His family, glad to +get rid of him, shipped him off to Madras; and he lived to lay +the foundations of the British power in India. Napoleon and +Wellington were both dull boys, not distinguishing themselves in +any way at school. <a name="citation356b"></a><a +href="#footnote356b" class="citation">[356b]</a> Of the +former the Duchess d’Abrantes says, “he had good +health, but was in other respects like other boys.”</p> + +<p>Ulysses Grant, the Commander-in-Chief of the United States, +was called “Useless Grant” by his mother—he was +so dull and unhandy when a boy; and Stonewall Jackson, +Lee’s greatest lieutenant, was, in his youth, chiefly noted +for his slowness. While a pupil at West Point Military +Academy he was, however, equally remarkable for his indefatigable +application and perseverance. When a task was set him, he +never left it until he had mastered it; nor did he ever feign to +possess knowledge which he had not entirely acquired. +“Again and again,” wrote one who knew him, +“when called upon to answer questions in the recitation of +the day, he would reply, ‘I have not yet looked at it; I +have been engaged in mastering the recitation of yesterday or the +day before.’ The result was that he graduated +seventeenth in a class of seventy. There was probably in +the whole class not a boy to whom Jackson at the outset was not +inferior in knowledge and attainments; but at the end of the race +he had only sixteen before him, and had outstripped no fewer than +fifty-three. It used to be said of him by his +contemporaries, that if the course had been for ten years instead +of four, Jackson would have graduated at the head of his +class.” <a name="citation357"></a><a href="#footnote357" +class="citation">[357]</a></p> + +<p>John Howard, the philanthropist, was another illustrious +dunce, learning next to nothing during the seven years that he +was at school. Stephenson, as a youth, was distinguished +chiefly for his skill at putting and wrestling, and attention to +his work. The brilliant Sir Humphry Davy was no cleverer +than other boys: his teacher, Dr. Cardew, once said of him, +“While he was with me I could not discern the faculties by +which he was so much distinguished.” Indeed, Davy +himself in after life considered it fortunate that he had been +left to “enjoy so much idleness” at school. +Watt was a dull scholar, notwithstanding the stories told about +his precocity; but he was, what was better, patient and +perseverant, and it was by such qualities, and by his carefully +cultivated inventiveness, that he was enabled to perfect his +steam-engine.</p> + +<p>What Dr. Arnold said of boys is equally true of men—that +the difference between one boy and another consists not so much +in talent as in energy. Given perseverance and energy soon +becomes habitual. Provided the dunce has persistency and +application he will inevitably head the cleverer fellow without +those qualities. Slow but sure wins the race. It is +perseverance that explains how the position of boys at school is +so often reversed in real life; and it is curious to note how +some who were then so clever have since become so commonplace; +whilst others, dull boys, of whom nothing was expected, slow in +their faculties but sure in their pace, have assumed the position +of leaders of men. The author of this book, when a boy, +stood in the same class with one of the greatest of dunces. +One teacher after another had tried his skill upon him and +failed. Corporal punishment, the fool’s cap, coaxing, +and earnest entreaty, proved alike fruitless. Sometimes the +experiment was tried of putting him at the top of his class, and +it was curious to note the rapidity with which he gravitated to +the inevitable bottom. The youth was given up by his +teachers as an incorrigible dunce—one of them pronouncing +him to be a “stupendous booby.” Yet, slow +though he was, this dunce had a sort of dull energy of purpose in +him, which grew with his muscles and his manhood; and, strange to +say, when he at length came to take part in the practical +business of life, he was found heading most of his school +companions, and eventually left the greater number of them far +behind. The last time the author heard of him, he was chief +magistrate of his native town.</p> + +<p>The tortoise in the right road will beat a racer in the +wrong. It matters not though a youth be slow, if he be but +diligent. Quickness of parts may even prove a defect, +inasmuch as the boy who learns readily will often forget as +readily; and also because he finds no need of cultivating that +quality of application and perseverance which the slower youth is +compelled to exercise, and which proves so valuable an element in +the formation of every character. Davy said “What I +am I have made myself;” and the same holds true +universally.</p> + +<p>To conclude: the best culture is not obtained from teachers +when at school or college, so much as by our own diligent +self-education when we have become men. Hence parents need +not be in too great haste to see their children’s talents +forced into bloom. Let them watch and wait patiently, +letting good example and quiet training do their work, and leave +the rest to Providence. Let them see to it that the youth +is provided, by free exercise of his bodily powers, with a full +stock of physical health; set him fairly on the road of +self-culture; carefully train his habits of application and +perseverance; and as he grows older, if the right stuff be in +him, he will be enabled vigorously and effectively to cultivate +himself.</p> +<h2><a name="page360"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +360</span>CHAPTER XII.<br /> +<span class="smcap">Example—Models</span>.</h2> +<blockquote><p>“Ever their phantoms rise before us,<br /> + Our loftier brothers, but one in blood;<br /> +By bed and table they lord it o’er us,<br /> + With looks of beauty and words of +good.”—<i>John Sterling</i>.</p> + +<p>“Children may be strangled, but Deeds never; they have +an indestructible life, both in and out of our +consciousness.”—<i>George Eliot</i>.</p> + +<p>“There is no action of man in this life, which is not +the beginning of so long a chain of consequences, as that no +human providence is high enough to give us a prospect to the +end.”—<i>Thomas of Malmesbury</i>.</p> +</blockquote> +<p><span class="smcap">Example</span> is one of the most potent +of instructors, though it teaches without a tongue. It is +the practical school of mankind, working by action, which is +always more forcible than words. Precept may point to us +the way, but it is silent continuous example, conveyed to us by +habits, and living with us in fact, that carries us along. +Good advice has its weight: but without the accompaniment of a +good example it is of comparatively small influence; and it will +be found that the common saying of “Do as I say, not as I +do,” is usually reversed in the actual experience of +life.</p> + +<p>All persons are more or less apt to learn through the eye +rather than the ear; and, whatever is seen in fact, makes a far +deeper impression than anything that is merely read or +heard. This is especially the case in early youth, when the +eye is the chief inlet of knowledge. Whatever children see +they unconsciously imitate. They insensibly come to +resemble those who are about them—as insects take the +colour of the leaves they feed on. Hence the vast +importance of domestic training. For whatever may be the +efficiency of schools, the examples set in our Homes must always +be of vastly greater influence in forming the characters of our +future men and women. The Home is the crystal of +society—the nucleus of national character; and from that +source, be it pure or tainted, issue the habits, principles and +maxims, which govern public as well as private life. The +nation comes from the nursery. Public opinion itself is for +the most part the outgrowth of the home; and the best +philanthropy comes from the fireside. “To love the +little platoon we belong to in society,” says Burke, +“is the germ of all public affections.” From +this little central spot, the human sympathies may extend in an +ever widening circle, until the world is embraced; for, though +true philanthropy, like charity, begins at home, assuredly it +does not end there.</p> + +<p>Example in conduct, therefore, even in apparently trivial +matters, is of no light moment, inasmuch as it is constantly +becoming inwoven with the lives of others, and contributing to +form their natures for better or for worse. The characters +of parents are thus constantly repeated in their children; and +the acts of affection, discipline, industry, and self-control, +which they daily exemplify, live and act when all else which may +have been learned through the ear has long been forgotten. +Hence a wise man was accustomed to speak of his children as his +“future state.” Even the mute action and +unconscious look of a parent may give a stamp to the character +which is never effaced; and who can tell how much evil act has +been stayed by the thought of some good parent, whose memory +their children may not sully by the commission of an unworthy +deed, or the indulgence of an impure thought? The veriest +trifles thus become of importance in influencing the characters +of men. “A kiss from my mother,” said West, +“made me a painter.” It is on the direction of +such seeming trifles when children that the future happiness and +success of men mainly depend. Fowell Buxton, when occupying +an eminent and influential station in life, wrote to his mother, +“I constantly feel, especially in action and exertion for +others, the effects of principles early implanted by you in my +mind.” Buxton was also accustomed to remember with +gratitude the obligations which he owed to an illiterate man, a +gamekeeper, named Abraham Plastow, with whom he played, and rode, +and sported—a man who could neither read nor write, but was +full of natural good sense and mother-wit. “What made +him particularly valuable,” says Buxton, “were his +principles of integrity and honour. He never said or did a +thing in the absence of my mother of which she would have +disapproved. He always held up the highest standard of +integrity, and filled our youthful minds with sentiments as pure +and as generous as could be found in the writings of Seneca or +Cicero. Such was my first instructor, and, I must add, my +best.”</p> + +<p>Lord Langdale, looking back upon the admirable example set him +by his mother, declared, “If the whole world were put into +one scale, and my mother into the other, the world would kick the +beam.” Mrs. Schimmel Penninck, in her old age, was +accustomed to call to mind the personal influence exercised by +her mother upon the society amidst which she moved. When +she entered a room it had the effect of immediately raising the +tone of the conversation, and as if purifying the moral +atmosphere—all seeming to breathe more freely, and stand +more erectly. “In her presence,” says the +daughter, “I became for the time transformed into another +person.” So much does she moral health depend upon +the moral atmosphere that is breathed, and so great is the +influence daily exercised by parents over their children by +living a life before their eyes, that perhaps the best system of +parental instruction might be summed up in these two words: +“Improve thyself.”</p> + +<p>There is something solemn and awful in the thought that there +is not an act done or a word uttered by a human being but carries +with it a train of consequences, the end of which we may never +trace. Not one but, to a certain extent, gives a colour to +our life, and insensibly influences the lives of those about +us. The good deed or word will live, even though we may not +see it fructify, but so will the bad; and no person is so +insignificant as to be sure that his example will not do good on +the one hand, or evil on the other. The spirits of men do +not die: they still live and walk abroad among us. It was a +fine and a true thought uttered by Mr. Disraeli in the House of +Commons on the death of Richard Cobden, that “he was one of +those men who, though not present, were still members of that +House, who were independent of dissolutions, of the caprices of +constituencies, and even of the course of time.”</p> + +<p>There is, indeed, an essence of immortality in the life of +man, even in this world. No individual in the universe +stands alone; he is a component part of a system of mutual +dependencies; and by his several acts he either increases or +diminishes the sum of human good now and for ever. As the +present is rooted in the past, and the lives and examples of our +forefathers still to a great extent influence us, so are we by +our daily acts contributing to form the condition and character +of the future. Man is a fruit formed and ripened by the +culture of all the foregoing centuries; and the living generation +continues the magnetic current of action and example destined to +bind the remotest past with the most distant future. No +man’s acts die utterly; and though his body may resolve +into dust and air, his good or his bad deeds will still be +bringing forth fruit after their kind, and influencing future +generations for all time to come. It is in this momentous +and solemn fact that the great peril and responsibility of human +existence lies.</p> + +<p>Mr. Babbage has so powerfully expressed this idea in a noble +passage in one of his writings that we here venture to quote his +words: “Every atom,” he says, “impressed with +good or ill, retains at once the motions which philosophers and +sages have imparted to it, mixed and combined in ten thousand +ways with all that is worthless and base; the air itself is one +vast library, on whose pages are written <i>for ever</i> all that +man has ever said or whispered. There, in their immutable +but unerring characters, mixed with the earliest as well as the +latest sighs of mortality, stand for ever recorded vows +unredeemed, promises unfulfilled; perpetuating, in the united +movements of each particle, the testimony of man’s +changeful will. But, if the air we breathe is the +never-failing historian of the sentiments we have uttered, earth, +air, and ocean, are, in like manner, the eternal witnesses of the +acts we have done; the same principle of the equality of action +and reaction applies to them. No motion impressed by +natural causes, or by human agency, is ever obliterated. . . . If +the Almighty stamped on the brow of the first murderer the +indelible and visible mark of his guilt, He has also established +laws by which every succeeding criminal is not less irrevocably +chained to the testimony of his crime; for every atom of his +mortal frame, through whatever changes its severed particles may +migrate, will still retain adhering to it, through every +combination, some movement derived from that very muscular effort +by which the crime itself was perpetrated.”</p> + +<p>Thus, every act we do or word we utter, as well as every act +we witness or word we hear, carries with it an influence which +extends over, and gives a colour, not only to the whole of our +future life, but makes itself felt upon the whole frame of +society. We may not, and indeed cannot, possibly, trace the +influence working itself into action in its various ramifications +amongst our children, our friends, or associates; yet there it is +assuredly, working on for ever. And herein lies the great +significance of setting forth a good example,—a silent +teaching which even the poorest and least significant person can +practise in his daily life. There is no one so humble, but +that he owes to others this simple but priceless +instruction. Even the meanest condition may thus be made +useful; for the light set in a low place shines as faithfully as +that set upon a hill. Everywhere, and under almost all +circumstances, however externally adverse—in moorland +shielings, in cottage hamlets, in the close alleys of great +towns—the true man may grow. He who tills a space of +earth scarce bigger than is needed for his grave, may work as +faithfully, and to as good purpose, as the heir to +thousands. The commonest workshop may thus be a school of +industry, science, and good morals, on the one hand; or of +idleness, folly, and depravity, on the other. It all +depends on the individual men, and the use they make of the +opportunities for good which offer themselves.</p> + +<p>A life well spent, a character uprightly sustained, is no +slight legacy to leave to one’s children, and to the world; +for it is the most eloquent lesson of virtue and the severest +reproof of vice, while it continues an enduring source of the +best kind of riches. Well for those who can say, as Pope +did, in rejoinder to the sarcasm of Lord Hervey, “I think +it enough that my parents, such as they were, never cost me a +blush, and that their son, such as he is, never cost them a +tear.”</p> + +<p>It is not enough to tell others what they are to do, but to +exhibit the actual example of doing. What Mrs. Chisholm +described to Mrs. Stowe as the secret of her success, applies to +all life. “I found,” she said, “that if +we want anything <i>done</i>, we must go to work and <i>do</i>: +it is of no use merely to talk—none whatever.” +It is poor eloquence that only shows how a person can talk. +Had Mrs. Chisholm rested satisfied with lecturing, her project, +she was persuaded, would never have got beyond the region of +talk; but when people saw what she was doing and had actually +accomplished, they fell in with her views and came forward to +help her. Hence the most beneficent worker is not he who +says the most eloquent things, or even who thinks the most +loftily, but he who does the most eloquent acts.</p> + +<p>True-hearted persons, even in the humblest station in life, +who are energetic doers, may thus give an impulse to good works +out of all proportion, apparently, to their actual station in +society. Thomas Wright might have talked about the +reclamation of criminals, and John Pounds about the necessity for +Ragged Schools, and yet done nothing; instead of which they +simply set to work without any other idea in their minds than +that of doing, not talking. And how the example of even the +poorest man may tell upon society, hear what Dr. Guthrie, the +apostle of the Ragged School movement, says of the influence +which the example of John Pounds, the humble Portsmouth cobbler, +exercised upon his own working career:—</p> + +<p>“The interest I have been led to take in this cause is +an example of how, in Providence, a man’s destiny—his +course of life, like that of a river—may be determined and +affected by very trivial circumstances. It is rather +curious—at least it is interesting to me to +remember—that it was by a picture I was first led to take +an interest in ragged schools—by a picture in an old, +obscure, decaying burgh that stands on the shores of the Frith of +Forth, the birthplace of Thomas Chalmers. I went to see +this place many years ago; and, going into an inn for +refreshment, I found the room covered with pictures of +shepherdesses with their crooks, and sailors in holiday attire, +not particularly interesting. But above the chimney-piece +there was a large print, more respectable than its neighbours, +which represented a cobbler’s room. The cobbler was +there himself, spectacles on nose, an old shoe between his +knees—the massive forehead and firm mouth indicating great +determination of character, and, beneath his bushy eyebrows, +benevolence gleamed out on a number of poor ragged boys and girls +who stood at their lessons round the busy cobbler. My +curiosity was awakened; and in the inscription I read how this +man, John Pounds, a cobbler in Portsmouth, taking pity on the +multitude of poor ragged children left by ministers and +magistrates, and ladies and gentlemen, to go to ruin on the +streets—how, like a good shepherd, he gathered in these +wretched outcasts—how he had trained them to God and to the +world—and how, while earning his daily bread by the sweat +of his brow, he had rescued from misery and saved to society not +less than five hundred of these children. I felt ashamed of +myself. I felt reproved for the little I had done. My +feelings were touched. I was astonished at this man’s +achievements; and I well remember, in the enthusiasm of the +moment, saying to my companion (and I have seen in my cooler and +calmer moments no reason for unsaying the +saying)—‘That man is an honour to humanity, and +deserves the tallest monument ever raised within the shores of +Britain.’ I took up that man’s history, and I +found it animated by the spirit of Him who ‘had compassion +on the multitude.’ John Pounds was a clever man +besides; and, like Paul, if he could not win a poor boy any other +way, he won him by art. He would be seen chasing a ragged +boy along the quays, and compelling him to come to school, not by +the power of a policeman, but by the power of a hot potato. +He knew the love an Irishman had for a potato; and John Pounds +might be seen running holding under the boy’s nose a +potato, like an Irishman, very hot, and with a coat as ragged as +himself. When the day comes when honour will be done to +whom honour is due, I can fancy the crowd of those whose fame +poets have sung, and to whose memory monuments have been raised, +dividing like the wave, and, passing the great, and the noble, +and the mighty of the land, this poor, obscure old man stepping +forward and receiving the especial notice of Him who said +‘Inasmuch as ye did it to one of the least of these, ye did +it also to Me.’”</p> + +<p>The education of character is very much a question of models; +we mould ourselves so unconsciously after the characters, +manners, habits, and opinions of those who are about us. +Good rules may do much, but good models far more; for in the +latter we have instruction in action—wisdom at work. +Good admonition and bad example only build with one hand to pull +down with the other. Hence the vast importance of +exercising great care in the selection of companions, especially +in youth. There is a magnetic affinity in young persons +which insensibly tends to assimilate them to each other’s +likeness. Mr. Edgeworth was so strongly convinced that from +sympathy they involuntarily imitated or caught the tone of the +company they frequented, that he held it to be of the most +essential importance that they should be taught to select the +very best models. “No company, or good +company,” was his motto. Lord Collingwood, writing to +a young friend, said, “Hold it as a maxim that you had +better be alone than in mean company. Let your companions +be such as yourself, or superior; for the worth of a man will +always be ruled by that of his company.” It was a +remark of the famous Dr. Sydenham that everybody some time or +other would be the better or the worse for having but spoken to a +good or a bad man. As Sir Peter Lely made it a rule never +to look at a bad picture if he could help it, believing that +whenever he did so his pencil caught a taint from it, so, whoever +chooses to gaze often upon a debased specimen of humanity and to +frequent his society, cannot help gradually assimilating himself +to that sort of model.</p> + +<p>It is therefore advisable for young men to seek the fellowship +of the good, and always to aim at a higher standard than +themselves. Francis Horner, speaking of the advantages to +himself of direct personal intercourse with high-minded, +intelligent men, said, “I cannot hesitate to decide that I +have derived more intellectual improvement from them than from +all the books I have turned over.” Lord Shelburne +(afterwards Marquis of Lansdowne), when a young man, paid a visit +to the venerable Malesherbes, and was so much impressed by it, +that he said,—“I have travelled much, but I have +never been so influenced by personal contact with any man; and if +I ever accomplish any good in the course of my life, I am certain +that the recollection of M. de Malesherbes will animate my +soul.” So Fowell Buxton was always ready to +acknowledge the powerful influence exercised upon the formation +of his character in early life by the example of the Gurney +family: “It has given a colour to my life,” he used +to say. Speaking of his success at the Dublin University, +he confessed, “I can ascribe it to nothing but my Earlham +visits.” It was from the Gurneys he “caught the +infection” of self-improvement.</p> + +<p>Contact with the good never fails to impart good, and we carry +away with us some of the blessing, as travellers’ garments +retain the odour of the flowers and shrubs through which they +have passed. Those who knew the late John Sterling +intimately, have spoken of the beneficial influence which he +exercised on all with whom he came into personal contact. +Many owed to him their first awakening to a higher being; from +him they learnt what they were, and what they ought to be. +Mr. Trench says of him:—“It was impossible to come in +contact with his noble nature without feeling one’s self in +some measure <i>ennobled</i> and <i>lifted up</i>, as I ever felt +when I left him, into a higher region of objects and aims than +that in which one is tempted habitually to dwell.” It +is thus that the noble character always acts; we become +insensibly elevated by him, and cannot help feeling as he does +and acquiring the habit of looking at things in the same +light. Such is the magical action and reaction of minds +upon each other.</p> + +<p>Artists, also, feel themselves elevated by contact with +artists greater than themselves. Thus Haydn’s genius +was first fired by Handel. Hearing him play, Haydn’s +ardour for musical composition was at once excited, and but for +this circumstance, he himself believed that he would never have +written the ‘Creation.’ Speaking of Handel, he +said, “When he chooses, he strikes like the +thunderbolt;” and at another time, “There is not a +note of him but draws blood.” Scarlatti was another +of Handel’s ardent admirers, following him all over Italy; +afterwards, when speaking of the great master, he would cross +himself in token of admiration. True artists never fail +generously to recognise each other’s greatness. Thus +Beethoven’s admiration for Cherubini was regal: and he +ardently hailed the genius of Schubert: “Truly,” said +he, “in Schubert dwells a divine fire.” When +Northcote was a mere youth he had such an admiration for Reynolds +that, when the great painter was once attending a public meeting +down in Devonshire, the boy pushed through the crowd, and got so +near Reynolds as to touch the skirt of his coat, “which I +did,” says Northcote, “with great satisfaction to my +mind,”—a true touch of youthful enthusiasm in its +admiration of genius.</p> + +<p>The example of the brave is an inspiration to the timid, their +presence thrilling through every fibre. Hence the miracles +of valour so often performed by ordinary men under the leadership +of the heroic. The very recollection of the deeds of the +valiant stirs men’s blood like the sound of a +trumpet. Ziska bequeathed his skin to be used as a drum to +inspire the valour of the Bohemians. When Scanderbeg, +prince of Epirus, was dead, the Turks wished to possess his +bones, that each might wear a piece next his heart, hoping thus +to secure some portion of the courage he had displayed while +living, and which they had so often experienced in battle. +When the gallant Douglas, bearing the heart of Bruce to the Holy +Land, saw one of his knights surrounded and sorely pressed by the +Saracens, he took from his neck the silver case containing the +hero’s bequest, and throwing it amidst the thickest press +of his foes, cried, “Pass first in fight, as thou wert wont +to do, and Douglas will follow thee, or die;” and so +saying, he rushed forward to the place where it fell, and was +there slain.</p> + +<p>The chief use of biography consists in the noble models of +character in which it abounds. Our great forefathers still +live among us in the records of their lives, as well as in the +acts they have done, which live also; still sit by us at table, +and hold us by the hand; furnishing examples for our benefit, +which we may still study, admire and imitate. Indeed, +whoever has left behind him the record of a noble life, has +bequeathed to posterity an enduring source of good, for it serves +as a model for others to form themselves by in all time to come; +still breathing fresh life into men, helping them to reproduce +his life anew, and to illustrate his character in other +forms. Hence a book containing the life of a true man is +full of precious seed. It is a still living voice; it is an +intellect. To use Milton’s words, “it is the +precious life-blood of a master spirit, embalmed and treasured up +on purpose to a life beyond life.” Such a book never +ceases to exercise an elevating and ennobling influence. +But, above all, there is the Book containing the very highest +Example set before us to shape our lives by in this +world—the most suitable for all the necessities of our mind +and heart—an example which we can only follow afar off and +feel after,</p> +<blockquote><p>“Like plants or vines which never saw the +sun,<br /> +But dream of him and guess where he may be,<br /> +And do their best to climb and get to him.”</p> +</blockquote> +<p>Again, no young man can rise from the perusal of such lives as +those of Buxton and Arnold, without feeling his mind and heart +made better, and his best resolves invigorated. Such +biographies increase a man’s self-reliance by demonstrating +what men can be, and what they can do; fortifying his hopes and +elevating his aims in life. Sometimes a young man discovers +himself in a biography, as Correggio felt within him the risings +of genius on contemplating the works of Michael Angelo: +“And I too, am a painter,” he exclaimed. Sir +Samuel Romilly, in his autobiography, confessed himself to have +been powerfully influenced by the life of the great and +noble-minded French Chancellor Daguesseau:—“The works +of Thomas,” says he, “had fallen into my hands, and I +had read with admiration his ‘Eloge of Daguesseau;’ +and the career of honour which he represented that illustrious +magistrate to have run, excited to a great degree my ardour and +ambition, and opened to my imagination new paths of +glory.”</p> + +<p>Franklin was accustomed to attribute his usefulness and +eminence to his having early read Cotton Mather’s +‘Essays to do Good’—a book which grew out of +Mather’s own life. And see how good example draws +other men after it, and propagates itself through future +generations in all lands. For Samuel Drew avers that he +framed his own life, and especially his business habits, after +the model left on record by Benjamin Franklin. Thus it is +impossible to say where a good example may not reach, or where it +will end, if indeed it have an end. Hence the advantage, in +literature as in life, of keeping the best society, reading the +best books, and wisely admiring and imitating the best things we +find in them. “In literature,” said Lord +Dudley, “I am fond of confining myself to the best company, +which consists chiefly of my old acquaintance, with whom I am +desirous of becoming more intimate; and I suspect that nine times +out of ten it is more profitable, if not more agreeable, to read +an old book over again, than to read a new one for the first +time.”</p> + +<p>Sometimes a book containing a noble exemplar of life, taken up +at random, merely with the object of reading it as a pastime, has +been known to call forth energies whose existence had not before +been suspected. Alfieri was first drawn with passion to +literature by reading ‘Plutarch’s Lives.’ +Loyola, when a soldier serving at the siege of Pampeluna, and +laid up by a dangerous wound in his leg, asked for a book to +divert his thoughts: the ‘Lives of the Saints’ was +brought to him, and its perusal so inflamed his mind, that he +determined thenceforth to devote himself to the founding of a +religious order. Luther, in like manner, was inspired to +undertake the great labours of his life by a perusal of the +‘Life and Writings of John Huss.’ Dr. Wolff was +stimulated to enter upon his missionary career by reading the +‘Life of Francis Xavier;’ and the book fired his +youthful bosom with a passion the most sincere and ardent to +devote himself to the enterprise of his life. William +Carey, also, got the first idea of entering upon his sublime +labours as a missionary from a perusal of the Voyages of Captain +Cook.</p> + +<p>Francis Horner was accustomed to note in his diary and letters +the books by which he was most improved and influenced. +Amongst these were Condorcet’s ‘Eloge of +Haller,’ Sir Joshua Reynolds’ +‘Discourses,’ the writings of Bacon, and +‘Burnet’s Account of Sir Matthew Hale.’ +The perusal of the last-mentioned book—the portrait of a +prodigy of labour—Horner says, filled him with +enthusiasm. Of Condorcet’s ‘Eloge of +Haller,’ he said: “I never rise from the account of +such men without a sort of thrilling palpitation about me, which +I know not whether I should call admiration, ambition, or +despair.” And speaking of the +‘Discourses’ of Sir Joshua Reynolds, he said: +“Next to the writings of Bacon, there is no book which has +more powerfully impelled me to self-culture. He is one of +the first men of genius who has condescended to inform the world +of the steps by which greatness is attained. The confidence +with which he asserts the omnipotence of human labour has the +effect of familiarising his reader with the idea that genius is +an acquisition rather than a gift; whilst with all there is +blended so naturally and eloquently the most elevated and +passionate admiration of excellence, that upon the whole there is +no book of a more <i>inflammatory</i> effect.” It is +remarkable that Reynolds himself attributed his first passionate +impulse towards the study of art, to reading Richardson’s +account of a great painter; and Haydon was in like manner +afterwards inflamed to follow the same pursuit by reading of the +career of Reynolds. Thus the brave and aspiring life of one +man lights a flame in the minds of others of like faculties and +impulse; and where there is equally vigorous efforts like +distinction and success will almost surely follow. Thus the +chain of example is carried down through time in an endless +succession of links,—admiration exciting imitation, and +perpetuating the true aristocracy of genius.</p> + +<p>One of the most valuable, and one of the most infectious +examples which can be set before the young, is that of cheerful +working. Cheerfulness gives elasticity to the spirit. +Spectres fly before it; difficulties cause no despair, for they +are encountered with hope, and the mind acquires that happy +disposition to improve opportunities which rarely fails of +success. The fervent spirit is always a healthy and happy +spirit; working cheerfully itself, and stimulating others to +work. It confers a dignity on even the most ordinary +occupations. The most effective work, also, is usually the +full-hearted work—that which passes through the hands or +the head of him whose heart is glad. Hume was accustomed to +say that he would rather possess a cheerful +disposition—inclined always to look at the bright side of +things—than with a gloomy mind to be the master of an +estate of ten thousand a year. Granville Sharp, amidst his +indefatigable labours on behalf of the slave, solaced himself in +the evenings by taking part in glees and instrumental concerts at +his brother’s house, singing, or playing on the flute, the +clarionet or the oboe; and, at the Sunday evening oratorios, when +Handel was played, he beat the kettle-drums. He also +indulged, though sparingly, in caricature drawing. Fowell +Buxton also was an eminently cheerful man; taking special +pleasure in field sports, in riding about the country with his +children, and in mixing in all their domestic amusements.</p> + +<p>In another sphere of action, Dr. Arnold was a noble and a +cheerful worker, throwing himself into the great business of his +life, the training and teaching of young men, with his whole +heart and soul. It is stated in his admirable biography, +that “the most remarkable thing in the Laleham circle was +the wonderful healthiness of tone which prevailed there. It +was a place where a new comer at once felt that a great and +earnest work was going forward. Every pupil was made to +feel that there was a work for him to do; that his happiness, as +well as his duty, lay in doing that work well. Hence an +indescribable zest was communicated to a young man’s +feeling about life; a strange joy came over him on discerning +that he had the means of being useful, and thus of being happy; +and a deep respect and ardent attachment sprang up towards him +who had taught him thus to value life and his own self, and his +work and mission in the world. All this was founded on the +breadth and comprehensiveness of Arnold’s character, as +well as its striking truth and reality; on the unfeigned regard +he had for work of all kinds, and the sense he had of its value, +both for the complex aggregate of society and the growth and +protection of the individual. In all this there was no +excitement; no predilection for one class of work above another; +no enthusiasm for any one-sided object: but a humble, profound, +and most religious consciousness that work is the appointed +calling of man on earth; the end for which his various faculties +were given; the element in which his nature is ordained to +develop itself, and in which his progressive advance towards +heaven is to lie.” Among the many valuable men +trained for public life and usefulness by Arnold, was the gallant +Hodson, of Hodson’s Horse, who, writing home from India, +many years after, thus spoke of his revered master: “The +influence he produced has been most lasting and striking in its +effects. It is felt even in India; I cannot say more than +<i>that</i>.”</p> + +<p>The useful influence which a right-hearted man of energy and +industry may exercise amongst his neighbours and dependants, and +accomplish for his country, cannot, perhaps, be better +illustrated than by the career of Sir John Sinclair; +characterized by the Abbé Gregoire as “the most +indefatigable man in Europe.” He was originally a +country laird, born to a considerable estate situated near John +o’ Groat’s House, almost beyond the beat of +civilization, in a bare wild country fronting the stormy North +Sea. His father dying while he was a youth of sixteen, the +management of the family property thus early devolved upon him; +and at eighteen he began a course of vigorous improvement in the +county of Caithness, which eventually spread all over +Scotland. Agriculture then was in a most backward state; +the fields were unenclosed, the lands undrained; the small +farmers of Caithness were so poor that they could scarcely afford +to keep a horse or shelty; the hard work was chiefly done, and +the burdens borne, by the women; and if a cottier lost a horse it +was not unusual for him to marry a wife as the cheapest +substitute. The country was without roads or bridges; and +drovers driving their cattle south had to swim the rivers along +with their beasts. The chief track leading into Caithness +lay along a high shelf on a mountain side, the road being some +hundred feet of clear perpendicular height above the sea which +dashed below. Sir John, though a mere youth, determined to +make a new road over the hill of Ben Cheilt, the old let-alone +proprietors, however, regarding his scheme with incredulity and +derision. But he himself laid out the road, assembled some +twelve hundred workmen early one summer’s morning, set them +simultaneously to work, superintending their labours, and +stimulating them by his presence and example; and before night, +what had been a dangerous sheep track, six miles in length, +hardly passable for led horses, was made practicable for +wheel-carriages as if by the power of magic. It was an +admirable example of energy and well-directed labour, which could +not fail to have a most salutary influence upon the surrounding +population. He then proceeded to make more roads, to erect +mills, to build bridges, and to enclose and cultivate the waste +lands. He introduced improved methods of culture, and +regular rotation of crops, distributing small premiums to +encourage industry; and he thus soon quickened the whole frame of +society within reach of his influence, and infused an entirely +new spirit into the cultivators of the soil. From being one +of the most inaccessible districts of the north—the very +<i>ultima Thule</i> of civilization—Caithness became a +pattern county for its roads, its agriculture, and its +fisheries. In Sinclair’s youth, the post was carried +by a runner only once a week, and the young baronet then declared +that he would never rest till a coach drove daily to +Thurso. The people of the neighbourhood could not believe +in any such thing, and it became a proverb in the county to say +of an utterly impossible scheme, “Ou, ay, that will come to +pass when Sir John sees the daily mail at Thurso!” +But Sir John lived to see his dream realized, and the daily mail +established to Thurso.</p> + +<p>The circle of his benevolent operation gradually +widened. Observing the serious deterioration which had +taken place in the quality of British wool,—one of the +staple commodities of the country,—he forthwith, though but +a private and little-known country gentleman, devoted himself to +its improvement. By his personal exertions he established +the British Wool Society for the purpose, and himself led the way +to practical improvement by importing 800 sheep from all +countries, at his own expense. The result was, the +introduction into Scotland of the celebrated Cheviot breed. +Sheep farmers scouted the idea of south country flocks being able +to thrive in the far north. But Sir John persevered; and in +a few years there were not fewer than 300,000 Cheviots diffused +over the four northern counties alone. The value of all +grazing land was thus enormously increased; and Scotch estates, +which before were comparatively worthless, began to yield large +rentals.</p> + +<p>Returned by Caithness to Parliament, in which he remained for +thirty years, rarely missing a division, his position gave him +farther opportunities of usefulness, which he did not neglect to +employ. Mr. Pitt, observing his persevering energy in all +useful public projects, sent for him to Downing Street, and +voluntarily proposed his assistance in any object he might have +in view. Another man might have thought of himself and his +own promotion; but Sir John characteristically replied, that he +desired no favour for himself, but intimated that the reward most +gratifying to his feelings would be Mr. Pitt’s assistance +in the establishment of a National Board of Agriculture. +Arthur Young laid a bet with the baronet that his scheme would +never be established, adding, “Your Board of Agriculture +will be in the moon!” But vigorously setting to work, +he roused public attention to the subject, enlisted a majority of +Parliament on his side, and eventually established the Board, of +which he was appointed President. The result of its action +need not be described, but the stimulus which it gave to +agriculture and stock-raising was shortly felt throughout the +whole United Kingdom, and tens of thousands of acres were +redeemed from barrenness by its operation. He was equally +indefatigable in encouraging the establishment of fisheries; and +the successful founding of these great branches of British +industry at Thurso and Wick was mainly due to his +exertions. He urged for long years, and at length succeeded +in obtaining the enclosure of a harbour for the latter place, +which is perhaps the greatest and most prosperous fishing town in +the world.</p> + +<p>Sir John threw his personal energy into every work in which he +engaged, rousing the inert, stimulating the idle, encouraging the +hopeful, and working with all. When a French invasion was +threatened, he offered to Mr. Pitt to raise a regiment on his own +estate, and he was as good as his word. He went down to the +north, and raised a battalion of 600 men, afterwards increased to +1000; and it was admitted to be one of the finest volunteer +regiments ever raised, inspired throughout by his own noble and +patriotic spirit. While commanding officer of the camp at +Aberdeen he held the offices of a Director of the Bank of +Scotland, Chairman of the British Wool Society, Provost of Wick, +Director of the British Fishery Society, Commissioner for issuing +Exchequer Bills, Member of Parliament for Caithness, and +President of the Board of Agriculture. Amidst all this +multifarious and self-imposed work, he even found time to write +books, enough of themselves to establish a reputation. When +Mr. Rush, the American Ambassador, arrived in England, he relates +that he inquired of Mr. Coke of Holkham, what was the best work +on Agriculture, and was referred to Sir John Sinclair’s; +and when he further asked of Mr. Vansittart, Chancellor of the +Exchequer, what was the best work on British Finance, he was +again referred to a work by Sir John Sinclair, his ‘History +of the Public Revenue.’ But the great monument of his +indefatigable industry, a work that would have appalled other +men, but only served to rouse and sustain his energy, was his +‘Statistical Account of Scotland,’ in twenty-one +volumes, one of the most valuable practical works ever published +in any age or country. Amid a host of other pursuits it +occupied him nearly eight years of hard labour, during which he +received, and attended to, upwards of 20,000 letters on the +subject. It was a thoroughly patriotic undertaking, from +which he derived no personal advantage whatever, beyond the +honour of having completed it. The whole of the profits +were assigned by him to the Society for the Sons of the Clergy in +Scotland. The publication of the book led to great public +improvements; it was followed by the immediate abolition of +several oppressive feudal rights, to which it called attention; +the salaries of schoolmasters and clergymen in many parishes were +increased; and an increased stimulus was given to agriculture +throughout Scotland. Sir John then publicly offered to +undertake the much greater labour of collecting and publishing a +similar Statistical Account of England; but unhappily the then +Archbishop of Canterbury refused to sanction it, lest it should +interfere with the tithes of the clergy, and the idea was +abandoned.</p> + +<p>A remarkable illustration of his energetic promptitude was the +manner in which he once provided, on a great emergency, for the +relief of the manufacturing districts. In 1793 the +stagnation produced by the war led to an unusual number of +bankruptcies, and many of the first houses in Manchester and +Glasgow were tottering, not so much from want of property, but +because the usual sources of trade and credit were for the time +closed up. A period of intense distress amongst the +labouring classes seemed imminent, when Sir John urged, in +Parliament, that Exchequer notes to the amount of five millions +should be issued immediately as a loan to such merchants as could +give security. This suggestion was adopted, and his offer +to carry out his plan, in conjunction with certain members named +by him, was also accepted. The vote was passed late at +night, and early next morning Sir John, anticipating the delays +of officialism and red tape, proceeded to bankers in the city, +and borrowed of them, on his own personal security, the sum of +70,000<i>l.</i>, which he despatched the same evening to those +merchants who were in the most urgent need of assistance. +Pitt meeting Sir John in the House, expressed his great regret +that the pressing wants of Manchester and Glasgow could not be +supplied so soon as was desirable, adding, “The money +cannot be raised for some days.” “It is already +gone! it left London by to-night’s mail!” was Sir +John’s triumphant reply; and in afterwards relating the +anecdote he added, with a smile of pleasure, “Pitt was as +much startled as if I had stabbed him.” To the last +this great, good man worked on usefully and cheerfully, setting a +great example for his family and for his country. In so +laboriously seeking others’ good, it might be said that he +found his own—not wealth, for his generosity seriously +impaired his private fortune, but happiness, and +self-satisfaction, and the peace that passes knowledge. A +great patriot, with magnificent powers of work, he nobly did his +duty to his country; yet he was not neglectful of his own +household and home. His sons and daughters grew up to +honour and usefulness; and it was one of the proudest things Sir +John could say, when verging on his eightieth year, that he had +lived to see seven sons grown up, not one of whom had incurred a +debt he could not pay, or caused him a sorrow that could have +been avoided.</p> +<h2><a name="page382"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +382</span>CHAPTER XIII.<br /> +<span class="smcap">Character—The True +Gentleman</span>.</h2> +<blockquote><p>“For who can always act? but he,<br /> + To whom a thousand memories call,<br /> +Not being less but more than all<br /> + The gentleness he seemed to be,</p> + +<p>But seemed the thing he was, and joined<br /> + Each office of the social hour<br /> +To noble manners, as the flower<br /> + And native growth of noble mind;</p> + +<p>And thus he bore without abuse<br /> + The grand old name of +Gentleman.”—<i>Tennyson</i>.</p> + +<p>“Es bildet ein Talent sich in der Stille,<br /> +Sich ein Charakter in dem Strom der +Welt.”—<i>Goethe</i>.</p> + +<p>“That which raises a country, that which strengthens a +country, and that which dignifies a country,—that which +spreads her power, creates her moral influence, and makes her +respected and submitted to, bends the hearts of millions, and +bows down the pride of nations to her—the instrument of +obedience, the fountain of supremacy, the true throne, crown, and +sceptre of a nation;—this aristocracy is not an aristocracy +of blood, not an aristocracy of fashion, not an aristocracy of +talent only; it is an aristocracy of Character. That is the +true heraldry of man.”—<i>The Times</i>.</p> +</blockquote> +<p><span class="smcap">The</span> crown and glory of life is +Character. It is the noblest possession of a man, +constituting a rank in itself, and an estate in the general +goodwill; dignifying every station, and exalting every position +in society. It exercises a greater power than wealth, and +secures all the honour without the jealousies of fame. It +carries with it an influence which always tells; for it is the +result of proved honour, rectitude, and +consistency—qualities which, perhaps more than any other, +command the general confidence and respect of mankind.</p> + +<p>Character is human nature in its best form. It is moral +order embodied in the individual. Men of character are not +only the conscience of society, but in every well-governed State +they are its best motive power; for it is moral qualities in the +main which rule the world. Even in war, Napoleon said the +moral is to the physical as ten to one. The strength, the +industry, and the civilisation of nations—all depend upon +individual character; and the very foundations of civil security +rest upon it. Laws and institutions are but its +outgrowth. In the just balance of nature, individuals, +nations, and races, will obtain just so much as they deserve, and +no more. And as effect finds its cause, so surely does +quality of character amongst a people produce its befitting +results.</p> + +<p>Though a man have comparatively little culture, slender +abilities, and but small wealth, yet, if his character be of +sterling worth, he will always command an influence, whether it +be in the workshop, the counting-house, the mart, or the +senate. Canning wisely wrote in 1801, “My road must +be through Character to power; I will try no other course; and I +am sanguine enough to believe that this course, though not +perhaps the quickest, is the surest.” You may admire +men of intellect; but something more is necessary before you will +trust them. Hence Lord John Russell once observed in a +sentence full of truth, “It is the nature of party in +England to ask the assistance of men of genius, but to follow the +guidance of men of character.” This was strikingly +illustrated in the career of the late Francis Horner—a man +of whom Sydney Smith said that the Ten Commandments were stamped +upon his countenance. “The valuable and peculiar +light,” says Lord Cockburn, “in which his history is +calculated to inspire every right-minded youth, is this. He +died at the age of thirty-eight; possessed of greater public +influence than any other private man; and admired, beloved, +trusted, and deplored by all, except the heartless or the +base. No greater homage was ever paid in Parliament to any +deceased member. Now let every young man ask—how was +this attained? By rank? He was the son of an +Edinburgh merchant. By wealth? Neither he, nor any of +his relations, ever had a superfluous sixpence. By +office? He held but one, and only for a few years, of no +influence, and with very little pay. By talents? His +were not splendid, and he had no genius. Cautious and slow, +his only ambition was to be right. By eloquence? He +spoke in calm, good taste, without any of the oratory that either +terrifies or seduces. By any fascination of manner? +His was only correct and agreeable. By what, then, was +it? Merely by sense, industry, good principles, and a good +heart—qualities which no well-constituted mind need ever +despair of attaining. It was the force of his character +that raised him; and this character not impressed upon him by +nature, but formed, out of no peculiarly fine elements, by +himself. There were many in the House of Commons of far +greater ability and eloquence. But no one surpassed him in +the combination of an adequate portion of these with moral +worth. Horner was born to show what moderate powers, +unaided by anything whatever except culture and goodness, may +achieve, even when these powers are displayed amidst the +competition and jealousy of public life.”</p> + +<p>Franklin, also, attributed his success as a public man, not to +his talents or his powers of speaking—for these were but +moderate—but to his known integrity of character. +Hence it was, he says, “that I had so much weight with my +fellow citizens. I was but a bad speaker, never eloquent, +subject to much hesitation in my choice of words, hardly correct +in language, and yet I generally carried my point.” +Character creates confidence in men in high station as well as in +humble life. It was said of the first Emperor Alexander of +Russia, that his personal character was equivalent to a +constitution. During the wars of the Fronde, Montaigne was +the only man amongst the French gentry who kept his castle gates +unbarred; and it was said of him, that his personal character was +a better protection for him than a regiment of horse would have +been.</p> + +<p>That character is power, is true in a much higher sense than +that knowledge is power. Mind without heart, intelligence +without conduct, cleverness without goodness, are powers in their +way, but they may be powers only for mischief. We may be +instructed or amused by them; but it is sometimes as difficult to +admire them as it would be to admire the dexterity of a +pickpocket or the horsemanship of a highwayman.</p> + +<p>Truthfulness, integrity, and goodness—qualities that +hang not on any man’s breath—form the essence of +manly character, or, as one of our old writers has it, +“that inbred loyalty unto Virtue which can serve her +without a livery.” He who possesses these qualities, +united with strength of purpose, carries with him a power which +is irresistible. He is strong to do good, strong to resist +evil, and strong to bear up under difficulty and +misfortune. When Stephen of Colonna fell into the hands of +his base assailants, and they asked him in derision, “Where +is now your fortress?” “Here,” was his +bold reply, placing his hand upon his heart. It is in +misfortune that the character of the upright man shines forth +with the greatest lustre; and when all else fails, he takes stand +upon his integrity and his courage.</p> + +<p>The rules of conduct followed by Lord Erskine—a man of +sterling independence of principle and scrupulous adherence to +truth—are worthy of being engraven on every young +man’s heart. “It was a first command and +counsel of my earliest youth,” he said, “always to do +what my conscience told me to be a duty, and to leave the +consequence to God. I shall carry with me the memory, and I +trust the practice, of this parental lesson to the grave. I +have hitherto followed it, and I have no reason to complain that +my obedience to it has been a temporal sacrifice. I have +found it, on the contrary, the road to prosperity and wealth, and +I shall point out the same path to my children for their +pursuit.”</p> + +<p>Every man is bound to aim at the possession of a good +character as one of the highest objects of life. The very +effort to secure it by worthy means will furnish him with a +motive for exertion; and his idea of manhood, in proportion as it +is elevated, will steady and animate his motive. It is well +to have a high standard of life, even though we may not be able +altogether to realize it. “The youth,” says Mr. +Disraeli, “who does not look up will look down; and the +spirit that does not soar is destined perhaps to +grovel.” George Herbert wisely writes,</p> +<blockquote><p>“Pitch thy behaviour low, thy projects +high,<br /> +So shall thou humble and magnanimous be.<br /> +Sink not in spirit; who aimeth at the sky<br /> +Shoots higher much than he that means a tree.”</p> +</blockquote> +<p>He who has a high standard of living and thinking will +certainly do better than he who has none at all. +“Pluck at a gown of gold,” says the Scotch proverb, +“and you may get a sleeve o’t.” Whoever +tries for the highest results cannot fail to reach a point far in +advance of that from which he started; and though the end +attained may fall short of that proposed, still, the very effort +to rise, of itself cannot fail to prove permanently +beneficial.</p> + +<p>There are many counterfeits of character, but the genuine +article is difficult to be mistaken. Some, knowing its +money value, would assume its disguise for the purpose of +imposing upon the unwary. Colonel Charteris said to a man +distinguished for his honesty, “I would give a thousand +pounds for your good name.” “Why?” +“Because I could make ten thousand by it,” was the +knave’s reply.</p> + +<p>Integrity in word and deed is the backbone of character; and +loyal adherence to veracity its most prominent +characteristic. One of the finest testimonies to the +character of the late Sir Robert Peel was that borne by the Duke +of Wellington in the House of Lords, a few days after the great +statesman’s death. “Your lordships,” he +said, “must all feel the high and honourable character of +the late Sir Robert Peel. I was long connected with him in +public life. We were both in the councils of our Sovereign +together, and I had long the honour to enjoy his private +friendship. In all the course of my acquaintance with him I +never knew a man in whose truth and justice I had greater +confidence, or in whom I saw a more invariable desire to promote +the public service. In the whole course of my communication +with him, I never knew an instance in which he did not show the +strongest attachment to truth; and I never saw in the whole +course of my life the smallest reason for suspecting that he +stated anything which he did not firmly believe to be the +fact.” And this high-minded truthfulness of the +statesman was no doubt the secret of no small part of his +influence and power.</p> + +<p>There is a truthfulness in action as well as in words, which +is essential to uprightness of character. A man must really +be what he seems or purposes to be. When an American +gentleman wrote to Granville Sharp, that from respect for his +great virtues he had named one of his sons after him, Sharp +replied: “I must request you to teach him a favourite maxim +of the family whose name you have given him—<i>Always +endeavour to be really what you would wish to appear</i>. +This maxim, as my father informed me, was carefully and humbly +practised by <i>his</i> father, whose sincerity, as a plain and +honest man, thereby became the principal feature of his +character, both in public and private life.” Every +man who respects himself, and values the respect of others, will +carry out the maxim in act—doing honestly what he proposes +to do—putting the highest character into his work, scamping +nothing, but priding himself upon his integrity and +conscientiousness. Once Cromwell said to Bernard,—a +clever but somewhat unscrupulous lawyer, “I understand that +you have lately been vastly wary in your conduct; do not be too +confident of this; subtlety may deceive you, integrity never +will.” Men whose acts are at direct variance with +their words, command no respect, and what they say has but little +weight; even truths, when uttered by them, seem to come blasted +from their lips.</p> + +<p>The true character acts rightly, whether in secret or in the +sight of men. That boy was well trained who, when asked why +he did not pocket some pears, for nobody was there to see, +replied, “Yes, there was: I was there to see myself; and I +don’t intend ever to see myself do a dishonest +thing.”—This is a simple but not inappropriate +illustration of principle, or conscience, dominating in the +character, and exercising a noble protectorate over it; not +merely a passive influence, but an active power regulating the +life. Such a principle goes on moulding the character +hourly and daily, growing with a force that operates every +moment. Without this dominating influence, character has no +protection, but is constantly liable to fall away before +temptation; and every such temptation succumbed to, every act of +meanness or dishonesty, however slight, causes +self-degradation. It matters not whether the act be +successful or not, discovered or concealed; the culprit is no +longer the same, but another person; and he is pursued by a +secret uneasiness, by self-reproach, or the workings of what we +call conscience, which is the inevitable doom of the guilty.</p> + +<p>And here it may be observed how greatly the character may be +strengthened and supported by the cultivation of good +habits. Man, it has been said, is a bundle of habits; and +habit is second nature. Metastasio entertained so strong an +opinion as to the power of repetition in act and thought, that he +said, “All is habit in mankind, even virtue +itself.” Butler, in his ‘Analogy,’ +impresses the importance of careful self-discipline and firm +resistance to temptation, as tending to make virtue habitual, so +that at length it may become more easy to be good than to give +way to sin. “As habits belonging to the body,” +he says, “are produced by external acts, so habits of the +mind are produced by the execution of inward practical purposes, +i.e., carrying them into act, or acting upon them—the +principles of obedience, veracity, justice, and +charity.” And again, Lord Brougham says, when +enforcing the immense importance of training and example in +youth, “I trust everything under God to habit, on which, in +all ages, the lawgiver, as well as the schoolmaster, has mainly +placed his reliance; habit, which makes everything easy, and +casts the difficulties upon the deviation from a wonted +course.” Thus, make sobriety a habit, and +intemperance will be hateful; make prudence a habit, and reckless +profligacy will become revolting to every principle of conduct +which regulates the life of the individual. Hence the +necessity for the greatest care and watchfulness against the +inroad of any evil habit; for the character is always weakest at +that point at which it has once given way; and it is long before +a principle restored can become so firm as one that has never +been moved. It is a fine remark of a Russian writer, that +“Habits are a necklace of pearls: untie the knot, and the +whole unthreads.”</p> + +<p>Wherever formed, habit acts involuntarily, and without effort; +and, it is only when you oppose it, that you find how powerful it +has become. What is done once and again, soon gives +facility and proneness. The habit at first may seem to have +no more strength than a spider’s web; but, once formed, it +binds as with a chain of iron. The small events of life, +taken singly, may seem exceedingly unimportant, like snow that +falls silently, flake by flake; yet accumulated, these +snow-flakes form the avalanche.</p> + +<p>Self-respect, self-help, application, industry, +integrity—all are of the nature of habits, not +beliefs. Principles, in fact, are but the names which we +assign to habits; for the principles are words, but the habits +are the things themselves: benefactors or tyrants, according as +they are good or evil. It thus happens that as we grow +older, a portion of our free activity and individuality becomes +suspended in habit; our actions become of the nature of fate; and +we are bound by the chains which we have woven around +ourselves.</p> + +<p>It is indeed scarcely possible to over-estimate the importance +of training the young to virtuous habits. In them they are +the easiest formed, and when formed they last for life; like +letters cut on the bark of a tree they grow and widen with +age. “Train up a child in the way he should go, and +when he is old he will not depart from it.” The +beginning holds within it the end; the first start on the road of +life determines the direction and the destination of the journey; +<i>ce n’est que le premier pas qui coûte</i>. +“Remember,” said Lord Collingwood to a young man whom +he loved, “before you are five-and-twenty you must +establish a character that will serve you all your +life.” As habit strengthens with age, and character +becomes formed, any turning into a new path becomes more and more +difficult. Hence, it is often harder to unlearn than to +learn; and for this reason the Grecian flute-player was justified +who charged double fees to those pupils who had been taught by an +inferior master. To uproot an old habit is sometimes a more +painful thing, and vastly more difficult, than to wrench out a +tooth. Try and reform a habitually indolent, or +improvident, or drunken person, and in a large majority of cases +you will fail. For the habit in each case has wound itself +in and through the life until it has become an integral part of +it, and cannot be uprooted. Hence, as Mr. Lynch observes, +“the wisest habit of all is the habit of care in the +formation of good habits.”</p> + +<p>Even happiness itself may become habitual. There is a +habit of looking at the bright side of things, and also of +looking at the dark side. Dr. Johnson has said that the +habit of looking at the best side of a thing is worth more to a +man than a thousand pounds a year. And we possess the +power, to a great extent, of so exercising the will as to direct +the thoughts upon objects calculated to yield happiness and +improvement rather than their opposites. In this way the +habit of happy thought may be made to spring up like any other +habit. And to bring up men or women with a genial nature of +this sort, a good temper, and a happy frame of mind, is perhaps +of even more importance, in many cases, than to perfect them in +much knowledge and many accomplishments.</p> + +<p>As daylight can be seen through very small holes, so little +things will illustrate a person’s character. Indeed +character consists in little acts, well and honourably performed; +daily life being the quarry from which we build it up, and +rough-hew the habits which form it. One of the most marked +tests of character is the manner in which we conduct ourselves +towards others. A graceful behaviour towards superiors, +inferiors, and equals, is a constant source of pleasure. It +pleases others because it indicates respect for their +personality; but it gives tenfold more pleasure to +ourselves. Every man may to a large extent be a +self-educator in good behaviour, as in everything else; he can be +civil and kind, if he will, though he have not a penny in his +purse. Gentleness in society is like the silent influence +of light, which gives colour to all nature; it is far more +powerful than loudness or force, and far more fruitful. It +pushes its way quietly and persistently, like the tiniest +daffodil in spring, which raises the clod and thrusts it aside by +the simple persistency of growing.</p> + +<p>Even a kind look will give pleasure and confer +happiness. In one of Robertson of Brighton’s letters, +he tells of a lady who related to him “the delight, the +tears of gratitude, which she had witnessed in a poor girl to +whom, in passing, I gave a kind look on going out of church on +Sunday. What a lesson! How cheaply happiness can be +given! What opportunities we miss of doing an angel’s +work! I remember doing it, full of sad feelings, passing +on, and thinking no more about it; and it gave an hour’s +sunshine to a human life, and lightened the load of life to a +human heart for a time!” <a name="citation392"></a><a +href="#footnote392" class="citation">[392]</a></p> + +<p>Morals and manners, which give colour to life, are of much +greater importance than laws, which are but their +manifestations. The law touches us here and there, but +manners are about us everywhere, pervading society like the air +we breathe. Good manners, as we call them, are neither more +nor less than good behaviour; consisting of courtesy and +kindness; benevolence being the preponderating element in all +kinds of mutually beneficial and pleasant intercourse amongst +human beings. “Civility,” said Lady Montague, +“costs nothing and buys everything.” The +cheapest of all things is kindness, its exercise requiring the +least possible trouble and self-sacrifice. “Win +hearts,” said Burleigh to Queen Elizabeth, “and you +have all men’s hearts and purses.” If we would +only let nature act kindly, free from affectation and artifice, +the results on social good humour and happiness would be +incalculable. The little courtesies which form the small +change of life, may separately appear of little intrinsic value, +but they acquire their importance from repetition and +accumulation. They are like the spare minutes, or the groat +a day, which proverbially produce such momentous results in the +course of a twelvemonth, or in a lifetime.</p> + +<p>Manners are the ornament of action; and there is a way of +speaking a kind word, or of doing a kind thing, which greatly +enhances their value. What seems to be done with a grudge, +or as an act of condescension, is scarcely accepted as a +favour. Yet there are men who pride themselves upon their +gruffness; and though they may possess virtue and capacity, their +manner is often such as to render them almost +insupportable. It is difficult to like a man who, though he +may not pull your nose, habitually wounds your self-respect, and +takes a pride in saying disagreeable things to you. There +are others who are dreadfully condescending, and cannot avoid +seizing upon every small opportunity of making their greatness +felt. When Abernethy was canvassing for the office of +surgeon to St. Bartholomew Hospital, he called upon such a +person—a rich grocer, one of the governors. The great +man behind the counter seeing the great surgeon enter, +immediately assumed the grand air towards the supposed suppliant +for his vote. “I presume, Sir, you want my vote and +interest at this momentous epoch of your life?” +Abernethy, who hated humbugs, and felt nettled at the tone, +replied: “No, I don’t: I want a pennyworth of figs; +come, look sharp and wrap them up; I want to be off!”</p> + +<p>The cultivation of manner—though in excess it is foppish +and foolish—is highly necessary in a person who has +occasion to negociate with others in matters of business. +Affability and good breeding may even be regarded as essential to +the success of a man in any eminent station and enlarged sphere +of life; for the want of it has not unfrequently been found in a +great measure to neutralise the results of much industry, +integrity, and honesty of character. There are, no doubt, a +few strong tolerant minds which can bear with defects and +angularities of manner, and look only to the more genuine +qualities; but the world at large is not so forbearant, and +cannot help forming its judgments and likings mainly according to +outward conduct.</p> + +<p>Another mode of displaying true politeness is consideration +for the opinions of others. It has been said of dogmatism, +that it is only puppyism come to its full growth; and certainly +the worst form this quality can assume, is that of +opinionativeness and arrogance. Let men agree to differ, +and, when they do differ, bear and forbear. Principles and +opinions may be maintained with perfect suavity, without coming +to blows or uttering hard words; and there are circumstances in +which words are blows, and inflict wounds far less easy to +heal. As bearing upon this point, we quote an instructive +little parable spoken some time since by an itinerant preacher of +the Evangelical Alliance on the borders of Wales:—“As +I was going to the hills,” said he, “early one misty +morning, I saw something moving on a mountain side, so strange +looking that I took it for a monster. When I came nearer to +it I found it was a man. When I came up to him I found he +was my brother.”</p> + +<p>The inbred politeness which springs from right-heartedness and +kindly feelings, is of no exclusive rank or station. The +mechanic who works at the bench may possess it, as well as the +clergyman or the peer. It is by no means a necessary +condition of labour that it should, in any respect, be either +rough or coarse. The politeness and refinement which +distinguish all classes of the people in many continental +countries show that those qualities might become ours +too—as doubtless they will become with increased culture +and more general social intercourse—without sacrificing any +of our more genuine qualities as men. From the highest to +the lowest, the richest to the poorest, to no rank or condition +in life has nature denied her highest boon—the great +heart. There never yet existed a gentleman but was lord of +a great heart. And this may exhibit itself under the hodden +grey of the peasant as well as under the laced coat of the +noble. Robert Burns was once taken to task by a young +Edinburgh blood, with whom he was walking, for recognising an +honest farmer in the open street. “Why you fantastic +gomeral,” exclaimed Burns, “it was not the great +coat, the scone bonnet, and the saunders-boot hose that I spoke +to, but <i>the man</i> that was in them; and the man, sir, for +true worth, would weigh down you and me, and ten more such, any +day.” There may be a homeliness in externals, which +may seem vulgar to those who cannot discern the heart beneath; +but, to the right-minded, character will always have its clear +insignia.</p> + +<p>William and Charles Grant were the sons of a farmer in +Inverness-shire, whom a sudden flood stripped of everything, even +to the very soil which he tilled. The farmer and his sons, +with the world before them where to choose, made their way +southward in search of employment until they arrived in the +neighbourhood of Bury in Lancashire. From the crown of the +hill near Walmesley they surveyed the wide extent of country +which lay before them, the river Irwell making its circuitous +course through the valley. They were utter strangers in the +neighbourhood, and knew not which way to turn. To decide +their course they put up a stick, and agreed to pursue the +direction in which it fell. Thus their decision was made, +and they journeyed on accordingly until they reached the village +of Ramsbotham, not far distant. They found employment in a +print-work, in which William served his apprenticeship; and they +commanded themselves to their employers by their diligence, +sobriety, and strict integrity. They plodded on, rising +from one station to another, until at length the two men +themselves became employers, and after many long years of +industry, enterprise, and benevolence, they became rich, +honoured, and respected by all who knew them. Their +cotton-mills and print-works gave employment to a large +population. Their well-directed diligence made the valley +teem with activity, joy, health, and opulence. Out of their +abundant wealth they gave liberally to all worthy objects, +erecting churches, founding schools, and in all ways promoting +the well-being of the class of working-men from which they had +sprung. They afterwards erected, on the top of the hill +above Walmesley, a lofty tower in commemoration of the early +event in their history which had determined the place of their +settlement. The brothers Grant became widely celebrated for +their benevolence and their various goodness, and it is said that +Mr. Dickens had them in his mind’s eye when delineating the +character of the brothers Cheeryble. One amongst many +anecdotes of a similar kind may be cited to show that the +character was by no means exaggerated. A Manchester +warehouseman published an exceedingly scurrilous pamphlet against +the firm of Grant Brothers, holding up the elder partner to +ridicule as “Billy Button.” William was +informed by some one of the nature of the pamphlet, and his +observation was that the man would live to repent of it. +“Oh!” said the libeller, when informed of the remark, +“he thinks that some time or other I shall be in his debt; +but I will take good care of that.” It happens, +however, that men in business do not always foresee who shall be +their creditor, and it so turned out that the Grants’ +libeller became a bankrupt, and could not complete his +certificate and begin business again without obtaining their +signature. It seemed to him a hopeless case to call upon +that firm for any favour, but the pressing claims of his family +forced him to make the application. He appeared before the +man whom he had ridiculed as “Billy Button” +accordingly. He told his tale and produced his +certificate. “You wrote a pamphlet against us +once?” said Mr. Grant. The supplicant expected to see +his document thrown into the fire; instead of which Grant signed +the name of the firm, and thus completed the necessary +certificate. “We make it a rule,” said he, +handing it back, “never to refuse signing the certificate +of an honest tradesman, and we have never heard that you were +anything else.” The tears started into the +man’s eyes. “Ah,” continued Mr. Grant, +“you see my saying was true, that you would live to repent +writing that pamphlet. I did not mean it as a +threat—I only meant that some day you would know us better, +and repent having tried to injure us.” “I do, I +do, indeed, repent it.” “Well, well, you know +us now. But how do you get on—what are you going to +do?” The poor man stated that he had friends who +would assist him when his certificate was obtained. +“But how are you off in the mean time?” The +answer was, that, having given up every farthing to his +creditors, he had been compelled to stint his family in even the +common necessaries of life, that he might be enabled to pay for +his certificate. “My good fellow, this will never do; +your wife and family must not suffer in this way; be kind enough +to take this ten-pound note to your wife from me: there, there, +now—don’t cry, it will be all well with you yet; keep +up your spirits, set to work like a man, and you will raise your +head among the best of us yet.” The overpowered man +endeavoured with choking utterance to express his gratitude, but +in vain; and putting his hand to his face, he went out of the +room sobbing like a child.</p> + +<p>The True Gentleman is one whose nature has been fashioned +after the highest models. It is a grand old name, that of +Gentleman, and has been recognized as a rank and power in all +stages of society. “The Gentleman is always the +Gentleman,” said the old French General to his regiment of +Scottish gentry at Rousillon, “and invariably proves +himself such in need and in danger.” To possess this +character is a dignity of itself, commanding the instinctive +homage of every generous mind, and those who will not bow to +titular rank, will yet do homage to the gentleman. His +qualities depend not upon fashion or manners, but upon moral +worth—not on personal possessions, but on personal +qualities. The Psalmist briefly describes him as one +“that walketh uprightly, and worketh righteousness, and +speaketh the truth in his heart.”</p> + +<p>The gentleman is eminently distinguished for his +self-respect. He values his character,—not so much of +it only as can be seen of others, but as he sees it himself; +having regard for the approval of his inward monitor. And, +as he respects himself, so, by the same law, does he respect +others. Humanity is sacred in his eyes: and thence proceed +politeness and forbearance, kindness and charity. It is +related of Lord Edward Fitzgerald that, while travelling in +Canada, in company with the Indians, he was shocked by the sight +of a poor squaw trudging along laden with her husband’s +trappings, while the chief himself walked on unencumbered. +Lord Edward at once relieved the squaw of her pack by placing it +upon his own shoulders,—a beautiful instance of what the +French call <i>politesse de cœur</i>—the inbred +politeness of the true gentleman.</p> + +<p>The true gentleman has a keen sense of +honour,—scrupulously avoiding mean actions. His +standard of probity in word and action is high. He does not +shuffle or prevaricate, dodge or skulk; but is honest, upright, +and straightforward. His law is rectitude—action in +right lines. When he says <i>yes</i>, it is a law: and he +dares to say the valiant <i>no</i> at the fitting season. +The gentleman will not be bribed; only the low-minded and +unprincipled will sell themselves to those who are interested in +buying them. When the upright Jonas Hanway officiated as +commissioner in the victualling department, he declined to +receive a present of any kind from a contractor; refusing thus to +be biassed in the performance of his public duty. A fine +trait of the same kind is to be noted in the life of the Duke of +Wellington. Shortly after the battle of Assaye, one morning +the Prime Minister of the Court of Hyderabad waited upon him for +the purpose of privately ascertaining what territory and what +advantages had been reserved for his master in the treaty of +peace between the Mahratta princes and the Nizam. To obtain +this information the minister offered the general a very large +sum—considerably above 100,000<i>l.</i> Looking at +him quietly for a few seconds, Sir Arthur said, “It +appears, then, that you are capable of keeping a +secret?” “Yes, certainly,” replied the +minister. “<i>Then so am I</i>,” said the +English general, smiling, and bowed the minister out. It +was to Wellington’s great honour, that though uniformly +successful in India, and with the power of earning in such modes +as this enormous wealth, he did not add a farthing to his +fortune, and returned to England a comparatively poor man.</p> + +<p>A similar sensitiveness and high-mindedness characterised his +noble relative, the Marquis of Wellesley, who, on one occasion, +positively refused a present of 100,000<i>l.</i> proposed to be +given him by the Directors of the East India Company on the +conquest of Mysore. “It is not necessary,” said +he, “for me to allude to the independence of my character, +and the proper dignity attaching to my office; other reasons +besides these important considerations lead me to decline this +testimony, which is not suitable to me. <i>I think of +nothing but our army</i>. I should be much distressed to +curtail the share of those brave soldiers.” And the +Marquis’s resolution to refuse the present remained +unalterable.</p> + +<p>Sir Charles Napier exhibited the same noble self-denial in the +course of his Indian career. He rejected all the costly +gifts which barbaric princes were ready to lay at his feet, and +said with truth, “Certainly I could have got +30,000<i>l.</i> since my coming to Scinde, but my hands do not +want washing yet. Our dear father’s sword which I +wore in both battles (Meanee and Hyderabad) is +unstained.”</p> + +<p>Riches and rank have no necessary connexion with genuine +gentlemanly qualities. The poor man may be a true +gentleman,—in spirit and in daily life. He may be +honest, truthful, upright, polite, temperate, courageous, +self-respecting, and self-helping,—that is, be a true +gentleman. The poor man with a rich spirit is in all ways +superior to the rich man with a poor spirit. To borrow St. +Paul’s words, the former is as “having nothing, yet +possessing all things,” while the other, though possessing +all things, has nothing. The first hopes everything, and +fears nothing; the last hopes nothing, and fears +everything. Only the poor in spirit are really poor. +He who has lost all, but retains his courage, cheerfulness, hope, +virtue, and self-respect, is still rich. For such a man, +the world is, as it were, held in trust; his spirit dominating +over its grosser cares, he can still walk erect, a true +gentleman.</p> + +<p>Occasionally, the brave and gentle character may be found +under the humblest garb. Here is an old illustration, but a +fine one. Once on a time, when the Adige suddenly +overflowed its banks, the bridge of Verona was carried away, with +the exception of the centre arch, on which stood a house, whose +inhabitants supplicated help from the windows, while the +foundations were visibly giving way. “I will give a +hundred French louis,” said the Count Spolverini, who stood +by, “to any person who will venture to deliver these +unfortunate people.” A young peasant came forth from +the crowd, seized a boat, and pushed into the stream. He +gained the pier, received the whole family into the boat, and +made for the shore, where he landed them in safety. +“Here is your money, my brave young fellow,” said the +count. “No,” was the answer of the young man, +“I do not sell my life; give the money to this poor family, +who have need of it.” Here spoke the true spirit of +the gentleman, though he was but in the garb of a peasant.</p> + +<p>Not less touching was the heroic conduct of a party of Deal +boatmen in rescuing the crew of a collier-brig in the Downs but a +short time ago. <a name="citation400"></a><a href="#footnote400" +class="citation">[400]</a> A sudden storm which set in from +the north-east drove several ships from their anchors, and it +being low water, one of them struck the ground at a considerable +distance from the shore, when the sea made a clean breach over +her. There was not a vestige of hope for the vessel, such +was the fury of the wind and the violence of the waves. +There was nothing to tempt the boatmen on shore to risk their +lives in saving either ship or crew, for not a farthing of +salvage was to be looked for. But the daring intrepidity of +the Deal boatmen was not wanting at this critical moment. +No sooner had the brig grounded than Simon Pritchard, one of the +many persons assembled along the beach, threw off his coat and +called out, “Who will come with me and try to save that +crew?” Instantly twenty men sprang forward, with +“I will,” “and I.” But seven only +were wanted; and running down a galley punt into the surf, they +leaped in and dashed through the breakers, amidst the cheers of +those on shore. How the boat lived in such a sea seemed a +miracle; but in a few minutes, impelled by the strong arms of +these gallant men, she flew on and reached the stranded ship, +“catching her on the top of a wave”; and in less than +a quarter of an hour from the time the boat left the shore, the +six men who composed the crew of the collier were landed safe on +Walmer Beach. A nobler instance of indomitable courage and +disinterested heroism on the part of the Deal boatmen—brave +though they are always known to be—perhaps cannot be cited; +and we have pleasure in here placing it on record.</p> + +<p>Mr. Turnbull, in his work on ‘Austria,’ relates an +anecdote of the late Emperor Francis, in illustration of the +manner in which the Government of that country has been indebted, +for its hold upon the people, to the personal qualities of its +princes. “At the time when the cholera was raging at +Vienna, the emperor, with an aide-de-camp, was strolling about +the streets of the city and suburbs, when a corpse was dragged +past on a litter unaccompanied by a single mourner. The +unusual circumstance attracted his attention, and he learnt, on +inquiry, that the deceased was a poor person who had died of +cholera, and that the relatives had not ventured on what was then +considered the very dangerous office of attending the body to the +grave. ‘Then,’ said Francis, ‘we will +supply their place, for none of my poor people should go to the +grave without that last mark of respect;’ and he followed +the body to the distant place of interment, and, bare-headed, +stood to see every rite and observance respectfully +performed.”</p> + +<p>Fine though this illustration may be of the qualities of the +gentleman, we can match it by another equally good, of two +English navvies in Paris, as related in a morning paper a few +years ago. “One day a hearse was observed ascending +the steep Rue de Clichy on its way to Montmartre, bearing a +coffin of poplar wood with its cold corpse. Not a soul +followed—not even the living dog of the dead man, if he had +one. The day was rainy and dismal; passers by lifted the +hat as is usual when a funeral passes, and that was all. At +length it passed two English navvies, who found themselves in +Paris on their way from Spain. A right feeling spoke from +beneath their serge jackets. ‘Poor wretch!’ +said the one to the other, ‘no one follows him; let us two +follow!’ And the two took off their hats, and walked +bare-headed after the corpse of a stranger to the cemetery of +Montmartre.”</p> + +<p>Above all, the gentleman is truthful. He feels that +truth is the “summit of being,” and the soul of +rectitude in human affairs. Lord Chesterfield declared that +Truth made the success of a gentleman. The Duke of +Wellington, writing to Kellerman, on the subject of prisoners on +parole, when opposed to that general in the peninsula, told him +that if there was one thing on which an English officer prided +himself more than another, excepting his courage, it was his +truthfulness. “When English officers,” said he, +“have given their parole of honour not to escape, be sure +they will not break it. Believe me—trust to their +word; the word of an English officer is a surer guarantee than +the vigilance of sentinels.”</p> + +<p>True courage and gentleness go hand in hand. The brave +man is generous and forbearant, never unforgiving and +cruel. It was finely said of Sir John Franklin by his +friend Parry, that “he was a man who never turned his back +upon a danger, yet of that tenderness that he would not brush +away a mosquito.” A fine trait of +character—truly gentle, and worthy of the spirit of +Bayard—was displayed by a French officer in the cavalry +combat of El Bodon in Spain. He had raised his sword to +strike Sir Felton Harvey, but perceiving his antagonist had only +one arm, he instantly stopped, brought down his sword before Sir +Felton in the usual salute, and rode past. To this may be +added a noble and gentle deed of Ney during the same Peninsular +War. Charles Napier was taken prisoner at Corunna, +desperately wounded; and his friends at home did not know whether +he was alive or dead. A special messenger was sent out from +England with a frigate to ascertain his fate. Baron Clouet +received the flag, and informed Ney of the arrival. +“Let the prisoner see his friends,” said Ney, +“and tell them he is well, and well treated.” +Clouet lingered, and Ney asked, smiling, “what more he +wanted”? “He has an old mother, a widow, and +blind.” “Has he? then let him go himself and +tell her he is alive.” As the exchange of prisoners +between the countries was not then allowed, Ney knew that he +risked the displeasure of the Emperor by setting the young +officer at liberty; but Napoleon approved the generous act.</p> + +<p>Notwithstanding the wail which we occasionally hear for the +chivalry that is gone, our own age has witnessed deeds of bravery +and gentleness—of heroic self-denial and manly +tenderness—which are unsurpassed in history. The +events of the last few years have shown that our countrymen are +as yet an undegenerate race. On the bleak plateau of +Sebastopol, in the dripping perilous trenches of that +twelvemonth’s leaguer, men of all classes proved themselves +worthy of the noble inheritance of character which their +forefathers have bequeathed to them. But it was in the hour +of the great trial in India that the qualities of our countrymen +shone forth the brightest. The march of Neill on Cawnpore, +of Havelock on Lucknow—officers and men alike urged on by +the hope of rescuing the women and the children—are events +which the whole history of chivalry cannot equal. +Outram’s conduct to Havelock, in resigning to him, though +his inferior officer, the honour of leading the attack on +Lucknow, was a trait worthy of Sydney, and alone justifies the +title which has been awarded to him of, “the Bayard of +India.” The death of Henry Lawrence—that brave +and gentle spirit—his last words before dying, “Let +there be no fuss about me; let me be buried <i>with the +men</i>,”—the anxious solicitude of Sir Colin +Campbell to rescue the beleaguered of Lucknow, and to conduct his +long train of women and children by night from thence to +Cawnpore, which he reached amidst the all but overpowering +assault of the enemy,—the care with which he led them +across the perilous bridge, never ceasing his charge over them +until he had seen the precious convoy safe on the road to +Allahabad, and then burst upon the Gwalior contingent like a +thunder-clap;—such things make us feel proud of our +countrymen and inspire the conviction that the best and purest +glow of chivalry is not dead, but vigorously lives among us +yet.</p> + +<p>Even the common soldiers proved themselves gentlemen under +their trials. At Agra, where so many poor fellows had been +scorched and wounded in their encounter with the enemy, they were +brought into the fort, and tenderly nursed by the ladies; and the +rough, gallant fellows proved gentle as any children. +During the weeks that the ladies watched over their charge, never +a word was said by any soldier that could shock the ear of the +gentlest. And when all was over—when the +mortally-wounded had died, and the sick and maimed who survived +were able to demonstrate their gratitude—they invited their +nurses and the chief people of Agra to an entertainment in the +beautiful gardens of the Taj, where, amidst flowers and music, +the rough veterans, all scarred and mutilated as they were, stood +up to thank their gentle countrywomen who had clothed and fed +them, and ministered to their wants during their time of sore +distress. In the hospitals at Scutari, too, many wounded +and sick blessed the kind English ladies who nursed them; and +nothing can be finer than the thought of the poor sufferers, +unable to rest through pain, blessing the shadow of Florence +Nightingale as it fell upon their pillow in the night +watches.</p> + +<p>The wreck of the <i>Birkenhead</i> off the coast of Africa on +the 27th of February, 1852, affords another memorable +illustration of the chivalrous spirit of common men acting in +this nineteenth century, of which any age might be proud. +The vessel was steaming along the African coast with 472 men and +166 women and children on board. The men belonged to +several regiments then serving at the Cape, and consisted +principally of recruits who had been only a short time in the +service. At two o’clock in the morning, while all +were asleep below, the ship struck with violence upon a hidden +rock which penetrated her bottom; and it was at once felt that +she must go down. The roll of the drums called the soldiers +to arms on the upper deck, and the men mustered as if on +parade. The word was passed to <i>save the women and +children</i>; and the helpless creatures were brought from below, +mostly undressed, and handed silently into the boats. When +they had all left the ship’s side, the commander of the +vessel thoughtlessly called out, “All those that can swim, +jump overboard and make for the boats.” But Captain +Wright, of the 91st Highlanders, said, “No! if you do that, +<i>the boats with the women must be swamped</i>;” and the +brave men stood motionless. There was no boat remaining, +and no hope of safety; but not a heart quailed; no one flinched +from his duty in that trying moment. “There was not a +murmur nor a cry amongst them,” said Captain Wright, a +survivor, “until the vessel made her final +plunge.” Down went the ship, and down went the heroic +band, firing a <i>feu de joie</i> as they sank beneath the +waves. Glory and honour to the gentle and the brave! +The examples of such men never die, but, like their memories, are +immortal.</p> + +<p>There are many tests by which a gentleman may be known; but +there is one that never fails—How does he <i>exercise +power</i> over those subordinate to him? How does he +conduct himself towards women and children? How does the +officer treat his men, the employer his servants, the master his +pupils, and man in every station those who are weaker than +himself? The discretion, forbearance, and kindliness, with +which power in such cases is used, may indeed be regarded as the +crucial test of gentlemanly character. When La Motte was +one day passing through a crowd, he accidentally trod upon the +foot of a young fellow, who forthwith struck him on the face: +“Ah, sire,” said La Motte, “you will surely be +sorry for what you have done, when you know that <i>I am +blind</i>.” He who bullies those who are not in a +position to resist may be a snob, but cannot be a +gentleman. He who tyrannizes over the weak and helpless may +be a coward, but no true man. The tyrant, it has been said, +is but a slave turned inside out. Strength, and the +consciousness of strength, in a right-hearted man, imparts a +nobleness to his character; but he will be most careful how he +uses it; for</p> +<blockquote><p>“It is excellent<br /> +To have a giant’s strength; but it is tyrannous<br /> +To use it like a giant.”</p> +</blockquote> +<p>Gentleness is indeed the best test of gentlemanliness. A +consideration for the feelings of others, for his inferiors and +dependants as well as his equals, and respect for their +self-respect, will pervade the true gentleman’s whole +conduct. He will rather himself suffer a small injury, than +by an uncharitable construction of another’s behaviour, +incur the risk of committing a great wrong. He will be +forbearant of the weaknesses, the failings, and the errors, of +those whose advantages in life have not been equal to his +own. He will be merciful even to his beast. He will +not boast of his wealth, or his strength, or his gifts. He +will not be puffed up by success, or unduly depressed by +failure. He will not obtrude his views on others, but speak +his mind freely when occasion calls for it. He will not +confer favours with a patronizing air. Sir Walter Scott +once said of Lord Lothian, “He is a man from whom one may +receive a favour, and that’s saying a great deal in these +days.”</p> + +<p>Lord Chatham has said that the gentleman is characterised by +his sacrifice of self and preference of others to himself in the +little daily occurrences of life. In illustration of this +ruling spirit of considerateness in a noble character, we may +cite the anecdote of the gallant Sir Ralph Abercromby, of whom it +is related, that when mortally wounded in the battle of Aboukir, +he was carried in a litter on board the ‘Foudroyant;’ +and, to ease his pain, a soldier’s blanket was placed under +his head, from which he experienced considerable relief. He +asked what it was. “It’s only a soldier’s +blanket,” was the reply. “<i>Whose</i> blanket +is it?” said he, half lifting himself up. “Only +one of the men’s.” “I wish to know the +name of the man whose blanket this is.” “It is +Duncan Roy’s, of the 42nd, Sir Ralph.” +“Then see that Duncan Roy gets his blanket this very +night.” <a name="citation408"></a><a href="#footnote408" +class="citation">[408]</a> Even to ease his dying agony the +general would not deprive the private soldier of his blanket for +one night. The incident is as good in its way as that of +the dying Sydney handing his cup of water to the private soldier +on the field of Zutphen.</p> + +<p>The quaint old Fuller sums up in a few words the character of +the true gentleman and man of action in describing that of the +great admiral, Sir Francis Drake: “Chaste in his life, just +in his dealings, true of his word; merciful to those that were +under him, and hating nothing so much as idlenesse; in matters +especially of moment, he was never wont to rely on other +men’s care, how trusty or skilful soever they might seem to +be, but, always contemning danger, and refusing no toyl, he was +wont himself to be one (whoever was a second) at every turn, +where courage, skill, or industry, was to be employed.”</p> +<h2>FOOTNOTES</h2> + +<p><a name="footnote4"></a><a href="#citation4" +class="footnote">[4]</a> Napoleon III., ‘Life of +Cæsar.’</p> + +<p><a name="footnote15"></a><a href="#citation15" +class="footnote">[15]</a> Soult received but little +education in his youth, and learnt next to no geography until he +became foreign minister of France, when the study of this branch +of knowledge is said to have given him the greatest +pleasure.—‘Œuvres, &c., d’Alexis de +Tocqueville. Par G. de Beaumont.’ Paris, 1861. +I. 52</p> + +<p><a name="footnote25"></a><a href="#citation25" +class="footnote">[25]</a> ‘Œuvres et +Correspondance inédite d’Alexis de +Tocqueville. Par Gustave de Beaumont.’ I. +398.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote26"></a><a href="#citation26" +class="footnote">[26]</a> “I have seen,” said +he, “a hundred times in the course of my life, a weak man +exhibit genuine public virtue, because supported by a wife who +sustained hint in his course, not so much by advising him to such +and such acts, as by exercising a strengthening influence over +the manner in which duty or even ambition was to be +regarded. Much oftener, however, it must be confessed, have +I seen private and domestic life gradually transform a man to +whom nature had given generosity, disinterestedness, and even +some capacity for greatness, into an ambitious, mean-spirited, +vulgar, and selfish creature who, in matters relating to his +country, ended by considering them only in so far as they +rendered his own particular condition more comfortable and +easy.”—‘Œuvres de Tocqueville.’ II. +349.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote31"></a><a href="#citation31" +class="footnote">[31]</a> Since the original publication of +this book, the author has in another work, ‘The Lives of +Boulton and Watt,’ endeavoured to portray in greater detail +the character and achievements of these two remarkable men.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote43a"></a><a href="#citation43a" +class="footnote">[43a]</a> The following entry, which +occurs in the account of monies disbursed by the burgesses of +Sheffield in 1573 [?] is supposed by some to refer to the +inventor of the stocking frame:—“Item gyven to +Willm-Lee, a poore scholler in Sheafield, towards the settyng him +to the Universitie of Chambrydge, and buying him bookes and other +furnyture [which money was afterwards returned] xiii iiii [13s. +4d.].”—Hunter, ‘History of Hallamshire,’ +141.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote43b"></a><a href="#citation43b" +class="footnote">[43b]</a> ‘History of the Framework +Knitters.’</p> + +<p><a name="footnote44"></a><a href="#citation44" +class="footnote">[44]</a> There are, however, other and +different accounts. One is to the effect that Lee set about +studying the contrivance of the stocking-loom for the purpose of +lessening the labour of a young country-girl to whom he was +attached, whose occupation was knitting; another, that being +married and poor, his wife was under the necessity of +contributing to their joint support by knitting; and that Lee, +while watching the motion of his wife’s fingers, conceived +the idea of imitating their movements by a machine. The +latter story seems to have been invented by Aaron Hill, Esq., in +his ‘Account of the Rise and Progress of the Beech Oil +manufacture,’ London, 1715; but his statement is altogether +unreliable. Thus he makes Lee to have been a Fellow of a +college at Oxford, from which he was expelled for marrying an +innkeeper’s daughter; whilst Lee neither studied at Oxford, +nor married there, nor was a Fellow of any college; and he +concludes by alleging that the result of his invention was to +“make Lee and his family happy;” whereas the +invention brought him only a heritage of misery, and he died +abroad destitute.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote45"></a><a href="#citation45" +class="footnote">[45]</a> Blackner, ‘History of +Nottingham.’ The author adds, “We have +information, handed down in direct succession from father to son, +that it was not till late in the seventeenth century that one man +could manage the working of a frame. The man who was +considered the workman employed a labourer, who stood behind the +frame to work the slur and pressing motions; but the application +of traddles and of the feet eventually rendered the labour +unnecessary.”</p> + +<p><a name="footnote74"></a><a href="#citation74" +class="footnote">[74]</a> Palissy’s own words +are:—“Le bois m’ayant failli, je fus contraint +brusler les estapes (étaies) qui soustenoyent les tailles +de mon jardin, lesquelles estant bruslées, je fus +constraint brusler les tables et plancher de la maison, afin de +faire fondre la seconde composition. J’estois en une +telle angoisse que je ne sçaurois dire: car j’estois +tout tari et deseché à cause du labeur et de la +chaleur du fourneau; il y avoit plus d’un mois que ma +chemise n’avoit seiché sur moy, encores pour me +consoler on se moquoit de moy, et mesme ceux qui me devoient +secourir alloient crier par la ville que je faisois brusler le +plancher: et par tel moyen l’on me faisoit perdre mon +credit et m’estimoit-on estre fol. Les autres +disoient que je cherchois à faire la fausse monnoye, qui +estoit un mal qui me faisoit seicher sur les pieds; et m’en +allois par les ruës tout baissé comme un homme +honteux: . . . personne ne me secouroit: Mais au contraire ils se +mocquoyent de moy, en disant: Il luy appartient bien de mourir de +faim, par ce qu’il delaisse son mestier. Toutes ces +nouvelles venoyent a mes aureilles quand je passois par la +ruë.” ‘Œuvres Complètes de +Palissy. Paris, 1844;’ De l’Art de Terre, p. +315.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote77"></a><a href="#citation77" +class="footnote">[77]</a> “Toutes ces fautes +m’ont causé un tel lasseur et tristesse +d’esprit, qu’auparavant que j’aye rendu mes +émaux fusible à un mesme degré de feu, +j’ay cuidé entrer jusques à la porte du +sepulchre: aussi en me travaillant à tels affaires je me +suis trouvé l’espace de plus se dix ans si fort +escoulé en ma personne, qu’il n’y avoit aucune +forme ny apparence de bosse aux bras ny aux jambes: ains estoyent +mes dites jambes toutes d’une venue: de sorte que les liens +de quoy j’attachois mes bas de chausses estoyent, soudain +que je cheminois, sur les talons avec le residu de mes +chausses.”—‘Œuvres, 319–20.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote78"></a><a href="#citation78" +class="footnote">[78]</a> At the sale of Mr. Bernal’s +articles of vertu in London a few years since, one of +Palissy’s small dishes, 12 inches in diameter, with a +lizard in the centre, sold for 162<i>l.</i></p> + +<p><a name="footnote79"></a><a href="#citation79" +class="footnote">[79]</a> Within the last few months, Mr. +Charles Read, a gentleman curious in matters of Protestant +antiquarianism in France, has discovered one of the ovens in +which Palissy baked his chefs-d’œuvre. Several +moulds of faces, plants, animals, &c., were dug up in a good +state of preservation, bearing his well-known stamp. It is +situated under the gallery of the Louvre, in the Place du +Carrousel.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote80a"></a><a href="#citation80a" +class="footnote">[80a]</a> D’Aubigné, +‘Histoire Universelle.’ The historian adds, +“Voyez l’impudence de ce bilistre! vous diriez +qu’il auroit lu ce vers de Sénèque: ‘On +ne peut contraindre celui qui sait mourir: <i>Qui mori scit</i>, +cogi nescit.’”</p> + +<p><a name="footnote80b"></a><a href="#citation80b" +class="footnote">[80b]</a> The subject of Palissy’s +life and labours has been ably and elaborately treated by +Professor Morley in his well-known work. In the above brief +narrative we have for the most part followed Palissy’s own +account of his experiments as given in his ‘Art de +Terre.’</p> + +<p><a name="footnote84"></a><a href="#citation84" +class="footnote">[84]</a> “Almighty God, the great +Creator,<br /> +Has changed a goldmaker to a potter.”</p> + +<p><a name="footnote85"></a><a href="#citation85" +class="footnote">[85]</a> The whole of the Chinese and +Japanese porcelain was formerly known as Indian +porcelain—probably because it was first brought by the +Portuguese from India to Europe, after the discovery of the Cape +of Good Hope by Vasco da Gama.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote89"></a><a href="#citation89" +class="footnote">[89]</a> ‘Wedgwood: an Address +delivered at Burslem, Oct. 26th, 1863.’ By the Right +Hon. W. E. Gladstone, M.P.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote115"></a><a href="#citation115" +class="footnote">[115]</a> It was characteristic of Mr. +Hume, that, during his professional voyages between England and +India, he should diligently apply his spare time to the study of +navigation and seamanship; and many years after, it proved of use +to him in a remarkable manner. In 1825, when on his passage +from London to Leith by a sailing smack, the vessel had scarcely +cleared the mouth of the Thames when a sudden storm came on, she +was driven out of her course, and, in the darkness of the night, +she struck on the Goodwin Sands. The captain, losing his +presence of mind, seemed incapable of giving coherent orders, and +it is probable that the vessel would have become a total wreck, +had not one of the passengers suddenly taken the command and +directed the working of the ship, himself taking the helm while +the danger lasted. The vessel was saved, and the stranger +was Mr. Hume.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote149"></a><a href="#citation149" +class="footnote">[149]</a> ‘Saturday Review,’ +July 3rd, 1858.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote173"></a><a href="#citation173" +class="footnote">[173]</a> Mrs. Grote’s ‘Memoir +of the Life of Ary Scheffer,’ p. 67.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote201"></a><a href="#citation201" +class="footnote">[201]</a> While the sheets of this revised +edition are passing through the press, the announcement appears +in the local papers of the death of Mr. Jackson at the age of +fifty. His last work, completed shortly before his death, +was a cantata, entitled ‘The Praise of Music.’ +The above particulars of his early life were communicated by +himself to the author several years since, while he was still +carrying on his business of a tallow-chandler at Masham.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote216"></a><a href="#citation216" +class="footnote">[216]</a> Mansfield owed nothing to his +noble relations, who were poor and uninfluential. His +success was the legitimate and logical result of the means which +he sedulously employed to secure it. When a boy he rode up +from Scotland to London on a pony—taking two months to make +the journey. After a course of school and college, he +entered upon the profession of the law, and he closed a career of +patient and ceaseless labour as Lord Chief Justice of +England—the functions of which he is universally admitted +to have performed with unsurpassed ability, justice, and +honour.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote263"></a><a href="#citation263" +class="footnote">[263]</a> On ‘Thought and +Action.’</p> + +<p><a name="footnote277"></a><a href="#citation277" +class="footnote">[277]</a> ‘Correspondance de +Napoléon Ier.,’ publiée par ordre de +l’Empereur Napoléon III, Paris, 1864.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote283"></a><a href="#citation283" +class="footnote">[283]</a> The recently published +correspondence of Napoleon with his brother Joseph, and the +Memoirs of the Duke of Ragusa, abundantly confirm this +view. The Duke overthrew Napoleon’s generals by the +superiority of his routine. He used to say that, if he knew +anything at all, he knew how to feed an army.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote313"></a><a href="#citation313" +class="footnote">[313]</a> His old gardener. +Collingwood’s favourite amusement was gardening. +Shortly after the battle of Trafalgar a brother admiral called +upon him, and, after searching for his lordship all over the +garden, he at last discovered him, with old Scott, in the bottom +of a deep trench which they were busily employed in digging.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote319"></a><a href="#citation319" +class="footnote">[319]</a> Article in the +‘Times.’</p> + +<p><a name="footnote321"></a><a href="#citation321" +class="footnote">[321]</a> ‘Self-Development: an +Address to Students,’ by George Ross, M.D., pp. 1–20, +reprinted from the ‘Medical Circular.’ This +address, to which we acknowledge our obligations, contains many +admirable thoughts on self-culture, is thoroughly healthy in its +tone, and well deserves republication in an enlarged form.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote329"></a><a href="#citation329" +class="footnote">[329]</a> ‘Saturday +Review.’</p> + +<p><a name="footnote354"></a><a href="#citation354" +class="footnote">[354]</a> See the admirable and well-known +book, ‘The Pursuit of Knowledge under +Difficulties.’</p> + +<p><a name="footnote356a"></a><a href="#citation356a" +class="footnote">[356a]</a> Late Professor of Moral +Philosophy at St. Andrew’s.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote356b"></a><a href="#citation356b" +class="footnote">[356b]</a> A writer in the +‘Edinburgh Review’ (July, 1859) observes that +“the Duke’s talents seem never to have developed +themselves until some active and practical field for their +display was placed immediately before him. He was long +described by his Spartan mother, who thought him a dunce, as only +‘food for powder.’ He gained no sort of +distinction, either at Eton or at the French Military College of +Angers.” It is not improbable that a competitive +examination, at this day, might have excluded him from the +army.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote357"></a><a href="#citation357" +class="footnote">[357]</a> Correspondent of ‘The +Times,’ 11th June, 1863.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote392"></a><a href="#citation392" +class="footnote">[392]</a> Robertson’s ‘Life +and Letters,’ i. 258.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote400"></a><a href="#citation400" +class="footnote">[400]</a> On the 11th January, 1866.</p> + +<p><a name="footnote408"></a><a href="#citation408" +class="footnote">[408]</a> Brown’s ‘Horæ +Subsecivæ.’</p> + +<div style='display:block;margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SELF-HELP ***</div> +<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0;'>This file should be named 935-h.htm or 935-h.zip</div> +<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0;'>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in https://www.gutenberg.org/9/3/935/</div> +<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'> +Updated editions will replace the previous one—the old editions will +be renamed. +</div> + +<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'> +Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright +law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, +so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United +States without permission and without paying copyright +royalties. 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Do not change or edit the +header without written permission. + +Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the +eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is +important information about your specific rights and restrictions in +how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a +donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved. + + +**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** + +**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** + +*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!***** + + +Title: Self Help + +Author: Samuel Smiles + +Release Date: June, 1997 [EBook #935] +[This file was first posted on June 10, 1997] +[Most recently updated: May 20, 2003] + +Edition: 10 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: US-ASCII + +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, SELF HELP *** + + + + +Transcribed by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk + + + + +SELF HELP; WITH ILLUSTRATIONS OF CONDUCT AND PERSEVERANCE + + + + +CHAPTER I--SELF-HELP--NATIONAL AND INDIVIDUAL + + + +"The worth of a State, in the long run, is the worth of the +individuals composing it."--J. S. Mill. + +"We put too much faith in systems, and look too little to men."--B. +Disraeli. + + +"Heaven helps those who help themselves" is a well-tried maxim, +embodying in a small compass the results of vast human experience. +The spirit of self-help is the root of all genuine growth in the +individual; and, exhibited in the lives of many, it constitutes the +true source of national vigour and strength. Help from without is +often enfeebling in its effects, but help from within invariably +invigorates. Whatever is done FOR men or classes, to a certain +extent takes away the stimulus and necessity of doing for +themselves; and where men are subjected to over-guidance and over- +government, the inevitable tendency is to render them comparatively +helpless. + +Even the best institutions can give a man no active help. Perhaps +the most they can do is, to leave him free to develop himself and +improve his individual condition. But in all times men have been +prone to believe that their happiness and well-being were to be +secured by means of institutions rather than by their own conduct. +Hence the value of legislation as an agent in human advancement has +usually been much over-estimated. To constitute the millionth part +of a Legislature, by voting for one or two men once in three or +five years, however conscientiously this duty may be performed, can +exercise but little active influence upon any man's life and +character. Moreover, it is every day becoming more clearly +understood, that the function of Government is negative and +restrictive, rather than positive and active; being resolvable +principally into protection--protection of life, liberty, and +property. Laws, wisely administered, will secure men in the +enjoyment of the fruits of their labour, whether of mind or body, +at a comparatively small personal sacrifice; but no laws, however +stringent, can make the idle industrious, the thriftless provident, +or the drunken sober. Such reforms can only be effected by means +of individual action, economy, and self-denial; by better habits, +rather than by greater rights. + +The Government of a nation itself is usually found to be but the +reflex of the individuals composing it. The Government that is +ahead of the people will inevitably be dragged down to their level, +as the Government that is behind them will in the long run be +dragged up. In the order of nature, the collective character of a +nation will as surely find its befitting results in its law and +government, as water finds its own level. The noble people will be +nobly ruled, and the ignorant and corrupt ignobly. Indeed all +experience serves to prove that the worth and strength of a State +depend far less upon the form of its institutions than upon the +character of its men. For the nation is only an aggregate of +individual conditions, and civilization itself is but a question of +the personal improvement of the men, women, and children of whom +society is composed. + +National progress is the sum of individual industry, energy, and +uprightness, as national decay is of individual idleness, +selfishness, and vice. What we are accustomed to decry as great +social evils, will, for the most part, be found to be but the +outgrowth of man's own perverted life; and though we may endeavour +to cut them down and extirpate them by means of Law, they will only +spring up again with fresh luxuriance in some other form, unless +the conditions of personal life and character are radically +improved. If this view be correct, then it follows that the +highest patriotism and philanthropy consist, not so much in +altering laws and modifying institutions, as in helping and +stimulating men to elevate and improve themselves by their own free +and independent individual action. + +It may be of comparatively little consequence how a man is governed +from without, whilst everything depends upon how he governs himself +from within. The greatest slave is not he who is ruled by a +despot, great though that evil be, but he who is the thrall of his +own moral ignorance, selfishness, and vice. Nations who are thus +enslaved at heart cannot be freed by any mere changes of masters or +of institutions; and so long as the fatal delusion prevails, that +liberty solely depends upon and consists in government, so long +will such changes, no matter at what cost they may be effected, +have as little practical and lasting result as the shifting of the +figures in a phantasmagoria. The solid foundations of liberty must +rest upon individual character; which is also the only sure +guarantee for social security and national progress. John Stuart +Mill truly observes that "even despotism does not produce its worst +effects so long as individuality exists under it; and whatever +crushes individuality IS despotism, by whatever name it be called." + +Old fallacies as to human progress are constantly turning up. Some +call for Caesars, others for Nationalities, and others for Acts of +Parliament. We are to wait for Caesars, and when they are found, +"happy the people who recognise and follow them." {1} This +doctrine shortly means, everything FOR the people, nothing BY +them,--a doctrine which, if taken as a guide, must, by destroying +the free conscience of a community, speedily prepare the way for +any form of despotism. Caesarism is human idolatry in its worst +form--a worship of mere power, as degrading in its effects as the +worship of mere wealth would be. A far healthier doctrine to +inculcate among the nations would be that of Self-Help; and so soon +as it is thoroughly understood and carried into action, Caesarism +will be no more. The two principles are directly antagonistic; and +what Victor Hugo said of the Pen and the Sword alike applies to +them, "Ceci tuera cela." [This will kill that.] + +The power of Nationalities and Acts of Parliament is also a +prevalent superstition. What William Dargan, one of Ireland's +truest patriots, said at the closing of the first Dublin Industrial +Exhibition, may well be quoted now. "To tell the truth," he said, +"I never heard the word independence mentioned that my own country +and my own fellow townsmen did not occur to my mind. I have heard +a great deal about the independence that we were to get from this, +that, and the other place, and of the great expectations we were to +have from persons from other countries coming amongst us. Whilst I +value as much as any man the great advantages that must result to +us from that intercourse, I have always been deeply impressed with +the feeling that our industrial independence is dependent upon +ourselves. I believe that with simple industry and careful +exactness in the utilization of our energies, we never had a fairer +chance nor a brighter prospect than the present. We have made a +step, but perseverance is the great agent of success; and if we but +go on zealously, I believe in my conscience that in a short period +we shall arrive at a position of equal comfort, of equal happiness, +and of equal independence, with that of any other people." + +All nations have been made what they are by the thinking and the +working of many generations of men. Patient and persevering +labourers in all ranks and conditions of life, cultivators of the +soil and explorers of the mine, inventors and discoverers, +manufacturers, mechanics and artisans, poets, philosophers, and +politicians, all have contributed towards the grand result, one +generation building upon another's labours, and carrying them +forward to still higher stages. This constant succession of noble +workers--the artisans of civilisation--has served to create order +out of chaos in industry, science, and art; and the living race has +thus, in the course of nature, become the inheritor of the rich +estate provided by the skill and industry of our forefathers, which +is placed in our hands to cultivate, and to hand down, not only +unimpaired but improved, to our successors. + +The spirit of self-help, as exhibited in the energetic action of +individuals, has in all times been a marked feature in the English +character, and furnishes the true measure of our power as a nation. +Rising above the heads of the mass, there were always to be found a +series of individuals distinguished beyond others, who commanded +the public homage. But our progress has also been owing to +multitudes of smaller and less known men. Though only the +generals' names may be remembered in the history of any great +campaign, it has been in a great measure through the individual +valour and heroism of the privates that victories have been won. +And life, too, is "a soldiers' battle,"--men in the ranks having in +all times been amongst the greatest of workers. Many are the lives +of men unwritten, which have nevertheless as powerfully influenced +civilisation and progress as the more fortunate Great whose names +are recorded in biography. Even the humblest person, who sets +before his fellows an example of industry, sobriety, and upright +honesty of purpose in life, has a present as well as a future +influence upon the well-being of his country; for his life and +character pass unconsciously into the lives of others, and +propagate good example for all time to come. + +Daily experience shows that it is energetic individualism which +produces the most powerful effects upon the life and action of +others, and really constitutes the best practical education. +Schools, academies, and colleges, give but the merest beginnings of +culture in comparison with it. Far more influential is the life- +education daily given in our homes, in the streets, behind +counters, in workshops, at the loom and the plough, in counting- +houses and manufactories, and in the busy haunts of men. This is +that finishing instruction as members of society, which Schiller +designated "the education of the human race," consisting in action, +conduct, self-culture, self-control,--all that tends to discipline +a man truly, and fit him for the proper performance of the duties +and business of life,--a kind of education not to be learnt from +books, or acquired by any amount of mere literary training. With +his usual weight of words Bacon observes, that "Studies teach not +their own use; but that is a wisdom without them, and above them, +won by observation;" a remark that holds true of actual life, as +well as of the cultivation of the intellect itself. For all +experience serves to illustrate and enforce the lesson, that a man +perfects himself by work more than by reading,--that it is life +rather than literature, action rather than study, and character +rather than biography, which tend perpetually to renovate mankind. + +Biographies of great, but especially of good men, are nevertheless +most instructive and useful, as helps, guides, and incentives to +others. Some of the best are almost equivalent to gospels-- +teaching high living, high thinking, and energetic action for their +own and the world's good. The valuable examples which they furnish +of the power of self-help, of patient purpose, resolute working, +and steadfast integrity, issuing in the formation of truly noble +and manly character, exhibit in language not to be misunderstood, +what it is in the power of each to accomplish for himself; and +eloquently illustrate the efficacy of self-respect and self- +reliance in enabling men of even the humblest rank to work out for +themselves an honourable competency and a solid reputation. + +Great men of science, literature, and art--apostles of great +thoughts and lords of the great heart--have belonged to no +exclusive class nor rank in life. They have come alike from +colleges, workshops, and farmhouses,--from the huts of poor men and +the mansions of the rich. Some of God's greatest apostles have +come from "the ranks." The poorest have sometimes taken the +highest places; nor have difficulties apparently the most +insuperable proved obstacles in their way. Those very +difficulties, in many instances, would ever seem to have been their +best helpers, by evoking their powers of labour and endurance, and +stimulating into life faculties which might otherwise have lain +dormant. The instances of obstacles thus surmounted, and of +triumphs thus achieved, are indeed so numerous, as almost to +justify the proverb that "with Will one can do anything." Take, +for instance, the remarkable fact, that from the barber's shop came +Jeremy Taylor, the most poetical of divines; Sir Richard Arkwright, +the inventor of the spinning-jenny and founder of the cotton +manufacture; Lord Tenterden, one of the most distinguished of Lord +Chief Justices; and Turner, the greatest among landscape painters. + +No one knows to a certainty what Shakespeare was; but it is +unquestionable that he sprang from a humble rank. His father was a +butcher and grazier; and Shakespeare himself is supposed to have +been in early life a woolcomber; whilst others aver that he was an +usher in a school and afterwards a scrivener's clerk. He truly +seems to have been "not one, but all mankind's epitome." For such +is the accuracy of his sea phrases that a naval writer alleges that +he must have been a sailor; whilst a clergyman infers, from +internal evidence in his writings, that he was probably a parson's +clerk; and a distinguished judge of horse-flesh insists that he +must have been a horse-dealer. Shakespeare was certainly an actor, +and in the course of his life "played many parts," gathering his +wonderful stores of knowledge from a wide field of experience and +observation. In any event, he must have been a close student and a +hard worker; and to this day his writings continue to exercise a +powerful influence on the formation of English character. + +The common class of day labourers has given us Brindley the +engineer, Cook the navigator, and Burns the poet. Masons and +bricklayers can boast of Ben Jonson, who worked at the building of +Lincoln's Inn, with a trowel in his hand and a book in his pocket, +Edwards and Telford the engineers, Hugh Miller the geologist, and +Allan Cunningham the writer and sculptor; whilst among +distinguished carpenters we find the names of Inigo Jones the +architect, Harrison the chronometer-maker, John Hunter the +physiologist, Romney and Opie the painters, Professor Lee the +Orientalist, and John Gibson the sculptor. + +From the weaver class have sprung Simson the mathematician, Bacon +the sculptor, the two Milners, Adam Walker, John Foster, Wilson the +ornithologist, Dr. Livingstone the missionary traveller, and +Tannahill the poet. Shoemakers have given us Sir Cloudesley Shovel +the great Admiral, Sturgeon the electrician, Samuel Drew the +essayist, Gifford the editor of the 'Quarterly Review,' Bloomfield +the poet, and William Carey the missionary; whilst Morrison, +another laborious missionary, was a maker of shoe-lasts. Within +the last few years, a profound naturalist has been discovered in +the person of a shoemaker at Banff, named Thomas Edwards, who, +while maintaining himself by his trade, has devoted his leisure to +the study of natural science in all its branches, his researches in +connexion with the smaller crustaceae having been rewarded by the +discovery of a new species, to which the name of "Praniza +Edwardsii" has been given by naturalists. + +Nor have tailors been undistinguished. John Stow, the historian, +worked at the trade during some part of his life. Jackson, the +painter, made clothes until he reached manhood. The brave Sir John +Hawkswood, who so greatly distinguished himself at Poictiers, and +was knighted by Edward III. for his valour, was in early life +apprenticed to a London tailor. Admiral Hobson, who broke the boom +at Vigo in 1702, belonged to the same calling. He was working as a +tailor's apprentice near Bonchurch, in the Isle of Wight, when the +news flew through the village that a squadron of men-of-war was +sailing off the island. He sprang from the shopboard, and ran down +with his comrades to the beach, to gaze upon the glorious sight. +The boy was suddenly inflamed with the ambition to be a sailor; and +springing into a boat, he rowed off to the squadron, gained the +admiral's ship, and was accepted as a volunteer. Years after, he +returned to his native village full of honours, and dined off bacon +and eggs in the cottage where he had worked as an apprentice. But +the greatest tailor of all is unquestionably Andrew Johnson, the +present President of the United States--a man of extraordinary +force of character and vigour of intellect. In his great speech at +Washington, when describing himself as having begun his political +career as an alderman, and run through all the branches of the +legislature, a voice in the crowd cried, "From a tailor up." It +was characteristic of Johnson to take the intended sarcasm in good +part, and even to turn it to account. "Some gentleman says I have +been a tailor. That does not disconcert me in the least; for when +I was a tailor I had the reputation of being a good one, and making +close fits; I was always punctual with my customers, and always did +good work." + +Cardinal Wolsey, De Foe, Akenside, and Kirke White were the sons of +butchers; Bunyan was a tinker, and Joseph Lancaster a basket-maker. +Among the great names identified with the invention of the steam- +engine are those of Newcomen, Watt, and Stephenson; the first a +blacksmith, the second a maker of mathematical instruments, and the +third an engine-fireman. Huntingdon the preacher was originally a +coalheaver, and Bewick, the father of wood-engraving, a coalminer. +Dodsley was a footman, and Holcroft a groom. Baffin the navigator +began his seafaring career as a man before the mast, and Sir +Cloudesley Shovel as a cabin-boy. Herschel played the oboe in a +military band. Chantrey was a journeyman carver, Etty a journeyman +printer, and Sir Thomas Lawrence the son of a tavern-keeper. +Michael Faraday, the son of a blacksmith, was in early life +apprenticed to a bookbinder, and worked at that trade until he +reached his twenty-second year: he now occupies the very first +rank as a philosopher, excelling even his master, Sir Humphry Davy, +in the art of lucidly expounding the most difficult and abstruse +points in natural science. + +Among those who have given the greatest impulse to the sublime +science of astronomy, we find Copernicus, the son of a Polish +baker; Kepler, the son of a German public-house keeper, and himself +the "garcon de cabaret;" d'Alembert, a foundling picked up one +winter's night on the steps of the church of St. Jean le Rond at +Paris, and brought up by the wife of a glazier; and Newton and +Laplace, the one the son of a small freeholder near Grantham, the +other the son of a poor peasant of Beaumont-en-Auge, near Honfleur. +Notwithstanding their comparatively adverse circumstances in early +life, these distinguished men achieved a solid and enduring +reputation by the exercise of their genius, which all the wealth in +the world could not have purchased. The very possession of wealth +might indeed have proved an obstacle greater even than the humble +means to which they were born. The father of Lagrange, the +astronomer and mathematician, held the office of Treasurer of War +at Turin; but having ruined himself by speculations, his family +were reduced to comparative poverty. To this circumstance Lagrange +was in after life accustomed partly to attribute his own fame and +happiness. "Had I been rich," said he, "I should probably not have +become a mathematician." + +The sons of clergymen and ministers of religion generally, have +particularly distinguished themselves in our country's history. +Amongst them we find the names of Drake and Nelson, celebrated in +naval heroism; of Wollaston, Young, Playfair, and Bell, in science; +of Wren, Reynolds, Wilson, and Wilkie, in art; of Thurlow and +Campbell, in law; and of Addison, Thomson, Goldsmith, Coleridge, +and Tennyson, in literature. Lord Hardinge, Colonel Edwardes, and +Major Hodson, so honourably known in Indian warfare, were also the +sons of clergymen. Indeed, the empire of England in India was won +and held chiefly by men of the middle class--such as Clive, Warren +Hastings, and their successors--men for the most part bred in +factories and trained to habits of business. + +Among the sons of attorneys we find Edmund Burke, Smeaton the +engineer, Scott and Wordsworth, and Lords Somers, Hardwick, and +Dunning. Sir William Blackstone was the posthumous son of a silk- +mercer. Lord Gifford's father was a grocer at Dover; Lord Denman's +a physician; judge Talfourd's a country brewer; and Lord Chief +Baron Pollock's a celebrated saddler at Charing Cross. Layard, the +discoverer of the monuments of Nineveh, was an articled clerk in a +London solicitor's office; and Sir William Armstrong, the inventor +of hydraulic machinery and of the Armstrong ordnance, was also +trained to the law and practised for some time as an attorney. +Milton was the son of a London scrivener, and Pope and Southey were +the sons of linendrapers. Professor Wilson was the son of a +Paisley manufacturer, and Lord Macaulay of an African merchant. +Keats was a druggist, and Sir Humphry Davy a country apothecary's +apprentice. Speaking of himself, Davy once said, "What I am I have +made myself: I say this without vanity, and in pure simplicity of +heart." Richard Owen, the Newton of Natural History, began life as +a midshipman, and did not enter upon the line of scientific +research in which he has since become so distinguished, until +comparatively late in life. He laid the foundations of his great +knowledge while occupied in cataloguing the magnificent museum +accumulated by the industry of John Hunter, a work which occupied +him at the College of Surgeons during a period of about ten years. + +Foreign not less than English biography abounds in illustrations of +men who have glorified the lot of poverty by their labours and +their genius. In Art we find Claude, the son of a pastrycook; +Geefs, of a baker; Leopold Robert, of a watchmaker; and Haydn, of a +wheelwright; whilst Daguerre was a scene-painter at the Opera. The +father of Gregory VII. was a carpenter; of Sextus V., a shepherd; +and of Adrian VI., a poor bargeman. When a boy, Adrian, unable to +pay for a light by which to study, was accustomed to prepare his +lessons by the light of the lamps in the streets and the church +porches, exhibiting a degree of patience and industry which were +the certain forerunners of his future distinction. Of like humble +origin were Hauy, the mineralogist, who was the son of a weaver of +Saint-Just; Hautefeuille, the mechanician, of a baker at Orleans; +Joseph Fourier, the mathematician, of a tailor at Auxerre; Durand, +the architect, of a Paris shoemaker; and Gesner, the naturalist, of +a skinner or worker in hides, at Zurich. This last began his +career under all the disadvantages attendant on poverty, sickness, +and domestic calamity; none of which, however, were sufficient to +damp his courage or hinder his progress. His life was indeed an +eminent illustration of the truth of the saying, that those who +have most to do and are willing to work, will find the most time. +Pierre Ramus was another man of like character. He was the son of +poor parents in Picardy, and when a boy was employed to tend sheep. +But not liking the occupation he ran away to Paris. After +encountering much misery, he succeeded in entering the College of +Navarre as a servant. The situation, however, opened for him the +road to learning, and he shortly became one of the most +distinguished men of his time. + +The chemist Vauquelin was the son of a peasant of Saint-Andre- +d'Herbetot, in the Calvados. When a boy at school, though poorly +clad, he was full of bright intelligence; and the master, who +taught him to read and write, when praising him for his diligence, +used to say, "Go on, my boy; work, study, Colin, and one day you +will go as well dressed as the parish churchwarden!" A country +apothecary who visited the school, admired the robust boy's arms, +and offered to take him into his laboratory to pound his drugs, to +which Vauquelin assented, in the hope of being able to continue his +lessons. But the apothecary would not permit him to spend any part +of his time in learning; and on ascertaining this, the youth +immediately determined to quit his service. He therefore left +Saint-Andre and took the road for Paris with his havresac on his +back. Arrived there, he searched for a place as apothecary's boy, +but could not find one. Worn out by fatigue and destitution, +Vauquelin fell ill, and in that state was taken to the hospital, +where he thought he should die. But better things were in store +for the poor boy. He recovered, and again proceeded in his search +of employment, which he at length found with an apothecary. +Shortly after, he became known to Fourcroy the eminent chemist, who +was so pleased with the youth that he made him his private +secretary; and many years after, on the death of that great +philosopher, Vauquelin succeeded him as Professor of Chemistry. +Finally, in 1829, the electors of the district of Calvados +appointed him their representative in the Chamber of Deputies, and +he re-entered in triumph the village which he had left so many +years before, so poor and so obscure. + +England has no parallel instances to show, of promotions from the +ranks of the army to the highest military offices; which have been +so common in France since the first Revolution. "La carriere +ouverte aux talents" has there received many striking +illustrations, which would doubtless be matched among ourselves +were the road to promotion as open. Hoche, Humbert, and Pichegru, +began their respective careers as private soldiers. Hoche, while +in the King's army, was accustomed to embroider waistcoats to +enable him to earn money wherewith to purchase books on military +science. Humbert was a scapegrace when a youth; at sixteen he ran +away from home, and was by turns servant to a tradesman at Nancy, a +workman at Lyons, and a hawker of rabbit skins. In 1792, he +enlisted as a volunteer; and in a year he was general of brigade. +Kleber, Lefevre, Suchet, Victor, Lannes, Soult, Massena, St. Cyr, +D'Erlon, Murat, Augereau, Bessieres, and Ney, all rose from the +ranks. In some cases promotion was rapid, in others it was slow. +Saint Cyr, the son of a tanner of Toul, began life as an actor, +after which he enlisted in the Chasseurs, and was promoted to a +captaincy within a year. Victor, Duc de Belluno, enlisted in the +Artillery in 1781: during the events preceding the Revolution he +was discharged; but immediately on the outbreak of war he re- +enlisted, and in the course of a few months his intrepidity and +ability secured his promotion as Adjutant-Major and chief of +battalion. Murat, "le beau sabreur," was the son of a village +innkeeper in Perigord, where he looked after the horses. He first +enlisted in a regiment of Chasseurs, from which he was dismissed +for insubordination: but again enlisting, he shortly rose to the +rank of Colonel. Ney enlisted at eighteen in a hussar regiment, +and gradually advanced step by step: Kleber soon discovered his +merits, surnaming him "The Indefatigable," and promoted him to be +Adjutant-General when only twenty-five. On the other hand, Soult +{2} was six years from the date of his enlistment before he reached +the rank of sergeant. But Soult's advancement was rapid compared +with that of Massena, who served for fourteen years before he was +made sergeant; and though he afterwards rose successively, step by +step, to the grades of Colonel, General of Division, and Marshal, +he declared that the post of sergeant was the step which of all +others had cost him the most labour to win. Similar promotions +from the ranks, in the French army, have continued down to our own +day. Changarnier entered the King's bodyguard as a private in +1815. Marshal Bugeaud served four years in the ranks, after which +he was made an officer. Marshal Randon, the present French +Minister of War, began his military career as a drummer boy; and in +the portrait of him in the gallery at Versailles, his hand rests +upon a drum-head, the picture being thus painted at his own +request. Instances such as these inspire French soldiers with +enthusiasm for their service, as each private feels that he may +possibly carry the baton of a marshal in his knapsack. + +The instances of men, in this and other countries, who, by dint of +persevering application and energy, have raised themselves from the +humblest ranks of industry to eminent positions of usefulness and +influence in society, are indeed so numerous that they have long +ceased to be regarded as exceptional. Looking at some of the more +remarkable, it might almost be said that early encounter with +difficulty and adverse circumstances was the necessary and +indispensable condition of success. The British House of Commons +has always contained a considerable number of such self-raised men- +-fitting representatives of the industrial character of the people; +and it is to the credit of our Legislature that they have been +welcomed and honoured there. When the late Joseph Brotherton, +member for Salford, in the course of the discussion on the Ten +Hours Bill, detailed with true pathos the hardships and fatigues to +which he had been subjected when working as a factory boy in a +cotton mill, and described the resolution which he had then formed, +that if ever it was in his power he would endeavour to ameliorate +the condition of that class, Sir James Graham rose immediately +after him, and declared, amidst the cheers of the House, that he +did not before know that Mr. Brotherton's origin had been so +humble, but that it rendered him more proud than he had ever before +been of the House of Commons, to think that a person risen from +that condition should be able to sit side by side, on equal terms, +with the hereditary gentry of the land. + +The late Mr. Fox, member for Oldham, was accustomed to introduce +his recollections of past times with the words, "when I was working +as a weaver boy at Norwich;" and there are other members of +parliament, still living, whose origin has been equally humble. +Mr. Lindsay, the well-known ship owner, until recently member for +Sunderland, once told the simple story of his life to the electors +of Weymouth, in answer to an attack made upon him by his political +opponents. He had been left an orphan at fourteen, and when he +left Glasgow for Liverpool to push his way in the world, not being +able to pay the usual fare, the captain of the steamer agreed to +take his labour in exchange, and the boy worked his passage by +trimming the coals in the coal hole. At Liverpool he remained for +seven weeks before he could obtain employment, during which time he +lived in sheds and fared hardly; until at last he found shelter on +board a West Indiaman. He entered as a boy, and before he was +nineteen, by steady good conduct he had risen to the command of a +ship. At twenty-three he retired from the sea, and settled on +shore, after which his progress was rapid "he had prospered," he +said, "by steady industry, by constant work, and by ever keeping in +view the great principle of doing to others as you would be done +by." + +The career of Mr. William Jackson, of Birkenhead, the present +member for North Derbyshire, bears considerable resemblance to that +of Mr. Lindsay. His father, a surgeon at Lancaster, died, leaving +a family of eleven children, of whom William Jackson was the +seventh son. The elder boys had been well educated while the +father lived, but at his death the younger members had to shift for +themselves. William, when under twelve years old, was taken from +school, and put to hard work at a ship's side from six in the +morning till nine at night. His master falling ill, the boy was +taken into the counting-house, where he had more leisure. This +gave him an opportunity of reading, and having obtained access to a +set of the 'Encyclopaedia Britannica,' he read the volumes through +from A to Z, partly by day, but chiefly at night. He afterwards +put himself to a trade, was diligent, and succeeded in it. Now he +has ships sailing on almost every sea, and holds commercial +relations with nearly every country on the globe. + +Among like men of the same class may be ranked the late Richard +Cobden, whose start in life was equally humble. The son of a small +farmer at Midhurst in Sussex, he was sent at an early age to London +and employed as a boy in a warehouse in the City. He was diligent, +well conducted, and eager for information. His master, a man of +the old school, warned him against too much reading; but the boy +went on in his own course, storing his mind with the wealth found +in books. He was promoted from one position of trust to another-- +became a traveller for his house--secured a large connection, and +eventually started in business as a calico printer at Manchester. +Taking an interest in public questions, more especially in popular +education, his attention was gradually drawn to the subject of the +Corn Laws, to the repeal of which he may be said to have devoted +his fortune and his life. It may be mentioned as a curious fact +that the first speech he delivered in public was a total failure. +But he had great perseverance, application, and energy; and with +persistency and practice, he became at length one of the most +persuasive and effective of public speakers, extorting the +disinterested eulogy of even Sir Robert Peel himself. M. Drouyn de +Lhuys, the French Ambassador, has eloquently said of Mr. Cobden, +that he was "a living proof of what merit, perseverance, and labour +can accomplish; one of the most complete examples of those men who, +sprung from the humblest ranks of society, raise themselves to the +highest rank in public estimation by the effect of their own worth +and of their personal services; finally, one of the rarest examples +of the solid qualities inherent in the English character." + +In all these cases, strenuous individual application was the price +paid for distinction; excellence of any sort being invariably +placed beyond the reach of indolence. It is the diligent hand and +head alone that maketh rich--in self-culture, growth in wisdom, and +in business. Even when men are born to wealth and high social +position, any solid reputation which they may individually achieve +can only be attained by energetic application; for though an +inheritance of acres may be bequeathed, an inheritance of knowledge +and wisdom cannot. The wealthy man may pay others for doing his +work for him, but it is impossible to get his thinking done for him +by another, or to purchase any kind of self-culture. Indeed, the +doctrine that excellence in any pursuit is only to be achieved by +laborious application, holds as true in the case of the man of +wealth as in that of Drew and Gifford, whose only school was a +cobbler's stall, or Hugh Miller, whose only college was a Cromarty +stone quarry. + +Riches and ease, it is perfectly clear, are not necessary for man's +highest culture, else had not the world been so largely indebted in +all times to those who have sprung from the humbler ranks. An easy +and luxurious existence does not train men to effort or encounter +with difficulty; nor does it awaken that consciousness of power +which is so necessary for energetic and effective action in life. +Indeed, so far from poverty being a misfortune, it may, by vigorous +self-help, be converted even into a blessing; rousing a man to that +struggle with the world in which, though some may purchase ease by +degradation, the right-minded and true-hearted find strength, +confidence, and triumph. Bacon says, "Men seem neither to +understand their riches nor their strength: of the former they +believe greater things than they should; of the latter much less. +Self-reliance and self-denial will teach a man to drink out of his +own cistern, and eat his own sweet bread, and to learn and labour +truly to get his living, and carefully to expend the good things +committed to his trust." + +Riches are so great a temptation to ease and self-indulgence, to +which men are by nature prone, that the glory is all the greater of +those who, born to ample fortunes, nevertheless take an active part +in the work of their generation--who "scorn delights and live +laborious days." It is to the honour of the wealthier ranks in +this country that they are not idlers; for they do their fair share +of the work of the state, and usually take more than their fair +share of its dangers. It was a fine thing said of a subaltern +officer in the Peninsular campaigns, observed trudging alone +through mud and mire by the side of his regiment, "There goes +15,000l. a year!" and in our own day, the bleak slopes of +Sebastopol and the burning soil of India have borne witness to the +like noble self-denial and devotion on the part of our gentler +classes; many a gallant and noble fellow, of rank and estate, +having risked his life, or lost it, in one or other of those fields +of action, in the service of his country. + +Nor have the wealthier classes been undistinguished in the more +peaceful pursuits of philosophy and science. Take, for instance, +the great names of Bacon, the father of modern philosophy, and of +Worcester, Boyle, Cavendish, Talbot, and Rosse, in science. The +last named may be regarded as the great mechanic of the peerage; a +man who, if he had not been born a peer, would probably have taken +the highest rank as an inventor. So thorough is his knowledge of +smith-work that he is said to have been pressed on one occasion to +accept the foremanship of a large workshop, by a manufacturer to +whom his rank was unknown. The great Rosse telescope, of his own +fabrication, is certainly the most extraordinary instrument of the +kind that has yet been constructed. + +But it is principally in the departments of politics and literature +that we find the most energetic labourers amongst our higher +classes. Success in these lines of action, as in all others, can +only be achieved through industry, practice, and study; and the +great Minister, or parliamentary leader, must necessarily be +amongst the very hardest of workers. Such was Palmerston; and such +are Derby and Russell, Disraeli and Gladstone. These men have had +the benefit of no Ten Hours Bill, but have often, during the busy +season of Parliament, worked "double shift," almost day and night. +One of the most illustrious of such workers in modern times was +unquestionably the late Sir Robert Peel. He possessed in an +extraordinary degree the power of continuous intellectual labour, +nor did he spare himself. His career, indeed, presented a +remarkable example of how much a man of comparatively moderate +powers can accomplish by means of assiduous application and +indefatigable industry. During the forty years that he held a seat +in Parliament, his labours were prodigious. He was a most +conscientious man, and whatever he undertook to do, he did +thoroughly. All his speeches bear evidence of his careful study of +everything that had been spoken or written on the subject under +consideration. He was elaborate almost to excess; and spared no +pains to adapt himself to the various capacities of his audience. +Withal, he possessed much practical sagacity, great strength of +purpose, and power to direct the issues of action with steady hand +and eye. In one respect he surpassed most men: his principles +broadened and enlarged with time; and age, instead of contracting, +only served to mellow and ripen his nature. To the last he +continued open to the reception of new views, and, though many +thought him cautious to excess, he did not allow himself to fall +into that indiscriminating admiration of the past, which is the +palsy of many minds similarly educated, and renders the old age of +many nothing but a pity. + +The indefatigable industry of Lord Brougham has become almost +proverbial. His public labours have extended over a period of +upwards of sixty years, during which he has ranged over many +fields--of law, literature, politics, and science,--and achieved +distinction in them all. How he contrived it, has been to many a +mystery. Once, when Sir Samuel Romilly was requested to undertake +some new work, he excused himself by saying that he had no time; +"but," he added, "go with it to that fellow Brougham, he seems to +have time for everything." The secret of it was, that he never +left a minute unemployed; withal he possessed a constitution of +iron. When arrived at an age at which most men would have retired +from the world to enjoy their hard-earned leisure, perhaps to doze +away their time in an easy chair, Lord Brougham commenced and +prosecuted a series of elaborate investigations as to the laws of +Light, and he submitted the results to the most scientific +audiences that Paris and London could muster. About the same time, +he was passing through the press his admirable sketches of the 'Men +of Science and Literature of the Reign of George III.,' and taking +his full share of the law business and the political discussions in +the House of Lords. Sydney Smith once recommended him to confine +himself to only the transaction of so much business as three strong +men could get through. But such was Brougham's love of work--long +become a habit--that no amount of application seems to have been +too great for him; and such was his love of excellence, that it has +been said of him that if his station in life had been only that of +a shoe-black, he would never have rested satisfied until he had +become the best shoe-black in England. + +Another hard-working man of the same class is Sir E. Bulwer Lytton. +Few writers have done more, or achieved higher distinction in +various walks--as a novelist, poet, dramatist, historian, essayist, +orator, and politician. He has worked his way step by step, +disdainful of ease, and animated throughout by the ardent desire to +excel. On the score of mere industry, there are few living English +writers who have written so much, and none that have produced so +much of high quality. The industry of Bulwer is entitled to all +the greater praise that it has been entirely self-imposed. To +hunt, and shoot, and live at ease,--to frequent the clubs and enjoy +the opera, with the variety of London visiting and sight-seeing +during the "season," and then off to the country mansion, with its +well-stocked preserves, and its thousand delightful out-door +pleasures,--to travel abroad, to Paris, Vienna, or Rome,--all this +is excessively attractive to a lover of pleasure and a man of +fortune, and by no means calculated to make him voluntarily +undertake continuous labour of any kind. Yet these pleasures, all +within his reach, Bulwer must, as compared with men born to similar +estate, have denied himself in assuming the position and pursuing +the career of a literary man. Like Byron, his first effort was +poetical ('Weeds and Wild Flowers'), and a failure. His second was +a novel ('Falkland'), and it proved a failure too. A man of weaker +nerve would have dropped authorship; but Bulwer had pluck and +perseverance; and he worked on, determined to succeed. He was +incessantly industrious, read extensively, and from failure went +courageously onwards to success. 'Pelham' followed 'Falkland' +within a year, and the remainder of Bulwer's literary life, now +extending over a period of thirty years, has been a succession of +triumphs. + +Mr. Disraeli affords a similar instance of the power of industry +and application in working out an eminent public career. His first +achievements were, like Bulwer's, in literature; and he reached +success only through a succession of failures. His 'Wondrous Tale +of Alroy' and 'Revolutionary Epic' were laughed at, and regarded as +indications of literary lunacy. But he worked on in other +directions, and his 'Coningsby,' 'Sybil,' and 'Tancred,' proved the +sterling stuff of which he was made. As an orator too, his first +appearance in the House of Commons was a failure. It was spoken of +as "more screaming than an Adelphi farce." Though composed in a +grand and ambitious strain, every sentence was hailed with "loud +laughter." 'Hamlet' played as a comedy were nothing to it. But he +concluded with a sentence which embodied a prophecy. Writhing +under the laughter with which his studied eloquence had been +received, he exclaimed, "I have begun several times many things, +and have succeeded in them at last. I shall sit down now, but the +time will come when you will hear me." The time did come; and how +Disraeli succeeded in at length commanding the attention of the +first assembly of gentlemen in the world, affords a striking +illustration of what energy and determination will do; for Disraeli +earned his position by dint of patient industry. He did not, as +many young men do, having once failed, retire dejected, to mope and +whine in a corner, but diligently set himself to work. He +carefully unlearnt his faults, studied the character of his +audience, practised sedulously the art of speech, and industriously +filled his mind with the elements of parliamentary knowledge. He +worked patiently for success; and it came, but slowly: then the +House laughed with him, instead of at him. The recollection of his +early failure was effaced, and by general consent he was at length +admitted to be one of the most finished and effective of +parliamentary speakers. + +Although much may be accomplished by means of individual industry +and energy, as these and other instances set forth in the following +pages serve to illustrate, it must at the same time be acknowledged +that the help which we derive from others in the journey of life is +of very great importance. The poet Wordsworth has well said that +"these two things, contradictory though they may seem, must go +together--manly dependence and manly independence, manly reliance +and manly self-reliance." From infancy to old age, all are more or +less indebted to others for nurture and culture; and the best and +strongest are usually found the readiest to acknowledge such help. +Take, for example, the career of the late Alexis de Tocqueville, a +man doubly well-born, for his father was a distinguished peer of +France, and his mother a grand-daughter of Malesherbes. Through +powerful family influence, he was appointed Judge Auditor at +Versailles when only twenty-one; but probably feeling that he had +not fairly won the position by merit, he determined to give it up +and owe his future advancement in life to himself alone. "A +foolish resolution," some will say; but De Tocqueville bravely +acted it out. He resigned his appointment, and made arrangements +to leave France for the purpose of travelling through the United +States, the results of which were published in his great book on +'Democracy in America.' His friend and travelling companion, +Gustave de Beaumont, has described his indefatigable industry +during this journey. "His nature," he says, "was wholly averse to +idleness, and whether he was travelling or resting, his mind was +always at work. . . . With Alexis, the most agreeable conversation +was that which was the most useful. The worst day was the lost +day, or the day ill spent; the least loss of time annoyed him." +Tocqueville himself wrote to a friend--"There is no time of life at +which one can wholly cease from action, for effort without one's +self, and still more effort within, is equally necessary, if not +more so, when we grow old, as it is in youth. I compare man in +this world to a traveller journeying without ceasing towards a +colder and colder region; the higher he goes, the faster he ought +to walk. The great malady of the soul is cold. And in resisting +this formidable evil, one needs not only to be sustained by the +action of a mind employed, but also by contact with one's fellows +in the business of life." {3} + +Notwithstanding de Tocqueville's decided views as to the necessity +of exercising individual energy and self-dependence, no one could +be more ready than he was to recognise the value of that help and +support for which all men are indebted to others in a greater or +less degree. Thus, he often acknowledged, with gratitude, his +obligations to his friends De Kergorlay and Stofells,--to the +former for intellectual assistance, and to the latter for moral +support and sympathy. To De Kergorlay he wrote--"Thine is the only +soul in which I have confidence, and whose influence exercises a +genuine effect upon my own. Many others have influence upon the +details of my actions, but no one has so much influence as thou on +the origination of fundamental ideas, and of those principles which +are the rule of conduct." De Tocqueville was not less ready to +confess the great obligations which he owed to his wife, Marie, for +the preservation of that temper and frame of mind which enabled him +to prosecute his studies with success. He believed that a noble- +minded woman insensibly elevated the character of her husband, +while one of a grovelling nature as certainly tended to degrade it. +{4} + +In fine, human character is moulded by a thousand subtle +influences; by example and precept; by life and literature; by +friends and neighbours; by the world we live in as well as by the +spirits of our forefathers, whose legacy of good words and deeds we +inherit. But great, unquestionably, though these influences are +acknowledged to be, it is nevertheless equally clear that men must +necessarily be the active agents of their own well-being and well- +doing; and that, however much the wise and the good may owe to +others, they themselves must in the very nature of things be their +own best helpers. + + + +CHAPTER II--LEADERS OF INDUSTRY--INVENTORS AND PRODUCERS + + + +"Le travail et la Science sont desormais les maitres du monde."--De +Salvandy. + +"Deduct all that men of the humbler classes have done for England +in the way of inventions only, and see where she would have been +but for them."--Arthur Helps. + + +One of the most strongly-marked features of the English people is +their spirit of industry, standing out prominent and distinct in +their past history, and as strikingly characteristic of them now as +at any former period. It is this spirit, displayed by the commons +of England, which has laid the foundations and built up the +industrial greatness of the empire. This vigorous growth of the +nation has been mainly the result of the free energy of +individuals, and it has been contingent upon the number of hands +and minds from time to time actively employed within it, whether as +cultivators of the soil, producers of articles of utility, +contrivers of tools and machines, writers of books, or creators of +works of art. And while this spirit of active industry has been +the vital principle of the nation, it has also been its saving and +remedial one, counteracting from time to time the effects of errors +in our laws and imperfections in our constitution. + +The career of industry which the nation has pursued, has also +proved its best education. As steady application to work is the +healthiest training for every individual, so is it the best +discipline of a state. Honourable industry travels the same road +with duty; and Providence has closely linked both with happiness. +The gods, says the poet, have placed labour and toil on the way +leading to the Elysian fields. Certain it is that no bread eaten +by man is so sweet as that earned by his own labour, whether bodily +or mental. By labour the earth has been subdued, and man redeemed +from barbarism; nor has a single step in civilization been made +without it. Labour is not only a necessity and a duty, but a +blessing: only the idler feels it to be a curse. The duty of work +is written on the thews and muscles of the limbs, the mechanism of +the hand, the nerves and lobes of the brain--the sum of whose +healthy action is satisfaction and enjoyment. In the school of +labour is taught the best practical wisdom; nor is a life of manual +employment, as we shall hereafter find, incompatible with high +mental culture. + +Hugh Miller, than whom none knew better the strength and the +weakness belonging to the lot of labour, stated the result of his +experience to be, that Work, even the hardest, is full of pleasure +and materials for self-improvement. He held honest labour to be +the best of teachers, and that the school of toil is the noblest of +schools--save only the Christian one,--that it is a school in which +the ability of being useful is imparted, the spirit of independence +learnt, and the habit of persevering effort acquired. He was even +of opinion that the training of the mechanic,--by the exercise +which it gives to his observant faculties, from his daily dealing +with things actual and practical, and the close experience of life +which he acquires,--better fits him for picking his way along the +journey of life, and is more favourable to his growth as a Man, +emphatically speaking, than the training afforded by any other +condition. + +The array of great names which we have already cursorily cited, of +men springing from the ranks of the industrial classes, who have +achieved distinction in various walks of life--in science, +commerce, literature, and art--shows that at all events the +difficulties interposed by poverty and labour are not +insurmountable. As respects the great contrivances and inventions +which have conferred so much power and wealth upon the nation, it +is unquestionable that for the greater part of them we have been +indebted to men of the humblest rank. Deduct what they have done +in this particular line of action, and it will be found that very +little indeed remains for other men to have accomplished. + +Inventors have set in motion some of the greatest industries of the +world. To them society owes many of its chief necessaries, +comforts, and luxuries; and by their genius and labour daily life +has been rendered in all respects more easy as well as enjoyable. +Our food, our clothing, the furniture of our homes, the glass which +admits the light to our dwellings at the same time that it excludes +the cold, the gas which illuminates our streets, our means of +locomotion by land and by sea, the tools by which our various +articles of necessity and luxury are fabricated, have been the +result of the labour and ingenuity of many men and many minds. +Mankind at large are all the happier for such inventions, and are +every day reaping the benefit of them in an increase of individual +well-being as well as of public enjoyment. + +Though the invention of the working steam-engine--the king of +machines--belongs, comparatively speaking, to our own epoch, the +idea of it was born many centuries ago. Like other contrivances +and discoveries, it was effected step by step--one man transmitting +the result of his labours, at the time apparently useless, to his +successors, who took it up and carried it forward another stage,-- +the prosecution of the inquiry extending over many generations. +Thus the idea promulgated by Hero of Alexandria was never +altogether lost; but, like the grain of wheat hid in the hand of +the Egyptian mummy, it sprouted and again grew vigorously when +brought into the full light of modern science. The steam-engine +was nothing, however, until it emerged from the state of theory, +and was taken in hand by practical mechanics; and what a noble +story of patient, laborious investigation, of difficulties +encountered and overcome by heroic industry, does not that +marvellous machine tell of! It is indeed, in itself, a monument of +the power of self-help in man. Grouped around it we find Savary, +the military engineer; Newcomen, the Dartmouth blacksmith; Cawley, +the glazier; Potter, the engine-boy; Smeaton, the civil engineer; +and, towering above all, the laborious, patient, never-tiring James +Watt, the mathematical-instrument maker. + +Watt was one of the most industrious of men; and the story of his +life proves, what all experience confirms, that it is not the man +of the greatest natural vigour and capacity who achieves the +highest results, but he who employs his powers with the greatest +industry and the most carefully disciplined skill--the skill that +comes by labour, application, and experience. Many men in his time +knew far more than Watt, but none laboured so assiduously as he did +to turn all that he did know to useful practical purposes. He was, +above all things, most persevering in the pursuit of facts. He +cultivated carefully that habit of active attention on which all +the higher working qualities of the mind mainly depend. Indeed, +Mr. Edgeworth entertained the opinion, that the difference of +intellect in men depends more upon the early cultivation of this +HABIT OF ATTENTION, than upon any great disparity between the +powers of one individual and another. + +Even when a boy, Watt found science in his toys. The quadrants +lying about his father's carpenter's shop led him to the study of +optics and astronomy; his ill health induced him to pry into the +secrets of physiology; and his solitary walks through the country +attracted him to the study of botany and history. While carrying +on the business of a mathematical-instrument maker, he received an +order to build an organ; and, though without an ear for music, he +undertook the study of harmonics, and successfully constructed the +instrument. And, in like manner, when the little model of +Newcomen's steam-engine, belonging to the University of Glasgow, +was placed in his hands to repair, he forthwith set himself to +learn all that was then known about heat, evaporation, and +condensation,--at the same time plodding his way in mechanics and +the science of construction,--the results of which he at length +embodied in his condensing steam-engine. + +For ten years he went on contriving and inventing--with little hope +to cheer him, and with few friends to encourage him. He went on, +meanwhile, earning bread for his family by making and selling +quadrants, making and mending fiddles, flutes, and musical +instruments; measuring mason-work, surveying roads, superintending +the construction of canals, or doing anything that turned up, and +offered a prospect of honest gain. At length, Watt found a fit +partner in another eminent leader of industry--Matthew Boulton, of +Birmingham; a skilful, energetic, and far-seeing man, who +vigorously undertook the enterprise of introducing the condensing- +engine into general use as a working power; and the success of both +is now matter of history. {5} + +Many skilful inventors have from time to time added new power to +the steam-engine; and, by numerous modifications, rendered it +capable of being applied to nearly all the purposes of manufacture- +-driving machinery, impelling ships, grinding corn, printing books, +stamping money, hammering, planing, and turning iron; in short, of +performing every description of mechanical labour where power is +required. One of the most useful modifications in the engine was +that devised by Trevithick, and eventually perfected by George +Stephenson and his son, in the form of the railway locomotive, by +which social changes of immense importance have been brought about, +of even greater consequence, considered in their results on human +progress and civilization, than the condensing-engine of Watt. + +One of the first grand results of Watt's invention,--which placed +an almost unlimited power at the command of the producing classes,- +-was the establishment of the cotton-manufacture. The person most +closely identified with the foundation of this great branch of +industry was unquestionably Sir Richard Arkwright, whose practical +energy and sagacity were perhaps even more remarkable than his +mechanical inventiveness. His originality as an inventor has +indeed been called in question, like that of Watt and Stephenson. +Arkwright probably stood in the same relation to the spinning- +machine that Watt did to the steam-engine and Stephenson to the +locomotive. He gathered together the scattered threads of +ingenuity which already existed, and wove them, after his own +design, into a new and original fabric. Though Lewis Paul, of +Birmingham, patented the invention of spinning by rollers thirty +years before Arkwright, the machines constructed by him were so +imperfect in their details, that they could not be profitably +worked, and the invention was practically a failure. Another +obscure mechanic, a reed-maker of Leigh, named Thomas Highs, is +also said to have invented the water-frame and spinning-jenny; but +they, too, proved unsuccessful. + +When the demands of industry are found to press upon the resources +of inventors, the same idea is usually found floating about in many +minds;--such has been the case with the steam-engine, the safety- +lamp, the electric telegraph, and other inventions. Many ingenious +minds are found labouring in the throes of invention, until at +length the master mind, the strong practical man, steps forward, +and straightway delivers them of their idea, applies the principle +successfully, and the thing is done. Then there is a loud outcry +among all the smaller contrivers, who see themselves distanced in +the race; and hence men such as Watt, Stephenson, and Arkwright, +have usually to defend their reputation and their rights as +practical and successful inventors. + +Richard Arkwright, like most of our great mechanicians, sprang from +the ranks. He was born in Preston in 1732. His parents were very +poor, and he was the youngest of thirteen children. He was never +at school: the only education he received he gave to himself; and +to the last he was only able to write with difficulty. When a boy, +he was apprenticed to a barber, and after learning the business, he +set up for himself in Bolton, where he occupied an underground +cellar, over which he put up the sign, "Come to the subterraneous +barber--he shaves for a penny." The other barbers found their +customers leaving them, and reduced their prices to his standard, +when Arkwright, determined to push his trade, announced his +determination to give "A clean shave for a halfpenny." After a few +years he quitted his cellar, and became an itinerant dealer in +hair. At that time wigs were worn, and wig-making formed an +important branch of the barbering business. Arkwright went about +buying hair for the wigs. He was accustomed to attend the hiring +fairs throughout Lancashire resorted to by young women, for the +purpose of securing their long tresses; and it is said that in +negotiations of this sort he was very successful. He also dealt in +a chemical hair dye, which he used adroitly, and thereby secured a +considerable trade. But he does not seem, notwithstanding his +pushing character, to have done more than earn a bare living. + +The fashion of wig-wearing having undergone a change, distress fell +upon the wig-makers; and Arkwright, being of a mechanical turn, was +consequently induced to turn machine inventor or "conjurer," as the +pursuit was then popularly termed. Many attempts were made about +that time to invent a spinning-machine, and our barber determined +to launch his little bark on the sea of invention with the rest. +Like other self-taught men of the same bias, he had already been +devoting his spare time to the invention of a perpetual-motion +machine; and from that the transition to a spinning-machine was +easy. He followed his experiments so assiduously that he neglected +his business, lost the little money he had saved, and was reduced +to great poverty. His wife--for he had by this time married--was +impatient at what she conceived to be a wanton waste of time and +money, and in a moment of sudden wrath she seized upon and +destroyed his models, hoping thus to remove the cause of the family +privations. Arkwright was a stubborn and enthusiastic man, and he +was provoked beyond measure by this conduct of his wife, from whom +he immediately separated. + +In travelling about the country, Arkwright had become acquainted +with a person named Kay, a clockmaker at Warrington, who assisted +him in constructing some of the parts of his perpetual-motion +machinery. It is supposed that he was informed by Kay of the +principle of spinning by rollers; but it is also said that the idea +was first suggested to him by accidentally observing a red-hot +piece of iron become elongated by passing between iron rollers. +However this may be, the idea at once took firm possession of his +mind, and he proceeded to devise the process by which it was to be +accomplished, Kay being able to tell him nothing on this point. +Arkwright now abandoned his business of hair collecting, and +devoted himself to the perfecting of his machine, a model of which, +constructed by Kay under his directions, he set up in the parlour +of the Free Grammar School at Preston. Being a burgess of the +town, he voted at the contested election at which General Burgoyne +was returned; but such was his poverty, and such the tattered state +of his dress, that a number of persons subscribed a sum sufficient +to have him put in a state fit to appear in the poll-room. The +exhibition of his machine in a town where so many workpeople lived +by the exercise of manual labour proved a dangerous experiment; +ominous growlings were heard outside the school-room from time to +time, and Arkwright,--remembering the fate of Kay, who was mobbed +and compelled to fly from Lancashire because of his invention of +the fly-shuttle, and of poor Hargreaves, whose spinning-jenny had +been pulled to pieces only a short time before by a Blackburn mob,- +-wisely determined on packing up his model and removing to a less +dangerous locality. He went accordingly to Nottingham, where he +applied to some of the local bankers for pecuniary assistance; and +the Messrs. Wright consented to advance him a sum of money on +condition of sharing in the profits of the invention. The machine, +however, not being perfected so soon as they had anticipated, the +bankers recommended Arkwright to apply to Messrs. Strutt and Need, +the former of whom was the ingenious inventor and patentee of the +stocking-frame. Mr. Strutt at once appreciated the merits of the +invention, and a partnership was entered into with Arkwright, whose +road to fortune was now clear. The patent was secured in the name +of "Richard Arkwright, of Nottingham, clockmaker," and it is a +circumstance worthy of note, that it was taken out in 1769, the +same year in which Watt secured the patent for his steam-engine. A +cotton-mill was first erected at Nottingham, driven by horses; and +another was shortly after built, on a much larger scale, at +Cromford, in Derbyshire, turned by a water-wheel, from which +circumstance the spinning-machine came to be called the water- +frame. + +Arkwright's labours, however, were, comparatively speaking, only +begun. He had still to perfect all the working details of his +machine. It was in his hands the subject of constant modification +and improvement, until eventually it was rendered practicable and +profitable in an eminent degree. But success was only secured by +long and patient labour: for some years, indeed, the speculation +was disheartening and unprofitable, swallowing up a very large +amount of capital without any result. When success began to appear +more certain, then the Lancashire manufacturers fell upon +Arkwright's patent to pull it in pieces, as the Cornish miners fell +upon Boulton and Watt to rob them of the profits of their steam- +engine. Arkwright was even denounced as the enemy of the working +people; and a mill which he built near Chorley was destroyed by a +mob in the presence of a strong force of police and military. The +Lancashire men refused to buy his materials, though they were +confessedly the best in the market. Then they refused to pay +patent-right for the use of his machines, and combined to crush him +in the courts of law. To the disgust of right-minded people, +Arkwright's patent was upset. After the trial, when passing the +hotel at which his opponents were staying, one of them said, loud +enough to be heard by him, "Well, we've done the old shaver at +last;" to which he coolly replied, "Never mind, I've a razor left +that will shave you all." He established new mills in Lancashire, +Derbyshire, and at New Lanark, in Scotland. The mills at Cromford +also came into his hands at the expiry of his partnership with +Strutt, and the amount and the excellence of his products were +such, that in a short time he obtained so complete a control of the +trade, that the prices were fixed by him, and he governed the main +operations of the other cotton-spinners. + +Arkwright was a man of great force of character, indomitable +courage, much worldly shrewdness, with a business faculty almost +amounting to genius. At one period his time was engrossed by +severe and continuous labour, occasioned by the organising and +conducting of his numerous manufactories, sometimes from four in +the morning till nine at night. At fifty years of age he set to +work to learn English grammar, and improve himself in writing and +orthography. After overcoming every obstacle, he had the +satisfaction of reaping the reward of his enterprise. Eighteen +years after he had constructed his first machine, he rose to such +estimation in Derbyshire that he was appointed High Sheriff of the +county, and shortly after George III. conferred upon him the honour +of knighthood. He died in 1792. Be it for good or for evil, +Arkwright was the founder in England of the modern factory system, +a branch of industry which has unquestionably proved a source of +immense wealth to individuals and to the nation. + +All the other great branches of industry in Britain furnish like +examples of energetic men of business, the source of much benefit +to the neighbourhoods in which they have laboured, and of increased +power and wealth to the community at large. Amongst such might be +cited the Strutts of Belper; the Tennants of Glasgow; the Marshalls +and Gotts of Leeds; the Peels, Ashworths, Birleys, Fieldens, +Ashtons, Heywoods, and Ainsworths of South Lancashire, some of +whose descendants have since become distinguished in connection +with the political history of England. Such pre-eminently were the +Peels of South Lancashire. + +The founder of the Peel family, about the middle of last century, +was a small yeoman, occupying the Hole House Farm, near Blackburn, +from which he afterwards removed to a house situated in Fish Lane +in that town. Robert Peel, as he advanced in life, saw a large +family of sons and daughters growing up about him; but the land +about Blackburn being somewhat barren, it did not appear to him +that agricultural pursuits offered a very encouraging prospect for +their industry. The place had, however, long been the seat of a +domestic manufacture--the fabric called "Blackburn greys," +consisting of linen weft and cotton warp, being chiefly made in +that town and its neighbourhood. It was then customary--previous +to the introduction of the factory system--for industrious yeomen +with families to employ the time not occupied in the fields in +weaving at home; and Robert Peel accordingly began the domestic +trade of calico-making. He was honest, and made an honest article; +thrifty and hardworking, and his trade prospered. He was also +enterprising, and was one of the first to adopt the carding +cylinder, then recently invented. + +But Robert Peel's attention was principally directed to the +PRINTING of calico--then a comparatively unknown art--and for some +time he carried on a series of experiments with the object of +printing by machinery. The experiments were secretly conducted in +his own house, the cloth being ironed for the purpose by one of the +women of the family. It was then customary, in such houses as the +Peels, to use pewter plates at dinner. Having sketched a figure or +pattern on one of the plates, the thought struck him that an +impression might be got from it in reverse, and printed on calico +with colour. In a cottage at the end of the farm-house lived a +woman who kept a calendering machine, and going into her cottage, +he put the plate with colour rubbed into the figured part and some +calico over it, through the machine, when it was found to leave a +satisfactory impression. Such is said to have been the origin of +roller printing on calico. Robert Peel shortly perfected his +process, and the first pattern he brought out was a parsley leaf; +hence he is spoken of in the neighbourhood of Blackburn to this day +as "Parsley Peel." The process of calico printing by what is +called the mule machine--that is, by means of a wooden cylinder in +relief, with an engraved copper cylinder--was afterwards brought to +perfection by one of his sons, the head of the firm of Messrs. Peel +and Co., of Church. Stimulated by his success, Robert Peel shortly +gave up farming, and removing to Brookside, a village about two +miles from Blackburn, he devoted himself exclusively to the +printing business. There, with the aid of his sons, who were as +energetic as himself, he successfully carried on the trade for +several years; and as the young men grew up towards manhood, the +concern branched out into various firms of Peels, each of which +became a centre of industrial activity and a source of remunerative +employment to large numbers of people. + +From what can now be learnt of the character of the original and +untitled Robert Peel, he must have been a remarkable man--shrewd, +sagacious, and far-seeing. But little is known of him excepting +from traditions and the sons of those who knew him are fast passing +away. His son, Sir Robert, thus modestly spoke of him:- "My father +may be truly said to have been the founder of our family; and he so +accurately appreciated the importance of commercial wealth in a +national point of view, that he was often heard to say that the +gains to individuals were small compared with the national gains +arising from trade." + +Sir Robert Peel, the first baronet and the second manufacturer of +the name, inherited all his father's enterprise, ability, and +industry. His position, at starting in life, was little above that +of an ordinary working man; for his father, though laying the +foundations of future prosperity, was still struggling with the +difficulties arising from insufficient capital. When Robert was +only twenty years of age, he determined to begin the business of +cotton-printing, which he had by this time learnt from his father, +on his own account. His uncle, James Haworth, and William Yates of +Blackburn, joined him in his enterprise; the whole capital which +they could raise amongst them amounting to only about 500l., the +principal part of which was supplied by William Yates. The father +of the latter was a householder in Blackburn, where he was well +known and much respected; and having saved money by his business, +he was willing to advance sufficient to give his son a start in the +lucrative trade of cotton-printing, then in its infancy. Robert +Peel, though comparatively a mere youth, supplied the practical +knowledge of the business; but it was said of him, and proved true, +that he "carried an old head on young shoulders." A ruined corn- +mill, with its adjoining fields, was purchased for a comparatively +small sum, near the then insignificant town of Bury, where the +works long after continued to be known as "The Ground;" and a few +wooden sheds having been run up, the firm commenced their cotton- +printing business in a very humble way in the year 1770, adding to +it that of cotton-spinning a few years later. The frugal style in +which the partners lived may be inferred from the following +incident in their early career. William Yates, being a married man +with a family, commenced housekeeping on a small scale, and, to +oblige Peel, who was single, he agreed to take him as a lodger. +The sum which the latter first paid for board and lodging was only +8s. a week; but Yates, considering this too little, insisted on the +weekly payment being increased a shilling, to which Peel at first +demurred, and a difference between the partners took place, which +was eventually compromised by the lodger paying an advance of +sixpence a week. William Yates's eldest child was a girl named +Ellen, and she very soon became an especial favourite with the +young lodger. On returning from his hard day's work at "The +Ground," he would take the little girl upon his knee, and say to +her, "Nelly, thou bonny little dear, wilt be my wife?" to which the +child would readily answer "Yes," as any child would do. "Then +I'll wait for thee, Nelly; I'll wed thee, and none else." And +Robert Peel did wait. As the girl grew in beauty towards +womanhood, his determination to wait for her was strengthened; and +after the lapse of ten years--years of close application to +business and rapidly increasing prosperity--Robert Peel married +Ellen Yates when she had completed her seventeenth year; and the +pretty child, whom her mother's lodger and father's partner had +nursed upon his knee, became Mrs. Peel, and eventually Lady Peel, +the mother of the future Prime Minister of England. Lady Peel was +a noble and beautiful woman, fitted to grace any station in life. +She possessed rare powers of mind, and was, on every emergency, the +high-souled and faithful counsellor of her husband. For many years +after their marriage, she acted as his amanuensis, conducting the +principal part of his business correspondence, for Mr. Peel himself +was an indifferent and almost unintelligible writer. She died in +1803, only three years after the Baronetcy had been conferred upon +her husband. It is said that London fashionable life--so unlike +what she had been accustomed to at home--proved injurious to her +health; and old Mr. Yates afterwards used to say, "if Robert hadn't +made our Nelly a 'Lady,' she might ha' been living yet." + +The career of Yates, Peel, & Co., was throughout one of great and +uninterrupted prosperity. Sir Robert Peel himself was the soul of +the firm; to great energy and application uniting much practical +sagacity, and first-rate mercantile abilities--qualities in which +many of the early cotton-spinners were exceedingly deficient. He +was a man of iron mind and frame, and toiled unceasingly. In +short, he was to cotton printing what Arkwright was to cotton- +spinning, and his success was equally great. The excellence of the +articles produced by the firm secured the command of the market, +and the character of the firm stood pre-eminent in Lancashire. +Besides greatly benefiting Bury, the partnership planted similar +extensive works in the neighbourhood, on the Irwell and the Roch; +and it was cited to their honour, that, while they sought to raise +to the highest perfection the quality of their manufactures, they +also endeavoured, in all ways, to promote the well-being and +comfort of their workpeople; for whom they contrived to provide +remunerative employment even in the least prosperous times. + +Sir Robert Peel readily appreciated the value of all new processes +and inventions; in illustration of which we may allude to his +adoption of the process for producing what is called RESIST WORK in +calico printing. This is accomplished by the use of a paste, or +resist, on such parts of the cloth as were intended to remain +white. The person who discovered the paste was a traveller for a +London house, who sold it to Mr. Peel for an inconsiderable sum. +It required the experience of a year or two to perfect the system +and make it practically useful; but the beauty of its effect, and +the extreme precision of outline in the pattern produced, at once +placed the Bury establishment at the head of all the factories for +calico printing in the country. Other firms, conducted with like +spirit, were established by members of the same family at Burnley, +Foxhill bank, and Altham, in Lancashire; Salley Abbey, in +Yorkshire; and afterwards at Burton-on-Trent, in Staffordshire; +these various establishments, whilst they brought wealth to their +proprietors, setting an example to the whole cotton trade, and +training up many of the most successful printers and manufacturers +in Lancashire. + +Among other distinguished founders of industry, the Rev. William +Lee, inventor of the Stocking Frame, and John Heathcoat, inventor +of the Bobbin-net Machine, are worthy of notice, as men of great +mechanical skill and perseverance, through whose labours a vast +amount of remunerative employment has been provided for the +labouring population of Nottingham and the adjacent districts. The +accounts which have been preserved of the circumstances connected +with the invention of the Stocking Frame are very confused, and in +many respects contradictory, though there is no doubt as to the +name of the inventor. This was William Lee, born at Woodborough, a +village some seven miles from Nottingham, about the year 1563. +According to some accounts, he was the heir to a small freehold, +while according to others he was a poor scholar, {6} and had to +struggle with poverty from his earliest years. He entered as a +sizar at Christ College, Cambridge, in May, 1579, and subsequently +removed to St. John's, taking his degree of B.A. in 1582-3. It is +believed that he commenced M.A. in 1586; but on this point there +appears to be some confusion in the records of the University. The +statement usually made that he was expelled for marrying contrary +to the statutes, is incorrect, as he was never a Fellow of the +University, and therefore could not be prejudiced by taking such a +step. + +At the time when Lee invented the Stocking Frame he was officiating +as curate of Calverton, near Nottingham; and it is alleged by some +writers that the invention had its origin in disappointed +affection. The curate is said to have fallen deeply in love with a +young lady of the village, who failed to reciprocate his +affections; and when he visited her, she was accustomed to pay much +more attention to the process of knitting stockings and instructing +her pupils in the art, than to the addresses of her admirer. This +slight is said to have created in his mind such an aversion to +knitting by hand, that he formed the determination to invent a +machine that should supersede it and render it a gainless +employment. For three years he devoted himself to the prosecution +of the invention, sacrificing everything to his new idea. At the +prospect of success opened before him, he abandoned his curacy, and +devoted himself to the art of stocking making by machinery. This +is the version of the story given by Henson {7} on the authority of +an old stocking-maker, who died in Collins's Hospital, Nottingham, +aged ninety-two, and was apprenticed in the town during the reign +of Queen Anne. It is also given by Deering and Blackner as the +traditional account in the neighbourhood, and it is in some measure +borne out by the arms of the London Company of Frame-Work Knitters, +which consists of a stocking frame without the wood-work, with a +clergyman on one side and a woman on the other as supporters. {8} + +Whatever may have been the actual facts as to the origin of the +invention of the Stocking Loom, there can be no doubt as to the +extraordinary mechanical genius displayed by its inventor. That a +clergyman living in a remote village, whose life had for the most +part been spent with books, should contrive a machine of such +delicate and complicated movements, and at once advance the art of +knitting from the tedious process of linking threads in a chain of +loops by three skewers in the fingers of a woman, to the beautiful +and rapid process of weaving by the stocking frame, was indeed an +astonishing achievement, which may be pronounced almost unequalled +in the history of mechanical invention. Lee's merit was all the +greater, as the handicraft arts were then in their infancy, and +little attention had as yet been given to the contrivance of +machinery for the purposes of manufacture. He was under the +necessity of extemporising the parts of his machine as he best +could, and adopting various expedients to overcome difficulties as +they arose. His tools were imperfect, and his materials imperfect; +and he had no skilled workmen to assist him. According to +tradition, the first frame he made was a twelve gauge, without lead +sinkers, and it was almost wholly of wood; the needles being also +stuck in bits of wood. One of Lee's principal difficulties +consisted in the formation of the stitch, for want of needle eyes; +but this he eventually overcame by forming eyes to the needles with +a three-square file. {9} At length, one difficulty after another +was successfully overcome, and after three years' labour the +machine was sufficiently complete to be fit for use. The quondam +curate, full of enthusiasm for his art, now began stocking weaving +in the village of Calverton, and he continued to work there for +several years, instructing his brother James and several of his +relations in the practice of the art. + +Having brought his frame to a considerable degree of perfection, +and being desirous of securing the patronage of Queen Elizabeth, +whose partiality for knitted silk stockings was well known, Lee +proceeded to London to exhibit the loom before her Majesty. He +first showed it to several members of the court, among others to +Sir William (afterwards Lord) Hunsdon, whom he taught to work it +with success; and Lee was, through their instrumentality, at length +admitted to an interview with the Queen, and worked the machine in +her presence. Elizabeth, however, did not give him the +encouragement that he had expected; and she is said to have opposed +the invention on the ground that it was calculated to deprive a +large number of poor people of their employment of hand knitting. +Lee was no more successful in finding other patrons, and +considering himself and his invention treated with contempt, he +embraced the offer made to him by Sully, the sagacious minister of +Henry IV., to proceed to Rouen and instruct the operatives of that +town--then one of the most important manufacturing centres of +France--in the construction and use of the stocking-frame. Lee +accordingly transferred himself and his machines to France, in +1605, taking with him his brother and seven workmen. He met with a +cordial reception at Rouen, and was proceeding with the manufacture +of stockings on a large scale--having nine of his frames in full +work,--when unhappily ill fortune again overtook him. Henry IV., +his protector, on whom he had relied for the rewards, honours, and +promised grant of privileges, which had induced Lee to settle in +France, was murdered by the fanatic Ravaillac; and the +encouragement and protection which had heretofore been extended to +him were at once withdrawn. To press his claims at court, Lee +proceeded to Paris; but being a protestant as well as a foreigner, +his representations were treated with neglect; and worn out with +vexation and grief, this distinguished inventor shortly after died +at Paris, in a state of extreme poverty and distress. + +Lee's brother, with seven of the workmen, succeeded in escaping +from France with their frames, leaving two behind. On James Lee's +return to Nottinghamshire, he was joined by one Ashton, a miller of +Thoroton, who had been instructed in the art of frame-work knitting +by the inventor himself before he left England. These two, with +the workmen and their frames, began the stocking manufacture at +Thoroton, and carried it on with considerable success. The place +was favourably situated for the purpose, as the sheep pastured in +the neighbouring district of Sherwood yielded a kind of wool of the +longest staple. Ashton is said to have introduced the method of +making the frames with lead sinkers, which was a great improvement. +The number of looms employed in different parts of England +gradually increased; and the machine manufacture of stockings +eventually became an important branch of the national industry. + +One of the most important modifications in the Stocking-Frame was +that which enabled it to be applied to the manufacture of lace on a +large scale. In 1777, two workmen, Frost and Holmes, were both +engaged in making point-net by means of the modifications they had +introduced in the stocking-frame; and in the course of about thirty +years, so rapid was the growth of this branch of production that +1500 point-net frames were at work, giving employment to upwards of +15,000 people. Owing, however, to the war, to change of fashion, +and to other circumstances, the Nottingham lace manufacture rapidly +fell off; and it continued in a decaying state until the invention +of the Bobbin-net Machine by John Heathcoat, late M.P. for +Tiverton, which had the effect of at once re-establishing the +manufacture on solid foundations. + +John Heathcoat was the youngest son of a respectable small farmer +at Duffield, Derbyshire, where he was born in 1783. When at school +he made steady and rapid progress, but was early removed from it to +be apprenticed to a frame-smith near Loughborough. The boy soon +learnt to handle tools with dexterity, and he acquired a minute +knowledge of the parts of which the stocking-frame was composed, as +well as of the more intricate warp-machine. At his leisure he +studied how to introduce improvements in them, and his friend, Mr. +Bazley, M.P., states that as early as the age of sixteen, he +conceived the idea of inventing a machine by which lace might be +made similar to Buckingham or French lace, then all made by hand. +The first practical improvement he succeeded in introducing was in +the warp-frame, when, by means of an ingenious apparatus, he +succeeded in producing "mitts" of a lacy appearance, and it was +this success which determined him to pursue the study of mechanical +lace-making. The stocking-frame had already, in a modified form, +been applied to the manufacture of point-net lace, in which the +mesh was LOOPED as in a stocking, but the work was slight and +frail, and therefore unsatisfactory. Many ingenious Nottingham +mechanics had, during a long succession of years, been labouring at +the problem of inventing a machine by which the mesh of threads +should be TWISTED round each other on the formation of the net. +Some of these men died in poverty, some were driven insane, and all +alike failed in the object of their search. The old warp-machine +held its ground. + +When a little over twenty-one years of age, Heathcoat went to +Nottingham, where he readily found employment, for which he soon +received the highest remuneration, as a setter-up of hosiery and +warp-frames, and was much respected for his talent for invention, +general intelligence, and the sound and sober principles that +governed his conduct. He also continued to pursue the subject on +which his mind had before been occupied, and laboured to compass +the contrivance of a twist traverse-net machine. He first studied +the art of making the Buckingham or pillow-lace by hand, with the +object of effecting the same motions by mechanical means. It was a +long and laborious task, requiring the exercise of great +perseverance and ingenuity. His master, Elliot, described him at +that time as inventive, patient, self-denying, and taciturn, +undaunted by failures and mistakes, full of resources and +expedients, and entertaining the most perfect confidence that his +application of mechanical principles would eventually be crowned +with success. + +It is difficult to describe in words an invention so complicated as +the bobbin-net machine. It was, indeed, a mechanical pillow for +making lace, imitating in an ingenious manner the motions of the +lace-maker's fingers in intersecting or tying the meshes of the +lace upon her pillow. On analysing the component parts of a piece +of hand-made lace, Heathcoat was enabled to classify the threads +into longitudinal and diagonal. He began his experiments by fixing +common pack-threads lengthwise on a sort of frame for the warp, and +then passing the weft threads between them by common plyers, +delivering them to other plyers on the opposite side; then, after +giving them a sideways motion and twist, the threads were repassed +back between the next adjoining cords, the meshes being thus tied +in the same way as upon pillows by hand. He had then to contrive a +mechanism that should accomplish all these nice and delicate +movements, and to do this cost him no small amount of mental toil. +Long after he said, "The single difficulty of getting the diagonal +threads to twist in the allotted space was so great that if it had +now to be done, I should probably not attempt its accomplishment." +His next step was to provide thin metallic discs, to be used as +bobbins for conducting the threads backwards and forwards through +the warp. These discs, being arranged in carrier-frames placed on +each side of the warp, were moved by suitable machinery so as to +conduct the threads from side to side in forming the lace. He +eventually succeeded in working out his principle with +extraordinary skill and success; and, at the age of twenty-four, he +was enabled to secure his invention by a patent. + +During this time his wife was kept in almost as great anxiety as +himself, for she well knew of his trials and difficulties while he +was striving to perfect his invention. Many years after they had +been successfully overcome, the conversation which took place one +eventful evening was vividly remembered. "Well," said the anxious +wife, "will it work?" "No," was the sad answer; "I have had to +take it all to pieces again." Though he could still speak +hopefully and cheerfully, his poor wife could restrain her feelings +no longer, but sat down and cried bitterly. She had, however, only +a few more weeks to wait, for success long laboured for and richly +deserved, came at last, and a proud and happy man was John +Heathcoat when he brought home the first narrow strip of bobbin-net +made by his machine, and placed it in the hands of his wife. + +As in the case of nearly all inventions which have proved +productive, Heathcoat's rights as a patentee were disputed, and his +claims as an inventor called in question. On the supposed +invalidity of the patent, the lace-makers boldly adopted the +bobbin-net machine, and set the inventor at defiance. But other +patents were taken out for alleged improvements and adaptations; +and it was only when these new patentees fell out and went to law +with each other that Heathcoat's rights became established. One +lace-manufacturer having brought an action against another for an +alleged infringement of his patent, the jury brought in a verdict +for the defendant, in which the judge concurred, on the ground that +BOTH the machines in question were infringements of Heathcoat's +patent. It was on the occasion of this trial, "Boville v. Moore," +that Sir John Copley (afterwards Lord Lyndhurst), who was retained +for the defence in the interest of Mr. Heathcoat, learnt to work +the bobbin-net machine in order that he might master the details of +the invention. On reading over his brief, he confessed that he did +not quite understand the merits of the case; but as it seemed to +him to be one of great importance, he offered to go down into the +country forthwith and study the machine until he understood it; +"and then," said he, "I will defend you to the best of my ability." +He accordingly put himself into that night's mail, and went down to +Nottingham to get up his case as perhaps counsel never got it up +before. Next morning the learned sergeant placed himself in a +lace-loom, and he did not leave it until he could deftly make a +piece of bobbin-net with his own hands, and thoroughly understood +the principle as well as the details of the machine. When the case +came on for trial, the learned sergeant was enabled to work the +model on the table with such case and skill, and to explain the +precise nature of the invention with such felicitous clearness, as +to astonish alike judge, jury, and spectators; and the thorough +conscientiousness and mastery with which he handled the case had no +doubt its influence upon the decision of the court. + +After the trial was over, Mr. Heathcoat, on inquiry, found about +six hundred machines at work after his patent, and he proceeded to +levy royalty upon the owners of them, which amounted to a large +sum. But the profits realised by the manufacturers of lace were +very great, and the use of the machines rapidly extended; while the +price of the article was reduced from five pounds the square yard +to about five pence in the course of twenty-five years. During the +same period the average annual returns of the lace-trade have been +at least four millions sterling, and it gives remunerative +employment to about 150,000 workpeople. + +To return to the personal history of Mr. Heathcoat. In 1809 we +find him established as a lace-manufacturer at Loughborough, in +Leicestershire. There he carried on a prosperous business for +several years, giving employment to a large number of operatives, +at wages varying from 5l. to 10l. a week. Notwithstanding the +great increase in the number of hands employed in lace-making +through the introduction of the new machines, it began to be +whispered about among the workpeople that they were superseding +labour, and an extensive conspiracy was formed for the purpose of +destroying them wherever found. As early as the year 1811 disputes +arose between the masters and men engaged in the stocking and lace +trades in the south-western parts of Nottinghamshire and the +adjacent parts of Derbyshire and Leicestershire, the result of +which was the assembly of a mob at Sutton, in Ashfield, who +proceeded in open day to break the stocking and lace-frames of the +manufacturers. Some of the ringleaders having been seized and +punished, the disaffected learnt caution; but the destruction of +the machines was nevertheless carried on secretly wherever a safe +opportunity presented itself. As the machines were of so delicate +a construction that a single blow of a hammer rendered them +useless, and as the manufacture was carried on for the most part in +detached buildings, often in private dwellings remote from towns, +the opportunities of destroying them were unusually easy. In the +neighbourhood of Nottingham, which was the focus of turbulence, the +machine-breakers organized themselves in regular bodies, and held +nocturnal meetings at which their plans were arranged. Probably +with the view of inspiring confidence, they gave out that they were +under the command of a leader named Ned Ludd, or General Ludd, and +hence their designation of Luddites. Under this organization +machine-breaking was carried on with great vigour during the winter +of 1811, occasioning great distress, and throwing large numbers of +workpeople out of employment. Meanwhile, the owners of the frames +proceeded to remove them from the villages and lone dwellings in +the country, and brought them into warehouses in the towns for +their better protection. + +The Luddites seem to have been encouraged by the lenity of the +sentences pronounced on such of their confederates as had been +apprehended and tried; and, shortly after, the mania broke out +afresh, and rapidly extended over the northern and midland +manufacturing districts. The organization became more secret; an +oath was administered to the members binding them to obedience to +the orders issued by the heads of the confederacy; and the betrayal +of their designs was decreed to be death. All machines were doomed +by them to destruction, whether employed in the manufacture of +cloth, calico, or lace; and a reign of terror began which lasted +for years. In Yorkshire and Lancashire mills were boldly attacked +by armed rioters, and in many cases they were wrecked or burnt; so +that it became necessary to guard them by soldiers and yeomanry. +The masters themselves were doomed to death; many of them were +assaulted, and some were murdered. At length the law was +vigorously set in motion; numbers of the misguided Luddites were +apprehended; some were executed; and after several years' violent +commotion from this cause, the machine-breaking riots were at +length quelled. + +Among the numerous manufacturers whose works were attacked by the +Luddites, was the inventor of the bobbin-net machine himself. One +bright sunny day, in the summer of 1816, a body of rioters entered +his factory at Loughborough with torches, and set fire to it, +destroying thirty-seven lace-machines, and above 10,000l. worth of +property. Ten of the men were apprehended for the felony, and +eight of them were executed. Mr. Heathcoat made a claim upon the +county for compensation, and it was resisted; but the Court of +Queen's Bench decided in his favour, and decreed that the county +must make good his loss of 10,000l. The magistrates sought to +couple with the payment of the damage the condition that Mr. +Heathcoat should expend the money in the county of Leicester; but +to this he would not assent, having already resolved on removing +his manufacture elsewhere. At Tiverton, in Devonshire, he found a +large building which had been formerly used as a woollen +manufactory; but the Tiverton cloth trade having fallen into decay, +the building remained unoccupied, and the town itself was generally +in a very poverty-stricken condition. Mr. Heathcoat bought the old +mill, renovated and enlarged it, and there recommenced the +manufacture of lace upon a larger scale than before; keeping in +full work as many as three hundred machines, and employing a large +number of artisans at good wages. Not only did he carry on the +manufacture of lace, but the various branches of business connected +with it--yarn-doubling, silk-spinning, net-making, and finishing. +He also established at Tiverton an iron-foundry and works for the +manufacture of agricultural implements, which proved of great +convenience to the district. It was a favourite idea of his that +steam power was capable of being applied to perform all the heavy +drudgery of life, and he laboured for a long time at the invention +of a steam-plough. In 1832 he so far completed his invention as to +be enabled to take out a patent for it; and Heathcoat's steam- +plough, though it has since been superseded by Fowler's, was +considered the best machine of the kind that had up to that time +been invented. + +Mr. Heathcoat was a man of great natural gifts. He possessed a +sound understanding, quick perception, and a genius for business of +the highest order. With these he combined uprightness, honesty, +and integrity--qualities which are the true glory of human +character. Himself a diligent self-educator, he gave ready +encouragement to deserving youths in his employment, stimulating +their talents and fostering their energies. During his own busy +life, he contrived to save time to master French and Italian, of +which he acquired an accurate and grammatical knowledge. His mind +was largely stored with the results of a careful study of the best +literature, and there were few subjects on which he had not formed +for himself shrewd and accurate views. The two thousand workpeople +in his employment regarded him almost as a father, and he carefully +provided for their comfort and improvement. Prosperity did not +spoil him, as it does so many; nor close his heart against the +claims of the poor and struggling, who were always sure of his +sympathy and help. To provide for the education of the children of +his workpeople, he built schools for them at a cost of about 6000l. +He was also a man of singularly cheerful and buoyant disposition, a +favourite with men of all classes and most admired and beloved by +those who knew him best. + +In 1831 the electors of Tiverton, of which town Mr. Heathcoat had +proved himself so genuine a benefactor, returned him to represent +them in Parliament, and he continued their member for nearly thirty +years. During a great part of that time he had Lord Palmerston for +his colleague, and the noble lord, on more than one public +occasion, expressed the high regard which he entertained for his +venerable friend. On retiring from the representation in 1859, +owing to advancing age and increasing infirmities, thirteen hundred +of his workmen presented him with a silver inkstand and gold pen, +in token of their esteem. He enjoyed his leisure for only two more +years, dying in January, 1861, at the age of seventy-seven, and +leaving behind him a character for probity, virtue, manliness, and +mechanical genius, of which his descendants may well be proud. + +We next turn to a career of a very different kind, that of the +illustrious but unfortunate Jacquard, whose life also illustrates +in a remarkable manner the influence which ingenious men, even of +the humblest rank, may exercise upon the industry of a nation. +Jacquard was the son of a hard-working couple of Lyons, his father +being a weaver, and his mother a pattern reader. They were too +poor to give him any but the most meagre education. When he was of +age to learn a trade, his father placed him with a book-binder. An +old clerk, who made up the master's accounts, gave Jacquard some +lessons in mathematics. He very shortly began to display a +remarkable turn for mechanics, and some of his contrivances quite +astonished the old clerk, who advised Jacquard's father to put him +to some other trade, in which his peculiar abilities might have +better scope than in bookbinding. He was accordingly put +apprentice to a cutler; but was so badly treated by his master, +that he shortly afterwards left his employment, on which he was +placed with a type-founder. + +His parents dying, Jacquard found himself in a measure compelled to +take to his father's two looms, and carry on the trade of a weaver. +He immediately proceeded to improve the looms, and became so +engrossed with his inventions that he forgot his work, and very +soon found himself at the end of his means. He then sold the looms +to pay his debts, at the same time that he took upon himself the +burden of supporting a wife. He became still poorer, and to +satisfy his creditors, he next sold his cottage. He tried to find +employment, but in vain, people believing him to be an idler, +occupied with mere dreams about his inventions. At length he +obtained employment with a line-maker of Bresse, whither he went, +his wife remaining at Lyons, earning a precarious living by making +straw bonnets. + +We hear nothing further of Jacquard for some years, but in the +interval he seems to have prosecuted his improvement in the +drawloom for the better manufacture of figured fabrics; for, in +1790, he brought out his contrivance for selecting the warp +threads, which, when added to the loom, superseded the services of +a draw-boy. The adoption of this machine was slow but steady, and +in ten years after its introduction, 4000 of them were found at +work in Lyons. Jacquard's pursuits were rudely interrupted by the +Revolution, and, in 1792, we find him fighting in the ranks of the +Lyonnaise Volunteers against the Army of the Convention under the +command of Dubois Crance. The city was taken; Jacquard fled and +joined the Army of the Rhine, where he rose to the rank of +sergeant. He might have remained a soldier, but that, his only son +having been shot dead at his side, he deserted and returned to +Lyons to recover his wife. He found her in a garret still employed +at her old trade of straw-bonnet making. While living in +concealment with her, his mind reverted to the inventions over +which he had so long brooded in former years; but he had no means +wherewith to prosecute them. Jacquard found it necessary, however, +to emerge from his hiding-place and try to find some employment. +He succeeded in obtaining it with an intelligent manufacturer, and +while working by day he went on inventing by night. It had +occurred to him that great improvements might still be introduced +in looms for figured goods, and he incidentally mentioned the +subject one day to his master, regretting at the same time that his +limited means prevented him from carrying out his ideas. Happily +his master appreciated the value of the suggestions, and with +laudable generosity placed a sum of money at his disposal, that he +might prosecute the proposed improvements at his leisure. + +In three months Jacquard had invented a loom to substitute +mechanical action for the irksome and toilsome labour of the +workman. The loom was exhibited at the Exposition of National +Industry at Paris in 1801, and obtained a bronze medal. Jacquard +was further honoured by a visit at Lyons from the Minister Carnot, +who desired to congratulate him in person on the success of his +invention. In the following year the Society of Arts in London +offered a prize for the invention of a machine for manufacturing +fishing-nets and boarding-netting for ships. Jacquard heard of +this, and while walking one day in the fields according to his +custom, he turned the subject over in his mind, and contrived the +plan of a machine for the purpose. His friend, the manufacturer, +again furnished him with the means of carrying out his idea, and in +three weeks Jacquard had completed his invention. + +Jacquard's achievement having come to the knowledge of the Prefect +of the Department, he was summoned before that functionary, and, on +his explanation of the working of the machine, a report on the +subject was forwarded to the Emperor. The inventor was forthwith +summoned to Paris with his machine, and brought into the presence +of the Emperor, who received him with the consideration due to his +genius. The interview lasted two hours, during which Jacquard, +placed at his ease by the Emperor's affability, explained to him +the improvements which he proposed to make in the looms for weaving +figured goods. The result was, that he was provided with +apartments in the Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers, where he had +the use of the workshop during his stay, and was provided with a +suitable allowance for his maintenance. + +Installed in the Conservatoire, Jacquard proceeded to complete the +details of his improved loom. He had the advantage of minutely +inspecting the various exquisite pieces of mechanism contained in +that great treasury of human ingenuity. Among the machines which +more particularly attracted his attention, and eventually set him +upon the track of his discovery, was a loom for weaving flowered +silk, made by Vaucanson the celebrated automaton-maker. + +Vaucanson was a man of the highest order of constructive genius. +The inventive faculty was so strong in him that it may almost be +said to have amounted to a passion, and could not be restrained. +The saying that the poet is born, not made, applies with equal +force to the inventor, who, though indebted, like the other, to +culture and improved opportunities, nevertheless contrives and +constructs new combinations of machinery mainly to gratify his own +instinct. This was peculiarly the case with Vaucanson; for his +most elaborate works were not so much distinguished for their +utility as for the curious ingenuity which they displayed. While a +mere boy attending Sunday conversations with his mother, he amused +himself by watching, through the chinks of a partition wall, part +of the movements of a clock in the adjoining apartment. He +endeavoured to understand them, and by brooding over the subject, +after several months he discovered the principle of the escapement. + +From that time the subject of mechanical invention took complete +possession of him. With some rude tools which he contrived, he +made a wooden clock that marked the hours with remarkable +exactness; while he made for a miniature chapel the figures of some +angels which waved their wings, and some priests that made several +ecclesiastical movements. With the view of executing some other +automata he had designed, he proceeded to study anatomy, music, and +mechanics, which occupied him for several years. The sight of the +Flute-player in the Gardens of the Tuileries inspired him with the +resolution to invent a similar figure that should PLAY; and after +several years' study and labour, though struggling with illness, he +succeeded in accomplishing his object. He next produced a +Flageolet-player, which was succeeded by a Duck--the most ingenious +of his contrivances,--which swam, dabbled, drank, and quacked like +a real duck. He next invented an asp, employed in the tragedy of +'Cleopatre,' which hissed and darted at the bosom of the actress. + +Vaucanson, however, did not confine himself merely to the making of +automata. By reason of his ingenuity, Cardinal de Fleury appointed +him inspector of the silk manufactories of France; and he was no +sooner in office, than with his usual irrepressible instinct to +invent, he proceeded to introduce improvements in silk machinery. +One of these was his mill for thrown silk, which so excited the +anger of the Lyons operatives, who feared the loss of employment +through its means, that they pelted him with stones and had nearly +killed him. He nevertheless went on inventing, and next produced a +machine for weaving flowered silks, with a contrivance for giving a +dressing to the thread, so as to render that of each bobbin or +skein of an equal thickness. + +When Vaucanson died in 1782, after a long illness, he bequeathed +his collection of machines to the Queen, who seems to have set but +small value on them, and they were shortly after dispersed. But +his machine for weaving flowered silks was happily preserved in the +Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers, and there Jacquard found it +among the many curious and interesting articles in the collection. +It proved of the utmost value to him, for it immediately set him on +the track of the principal modification which he introduced in his +improved loom. + +One of the chief features of Vaucanson's machine was a pierced +cylinder which, according to the holes it presented when revolved, +regulated the movement of certain needles, and caused the threads +of the warp to deviate in such a manner as to produce a given +design, though only of a simple character. Jacquard seized upon +the suggestion with avidity, and, with the genius of the true +inventor, at once proceeded to improve upon it. At the end of a +month his weaving-machine was completed. To the cylinder of +Vancanson, he added an endless piece of pasteboard pierced with a +number of holes, through which the threads of the warp were +presented to the weaver; while another piece of mechanism indicated +to the workman the colour of the shuttle which he ought to throw. +Thus the drawboy and the reader of designs were both at once +superseded. The first use Jacquard made of his new loom was to +weave with it several yards of rich stuff which he presented to the +Empress Josephine. Napoleon was highly gratified with the result +of the inventor's labours, and ordered a number of the looms to be +constructed by the best workmen, after Jacquard's model, and +presented to him; after which he returned to Lyons. + +There he experienced the frequent fate of inventors. He was +regarded by his townsmen as an enemy, and treated by them as Kay, +Hargreaves, and Arkwright had been in Lancashire. The workmen +looked upon the new loom as fatal to their trade, and feared lest +it should at once take the bread from their mouths. A tumultuous +meeting was held on the Place des Terreaux, when it was determined +to destroy the machines. This was however prevented by the +military. But Jacquard was denounced and hanged in effigy. The +'Conseil des prud'hommes' in vain endeavoured to allay the +excitement, and they were themselves denounced. At length, carried +away by the popular impulse, the prud'hommes, most of whom had been +workmen and sympathized with the class, had one of Jacquard's looms +carried off and publicly broken in pieces. Riots followed, in one +of which Jacquard was dragged along the quay by an infuriated mob +intending to drown him, but he was rescued. + +The great value of the Jacquard loom, however, could not be denied, +and its success was only a question of time. Jacquard was urged by +some English silk manufacturers to pass over into England and +settle there. But notwithstanding the harsh and cruel treatment he +had received at the hands of his townspeople, his patriotism was +too strong to permit him to accept their offer. The English +manufacturers, however, adopted his loom. Then it was, and only +then, that Lyons, threatened to be beaten out of the field, adopted +it with eagerness; and before long the Jacquard machine was +employed in nearly all kinds of weaving. The result proved that +the fears of the workpeople had been entirely unfounded. Instead +of diminishing employment, the Jacquard loom increased it at least +tenfold. The number of persons occupied in the manufacture of +figured goods in Lyons, was stated by M. Leon Faucher to have been +60,000 in 1833; and that number has since been considerably +increased. + +As for Jacquard himself, the rest of his life passed peacefully, +excepting that the workpeople who dragged him along the quay to +drown him were shortly after found eager to bear him in triumph +along the same route in celebration of his birthday. But his +modesty would not permit him to take part in such a demonstration. +The Municipal Council of Lyons proposed to him that he should +devote himself to improving his machine for the benefit of the +local industry, to which Jacquard agreed in consideration of a +moderate pension, the amount of which was fixed by himself. After +perfecting his invention accordingly, he retired at sixty to end +his days at Oullins, his father's native place. It was there that +he received, in 1820, the decoration of the Legion of Honour; and +it was there that he died and was buried in 1834. A statue was +erected to his memory, but his relatives remained in poverty; and +twenty years after his death, his two nieces were under the +necessity of selling for a few hundred francs the gold medal +bestowed upon their uncle by Louis XVIII. "Such," says a French +writer, "was the gratitude of the manufacturing interests of Lyons +to the man to whom it owes so large a portion of its splendour." + +It would be easy to extend the martyrology of inventors, and to +cite the names of other equally distinguished men who have, without +any corresponding advantage to themselves, contributed to the +industrial progress of the age,--for it has too often happened that +genius has planted the tree, of which patient dulness has gathered +the fruit; but we will confine ourselves for the present to a brief +account of an inventor of comparatively recent date, by way of +illustration of the difficulties and privations which it is so +frequently the lot of mechanical genius to surmount. We allude to +Joshua Heilmann, the inventor of the Combing Machine. + +Heilmann was born in 1796 at Mulhouse, the principal seat of the +Alsace cotton manufacture. His father was engaged in that +business; and Joshua entered his office at fifteen. He remained +there for two years, employing his spare time in mechanical +drawing. He afterwards spent two years in his uncle's banking- +house in Paris, prosecuting the study of mathematics in the +evenings. Some of his relatives having established a small cotton- +spinning factory at Mulhouse, young Heilmann was placed with +Messrs. Tissot and Rey, at Paris, to learn the practice of that +firm. At the same time he became a student at the Conservatoire +des Arts et Metiers, where he attended the lectures, and studied +the machines in the museum. He also took practical lessons in +turning from a toymaker. After some time, thus diligently +occupied, he returned to Alsace, to superintend the construction of +the machinery for the new factory at Vieux-Thann, which was shortly +finished and set to work. The operations of the manufactory were, +however, seriously affected by a commercial crisis which occurred, +and it passed into other hands, on which Heilmann returned to his +family at Mulhouse. + +He had in the mean time been occupying much of his leisure with +inventions, more particularly in connection with the weaving of +cotton and the preparation of the staple for spinning. One of his +earliest contrivances was an embroidering-machine, in which twenty +needles were employed, working simultaneously; and he succeeded in +accomplishing his object after about six months' labour. For this +invention, which he exhibited at the Exposition of 1834, he +received a gold medal, and was decorated with the Legion of Honour. +Other inventions quickly followed--an improved loom, a machine for +measuring and folding fabrics, an improvement of the "bobbin and +fly frames" of the English spinners, and a weft winding-machine, +with various improvements in the machinery for preparing, spinning, +and weaving silk and cotton. One of his most ingenious +contrivances was his loom for weaving simultaneously two pieces of +velvet or other piled fabric, united by the pile common to both, +with a knife and traversing apparatus for separating the two +fabrics when woven. But by far the most beautiful and ingenious of +his inventions was the combing-machine, the history of which we now +proceed shortly to describe. + +Heilmann had for some years been diligently studying the +contrivance of a machine for combing long-stapled cotton, the +ordinary carding-machine being found ineffective in preparing the +raw material for spinning, especially the finer sorts of yarn, +besides causing considerable waste. To avoid these imperfections, +the cotton-spinners of Alsace offered a prize of 5000 francs for an +improved combing-machine, and Heilmann immediately proceeded to +compete for the reward. He was not stimulated by the desire of +gain, for he was comparatively rich, having acquired a considerable +fortune by his wife. It was a saying of his that "one will never +accomplish great things who is constantly asking himself, how much +gain will this bring me?" What mainly impelled him was the +irrepressible instinct of the inventor, who no sooner has a +mechanical problem set before him than he feels impelled to +undertake its solution. The problem in this case was, however, +much more difficult than he had anticipated. The close study of +the subject occupied him for several years, and the expenses in +which he became involved in connection with it were so great, that +his wife's fortune was shortly swallowed up, and he was reduced to +poverty, without being able to bring his machine to perfection. +From that time he was under the necessity of relying mainly on the +help of his friends to enable him to prosecute the invention. + +While still struggling with poverty and difficulties, Heilmann's +wife died, believing her husband ruined; and shortly after he +proceeded to England and settled for a time at Manchester, still +labouring at his machine. He had a model made for him by the +eminent machine-makers, Sharpe, Roberts, and Company; but still he +could not make it work satisfactorily, and he was at length brought +almost to the verge of despair. He returned to France to visit his +family, still pursuing his idea, which had obtained complete +possession of his mind. While sitting by his hearth one evening, +meditating upon the hard fate of inventors and the misfortunes in +which their families so often become involved, he found himself +almost unconsciously watching his daughters coming their long hair +and drawing it out at full length between their fingers. The +thought suddenly struck him that if he could successfully imitate +in a machine the process of combing out the longest hair and +forcing back the short by reversing the action of the comb, it +might serve to extricate him from his difficulty. It may be +remembered that this incident in the life of Heilmann has been made +the subject of a beautiful picture by Mr. Elmore, R.A., which was +exhibited at the Royal Academy Exhibition of 1862. + +Upon this idea he proceeded, introduced the apparently simple but +really most intricate process of machine-combing, and after great +labour he succeeded in perfecting the invention. The singular +beauty of the process can only be appreciated by those who have +witnessed the machine at work, when the similarity of its movements +to that of combing the hair, which suggested the invention, is at +once apparent. The machine has been described as "acting with +almost the delicacy of touch of the human fingers." It combs the +lock of cotton AT BOTH ENDS, places the fibres exactly parallel +with each other, separates the long from the short, and unites the +long fibres in one sliver and the short ones in another. In fine, +the machine not only acts with the delicate accuracy of the human +fingers, but apparently with the delicate intelligence of the human +mind. + +The chief commercial value of the invention consisted in its +rendering the commoner sorts of cotton available for fine spinning. +The manufacturers were thereby enabled to select the most suitable +fibres for high-priced fabrics, and to produce the finer sorts of +yarn in much larger quantities. It became possible by its means to +make thread so fine that a length of 334 miles might be spun from a +single pound weight of the prepared cotton, and, worked up into the +finer sorts of lace, the original shilling's worth of cotton-wool, +before it passed into the hands of the consumer, might thus be +increased to the value of between 300l. and 400l. sterling. + +The beauty and utility of Heilmann's invention were at once +appreciated by the English cotton-spinners. Six Lancashire firms +united and purchased the patent for cotton-spinning for England for +the sum of 30,000l; the wool-spinners paid the same sum for the +privilege of applying the process to wool; and the Messrs. +Marshall, of Leeds, 20,000l. for the privilege of applying it to +flax. Thus wealth suddenly flowed in upon poor Heilmann at last. +But he did not live to enjoy it. Scarcely had his long labours +been crowned by success than he died, and his son, who had shared +in his privations, shortly followed him. + +It is at the price of lives such as these that the wonders of +civilisation are achieved. + + + +CHAPTER III--THE GREAT POTTERS--PALISSY, BOTTGHER, WEDGWOOD + + + +"Patience is the finest and worthiest part of fortitude, and the +rarest too . . . Patience lies at the root of all pleasures, as +well as of all powers. Hope herself ceases to be happiness when +Impatience companions her."--John Ruskin. + +"Il y a vingt et cinq ans passez qu'il ne me fut monstre une coupe +de terre, tournee et esmaillee d'une telle beaute que . . . +deslors, sans avoir esgard que je n'avois nulle connoissance des +terres argileuses, je me mis a chercher les emaux, comme un homme +qui taste en tenebres."--Bernard Palissy. + + +It so happens that the history of Pottery furnishes some of the +most remarkable instances of patient perseverance to be found in +the whole range of biography. Of these we select three of the most +striking, as exhibited in the lives of Bernard Palissy, the +Frenchman; Johann Friedrich Bottgher, the German; and Josiah +Wedgwood, the Englishman. + +Though the art of making common vessels of clay was known to most +of the ancient nations, that of manufacturing enamelled earthenware +was much less common. It was, however, practised by the ancient +Etruscans, specimens of whose ware are still to be found in +antiquarian collections. But it became a lost art, and was only +recovered at a comparatively recent date. The Etruscan ware was +very valuable in ancient times, a vase being worth its weight in +gold in the time of Augustus. The Moors seem to have preserved +amongst them a knowledge of the art, which they were found +practising in the island of Majorca when it was taken by the Pisans +in 1115. Among the spoil carried away were many plates of Moorish +earthenware, which, in token of triumph, were embedded in the walls +of several of the ancient churches of Pisa, where they are to be +seen to this day. About two centuries later the Italians began to +make an imitation enamelled ware, which they named Majolica, after +the Moorish place of manufacture. + +The reviver or re-discoverer of the art of enamelling in Italy was +Luca della Robbia, a Florentine sculptor. Vasari describes him as +a man of indefatigable perseverance, working with his chisel all +day and practising drawing during the greater part of the night. +He pursued the latter art with so much assiduity, that when working +late, to prevent his feet from freezing with the cold, he was +accustomed to provide himself with a basket of shavings, in which +he placed them to keep himself warm and enable him to proceed with +his drawings. "Nor," says Vasari, "am I in the least astonished at +this, since no man ever becomes distinguished in any art whatsoever +who does not early begin to acquire the power of supporting heat, +cold, hunger, thirst, and other discomforts; whereas those persons +deceive themselves altogether who suppose that when taking their +ease and surrounded by all the enjoyments of the world they may +still attain to honourable distinction,--for it is not by sleeping, +but by waking, watching, and labouring continually, that +proficiency is attained and reputation acquired." + +But Luca, notwithstanding all his application and industry, did not +succeed in earning enough money by sculpture to enable him to live +by the art, and the idea occurred to him that he might nevertheless +be able to pursue his modelling in some material more facile and +less dear than marble. Hence it was that he began to make his +models in clay, and to endeavour by experiment so to coat and bake +the clay as to render those models durable. After many trials he +at length discovered a method of covering the clay with a material, +which, when exposed to the intense heat of a furnace, became +converted into an almost imperishable enamel. He afterwards made +the further discovery of a method of imparting colour to the +enamel, thus greatly adding to its beauty. + +The fame of Luca's work extended throughout Europe, and specimens +of his art became widely diffused. Many of them were sent into +France and Spain, where they were greatly prized. At that time +coarse brown jars and pipkins were almost the only articles of +earthenware produced in France; and this continued to be the case, +with comparatively small improvement, until the time of Palissy--a +man who toiled and fought against stupendous difficulties with a +heroism that sheds a glow almost of romance over the events of his +chequered life. + +Bernard Palissy is supposed to have been born in the south of +France, in the diocese of Agen, about the year 1510. His father +was probably a worker in glass, to which trade Bernard was brought +up. His parents were poor people--too poor to give him the benefit +of any school education. "I had no other books," said he +afterwards, "than heaven and earth, which are open to all." He +learnt, however, the art of glass-painting, to which he added that +of drawing, and afterwards reading and writing. + +When about eighteen years old, the glass trade becoming decayed, +Palissy left his father's house, with his wallet on his back, and +went out into the world to search whether there was any place in it +for him. He first travelled towards Gascony, working at his trade +where he could find employment, and occasionally occupying part of +his time in land-measuring. Then he travelled northwards, +sojourning for various periods at different places in France, +Flanders, and Lower Germany. + +Thus Palissy occupied about ten more years of his life, after which +he married, and ceased from his wanderings, settling down to +practise glass-painting and land-measuring at the small town of +Saintes, in the Lower Charente. There children were born to him; +and not only his responsibilities but his expenses increased, +while, do what he could, his earnings remained too small for his +needs. It was therefore necessary for him to bestir himself. +Probably he felt capable of better things than drudging in an +employment so precarious as glass-painting; and hence he was +induced to turn his attention to the kindred art of painting and +enamelling earthenware. Yet on this subject he was wholly +ignorant; for he had never seen earth baked before he began his +operations. He had therefore everything to learn by himself, +without any helper. But he was full of hope, eager to learn, of +unbounded perseverance and inexhaustible patience. + +It was the sight of an elegant cup of Italian manufacture--most +probably one of Luca della Robbia's make--which first set Palissy +a-thinking about the new art. A circumstance so apparently +insignificant would have produced no effect upon an ordinary mind, +or even upon Palissy himself at an ordinary time; but occurring as +it did when he was meditating a change of calling, he at once +became inflamed with the desire of imitating it. The sight of this +cup disturbed his whole existence; and the determination to +discover the enamel with which it was glazed thenceforward +possessed him like a passion. Had he been a single man he might +have travelled into Italy in search of the secret; but he was bound +to his wife and his children, and could not leave them; so he +remained by their side groping in the dark in the hope of finding +out the process of making and enamelling earthenware. + +At first he could merely guess the materials of which the enamel +was composed; and he proceeded to try all manner of experiments to +ascertain what they really were. He pounded all the substances +which he supposed were likely to produce it. Then he bought common +earthen pots, broke them into pieces, and, spreading his compounds +over them, subjected them to the heat of a furnace which he erected +for the purpose of baking them. His experiments failed; and the +results were broken pots and a waste of fuel, drugs, time, and +labour. Women do not readily sympathise with experiments whose +only tangible effect is to dissipate the means of buying clothes +and food for their children; and Palissy's wife, however dutiful in +other respects, could not be reconciled to the purchase of more +earthen pots, which seemed to her to be bought only to be broken. +Yet she must needs submit; for Palissy had become thoroughly +possessed by the determination to master the secret of the enamel, +and would not leave it alone. + +For many successive months and years Palissy pursued his +experiments. The first furnace having proved a failure, he +proceeded to erect another out of doors. There he burnt more wood, +spoiled more drugs and pots, and lost more time, until poverty +stared him and his family in the face. "Thus," said he, "I fooled +away several years, with sorrow and sighs, because I could not at +all arrive at my intention." In the intervals of his experiments +he occasionally worked at his former callings, painting on glass, +drawing portraits, and measuring land; but his earnings from these +sources were very small. At length he was no longer able to carry +on his experiments in his own furnace because of the heavy cost of +fuel; but he bought more potsherds, broke them up as before into +three or four hundred pieces, and, covering them with chemicals, +carried them to a tile-work a league and a half distant from +Saintes, there to be baked in an ordinary furnace. After the +operation he went to see the pieces taken out; and, to his dismay, +the whole of the experiments were failures. But though +disappointed, he was not yet defeated; for he determined on the +very spot to "begin afresh." + +His business as a land-measurer called him away for a brief season +from the pursuit of his experiments. In conformity with an edict +of the State, it became necessary to survey the salt-marshes in the +neighbourhood of Saintes for the purpose of levying the land-tax. +Palissy was employed to make this survey, and prepare the requisite +map. The work occupied him some time, and he was doubtless well +paid for it; but no sooner was it completed than he proceeded, with +redoubled zeal, to follow up his old investigations "in the track +of the enamels." He began by breaking three dozen new earthen +pots, the pieces of which he covered with different materials which +he had compounded, and then took them to a neighbouring glass- +furnace to be baked. The results gave him a glimmer of hope. The +greater heat of the glass-furnace had melted some of the compounds; +but though Palissy searched diligently for the white enamel he +could find none. + +For two more years he went on experimenting without any +satisfactory result, until the proceeds of his survey of the salt- +marshes having become nearly spent, he was reduced to poverty +again. But he resolved to make a last great effort; and he began +by breaking more pots than ever. More than three hundred pieces of +pottery covered with his compounds were sent to the glass-furnace; +and thither he himself went to watch the results of the baking. +Four hours passed, during which he watched; and then the furnace +was opened. The material on ONE only of the three hundred pieces +of potsherd had melted, and it was taken out to cool. As it +hardened, it grew white-white and polished! The piece of potsherd +was covered with white enamel, described by Palissy as "singularly +beautiful!" And beautiful it must no doubt have been in his eyes +after all his weary waiting. He ran home with it to his wife, +feeling himself, as he expressed it, quite a new creature. But the +prize was not yet won--far from it. The partial success of this +intended last effort merely had the effect of luring him on to a +succession of further experiments and failures. + +In order that he might complete the invention, which he now +believed to be at hand, he resolved to build for himself a glass- +furnace near his dwelling, where he might carry on his operations +in secret. He proceeded to build the furnace with his own hands, +carrying the bricks from the brick-field upon his back. He was +bricklayer, labourer, and all. From seven to eight more months +passed. At last the furnace was built and ready for use. Palissy +had in the mean time fashioned a number of vessels of clay in +readiness for the laying on of the enamel. After being subjected +to a preliminary process of baking, they were covered with the +enamel compound, and again placed in the furnace for the grand +crucial experiment. Although his means were nearly exhausted, +Palissy had been for some time accumulating a great store of fuel +for the final effort; and he thought it was enough. At last the +fire was lit, and the operation proceeded. All day he sat by the +furnace, feeding it with fuel. He sat there watching and feeding +all through the long night. But the enamel did not melt. The sun +rose upon his labours. His wife brought him a portion of the +scanty morning meal,--for he would not stir from the furnace, into +which he continued from time to time to heave more fuel. The +second day passed, and still the enamel did not melt. The sun set, +and another night passed. The pale, haggard, unshorn, baffled yet +not beaten Palissy sat by his furnace eagerly looking for the +melting of the enamel. A third day and night passed--a fourth, a +fifth, and even a sixth,--yes, for six long days and nights did the +unconquerable Palissy watch and toil, fighting against hope; and +still the enamel would not melt. + +It then occurred to him that there might be some defect in the +materials for the enamel--perhaps something wanting in the flux; so +he set to work to pound and compound fresh materials for a new +experiment. Thus two or three more weeks passed. But how to buy +more pots?--for those which he had made with his own hands for the +purposes of the first experiment were by long baking irretrievably +spoilt for the purposes of a second. His money was now all spent; +but he could borrow. His character was still good, though his wife +and the neighbours thought him foolishly wasting his means in +futile experiments. Nevertheless he succeeded. He borrowed +sufficient from a friend to enable him to buy more fuel and more +pots, and he was again ready for a further experiment. The pots +were covered with the new compound, placed in the furnace, and the +fire was again lit. + +It was the last and most desperate experiment of the whole. The +fire blazed up; the heat became intense; but still the enamel did +not melt. The fuel began to run short! How to keep up the fire? +There were the garden palings: these would burn. They must be +sacrificed rather than that the great experiment should fail. The +garden palings were pulled up and cast into the furnace. They were +burnt in vain! The enamel had not yet melted. Ten minutes more +heat might do it. Fuel must be had at whatever cost. There +remained the household furniture and shelving. A crashing noise +was heard in the house; and amidst the screams of his wife and +children, who now feared Palissy's reason was giving way, the +tables were seized, broken up, and heaved into the furnace. The +enamel had not melted yet! There remained the shelving. Another +noise of the wrenching of timber was heard within the house; and +the shelves were torn down and hurled after the furniture into the +fire. Wife and children then rushed from the house, and went +frantically through the town, calling out that poor Palissy had +gone mad, and was breaking up his very furniture for firewood! {10} + +For an entire month his shirt had not been off his back, and he was +utterly worn out--wasted with toil, anxiety, watching, and want of +food. He was in debt, and seemed on the verge of ruin. But he had +at length mastered the secret; for the last great burst of heat had +melted the enamel. The common brown household jars, when taken out +of the furnace after it had become cool, were found covered with a +white glaze! For this he could endure reproach, contumely, and +scorn, and wait patiently for the opportunity of putting his +discovery into practice as better days came round. + +Palissy next hired a potter to make some earthen vessels after +designs which he furnished; while he himself proceeded to model +some medallions in clay for the purpose of enamelling them. But +how to maintain himself and his family until the wares were made +and ready for sale? Fortunately there remained one man in Saintes +who still believed in the integrity, if not in the judgment, of +Palissy--an inn-keeper, who agreed to feed and lodge him for six +months, while he went on with his manufacture. As for the working +potter whom he had hired, Palissy soon found that he could not pay +him the stipulated wages. Having already stripped his dwelling, he +could but strip himself; and he accordingly parted with some of his +clothes to the potter, in part payment of the wages which he owed +him. + +Palissy next erected an improved furnace, but he was so unfortunate +as to build part of the inside with flints. When it was heated, +these flints cracked and burst, and the spiculae were scattered +over the pieces of pottery, sticking to them. Though the enamel +came out right, the work was irretrievably spoilt, and thus six +more months' labour was lost. Persons were found willing to buy +the articles at a low price, notwithstanding the injury they had +sustained; but Palissy would not sell them, considering that to +have done so would be to "decry and abate his honour;" and so he +broke in pieces the entire batch. "Nevertheless," says he, "hope +continued to inspire me, and I held on manfully; sometimes, when +visitors called, I entertained them with pleasantry, while I was +really sad at heart. . . . Worst of all the sufferings I had to +endure, were the mockeries and persecutions of those of my own +household, who were so unreasonable as to expect me to execute work +without the means of doing so. For years my furnaces were without +any covering or protection, and while attending them I have been +for nights at the mercy of the wind and the rain, without help or +consolation, save it might be the wailing of cats on the one side +and the howling of dogs on the other. Sometimes the tempest would +beat so furiously against the furnaces that I was compelled to +leave them and seek shelter within doors. Drenched by rain, and in +no better plight than if I had been dragged through mire, I have +gone to lie down at midnight or at daybreak, stumbling into the +house without a light, and reeling from one side to another as if I +had been drunken, but really weary with watching and filled with +sorrow at the loss of my labour after such long toiling. But alas! +my home proved no refuge; for, drenched and besmeared as I was, I +found in my chamber a second persecution worse than the first, +which makes me even now marvel that I was not utterly consumed by +my many sorrows." + +At this stage of his affairs, Palissy became melancholy and almost +hopeless, and seems to have all but broken down. He wandered +gloomily about the fields near Saintes, his clothes hanging in +tatters, and himself worn to a skeleton. In a curious passage in +his writings he describes how that the calves of his legs had +disappeared and were no longer able with the help of garters to +hold up his stockings, which fell about his heels when he walked. +{11} The family continued to reproach him for his recklessness, +and his neighbours cried shame upon him for his obstinate folly. +So he returned for a time to his former calling; and after about a +year's diligent labour, during which he earned bread for his +household and somewhat recovered his character among his +neighbours, he again resumed his darling enterprise. But though he +had already spent about ten years in the search for the enamel, it +cost him nearly eight more years of experimental plodding before he +perfected his invention. He gradually learnt dexterity and +certainty of result by experience, gathering practical knowledge +out of many failures. Every mishap was a fresh lesson to him, +teaching him something new about the nature of enamels, the +qualities of argillaceous earths, the tempering of clays, and the +construction and management of furnaces. + +At last, after about sixteen years' labour, Palissy took heart and +called himself Potter. These sixteen years had been his term of +apprenticeship to the art; during which he had wholly to teach +himself, beginning at the very beginning. He was now able to sell +his wares and thereby maintain his family in comfort. But he never +rested satisfied with what he had accomplished. He proceeded from +one step of improvement to another; always aiming at the greatest +perfection possible. He studied natural objects for patterns, and +with such success that the great Buffon spoke of him as "so great a +naturalist as Nature only can produce." His ornamental pieces are +now regarded as rare gems in the cabinets of virtuosi, and sell at +almost fabulous prices. {12} The ornaments on them are for the +most part accurate models from life, of wild animals, lizards, and +plants, found in the fields about Saintes, and tastefully combined +as ornaments into the texture of a plate or vase. When Palissy had +reached the height of his art he styled himself "Ouvrier de Terre +et Inventeur des Rustics Figulines." + +We have not, however, come to an end of the sufferings of Palissy, +respecting which a few words remain to be said. Being a +Protestant, at a time when religious persecution waxed hot in the +south of France, and expressing his views without fear, he was +regarded as a dangerous heretic. His enemies having informed +against him, his house at Saintes was entered by the officers of +"justice," and his workshop was thrown open to the rabble, who +entered and smashed his pottery, while he himself was hurried off +by night and cast into a dungeon at Bordeaux, to wait his turn at +the stake or the scaffold. He was condemned to be burnt; but a +powerful noble, the Constable de Montmorency, interposed to save +his life--not because he had any special regard for Palissy or his +religion, but because no other artist could be found capable of +executing the enamelled pavement for his magnificent chateau then +in course of erection at Ecouen, about four leagues from Paris. By +his influence an edict was issued appointing Palissy Inventor of +Rustic Figulines to the King and to the Constable, which had the +effect of immediately removing him from the jurisdiction of +Bourdeaux. He was accordingly liberated, and returned to his home +at Saintes only to find it devastated and broken up. His workshop +was open to the sky, and his works lay in ruins. Shaking the dust +of Saintes from his feet he left the place never to return to it, +and removed to Paris to carry on the works ordered of him by the +Constable and the Queen Mother, being lodged in the Tuileries {13} +while so occupied. + +Besides carrying on the manufacture of pottery, with the aid of his +two sons, Palissy, during the latter part of his life, wrote and +published several books on the potter's art, with a view to the +instruction of his countrymen, and in order that they might avoid +the many mistakes which he himself had made. He also wrote on +agriculture, on fortification, and natural history, on which latter +subject he even delivered lectures to a limited number of persons. +He waged war against astrology, alchemy, witchcraft, and like +impostures. This stirred up against him many enemies, who pointed +the finger at him as a heretic, and he was again arrested for his +religion and imprisoned in the Bastille. He was now an old man of +seventy-eight, trembling on the verge of the grave, but his spirit +was as brave as ever. He was threatened with death unless he +recanted; but he was as obstinate in holding to his religion as he +had been in hunting out the secret of the enamel. The king, Henry +III., even went to see him in prison to induce him to abjure his +faith. "My good man," said the King, "you have now served my +mother and myself for forty-five years. We have put up with your +adhering to your religion amidst fires and massacres: now I am so +pressed by the Guise party as well as by my own people, that I am +constrained to leave you in the hands of your enemies, and to- +morrow you will be burnt unless you become converted." "Sire," +answered the unconquerable old man, "I am ready to give my life for +the glory of God. You have said many times that you have pity on +me; and now I have pity on you, who have pronounced the words _I_ +AM CONSTRAINED! It is not spoken like a king, sire; it is what +you, and those who constrain you, the Guisards and all your people, +can never effect upon me, for I know how to die." {14} Palissy did +indeed die shortly after, a martyr, though not at the stake. He +died in the Bastille, after enduring about a year's imprisonment,-- +there peacefully terminating a life distinguished for heroic +labour, extraordinary endurance, inflexible rectitude, and the +exhibition of many rare and noble virtues. {15} + +The life of John Frederick Bottgher, the inventor of hard +porcelain, presents a remarkable contrast to that of Palissy; +though it also contains many points of singular and almost romantic +interest. Bottgher was born at Schleiz, in the Voightland, in +1685, and at twelve years of age was placed apprentice with an +apothecary at Berlin. He seems to have been early fascinated by +chemistry, and occupied most of his leisure in making experiments. +These for the most part tended in one direction--the art of +converting common on metals into gold. At the end of several +years, Bottgher pretended to have discovered the universal solvent +of the alchemists, and professed that he had made gold by its +means. He exhibited its powers before his master, the apothecary +Zorn, and by some trick or other succeeded in making him and +several other witnesses believe that he had actually converted +copper into gold. + +The news spread abroad that the apothecary's apprentice had +discovered the grand secret, and crowds collected about the shop to +get a sight of the wonderful young "gold-cook." The king himself +expressed a wish to see and converse with him, and when Frederick +I. was presented with a piece of the gold pretended to have been +converted from copper, he was so dazzled with the prospect of +securing an infinite quantity of it--Prussia being then in great +straits for money--that he determined to secure Bottgher and employ +him to make gold for him within the strong fortress of Spandau. +But the young apothecary, suspecting the king's intention, and +probably fearing detection, at once resolved on flight, and he +succeeded in getting across the frontier into Saxony. + +A reward of a thousand thalers was offered for Bottgher's +apprehension, but in vain. He arrived at Wittenberg, and appealed +for protection to the Elector of Saxony, Frederick Augustus I. +(King of Poland), surnamed "the Strong." Frederick was himself +very much in want of money at the time, and he was overjoyed at the +prospect of obtaining gold in any quantity by the aid of the young +alchemist. Bottgher was accordingly conveyed in secret to Dresden, +accompanied by a royal escort. He had scarcely left Wittenberg +when a battalion of Prussian grenadiers appeared before the gates +demanding the gold-maker's extradition. But it was too late: +Bottgher had already arrived in Dresden, where he was lodged in the +Golden House, and treated with every consideration, though strictly +watched and kept under guard. + +The Elector, however, must needs leave him there for a time, having +to depart forthwith to Poland, then almost in a state of anarchy. +But, impatient for gold, he wrote Bottgher from Warsaw, urging him +to communicate the secret, so that he himself might practise the +art of commutation. The young "gold-cook," thus pressed, forwarded +to Frederick a small phial containing "a reddish fluid," which, it +was asserted, changed all metals, when in a molten state, into +gold. This important phial was taken in charge by the Prince Furst +von Furstenburg, who, accompanied by a regiment of Guards, hurried +with it to Warsaw. Arrived there, it was determined to make +immediate trial of the process. The King and the Prince locked +themselves up in a secret chamber of the palace, girt themselves +about with leather aprons, and like true "gold-cooks" set to work +melting copper in a crucible and afterwards applying to it the red +fluid of Bottgher. But the result was unsatisfactory; for +notwithstanding all that they could do, the copper obstinately +remained copper. On referring to the alchemist's instructions, +however, the King found that, to succeed with the process, it was +necessary that the fluid should be used "in great purity of heart;" +and as his Majesty was conscious of having spent the evening in +very bad company he attributed the failure of the experiment to +that cause. A second trial was followed by no better results, and +then the King became furious; for he had confessed and received +absolution before beginning the second experiment. + +Frederick Augustus now resolved on forcing Bottgher to disclose the +golden secret, as the only means of relief from his urgent +pecuniary difficulties. The alchemist, hearing of the royal +intention, again determined to fly. He succeeded in escaping his +guard, and, after three days' travel, arrived at Ens in Austria, +where he thought himself safe. The agents of the Elector were, +however, at his heels; they had tracked him to the "Golden Stag," +which they surrounded, and seizing him in his bed, notwithstanding +his resistance and appeals to the Austrian authorities for help, +they carried him by force to Dresden. From this time he was more +strictly watched than ever, and he was shortly after transferred to +the strong fortress of Koningstein. It was communicated to him +that the royal exchequer was completely empty, and that ten +regiments of Poles in arrears of pay were waiting for his gold. +The King himself visited him, and told him in a severe tone that if +he did not at once proceed to make gold, he would be hung! ("Thu +mir zurecht, Bottgher, sonst lass ich dich hangen"). + +Years passed, and still Bottgher made no gold; but he was not hung. +It was reserved for him to make a far more important discovery than +the conversion of copper into gold, namely, the conversion of clay +into porcelain. Some rare specimens of this ware had been brought +by the Portuguese from China, which were sold for more than their +weight in gold. Bottgher was first induced to turn his attention +to the subject by Walter von Tschirnhaus, a maker of optical +instruments, also an alchemist. Tschirnhaus was a man of education +and distinction, and was held in much esteem by Prince Furstenburg +as well as by the Elector. He very sensibly said to Bottgher, +still in fear of the gallows--"If you can't make gold, try and do +something else; make porcelain." + +The alchemist acted on the hint, and began his experiments, working +night and day. He prosecuted his investigations for a long time +with great assiduity, but without success. At length some red +clay, brought to him for the purpose of making his crucibles, set +him on the right track. He found that this clay, when submitted to +a high temperature, became vitrified and retained its shape; and +that its texture resembled that of porcelain, excepting in colour +and opacity. He had in fact accidentally discovered red porcelain, +and he proceeded to manufacture it and sell it as porcelain. + +Bottgher was, however, well aware that the white colour was an +essential property of true porcelain; and he therefore prosecuted +his experiments in the hope of discovering the secret. Several +years thus passed, but without success; until again accident stood +his friend, and helped him to a knowledge of the art of making +white porcelain. One day, in the year 1707, he found his perruque +unusually heavy, and asked of his valet the reason. The answer +was, that it was owing to the powder with which the wig was +dressed, which consisted of a kind of earth then much used for hair +powder. Bottgher's quick imagination immediately seized upon the +idea. This white earthy powder might possibly be the very earth of +which he was in search--at all events the opportunity must not be +let slip of ascertaining what it really was. He was rewarded for +his painstaking care and watchfulness; for he found, on experiment, +that the principal ingredient of the hair-powder consisted of +kaolin, the want of which had so long formed an insuperable +difficulty in the way of his inquiries. + +The discovery, in Bottgher's intelligent hands, led to great +results, and proved of far greater importance than the discovery of +the philosopher's stone would have been. In October, 1707, he +presented his first piece of porcelain to the Elector, who was +greatly pleased with it; and it was resolved that Bottgher should +be furnished with the means necessary for perfecting his invention. +Having obtained a skilled workman from Delft, he began to TURN +porcelain with great success. He now entirely abandoned alchemy +for pottery, and inscribed over the door of his workshop this +distich:- + + +"Es machte Gott, der grosse Schopfer, +Aus einem Goldmacher einen Topfer." {16} + + +Bottgher, however, was still under strict surveillance, for fear +lest he should communicate his secret to others or escape the +Elector's control. The new workshops and furnaces which were +erected for him, were guarded by troops night and day, and six +superior officers were made responsible for the personal security +of the potter. + +Bottgher's further experiments with his new furnaces proving very +successful, and the porcelain which he manufactured being found to +fetch large prices, it was next determined to establish a Royal +Manufactory of porcelain. The manufacture of delft ware was known +to have greatly enriched Holland. Why should not the manufacture +of porcelain equally enrich the Elector? Accordingly, a decree +went forth, dated the 23rd of January, 1710, for the establishment +of "a large manufactory of porcelain" at the Albrechtsburg in +Meissen. In this decree, which was translated into Latin, French, +and Dutch, and distributed by the Ambassadors of the Elector at all +the European Courts, Frederick Augustus set forth that to promote +the welfare of Saxony, which had suffered much through the Swedish +invasion, he had "directed his attention to the subterranean +treasures (unterirdischen Schatze)" of the country, and having +employed some able persons in the investigation, they had succeeded +in manufacturing "a sort of red vessels (eine Art rother Gefasse) +far superior to the Indian terra sigillata;" {17} as also "coloured +ware and plates (buntes Geschirr und Tafeln) which may be cut, +ground, and polished, and are quite equal to Indian vessels," and +finally that "specimens of white porcelain (Proben von weissem +Porzellan)" had already been obtained, and it was hoped that this +quality, too, would soon be manufactured in considerable +quantities. The royal decree concluded by inviting "foreign +artists and handicraftmen" to come to Saxony and engage as +assistants in the new factory, at high wages, and under the +patronage of the King. This royal edict probably gives the best +account of the actual state of Bottgher's invention at the time. + +It has been stated in German publications that Bottgher, for the +great services rendered by him to the Elector and to Saxony, was +made Manager of the Royal Porcelain Works, and further promoted to +the dignity of Baron. Doubtless he deserved these honours; but his +treatment was of an altogether different character, for it was +shabby, cruel, and inhuman. Two royal officials, named Matthieu +and Nehmitz, were put over his head as directors of the factory, +while he himself only held the position of foreman of potters, and +at the same time was detained the King's prisoner. During the +erection of the factory at Meissen, while his assistance was still +indispensable, he was conducted by soldiers to and from Dresden; +and even after the works were finished, he was locked up nightly in +his room. All this preyed upon his mind, and in repeated letters +to the King he sought to obtain mitigation of his fate. Some of +these letters are very touching. "I will devote my whole soul to +the art of making porcelain," he writes on one occasion, "I will do +more than any inventor ever did before; only give me liberty, +liberty!" + +To these appeals, the King turned a deaf ear. He was ready to +spend money and grant favours; but liberty he would not give. He +regarded Bottgher as his slave. In this position, the persecuted +man kept on working for some time, till, at the end of a year or +two, he grew negligent. Disgusted with the world and with himself, +he took to drinking. Such is the force of example, that it no +sooner became known that Bottgher had betaken himself to this vice, +than the greater number of the workmen at the Meissen factory +became drunkards too. Quarrels and fightings without end were the +consequence, so that the troops were frequently called upon to +interfere and keep peace among the "Porzellanern," as they were +nicknamed. After a while, the whole of them, more than three +hundred, were shut up in the Albrechtsburg, and treated as +prisoners of state. + +Bottgher at last fell seriously ill, and in May, 1713, his +dissolution was hourly expected. The King, alarmed at losing so +valuable a slave, now gave him permission to take carriage exercise +under a guard; and, having somewhat recovered, he was allowed +occasionally to go to Dresden. In a letter written by the King in +April, 1714, Bottgher was promised his full liberty; but the offer +came too late. Broken in body and mind, alternately working and +drinking, though with occasional gleams of nobler intention, and +suffering under constant ill-health, the result of his enforced +confinement, Bottgher lingered on for a few years more, until death +freed him from his sufferings on the 13th March, 1719, in the +thirty-fifth year of his age. He was buried AT NIGHT--as if he had +been a dog--in the Johannis Cemetery of Meissen. Such was the +treatment and such the unhappy end, of one of Saxony's greatest +benefactors. + +The porcelain manufacture immediately opened up an important source +of public revenue, and it became so productive to the Elector of +Saxony, that his example was shortly after followed by most +European monarchs. Although soft porcelain had been made at St. +Cloud fourteen years before Bottgher's discovery, the superiority +of the hard porcelain soon became generally recognised. Its +manufacture was begun at Sevres in 1770, and it has since almost +entirely superseded the softer material. This is now one of the +most thriving branches of French industry, of which the high +quality of the articles produced is certainly indisputable. + +The career of Josiah Wedgwood, the English potter, was less +chequered and more prosperous than that of either Palissy or +Bottgher, and his lot was cast in happier times. Down to the +middle of last century England was behind most other nations of the +first order in Europe in respect of skilled industry. Although +there were many potters in Staffordshire--and Wedgwood himself +belonged to a numerous clan of potters of the same name--their +productions were of the rudest kind, for the most part only plain +brown ware, with the patterns scratched in while the clay was wet. +The principal supply of the better articles of earthenware came +from Delft in Holland, and of drinking stone pots from Cologne. +Two foreign potters, the brothers Elers from Nuremberg, settled for +a time in Staffordshire, and introduced an improved manufacture, +but they shortly after removed to Chelsea, where they confined +themselves to the manufacture of ornamental pieces. No porcelain +capable of resisting a scratch with a hard point had yet been made +in England; and for a long time the "white ware" made in +Staffordshire was not white, but of a dirty cream colour. Such, in +a few words, was the condition of the pottery manufacture when +Josiah Wedgwood was born at Burslem in 1730. By the time that he +died, sixty-four years later, it had become completely changed. By +his energy, skill, and genius, he established the trade upon a new +and solid foundation; and, in the words of his epitaph, "converted +a rude and inconsiderable manufacture into an elegant art and an +important branch of national commerce." + +Josiah Wedgwood was one of those indefatigable men who from time to +time spring from the ranks of the common people, and by their +energetic character not only practically educate the working +population in habits of industry, but by the example of diligence +and perseverance which they set before them, largely influence the +public activity in all directions, and contribute in a great degree +to form the national character. He was, like Arkwright, the +youngest of a family of thirteen children. His grandfather and +granduncle were both potters, as was also his father who died when +he was a mere boy, leaving him a patrimony of twenty pounds. He +had learned to read and write at the village school; but on the +death of his father he was taken from it and set to work as a +"thrower" in a small pottery carried on by his elder brother. +There he began life, his working life, to use his own words, "at +the lowest round of the ladder," when only eleven years old. He +was shortly after seized by an attack of virulent smallpox, from +the effects of which he suffered during the rest of his life, for +it was followed by a disease in the right knee, which recurred at +frequent intervals, and was only got rid of by the amputation of +the limb many years later. Mr. Gladstone, in his eloquent Eloge on +Wedgwood recently delivered at Burslem, well observed that the +disease from which he suffered was not improbably the occasion of +his subsequent excellence. "It prevented him from growing up to be +the active, vigorous English workman, possessed of all his limbs, +and knowing right well the use of them; but it put him upon +considering whether, as he could not be that, he might not be +something else, and something greater. It sent his mind inwards; +it drove him to meditate upon the laws and secrets of his art. The +result was, that he arrived at a perception and a grasp of them +which might, perhaps, have been envied, certainly have been owned, +by an Athenian potter." {18} + +When he had completed his apprenticeship with his brother, Josiah +joined partnership with another workman, and carried on a small +business in making knife-hafts, boxes, and sundry articles for +domestic use. Another partnership followed, when he proceeded to +make melon table plates, green pickle leaves, candlesticks, +snuffboxes, and such like articles; but he made comparatively +little progress until he began business on his own account at +Burslem in the year 1759. There he diligently pursued his calling, +introducing new articles to the trade, and gradually extending his +business. What he chiefly aimed at was to manufacture cream- +coloured ware of a better quality than was then produced in +Staffordshire as regarded shape, colour, glaze, and durability. To +understand the subject thoroughly, he devoted his leisure to the +study of chemistry; and he made numerous experiments on fluxes, +glazes, and various sorts of clay. Being a close inquirer and +accurate observer, he noticed that a certain earth containing +silica, which was black before calcination, became white after +exposure to the heat of a furnace. This fact, observed and +pondered on, led to the idea of mixing silica with the red powder +of the potteries, and to the discovery that the mixture becomes +white when calcined. He had but to cover this material with a +vitrification of transparent glaze, to obtain one of the most +important products of fictile art--that which, under the name of +English earthenware, was to attain the greatest commercial value +and become of the most extensive utility. + +Wedgwood was for some time much troubled by his furnaces, though +nothing like to the same extent that Palissy was; and he overcame +his difficulties in the same way--by repeated experiments and +unfaltering perseverance. His first attempts at making porcelain +for table use was a succession of disastrous failures,--the labours +of months being often destroyed in a day. It was only after a long +series of trials, in the course of which he lost time, money, and +labour, that he arrived at the proper sort of glaze to be used; but +he would not be denied, and at last he conquered success through +patience. The improvement of pottery became his passion, and was +never lost sight of for a moment. Even when he had mastered his +difficulties, and become a prosperous man--manufacturing white +stone ware and cream-coloured ware in large quantities for home and +foreign use--he went forward perfecting his manufactures, until, +his example extending in all directions, the action of the entire +district was stimulated, and a great branch of British industry was +eventually established on firm foundations. He aimed throughout at +the highest excellence, declaring his determination "to give over +manufacturing any article, whatsoever it might be, rather than to +degrade it." + +Wedgwood was cordially helped by many persons of rank and +influence; for, working in the truest spirit, he readily commanded +the help and encouragement of other true workers. He made for +Queen Charlotte the first royal table-service of English +manufacture, of the kind afterwards called "Queen's-ware," and was +appointed Royal Potter; a title which he prized more than if he had +been made a baron. Valuable sets of porcelain were entrusted to +him for imitation, in which he succeeded to admiration. Sir +William Hamilton lent him specimens of ancient art from +Herculaneum, of which he produced accurate and beautiful copies. +The Duchess of Portland outbid him for the Barberini Vase when that +article was offered for sale. He bid as high as seventeen hundred +guineas for it: her grace secured it for eighteen hundred; but +when she learnt Wedgwood's object she at once generously lent him +the vase to copy. He produced fifty copies at a cost of about +2500l., and his expenses were not covered by their sale; but he +gained his object, which was to show that whatever had been done, +that English skill and energy could and would accomplish. + +Wedgwood called to his aid the crucible of the chemist, the +knowledge of the antiquary, and the skill of the artist. He found +out Flaxman when a youth, and while he liberally nurtured his +genius drew from him a large number of beautiful designs for his +pottery and porcelain; converting them by his manufacture into +objects of taste and excellence, and thus making them instrumental +in the diffusion of classical art amongst the people. By careful +experiment and study he was even enabled to rediscover the art of +painting on porcelain or earthenware vases and similar articles--an +art practised by the ancient Etruscans, but which had been lost +since the time of Pliny. He distinguished himself by his own +contributions to science, and his name is still identified with the +Pyrometer which he invented. He was an indefatigable supporter of +all measures of public utility; and the construction of the Trent +and Mersey Canal, which completed the navigable communication +between the eastern and western sides of the island, was mainly due +to his public-spirited exertions, allied to the engineering skill +of Brindley. The road accommodation of the district being of an +execrable character, he planned and executed a turnpike-road +through the Potteries, ten miles in length. The reputation he +achieved was such that his works at Burslem, and subsequently those +at Etruria, which he founded and built, became a point of +attraction to distinguished visitors from all parts of Europe. + +The result of Wedgwood's labours was, that the manufacture of +pottery, which he found in the very lowest condition, became one of +the staples of England; and instead of importing what we needed for +home use from abroad, we became large exporters to other countries, +supplying them with earthenware even in the face of enormous +prohibitory duties on articles of British produce. Wedgwood gave +evidence as to his manufactures before Parliament in 1785, only +some thirty years after he had begun his operations; from which it +appeared, that instead of providing only casual employment to a +small number of inefficient and badly remunerated workmen, about +20,000 persons then derived their bread directly from the +manufacture of earthenware, without taking into account the +increased numbers to which it gave employment in coal-mines, and in +the carrying trade by land and sea, and the stimulus which it gave +to employment in many ways in various parts of the country. Yet, +important as had been the advances made in his time, Mr. Wedgwood +was of opinion that the manufacture was but in its infancy, and +that the improvements which he had effected were of but small +amount compared with those to which the art was capable of +attaining, through the continued industry and growing intelligence +of the manufacturers, and the natural facilities and political +advantages enjoyed by Great Britain; an opinion which has been +fully borne out by the progress which has since been effected in +this important branch of industry. In 1852 not fewer than +84,000,000 pieces of pottery were exported from England to other +countries, besides what were made for home use. But it is not +merely the quantity and value of the produce that is entitled to +consideration, but the improvement of the condition of the +population by whom this great branch of industry is conducted. +When Wedgwood began his labours, the Staffordshire district was +only in a half-civilized state. The people were poor, +uncultivated, and few in number. When Wedgwood's manufacture was +firmly established, there was found ample employment at good wages +for three times the number of population; while their moral +advancement had kept pace with their material improvement. + +Men such as these are fairly entitled to take rank as the +Industrial Heroes of the civilized world. Their patient self- +reliance amidst trials and difficulties, their courage and +perseverance in the pursuit of worthy objects, are not less heroic +of their kind than the bravery and devotion of the soldier and the +sailor, whose duty and pride it is heroically to defend what these +valiant leaders of industry have so heroically achieved. + + + +CHAPTER IV--APPLICATION AND PERSEVERANCE + + + +"Rich are the diligent, who can command +Time, nature's stock! and could his hour-glass fall, +Would, as for seed of stars, stoop for the sand, +And, by incessant labour, gather all."--D'Avenant. +"Allez en avant, et la foi vous viendra!"--D'Alembert. + + +The greatest results in life are usually attained by simple means, +and the exercise of ordinary qualities. The common life of every +day, with its cares, necessities, and duties, affords ample +opportunity for acquiring experience of the best kind; and its most +beaten paths provide the true worker with abundant scope for effort +and room for self-improvement. The road of human welfare lies +along the old highway of steadfast well-doing; and they who are the +most persistent, and work in the truest spirit, will usually be the +most successful. + +Fortune has often been blamed for her blindness; but fortune is not +so blind as men are. Those who look into practical life will find +that fortune is usually on the side of the industrious, as the +winds and waves are on the side of the best navigators. In the +pursuit of even the highest branches of human inquiry, the commoner +qualities are found the most useful--such as common sense, +attention, application, and perseverance. Genius may not be +necessary, though even genius of the highest sort does not disdain +the use of these ordinary qualities. The very greatest men have +been among the least believers in the power of genius, and as +worldly wise and persevering as successful men of the commoner +sort. Some have even defined genius to be only common sense +intensified. A distinguished teacher and president of a college +spoke of it as the power of making efforts. John Foster held it to +be the power of lighting one's own fire. Buffon said of genius "it +is patience." + +Newton's was unquestionably a mind of the very highest order, and +yet, when asked by what means he had worked out his extraordinary +discoveries, he modestly answered, "By always thinking unto them." +At another time he thus expressed his method of study: "I keep the +subject continually before me, and wait till the first dawnings +open slowly by little and little into a full and clear light." It +was in Newton's case, as in every other, only by diligent +application and perseverance that his great reputation was +achieved. Even his recreation consisted in change of study, laying +down one subject to take up another. To Dr. Bentley he said: "If +I have done the public any service, it is due to nothing but +industry and patient thought." So Kepler, another great +philosopher, speaking of his studies and his progress, said: "As +in Virgil, 'Fama mobilitate viget, vires acquirit eundo,' so it was +with me, that the diligent thought on these things was the occasion +of still further thinking; until at last I brooded with the whole +energy of my mind upon the subject." + +The extraordinary results effected by dint of sheer industry and +perseverance, have led many distinguished men to doubt whether the +gift of genius be so exceptional an endowment as it is usually +supposed to be. Thus Voltaire held that it is only a very slight +line of separation that divides the man of genius from the man of +ordinary mould. Beccaria was even of opinion that all men might be +poets and orators, and Reynolds that they might be painters and +sculptors. If this were really so, that stolid Englishman might +not have been so very far wrong after all, who, on Canova's death, +inquired of his brother whether it was "his intention to carry on +the business!" Locke, Helvetius, and Diderot believed that all men +have an equal aptitude for genius, and that what some are able to +effect, under the laws which regulate the operations of the +intellect, must also be within the reach of others who, under like +circumstances, apply themselves to like pursuits. But while +admitting to the fullest extent the wonderful achievements of +labour, and recognising the fact that men of the most distinguished +genius have invariably been found the most indefatigable workers, +it must nevertheless be sufficiently obvious that, without the +original endowment of heart and brain, no amount of labour, however +well applied, could have produced a Shakespeare, a Newton, a +Beethoven, or a Michael Angelo. + +Dalton, the chemist, repudiated the notion of his being "a genius," +attributing everything which he had accomplished to simple industry +and accumulation. John Hunter said of himself, "My mind is like a +beehive; but full as it is of buzz and apparent confusion, it is +yet full of order and regularity, and food collected with incessant +industry from the choicest stores of nature." We have, indeed, but +to glance at the biographies of great men to find that the most +distinguished inventors, artists, thinkers, and workers of all +kinds, owe their success, in a great measure, to their +indefatigable industry and application. They were men who turned +all things to gold--even time itself. Disraeli the elder held that +the secret of success consisted in being master of your subject, +such mastery being attainable only through continuous application +and study. Hence it happens that the men who have most moved the +world, have not been so much men of genius, strictly so called, as +men of intense mediocre abilities, and untiring perseverance; not +so often the gifted, of naturally bright and shining qualities, as +those who have applied themselves diligently to their work, in +whatsoever line that might lie. "Alas!" said a widow, speaking of +her brilliant but careless son, "he has not the gift of +continuance." Wanting in perseverance, such volatile natures are +outstripped in the race of life by the diligent and even the dull. +"Che va piano, va longano, e va lontano," says the Italian proverb: +Who goes slowly, goes long, and goes far. + +Hence, a great point to be aimed at is to get the working quality +well trained. When that is done, the race will be found +comparatively easy. We must repeat and again repeat; facility will +come with labour. Not even the simplest art can be accomplished +without it; and what difficulties it is found capable of achieving! +It was by early discipline and repetition that the late Sir Robert +Peel cultivated those remarkable, though still mediocre powers, +which rendered him so illustrious an ornament of the British +Senate. When a boy at Drayton Manor, his father was accustomed to +set him up at table to practise speaking extempore; and he early +accustomed him to repeat as much of the Sunday's sermon as he could +remember. Little progress was made at first, but by steady +perseverance the habit of attention became powerful, and the sermon +was at length repeated almost verbatim. When afterwards replying +in succession to the arguments of his parliamentary opponents--an +art in which he was perhaps unrivalled--it was little surmised that +the extraordinary power of accurate remembrance which he displayed +on such occasions had been originally trained under the discipline +of his father in the parish church of Drayton. + +It is indeed marvellous what continuous application will effect in +the commonest of things. It may seem a simple affair to play upon +a violin; yet what a long and laborious practice it requires! +Giardini said to a youth who asked him how long it would take to +learn it, "Twelve hours a day for twenty years together." +Industry, it is said, fait l'ours danser. The poor figurante must +devote years of incessant toil to her profitless task before she +can shine in it. When Taglioni was preparing herself for her +evening exhibition, she would, after a severe two hours' lesson +from her father, fall down exhausted, and had to be undressed, +sponged, and resuscitated totally unconscious. The agility and +bounds of the evening were insured only at a price like this. + +Progress, however, of the best kind, is comparatively slow. Great +results cannot be achieved at once; and we must be satisfied to +advance in life as we walk, step by step. De Maistre says that "to +know HOW TO WAIT is the great secret of success." We must sow +before we can reap, and often have to wait long, content meanwhile +to look patiently forward in hope; the fruit best worth waiting for +often ripening the slowest. But "time and patience," says the +Eastern proverb, "change the mulberry leaf to satin." + +To wait patiently, however, men must work cheerfully. Cheerfulness +is an excellent working quality, imparting great elasticity to the +character. As a bishop has said, "Temper is nine-tenths of +Christianity;" so are cheerfulness and diligence nine-tenths of +practical wisdom. They are the life and soul of success, as well +as of happiness; perhaps the very highest pleasure in life +consisting in clear, brisk, conscious working; energy, confidence, +and every other good quality mainly depending upon it. Sydney +Smith, when labouring as a parish priest at Foston-le-Clay, in +Yorkshire,--though he did not feel himself to be in his proper +element,--went cheerfully to work in the firm determination to do +his best. "I am resolved," he said, "to like it, and reconcile +myself to it, which is more manly than to feign myself above it, +and to send up complaints by the post of being thrown away, and +being desolate, and such like trash." So Dr. Hook, when leaving +Leeds for a new sphere of labour said, "Wherever I may be, I shall, +by God's blessing, do with my might what my hand findeth to do; and +if I do not find work, I shall make it." + +Labourers for the public good especially, have to work long and +patiently, often uncheered by the prospect of immediate recompense +or result. The seeds they sow sometimes lie hidden under the +winter's snow, and before the spring comes the husbandman may have +gone to his rest. It is not every public worker who, like Rowland +Hill, sees his great idea bring forth fruit in his life-time. Adam +Smith sowed the seeds of a great social amelioration in that dingy +old University of Glasgow where he so long laboured, and laid the +foundations of his 'Wealth of Nations;' but seventy years passed +before his work bore substantial fruits, nor indeed are they all +gathered in yet. + +Nothing can compensate for the loss of hope in a man: it entirely +changes the character. "How can I work--how can I be happy," said +a great but miserable thinker, "when I have lost all hope?" One of +the most cheerful and courageous, because one of the most hopeful +of workers, was Carey, the missionary. When in India, it was no +uncommon thing for him to weary out three pundits, who officiated +as his clerks, in one day, he himself taking rest only in change of +employment. Carey, the son of a shoe-maker, was supported in his +labours by Ward, the son of a carpenter, and Marsham, the son of a +weaver. By their labours, a magnificent college was erected at +Serampore; sixteen flourishing stations were established; the Bible +was translated into sixteen languages, and the seeds were sown of a +beneficent moral revolution in British India. Carey was never +ashamed of the humbleness of his origin. On one occasion, when at +the Governor-General's table he over-heard an officer opposite him +asking another, loud enough to be heard, whether Carey had not once +been a shoemaker: "No, sir," exclaimed Carey immediately; "only a +cobbler." An eminently characteristic anecdote has been told of +his perseverance as a boy. When climbing a tree one day, his foot +slipped, and he fell to the ground, breaking his leg by the fall. +He was confined to his bed for weeks, but when he recovered and was +able to walk without support, the very first thing he did was to go +and climb that tree. Carey had need of this sort of dauntless +courage for the great missionary work of his life, and nobly and +resolutely he did it. + +It was a maxim of Dr. Young, the philosopher, that "Any man can do +what any other man has done;" and it is unquestionable that he +himself never recoiled from any trials to which he determined to +subject himself. It is related of him, that the first time he +mounted a horse, he was in company with the grandson of Mr. Barclay +of Ury, the well-known sportsman; when the horseman who preceded +them leapt a high fence. Young wished to imitate him, but fell off +his horse in the attempt. Without saying a word, he remounted, +made a second effort, and was again unsuccessful, but this time he +was not thrown further than on to the horse's neck, to which he +clung. At the third trial, he succeeded, and cleared the fence. + +The story of Timour the Tartar learning a lesson of perseverance +under adversity from the spider is well known. Not less +interesting is the anecdote of Audubon, the American ornithologist, +as related by himself: "An accident," he says, "which happened to +two hundred of my original drawings, nearly put a stop to my +researches in ornithology. I shall relate it, merely to show how +far enthusiasm--for by no other name can I call my perseverance-- +may enable the preserver of nature to surmount the most +disheartening difficulties. I left the village of Henderson, in +Kentucky, situated on the banks of the Ohio, where I resided for +several years, to proceed to Philadelphia on business. I looked to +my drawings before my departure, placed them carefully in a wooden +box, and gave them in charge of a relative, with injunctions to see +that no injury should happen to them. My absence was of several +months; and when I returned, after having enjoyed the pleasures of +home for a few days, I inquired after my box, and what I was +pleased to call my treasure. The box was produced and opened; but +reader, feel for me--a pair of Norway rats had taken possession of +the whole, and reared a young family among the gnawed bits of +paper, which, but a month previous, represented nearly a thousand +inhabitants of air! The burning beat which instantly rushed +through my brain was too great to be endured without affecting my +whole nervous system. I slept for several nights, and the days +passed like days of oblivion--until the animal powers being +recalled into action through the strength of my constitution, I +took up my gun, my notebook, and my pencils, and went forth to the +woods as gaily as if nothing had happened. I felt pleased that I +might now make better drawings than before; and, ere a period not +exceeding three years had elapsed, my portfolio was again filled." + +The accidental destruction of Sir Isaac Newton's papers, by his +little dog 'Diamond' upsetting a lighted taper upon his desk, by +which the elaborate calculations of many years were in a moment +destroyed, is a well-known anecdote, and need not be repeated: it +is said that the loss caused the philosopher such profound grief +that it seriously injured his health, and impaired his +understanding. An accident of a somewhat similar kind happened to +the MS. of Mr. Carlyle's first volume of his 'French Revolution.' +He had lent the MS. to a literary neighbour to peruse. By some +mischance, it had been left lying on the parlour floor, and become +forgotten. Weeks ran on, and the historian sent for his work, the +printers being loud for "copy." Inquiries were made, and it was +found that the maid-of-all-work, finding what she conceived to be a +bundle of waste paper on the floor, had used it to light the +kitchen and parlour fires with! Such was the answer returned to +Mr. Carlyle; and his feelings may be imagined. There was, however, +no help for him but to set resolutely to work to re-write the book; +and he turned to and did it. He had no draft, and was compelled to +rake up from his memory facts, ideas, and expressions, which had +been long since dismissed. The composition of the book in the +first instance had been a work of pleasure; the re-writing of it a +second time was one of pain and anguish almost beyond belief. That +he persevered and finished the volume under such circumstances, +affords an instance of determination of purpose which has seldom +been surpassed. + +The lives of eminent inventors are eminently illustrative of the +same quality of perseverance. George Stephenson, when addressing +young men, was accustomed to sum up his best advice to them, in the +words, "Do as I have done--persevere." He had worked at the +improvement of his locomotive for some fifteen years before +achieving his decisive victory at Rainhill; and Watt was engaged +for some thirty years upon the condensing-engine before he brought +it to perfection. But there are equally striking illustrations of +perseverance to be found in every other branch of science, art, and +industry. Perhaps one of the most interesting is that connected +with the disentombment of the Nineveh marbles, and the discovery of +the long-lost cuneiform or arrow-headed character in which the +inscriptions on them are written--a kind of writing which had been +lost to the world since the period of the Macedonian conquest of +Persia. + +An intelligent cadet of the East India Company, stationed at +Kermanshah, in Persia, had observed the curious cuneiform +inscriptions on the old monuments in the neighbourhood--so old that +all historical traces of them had been lost,--and amongst the +inscriptions which he copied was that on the celebrated rock of +Behistun--a perpendicular rock rising abruptly some 1700 feet from +the plain, the lower part bearing inscriptions for the space of +about 300 feet in three languages--Persian, Scythian, and Assyrian. +Comparison of the known with the unknown, of the language which +survived with the language that had been lost, enabled this cadet +to acquire some knowledge of the cuneiform character, and even to +form an alphabet. Mr. (afterwards Sir Henry) Rawlinson sent his +tracings home for examination. No professors in colleges as yet +knew anything of the cuneiform character; but there was a ci-devant +clerk of the East India House--a modest unknown man of the name of +Norris--who had made this little-understood subject his study, to +whom the tracings were submitted; and so accurate was his +knowledge, that, though he had never seen the Behistun rock, he +pronounced that the cadet had not copied the puzzling inscription +with proper exactness. Rawlinson, who was still in the +neighbourhood of the rock, compared his copy with the original, and +found that Norris was right; and by further comparison and careful +study the knowledge of the cuneiform writing was thus greatly +advanced. + +But to make the learning of these two self-taught men of avail, a +third labourer was necessary in order to supply them with material +for the exercise of their skill. Such a labourer presented himself +in the person of Austen Layard, originally an articled clerk in the +office of a London solicitor. One would scarcely have expected to +find in these three men, a cadet, an India-House clerk, and a +lawyer's clerk, the discoverers of a forgotten language, and of the +buried history of Babylon; yet it was so. Layard was a youth of +only twenty-two, travelling in the East, when he was possessed with +a desire to penetrate the regions beyond the Euphrates. +Accompanied by a single companion, trusting to his arms for +protection, and, what was better, to his cheerfulness, politeness, +and chivalrous bearing, he passed safely amidst tribes at deadly +war with each other; and, after the lapse of many years, with +comparatively slender means at his command, but aided by +application and perseverance, resolute will and purpose, and almost +sublime patience,--borne up throughout by his passionate enthusiasm +for discovery and research,--he succeeded in laying bare and +digging up an amount of historical treasures, the like of which has +probably never before been collected by the industry of any one +man. Not less than two miles of bas-reliefs were thus brought to +light by Mr. Layard. The selection of these valuable antiquities, +now placed in the British Museum, was found so curiously +corroborative of the scriptural records of events which occurred +some three thousand years ago, that they burst upon the world +almost like a new revelation. And the story of the disentombment +of these remarkable works, as told by Mr. Layard himself in his +'Monuments of Nineveh,' will always be regarded as one of the most +charming and unaffected records which we possess of individual +enterprise, industry, and energy. + +The career of the Comte de Buffon presents another remarkable +illustration of the power of patient industry as well as of his own +saying, that "Genius is patience." Notwithstanding the great +results achieved by him in natural history, Buffon, when a youth, +was regarded as of mediocre talents. His mind was slow in forming +itself, and slow in reproducing what it had acquired. He was also +constitutionally indolent; and being born to good estate, it might +be supposed that he would indulge his liking for ease and luxury. +Instead of which, he early formed the resolution of denying himself +pleasure, and devoting himself to study and self-culture. +Regarding time as a treasure that was limited, and finding that he +was losing many hours by lying a-bed in the mornings, he determined +to break himself of the habit. He struggled hard against it for +some time, but failed in being able to rise at the hour he had +fixed. He then called his servant, Joseph, to his help, and +promised him the reward of a crown every time that he succeeded in +getting him up before six. At first, when called, Buffon declined +to rise--pleaded that he was ill, or pretended anger at being +disturbed; and on the Count at length getting up, Joseph found that +he had earned nothing but reproaches for having permitted his +master to lie a-bed contrary to his express orders. At length the +valet determined to earn his crown; and again and again he forced +Buffon to rise, notwithstanding his entreaties, expostulations, and +threats of immediate discharge from his service. One morning +Buffon was unusually obstinate, and Joseph found it necessary to +resort to the extreme measure of dashing a basin of ice-cold water +under the bed-clothes, the effect of which was instantaneous. By +the persistent use of such means, Buffon at length conquered his +habit; and he was accustomed to say that he owed to Joseph three or +four volumes of his Natural History. + +For forty years of his life, Buffon worked every morning at his +desk from nine till two, and again in the evening from five till +nine. His diligence was so continuous and so regular that it +became habitual. His biographer has said of him, "Work was his +necessity; his studies were the charm of his life; and towards the +last term of his glorious career he frequently said that he still +hoped to be able to consecrate to them a few more years." He was a +most conscientious worker, always studying to give the reader his +best thoughts, expressed in the very best manner. He was never +wearied with touching and retouching his compositions, so that his +style may be pronounced almost perfect. He wrote the 'Epoques de +la Nature' not fewer than eleven times before he was satisfied with +it; although he had thought over the work about fifty years. He +was a thorough man of business, most orderly in everything; and he +was accustomed to say that genius without order lost three-fourths +of its power. His great success as a writer was the result mainly +of his painstaking labour and diligent application. "Buffon," +observed Madame Necker, "strongly persuaded that genius is the +result of a profound attention directed to a particular subject, +said that he was thoroughly wearied out when composing his first +writings, but compelled himself to return to them and go over them +carefully again, even when he thought he had already brought them +to a certain degree of perfection; and that at length he found +pleasure instead of weariness in this long and elaborate +correction." It ought also to be added that Buffon wrote and +published all his great works while afflicted by one of the most +painful diseases to which the human frame is subject. + +Literary life affords abundant illustrations of the same power of +perseverance; and perhaps no career is more instructive, viewed in +this light, than that of Sir Walter Scott. His admirable working +qualities were trained in a lawyer's office, where he pursued for +many years a sort of drudgery scarcely above that of a copying +clerk. His daily dull routine made his evenings, which were his +own, all the more sweet; and he generally devoted them to reading +and study. He himself attributed to his prosaic office discipline +that habit of steady, sober diligence, in which mere literary men +are so often found wanting. As a copying clerk he was allowed 3d. +for every page containing a certain number of words; and he +sometimes, by extra work, was able to copy as many as 120 pages in +twenty-four hours, thus earning some 30s.; out of which he would +occasionally purchase an odd volume, otherwise beyond his means. + +During his after-life Scott was wont to pride himself upon being a +man of business, and he averred, in contradiction to what he called +the cant of sonneteers, that there was no necessary connection +between genius and an aversion or contempt for the common duties of +life. On the contrary, he was of opinion that to spend some fair +portion of every day in any matter-of-fact occupation was good for +the higher faculties themselves in the upshot. While afterwards +acting as clerk to the Court of Session in Edinburgh, he performed +his literary work chiefly before breakfast, attending the court +during the day, where he authenticated registered deeds and +writings of various kinds. On the whole, says Lockhart, "it forms +one of the most remarkable features in his history, that throughout +the most active period of his literary career, he must have devoted +a large proportion of his hours, during half at least of every +year, to the conscientious discharge of professional duties." It +was a principle of action which he laid down for himself, that he +must earn his living by business, and not by literature. On one +occasion he said, "I determined that literature should be my staff, +not my crutch, and that the profits of my literary labour, however +convenient otherwise, should not, if I could help it, become +necessary to my ordinary expenses." + +His punctuality was one of the most carefully cultivated of his +habits, otherwise it had not been possible for him to get through +so enormous an amount of literary labour. He made it a rule to +answer every letter received by him on the same day, except where +inquiry and deliberation were requisite. Nothing else could have +enabled him to keep abreast with the flood of communications that +poured in upon him and sometimes put his good nature to the +severest test. It was his practice to rise by five o'clock, and +light his own fire. He shaved and dressed with deliberation, and +was seated at his desk by six o'clock, with his papers arranged +before him in the most accurate order, his works of reference +marshalled round him on the floor, while at least one favourite dog +lay watching his eye, outside the line of books. Thus by the time +the family assembled for breakfast, between nine and ten, he had +done enough--to use his own words--to break the neck of the day's +work. But with all his diligent and indefatigable industry, and +his immense knowledge, the result of many years' patient labour, +Scott always spoke with the greatest diffidence of his own powers. +On one occasion he said, "Throughout every part of my career I have +felt pinched and hampered by my own ignorance." + +Such is true wisdom and humility; for the more a man really knows, +the less conceited he will be. The student at Trinity College who +went up to his professor to take leave of him because he had +"finished his education," was wisely rebuked by the professor's +reply, "Indeed! I am only beginning mine." The superficial person +who has obtained a smattering of many things, but knows nothing +well, may pride himself upon his gifts; but the sage humbly +confesses that "all he knows is, that he knows nothing," or like +Newton, that he has been only engaged in picking shells by the sea +shore, while the great ocean of truth lies all unexplored before +him. + +The lives of second-rate literary men furnish equally remarkable +illustrations of the power of perseverance. The late John Britton, +author of 'The Beauties of England and Wales,' and of many valuable +architectural works, was born in a miserable cot in Kingston, +Wiltshire. His father had been a baker and maltster, but was +ruined in trade and became insane while Britton was yet a child. +The boy received very little schooling, but a great deal of bad +example, which happily did not corrupt him. He was early in life +set to labour with an uncle, a tavern-keeper in Clerkenwell, under +whom he bottled, corked, and binned wine for more than five years. +His health failing him, his uncle turned him adrift in the world, +with only two guineas, the fruits of his five years' service, in +his pocket. During the next seven years of his life he endured +many vicissitudes and hardships. Yet he says, in his +autobiography, "in my poor and obscure lodgings, at eighteenpence a +week, I indulged in study, and often read in bed during the winter +evenings, because I could not afford a fire." Travelling on foot +to Bath, he there obtained an engagement as a cellarman, but +shortly after we find him back in the metropolis again almost +penniless, shoeless, and shirtless. He succeeded, however, in +obtaining employment as a cellarman at the London Tavern, where it +was his duty to be in the cellar from seven in the morning until +eleven at night. His health broke down under this confinement in +the dark, added to the heavy work; and he then engaged himself, at +fifteen shillings a week, to an attorney,--for he had been +diligently cultivating the art of writing during the few spare +minutes that he could call his own. While in this employment, he +devoted his leisure principally to perambulating the bookstalls, +where he read books by snatches which he could not buy, and thus +picked up a good deal of odd knowledge. Then he shifted to another +office, at the advanced wages of twenty shillings a week, still +reading and studying. At twenty-eight he was able to write a book, +which he published under the title of 'The Enterprising Adventures +of Pizarro;' and from that time until his death, during a period of +about fifty-five years, Britton was occupied in laborious literary +occupation. The number of his published works is not fewer than +eighty-seven; the most important being 'The Cathedral Antiquities +of England,' in fourteen volumes, a truly magnificent work; itself +the best monument of John Britton's indefatigable industry. + +London, the landscape gardener, was a man of somewhat similar +character, possessed of an extraordinary working power. The son of +a farmer near Edinburgh, he was early inured to work. His skill in +drawing plans and making sketches of scenery induced his father to +train him for a landscape gardener. During his apprenticeship he +sat up two whole nights every week to study; yet he worked harder +during the day than any labourer. In the course of his night +studies he learnt French, and before he was eighteen he translated +a life of Abelard for an Encyclopaedia. He was so eager to make +progress in life, that when only twenty, while working as a +gardener in England, he wrote down in his note-book, "I am now +twenty years of age, and perhaps a third part of my life has passed +away, and yet what have I done to benefit my fellow men?" an +unusual reflection for a youth of only twenty. From French he +proceeded to learn German, and rapidly mastered that language. +Having taken a large farm, for the purpose of introducing Scotch +improvements in the art of agriculture, he shortly succeeded in +realising a considerable income. The continent being thrown open +at the end of the war, he travelled abroad for the purpose of +inquiring into the system of gardening and agriculture in other +countries. He twice repeated his journeys, and the results were +published in his Encyclopaedias, which are among the most +remarkable works of their kind,--distinguished for the immense mass +of useful matter which they contain, collected by an amount of +industry and labour which has rarely been equalled. + +The career of Samuel Drew is not less remarkable than any of those +which we have cited. His father was a hard-working labourer of the +parish of St. Austell, in Cornwall. Though poor, he contrived to +send his two sons to a penny-a-week school in the neighbourhood. +Jabez, the elder, took delight in learning, and made great progress +in his lessons; but Samuel, the younger, was a dunce, notoriously +given to mischief and playing truant. When about eight years old +he was put to manual labour, earning three-halfpence a day as a +buddle-boy at a tin mine. At ten he was apprenticed to a +shoemaker, and while in this employment he endured much hardship,-- +living, as he used to say, "like a toad under a harrow." He often +thought of running away and becoming a pirate, or something of the +sort, and he seems to have grown in recklessness as he grew in +years. In robbing orchards he was usually a leader; and, as he +grew older, he delighted to take part in any poaching or smuggling +adventure. When about seventeen, before his apprenticeship was +out, he ran away, intending to enter on board a man-of-war; but, +sleeping in a hay-field at night cooled him a little, and he +returned to his trade. + +Drew next removed to the neighbourhood of Plymouth to work at his +shoemaking business, and while at Cawsand he won a prize for +cudgel-playing, in which he seems to have been an adept. While +living there, he had nearly lost his life in a smuggling exploit +which he had joined, partly induced by the love of adventure, and +partly by the love of gain, for his regular wages were not more +than eight shillings a-week. One night, notice was given +throughout Crafthole, that a smuggler was off the coast, ready to +land her cargo; on which the male population of the place--nearly +all smugglers--made for the shore. One party remained on the rocks +to make signals and dispose of the goods as they were landed; and +another manned the boats, Drew being of the latter party. The +night was intensely dark, and very little of the cargo had been +landed, when the wind rose, with a heavy sea. The men in the +boats, however, determined to persevere, and several trips were +made between the smuggler, now standing farther out to sea, and the +shore. One of the men in the boat in which Drew was, had his hat +blown off by the wind, and in attempting to recover it, the boat +was upset. Three of the men were immediately drowned; the others +clung to the boat for a time, but finding it drifting out to sea, +they took to swimming. They were two miles from land, and the +night was intensely dark. After being about three hours in the +water, Drew reached a rock near the shore, with one or two others, +where he remained benumbed with cold till morning, when he and his +companions were discovered and taken off, more dead than alive. A +keg of brandy from the cargo just landed was brought, the head +knocked in with a hatchet, and a bowlfull of the liquid presented +to the survivors; and, shortly after, Drew was able to walk two +miles through deep snow, to his lodgings. + +This was a very unpromising beginning of a life; and yet this same +Drew, scapegrace, orchard-robber, shoemaker, cudgel-player, and +smuggler, outlived the recklessness of his youth and became +distinguished as a minister of the Gospel and a writer of good +books. Happily, before it was too late, the energy which +characterised him was turned into a more healthy direction, and +rendered him as eminent in usefulness as he had before been in +wickedness. His father again took him back to St. Austell, and +found employment for him as a journeyman shoemaker. Perhaps his +recent escape from death had tended to make the young man serious, +as we shortly find him attracted by the forcible preaching of Dr. +Adam Clarke, a minister of the Wesleyan Methodists. His brother +having died about the same time, the impression of seriousness was +deepened; and thenceforward he was an altered man. He began anew +the work of education, for he had almost forgotten how to read and +write; and even after several years' practice, a friend compared +his writing to the traces of a spider dipped in ink set to crawl +upon paper. Speaking of himself, about that time, Drew afterwards +said, "The more I read, the more I felt my own ignorance; and the +more I felt my ignorance, the more invincible became my energy to +surmount it. Every leisure moment was now employed in reading one +thing or another. Having to support myself by manual labour, my +time for reading was but little, and to overcome this disadvantage, +my usual method was to place a book before me while at meat, and at +every repast I read five or six pages." The perusal of Locke's +'Essay on the Understanding' gave the first metaphysical turn to +his mind. "It awakened me from my stupor," said he, "and induced +me to form a resolution to abandon the grovelling views which I had +been accustomed to entertain." + +Drew began business on his own account, with a capital of a few +shillings; but his character for steadiness was such that a +neighbouring miller offered him a loan, which was accepted, and, +success attending his industry, the debt was repaid at the end of a +year. He started with a determination to "owe no man anything," +and he held to it in the midst of many privations. Often he went +to bed supperless, to avoid rising in debt. His ambition was to +achieve independence by industry and economy, and in this he +gradually succeeded. In the midst of incessant labour, he +sedulously strove to improve his mind, studying astronomy, history, +and metaphysics. He was induced to pursue the latter study chiefly +because it required fewer books to consult than either of the +others. "It appeared to be a thorny path," he said, "but I +determined, nevertheless, to enter, and accordingly began to tread +it." + +Added to his labours in shoemaking and metaphysics, Drew became a +local preacher and a class leader. He took an eager interest in +politics, and his shop became a favourite resort with the village +politicians. And when they did not come to him, he went to them to +talk over public affairs. This so encroached upon his time that he +found it necessary sometimes to work until midnight to make up for +the hours lost during the day. His political fervour become the +talk of the village. While busy one night hammering away at a +shoe-sole, a little boy, seeing a light in the shop, put his mouth +to the keyhole of the door, and called out in a shrill pipe, +"Shoemaker! shoe-maker! work by night and run about by day!" A +friend, to whom Drew afterwards told the story, asked, "And did not +you run after the boy, and strap him?" "No, no," was the reply; +"had a pistol been fired off at my ear, I could not have been more +dismayed or confounded. I dropped my work, and said to myself, +'True, true! but you shall never have that to say of me again.' To +me that cry was as the voice of God, and it has been a word in +season throughout my life. I learnt from it not to leave till to- +morrow the work of to-day, or to idle when I ought to be working." + +From that moment Drew dropped politics, and stuck to his work, +reading and studying in his spare hours: but he never allowed the +latter pursuit to interfere with his business, though it frequently +broke in upon his rest. He married, and thought of emigrating to +America; but he remained working on. His literary taste first took +the direction of poetical composition; and from some of the +fragments which have been preserved, it appears that his +speculations as to the immateriality and immortality of the soul +had their origin in these poetical musings. His study was the +kitchen, where his wife's bellows served him for a desk; and he +wrote amidst the cries and cradlings of his children. Paine's 'Age +of Reason' having appeared about this time and excited much +interest, he composed a pamphlet in refutation of its arguments, +which was published. He used afterwards to say that it was the +'Age of Reason' that made him an author. Various pamphlets from +his pen shortly appeared in rapid succession, and a few years +later, while still working at shoemaking, he wrote and published +his admirable 'Essay on the Immateriality and Immortality of the +Human Soul,' which he sold for twenty pounds, a great sum in his +estimation at the time. The book went through many editions, and +is still prized. + +Drew was in no wise puffed up by his success, as many young authors +are, but, long after he had become celebrated as a writer, used to +be seen sweeping the street before his door, or helping his +apprentices to carry in the winter's coals. Nor could he, for some +time, bring himself to regard literature as a profession to live +by. His first care was, to secure an honest livelihood by his +business, and to put into the "lottery of literary success," as he +termed it, only the surplus of his time. At length, however, he +devoted himself wholly to literature, more particularly in +connection with the Wesleyan body; editing one of their magazines, +and superintending the publication of several of their +denominational works. He also wrote in the 'Eclectic Review,' and +compiled and published a valuable history of his native county, +Cornwall, with numerous other works. Towards the close of his +career, he said of himself,--"Raised from one of the lowest +stations in society, I have endeavoured through life to bring my +family into a state of respectability, by honest industry, +frugality, and a high regard for my moral character. Divine +providence has smiled on my exertions, and crowned my wishes with +success." + +The late Joseph Hume pursued a very different career, but worked in +an equally persevering spirit. He was a man of moderate parts, but +of great industry and unimpeachable honesty of purpose. The motto +of his life was "Perseverance," and well, he acted up to it. His +father dying while he was a mere child, his mother opened a small +shop in Montrose, and toiled hard to maintain her family and bring +them up respectably. Joseph she put apprentice to a surgeon, and +educated for the medical profession. Having got his diploma, he +made several voyages to India as ship's surgeon, {19} and +afterwards obtained a cadetship in the Company's service. None +worked harder, or lived more temperately, than he did, and, +securing the confidence of his superiors, who found him a capable +man in the performance of his duty, they gradually promoted him to +higher offices. In 1803 he was with the division of the army under +General Powell, in the Mahratta war; and the interpreter having +died, Hume, who had meanwhile studied and mastered the native +languages, was appointed in his stead. He was next made chief of +the medical staff. But as if this were not enough to occupy his +full working power, he undertook in addition the offices of +paymaster and post-master, and filled them satisfactorily. He also +contracted to supply the commissariat, which he did with advantage +to the army and profit to himself. After about ten years' +unremitting labour, he returned to England with a competency; and +one of his first acts was to make provision for the poorer members +of his family. + +But Joseph Hume was not a man to enjoy the fruits of his industry +in idleness. Work and occupation had become necessary for his +comfort and happiness. To make himself fully acquainted with the +actual state of his own country, and the condition of the people, +he visited every town in the kingdom which then enjoyed any degree +of manufacturing celebrity. He afterwards travelled abroad for the +purpose of obtaining a knowledge of foreign states. Returned to +England, he entered Parliament in 1812, and continued a member of +that assembly, with a short interruption, for a period of about +thirty-four years. His first recorded speech was on the subject of +public education, and throughout his long and honourable career he +took an active and earnest interest in that and all other questions +calculated to elevate and improve the condition of the people-- +criminal reform, savings-banks, free trade, economy and +retrenchment, extended representation, and such like measures, all +of which he indefatigably promoted. Whatever subject he undertook, +he worked at with all his might. He was not a good speaker, but +what he said was believed to proceed from the lips of an honest, +single-minded, accurate man. If ridicule, as Shaftesbury says, be +the test of truth, Joseph Hume stood the test well. No man was +more laughed at, but there he stood perpetually, and literally, "at +his post." He was usually beaten on a division, but the influence +which he exercised was nevertheless felt, and many important +financial improvements were effected by him even with the vote +directly against him. The amount of hard work which he contrived +to get through was something extraordinary. He rose at six, wrote +letters and arranged his papers for parliament; then, after +breakfast, he received persons on business, sometimes as many as +twenty in a morning. The House rarely assembled without him, and +though the debate might be prolonged to two or three o'clock in the +morning, his name was seldom found absent from the division. In +short, to perform the work which he did, extending over so long a +period, in the face of so many Administrations, week after week, +year after year,--to be outvoted, beaten, laughed at, standing on +many occasions almost alone,--to persevere in the face of every +discouragement, preserving his temper unruffled, never relaxing in +his energy or his hope, and living to see the greater number of his +measures adopted with acclamation, must be regarded as one of the +most remarkable illustrations of the power of human perseverance +that biography can exhibit. + + + +CHAPTER V--HELPS AND OPPORTUNITIES--SCIENTIFIC PURSUITS + + + +"Neither the naked hand, nor the understanding, left to itself, can +do much; the work is accomplished by instruments and helps, of +which the need is not less for the understanding than the hand."-- +Bacon. + +"Opportunity has hair in front, behind she is bald; if you seize +her by the forelock you may hold her, but, if suffered to escape, +not Jupiter himself can catch her again."--From the Latin. + + +Accident does very little towards the production of any great +result in life. Though sometimes what is called "a happy hit" may +be made by a bold venture, the common highway of steady industry +and application is the only safe road to travel. It is said of the +landscape painter Wilson, that when he had nearly finished a +picture in a tame, correct manner, he would step back from it, his +pencil fixed at the end of a long stick, and after gazing earnestly +on the work, he would suddenly walk up and by a few bold touches +give a brilliant finish to the painting. But it will not do for +every one who would produce an effect, to throw his brush at the +canvas in the hope of producing a picture. The capability of +putting in these last vital touches is acquired only by the labour +of a life; and the probability is, that the artist who has not +carefully trained himself beforehand, in attempting to produce a +brilliant effect at a dash, will only produce a blotch. + +Sedulous attention and painstaking industry always mark the true +worker. The greatest men are not those who "despise the day of +small things," but those who improve them the most carefully. +Michael Angelo was one day explaining to a visitor at his studio, +what he had been doing at a statue since his previous visit. "I +have retouched this part--polished that--softened this feature-- +brought out that muscle--given some expression to this lip, and +more energy to that limb." "But these are trifles," remarked the +visitor. "It may be so," replied the sculptor, "but recollect that +trifles make perfection, and perfection is no trifle." So it was +said of Nicholas Poussin, the painter, that the rule of his conduct +was, that "whatever was worth doing at all was worth doing well;" +and when asked, late in life, by his friend Vigneul de Marville, by +what means he had gained so high a reputation among the painters of +Italy, Poussin emphatically answered, "Because I have neglected +nothing." + +Although there are discoveries which are said to have been made by +accident, if carefully inquired into, it will be found that there +has really been very little that was accidental about them. For +the most part, these so-called accidents have only been +opportunities, carefully improved by genius. The fall of the apple +at Newton's feet has often been quoted in proof of the accidental +character of some discoveries. But Newton's whole mind had already +been devoted for years to the laborious and patient investigation +of the subject of gravitation; and the circumstance of the apple +falling before his eyes was suddenly apprehended only as genius +could apprehend it, and served to flash upon him the brilliant +discovery then opening to his sight. In like manner, the +brilliantly-coloured soap-bubbles blown from a common tobacco pipe- +-though "trifles light as air" in most eyes--suggested to Dr. Young +his beautiful theory of "interferences," and led to his discovery +relating to the diffraction of light. Although great men are +popularly supposed only to deal with great things, men such as +Newton and Young were ready to detect the significance of the most +familiar and simple facts; their greatness consisting mainly in +their wise interpretation of them. + +The difference between men consists, in a great measure, in the +intelligence of their observation. The Russian proverb says of the +non-observant man, "He goes through the forest and sees no +firewood." "The wise man's eyes are in his head," says Solomon, +"but the fool walketh in darkness." "Sir," said Johnson, on one +occasion, to a fine gentleman just returned from Italy, "some men +will learn more in the Hampstead stage than others in the tour of +Europe." It is the mind that sees as well as the eye. Where +unthinking gazers observe nothing, men of intelligent vision +penetrate into the very fibre of the phenomena presented to them, +attentively noting differences, making comparisons, and recognizing +their underlying idea. Many before Galileo had seen a suspended +weight swing before their eyes with a measured beat; but he was the +first to detect the value of the fact. One of the vergers in the +cathedral at Pisa, after replenishing with oil a lamp which hung +from the roof, left it swinging to and fro; and Galileo, then a +youth of only eighteen, noting it attentively, conceived the idea +of applying it to the measurement of time. Fifty years of study +and labour, however, elapsed, before he completed the invention of +his Pendulum,--the importance of which, in the measurement of time +and in astronomical calculations, can scarcely be overrated. In +like manner, Galileo, having casually heard that one Lippershey, a +Dutch spectacle-maker, had presented to Count Maurice of Nassau an +instrument by means of which distant objects appeared nearer to the +beholder, addressed himself to the cause of such a phenomenon, +which led to the invention of the telescope, and proved the +beginning of the modern science of astronomy. Discoveries such as +these could never have been made by a negligent observer, or by a +mere passive listener. + +While Captain (afterwards Sir Samuel) Brown was occupied in +studying the construction of bridges, with the view of contriving +one of a cheap description to be thrown across the Tweed, near +which he lived, he was walking in his garden one dewy autumn +morning, when he saw a tiny spider's net suspended across his path. +The idea immediately occurred to him, that a bridge of iron ropes +or chains might be constructed in like manner, and the result was +the invention of his Suspension Bridge. So James Watt, when +consulted about the mode of carrying water by pipes under the +Clyde, along the unequal bed of the river, turned his attention one +day to the shell of a lobster presented at table; and from that +model he invented an iron tube, which, when laid down, was found +effectually to answer the purpose. Sir Isambert Brunel took his +first lessons in forming the Thames Tunnel from the tiny shipworm: +he saw how the little creature perforated the wood with its well- +armed head, first in one direction and then in another, till the +archway was complete, and then daubed over the roof and sides with +a kind of varnish; and by copying this work exactly on a large +scale, Brunel was at length enabled to construct his shield and +accomplish his great engineering work. + +It is the intelligent eye of the careful observer which gives these +apparently trivial phenomena their value. So trifling a matter as +the sight of seaweed floating past his ship, enabled Columbus to +quell the mutiny which arose amongst his sailors at not discovering +land, and to assure them that the eagerly sought New World was not +far off. There is nothing so small that it should remain +forgotten; and no fact, however trivial, but may prove useful in +some way or other if carefully interpreted. Who could have +imagined that the famous "chalk cliffs of Albion" had been built up +by tiny insects--detected only by the help of the microscope--of +the same order of creatures that have gemmed the sea with islands +of coral! And who that contemplates such extraordinary results, +arising from infinitely minute operations, will venture to question +the power of little things? + +It is the close observation of little things which is the secret of +success in business, in art, in science, and in every pursuit in +life. Human knowledge is but an accumulation of small facts, made +by successive generations of men, the little bits of knowledge and +experience carefully treasured up by them growing at length into a +mighty pyramid. Though many of these facts and observations seemed +in the first instance to have but slight significance, they are all +found to have their eventual uses, and to fit into their proper +places. Even many speculations seemingly remote, turn out to be +the basis of results the most obviously practical. In the case of +the conic sections discovered by Apollonius Pergaeus, twenty +centuries elapsed before they were made the basis of astronomy--a +science which enables the modern navigator to steer his way through +unknown seas and traces for him in the heavens an unerring path to +his appointed haven. And had not mathematicians toiled for so +long, and, to uninstructed observers, apparently so fruitlessly, +over the abstract relations of lines and surfaces, it is probable +that but few of our mechanical inventions would have seen the +light. + +When Franklin made his discovery of the identity of lightning and +electricity, it was sneered at, and people asked, "Of what use is +it?" To which his reply was, "What is the use of a child? It may +become a man!" When Galvani discovered that a frog's leg twitched +when placed in contact with different metals, it could scarcely +have been imagined that so apparently insignificant a fact could +have led to important results. Yet therein lay the germ of the +Electric Telegraph, which binds the intelligence of continents +together, and, probably before many years have elapsed, will "put a +girdle round the globe." So too, little bits of stone and fossil, +dug out of the earth, intelligently interpreted, have issued in the +science of geology and the practical operations of mining, in which +large capitals are invested and vast numbers of persons profitably +employed. + +The gigantic machinery employed in pumping our mines, working our +mills and manufactures, and driving our steam-ships and +locomotives, in like manner depends for its supply of power upon so +slight an agency as little drops of water expanded by heat,--that +familiar agency called steam, which we see issuing from that common +tea-kettle spout, but which, when put up within an ingeniously +contrived mechanism, displays a force equal to that of millions of +horses, and contains a power to rebuke the waves and set even the +hurricane at defiance. The same power at work within the bowels of +the earth has been the cause of those volcanoes and earthquakes +which have played so mighty a part in the history of the globe. + +It is said that the Marquis of Worcester's attention was first +accidentally directed to the subject of steam power, by the tight +cover of a vessel containing hot water having been blown off before +his eyes, when confined a prisoner in the Tower. He published the +result of his observations in his 'Century of Inventions,' which +formed a sort of text-book for inquirers into the powers of steam +for a time, until Savary, Newcomen, and others, applying it to +practical purposes, brought the steam-engine to the state in which +Watt found it when called upon to repair a model of Newcomen's +engine, which belonged to the University of Glasgow. This +accidental circumstance was an opportunity for Watt, which he was +not slow to improve; and it was the labour of his life to bring the +steam-engine to perfection. + +This art of seizing opportunities and turning even accidents to +account, bending them to some purpose is a great secret of success. +Dr. Johnson has defined genius to be "a mind of large general +powers accidentally determined in some particular direction." Men +who are resolved to find a way for themselves, will always find +opportunities enough; and if they do not lie ready to their hand, +they will make them. It is not those who have enjoyed the +advantages of colleges, museums, and public galleries, that have +accomplished the most for science and art; nor have the greatest +mechanics and inventors been trained in mechanics' institutes. +Necessity, oftener than facility, has been the mother of invention; +and the most prolific school of all has been the school of +difficulty. Some of the very best workmen have had the most +indifferent tools to work with. But it is not tools that make the +workman, but the trained skill and perseverance of the man himself. +Indeed it is proverbial that the bad workman never yet had a good +tool. Some one asked Opie by what wonderful process he mixed his +colours. "I mix them with my brains, sir," was his reply. It is +the same with every workman who would excel. Ferguson made +marvellous things--such as his wooden clock, that accurately +measured the hours--by means of a common penknife, a tool in +everybody's hand; but then everybody is not a Ferguson. A pan of +water and two thermometers were the tools by which Dr. Black +discovered latent heat; and a prism, a lens, and a sheet of +pasteboard enabled Newton to unfold the composition of light and +the origin of colours. An eminent foreign savant once called upon +Dr. Wollaston, and requested to be shown over his laboratories in +which science had been enriched by so many important discoveries, +when the doctor took him into a little study, and, pointing to an +old tea-tray on the table, containing a few watch-glasses, test +papers, a small balance, and a blowpipe, said, "There is all the +laboratory that I have!" + +Stothard learnt the art of combining colours by closely studying +butterflies' wings: he would often say that no one knew what he +owed to these tiny insects. A burnt stick and a barn door served +Wilkie in lieu of pencil and canvas. Bewick first practised +drawing on the cottage walls of his native village, which he +covered with his sketches in chalk; and Benjamin West made his +first brushes out of the cat's tail. Ferguson laid himself down in +the fields at night in a blanket, and made a map of the heavenly +bodies by means of a thread with small beads on it stretched +between his eye and the stars. Franklin first robbed the +thundercloud of its lightning by means of a kite made with two +cross sticks and a silk handkerchief. Watt made his first model of +the condensing steam-engine out of an old anatomist's syringe, used +to inject the arteries previous to dissection. Gifford worked his +first problems in mathematics, when a cobbler's apprentice, upon +small scraps of leather, which he beat smooth for the purpose; +whilst Rittenhouse, the astronomer, first calculated eclipses on +his plough handle. + +The most ordinary occasions will furnish a man with opportunities +or suggestions for improvement, if he be but prompt to take +advantage of them. Professor Lee was attracted to the study of +Hebrew by finding a Bible in that tongue in a synagogue, while +working as a common carpenter at the repairs of the benches. He +became possessed with a desire to read the book in the original, +and, buying a cheap second-hand copy of a Hebrew grammar, he set to +work and learnt the language for himself. As Edmund Stone said to +the Duke of Argyle, in answer to his grace's inquiry how he, a poor +gardener's boy, had contrived to be able to read Newton's Principia +in Latin, "One needs only to know the twenty-four letters of the +alphabet in order to learn everything else that one wishes." +Application and perseverance, and the diligent improvement of +opportunities, will do the rest. + +Sir Walter Scott found opportunities for self-improvement in every +pursuit, and turned even accidents to account. Thus it was in the +discharge of his functions as a writer's apprentice that he first +visited the Highlands, and formed those friendships among the +surviving heroes of 1745 which served to lay the foundation of a +large class of his works. Later in life, when employed as +quartermaster of the Edinburgh Light Cavalry, he was accidentally +disabled by the kick of a horse, and confined for some time to his +house; but Scott was a sworn enemy to idleness, and he forthwith +set his mind to work. In three days he had composed the first +canto of 'The Lay of the Last Minstrel,' which he shortly after +finished,--his first great original work. + +The attention of Dr. Priestley, the discoverer of so many gases, +was accidentally drawn to the subject of chemistry through his +living in the neighbourhood of a brewery. When visiting the place +one day, he noted the peculiar appearances attending the extinction +of lighted chips in the gas floating over the fermented liquor. He +was forty years old at the time, and knew nothing of chemistry. He +consulted books to ascertain the cause, but they told him little, +for as yet nothing was known on the subject. Then he began to +experiment, with some rude apparatus of his own contrivance. The +curious results of his first experiments led to others, which in +his hands shortly became the science of pneumatic chemistry. About +the same time, Scheele was obscurely working in the same direction +in a remote Swedish village; and he discovered several new gases, +with no more effective apparatus at his command than a few +apothecaries' phials and pigs' bladders. + +Sir Humphry Davy, when an apothecary's apprentice, performed his +first experiments with instruments of the rudest description. He +extemporised the greater part of them himself, out of the motley +materials which chance threw in his way,--the pots and pans of the +kitchen, and the phials and vessels of his master's surgery. It +happened that a French ship was wrecked off the Land's End, and the +surgeon escaped, bearing with him his case of instruments, amongst +which was an old-fashioned glyster apparatus; this article he +presented to Davy, with whom he had become acquainted. The +apothecary's apprentice received it with great exultation, and +forthwith employed it as a part of a pneumatic apparatus which he +contrived, afterwards using it to perform the duties of an air-pump +in one of his experiments on the nature and sources of heat. + +In like manner Professor Faraday, Sir Humphry Davy's scientific +successor, made his first experiments in electricity by means of an +old bottle, white he was still a working bookbinder. And it is a +curious fact that Faraday was first attracted to the study of +chemistry by hearing one of Sir Humphry Davy's lectures on the +subject at the Royal Institution. A gentleman, who was a member, +calling one day at the shop where Faraday was employed in binding +books, found him poring over the article "Electricity" in an +Encyclopaedia placed in his hands to bind. The gentleman, having +made inquiries, found that the young bookbinder was curious about +such subjects, and gave him an order of admission to the Royal +Institution, where he attended a course of four lectures delivered +by Sir Humphry. He took notes of them, which he showed to the +lecturer, who acknowledged their scientific accuracy, and was +surprised when informed of the humble position of the reporter. +Faraday then expressed his desire to devote himself to the +prosecution of chemical studies, from which Sir Humphry at first +endeavoured to dissuade him: but the young man persisting, he was +at length taken into the Royal Institution as an assistant; and +eventually the mantle of the brilliant apothecary's boy fell upon +the worthy shoulders of the equally brilliant bookbinder's +apprentice. + +The words which Davy entered in his note-book, when about twenty +years of age, working in Dr. Beddoes' laboratory at Bristol, were +eminently characteristic of him: "I have neither riches, nor +power, nor birth to recommend me; yet if I live, I trust I shall +not be of less service to mankind and my friends, than if I had +been born with all these advantages." Davy possessed the +capability, as Faraday does, of devoting the whole power of his +mind to the practical and experimental investigation of a subject +in all its bearings; and such a mind will rarely fail, by dint of +mere industry and patient thinking, in producing results of the +highest order. Coleridge said of Davy, "There is an energy and +elasticity in his mind, which enables him to seize on and analyze +all questions, pushing them to their legitimate consequences. +Every subject in Davy's mind has the principle of vitality. Living +thoughts spring up like turf under his feet." Davy, on his part, +said of Coleridge, whose abilities he greatly admired, "With the +most exalted genius, enlarged views, sensitive heart, and +enlightened mind, he will be the victim of a want of order, +precision, and regularity." + +The great Cuvier was a singularly accurate, careful, and +industrious observer. When a boy, he was attracted to the subject +of natural history by the sight of a volume of Buffon which +accidentally fell in his way. He at once proceeded to copy the +drawings, and to colour them after the descriptions given in the +text. While still at school, one of his teachers made him a +present of 'Linnaeus's System of Nature;' and for more than ten +years this constituted his library of natural history. At eighteen +he was offered the situation of tutor in a family residing near +Fecamp, in Normandy. Living close to the sea-shore, he was brought +face to face with the wonders of marine life. Strolling along the +sands one day, he observed a stranded cuttlefish. He was attracted +by the curious object, took it home to dissect, and thus began the +study of the molluscae, in the pursuit of which he achieved so +distinguished a reputation. He had no books to refer to, excepting +only the great book of Nature which lay open before him. The study +of the novel and interesting objects which it daily presented to +his eyes made a much deeper impression on his mind than any written +or engraved descriptions could possibly have done. Three years +thus passed, during which he compared the living species of marine +animals with the fossil remains found in the neighbourhood, +dissected the specimens of marine life that came under his notice, +and, by careful observation, prepared the way for a complete reform +in the classification of the animal kingdom. About this time +Cuvier became known to the learned Abbe Teissier, who wrote to +Jussieu and other friends in Paris on the subject of the young +naturalist's inquiries, in terms of such high commendation, that +Cuvier was requested to send some of his papers to the Society of +Natural History; and he was shortly after appointed assistant- +superintendent at the Jardin des Plantes. In the letter written by +Teissier to Jussieu, introducing the young naturalist to his +notice, he said, "You remember that it was I who gave Delambre to +the Academy in another branch of science: this also will be a +Delambre." We need scarcely add that the prediction of Teissier +was more than fulfilled. + +It is not accident, then, that helps a man in the world so much as +purpose and persistent industry. To the feeble, the sluggish and +purposeless, the happiest accidents avail nothing,--they pass them +by, seeing no meaning in them. But it is astonishing how much can +be accomplished if we are prompt to seize and improve the +opportunities for action and effort which are constantly presenting +themselves. Watt taught himself chemistry and mechanics while +working at his trade of a mathematical-instrument maker, at the +same time that he was learning German from a Swiss dyer. +Stephenson taught himself arithmetic and mensuration while working +as an engineman during the night shifts; and when he could snatch a +few moments in the intervals allowed for meals during the day, he +worked his sums with a bit of chalk upon the sides of the colliery +waggons. Dalton's industry was the habit of his life. He began +from his boyhood, for he taught a little village-school when he was +only about twelve years old,--keeping the school in winter, and +working upon his father's farm in summer. He would sometimes urge +himself and companions to study by the stimulus of a bet, though +bred a Quaker; and on one occasion, by his satisfactory solution of +a problem, he won as much as enabled him to buy a winter's store of +candles. He continued his meteorological observations until a day +or two before he died,--having made and recorded upwards of 200,000 +in the course of his life. + +With perseverance, the very odds and ends of time may be worked up +into results of the greatest value. An hour in every day withdrawn +from frivolous pursuits would, if profitably employed, enable a +person of ordinary capacity to go far towards mastering a science. +It would make an ignorant man a well-informed one in less than ten +years. Time should not be allowed to pass without yielding fruits, +in the form of something learnt worthy of being known, some good +principle cultivated, or some good habit strengthened. Dr. Mason +Good translated Lucretius while riding in his carriage in the +streets of London, going the round of his patients. Dr. Darwin +composed nearly all his works in the same way while driving about +in his "sulky" from house to house in the country,--writing down +his thoughts on little scraps of paper, which he carried about with +him for the purpose. Hale wrote his 'Contemplations' while +travelling on circuit. Dr. Burney learnt French and Italian while +travelling on horseback from one musical pupil to another in the +course of his profession. Kirke White learnt Greek while walking +to and from a lawyer's office; and we personally know a man of +eminent position who learnt Latin and French while going messages +as an errand-boy in the streets of Manchester. + +Daguesseau, one of the great Chancellors of France, by carefully +working up his odd bits of time, wrote a bulky and able volume in +the successive intervals of waiting for dinner, and Madame de +Genlis composed several of her charming volumes while waiting for +the princess to whom she gave her daily lessons. Elihu Burritt +attributed his first success in self-improvement, not to genius, +which he disclaimed, but simply to the careful employment of those +invaluable fragments of time, called "odd moments." While working +and earning his living as a blacksmith, he mastered some eighteen +ancient and modern languages, and twenty-two European dialects. + +What a solemn and striking admonition to youth is that inscribed on +the dial at All Souls, Oxford--"Pereunt et imputantur"--the hours +perish, and are laid to our charge. Time is the only little +fragment of Eternity that belongs to man; and, like life, it can +never be recalled. "In the dissipation of worldly treasure," says +Jackson of Exeter, "the frugality of the future may balance the +extravagance of the past; but who can say, 'I will take from +minutes to-morrow to compensate for those I have lost to-day'?" +Melancthon noted down the time lost by him, that he might thereby +reanimate his industry, and not lose an hour. An Italian scholar +put over his door an inscription intimating that whosoever remained +there should join in his labours. "We are afraid," said some +visitors to Baxter, "that we break in upon your time." "To be sure +you do," replied the disturbed and blunt divine. Time was the +estate out of which these great workers, and all other workers, +formed that rich treasury of thoughts and deeds which they have +left to their successors. + +The mere drudgery undergone by some men in carrying on their +undertakings has been something extraordinary, but the drudgery +they regarded as the price of success. Addison amassed as much as +three folios of manuscript materials before he began his +'Spectator.' Newton wrote his 'Chronology' fifteen times over +before he was satisfied with it; and Gibbon wrote out his 'Memoir' +nine times. Hale studied for many years at the rate of sixteen +hours a day, and when wearied with the study of the law, he would +recreate himself with philosophy and the study of the mathematics. +Hume wrote thirteen hours a day while preparing his 'History of +England.' Montesquieu, speaking of one part of his writings, said +to a friend, "You will read it in a few hours; but I assure you it +has cost me so much labour that it has whitened my hair." + +The practice of writing down thoughts and facts for the purpose of +holding them fast and preventing their escape into the dim region +of forgetfulness, has been much resorted to by thoughtful and +studious men. Lord Bacon left behind him many manuscripts entitled +"Sudden thoughts set down for use." Erskine made great extracts +from Burke; and Eldon copied Coke upon Littleton twice over with +his own hand, so that the book became, as it were, part of his own +mind. The late Dr. Pye Smith, when apprenticed to his father as a +bookbinder, was accustomed to make copious memoranda of all the +books he read, with extracts and criticisms. This indomitable +industry in collecting materials distinguished him through life, +his biographer describing him as "always at work, always in +advance, always accumulating." These note-books afterwards proved, +like Richter's "quarries," the great storehouse from which he drew +his illustrations. + +The same practice characterized the eminent John Hunter, who +adopted it for the purpose of supplying the defects of memory; and +he was accustomed thus to illustrate the advantages which one +derives from putting one's thoughts in writing: "It resembles," he +said, "a tradesman taking stock, without which he never knows +either what he possesses or in what he is deficient." John Hunter- +-whose observation was so keen that Abernethy was accustomed to +speak of him as "the Argus-eyed"--furnished an illustrious example +of the power of patient industry. He received little or no +education till he was about twenty years of age, and it was with +difficulty that he acquired the arts of reading and writing. He +worked for some years as a common carpenter at Glasgow, after which +he joined his brother William, who had settled in London as a +lecturer and anatomical demonstrator. John entered his dissecting- +room as an assistant, but soon shot ahead of his brother, partly by +virtue of his great natural ability, but mainly by reason of his +patient application and indefatigable industry. He was one of the +first in this country to devote himself assiduously to the study of +comparative anatomy, and the objects he dissected and collected +took the eminent Professor Owen no less than ten years to arrange. +The collection contains some twenty thousand specimens, and is the +most precious treasure of the kind that has ever been accumulated +by the industry of one man. Hunter used to spend every morning +from sunrise until eight o'clock in his museum; and throughout the +day he carried on his extensive private practice, performed his +laborious duties as surgeon to St. George's Hospital and deputy +surgeon-general to the army; delivered lectures to students, and +superintended a school of practical anatomy at his own house; +finding leisure, amidst all, for elaborate experiments on the +animal economy, and the composition of various works of great +scientific importance. To find time for this gigantic amount of +work, he allowed himself only four hours of sleep at night, and an +hour after dinner. When once asked what method he had adopted to +insure success in his undertakings, he replied, "My rule is, +deliberately to consider, before I commence, whether the thing be +practicable. If it be not practicable, I do not attempt it. If it +be practicable, I can accomplish it if I give sufficient pains to +it; and having begun, I never stop till the thing is done. To this +rule I owe all my success." + +Hunter occupied a great deal of his time in collecting definite +facts respecting matters which, before his day, were regarded as +exceedingly trivial. Thus it was supposed by many of his +contemporaries that he was only wasting his time and thought in +studying so carefully as he did the growth of a deer's horn. But +Hunter was impressed with the conviction that no accurate knowledge +of scientific facts is without its value. By the study referred +to, he learnt how arteries accommodate themselves to circumstances, +and enlarge as occasion requires; and the knowledge thus acquired +emboldened him, in a case of aneurism in a branch artery, to tie +the main trunk where no surgeon before him had dared to tie it, and +the life of his patient was saved. Like many original men, he +worked for a long time as it were underground, digging and laying +foundations. He was a solitary and self-reliant genius, holding on +his course without the solace of sympathy or approbation,--for but +few of his contemporaries perceived the ultimate object of his +pursuits. But like all true workers, he did not fail in securing +his best reward--that which depends less upon others than upon +one's self--the approval of conscience, which in a right-minded man +invariably follows the honest and energetic performance of duty. + +Ambrose Pare, the great French surgeon, was another illustrious +instance of close observation, patient application, and +indefatigable perseverance. He was the son of a barber at Laval, +in Maine, where he was born in 1509. His parents were too poor to +send him to school, but they placed him as foot-boy with the cure +of the village, hoping that under that learned man he might pick up +an education for himself. But the cure kept him so busily employed +in grooming his mule and in other menial offices that the boy found +no time for learning. While in his service, it happened that the +celebrated lithotomist, Cotot, came to Laval to operate on one of +the cure's ecclesiastical brethren. Pare was present at the +operation, and was so much interested by it that he is said to have +from that time formed the determination of devoting himself to the +art of surgery. + +Leaving the cure's household service, Pare apprenticed himself to a +barber-surgeon named Vialot, under whom he learnt to let blood, +draw teeth, and perform the minor operations. After four years' +experience of this kind, he went to Paris to study at the school of +anatomy and surgery, meanwhile maintaining himself by his trade of +a barber. He afterwards succeeded in obtaining an appointment as +assistant at the Hotel Dieu, where his conduct was so exemplary, +and his progress so marked, that the chief surgeon, Goupil, +entrusted him with the charge of the patients whom he could not +himself attend to. After the usual course of instruction, Pare was +admitted a master barber-surgeon, and shortly after was appointed +to a charge with the French army under Montmorenci in Piedmont. +Pare was not a man to follow in the ordinary ruts of his +profession, but brought the resources of an ardent and original +mind to bear upon his daily work, diligently thinking out for +himself the rationale of diseases and their befitting remedies. +Before his time the wounded suffered much more at the hands of +their surgeons than they did at those of their enemies. To stop +bleeding from gunshot wounds, the barbarous expedient was resorted +to of dressing them with boiling oil. Haemorrhage was also stopped +by searing the wounds with a red-hot iron; and when amputation was +necessary, it was performed with a red-hot knife. At first Pare +treated wounds according to the approved methods; but, fortunately, +on one occasion, running short of boiling oil, he substituted a +mild and emollient application. He was in great fear all night +lest he should have done wrong in adopting this treatment; but was +greatly relieved next morning on finding his patients comparatively +comfortable, while those whose wounds had been treated in the usual +way were writhing in torment. Such was the casual origin of one of +Pare's greatest improvements in the treatment of gun-shot wounds; +and he proceeded to adopt the emollient treatment in all future +cases. Another still more important improvement was his employment +of the ligature in tying arteries to stop haemorrhage, instead of +the actual cautery. Pare, however, met with the usual fate of +innovators and reformers. His practice was denounced by his +surgical brethren as dangerous, unprofessional, and empirical; and +the older surgeons banded themselves together to resist its +adoption. They reproached him for his want of education, more +especially for his ignorance of Latin and Greek; and they assailed +him with quotations from ancient writers, which he was unable +either to verify or refute. But the best answer to his assailants +was the success of his practice. The wounded soldiers called out +everywhere for Pare, and he was always at their service: he tended +them carefully and affectionately; and he usually took leave of +them with the words, "I have dressed you; may God cure you." + +After three years' active service as army-surgeon, Pare returned to +Paris with such a reputation that he was at once appointed surgeon +in ordinary to the King. When Metz was besieged by the Spanish +army, under Charles V., the garrison suffered heavy loss, and the +number of wounded was very great. The surgeons were few and +incompetent, and probably slew more by their bad treatment than the +Spaniards did by the sword. The Duke of Guise, who commanded the +garrison, wrote to the King imploring him to send Pare to his help. +The courageous surgeon at once set out, and, after braving many +dangers (to use his own words, "d'estre pendu, estrangle ou mis en +pieces"), he succeeded in passing the enemy's lines, and entered +Metz in safety. The Duke, the generals, and the captains gave him +an affectionate welcome; while the soldiers, when they heard of his +arrival, cried, "We no longer fear dying of our wounds; our friend +is among us." In the following year Pare was in like manner with +the besieged in the town of Hesdin, which shortly fell before the +Duke of Savoy, and he was taken prisoner. But having succeeded in +curing one of the enemy's chief officers of a serious wound, he was +discharged without ransom, and returned in safety to Paris. + +The rest of his life was occupied in study, in self-improvement, in +piety, and in good deeds. Urged by some of the most learned among +his contemporaries, he placed on record the results of his surgical +experience, in twenty-eight books, which were published by him at +different times. His writings are valuable and remarkable chiefly +on account of the great number of facts and cases contained in +them, and the care with which he avoids giving any directions +resting merely upon theory unsupported by observation. Pare +continued, though a Protestant, to hold the office of surgeon in +ordinary to the King; and during the Massacre of St. Bartholomew he +owed his life to the personal friendship of Charles IX., whom he +had on one occasion saved from the dangerous effects of a wound +inflicted by a clumsy surgeon in performing the operation of +venesection. Brantome, in his 'Memoires,' thus speaks of the +King's rescue of Pare on the night of Saint Bartholomew--"He sent +to fetch him, and to remain during the night in his chamber and +wardrobe-room, commanding him not to stir, and saying that it was +not reasonable that a man who had preserved the lives of so many +people should himself be massacred." Thus Pare escaped the horrors +of that fearful night, which he survived for many years, and was +permitted to die in peace, full of age and honours. + +Harvey was as indefatigable a labourer as any we have named. He +spent not less than eight long years of investigation and research +before he published his views of the circulation of the blood. He +repeated and verified his experiments again and again, probably +anticipating the opposition he would have to encounter from the +profession on making known his discovery. The tract in which he at +length announced his views, was a most modest one,--but simple, +perspicuous, and conclusive. It was nevertheless received with +ridicule, as the utterance of a crack-brained impostor. For some +time, he did not make a single convert, and gained nothing but +contumely and abuse. He had called in question the revered +authority of the ancients; and it was even averred that his views +were calculated to subvert the authority of the Scriptures and +undermine the very foundations of morality and religion. His +little practice fell away, and he was left almost without a friend. +This lasted for some years, until the great truth, held fast by +Harvey amidst all his adversity, and which had dropped into many +thoughtful minds, gradually ripened by further observation, and +after a period of about twenty-five years, it became generally +recognised as an established scientific truth. + +The difficulties encountered by Dr. Jenner in promulgating and +establishing his discovery of vaccination as a preventive of small- +pox, were even greater than those of Harvey. Many, before him, had +witnessed the cow-pox, and had heard of the report current among +the milkmaids in Gloucestershire, that whoever had taken that +disease was secure against small-pox. It was a trifling, vulgar +rumour, supposed to have no significance whatever; and no one had +thought it worthy of investigation, until it was accidentally +brought under the notice of Jenner. He was a youth, pursuing his +studies at Sodbury, when his attention was arrested by the casual +observation made by a country girl who came to his master's shop +for advice. The small-pox was mentioned, when the girl said, "I +can't take that disease, for I have had cow-pox." The observation +immediately riveted Jenner's attention, and he forthwith set about +inquiring and making observations on the subject. His professional +friends, to whom he mentioned his views as to the prophylactic +virtues of cow-pox, laughed at him, and even threatened to expel +him from their society, if he persisted in harassing them with the +subject. In London he was so fortunate as to study under John +Hunter, to whom he communicated his views. The advice of the great +anatomist was thoroughly characteristic: "Don't think, but TRY; be +patient, be accurate." Jenner's courage was supported by the +advice, which conveyed to him the true art of philosophical +investigation. He went back to the country to practise his +profession and make observations and experiments, which he +continued to pursue for a period of twenty years. His faith in his +discovery was so implicit that he vaccinated his own son on three +several occasions. At length he published his views in a quarto of +about seventy pages, in which he gave the details of twenty-three +cases of successful vaccination of individuals, to whom it was +found afterwards impossible to communicate the small-pox either by +contagion or inoculation. It was in 1798 that this treatise was +published; though he had been working out his ideas since the year +1775, when they had begun to assume a definite form. + +How was the discovery received? First with indifference, then with +active hostility. Jenner proceeded to London to exhibit to the +profession the process of vaccination and its results; but not a +single medical man could be induced to make trial of it, and after +fruitlessly waiting for nearly three months, he returned to his +native village. He was even caricatured and abused for his attempt +to "bestialize" his species by the introduction into their systems +of diseased matter from the cow's udder. Vaccination was denounced +from the pulpit as "diabolical." It was averred that vaccinated +children became "ox-faced," that abscesses broke out to "indicate +sprouting horns," and that the countenance was gradually +"transmuted into the visage of a cow, the voice into the bellowing +of bulls." Vaccination, however, was a truth, and notwithstanding +the violence of the opposition, belief in it spread slowly. In one +village, where a gentleman tried to introduce the practice, the +first persons who permitted themselves to be vaccinated were +absolutely pelted and driven into their houses if they appeared out +of doors. Two ladies of title--Lady Ducie and the Countess of +Berkeley--to their honour be it remembered--had the courage to +vaccinate their children; and the prejudices of the day were at +once broken through. The medical profession gradually came round, +and there were several who even sought to rob Dr. Jenner of the +merit of the discovery, when its importance came to be recognised. +Jenner's cause at last triumphed, and he was publicly honoured and +rewarded. In his prosperity he was as modest as he had been in his +obscurity. He was invited to settle in London, and told that he +might command a practice of 10,000l. a year. But his answer was, +"No! In the morning of my days I have sought the sequestered and +lowly paths of life--the valley, and not the mountain,--and now, in +the evening of my days, it is not meet for me to hold myself up as +an object for fortune and for fame." During Jenner's own life-time +the practice of vaccination became adopted all over the civilized +world; and when he died, his title as a Benefactor of his kind was +recognised far and wide. Cuvier has said, "If vaccine were the +only discovery of the epoch, it would serve to render it +illustrious for ever; yet it knocked twenty times in vain at the +doors of the Academies." + +Not less patient, resolute, and persevering was Sir Charles Bell in +the prosecution of his discoveries relating to the nervous system. +Previous to his time, the most confused notions prevailed as to the +functions of the nerves, and this branch of study was little more +advanced than it had been in the times of Democritus and Anaxagoras +three thousand years before. Sir Charles Bell, in the valuable +series of papers the publication of which was commenced in 1821, +took an entirely original view of the subject, based upon a long +series of careful, accurate, and oft-repeated experiments. +Elaborately tracing the development of the nervous system up from +the lowest order of animated being, to man--the lord of the animal +kingdom,--he displayed it, to use his own words, "as plainly as if +it were written in our mother-tongue." His discovery consisted in +the fact, that the spinal nerves are double in their function, and +arise by double roots from the spinal marrow,--volition being +conveyed by that part of the nerves springing from the one root, +and sensation by the other. The subject occupied the mind of Sir +Charles Bell for a period of forty years, when, in 1840, he laid +his last paper before the Royal Society. As in the cases of Harvey +and Jenner, when he had lived down the ridicule and opposition with +which his views were first received, and their truth came to be +recognised, numerous claims for priority in making the discovery +were set up at home and abroad. Like them, too, he lost practice +by the publication of his papers; and he left it on record that, +after every step in his discovery, he was obliged to work harder +than ever to preserve his reputation as a practitioner. The great +merits of Sir Charles Bell were, however, at length fully +recognised; and Cuvier himself, when on his death-bed, finding his +face distorted and drawn to one side, pointed out the symptom to +his attendants as a proof of the correctness of Sir Charles Bell's +theory. + +An equally devoted pursuer of the same branch of science was the +late Dr. Marshall Hall, whose name posterity will rank with those +of Harvey, Hunter, Jenner, and Bell. During the whole course of +his long and useful life he was a most careful and minute observer; +and no fact, however apparently insignificant, escaped his +attention. His important discovery of the diastaltic nervous +system, by which his name will long be known amongst scientific +men, originated in an exceedingly simple circumstance. When +investigating the pneumonic circulation in the Triton, the +decapitated object lay upon the table; and on separating the tail +and accidentally pricking the external integument, he observed that +it moved with energy, and became contorted into various forms. He +had not touched a muscle or a muscular nerve; what then was the +nature of these movements? The same phenomena had probably been +often observed before, but Dr. Hall was the first to apply himself +perseveringly to the investigation of their causes; and he +exclaimed on the occasion, "I will never rest satisfied until I +have found all this out, and made it clear." His attention to the +subject was almost incessant; and it is estimated that in the +course of his life he devoted not less than 25,000 hours to its +experimental and chemical investigation. He was at the same time +carrying on an extensive private practice, and officiating as +lecturer at St. Thomas's Hospital and other Medical Schools. It +will scarcely be credited that the paper in which he embodied his +discovery was rejected by the Royal Society, and was only accepted +after the lapse of seventeen years, when the truth of his views had +become acknowledged by scientific men both at home and abroad. + +The life of Sir William Herschel affords another remarkable +illustration of the force of perseverance in another branch of +science. His father was a poor German musician, who brought up his +four sons to the same calling. William came over to England to +seek his fortune, and he joined the band of the Durham Militia, in +which he played the oboe. The regiment was lying at Doncaster, +where Dr. Miller first became acquainted with Herschel, having +heard him perform a solo on the violin in a surprising manner. The +Doctor entered into conversation with the youth, and was so pleased +with him, that he urged him to leave the militia and take up his +residence at his house for a time. Herschel did so, and while at +Doncaster was principally occupied in violin-playing at concerts, +availing himself of the advantages of Dr. Miller's library to study +at his leisure hours. A new organ having been built for the parish +church of Halifax, an organist was advertised for, on which +Herschel applied for the office, and was selected. Leading the +wandering life of an artist, he was next attracted to Bath, where +he played in the Pump-room band, and also officiated as organist in +the Octagon chapel. Some recent discoveries in astronomy having +arrested his mind, and awakened in him a powerful spirit of +curiosity, he sought and obtained from a friend the loan of a two- +foot Gregorian telescope. So fascinated was the poor musician by +the science, that he even thought of purchasing a telescope, but +the price asked by the London optician was so alarming, that he +determined to make one. Those who know what a reflecting telescope +is, and the skill which is required to prepare the concave metallic +speculum which forms the most important part of the apparatus, will +be able to form some idea of the difficulty of this undertaking. +Nevertheless, Herschel succeeded, after long and painful labour, in +completing a five-foot reflector, with which he had the +gratification of observing the ring and satellites of Saturn. Not +satisfied with his triumph, he proceeded to make other instruments +in succession, of seven, ten, and even twenty feet. In +constructing the seven-foot reflector, he finished no fewer than +two hundred specula before he produced one that would bear any +power that was applied to it,--a striking instance of the +persevering laboriousness of the man. While gauging the heavens +with his instruments, he continued patiently to earn his bread by +piping to the fashionable frequenters of the Pump-room. So eager +was he in his astronomical observations, that he would steal away +from the room during an interval of the performance, give a little +turn at his telescope, and contentedly return to his oboe. Thus +working away, Herschel discovered the Georgium Sidus, the orbit and +rate of motion of which he carefully calculated, and sent the +result to the Royal Society; when the humble oboe player found +himself at once elevated from obscurity to fame. He was shortly +after appointed Astronomer Royal, and by the kindness of George +III. was placed in a position of honourable competency for life. +He bore his honours with the same meekness and humility which had +distinguished him in the days of his obscurity. So gentle and +patient, and withal so distinguished and successful a follower of +science under difficulties, perhaps cannot be found in the entire +history of biography. + +The career of William Smith, the father of English geology, though +perhaps less known, is not less interesting and instructive as an +example of patient and laborious effort, and the diligent +cultivation of opportunities. He was born in 1769, the son of a +yeoman farmer at Churchill, in Oxfordshire. His father dying when +he was but a child, he received a very sparing education at the +village school, and even that was to a considerable extent +interfered with by his wandering and somewhat idle habits as a boy. +His mother having married a second time, he was taken in charge by +an uncle, also a farmer, by whom he was brought up. Though the +uncle was by no means pleased with the boy's love of wandering +about, collecting "poundstones," "pundips," and other stony +curiosities which lay scattered about the adjoining land, he yet +enabled him to purchase a few of the necessary books wherewith to +instruct himself in the rudiments of geometry and surveying; for +the boy was already destined for the business of a land-surveyor. +One of his marked characteristics, even as a youth, was the +accuracy and keenness of his observation; and what he once clearly +saw he never forgot. He began to draw, attempted to colour, and +practised the arts of mensuration and surveying, all without +regular instruction; and by his efforts in self-culture, he shortly +became so proficient, that he was taken on as assistant to a local +surveyor of ability in the neighbourhood. In carrying on his +business he was constantly under the necessity of traversing +Oxfordshire and the adjoining counties. One of the first things he +seriously pondered over, was the position of the various soils and +strata that came under his notice on the lands which he surveyed or +travelled over; more especially the position of the red earth in +regard to the lias and superincumbent rocks. The surveys of +numerous collieries which he was called upon to make, gave him +further experience; and already, when only twenty-three years of +age, he contemplated making a model of the strata of the earth. + +While engaged in levelling for a proposed canal in Gloucestershire, +the idea of a general law occurred to him relating to the strata of +that district. He conceived that the strata lying above the coal +were not laid horizontally, but inclined, and in one direction, +towards the east; resembling, on a large scale, "the ordinary +appearance of superposed slices of bread and butter." The +correctness of this theory he shortly after confirmed by +observations of the strata in two parallel valleys, the "red +ground," "lias," and "freestone" or "oolite," being found to come +down in an eastern direction, and to sink below the level, yielding +place to the next in succession. He was shortly enabled to verify +the truth of his views on a larger scale, having been appointed to +examine personally into the management of canals in England and +Wales. During his journeys, which extended from Bath to Newcastle- +on-Tyne, returning by Shropshire and Wales, his keen eyes were +never idle for a moment. He rapidly noted the aspect and structure +of the country through which he passed with his companions, +treasuring up his observations for future use. His geologic vision +was so acute, that though the road along which he passed from York +to Newcastle in the post chaise was from five to fifteen miles +distant from the hills of chalk and oolite on the east, he was +satisfied as to their nature, by their contours and relative +position, and their ranges on the surface in relation to the lias +and "red ground" occasionally seen on the road. + +The general results of his observation seem to have been these. He +noted that the rocky masses of country in the western parts of +England generally inclined to the east and south-east; that the red +sandstones and marls above the coal measures passed beneath the +lias, clay, and limestone, that these again passed beneath the +sands, yellow limestones and clays, forming the table-land of the +Cotswold Hills, while these in turn passed beneath the great chalk +deposits occupying the eastern parts of England. He further +observed, that each layer of clay, sand, and limestone held its own +peculiar classes of fossils; and pondering much on these things, he +at length came to the then unheard-of conclusion, that each +distinct deposit of marine animals, in these several strata, +indicated a distinct sea-bottom, and that each layer of clay, sand, +chalk, and stone, marked a distinct epoch of time in the history of +the earth. + +This idea took firm possession of his mind, and he could talk and +think of nothing else. At canal boards, at sheep-shearings, at +county meetings, and at agricultural associations, 'Strata Smith,' +as he came to be called, was always running over with the subject +that possessed him. He had indeed made a great discovery, though +he was as yet a man utterly unknown in the scientific world. He +proceeded to project a map of the stratification of England; but +was for some time deterred from proceeding with it, being fully +occupied in carrying out the works of the Somersetshire coal canal, +which engaged him for a period of about six years. He continued, +nevertheless, to be unremitting in his observation of facts; and he +became so expert in apprehending the internal structure of a +district and detecting the lie of the strata from its external +configuration, that he was often consulted respecting the drainage +of extensive tracts of land, in which, guided by his geological +knowledge, he proved remarkably successful, and acquired an +extensive reputation. + +One day, when looking over the cabinet collection of fossils +belonging to the Rev. Samuel Richardson, at Bath, Smith astonished +his friend by suddenly disarranging his classification, and re- +arranging the fossils in their stratigraphical order, saying-- +"These came from the blue lias, these from the over-lying sand and +freestone, these from the fuller's earth, and these from the Bath +building stone." A new light flashed upon Mr. Richardson's mind, +and he shortly became a convert to and believer in William Smith's +doctrine. The geologists of the day were not, however, so easily +convinced; and it was scarcely to be tolerated that an unknown +land-surveyor should pretend to teach them the science of geology. +But William Smith had an eye and mind to penetrate deep beneath the +skin of the earth; he saw its very fibre and skeleton, and, as it +were, divined its organization. His knowledge of the strata in the +neighbourhood of Bath was so accurate, that one evening, when +dining at the house of the Rev. Joseph Townsend, he dictated to Mr. +Richardson the different strata according to their order of +succession in descending order, twenty-three in number, commencing +with the chalk and descending in continuous series down to the +coal, below which the strata were not then sufficiently determined. +To this was added a list of the more remarkable fossils which had +been gathered in the several layers of rock. This was printed and +extensively circulated in 1801. + +He next determined to trace out the strata through districts as +remote from Bath as his means would enable him to reach. For years +he journeyed to and fro, sometimes on foot, sometimes on horseback, +riding on the tops of stage coaches, often making up by night- +travelling the time he had lost by day, so as not to fail in his +ordinary business engagements. When he was professionally called +away to any distance from home--as, for instance, when travelling +from Bath to Holkham, in Norfolk, to direct the irrigation and +drainage of Mr. Coke's land in that county--he rode on horseback, +making frequent detours from the road to note the geological +features of the country which he traversed. + +For several years he was thus engaged in his journeys to distant +quarters in England and Ireland, to the extent of upwards of ten +thousand miles yearly; and it was amidst this incessant and +laborious travelling, that he contrived to commit to paper his +fast-growing generalizations on what he rightly regarded as a new +science. No observation, howsoever trivial it might appear, was +neglected, and no opportunity of collecting fresh facts was +overlooked. Whenever he could, he possessed himself of records of +borings, natural and artificial sections, drew them to a constant +scale of eight yards to the inch, and coloured them up. Of his +keenness of observation take the following illustration. When +making one of his geological excursions about the country near +Woburn, as he was drawing near to the foot of the Dunstable chalk +hills, he observed to his companion, "If there be any broken ground +about the foot of these hills, we may find SHARK'S TEETH;" and they +had not proceeded far, before they picked up six from the white +bank of a new fence-ditch. As he afterwards said of himself, "The +habit of observation crept on me, gained a settlement in my mind, +became a constant associate of my life, and started up in activity +at the first thought of a journey; so that I generally went off +well prepared with maps, and sometimes with contemplations on its +objects, or on those on the road, reduced to writing before it +commenced. My mind was, therefore, like the canvas of a painter, +well prepared for the first and best impressions." + +Notwithstanding his courageous and indefatigable industry, many +circumstances contributed to prevent the promised publication of +William Smith's 'Map of the Strata of England and Wales,' and it +was not until 1814 that he was enabled, by the assistance of some +friends, to give to the world the fruits of his twenty years' +incessant labour. To prosecute his inquiries, and collect the +extensive series of facts and observations requisite for his +purpose, he had to expend the whole of the profits of his +professional labours during that period; and he even sold off his +small property to provide the means of visiting remoter parts of +the island. Meanwhile he had entered on a quarrying speculation +near Bath, which proved unsuccessful, and he was under the +necessity of selling his geological collection (which was purchased +by the British Museum), his furniture and library, reserving only +his papers, maps, and sections, which were useless save to himself. +He bore his losses and misfortunes with exemplary fortitude; and +amidst all, he went on working with cheerful courage and untiring +patience. He died at Northampton, in August, 1839, while on his +way to attend the meeting of the British Association at Birmingham. + +It is difficult to speak in terms of too high praise of the first +geological map of England, which we owe to the industry of this +courageous man of science. An accomplished writer says of it, "It +was a work so masterly in conception and so correct in general +outline, that in principle it served as a basis not only for the +production of later maps of the British Islands, but for geological +maps of all other parts of the world, wherever they have been +undertaken. In the apartments of the Geological Society Smith's +map may yet be seen--a great historical document, old and worn, +calling for renewal of its faded tints. Let any one conversant +with the subject compare it with later works on a similar scale, +and he will find that in all essential features it will not suffer +by the comparison--the intricate anatomy of the Silurian rocks of +Wales and the north of England by Murchison and Sedgwick being the +chief additions made to his great generalizations." {20} The +genius of the Oxfordshire surveyor did not fail to be duly +recognised and honoured by men of science during his lifetime. In +1831 the Geological Society of London awarded to him the Wollaston +medal, "in consideration of his being a great original discoverer +in English geology, and especially for his being the first in this +country to discover and to teach the identification of strata, and +to determine their succession by means of their imbedded fossils." +William Smith, in his simple, earnest way, gained for himself a +name as lasting as the science he loved so well. To use the words +of the writer above quoted, "Till the manner as well as the fact of +the first appearance of successive forms of life shall be solved, +it is not easy to surmise how any discovery can be made in geology +equal in value to that which we owe to the genius of William +Smith." + +Hugh Miller was a man of like observant faculties, who studied +literature as well as science with zeal and success. The book in +which he has told the story of his life, ('My Schools and +Schoolmasters'), is extremely interesting, and calculated to be +eminently useful. It is the history of the formation of a truly +noble character in the humblest condition of life; and inculcates +most powerfully the lessons of self-help, self-respect, and self- +dependence. While Hugh was but a child, his father, who was a +sailor, was drowned at sea, and he was brought up by his widowed +mother. He had a school training after a sort, but his best +teachers were the boys with whom he played, the men amongst whom he +worked, the friends and relatives with whom he lived. He read much +and miscellaneously, and picked up odd sorts of knowledge from many +quarters,--from workmen, carpenters, fishermen and sailors, and +above all, from the old boulders strewed along the shores of the +Cromarty Frith. With a big hammer which had belonged to his great- +grandfather, an old buccaneer, the boy went about chipping the +stones, and accumulating specimens of mica, porphyry, garnet, and +such like. Sometimes he had a day in the woods, and there, too, +the boy's attention was excited by the peculiar geological +curiosities which came in his way. While searching among the rocks +on the beach, he was sometimes asked, in irony, by the farm +servants who came to load their carts with sea-weed, whether he +"was gettin' siller in the stanes," but was so unlucky as never to +be able to answer in the affirmative. When of a suitable age he +was apprenticed to the trade of his choice--that of a working +stonemason; and he began his labouring career in a quarry looking +out upon the Cromarty Frith. This quarry proved one of his best +schools. The remarkable geological formations which it displayed +awakened his curiosity. The bar of deep-red stone beneath, and the +bar of pale-red clay above, were noted by the young quarryman, who +even in such unpromising subjects found matter for observation and +reflection. Where other men saw nothing, he detected analogies, +differences, and peculiarities, which set him a-thinking. He +simply kept his eyes and his mind open; was sober, diligent, and +persevering; and this was the secret of his intellectual growth. + +His curiosity was excited and kept alive by the curious organic +remains, principally of old and extinct species of fishes, ferns, +and ammonites, which were revealed along the coast by the washings +of the waves, or were exposed by the stroke of his mason's hammer. +He never lost sight of the subject; but went on accumulating +observations and comparing formations, until at length, many years +afterwards, when no longer a working mason, he gave to the world +his highly interesting work on the Old Red Sandstone, which at once +established his reputation as a scientific geologist. But this +work was the fruit of long years of patient observation and +research. As he modestly states in his autobiography, "the only +merit to which I lay claim in the case is that of patient research- +-a merit in which whoever wills may rival or surpass me; and this +humble faculty of patience, when rightly developed, may lead to +more extraordinary developments of idea than even genius itself." + +The late John Brown, the eminent English geologist, was, like +Miller, a stonemason in his early life, serving an apprenticeship +to the trade at Colchester, and afterwards working as a journeyman +mason at Norwich. He began business as a builder on his own +account at Colchester, where by frugality and industry he secured a +competency. It was while working at his trade that his attention +was first drawn to the study of fossils and shells; and he +proceeded to make a collection of them, which afterwards grew into +one of the finest in England. His researches along the coasts of +Essex, Kent, and Sussex brought to light some magnificent remains +of the elephant and rhinoceros, the most valuable of which were +presented by him to the British Museum. During the last few years +of his life he devoted considerable attention to the study of the +Foraminifera in chalk, respecting which he made several interesting +discoveries. His life was useful, happy, and honoured; and he died +at Stanway, in Essex, in November 1859, at the ripe age of eighty +years. + +Not long ago, Sir Roderick Murchison discovered at Thurso, in the +far north of Scotland, a profound geologist, in the person of a +baker there, named Robert Dick. When Sir Roderick called upon him +at the bakehouse in which he baked and earned his bread, Robert +Dick delineated to him, by means of flour upon the board, the +geographical features and geological phenomena of his native +county, pointing out the imperfections in the existing maps, which +he had ascertained by travelling over the country in his leisure +hours. On further inquiry, Sir Roderick ascertained that the +humble individual before him was not only a capital baker and +geologist, but a first-rate botanist. "I found," said the +President of the Geographical Society, "to my great humiliation +that the baker knew infinitely more of botanical science, ay, ten +times more, than I did; and that there were only some twenty or +thirty specimens of flowers which he had not collected. Some he +had obtained as presents, some he had purchased, but the greater +portion had been accumulated by his industry, in his native county +of Caithness; and the specimens were all arranged in the most +beautiful order, with their scientific names affixed." + +Sir Roderick Murchison himself is an illustrious follower of these +and kindred branches of science. A writer in the 'Quarterly +Review' cites him as a "singular instance of a man who, having +passed the early part of his life as a soldier, never having had +the advantage, or disadvantage as the case might have been, of a +scientific training, instead of remaining a fox-hunting country +gentleman, has succeeded by his own native vigour and sagacity, +untiring industry and zeal, in making for himself a scientific +reputation that is as wide as it is likely to be lasting. He took +first of all an unexplored and difficult district at home, and, by +the labour of many years, examined its rock-formations, classed +them in natural groups, assigned to each its characteristic +assemblage of fossils, and was the first to decipher two great +chapters in the world's geological history, which must always +henceforth carry his name on their title-page. Not only so, but he +applied the knowledge thus acquired to the dissection of large +districts, both at home and abroad, so as to become the geological +discoverer of great countries which had formerly been 'terrae +incognitae.'" But Sir Roderick Murchison is not merely a +geologist. His indefatigable labours in many branches of knowledge +have contributed to render him among the most accomplished and +complete of scientific men. + + + +CHAPTER VI--WORKERS IN ART + + + +"If what shone afar so grand, +Turn to nothing in thy hand, +On again; the virtue lies +In struggle, not the prize."--R. M. Milnes. + +"Excelle, et tu vivras."--Joubert. + + +Excellence in art, as in everything else, can only be achieved by +dint of painstaking labour. + +There is nothing less accidental than the painting of a fine +picture or the chiselling of a noble statue. Every skilled touch +of the artist's brush or chisel, though guided by genius, is the +product of unremitting study. + +Sir Joshua Reynolds was such a believer in the force of industry, +that he held that artistic excellence, "however expressed by +genius, taste, or the gift of heaven, may be acquired." Writing to +Barry he said, "Whoever is resolved to excel in painting, or indeed +any other art, must bring all his mind to bear upon that one object +from the moment that he rises till he goes to bed." And on another +occasion he said, "Those who are resolved to excel must go to their +work, willing or unwilling, morning, noon, and night: they will +find it no play, but very hard labour." But although diligent +application is no doubt absolutely necessary for the achievement of +the highest distinction in art, it is equally true that without the +inborn genius, no amount of mere industry, however well applied, +will make an artist. The gift comes by nature, but is perfected by +self-culture, which is of more avail than all the imparted +education of the schools. + +Some of the greatest artists have had to force their way upward in +the face of poverty and manifold obstructions. Illustrious +instances will at once flash upon the reader's mind. Claude +Lorraine, the pastrycook; Tintoretto, the dyer; the two +Caravaggios, the one a colour-grinder, the other a mortar-carrier +at the Vatican; Salvator Rosa, the associate of bandits; Giotto, +the peasant boy; Zingaro, the gipsy; Cavedone, turned out of doors +to beg by his father; Canova, the stone-cutter; these, and many +other well-known artists, succeeded in achieving distinction by +severe study and labour, under circumstances the most adverse. + +Nor have the most distinguished artists of our own country been +born in a position of life more than ordinarily favourable to the +culture of artistic genius. Gainsborough and Bacon were the sons +of cloth-workers; Barry was an Irish sailor boy, and Maclise a +banker's apprentice at Cork; Opie and Romney, like Inigo Jones, +were carpenters; West was the son of a small Quaker farmer in +Pennsylvania; Northcote was a watchmaker, Jackson a tailor, and +Etty a printer; Reynolds, Wilson, and Wilkie, were the sons of +clergymen; Lawrence was the son of a publican, and Turner of a +barber. Several of our painters, it is true, originally had some +connection with art, though in a very humble way,--such as Flaxman, +whose father sold plaster casts; Bird, who ornamented tea-trays; +Martin, who was a coach-painter; Wright and Gilpin, who were ship- +painters; Chantrey, who was a carver and gilder; and David Cox, +Stanfield, and Roberts, who were scene-painters. + +It was not by luck or accident that these men achieved distinction, +but by sheer industry and hard work. Though some achieved wealth, +yet this was rarely, if ever, the ruling motive. Indeed, no mere +love of money could sustain the efforts of the artist in his early +career of self-denial and application. The pleasure of the pursuit +has always been its best reward; the wealth which followed but an +accident. Many noble-minded artists have preferred following the +bent of their genius, to chaffering with the public for terms. +Spagnoletto verified in his life the beautiful fiction of Xenophon, +and after he had acquired the means of luxury, preferred +withdrawing himself from their influence, and voluntarily returned +to poverty and labour. When Michael Angelo was asked his opinion +respecting a work which a painter had taken great pains to exhibit +for profit, he said, "I think that he will be a poor fellow so long +as he shows such an extreme eagerness to become rich." + +Like Sir Joshua Reynolds, Michael Angelo was a great believer in +the force of labour; and he held that there was nothing which the +imagination conceived, that could not be embodied in marble, if the +hand were made vigorously to obey the mind. He was himself one of +the most indefatigable of workers; and he attributed his power of +studying for a greater number of hours than most of his +contemporaries, to his spare habits of living. A little bread and +wine was all he required for the chief part of the day when +employed at his work; and very frequently he rose in the middle of +the night to resume his labours. On these occasions, it was his +practice to fix the candle, by the light of which he chiselled, on +the summit of a paste-board cap which he wore. Sometimes he was +too wearied to undress, and he slept in his clothes, ready to +spring to his work so soon as refreshed by sleep. He had a +favourite device of an old man in a go-cart, with an hour-glass +upon it bearing the inscription, Ancora imparo! Still I am +learning. + +Titian, also, was an indefatigable worker. His celebrated "Pietro +Martire" was eight years in hand, and his "Last Supper" seven. In +his letter to Charles V. he said, "I send your Majesty the 'Last +Supper' after working at it almost daily for seven years--dopo +sette anni lavorandovi quasi continuamente." Few think of the +patient labour and long training involved in the greatest works of +the artist. They seem easy and quickly accomplished, yet with how +great difficulty has this ease been acquired. "You charge me fifty +sequins," said the Venetian nobleman to the sculptor, "for a bust +that cost you only ten days' labour." "You forget," said the +artist, "that I have been thirty years learning to make that bust +in ten days." Once when Domenichino was blamed for his slowness in +finishing a picture which was bespoken, he made answer, "I am +continually painting it within myself." It was eminently +characteristic of the industry of the late Sir Augustus Callcott, +that he made not fewer than forty separate sketches in the +composition of his famous picture of "Rochester." This constant +repetition is one of the main conditions of success in art, as in +life itself. + +No matter how generous nature has been in bestowing the gift of +genius, the pursuit of art is nevertheless a long and continuous +labour. Many artists have been precocious, but without diligence +their precocity would have come to nothing. The anecdote related +of West is well known. When only seven years old, struck with the +beauty of the sleeping infant of his eldest sister whilst watching +by its cradle, he ran to seek some paper and forthwith drew its +portrait in red and black ink. The little incident revealed the +artist in him, and it was found impossible to draw him from his +bent. West might have been a greater painter, had he not been +injured by too early success: his fame, though great, was not +purchased by study, trials, and difficulties, and it has not been +enduring. + +Richard Wilson, when a mere child, indulged himself with tracing +figures of men and animals on the walls of his father's house, with +a burnt stick. He first directed his attention to portrait +painting; but when in Italy, calling one day at the house of +Zucarelli, and growing weary with waiting, he began painting the +scene on which his friend's chamber window looked. When Zucarelli +arrived, he was so charmed with the picture, that he asked if +Wilson had not studied landscape, to which he replied that he had +not. "Then, I advise you," said the other, "to try; for you are +sure of great success." Wilson adopted the advice, studied and +worked hard, and became our first great English landscape painter. + +Sir Joshua Reynolds, when a boy, forgot his lessons, and took +pleasure only in drawing, for which his father was accustomed to +rebuke him. The boy was destined for the profession of physic, but +his strong instinct for art could not be repressed, and he became a +painter. Gainsborough went sketching, when a schoolboy, in the +woods of Sudbury; and at twelve he was a confirmed artist: he was +a keen observer and a hard worker,--no picturesque feature of any +scene he had once looked upon, escaping his diligent pencil. +William Blake, a hosier's son, employed himself in drawing designs +on the backs of his father's shop-bills, and making sketches on the +counter. Edward Bird, when a child only three or four years old, +would mount a chair and draw figures on the walls, which he called +French and English soldiers. A box of colours was purchased for +him, and his father, desirous of turning his love of art to +account, put him apprentice to a maker of tea-trays! Out of this +trade he gradually raised himself, by study and labour, to the rank +of a Royal Academician. + +Hogarth, though a very dull boy at his lessons, took pleasure in +making drawings of the letters of the alphabet, and his school +exercises were more remarkable for the ornaments with which he +embellished them, than for the matter of the exercises themselves. +In the latter respect he was beaten by all the blockheads of the +school, but in his adornments he stood alone. His father put him +apprentice to a silversmith, where he learnt to draw, and also to +engrave spoons and forks with crests and ciphers. From silver- +chasing, he went on to teach himself engraving on copper, +principally griffins and monsters of heraldry, in the course of +which practice he became ambitious to delineate the varieties of +human character. The singular excellence which he reached in this +art, was mainly the result of careful observation and study. He +had the gift, which he sedulously cultivated, of committing to +memory the precise features of any remarkable face, and afterwards +reproducing them on paper; but if any singularly fantastic form or +outre face came in his way, he would make a sketch of it on the +spot, upon his thumb-nail, and carry it home to expand at his +leisure. Everything fantastical and original had a powerful +attraction for him, and he wandered into many out-of-the-way places +for the purpose of meeting with character. By this careful storing +of his mind, he was afterwards enabled to crowd an immense amount +of thought and treasured observation into his works. Hence it is +that Hogarth's pictures are so truthful a memorial of the +character, the manners, and even the very thoughts of the times in +which he lived. True painting, he himself observed, can only be +learnt in one school, and that is kept by Nature. But he was not a +highly cultivated man, except in his own walk. His school +education had been of the slenderest kind, scarcely even perfecting +him in the art of spelling; his self-culture did the rest. For a +long time he was in very straitened circumstances, but nevertheless +worked on with a cheerful heart. Poor though he was, he contrived +to live within his small means, and he boasted, with becoming +pride, that he was "a punctual paymaster." When he had conquered +all his difficulties and become a famous and thriving man, he loved +to dwell upon his early labours and privations, and to fight over +again the battle which ended so honourably to him as a man and so +gloriously as an artist. "I remember the time," said he on one +occasion, "when I have gone moping into the city with scarce a +shilling, but as soon as I have received ten guineas there for a +plate, I have returned home, put on my sword, and sallied out with +all the confidence of a man who had thousands in his pockets." + +"Industry and perseverance" was the motto of the sculptor Banks, +which he acted on himself, and strongly recommended to others. His +well-known kindness induced many aspiring youths to call upon him +and ask for his advice and assistance; and it is related that one +day a boy called at his door to see him with this object, but the +servant, angry at the loud knock he had given, scolded him, and was +about sending him away, when Banks overhearing her, himself went +out. The little boy stood at the door with some drawings in his +hand. "What do you want with me?" asked the sculptor. "I want, +sir, if you please, to be admitted to draw at the Academy." Banks +explained that he himself could not procure his admission, but he +asked to look at the boy's drawings. Examining them, he said, +"Time enough for the Academy, my little man! go home--mind your +schooling--try to make a better drawing of the Apollo--and in a +month come again and let me see it." The boy went home--sketched +and worked with redoubled diligence--and, at the end of the month, +called again on the sculptor. The drawing was better; but again +Banks sent him back, with good advice, to work and study. In a +week the boy was again at his door, his drawing much improved; and +Banks bid him be of good cheer, for if spared he would distinguish +himself. The boy was Mulready; and the sculptor's augury was amply +fulfilled. + +The fame of Claude Lorraine is partly explained by his +indefatigable industry. Born at Champagne, in Lorraine, of poor +parents, he was first apprenticed to a pastrycook. His brother, +who was a wood-carver, afterwards took him into his shop to learn +that trade. Having there shown indications of artistic skill, a +travelling dealer persuaded the brother to allow Claude to +accompany him to Italy. He assented, and the young man reached +Rome, where he was shortly after engaged by Agostino Tassi, the +landscape painter, as his house-servant. In that capacity Claude +first learnt landscape painting, and in course of time he began to +produce pictures. We next find him making the tour of Italy, +France, and Germany, occasionally resting by the way to paint +landscapes, and thereby replenish his purse. On returning to Rome +he found an increasing demand for his works, and his reputation at +length became European. He was unwearied in the study of nature in +her various aspects. It was his practice to spend a great part of +his time in closely copying buildings, bits of ground, trees, +leaves, and such like, which he finished in detail, keeping the +drawings by him in store for the purpose of introducing them in his +studied landscapes. He also gave close attention to the sky, +watching it for whole days from morning till night, and noting the +various changes occasioned by the passing clouds and the increasing +and waning light. By this constant practice he acquired, although +it is said very slowly, such a mastery of hand and eye as +eventually secured for him the first rank among landscape painters. + +Turner, who has been styled "the English Claude," pursued a career +of like laborious industry. He was destined by his father for his +own trade of a barber, which he carried on in London, until one day +the sketch which the boy had made of a coat of arms on a silver +salver having attracted the notice of a customer whom his father +was shaving, the latter was urged to allow his son to follow his +bias, and he was eventually permitted to follow art as a +profession. Like all young artists, Turner had many difficulties +to encounter, and they were all the greater that his circumstances +were so straitened. But he was always willing to work, and to take +pains with his work, no matter how humble it might be. He was glad +to hire himself out at half-a-crown a night to wash in skies in +Indian ink upon other people's drawings, getting his supper into +the bargain. Thus he earned money and acquired expertness. Then +he took to illustrating guide-books, almanacs, and any sort of +books that wanted cheap frontispieces. "What could I have done +better?" said he afterwards; "it was first-rate practice." He did +everything carefully and conscientiously, never slurring over his +work because he was ill-remunerated for it. He aimed at learning +as well as living; always doing his best, and never leaving a +drawing without having made a step in advance upon his previous +work. A man who thus laboured was sure to do much; and his growth +in power and grasp of thought was, to use Ruskin's words, "as +steady as the increasing light of sunrise." But Turner's genius +needs no panegyric; his best monument is the noble gallery of +pictures bequeathed by him to the nation, which will ever be the +most lasting memorial of his fame. + +To reach Rome, the capital of the fine arts, is usually the highest +ambition of the art student. But the journey to Rome is costly, +and the student is often poor. With a will resolute to overcome +difficulties, Rome may however at last be reached. Thus Francois +Perrier, an early French painter, in his eager desire to visit the +Eternal City, consented to act as guide to a blind vagrant. After +long wanderings he reached the Vatican, studied and became famous. +Not less enthusiasm was displayed by Jacques Callot in his +determination to visit Rome. Though opposed by his father in his +wish to be an artist, the boy would not be baulked, but fled from +home to make his way to Italy. Having set out without means, he +was soon reduced to great straits; but falling in with a band of +gipsies, he joined their company, and wandered about with them from +one fair to another, sharing in their numerous adventures. During +this remarkable journey Callot picked up much of that extraordinary +knowledge of figure, feature, and character which he afterwards +reproduced, sometimes in such exaggerated forms, in his wonderful +engravings. + +When Callot at length reached Florence, a gentleman, pleased with +his ingenious ardour, placed him with an artist to study; but he +was not satisfied to stop short of Rome, and we find him shortly on +his way thither. At Rome he made the acquaintance of Porigi and +Thomassin, who, on seeing his crayon sketches, predicted for him a +brilliant career as an artist. But a friend of Callot's family +having accidentally encountered him, took steps to compel the +fugitive to return home. By this time he had acquired such a love +of wandering that he could not rest; so he ran away a second time, +and a second time he was brought back by his elder brother, who +caught him at Turin. At last the father, seeing resistance was in +vain, gave his reluctant consent to Callot's prosecuting his +studies at Rome. Thither he went accordingly; and this time he +remained, diligently studying design and engraving for several +years, under competent masters. On his way back to France, he was +encouraged by Cosmo II. to remain at Florence, where he studied and +worked for several years more. On the death of his patron he +returned to his family at Nancy, where, by the use of his burin and +needle, he shortly acquired both wealth and fame. When Nancy was +taken by siege during the civil wars, Callot was requested by +Richelieu to make a design and engraving of the event, but the +artist would not commemorate the disaster which had befallen his +native place, and he refused point-blank. Richelieu could not +shake his resolution, and threw him into prison. There Callot met +with some of his old friends the gipsies, who had relieved his +wants on his first journey to Rome. When Louis XIII. heard of his +imprisonment, he not only released him, but offered to grant him +any favour he might ask. Callot immediately requested that his old +companions, the gipsies, might be set free and permitted to beg in +Paris without molestation. This odd request was granted on +condition that Callot should engrave their portraits, and hence his +curious book of engravings entitled "The Beggars." Louis is said +to have offered Callot a pension of 3000 livres provided he would +not leave Paris; but the artist was now too much of a Bohemian, and +prized his liberty too highly to permit him to accept it; and he +returned to Nancy, where he worked till his death. His industry +may be inferred from the number of his engravings and etchings, of +which he left not fewer than 1600. He was especially fond of +grotesque subjects, which he treated with great skill; his free +etchings, touched with the graver, being executed with especial +delicacy and wonderful minuteness. + +Still more romantic and adventurous was the career of Benvenuto +Cellini, the marvellous gold worker, painter, sculptor, engraver, +engineer, and author. His life, as told by himself, is one of the +most extraordinary autobiographies ever written. Giovanni Cellini, +his father, was one of the Court musicians to Lorenzo de Medici at +Florence; and his highest ambition concerning his son Benvenuto was +that he should become an expert player on the flute. But Giovanni +having lost his appointment, found it necessary to send his son to +learn some trade, and he was apprenticed to a goldsmith. The boy +had already displayed a love of drawing and of art; and, applying +himself to his business, he soon became a dexterous workman. +Having got mixed up in a quarrel with some of the townspeople, he +was banished for six months, during which period he worked with a +goldsmith at Sienna, gaining further experience in jewellery and +gold-working. + +His father still insisting on his becoming a flute-player, +Benvenuto continued to practise on the instrument, though he +detested it. His chief pleasure was in art, which he pursued with +enthusiasm. Returning to Florence, he carefully studied the +designs of Leonardo da Vinci and Michael Angelo; and, still further +to improve himself in gold-working, he went on foot to Rome, where +he met with a variety of adventures. He returned to Florence with +the reputation of being a most expert worker in the precious +metals, and his skill was soon in great request. But being of an +irascible temper, he was constantly getting into scrapes, and was +frequently under the necessity of flying for his life. Thus he +fled from Florence in the disguise of a friar, again taking refuge +at Sienna, and afterwards at Rome. + +During his second residence in Rome, Cellini met with extensive +patronage, and he was taken into the Pope's service in the double +capacity of goldsmith and musician. He was constantly studying and +improving himself by acquaintance with the works of the best +masters. He mounted jewels, finished enamels, engraved seals, and +designed and executed works in gold, silver, and bronze, in such a +style as to excel all other artists. Whenever he heard of a +goldsmith who was famous in any particular branch, he immediately +determined to surpass him. Thus it was that he rivalled the medals +of one, the enamels of another, and the jewellery of a third; in +fact, there was not a branch of his business that he did not feel +impelled to excel in. + +Working in this spirit, it is not so wonderful that Cellini should +have been able to accomplish so much. He was a man of +indefatigable activity, and was constantly on the move. At one +time we find him at Florence, at another at Rome; then he is at +Mantua, at Rome, at Naples, and back to Florence again; then at +Venice, and in Paris, making all his long journeys on horseback. +He could not carry much luggage with him; so, wherever he went, he +usually began by making his own tools. He not only designed his +works, but executed them himself,--hammered and carved, and cast +and shaped them with his own hands. Indeed, his works have the +impress of genius so clearly stamped upon them, that they could +never have been designed by one person, and executed by another. +The humblest article--a buckle for a lady's girdle, a seal, a +locket, a brooch, a ring, or a button--became in his hands a +beautiful work of art. + +Cellini was remarkable for his readiness and dexterity in +handicraft. One day a surgeon entered the shop of Raffaello del +Moro, the goldsmith, to perform an operation on his daughter's +hand. On looking at the surgeon's instruments, Cellini, who was +present, found them rude and clumsy, as they usually were in those +days, and he asked the surgeon to proceed no further with the +operation for a quarter of an hour. He then ran to his shop, and +taking a piece of the finest steel, wrought out of it a beautifully +finished knife, with which the operation was successfully +performed. + +Among the statues executed by Cellini, the most important are the +silver figure of Jupiter, executed at Paris for Francis I., and the +Perseus, executed in bronze for the Grand Duke Cosmo of Florence. +He also executed statues in marble of Apollo, Hyacinthus, +Narcissus, and Neptune. The extraordinary incidents connected with +the casting of the Perseus were peculiarly illustrative of the +remarkable character of the man. + +The Grand Duke having expressed a decided opinion that the model, +when shown to him in wax, could not possibly be cast in bronze, +Cellini was immediately stimulated by the predicted impossibility, +not only to attempt, but to do it. He first made the clay model, +baked it, and covered it with wax, which he shaped into the perfect +form of a statue. Then coating the wax with a sort of earth, he +baked the second covering, during which the wax dissolved and +escaped, leaving the space between the two layers for the reception +of the metal. To avoid disturbance, the latter process was +conducted in a pit dug immediately under the furnace, from which +the liquid metal was to be introduced by pipes and apertures into +the mould prepared for it. + +Cellini had purchased and laid in several loads of pine-wood, in +anticipation of the process of casting, which now began. The +furnace was filled with pieces of brass and bronze, and the fire +was lit. The resinous pine-wood was soon in such a furious blaze, +that the shop took fire, and part of the roof was burnt; while at +the same time the wind blowing and the rain filling on the furnace, +kept down the heat, and prevented the metals from melting. For +hours Cellini struggled to keep up the heat, continually throwing +in more wood, until at length he became so exhausted and ill, that +he feared he should die before the statue could be cast. He was +forced to leave to his assistants the pouring in of the metal when +melted, and betook himself to his bed. While those about him were +condoling with him in his distress, a workman suddenly entered the +room, lamenting that "Poor Benvenuto's work was irretrievably +spoiled!" On hearing this, Cellini immediately sprang from his bed +and rushed to the workshop, where he found the fire so much gone +down that the metal had again become hard. + +Sending across to a neighbour for a load of young oak which had +been more than a year in drying, he soon had the fire blazing again +and the metal melting and glittering. The wind was, however, still +blowing with fury, and the rain falling heavily; so, to protect +himself, Cellini had some tables with pieces of tapestry and old +clothes brought to him, behind which he went on hurling the wood +into the furnace. A mass of pewter was thrown in upon the other +metal, and by stirring, sometimes with iron and sometimes with long +poles, the whole soon became completely melted. At this juncture, +when the trying moment was close at hand, a terrible noise as of a +thunderbolt was heard, and a glittering of fire flashed before +Cellini's eyes. The cover of the furnace had burst, and the metal +began to flow! Finding that it did not run with the proper +velocity, Cellini rushed into the kitchen, bore away every piece of +copper and pewter that it contained--some two hundred porringers, +dishes, and kettles of different kinds--and threw them into the +furnace. Then at length the metal flowed freely, and thus the +splendid statue of Perseus was cast. + +The divine fury of genius in which Cellini rushed to his kitchen +and stripped it of its utensils for the purposes of his furnace, +will remind the reader of the like act of Pallissy in breaking up +his furniture for the purpose of baking his earthenware. +Excepting, however, in their enthusiasm, no two men could be less +alike in character. Cellini was an Ishmael against whom, according +to his own account, every man's hand was turned. But about his +extraordinary skill as a workman, and his genius as an artist, +there cannot be two opinions. + +Much less turbulent was the career of Nicolas Poussin, a man as +pure and elevated in his ideas of art as he was in his daily life, +and distinguished alike for his vigour of intellect, his rectitude +of character, and his noble simplicity. He was born in a very +humble station, at Andeleys, near Rouen, where his father kept a +small school. The boy had the benefit of his parent's instruction, +such as it was, but of that he is said to have been somewhat +negligent, preferring to spend his time in covering his lesson- +books and his slate with drawings. A country painter, much pleased +with his sketches, besought his parents not to thwart him in his +tastes. The painter agreed to give Poussin lessons, and he soon +made such progress that his master had nothing more to teach him. +Becoming restless, and desirous of further improving himself, +Poussin, at the age of 18, set out for Paris, painting signboards +on his way for a maintenance. + +At Paris a new world of art opened before him, exciting his wonder +and stimulating his emulation. He worked diligently in many +studios, drawing, copying, and painting pictures. After a time, he +resolved, if possible, to visit Rome, and set out on his journey; +but he only succeeded in getting as far as Florence, and again +returned to Paris. A second attempt which he made to reach Rome +was even less successful; for this time he only got as far as +Lyons. He was, nevertheless, careful to take advantage of all +opportunities for improvement which came in his way, and continued +as sedulous as before in studying and working. + +Thus twelve years passed, years of obscurity and toil, of failures +and disappointments, and probably of privations. At length Poussin +succeeded in reaching Rome. There he diligently studied the old +masters, and especially the ancient statues, with whose perfection +he was greatly impressed. For some time he lived with the sculptor +Duquesnoi, as poor as himself, and assisted him in modelling +figures after the antique. With him he carefully measured some of +the most celebrated statues in Rome, more particularly the +'Antinous:' and it is supposed that this practice exercised +considerable influence on the formation of his future style. At +the same time he studied anatomy, practised drawing from the life, +and made a great store of sketches of postures and attitudes of +people whom he met, carefully reading at his leisure such standard +books on art as he could borrow from his friends. + +During all this time he remained very poor, satisfied to be +continually improving himself. He was glad to sell his pictures +for whatever they would bring. One, of a prophet, he sold for +eight livres; and another, the 'Plague of the Philistines,' he sold +for 60 crowns--a picture afterwards bought by Cardinal de Richelieu +for a thousand. To add to his troubles, he was stricken by a cruel +malady, during the helplessness occasioned by which the Chevalier +del Posso assisted him with money. For this gentleman Poussin +afterwards painted the 'Rest in the Desert,' a fine picture, which +far more than repaid the advances made during his illness. + +The brave man went on toiling and learning through suffering. +Still aiming at higher things, he went to Florence and Venice, +enlarging the range of his studies. The fruits of his +conscientious labour at length appeared in the series of great +pictures which he now began to produce,--his 'Death of Germanicus,' +followed by 'Extreme Unction,' the 'Testament of Eudamidas,' the +'Manna,' and the 'Abduction of the Sabines.' + +The reputation of Poussin, however, grew but slowly. He was of a +retiring disposition and shunned society. People gave him credit +for being a thinker much more than a painter. When not actually +employed in painting, he took long solitary walks in the country, +meditating the designs of future pictures. One of his few friends +while at Rome was Claude Lorraine, with whom he spent many hours at +a time on the terrace of La Trinite-du-Mont, conversing about art +and antiquarianism. The monotony and the quiet of Rome were suited +to his taste, and, provided he could earn a moderate living by his +brush, he had no wish to leave it. + +But his fame now extended beyond Rome, and repeated invitations +were sent him to return to Paris. He was offered the appointment +of principal painter to the King. At first he hesitated; quoted +the Italian proverb, Chi sta bene non si muove; said he had lived +fifteen years in Rome, married a wife there, and looked forward to +dying and being buried there. Urged again, he consented, and +returned to Paris. But his appearance there awakened much +professional jealousy, and he soon wished himself back in Rome +again. While in Paris he painted some of his greatest works--his +'Saint Xavier,' the 'Baptism,' and the 'Last Supper.' He was kept +constantly at work. At first he did whatever he was asked to do, +such as designing frontispieces for the royal books, more +particularly a Bible and a Virgil, cartoons for the Louvre, and +designs for tapestry; but at length he expostulated:- "It is +impossible for me," he said to M. de Chanteloup, "to work at the +same time at frontispieces for books, at a Virgin, at a picture of +the Congregation of St. Louis, at the various designs for the +gallery, and, finally, at designs for the royal tapestry. I have +only one pair of hands and a feeble head, and can neither be helped +nor can my labours be lightened by another." + +Annoyed by the enemies his success had provoked and whom he was +unable to conciliate, he determined, at the end of less than two +years' labour in Paris, to return to Rome. Again settled there in +his humble dwelling on Mont Pincio, he employed himself diligently +in the practice of his art during the remaining years of his life, +living in great simplicity and privacy. Though suffering much from +the disease which afflicted him, he solaced himself by study, +always striving after excellence. "In growing old," he said, "I +feel myself becoming more and more inflamed with the desire of +surpassing myself and reaching the highest degree of perfection." +Thus toiling, struggling, and suffering, Poussin spent his later +years. He had no children; his wife died before him; all his +friends were gone: so that in his old age he was left absolutely +alone in Rome, so full of tombs, and died there in 1665, +bequeathing to his relatives at Andeleys the savings of his life, +amounting to about 1000 crowns; and leaving behind him, as a legacy +to his race, the great works of his genius. + +The career of Ary Scheffer furnishes one of the best examples in +modern times of a like high-minded devotion to art. Born at +Dordrecht, the son of a German artist, he early manifested an +aptitude for drawing and painting, which his parents encouraged. +His father dying while he was still young, his mother resolved, +though her means were but small, to remove the family to Paris, in +order that her son might obtain the best opportunities for +instruction. There young Scheffer was placed with Guerin the +painter. But his mother's means were too limited to permit him to +devote himself exclusively to study. She had sold the few jewels +she possessed, and refused herself every indulgence, in order to +forward the instruction of her other children. Under such +circumstances, it was natural that Ary should wish to help her; and +by the time he was eighteen years of age he began to paint small +pictures of simple subjects, which met with a ready sale at +moderate prices. He also practised portrait painting, at the same +time gathering experience and earning honest money. He gradually +improved in drawing, colouring, and composition. The 'Baptism' +marked a new epoch in his career, and from that point he went on +advancing, until his fame culminated in his pictures illustrative +of 'Faust,' his 'Francisca de Rimini,' 'Christ the Consoler,' the +'Holy Women,' 'St. Monica and St. Augustin,' and many other noble +works. + +"The amount of labour, thought, and attention," says Mrs. Grote, +"which Scheffer brought to the production of the 'Francisca,' must +have been enormous. In truth, his technical education having been +so imperfect, he was forced to climb the steep of art by drawing +upon his own resources, and thus, whilst his hand was at work, his +mind was engaged in meditation. He had to try various processes of +handling, and experiments in colouring; to paint and repaint, with +tedious and unremitting assiduity. But Nature had endowed him with +that which proved in some sort an equivalent for shortcomings of a +professional kind. His own elevation of character, and his +profound sensibility, aided him in acting upon the feelings of +others through the medium of the pencil." {21} + +One of the artists whom Scheffer most admired was Flaxman; and he +once said to a friend, "If I have unconsciously borrowed from any +one in the design of the 'Francisca,' it must have been from +something I had seen among Flaxman's drawings." John Flaxman was +the son of a humble seller of plaster casts in New Street, Covent +Garden. When a child, he was such an invalid that it was his +custom to sit behind his father's shop counter propped by pillows, +amusing himself with drawing and reading. A benevolent clergyman, +the Rev. Mr. Matthews, calling at the shop one day, saw the boy +trying to read a book, and on inquiring what it was, found it to be +a Cornelius Nepos, which his father had picked up for a few pence +at a bookstall. The gentleman, after some conversation with the +boy, said that was not the proper book for him to read, but that he +would bring him one. The next day he called with translations of +Homer and 'Don Quixote,' which the boy proceeded to read with great +avidity. His mind was soon filled with the heroism which breathed +through the pages of the former, and, with the stucco Ajaxes and +Achilleses about him, ranged along the shop shelves, the ambition +took possession of him, that he too would design and embody in +poetic forms those majestic heroes. + +Like all youthful efforts, his first designs were crude. The proud +father one day showed some of them to Roubilliac the sculptor, who +turned from them with a contemptuous "pshaw!" But the boy had the +right stuff in him; he had industry and patience; and he continued +to labour incessantly at his books and drawings. He then tried his +young powers in modelling figures in plaster of Paris, wax, and +clay. Some of these early works are still preserved, not because +of their merit, but because they are curious as the first healthy +efforts of patient genius. It was long before the boy could walk, +and he only learnt to do so by hobbling along upon crutches. At +length he became strong enough to walk without them. + +The kind Mr. Matthews invited him to his house, where his wife +explained Homer and Milton to him. They helped him also in his +self-culture--giving him lessons in Greek and Latin, the study of +which he prosecuted at home. By dint of patience and perseverance, +his drawing improved so much that he obtained a commission from a +lady, to execute six original drawings in black chalk of subjects +in Homer. His first commission! What an event in the artist's +life! A surgeon's first fee, a lawyer's first retainer, a +legislator's first speech, a singer's first appearance behind the +foot-lights, an author's first book, are not any of them more full +of interest to the aspirant for fame than the artist's first +commission. The boy at once proceeded to execute the order, and he +was both well praised and well paid for his work. + +At fifteen Flaxman entered a pupil at the Royal Academy. +Notwithstanding his retiring disposition, he soon became known +among the students, and great things were expected of him. Nor +were their expectations disappointed: in his fifteenth year he +gained the silver prize, and next year he became a candidate for +the gold one. Everybody prophesied that he would carry off the +medal, for there was none who surpassed him in ability and +industry. Yet he lost it, and the gold medal was adjudged to a +pupil who was not afterwards heard of. This failure on the part of +the youth was really of service to him; for defeats do not long +cast down the resolute-hearted, but only serve to call forth their +real powers. "Give me time," said he to his father, "and I will +yet produce works that the Academy will be proud to recognise." He +redoubled his efforts, spared no pains, designed and modelled +incessantly, and made steady if not rapid progress. But meanwhile +poverty threatened his father's household; the plaster-cast trade +yielded a very bare living; and young Flaxman, with resolute self- +denial, curtailed his hours of study, and devoted himself to +helping his father in the humble details of his business. He laid +aside his Homer to take up the plaster-trowel. He was willing to +work in the humblest department of the trade so that his father's +family might be supported, and the wolf kept from the door. To +this drudgery of his art he served a long apprenticeship; but it +did him good. It familiarised him with steady work, and cultivated +in him the spirit of patience. The discipline may have been hard, +but it was wholesome. + +Happily, young Flaxman's skill in design had reached the knowledge +of Josiah Wedgwood, who sought him out for the purpose of employing +him to design improved patterns of china and earthenware. It may +seem a humble department of art for such a genius as Flaxman to +work in; but it really was not so. An artist may be labouring +truly in his vocation while designing a common teapot or water-jug. +Articles in daily use amongst the people, which are before their +eyes at every meal, may be made the vehicles of education to all, +and minister to their highest culture. The most ambitious artist +way thus confer a greater practical benefit on his countrymen than +by executing an elaborate work which he may sell for thousands of +pounds to be placed in some wealthy man's gallery where it is +hidden away from public sight. Before Wedgwood's time the designs +which figured upon our china and stoneware were hideous both in +drawing and execution, and he determined to improve both. Flaxman +did his best to carry out the manufacturer's views. He supplied +him from time to time with models and designs of various pieces of +earthenware, the subjects of which were principally from ancient +verse and history. Many of them are still in existence, and some +are equal in beauty and simplicity to his after designs for marble. +The celebrated Etruscan vases, specimens of which were to be found +in public museums and in the cabinets of the curious, furnished him +with the best examples of form, and these he embellished with his +own elegant devices. Stuart's 'Athens,' then recently published, +furnished him with specimens of the purest-shaped Greek utensils; +of these he adopted the best, and worked them into new shapes of +elegance and beauty. Flaxman then saw that he was labouring in a +great work--no less than the promotion of popular education; and he +was proud, in after life, to allude to his early labours in this +walk, by which he was enabled at the same time to cultivate his +love of the beautiful, to diffuse a taste for art among the people, +and to replenish his own purse, while he promoted the prosperity of +his friend and benefactor. + +At length, in the year 1782, when twenty-seven years of age, he +quitted his father's roof and rented a small house and studio in +Wardour Street, Soho; and what was more, he married--Ann Denman was +the name of his wife--and a cheerful, bright-souled, noble woman +she was. He believed that in marrying her he should be able to +work with an intenser spirit; for, like him, she had a taste for +poetry and art; and besides was an enthusiastic admirer of her +husband's genius. Yet when Sir Joshua Reynolds--himself a +bachelor--met Flaxman shortly after his marriage, he said to him, +"So, Flaxman, I am told you are married; if so, sir, I tell you you +are ruined for an artist." Flaxman went straight home, sat down +beside his wife, took her hand in his, and said, "Ann, I am ruined +for an artist." "How so, John? How has it happened? and who has +done it?" "It happened," he replied, "in the church, and Ann +Denman has done it." He then told her of Sir Joshua's remark-- +whose opinion was well known, and had often been expressed, that if +students would excel they must bring the whole powers of their mind +to bear upon their art, from the moment they rose until they went +to bed; and also, that no man could be a GREAT artist unless he +studied the grand works of Raffaelle, Michael Angelo, and others, +at Rome and Florence. "And I," said Flaxman, drawing up his little +figure to its full height, "_I_ would be a great artist." "And a +great artist you shall be," said his wife, "and visit Rome too, if +that be really necessary to make you great." "But how?" asked +Flaxman. "WORK AND ECONOMISE," rejoined the brave wife; "I will +never have it said that Ann Denman ruined John Flaxman for an +artist." And so it was determined by the pair that the journey to +Rome was to be made when their means would admit. "I will go to +Rome," said Flaxman, "and show the President that wedlock is for a +man's good rather than his harm; and you, Ann, shall accompany me." + +Patiently and happily the affectionate couple plodded on during +five years in their humble little home in Wardour Street, always +with the long journey to Rome before them. It was never lost sight +of for a moment, and not a penny was uselessly spent that could be +saved towards the necessary expenses. They said no word to any one +about their project; solicited no aid from the Academy; but trusted +only to their own patient labour and love to pursue and achieve +their object. During this time Flaxman exhibited very few works. +He could not afford marble to experiment in original designs; but +he obtained frequent commissions for monuments, by the profits of +which he maintained himself. He still worked for Wedgwood, who was +a prompt paymaster; and, on the whole, he was thriving, happy, and +hopeful. His local respectability was even such as to bring local +honours and local work upon him; for he was elected by the +ratepayers to collect the watch-rate for the Parish of St. Anne, +when he might be seen going about with an ink-bottle suspended from +his button-hole, collecting the money. + +At length Flaxman and his wife having accumulated a sufficient +store of savings, set out for Rome. Arrived there, he applied +himself diligently to study, maintaining himself, like other poor +artists, by making copies from the antique. English visitors +sought his studio, and gave him commissions; and it was then that +he composed his beautiful designs illustrative of Homer, AEschylus, +and Dante. The price paid for them was moderate--only fifteen +shillings a-piece; but Flaxman worked for art as well as money; and +the beauty of the designs brought him other friends and patrons. +He executed Cupid and Aurora for the munificent Thomas Hope, and +the Fury of Athamas for the Earl of Bristol. He then prepared to +return to England, his taste improved and cultivated by careful +study; but before he left Italy, the Academies of Florence and +Carrara recognised his merit by electing him a member. + +His fame had preceded him to London, where he soon found abundant +employment. While at Rome he had been commissioned to execute his +famous monument in memory of Lord Mansfield, and it was erected in +the north transept of Westminster Abbey shortly after his return. +It stands there in majestic grandeur, a monument to the genius of +Flaxman himself--calm, simple, and severe. No wonder that Banks, +the sculptor, then in the heyday of his fame, exclaimed when he saw +it, "This little man cuts us all out!" + +When the members of the Royal Academy heard of Flaxman's return, +and especially when they had an opportunity of seeing and admiring +his portrait-statue of Mansfield, they were eager to have him +enrolled among their number. He allowed his name to be proposed in +the candidates' list of associates, and was immediately elected. +Shortly after, he appeared in an entirely new character. The +little boy who had begun his studies behind the plaster-cast- +seller's shop-counter in New Street, Covent Garden, was now a man +of high intellect and recognised supremacy in art, to instruct +students, in the character of Professor of Sculpture to the Royal +Academy! And no man better deserved to fill that distinguished +office; for none is so able to instruct others as he who, for +himself and by his own efforts, has learnt to grapple with and +overcome difficulties. + +After a long, peaceful, and happy life, Flaxman found himself +growing old. The loss which he sustained by the death of his +affectionate wife Ann, was a severe shock to him; but he survived +her several years, during which he executed his celebrated "Shield +of Achilles," and his noble "Archangel Michael vanquishing Satan,"- +-perhaps his two greatest works. + +Chantrey was a more robust man;--somewhat rough, but hearty in his +demeanour; proud of his successful struggle with the difficulties +which beset him in early life; and, above all, proud of his +independence. He was born a poor man's child, at Norton, near +Sheffield. His father dying when he was a mere boy, his mother +married again. Young Chantrey used to drive an ass laden with +milk-cans across its back into the neighbouring town of Sheffield, +and there serve his mother's customers with milk. Such was the +humble beginning of his industrial career; and it was by his own +strength that he rose from that position, and achieved the highest +eminence as an artist. Not taking kindly to his step-father, the +boy was sent to trade, and was first placed with a grocer in +Sheffield. The business was very distasteful to him; but, passing +a carver's shop window one day, his eye was attracted by the +glittering articles it contained, and, charmed with the idea of +being a carver, he begged to be released from the grocery business +with that object. His friends consented, and he was bound +apprentice to the carver and gilder for seven years. His new +master, besides being a carver in wood, was also a dealer in prints +and plaster models; and Chantrey at once set about imitating both, +studying with great industry and energy. All his spare hours were +devoted to drawing, modelling, and self-improvement, and he often +carried his labours far into the night. Before his apprenticeship +was out--at the ace of twenty-one--he paid over to his master the +whole wealth which he was able to muster--a sum of 50l.--to cancel +his indentures, determined to devote himself to the career of an +artist. He then made the best of his way to London, and with +characteristic good sense, sought employment as an assistant +carver, studying painting and modelling at his bye-hours. Among +the jobs on which he was first employed as a journeyman carver, was +the decoration of the dining-room of Mr. Rogers, the poet--a room +in which he was in after years a welcome visitor; and he usually +took pleasure in pointing out his early handywork to the guests +whom he met at his friend's table. + +Returning to Sheffield on a professional visit, he advertised +himself in the local papers as a painter of portraits in crayons +and miniatures, and also in oil. For his first crayon portrait he +was paid a guinea by a cutler; and for a portrait in oil, a +confectioner paid him as much as 5l. and a pair of top boots! +Chantrey was soon in London again to study at the Royal Academy; +and next time he returned to Sheffield he advertised himself as +ready to model plaster busts of his townsmen, as well as paint +portraits of them. He was even selected to design a monument to a +deceased vicar of the town, and executed it to the general +satisfaction. When in London he used a room over a stable as a +studio, and there he modelled his first original work for +exhibition. It was a gigantic head of Satan. Towards the close of +Chantrey's life, a friend passing through his studio was struck by +this model lying in a corner. "That head," said the sculptor, "was +the first thing that I did after I came to London. I worked at it +in a garret with a paper cap on my head; and as I could then afford +only one candle, I stuck that one in my cap that it might move +along with me, and give me light whichever way I turned." Flaxman +saw and admired this head at the Academy Exhibition, and +recommended Chantrey for the execution of the busts of four +admirals, required for the Naval Asylum at Greenwich. This +commission led to others, and painting was given up. But for eight +years before, he had not earned 5l. by his modelling. His famous +head of Horne Tooke was such a success that, according to his own +account, it brought him commissions amounting to 12,000l. + +Chantrey had now succeeded, but he had worked hard, and fairly +earned his good fortune. He was selected from amongst sixteen +competitors to execute the statue of George III. for the city of +London. A few years later, he produced the exquisite monument of +the Sleeping Children, now in Lichfield Cathedral,--a work of great +tenderness and beauty; and thenceforward his career was one of +increasing honour, fame, and prosperity. His patience, industry, +and steady perseverance were the means by which he achieved his +greatness. Nature endowed him with genius, and his sound sense +enabled him to employ the precious gift as a blessing. He was +prudent and shrewd, like the men amongst whom he was born; the +pocket-book which accompanied him on his Italian tour containing +mingled notes on art, records of daily expenses, and the current +prices of marble. His tastes were simple, and he made his finest +subjects great by the mere force of simplicity. His statue of +Watt, in Handsworth church, seems to us the very consummation of +art; yet it is perfectly artless and simple. His generosity to +brother artists in need was splendid, but quiet and unostentatious. +He left the principal part of his fortune to the Royal Academy for +the promotion of British art. + +The same honest and persistent industry was throughout distinctive +of the career of David Wilkie. The son of a Scotch minister, he +gave early indications of an artistic turn; and though he was a +negligent and inapt scholar, he was a sedulous drawer of faces and +figures. A silent boy, he already displayed that quiet +concentrated energy of character which distinguished him through +life. He was always on the look-out for an opportunity to draw,-- +and the walls of the manse, or the smooth sand by the river side, +were alike convenient for his purpose. Any sort of tool would +serve him; like Giotto, he found a pencil in a burnt stick, a +prepared canvas in any smooth stone, and the subject for a picture +in every ragged mendicant he met. When he visited a house, he +generally left his mark on the walls as an indication of his +presence, sometimes to the disgust of cleanly housewives. In +short, notwithstanding the aversion of his father, the minister, to +the "sinful" profession of painting, Wilkie's strong propensity was +not to be thwarted, and he became an artist, working his way +manfully up the steep of difficulty. Though rejected on his first +application as a candidate for admission to the Scottish Academy, +at Edinburgh, on account of the rudeness and inaccuracy of his +introductory specimens, he persevered in producing better, until he +was admitted. But his progress was slow. He applied himself +diligently to the drawing of the human figure, and held on with the +determination to succeed, as if with a resolute confidence in the +result. He displayed none of the eccentric humour and fitful +application of many youths who conceive themselves geniuses, but +kept up the routine of steady application to such an extent that he +himself was afterwards accustomed to attribute his success to his +dogged perseverance rather than to any higher innate power. "The +single element," he said, "in all the progressive movements of my +pencil was persevering industry." At Edinburgh he gained a few +premiums, thought of turning his attention to portrait painting, +with a view to its higher and more certain remuneration, but +eventually went boldly into the line in which he earned his fame,-- +and painted his Pitlessie Fair. What was bolder still, he +determined to proceed to London, on account of its presenting so +much wider a field for study and work; and the poor Scotch lad +arrived in town, and painted his Village Politicians while living +in a humble lodging on eighteen shillings a week. + +Notwithstanding the success of this picture, and the commissions +which followed it, Wilkie long continued poor. The prices which +his works realized were not great, for he bestowed upon them so +much time and labour, that his earnings continued comparatively +small for many years. Every picture was carefully studied and +elaborated beforehand; nothing was struck off at a heat; many +occupied him for years--touching, retouching, and improving them +until they finally passed out of his hands. As with Reynolds, his +motto was "Work! work! work!" and, like him, he expressed great +dislike for talking artists. Talkers may sow, but the silent reap. +"Let us be DOING something," was his oblique mode of rebuking the +loquacious and admonishing the idle. He once related to his friend +Constable that when he studied at the Scottish Academy, Graham, the +master of it, was accustomed to say to the students, in the words +of Reynolds, "If you have genius, industry will improve it; if you +have none, industry will supply its place." "So," said Wilkie, "I +was determined to be very industrious, for I knew I had no genius." +He also told Constable that when Linnell and Burnett, his fellow- +students in London, were talking about art, he always contrived to +get as close to them as he could to hear all they said, "for," said +he, "they know a great deal, and I know very little." This was +said with perfect sincerity, for Wilkie was habitually modest. One +of the first things that he did with the sum of thirty pounds which +he obtained from Lord Mansfield for his Village Politicians, was to +buy a present--of bonnets, shawls, and dresses--for his mother and +sister at home, though but little able to afford it at the time. +Wilkie's early poverty had trained him in habits of strict economy, +which were, however, consistent with a noble liberality, as appears +from sundry passages in the Autobiography of Abraham Raimbach the +engraver. + +William Etty was another notable instance of unflagging industry +and indomitable perseverance in art. His father was a ginger-bread +and spicemaker at York, and his mother--a woman of considerable +force and originality of character--was the daughter of a +ropemaker. The boy early displayed a love of drawing, covering +walls, floors, and tables with specimens of his skill; his first +crayon being a farthing's worth of chalk, and this giving place to +a piece of coal or a bit of charred stick. His mother, knowing +nothing of art, put the boy apprentice to a trade--that of a +printer. But in his leisure hours he went on with the practice of +drawing; and when his time was out he determined to follow his +bent--he would be a painter and nothing else. Fortunately his +uncle and elder brother were able and willing to help him on in his +new career, and they provided him with the means of entering as +pupil at the Royal Academy. We observe, from Leslie's +Autobiography, that Etty was looked upon by his fellow students as +a worthy but dull, plodding person, who would never distinguish +himself. But he had in him the divine faculty of work, and +diligently plodded his way upward to eminence in the highest walks +of art. + +Many artists have had to encounter privations which have tried +their courage and endurance to the utmost before they succeeded. +What number may have sunk under them we can never know. Martin +encountered difficulties in the course of his career such as +perhaps fall to the lot of few. More than once he found himself on +the verge of starvation while engaged on his first great picture. +It is related of him that on one occasion he found himself reduced +to his last shilling--a BRIGHT shilling--which he had kept because +of its very brightness, but at length he found it necessary to +exchange it for bread. He went to a baker's shop, bought a loaf, +and was taking it away, when the baker snatched it from him, and +tossed back the shilling to the starving painter. The bright +shilling had failed him in his hour of need--it was a bad one! +Returning to his lodgings, he rummaged his trunk for some remaining +crust to satisfy his hunger. Upheld throughout by the victorious +power of enthusiasm, he pursued his design with unsubdued energy. +He had the courage to work on and to wait; and when, a few days +after, he found an opportunity to exhibit his picture, he was from +that time famous. Like many other great artists, his life proves +that, in despite of outward circumstances, genius, aided by +industry, will be its own protector, and that fame, though she +comes late, will never ultimately refuse her favours to real merit + +The most careful discipline and training after academic methods +will fail in making an artist, unless he himself take an active +part in the work. Like every highly cultivated man, he must be +mainly self-educated. When Pugin, who was brought up in his +father's office, had learnt all that he could learn of architecture +according to the usual formulas, he still found that he had learned +but little; and that he must begin at the beginning, and pass +through the discipline of labour. Young Pugin accordingly hired +himself out as a common carpenter at Covent Garden Theatre--first +working under the stage, then behind the flys, then upon the stage +itself. He thus acquired a familiarity with work, and cultivated +an architectural taste, to which the diversity of the mechanical +employment about a large operatic establishment is peculiarly +favourable. When the theatre closed for the season, he worked a +sailing-ship between London and some of the French ports, carrying +on at the same time a profitable trade. At every opportunity he +would land and make drawings of any old building, and especially of +any ecclesiastical structure which fell in his way. Afterwards he +would make special journeys to the Continent for the same purpose, +and returned home laden with drawings. Thus he plodded and +laboured on, making sure of the excellence and distinction which he +eventually achieved. + +A similar illustration of plodding industry in the same walk is +presented in the career of George Kemp, the architect of the +beautiful Scott Monument at Edinburgh. He was the son of a poor +shepherd, who pursued his calling on the southern slope of the +Pentland Hills. Amidst that pastoral solitude the boy had no +opportunity of enjoying the contemplation of works of art. It +happened, however, that in his tenth year he was sent on a message +to Roslin, by the farmer for whom his father herded sheep, and the +sight of the beautiful castle and chapel there seems to have made a +vivid and enduring impression on his mind. Probably to enable him +to indulge his love of architectural construction, the boy besought +his father to let him be a joiner; and he was accordingly put +apprentice to a neighbouring village carpenter. Having served his +time, he went to Galashiels to seek work. As he was plodding along +the valley of the Tweed with his tools upon his back, a carriage +overtook him near Elibank Tower; and the coachman, doubtless at the +suggestion of his master, who was seated inside, having asked the +youth how far he had to walk, and learning that he was on his way +to Galashiels, invited him to mount the box beside him, and thus to +ride thither. It turned out that the kindly gentleman inside was +no other than Sir Walter Scott, then travelling on his official +duty as Sheriff of Selkirkshire. Whilst working at Galashiels, +Kemp had frequent opportunities of visiting Melrose, Dryburgh, and +Jedburgh Abbeys, which he studied carefully. Inspired by his love +of architecture, he worked his way as a carpenter over the greater +part of the north of England, never omitting an opportunity of +inspecting and making sketches of any fine Gothic building. On one +occasion, when working in Lancashire, he walked fifty miles to +York, spent a week in carefully examining the Minster, and returned +in like manner on foot. We next find him in Glasgow, where he +remained four years, studying the fine cathedral there during his +spare time. He returned to England again, this time working his +way further south; studying Canterbury, Winchester, Tintern, and +other well-known structures. In 1824 he formed the design of +travelling over Europe with the same object, supporting himself by +his trade. Reaching Boulogne, he proceeded by Abbeville and +Beauvais to Paris, spending a few weeks making drawings and studies +at each place. His skill as a mechanic, and especially his +knowledge of mill-work, readily secured him employment wherever he +went; and he usually chose the site of his employment in the +neighbourhood of some fine old Gothic structure, in studying which +he occupied his leisure. After a year's working, travel, and study +abroad, he returned to Scotland. He continued his studies, and +became a proficient in drawing and perspective: Melrose was his +favourite ruin; and he produced several elaborate drawings of the +building, one of which, exhibiting it in a "restored" state, was +afterwards engraved. He also obtained employment as a modeller of +architectural designs; and made drawings for a work begun by an +Edinburgh engraver, after the plan of Britton's 'Cathedral +Antiquities.' This was a task congenial to his tastes, and he +laboured at it with an enthusiasm which ensured its rapid advance; +walking on foot for the purpose over half Scotland, and living as +an ordinary mechanic, whilst executing drawings which would have +done credit to the best masters in the art. The projector of the +work having died suddenly, the publication was however stopped, and +Kemp sought other employment. Few knew of the genius of this man-- +for he was exceedingly taciturn and habitually modest--when the +Committee of the Scott Monument offered a prize for the best +design. The competitors were numerous--including some of the +greatest names in classical architecture; but the design +unanimously selected was that of George Kemp, who was working at +Kilwinning Abbey in Ayrshire, many miles off, when the letter +reached him intimating the decision of the committee. Poor Kemp! +Shortly after this event he met an untimely death, and did not live +to see the first result of his indefatigable industry and self- +culture embodied in stone,--one of the most beautiful and +appropriate memorials ever erected to literary genius. + +John Gibson was another artist full of a genuine enthusiasm and +love for his art, which placed him high above those sordid +temptations which urge meaner natures to make time the measure of +profit. He was born at Gyffn, near Conway, in North Wales--the son +of a gardener. He early showed indications of his talent by the +carvings in wood which he made by means of a common pocket knife; +and his father, noting the direction of his talent, sent him to +Liverpool and bound him apprentice to a cabinet-maker and wood- +carver. He rapidly improved at his trade, and some of his carvings +were much admired. He was thus naturally led to sculpture, and +when eighteen years old he modelled a small figure of Time in wax, +which attracted considerable notice. The Messrs. Franceys, +sculptors, of Liverpool, having purchased the boy's indentures, +took him as their apprentice for six years, during which his genius +displayed itself in many original works. From thence he proceeded +to London, and afterwards to Rome; and his fame became European. + +Robert Thorburn, the Royal Academician, like John Gibson, was born +of poor parents. His father was a shoe-maker at Dumfries. Besides +Robert there were two other sons; one of whom is a skilful carver +in wood. One day a lady called at the shoemaker's and found +Robert, then a mere boy, engaged in drawing upon a stool which +served him for a table. She examined his work, and observing his +abilities, interested herself in obtaining for him some employment +in drawing, and enlisted in his behalf the services of others who +could assist him in prosecuting the study of art. The boy was +diligent, pains-taking, staid, and silent, mixing little with his +companions, and forming but few intimacies. About the year 1830, +some gentlemen of the town provided him with the means of +proceeding to Edinburgh, where he was admitted a student at the +Scottish Academy. There he had the advantage of studying under +competent masters, and the progress which he made was rapid. From +Edinburgh he removed to London, where, we understand, he had the +advantage of being introduced to notice under the patronage of the +Duke of Buccleuch. We need scarcely say, however, that of whatever +use patronage may have been to Thorburn in giving him an +introduction to the best circles, patronage of no kind could have +made him the great artist that he unquestionably is, without native +genius and diligent application. + +Noel Paton, the well-known painter, began his artistic career at +Dunfermline and Paisley, as a drawer of patterns for table-cloths +and muslin embroidered by hand; meanwhile working diligently at +higher subjects, including the drawing of the human figure. He +was, like Turner, ready to turn his hand to any kind of work, and +in 1840, when a mere youth, we find him engaged, among his other +labours, in illustrating the 'Renfrewshire Annual.' He worked his +way step by step, slowly yet surely; but he remained unknown until +the exhibition of the prize cartoons painted for the houses of +Parliament, when his picture of the Spirit of Religion (for which +he obtained one of the first prizes) revealed him to the world as a +genuine artist; and the works which he has since exhibited--such as +the 'Reconciliation of Oberon and Titania,' 'Home,' and 'The bluidy +Tryste'--have shown a steady advance in artistic power and culture. + +Another striking exemplification of perseverance and industry in +the cultivation of art in humble life is presented in the career of +James Sharples, a working blacksmith at Blackburn. He was born at +Wakefield in Yorkshire, in 1825, one of a family of thirteen +children. His father was a working ironfounder, and removed to +Bury to follow his business. The boys received no school +education, but were all sent to work as soon as they were able; and +at about ten James was placed in a foundry, where he was employed +for about two years as smithy-boy. After that he was sent into the +engine-shop where his father worked as engine-smith. The boy's +employment was to heat and carry rivets for the boiler-makers. +Though his hours of labour were very long--often from six in the +morning until eight at night--his father contrived to give him some +little teaching after working hours; and it was thus that he +partially learned his letters. An incident occurred in the course +of his employment among the boiler-makers, which first awakened in +him the desire to learn drawing. He had occasionally been employed +by the foreman to hold the chalked line with which he made the +designs of boilers upon the floor of the workshop; and on such +occasions the foreman was accustomed to hold the line, and direct +the boy to make the necessary dimensions. James soon became so +expert at this as to be of considerable service to the foreman; and +at his leisure hours at home his great delight was to practise +drawing designs of boilers upon his mother's floor. On one +occasion, when a female relative was expected from Manchester to +pay the family a visit, and the house had been made as decent as +possible for her reception, the boy, on coming in from the foundry +in the evening, began his usual operations upon the floor. He had +proceeded some way with his design of a large boiler in chalk, when +his mother arrived with the visitor, and to her dismay found the +boy unwashed and the floor chalked all over. The relative, +however, professed to be pleased with the boy's industry, praised +his design, and recommended his mother to provide "the little +sweep," as she called him, with paper and pencils. + +Encouraged by his elder brother, he began to practise figure and +landscape drawing, making copies of lithographs, but as yet without +any knowledge of the rules of perspective and the principles of +light and shade. He worked on, however, and gradually acquired +expertness in copying. At sixteen, he entered the Bury Mechanic's +Institution in order to attend the drawing class, taught by an +amateur who followed the trade of a barber. There he had a lesson +a week during three months. The teacher recommended him to obtain +from the library Burnet's 'Practical Treatise on Painting;' but as +he could not yet read with ease, he was under the necessity of +getting his mother, and sometimes his elder brother, to read +passages from the book for him while he sat by and listened. +Feeling hampered by his ignorance of the art of reading, and eager +to master the contents of Burnet's book, he ceased attending the +drawing class at the Institute after the first quarter, and devoted +himself to learning reading and writing at home. In this he soon +succeeded; and when he again entered the Institute and took out +'Burnet' a second time, he was not only able to read it, but to +make written extracts for further use. So ardently did he study +the volume, that he used to rise at four o'clock in the morning to +read it and copy out passages; after which he went to the foundry +at six, worked until six and sometimes eight in the evening; and +returned home to enter with fresh zest upon the study of Burnet, +which he continued often until a late hour. Parts of his nights +were also occupied in drawing and making copies of drawings. On +one of these--a copy of Leonardo da Vinci's "Last Supper"--he spent +an entire night. He went to bed indeed, but his mind was so +engrossed with the subject that he could not sleep, and rose again +to resume his pencil. + +He next proceeded to try his hand at painting in oil, for which +purpose he procured some canvas from a draper, stretched it on a +frame, coated it over with white lead, and began painting on it +with colours bought from a house-painter. But his work proved a +total failure; for the canvas was rough and knotty, and the paint +would not dry. In his extremity he applied to his old teacher, the +barber, from whom he first learnt that prepared canvas was to be +had, and that there were colours and varnishes made for the special +purpose of oil-painting. As soon therefore, as his means would +allow, he bought a small stock of the necessary articles and began +afresh,--his amateur master showing him how to paint; and the pupil +succeeded so well that he excelled the master's copy. His first +picture was a copy from an engraving called "Sheep-shearing," and +was afterwards sold by him for half-a-crown. Aided by a shilling +Guide to Oil-painting, he went on working at his leisure hours, and +gradually acquired a better knowledge of his materials. He made +his own easel and palette, palette-knife, and paint-chest; he +bought his paint, brushes, and canvas, as he could raise the money +by working over-time. This was the slender fund which his parents +consented to allow him for the purpose; the burden of supporting a +very large family precluding them from doing more. Often he would +walk to Manchester and back in the evenings to buy two or three +shillings' worth of paint and canvas, returning almost at midnight, +after his eighteen miles' walk, sometimes wet through and +completely exhausted, but borne up throughout by his inexhaustible +hope and invincible determination. The further progress of the +self-taught artist is best narrated in his own words, as +communicated by him in a letter to the author:- + +"The next pictures I painted," he says, "were a Landscape by +Moonlight, a Fruitpiece, and one or two others; after which I +conceived the idea of painting 'The Forge.' I had for some time +thought about it, but had not attempted to embody the conception in +a drawing. I now, however, made a sketch of the subject upon +paper, and then proceeded to paint it on canvas. The picture +simply represents the interior of a large workshop such as I have +been accustomed to work in, although not of any particular shop. +It is, therefore, to this extent, an original conception. Having +made an outline of the subject, I found that, before I could +proceed with it successfully, a knowledge of anatomy was +indispensable to enable me accurately to delineate the muscles of +the figures. My brother Peter came to my assistance at this +juncture, and kindly purchased for me Flaxman's 'Anatomical +studies,'--a work altogether beyond my means at the time, for it +cost twenty-four shillings. This book I looked upon as a great +treasure, and I studied it laboriously, rising at three o'clock in +the morning to draw after it, and occasionally getting my brother +Peter to stand for me as a model at that untimely hour. Although I +gradually improved myself by this practice, it was some time before +I felt sufficient confidence to go on with my picture. I also felt +hampered by my want of knowledge of perspective, which I +endeavoured to remedy by carefully studying Brook Taylor's +'Principles;' and shortly after I resumed my painting. While +engaged in the study of perspective at home, I used to apply for +and obtain leave to work at the heavier kinds of smith work at the +foundry, and for this reason--the time required for heating the +heaviest iron work is so much longer than that required for heating +the lighter, that it enabled me to secure a number of spare minutes +in the course of the day, which I carefully employed in making +diagrams in perspective upon the sheet iron casing in front of the +hearth at which I worked." + +Thus assiduously working and studying, James Sharples steadily +advanced in his knowledge of the principles of art, and acquired +greater facility in its practice. Some eighteen months after the +expiry of his apprenticeship he painted a portrait of his father, +which attracted considerable notice in the town; as also did the +picture of "The Forge," which he finished soon after. His success +in portrait-painting obtained for him a commission from the foreman +of the shop to paint a family group, and Sharples executed it so +well that the foreman not only paid him the agreed price of +eighteen pounds, but thirty shillings to boot. While engaged on +this group he ceased to work at the foundry, and he had thoughts of +giving up his trade altogether and devoting himself exclusively to +painting. He proceeded to paint several pictures, amongst others a +head of Christ, an original conception, life-size, and a view of +Bury; but not obtaining sufficient employment at portraits to +occupy his time, or give him the prospect of a steady income, he +had the good sense to resume his leather apron, and go on working +at his honest trade of a blacksmith; employing his leisure hours in +engraving his picture of "The Forge," since published. He was +induced to commence the engraving by the following circumstance. A +Manchester picture-dealer, to whom he showed the painting, let drop +the observation, that in the hands of a skilful engraver it would +make a very good print. Sharples immediately conceived the idea of +engraving it himself, though altogether ignorant of the art. The +difficulties which he encountered and successfully overcame in +carrying out his project are thus described by himself:- + +"I had seen an advertisement of a Sheffield steel-plate maker, +giving a list of the prices at which he supplied plates of various +sizes, and, fixing upon one of suitable dimensions, I remitted the +amount, together with a small additional sum for which I requested +him to send me a few engraving tools. I could not specify the +articles wanted, for I did not then know anything about the process +of engraving. However, there duly arrived with the plate three or +four gravers and an etching needle; the latter I spoiled before I +knew its use. While working at the plate, the Amalgamated Society +of Engineers offered a premium for the best design for an +emblematical picture, for which I determined to compete, and I was +so fortunate as to win the prize. Shortly after this I removed to +Blackburn, where I obtained employment at Messrs. Yates', +engineers, as an engine-smith; and continued to employ my leisure +time in drawing, painting, and engraving, as before. With the +engraving I made but very slow progress, owing to the difficulties +I experienced from not possessing proper tools. I then determined +to try to make some that would suit my purpose, and after several +failures I succeeded in making many that I have used in the course +of my engraving. I was also greatly at a loss for want of a proper +magnifying glass, and part of the plate was executed with no other +assistance of this sort than what my father's spectacles afforded, +though I afterwards succeeded in obtaining a proper magnifier, +which was of the utmost use to me. An incident occurred while I +was engraving the plate, which had almost caused me to abandon it +altogether. It sometimes happened that I was obliged to lay it +aside for a considerable time, when other work pressed; and in +order to guard it against rust, I was accustomed to rub over the +graven parts with oil. But on examining the plate after one of +such intervals, I found that the oil had become a dark sticky +substance extremely difficult to get out. I tried to pick it out +with a needle, but found that it would almost take as much time as +to engrave the parts afresh. I was in great despair at this, but +at length hit upon the expedient of boiling it in water containing +soda, and afterwards rubbing the engraved parts with a tooth-brush; +and to my delight found the plan succeeded perfectly. My greatest +difficulties now over, patience and perseverance were all that were +needed to bring my labours to a successful issue. I had neither +advice nor assistance from any one in finishing the plate. If, +therefore, the work possess any merit, I can claim it as my own; +and if in its accomplishment I have contributed to show what can be +done by persevering industry and determination, it is all the +honour I wish to lay claim to." + +It would be beside our purpose to enter upon any criticism of "The +Forge" as an engraving; its merits having been already fully +recognised by the art journals. The execution of the work occupied +Sharples's leisure evening hours during a period of five years; and +it was only when he took the plate to the printer that he for the +first time saw an engraved plate produced by any other man. To +this unvarnished picture of industry and genius, we add one other +trait, and it is a domestic one. "I have been married seven +years," says he, "and during that time my greatest pleasure, after +I have finished my daily labour at the foundry, has been to resume +my pencil or graver, frequently until a late hour of the evening, +my wife meanwhile sitting by my side and reading to me from some +interesting book,"--a simple but beautiful testimony to the +thorough common sense as well as the genuine right-heartedness of +this most interesting and deserving workman. + +The same industry and application which we have found to be +necessary in order to acquire excellence in painting and sculpture, +are equally required in the sister art of music--the one being the +poetry of form and colour, the other of the sounds of nature. +Handel was an indefatigable and constant worker; he was never cast +down by defeat, but his energy seemed to increase the more that +adversity struck him. When a prey to his mortifications as an +insolvent debtor, he did not give way for a moment, but in one year +produced his 'Saul,' 'Israel,' the music for Dryden's 'Ode,' his +'Twelve Grand Concertos,' and the opera of 'Jupiter in Argos,' +among the finest of his works. As his biographer says of him, "He +braved everything, and, by his unaided self, accomplished the work +of twelve men." + +Haydn, speaking of his art, said, "It consists in taking up a +subject and pursuing it." "Work," said Mozart, "is my chief +pleasure." Beethoven's favourite maxim was, "The barriers are not +erected which can say to aspiring talents and industry, 'Thus far +and no farther.'" When Moscheles submitted his score of 'Fidelio' +for the pianoforte to Beethoven, the latter found written at the +bottom of the last page, "Finis, with God's help." Beethoven +immediately wrote underneath, "O man! help thyself!" This was the +motto of his artistic life. John Sebastian Bach said of himself, +"I was industrious; whoever is equally sedulous, will be equally +successful." But there is no doubt that Bach was born with a +passion for music, which formed the mainspring of his industry, and +was the true secret of his success. When a mere youth, his elder +brother, wishing to turn his abilities in another direction, +destroyed a collection of studies which the young Sebastian, being +denied candles, had copied by moonlight; proving the strong natural +bent of the boy's genius. Of Meyerbeer, Bayle thus wrote from +Milan in 1820:- "He is a man of some talent, but no genius; he +lives solitary, working fifteen hours a day at music." Years +passed, and Meyerbeer's hard work fully brought out his genius, as +displayed in his 'Roberto,' 'Huguenots,' 'Prophete,' and other +works, confessedly amongst the greatest operas which have been +produced in modern times. + +Although musical composition is not an art in which Englishmen have +as yet greatly distinguished themselves, their energies having for +the most part taken other and more practical directions, we are not +without native illustrations of the power of perseverance in this +special pursuit. Arne was an upholsterer's son, intended by his +father for the legal profession; but his love of music was so +great, that he could not be withheld from pursuing it. While +engaged in an attorney's office, his means were very limited, but, +to gratify his tastes, he was accustomed to borrow a livery and go +into the gallery of the Opera, then appropriated to domestics. +Unknown to his father he made great progress with the violin, and +the first knowledge his father had of the circumstance was when +accidentally calling at the house of a neighbouring gentleman, to +his surprise and consternation he found his son playing the leading +instrument with a party of musicians. This incident decided the +fate of Arne. His father offered no further opposition to his +wishes; and the world thereby lost a lawyer, but gained a musician +of much taste and delicacy of feeling, who added many valuable +works to our stores of English music. + +The career of the late William Jackson, author of 'The Deliverance +of Israel,' an oratorio which has been successfully performed in +the principal towns of his native county of York, furnishes an +interesting illustration of the triumph of perseverance over +difficulties in the pursuit of musical science. He was the son of +a miller at Masham, a little town situated in the valley of the +Yore, in the north-west corner of Yorkshire. Musical taste seems +to have been hereditary in the family, for his father played the +fife in the band of the Masham Volunteers, and was a singer in the +parish choir. His grandfather also was leading singer and ringer +at Masham Church; and one of the boy's earliest musical treats was +to be present at the bell pealing on Sunday mornings. During the +service, his wonder was still more excited by the organist's +performance on the barrel-organ, the doors of which were thrown +open behind to let the sound fully into the church, by which the +stops, pipes, barrels, staples, keyboard, and jacks, were fully +exposed, to the wonderment of the little boys sitting in the +gallery behind, and to none more than our young musician. At eight +years of age he began to play upon his father's old fife, which, +however, would not sound D; but his mother remedied the difficulty +by buying for him a one-keyed flute; and shortly after, a gentleman +of the neighbourhood presented him with a flute with four silver +keys. As the boy made no progress with his "book learning," being +fonder of cricket, fives, and boxing, than of his school lessons-- +the village schoolmaster giving him up as "a bad job"--his parents +sent him off to a school at Pateley Bridge. While there he found +congenial society in a club of village choral singers at Brighouse +Gate, and with them he learnt the sol-fa-ing gamut on the old +English plan. He was thus well drilled in the reading of music, in +which he soon became a proficient. His progress astonished the +club, and he returned home full of musical ambition. He now learnt +to play upon his father's old piano, but with little melodious +result; and he became eager to possess a finger-organ, but had no +means of procuring one. About this time, a neighbouring parish +clerk had purchased, for an insignificant sum, a small disabled +barrel-organ, which had gone the circuit of the northern counties +with a show. The clerk tried to revive the tones of the +instrument, but failed; at last he bethought him that he would try +the skill of young Jackson, who had succeeded in making some +alterations and improvements in the hand-organ of the parish +church. He accordingly brought it to the lad's house in a donkey +cart, and in a short time the instrument was repaired, and played +over its old tunes again, greatly to the owner's satisfaction. + +The thought now haunted the youth that he could make a barrel- +organ, and he determined to do so. His father and he set to work, +and though without practice in carpentering, yet, by dint of hard +labour and after many failures, they at last succeeded; and an +organ was constructed which played ten tunes very decently, and the +instrument was generally regarded as a marvel in the neighbourhood. +Young Jackson was now frequently sent for to repair old church +organs, and to put new music upon the barrels which he added to +them. All this he accomplished to the satisfaction of his +employers, after which he proceeded with the construction of a +four-stop finger-organ, adapting to it the keys of an old +harpsichord. This he learnt to play upon,--studying 'Callcott's +Thorough Bass' in the evening, and working at his trade of a miller +during the day; occasionally also tramping about the country as a +"cadger," with an ass and a cart. During summer he worked in the +fields, at turnip-time, hay-time, and harvest, but was never +without the solace of music in his leisure evening hours. He next +tried his hand at musical composition, and twelve of his anthems +were shown to the late Mr. Camidge, of York, as "the production of +a miller's lad of fourteen." Mr. Camidge was pleased with them, +marked the objectionable passages, and returned them with the +encouraging remark, that they did the youth great credit, and that +he must "go on writing." + +A village band having been set on foot at Masham, young Jackson +joined it, and was ultimately appointed leader. He played all the +instruments by turns, and thus acquired a considerable practical +knowledge of his art: he also composed numerous tunes for the +band. A new finger-organ having been presented to the parish +church, he was appointed the organist. He now gave up his +employment as a journeyman miller, and commenced tallow-chandling, +still employing his spare hours in the study of music. In 1839 he +published his first anthem--'For joy let fertile valleys sing;' and +in the following year he gained the first prize from the +Huddersfield Glee Club, for his 'Sisters of the Lea.' His other +anthem 'God be merciful to us,' and the 103rd Psalm, written for a +double chorus and orchestra, are well known. In the midst of these +minor works, Jackson proceeded with the composition of his +oratorio,--'The Deliverance of Israel from Babylon.' His practice +was, to jot down a sketch of the ideas as they presented themselves +to his mind, and to write them out in score in the evenings, after +he had left his work in the candle-shop. His oratorio was +published in parts, in the course of 1844-5, and he published the +last chorus on his twenty-ninth birthday. The work was exceedingly +well received, and has been frequently performed with much success +in the northern towns. Mr. Jackson eventually settled as a +professor of music at Bradford, where he contributed in no small +degree to the cultivation of the musical taste of that town and its +neighbourhood. Some years since he had the honour of leading his +fine company of Bradford choral singers before Her Majesty at +Buckingham Palace; on which occasion, as well as at the Crystal +Palace, some choral pieces of his composition, were performed with +great effect. {22} + +Such is a brief outline of the career of a self-taught musician, +whose life affords but another illustration of the power of self- +help, and the force of courage and industry in enabling a man to +surmount and overcome early difficulties and obstructions of no +ordinary kind. + + + +CHAPTER VII--INDUSTRY AND THE PEERAGE + + + +"He either fears his fate too much, +Or his deserts are small, +That dares not put it to the touch, +To gain or lose it all."--Marquis of Montrose. + +"He hath put down the mighty from their seats; and exalted them of +low degree."--St. Luke. + + +We have already referred to some illustrious Commoners raised from +humble to elevated positions by the power of application and +industry; and we might point to even the Peerage itself as +affording equally instructive examples. One reason why the Peerage +of England has succeeded so well in holding its own, arises from +the fact that, unlike the peerages of other countries, it has been +fed, from time to time, by the best industrial blood of the +country--the very "liver, heart, and brain of Britain." Like the +fabled Antaeus, it has been invigorated and refreshed by touching +its mother earth, and mingling with that most ancient order of +nobility--the working order. + +The blood of all men flows from equally remote sources; and though +some are unable to trace their line directly beyond their +grandfathers, all are nevertheless justified in placing at the head +of their pedigree the great progenitors of the race, as Lord +Chesterfield did when he wrote, "ADAM de Stanhope--EVE de +Stanhope." No class is ever long stationary. The mighty fall, and +the humble are exalted. New families take the place of the old, +who disappear among the ranks of the common people. Burke's +'Vicissitudes of Families' strikingly exhibit this rise and fall of +families, and show that the misfortunes which overtake the rich and +noble are greater in proportion than those which overwhelm the +poor. This author points out that of the twenty-five barons +selected to enforce the observance of Magna Charta, there is not +now in the House of Peers a single male descendant. Civil wars and +rebellions ruined many of the old nobility and dispersed their +families. Yet their descendants in many cases survive, and are to +be found among the ranks of the people. Fuller wrote in his +'Worthies,' that "some who justly hold the surnames of Bohuns, +Mortimers, and Plantagenets, are hid in the heap of common men." +Thus Burke shows that two of the lineal descendants of the Earl of +Kent, sixth son of Edward I., were discovered in a butcher and a +toll-gatherer; that the great grandson of Margaret Plantagenet, +daughter of the Duke of Clarance, sank to the condition of a +cobbler at Newport, in Shropshire; and that among the lineal +descendants of the Duke of Gloucester, son of Edward III., was the +late sexton of St George's, Hanover Square. It is understood that +the lineal descendant of Simon de Montfort, England's premier +baron, is a saddler in Tooley Street. One of the descendants of +the "Proud Percys," a claimant of the title of Duke of +Northumberland, was a Dublin trunk-maker; and not many years since +one of the claimants for the title of Earl of Perth presented +himself in the person of a labourer in a Northumberland coal-pit. +Hugh Miller, when working as a stone-mason near Edinburgh, was +served by a hodman, who was one of the numerous claimants for the +earldom of Crauford--all that was wanted to establish his claim +being a missing marriage certificate; and while the work was going +on, the cry resounded from the walls many times in the day, of-- +"John, Yearl Crauford, bring us anither hod o'lime." One of Oliver +Cromwell's great grandsons was a grocer on Snow Hill, and others of +his descendants died in great poverty. Many barons of proud names +and titles have perished, like the sloth, upon their family tree, +after eating up all the leaves; while others have been overtaken by +adversities which they have been unable to retrieve, and sunk at +last into poverty and obscurity. Such are the mutabilities of rank +and fortune. + +The great bulk of our peerage is comparatively modern, so far as +the titles go; but it is not the less noble that it has been +recruited to so large an extent from the ranks of honourable +industry. In olden times, the wealth and commerce of London, +conducted as it was by energetic and enterprising men, was a +prolific source of peerages. Thus, the earldom of Cornwallis was +founded by Thomas Cornwallis, the Cheapside merchant; that of Essex +by William Capel, the draper; and that of Craven by William Craven, +the merchant tailor. The modern Earl of Warwick is not descended +from the "King-maker," but from William Greville, the woolstapler; +whilst the modern dukes of Northumberland find their head, not in +the Percies, but in Hugh Smithson, a respectable London apothecary. +The founders of the families of Dartmouth, Radnor, Ducie, and +Pomfret, were respectively a skinner, a silk manufacturer, a +merchant tailor, and a Calais merchant; whilst the founders of the +peerages of Tankerville, Dormer, and Coventry, were mercers. The +ancestors of Earl Romney, and Lord Dudley and Ward, were goldsmiths +and jewellers; and Lord Dacres was a banker in the reign of Charles +I., as Lord Overstone is in that of Queen Victoria. Edward +Osborne, the founder of the Dukedom of Leeds, was apprentice to +William Hewet, a rich clothworker on London Bridge, whose only +daughter he courageously rescued from drowning, by leaping into the +Thames after her, and eventually married. Among other peerages +founded by trade are those of Fitzwilliam, Leigh, Petre, Cowper, +Darnley, Hill, and Carrington. The founders of the houses of Foley +and Normanby were remarkable men in many respects, and, as +furnishing striking examples of energy of character, the story of +their lives is worthy of preservation. + +The father of Richard Foley, the founder of the family, was a small +yeoman living in the neighbourhood of Stourbridge in the time of +Charles I. That place was then the centre of the iron manufacture +of the midland districts, and Richard was brought up to work at one +of the branches of the trade--that of nail-making. He was thus a +daily observer of the great labour and loss of time caused by the +clumsy process then adopted for dividing the rods of iron in the +manufacture of nails. It appeared that the Stourbridge nailers +were gradually losing their trade in consequence of the importation +of nails from Sweden, by which they were undersold in the market. +It became known that the Swedes were enabled to make their nails so +much cheaper, by the use of splitting mills and machinery, which +had completely superseded the laborious process of preparing the +rods for nail-making then practised in England. + +Richard Foley, having ascertained this much, determined to make +himself master of the new process. He suddenly disappeared from +the neighbourhood of Stourbridge, and was not heard of for several +years. No one knew whither he had gone, not even his own family; +for he had not informed them of his intention, lest he should fail. +He had little or no money in his pocket, but contrived to get to +Hull, where he engaged himself on board a ship bound for a Swedish +port, and worked his passage there. The only article of property +which he possessed was his fiddle, and on landing in Sweden he +begged and fiddled his way to the Dannemora mines, near Upsala. He +was a capital musician, as well as a pleasant fellow, and soon +ingratiated himself with the iron-workers. He was received into +the works, to every part of which he had access; and he seized the +opportunity thus afforded him of storing his mind with +observations, and mastering, as he thought, the mechanism of iron +splitting. After a continued stay for this purpose, he suddenly +disappeared from amongst his kind friends the miners--no one knew +whither. + +Returned to England, he communicated the results of his voyage to +Mr. Knight and another person at Stourbridge, who had sufficient +confidence in him to advance the requisite funds for the purpose of +erecting buildings and machinery for splitting iron by the new +process. But when set to work, to the great vexation and +disappointment of all, and especially of Richard Foley, it was +found that the machinery would not act--at all events it would not +split the bars of iron. Again Foley disappeared. It was thought +that shame and mortification at his failure had driven him away for +ever. Not so! Foley had determined to master this secret of iron- +splitting, and he would yet do it. He had again set out for +Sweden, accompanied by his fiddle as before, and found his way to +the iron works, where he was joyfully welcomed by the miners; and, +to make sure of their fiddler, they this time lodged him in the +very splitting-mill itself. There was such an apparent absence of +intelligence about the man, except in fiddle-playing, that the +miners entertained no suspicions as to the object of their +minstrel, whom they thus enabled to attain the very end and aim of +his life. He now carefully examined the works, and soon discovered +the cause of his failure. He made drawings or tracings of the +machinery as well as he could, though this was a branch of art +quite new to him; and after remaining at the place long enough to +enable him to verify his observations, and to impress the +mechanical arrangements clearly and vividly on his mind, he again +left the miners, reached a Swedish port, and took ship for England. +A man of such purpose could not but succeed. Arrived amongst his +surprised friends, he now completed his arrangements, and the +results were entirely successful. By his skill and his industry he +soon laid the foundations of a large fortune, at the same time that +he restored the business of an extensive district. He himself +continued, during his life, to carry on his trade, aiding and +encouraging all works of benevolence in his neighbourhood. He +founded and endowed a school at Stourbridge; and his son Thomas (a +great benefactor of Kidderminster), who was High Sheriff of +Worcestershire in the time of "The Rump," founded and endowed an +hospital, still in existence, for the free education of children at +Old Swinford. All the early Foleys were Puritans. Richard Baxter +seems to have been on familiar and intimate terms with various +members of the family, and makes frequent mention of them in his +'Life and Times.' Thomas Foley, when appointed high sheriff of the +county, requested Baxter to preach the customary sermon before him; +and Baxter in his 'Life' speaks of him as "of so just and blameless +dealing, that all men he ever had to do with magnified his great +integrity and honesty, which were questioned by none." The family +was ennobled in the reign of Charles the Second. + +William Phipps, the founder of the Mulgrave or Normanby family, was +a man quite as remarkable in his way as Richard Foley. His father +was a gunsmith--a robust Englishman settled at Woolwich, in Maine, +then forming part of our English colonies in America. He was born +in 1651, one of a family of not fewer than twenty-six children (of +whom twenty-one were sons), whose only fortune lay in their stout +hearts and strong arms. William seems to have had a dash of the +Danish-sea blood in his veins, and did not take kindly to the quiet +life of a shepherd in which he spent his early years. By nature +bold and adventurous, he longed to become a sailor and roam through +the world. He sought to join some ship; but not being able to find +one, he apprenticed himself to a shipbuilder, with whom he +thoroughly learnt his trade, acquiring the arts of reading and +writing during his leisure hours. Having completed his +apprenticeship and removed to Boston, he wooed and married a widow +of some means, after which he set up a little shipbuilding yard of +his own, built a ship, and, putting to sea in her, he engaged in +the lumber trade, which he carried on in a plodding and laborious +way for the space of about ten years. + +It happened that one day, whilst passing through the crooked +streets of old Boston, he overheard some sailors talking to each +other of a wreck which had just taken place off the Bahamas; that +of a Spanish ship, supposed to have much money on board. His +adventurous spirit was at once kindled, and getting together a +likely crew without loss of time, he set sail for the Bahamas. The +wreck being well in-shore, he easily found it, and succeeded in +recovering a great deal of its cargo, but very little money; and +the result was, that he barely defrayed his expenses. His success +had been such, however, as to stimulate his enterprising spirit; +and when he was told of another and far more richly laden vessel +which had been wrecked near Port de la Plata more than half a +century before, he forthwith formed the resolution of raising the +wreck, or at all events of fishing up the treasure. + +Being too poor, however, to undertake such an enterprise without +powerful help, he set sail for England in the hope that he might +there obtain it. The fame of his success in raising the wreck off +the Bahamas had already preceded him. He applied direct to the +Government. By his urgent enthusiasm, he succeeded in overcoming +the usual inertia of official minds; and Charles II. eventually +placed at his disposal the "Rose Algier," a ship of eighteen guns +and ninety-five men, appointing him to the chief command. + +Phipps then set sail to find the Spanish ship and fish up the +treasure. He reached the coast of Hispaniola in safety; but how to +find the sunken ship was the great difficulty. The fact of the +wreck was more than fifty years old; and Phipps had only the +traditionary rumours of the event to work upon. There was a wide +coast to explore, and an outspread ocean without any trace whatever +of the argosy which lay somewhere at its bottom. But the man was +stout in heart and full of hope. He set his seamen to work to drag +along the coast, and for weeks they went on fishing up sea-weed, +shingle, and bits of rock. No occupation could be more trying to +seamen, and they began to grumble one to another, and to whisper +that the man in command had brought them on a fool's errand. + +At length the murmurers gained head, and the men broke into open +mutiny. A body of them rushed one day on to the quarter-deck, and +demanded that the voyage should be relinquished. Phipps, however, +was not a man to be intimidated; he seized the ringleaders, and +sent the others back to their duty. It became necessary to bring +the ship to anchor close to a small island for the purpose of +repairs; and, to lighten her, the chief part of the stores was +landed. Discontent still increasing amongst the crew, a new plot +was laid amongst the men on shore to seize the ship, throw Phipps +overboard, and start on a piratical cruize against the Spaniards in +the South Seas. But it was necessary to secure the services of the +chief ship carpenter, who was consequently made privy to the pilot. +This man proved faithful, and at once told the captain of his +danger. Summoning about him those whom he knew to be loyal, Phipps +had the ship's guns loaded which commanded the shore, and ordered +the bridge communicating with the vessel to be drawn up. When the +mutineers made their appearance, the captain hailed them, and told +the men he would fire upon them if they approached the stores +(still on land),--when they drew back; on which Phipps had the +stores reshipped under cover of his guns. The mutineers, fearful +of being left upon the barren island, threw down their arms and +implored to be permitted to return to their duty. The request was +granted, and suitable precautions were taken against future +mischief. Phipps, however, took the first opportunity of landing +the mutinous part of the crew, and engaging other men in their +places; but, by the time that he could again proceed actively with +his explorations, he found it absolutely necessary to proceed to +England for the purpose of repairing the ship. He had now, +however, gained more precise information as to the spot where the +Spanish treasure ship had sunk; and, though as yet baffled, he was +more confident than ever of the eventual success of his enterprise. + +Returned to London, Phipps reported the result of his voyage to the +Admiralty, who professed to be pleased with his exertions; but he +had been unsuccessful, and they would not entrust him with another +king's ship. James II. was now on the throne, and the Government +was in trouble; so Phipps and his golden project appealed to them +in vain. He next tried to raise the requisite means by a public +subscription. At first he was laughed at; but his ceaseless +importunity at length prevailed, and after four years' dinning of +his project into the ears of the great and influential--during +which time he lived in poverty--he at length succeeded. A company +was formed in twenty shares, the Duke of Albermarle, son of General +Monk, taking the chief interest in it, and subscribing the +principal part of the necessary fund for the prosecution of the +enterprise. + +Like Foley, Phipps proved more fortunate in his second voyage than +in his first. The ship arrived without accident at Port de la +Plata, in the neighbourhood of the reef of rocks supposed to have +been the scene of the wreck. His first object was to build a stout +boat capable of carrying eight or ten oars, in constructing which +Phipps used the adze himself. It is also said that he constructed +a machine for the purpose of exploring the bottom of the sea +similar to what is now known as the Diving Bell. Such a machine +was found referred to in books, but Phipps knew little of books, +and may be said to have re-invented the apparatus for his own use. +He also engaged Indian divers, whose feats of diving for pearls, +and in submarine operations, were very remarkable. The tender and +boat having been taken to the reef, the men were set to work, the +diving bell was sunk, and the various modes of dragging the bottom +of the sea were employed continuously for many weeks, but without +any prospect of success. Phipps, however, held on valiantly, +hoping almost against hope. At length, one day, a sailor, looking +over the boat's side down into the clear water, observed a curious +sea-plant growing in what appeared to be a crevice of the rock; and +he called upon an Indian diver to go down and fetch it for him. On +the red man coming up with the weed, he reported that a number of +ships guns were lying in the same place. The intelligence was at +first received with incredulity, but on further investigation it +proved to be correct. Search was made, and presently a diver came +up with a solid bar of silver in his arms. When Phipps was shown +it, he exclaimed, "Thanks be to God! we are all made men." Diving +bell and divers now went to work with a will, and in a few days, +treasure was brought up to the value of about 300,000 pounds, with +which Phipps set sail for England. On his arrival, it was urged +upon the king that he should seize the ship and its cargo, under +the pretence that Phipps, when soliciting his Majesty's permission, +had not given accurate information respecting the business. But +the king replied, that he knew Phipps to be an honest man, and that +he and his friends should divide the whole treasure amongst them, +even though he had returned with double the value. Phipps's share +was about 20,000 pounds, and the king, to show his approval of his +energy and honesty in conducting the enterprise, conferred upon him +the honour of knighthood. He was also made High Sheriff of New +England; and during the time he held the office, he did valiant +service for the mother country and the colonists against the +French, by expeditions against Port Royal and Quebec. He also held +the post of Governor of Massachusetts, from which he returned to +England, and died in London in 1695. + +Phipps throughout the latter part of his career, was not ashamed to +allude to the lowness of his origin, and it was matter of honest +pride to him that he had risen from the condition of common ship +carpenter to the honours of knighthood and the government of a +province. When perplexed with public business, he would often +declare that it would be easier for him to go back to his broad axe +again. He left behind him a character for probity, honesty, +patriotism, and courage, which is certainly not the least noble +inheritance of the house of Normanby. + +William Petty, the founder of the house of Lansdowne, was a man of +like energy and public usefulness in his day. He was the son of a +clothier in humble circumstances, at Romsey, in Hampshire, where he +was born in 1623. In his boyhood he obtained a tolerable education +at the grammar school of his native town; after which he determined +to improve himself by study at the University of Caen, in Normandy. +Whilst there he contrived to support himself unassisted by his +father, carrying on a sort of small pedler's trade with "a little +stock of merchandise." Returning to England, he had himself bound +apprentice to a sea captain, who "drubbed him with a rope's end" +for the badness of his sight. He left the navy in disgust, taking +to the study of medicine. When at Paris he engaged in dissection, +during which time he also drew diagrams for Hobbes, who was then +writing his treatise on Optics. He was reduced to such poverty +that he subsisted for two or three weeks entirely on walnuts. But +again he began to trade in a small way, turning an honest penny, +and he was enabled shortly to return to England with money in his +pocket. Being of an ingenious mechanical turn, we find him taking +out a patent for a letter-copying machine. He began to write upon +the arts and sciences, and practised chemistry and physic with such +success that his reputation shortly became considerable. +Associating with men of science, the project of forming a Society +for its prosecution was discussed, and the first meetings of the +infant Royal Society were held at his lodgings. At Oxford he acted +for a time as deputy to the anatomical professor there, who had a +great repugnance to dissection. In 1652 his industry was rewarded +by the appointment of physician to the army in Ireland, whither he +went; and whilst there he was the medical attendant of three +successive lords-lieutenant, Lambert, Fleetwood, and Henry +Cromwell. Large grants of forfeited land having been awarded to +the Puritan soldiery, Petty observed that the lands were very +inaccurately measured; and in the midst of his many avocations he +undertook to do the work himself. His appointments became so +numerous and lucrative that he was charged by the envious with +corruption, and removed from them all; but he was again taken into +favour at the Restoration. + +Petty was a most indefatigable contriver, inventor, and organizer +of industry. One of his inventions was a double-bottomed ship, to +sail against wind and tide. He published treatises on dyeing, on +naval philosophy, on woollen cloth manufacture, on political +arithmetic, and many other subjects. He founded iron works, opened +lead mines, and commenced a pilchard fishery and a timber trade; in +the midst of which he found time to take part in the discussions of +the Royal Society, to which he largely contributed. He left an +ample fortune to his sons, the eldest of whom was created Baron +Shelburne. His will was a curious document, singularly +illustrative of his character; containing a detail of the principal +events of his life, and the gradual advancement of his fortune. +His sentiments on pauperism are characteristic: "As for legacies +for the poor," said he, "I am at a stand; as for beggars by trade +and election, I give them nothing; as for impotents by the hand of +God, the public ought to maintain them; as for those who have been +bred to no calling nor estate, they should be put upon their +kindred;" . . . "wherefore I am contented that I have assisted all +my poor relations, and put many into a way of getting their own +bread; have laboured in public works; and by inventions have sought +out real objects of charity; and I do hereby conjure all who +partake of my estate, from time to time, to do the same at their +peril. Nevertheless to answer custom, and to take the surer side, +I give 20l. to the most wanting of the parish wherein I die." He +was interred in the fine old Norman church of Romsey--the town +wherein he was born a poor man's son--and on the south side of the +choir is still to be seen a plain slab, with the inscription, cut +by an illiterate workman, "Here Layes Sir William Petty." + +Another family, ennobled by invention and trade in our own day, is +that of Strutt of Belper. Their patent of nobility was virtually +secured by Jedediah Strutt in 1758, when he invented his machine +for making ribbed stockings, and thereby laid the foundations of a +fortune which the subsequent bearers of the name have largely +increased and nobly employed. The father of Jedediah was a farmer +and malster, who did but little for the education of his children; +yet they all prospered. Jedediah was the second son, and when a +boy assisted his father in the work of the farm. At an early age +he exhibited a taste for mechanics, and introduced several +improvements in the rude agricultural implements of the period. On +the death of his uncle he succeeded to a farm at Blackwall, near +Normanton, long in the tenancy of the family, and shortly after he +married Miss Wollatt, the daughter of a Derby hosier. Having +learned from his wife's brother that various unsuccessful attempts +had been made to manufacture ribbed-stockings, he proceeded to +study the subject with a view to effect what others had failed in +accomplishing. He accordingly obtained a stocking-frame, and after +mastering its construction and mode of action, he proceeded to +introduce new combinations, by means of which he succeeded in +effecting a variation in the plain looped-work of the frame, and +was thereby enabled to turn out "ribbed" hosiery. Having secured a +patent for the improved machine, he removed to Derby, and there +entered largely on the manufacture of ribbed-stockings, in which he +was very successful. He afterwards joined Arkwright, of the merits +of whose invention he fully satisfied himself, and found the means +of securing his patent, as well as erecting a large cotton-mill at +Cranford, in Derbyshire. After the expiry of the partnership with +Arkwright, the Strutts erected extensive cotton-mills at Milford, +near Belper, which worthily gives its title to the present head of +the family. The sons of the founder were, like their father, +distinguished for their mechanical ability. Thus William Strutt, +the eldest, is said to have invented a self-acting mule, the +success of which was only prevented by the mechanical skill of that +day being unequal to its manufacture. Edward, the son of William, +was a man of eminent mechanical genius, having early discovered the +principle of suspension-wheels for carriages: he had a wheelbarrow +and two carts made on the principle, which were used on his farm +near Belper. It may be added that the Strutts have throughout been +distinguished for their noble employment of the wealth which their +industry and skill have brought them; that they have sought in all +ways to improve the moral and social condition of the work-people +in their employment; and that they have been liberal donors in +every good cause--of which the presentation, by Mr. Joseph Strutt, +of the beautiful park or Arboretum at Derby, as a gift to the +townspeople for ever, affords only one of many illustrations. The +concluding words of the short address which he delivered on +presenting this valuable gift are worthy of being quoted and +remembered:- "As the sun has shone brightly on me through life, it +would be ungrateful in me not to employ a portion of the fortune I +possess in promoting the welfare of those amongst whom I live, and +by whose industry I have been aided in its organisation." + +No less industry and energy have been displayed by the many brave +men, both in present and past times, who have earned the peerage by +their valour on land and at sea. Not to mention the older feudal +lords, whose tenure depended upon military service, and who so +often led the van of the English armies in great national +encounters, we may point to Nelson, St. Vincent, and Lyons--to +Wellington, Hill, Hardinge, Clyde, and many more in recent times, +who have nobly earned their rank by their distinguished services. +But plodding industry has far oftener worked its way to the peerage +by the honourable pursuit of the legal profession, than by any +other. No fewer than seventy British peerages, including two +dukedoms, have been founded by successful lawyers. Mansfield and +Erskine were, it is true, of noble family; but the latter used to +thank God that out of his own family he did not know a lord. {23} +The others were, for the most part, the sons of attorneys, grocers, +clergymen, merchants, and hardworking members of the middle class. +Out of this profession have sprung the peerages of Howard and +Cavendish, the first peers of both families having been judges; +those of Aylesford, Ellenborough, Guildford, Shaftesbury, +Hardwicke, Cardigan, Clarendon, Camden, Ellesmere, Rosslyn; and +others nearer our own day, such as Tenterden, Eldon, Brougham, +Denman, Truro, Lyndhurst, St. Leonards, Cranworth, Campbell, and +Chelmsford. + +Lord Lyndhurst's father was a portrait painter, and that of St. +Leonards a perfumer and hairdresser in Burlington Street. Young +Edward Sugden was originally an errand-boy in the office of the +late Mr. Groom, of Henrietta Street, Cavendish Square, a +certificated conveyancer; and it was there that the future Lord +Chancellor of Ireland obtained his first notions of law. The +origin of the late Lord Tenterden was perhaps the humblest of all, +nor was he ashamed of it; for he felt that the industry, study, and +application, by means of which he achieved his eminent position, +were entirely due to himself. It is related of him, that on one +occasion he took his son Charles to a little shed, then standing +opposite the western front of Canterbury Cathedral, and pointing it +out to him, said, "Charles, you see this little shop; I have +brought you here on purpose to show it you. In that shop your +grandfather used to shave for a penny: that is the proudest +reflection of my life." When a boy, Lord Tenterden was a singer in +the Cathedral, and it is a curious circumstance that his +destination in life was changed by a disappointment. When he and +Mr. Justice Richards were going the Home Circuit together, they +went to service in the cathedral; and on Richards commending the +voice of a singing man in the choir, Lord Tenterden said, "Ah! that +is the only man I ever envied! When at school in this town, we +were candidates for a chorister's place, and he obtained it." + +Not less remarkable was the rise to the same distinguished office +of Lord Chief Justice, of the rugged Kenyon and the robust +Ellenborough; nor was he a less notable man who recently held the +same office--the astute Lord Campbell, late Lord Chancellor of +England, son of a parish minister in Fifeshire. For many years he +worked hard as a reporter for the press, while diligently preparing +himself for the practice of his profession. It is said of him, +that at the beginning of his career, he was accustomed to walk from +county town to county town when on circuit, being as yet too poor +to afford the luxury of posting. But step by step he rose slowly +but surely to that eminence and distinction which ever follow a +career of industry honourably and energetically pursued, in the +legal, as in every other profession. + +There have been other illustrious instances of Lords Chancellors +who have plodded up the steep of fame and honour with equal energy +and success. The career of the late Lord Eldon is perhaps one of +the most remarkable examples. He was the son of a Newcastle coal- +fitter; a mischievous rather than a studious boy; a great +scapegrace at school, and the subject of many terrible thrashings,- +-for orchard-robbing was one of the favourite exploits of the +future Lord Chancellor. His father first thought of putting him +apprentice to a grocer, and afterwards had almost made up his mind +to bring him up to his own trade of a coal-fitter. But by this +time his eldest son William (afterwards Lord Stowell) who had +gained a scholarship at Oxford, wrote to his father, "Send Jack up +to me, I can do better for him." John was sent up to Oxford +accordingly, where, by his brother's influence and his own +application, he succeeded in obtaining a fellowship. But when at +home during the vacation, he was so unfortunate--or rather so +fortunate, as the issue proved--as to fall in love; and running +across the Border with his eloped bride, he married, and as his +friends thought, ruined himself for life. He had neither house nor +home when he married, and had not yet earned a penny. He lost his +fellowship, and at the same time shut himself out from preferment +in the Church, for which he had been destined. He accordingly +turned his attention to the study of the law. To a friend he +wrote, "I have married rashly; but it is my determination to work +hard to provide for the woman I love." + +John Scott came up to London, and took a small house in Cursitor +Lane, where he settled down to the study of the law. He worked +with great diligence and resolution; rising at four every morning +and studying till late at night, binding a wet towel round his head +to keep himself awake. Too poor to study under a special pleader, +he copied out three folio volumes from a manuscript collection of +precedents. Long after, when Lord Chancellor, passing down +Cursitor Lane one day, he said to his secretary, "Here was my first +perch: many a time do I recollect coming down this street with +sixpence in my hand to buy sprats for supper." When at length +called to the bar, he waited long for employment. His first year's +earnings amounted to only nine shillings. For four years he +assiduously attended the London Courts and the Northern Circuit, +with little better success. Even in his native town, he seldom had +other than pauper cases to defend. The results were indeed so +discouraging, that he had almost determined to relinquish his +chance of London business, and settle down in some provincial town +as a country barrister. His brother William wrote home, "Business +is dull with poor Jack, very dull indeed!" But as he had escaped +being a grocer, a coal-fitter, and a country parson so did he also +escape being a country lawyer. + +An opportunity at length occurred which enabled John Scott to +exhibit the large legal knowledge which he had so laboriously +acquired. In a case in which he was engaged, he urged a legal +point against the wishes both of the attorney and client who +employed him. The Master of the Rolls decided against him, but on +an appeal to the House of Lords, Lord Thurlow reversed the decision +on the very point that Scott had urged. On leaving the House that +day, a solicitor tapped him on the shoulder and said, "Young man, +your bread and butter's cut for life." And the prophecy proved a +true one. Lord Mansfield used to say that he knew no interval +between no business and 3000l. a-year, and Scott might have told +the same story; for so rapid was his progress, that in 1783, when +only thirty-two, he was appointed King's Counsel, was at the head +of the Northern Circuit, and sat in Parliament for the borough of +Weobley. It was in the dull but unflinching drudgery of the early +part of his career that he laid the foundation of his future +success. He won his spurs by perseverance, knowledge, and ability, +diligently cultivated. He was successively appointed to the +offices of solicitor and attorney-general, and rose steadily +upwards to the highest office that the Crown had to bestow--that of +Lord Chancellor of England, which he held for a quarter of a +century. + +Henry Bickersteth was the son of a surgeon at Kirkby Lonsdale, in +Westmoreland, and was himself educated to that profession. As a +student at Edinburgh, he distinguished himself by the steadiness +with which he worked, and the application which he devoted to the +science of medicine. Returned to Kirkby Lonsdale, he took an +active part in his father's practice; but he had no liking for the +profession, and grew discontented with the obscurity of a country +town. He went on, nevertheless, diligently improving himself, and +engaged on speculations in the higher branches of physiology. In +conformity with his own wish, his father consented to send him to +Cambridge, where it was his intention to take a medical degree with +the view of practising in the metropolis. Close application to his +studies, however, threw him out of health, and with a view to re- +establishing his strength he accepted the appointment of travelling +physician to Lord Oxford. While abroad he mastered Italian, and +acquired a great admiration for Italian literature, but no greater +liking for medicine than before. On the contrary, he determined to +abandon it; but returning to Cambridge, he took his degree; and +that he worked hard may be inferred from the fact that he was +senior wrangler of his year. Disappointed in his desire to enter +the army, he turned to the bar, and entered a student of the Inner +Temple. He worked as hard at law as he had done at medicine. +Writing to his father, he said, "Everybody says to me, 'You are +certain of success in the end--only persevere;' and though I don't +well understand how this is to happen, I try to believe it as much +as I can, and I shall not fail to do everything in my power." At +twenty-eight he was called to the bar, and had every step in life +yet to make. His means were straitened, and he lived upon the +contributions of his friends. For years he studied and waited. +Still no business came. He stinted himself in recreation, in +clothes, and even in the necessaries of life; struggling on +indefatigably through all. Writing home, he "confessed that he +hardly knew how he should be able to struggle on till he had fair +time and opportunity to establish himself." After three years' +waiting, still without success, he wrote to his friends that rather +than be a burden upon them longer, he was willing to give the +matter up and return to Cambridge, "where he was sure of support +and some profit." The friends at home sent him another small +remittance, and he persevered. Business gradually came in. +Acquitting himself creditably in small matters, he was at length +entrusted with cases of greater importance. He was a man who never +missed an opportunity, nor allowed a legitimate chance of +improvement to escape him. His unflinching industry soon began to +tell upon his fortunes; a few more years and he was not only +enabled to do without assistance from home, but he was in a +position to pay back with interest the debts which he had incurred. +The clouds had dispersed, and the after career of Henry Bickersteth +was one of honour, of emolument, and of distinguished fame. He +ended his career as Master of the Rolls, sitting in the House of +Peers as Baron Langdale. His life affords only another +illustration of the power of patience, perseverance, and +conscientious working, in elevating the character of the +individual, and crowning his labours with the most complete +success. + +Such are a few of the distinguished men who have honourably worked +their way to the highest position, and won the richest rewards of +their profession, by the diligent exercise of qualities in many +respects of an ordinary character, but made potent by the force of +application and industry. + + + +CHAPTER VIII--ENERGY AND COURAGE + + + +"A coeur vaillant rien d'impossible."--Jacques Coeur. + +"Den Muthigen gehort die Welt."--German Proverb. + +"In every work that he began . . . he did it with all his heart, +and prospered."--II. Chron. XXXI. 21. + + +There is a famous speech recorded of an old Norseman, thoroughly +characteristic of the Teuton. "I believe neither in idols nor +demons," said he, "I put my sole trust in my own strength of body +and soul." The ancient crest of a pickaxe with the motto of +"Either I will find a way or make one," was an expression of the +same sturdy independence which to this day distinguishes the +descendants of the Northmen. Indeed nothing could be more +characteristic of the Scandinavian mythology, than that it had a +god with a hammer. A man's character is seen in small matters; and +from even so slight a test as the mode in which a man wields a +hammer, his energy may in some measure be inferred. Thus an +eminent Frenchman hit off in a single phrase the characteristic +quality of the inhabitants of a particular district, in which a +friend of his proposed to settle and buy land. "Beware," said he, +"of making a purchase there; I know the men of that department; the +pupils who come from it to our veterinary school at Paris DO NOR +STRIKE HARD UPON THE ANVIL; they want energy; and you will not get +a satisfactory return on any capital you may invest there." A fine +and just appreciation of character, indicating the thoughtful +observer; and strikingly illustrative of the fact that it is the +energy of the individual men that gives strength to a State, and +confers a value even upon the very soil which they cultivate. As +the French proverb has it: "Tant vaut l'homme, tant vaut sa +terre." + +The cultivation of this quality is of the greatest importance; +resolute determination in the pursuit of worthy objects being the +foundation of all true greatness of character. Energy enables a +man to force his way through irksome drudgery and dry details, and +carries him onward and upward in every station in life. It +accomplishes more than genius, with not one-half the disappointment +and peril. It is not eminent talent that is required to ensure +success in any pursuit, so much as purpose,--not merely the power +to achieve, but the will to labour energetically and perseveringly. +Hence energy of will may be defined to be the very central power of +character in a man--in a word, it is the Man himself. It gives +impulse to his every action, and soul to every effort. True hope +is based on it,--and it is hope that gives the real perfume to +life. There is a fine heraldic motto on a broken helmet in Battle +Abbey, "L'espoir est ma force," which might be the motto of every +man's life. "Woe unto him that is fainthearted," says the son of +Sirach. There is, indeed, no blessing equal to the possession of a +stout heart. Even if a man fail in his efforts, it will be a +satisfaction to him to enjoy the consciousness of having done his +best. In humble life nothing can be more cheering and beautiful +than to see a man combating suffering by patience, triumphing in +his integrity, and who, when his feet are bleeding and his limbs +failing him, still walks upon his courage. + +Mere wishes and desires but engender a sort of green sickness in +young minds, unless they are promptly embodied in act and deed. It +will not avail merely to wait as so many do, "until Blucher comes +up," but they must struggle on and persevere in the mean time, as +Wellington did. The good purpose once formed must be carried out +with alacrity and without swerving. In most conditions of life, +drudgery and toil are to be cheerfully endured as the best and most +wholesome discipline. "In life," said Ary Scheffer, "nothing bears +fruit except by labour of mind or body. To strive and still +strive--such is life; and in this respect mine is fulfilled; but I +dare to say, with just pride, that nothing has ever shaken my +courage. With a strong soul, and a noble aim, one can do what one +wills, morally speaking." + +Hugh Miller said the only school in which he was properly taught +was "that world-wide school in which toil and hardship are the +severe but noble teachers." He who allows his application to +falter, or shirks his work on frivolous pretexts, is on the sure +road to ultimate failure. Let any task be undertaken as a thing +not possible to be evaded, and it will soon come to be performed +with alacrity and cheerfulness. Charles IX. of Sweden was a firm +believer in the power of will, even in youth. Laying his hand on +the head of his youngest son when engaged on a difficult task, he +exclaimed, "He SHALL do it! he SHALL do it!" The habit of +application becomes easy in time, like every other habit. Thus +persons with comparatively moderate powers will accomplish much, if +they apply themselves wholly and indefatigably to one thing at a +time. Fowell Buxton placed his confidence in ordinary means and +extraordinary application; realizing the scriptural injunction, +"Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with all thy might;" and +he attributed his own success in life to his practice of "being a +whole man to one thing at a time." + +Nothing that is of real worth can be achieved without courageous +working. Man owes his growth chiefly to that active striving of +the will, that encounter with difficulty, which we call effort; and +it is astonishing to find how often results apparently +impracticable are thus made possible. An intense anticipation +itself transforms possibility into reality; our desires being often +but the precursors of the things which we are capable of +performing. On the contrary, the timid and hesitating find +everything impossible, chiefly because it seems so. It is related +of a young French officer, that he used to walk about his apartment +exclaiming, "I WILL be Marshal of France and a great general." His +ardent desire was the presentiment of his success; for the young +officer did become a distinguished commander, and he died a Marshal +of France. + +Mr. Walker, author of the 'Original,' had so great a faith in the +power of will, that he says on one occasion he DETERMINED to be +well, and he was so. This may answer once; but, though safer to +follow than many prescriptions, it will not always succeed. The +power of mind over body is no doubt great, but it may be strained +until the physical power breaks down altogether. It is related of +Muley Moluc, the Moorish leader, that, when lying ill, almost worn +out by an incurable disease, a battle took place between his troops +and the Portuguese; when, starting from his litter at the great +crisis of the fight, he rallied his army, led them to victory, and +instantly afterwards sank exhausted and expired. + +It is will,--force of purpose,--that enables a man to do or be +whatever he sets his mind on being or doing. A holy man was +accustomed to say, "Whatever you wish, that you are: for such is +the force of our will, joined to the Divine, that whatever we wish +to be, seriously, and with a true intention, that we become. No +one ardently wishes to be submissive, patient, modest, or liberal, +who does not become what he wishes." The story is told of a +working carpenter, who was observed one day planing a magistrate's +bench which he was repairing, with more than usual carefulness; and +when asked the reason, he replied, "Because I wish to make it easy +against the time when I come to sit upon it myself." And +singularly enough, the man actually lived to sit upon that very +bench as a magistrate. + +Whatever theoretical conclusions logicians may have formed as to +the freedom of the will, each individual feels that practically he +is free to choose between good and evil--that he is not as a mere +straw thrown upon the water to mark the direction of the current, +but that he has within him the power of a strong swimmer, and is +capable of striking out for himself, of buffeting with the waves, +and directing to a great extent his own independent course. There +is no absolute constraint upon our volitions, and we feel and know +that we are not bound, as by a spell, with reference to our +actions. It would paralyze all desire of excellence were we to +think otherwise. The entire business and conduct of life, with its +domestic rules, its social arrangements, and its public +institutions, proceed upon the practical conviction that the will +is free. Without this where would be responsibility?--and what the +advantage of teaching, advising, preaching, reproof, and +correction? What were the use of laws, were it not the universal +belief, as it is the universal fact, that men obey them or not, +very much as they individually determine? In every moment of our +life, conscience is proclaiming that our will is free. It is the +only thing that is wholly ours, and it rests solely with ourselves +individually, whether we give it the right or the wrong direction. +Our habits or our temptations are not our masters, but we of them. +Even in yielding, conscience tells us we might resist; and that +were we determined to master them, there would not be required for +that purpose a stronger resolution than we know ourselves to be +capable of exercising. + +"You are now at the age," said Lamennais once, addressing a gay +youth, "at which a decision must be formed by you; a little later, +and you may have to groan within the tomb which you yourself have +dug, without the power of rolling away the stone. That which the +easiest becomes a habit in us is the will. Learn then to will +strongly and decisively; thus fix your floating life, and leave it +no longer to be carried hither and thither, like a withered leaf, +by every wind that blows." + +Buxton held the conviction that a young man might be very much what +he pleased, provided he formed a strong resolution and held to it. +Writing to one of his sons, he said to him, "You are now at that +period of life, in which you must make a turn to the right or the +left. You must now give proofs of principle, determination, and +strength of mind; or you must sink into idleness, and acquire the +habits and character of a desultory, ineffective young man; and if +once you fall to that point, you will find it no easy matter to +rise again. I am sure that a young man may be very much what he +pleases. In my own case it was so. . . . Much of my happiness, and +all my prosperity in life, have resulted from the change I made at +your age. If you seriously resolve to be energetic and +industrious, depend upon it that you will for your whole life have +reason to rejoice that you were wise enough to form and to act upon +that determination." As will, considered without regard to +direction, is simply constancy, firmness, perseverance, it will be +obvious that everything depends upon right direction and motives. +Directed towards the enjoyment of the senses, the strong will may +be a demon, and the intellect merely its debased slave; but +directed towards good, the strong will is a king, and the intellect +the minister of man's highest well-being. + +"Where there is a will there is a way," is an old and true saying. +He who resolves upon doing a thing, by that very resolution often +scales the barriers to it, and secures its achievement. To think +we are able, is almost to be so--to determine upon attainment is +frequently attainment itself. Thus, earnest resolution has often +seemed to have about it almost a savour of omnipotence. The +strength of Suwarrow's character lay in his power of willing, and, +like most resolute persons, he preached it up as a system. "You +can only half will," he would say to people who failed. Like +Richelieu and Napoleon, he would have the word "impossible" +banished from the dictionary. "I don't know," "I can't," and +"impossible," were words which he detested above all others. +"Learn! Do! Try!" he would exclaim. His biographer has said of +him, that he furnished a remarkable illustration of what may be +effected by the energetic development and exercise of faculties, +the germs of which at least are in every human heart. + +One of Napoleon's favourite maxims was, "The truest wisdom is a +resolute determination." His life, beyond most others, vividly +showed what a powerful and unscrupulous will could accomplish. He +threw his whole force of body and mind direct upon his work. +Imbecile rulers and the nations they governed went down before him +in succession. He was told that the Alps stood in the way of his +armies--"There shall be no Alps," he said, and the road across the +Simplon was constructed, through a district formerly almost +inaccessible. "Impossible," said he, "is a word only to be found +in the dictionary of fools." He was a man who toiled terribly; +sometimes employing and exhausting four secretaries at a time. He +spared no one, not even himself. His influence inspired other men, +and put a new life into them. "I made my generals out of mud," he +said. But all was of no avail; for Napoleon's intense selfishness +was his ruin, and the ruin of France, which he left a prey to +anarchy. His life taught the lesson that power, however +energetically wielded, without beneficence, is fatal to its +possessor and its subjects; and that knowledge, or knowingness, +without goodness, is but the incarnate principle of Evil. + +Our own Wellington was a far greater man. Not less resolute, firm, +and persistent, but more self-denying, conscientious, and truly +patriotic. Napoleon's aim was "Glory;" Wellington's watchword, +like Nelson's, was "Duty." The former word, it is said, does not +once occur in his despatches; the latter often, but never +accompanied by any high-sounding professions. The greatest +difficulties could neither embarrass nor intimidate Wellington; his +energy invariably rising in proportion to the obstacles to be +surmounted. The patience, the firmness, the resolution, with which +he bore through the maddening vexations and gigantic difficulties +of the Peninsular campaigns, is, perhaps, one of the sublimest +things to be found in history. In Spain, Wellington not only +exhibited the genius of the general, but the comprehensive wisdom +of the statesman. Though his natural temper was irritable in the +extreme, his high sense of duty enabled him to restrain it; and to +those about him his patience seemed absolutely inexhaustible. His +great character stands untarnished by ambition, by avarice, or any +low passion. Though a man of powerful individuality, he yet +displayed a great variety of endowment. The equal of Napoleon in +generalship, he was as prompt, vigorous, and daring as Clive; as +wise a statesman as Cromwell; and as pure and high-minded as +Washington. The great Wellington left behind him an enduring +reputation, founded on toilsome campaigns won by skilful +combination, by fortitude which nothing could exhaust, by sublime +daring, and perhaps by still sublimer patience. + +Energy usually displays itself in promptitude and decision. When +Ledyard the traveller was asked by the African Association when he +would be ready to set out for Africa, he immediately answered, "To- +morrow morning." Blucher's promptitude obtained for him the +cognomen of "Marshal Forwards" throughout the Prussian army. When +John Jervis, afterwards Earl St. Vincent, was asked when he would +be ready to join his ship, he replied, "Directly." And when Sir +Colin Campbell, appointed to the command of the Indian army, was +asked when he could set out, his answer was, "To-morrow,"--an +earnest of his subsequent success. For it is rapid decision, and a +similar promptitude in action, such as taking instant advantage of +an enemy's mistakes, that so often wins battles. "At Arcola," said +Napoleon, "I won the battle with twenty-five horsemen. I seized a +moment of lassitude, gave every man a trumpet, and gained the day +with this handful. Two armies are two bodies which meet and +endeavour to frighten each other: a moment of panic occurs, and +THAT MOMENT must be turned to advantage." "Every moment lost," +said he at another time, "gives an opportunity for misfortune;" and +he declared that he beat the Austrians because they never knew the +value of time: while they dawdled, he overthrew them. + +India has, during the last century, been a great field for the +display of British energy. From Clive to Havelock and Clyde there +is a long and honourable roll of distinguished names in Indian +legislation and warfare,--such as Wellesley, Metcalfe, Outram, +Edwardes, and the Lawrences. Another great but sullied name is +that of Warren Hastings--a man of dauntless will and indefatigable +industry. His family was ancient and illustrious; but their +vicissitudes of fortune and ill-requited loyalty in the cause of +the Stuarts, brought them to poverty, and the family estate at +Daylesford, of which they had been lords of the manor for hundreds +of years, at length passed from their hands. The last Hastings of +Daylesford had, however, presented the parish living to his second +son; and it was in his house, many years later, that Warren +Hastings, his grandson, was born. The boy learnt his letters at +the village school, on the same bench with the children of the +peasantry. He played in the fields which his fathers had owned; +and what the loyal and brave Hastings of Daylesford HAD been, was +ever in the boy's thoughts. His young ambition was fired, and it +is said that one summer's day, when only seven years old, as he +laid him down on the bank of the stream which flowed through the +domain, he formed in his mind the resolution that he would yet +recover possession of the family lands. It was the romantic vision +of a boy; yet he lived to realize it. The dream became a passion, +rooted in his very life; and he pursued his determination through +youth up to manhood, with that calm but indomitable force of will +which was the most striking peculiarity of his character. The +orphan boy became one of the most powerful men of his time; he +retrieved the fortunes of his line; bought back the old estate, and +rebuilt the family mansion. "When, under a tropical sun," says +Macaulay, "he ruled fifty millions of Asiatics, his hopes, amidst +all the cares of war, finance, and legislation, still pointed to +Daylesford. And when his long public life, so singularly chequered +with good and evil, with glory and obloquy, had at length closed +for ever, it was to Daylesford that he retired to die." + +Sir Charles Napier was another Indian leader of extraordinary +courage and determination. He once said of the difficulties with +which he was surrounded in one of his campaigns, "They only make my +feet go deeper into the ground." His battle of Meeanee was one of +the most extraordinary feats in history. With 2000 men, of whom +only 400 were Europeans, he encountered an army of 35,000 hardy and +well-armed Beloochees. It was an act, apparently, of the most +daring temerity, but the general had faith in himself and in his +men. He charged the Belooch centre up a high bank which formed +their rampart in front, and for three mortal hours the battle +raged. Each man of that small force, inspired by the chief, became +for the time a hero. The Beloochees, though twenty to one, were +driven back, but with their faces to the foe. It is this sort of +pluck, tenacity, and determined perseverance which wins soldiers' +battles, and, indeed, every battle. It is the one neck nearer that +wins the race and shows the blood; it is the one march more that +wins the campaign; the five minutes' more persistent courage that +wins the fight. Though your force be less than another's, you +equal and outmaster your opponent if you continue it longer and +concentrate it more. The reply of the Spartan father, who said to +his son, when complaining that his sword was too short, "Add a step +to it," is applicable to everything in life. + +Napier took the right method of inspiring his men with his own +heroic spirit. He worked as hard as any private in the ranks. +"The great art of commanding," he said, "is to take a fair share of +the work. The man who leads an army cannot succeed unless his +whole mind is thrown into his work. The more trouble, the more +labour must be given; the more danger, the more pluck must be +shown, till all is overpowered." A young officer who accompanied +him in his campaign in the Cutchee Hills, once said, "When I see +that old man incessantly on his horse, how can I be idle who am +young and strong? I would go into a loaded cannon's mouth if he +ordered me." This remark, when repeated to Napier, he said was +ample reward for his toils. The anecdote of his interview with the +Indian juggler strikingly illustrates his cool courage as well as +his remarkable simplicity and honesty of character. On one +occasion, after the Indian battles, a famous juggler visited the +camp and performed his feats before the General, his family, and +staff. Among other performances, this man cut in two with a stroke +of his sword a lime or lemon placed in the hand of his assistant. +Napier thought there was some collusion between the juggler and his +retainer. To divide by a sweep of the sword on a man's hand so +small an object without touching the flesh he believed to be +impossible, though a similar incident is related by Scott in his +romance of the 'Talisman.' To determine the point, the General +offered his own hand for the experiment, and he stretched out his +right arm. The juggler looked attentively at the hand, and said he +would not make the trial. "I thought I would find you out!" +exclaimed Napier. "But stop," added the other, "let me see your +left hand." The left hand was submitted, and the man then said +firmly, "If you will hold your arm steady I will perform the feat." +"But why the left hand and not the right?" "Because the right hand +is hollow in the centre, and there is a risk of cutting off the +thumb; the left is high, and the danger will be less." Napier was +startled. "I got frightened," he said; "I saw it was an actual +feat of delicate swordsmanship, and if I had not abused the man as +I did before my staff, and challenged him to the trial, I honestly +acknowledge I would have retired from the encounter. However, I +put the lime on my hand, and held out my arm steadily. The juggler +balanced himself, and, with a swift stroke cut the lime in two +pieces. I felt the edge of the sword on my hand as if a cold +thread had been drawn across it. So much (he added) for the brave +swordsmen of India, whom our fine fellows defeated at Meeanee." + +The recent terrible struggle in India has served to bring out, +perhaps more prominently than any previous event in our history, +the determined energy and self-reliance of the national character. +Although English officialism may often drift stupidly into gigantic +blunders, the men of the nation generally contrive to work their +way out of them with a heroism almost approaching the sublime. In +May, 1857, when the revolt burst upon India like a thunder-clap, +the British forces had been allowed to dwindle to their extreme +minimum, and were scattered over a wide extent of country, many of +them in remote cantonments. The Bengal regiments, one after +another, rose against their officers, broke away, and rushed to +Delhi. Province after province was lapped in mutiny and rebellion; +and the cry for help rose from east to west. Everywhere the +English stood at bay in small detachments, beleaguered and +surrounded, apparently incapable of resistance. Their discomfiture +seemed so complete, and the utter ruin of the British cause in +India so certain, that it might be said of them then, as it had +been said before, "These English never know when they are beaten." +According to rule, they ought then and there to have succumbed to +inevitable fate. + +While the issue of the mutiny still appeared uncertain, Holkar, one +of the native princes, consulted his astrologer for information. +The reply was, "If all the Europeans save one are slain, that one +will remain to fight and reconquer." In their very darkest moment- +-even where, as at Lucknow, a mere handful of British soldiers, +civilians, and women, held out amidst a city and province in arms +against them--there was no word of despair, no thought of +surrender. Though cut off from all communication with their +friends for months, and not knowing whether India was lost or held, +they never ceased to have perfect faith in the courage and +devotedness of their countrymen. They knew that while a body of +men of English race held together in India, they would not be left +unheeded to perish. They never dreamt of any other issue but +retrieval of their misfortune and ultimate triumph; and if the +worst came to the worst, they could but fall at their post, and die +in the performance of their duty. Need we remind the reader of the +names of Havelock, Inglis, Neill, and Outram--men of truly heroic +mould--of each of whom it might with truth be said that he had the +heart of a chevalier, the soul of a believer, and the temperament +of a martyr. Montalembert has said of them that "they do honour to +the human race." But throughout that terrible trial almost all +proved equally great--women, civilians and soldiers--from the +general down through all grades to the private and bugleman. The +men were not picked: they belonged to the same ordinary people +whom we daily meet at home--in the streets, in workshops, in the +fields, at clubs; yet when sudden disaster fell upon them, each and +all displayed a wealth of personal resources and energy, and became +as it were individually heroic. "Not one of them," says +Montalembert, "shrank or trembled--all, military and civilians, +young and old, generals and soldiers, resisted, fought, and +perished with a coolness and intrepidity which never faltered. It +is in this circumstance that shines out the immense value of public +education, which invites the Englishman from his youth to make use +of his strength and his liberty, to associate, resist, fear +nothing, to be astonished at nothing, and to save himself, by his +own sole exertions, from every sore strait in life." + +It has been said that Delhi was taken and India saved by the +personal character of Sir John Lawrence. The very name of +"Lawrence" represented power in the North-West Provinces. His +standard of duty, zeal, and personal effort, was of the highest; +and every man who served under him seemed to be inspired by his +spirit. It was declared of him that his character alone was worth +an army. The same might be said of his brother Sir Henry, who +organised the Punjaub force that took so prominent a part in the +capture of Delhi. Both brothers inspired those who were about them +with perfect love and confidence. Both possessed that quality of +tenderness, which is one of the true elements of the heroic +character. Both lived amongst the people, and powerfully +influenced them for good. Above all as Col. Edwardes says, "they +drew models on young fellows' minds, which they went forth and +copied in their several administrations: they sketched a FAITH, +and begot a SCHOOL, which are both living things at this day." Sir +John Lawrence had by his side such men as Montgomery, Nicholson, +Cotton, and Edwardes, as prompt, decisive, and high-souled as +himself. John Nicholson was one of the finest, manliest, and +noblest of men--"every inch a hakim," the natives said of him--"a +tower of strength," as he was characterised by Lord Dalhousie. In +whatever capacity he acted he was great, because he acted with his +whole strength and soul. A brotherhood of fakeers--borne away by +their enthusiastic admiration of the man--even began the worship of +Nikkil Seyn: he had some of them punished for their folly, but +they continued their worship nevertheless. Of his sustained energy +and persistency an illustration may be cited in his pursuit of the +55th Sepoy mutineers, when he was in the saddle for twenty +consecutive hours, and travelled more than seventy miles. When the +enemy set up their standard at Delhi, Lawrence and Montgomery, +relying on the support of the people of the Punjaub, and compelling +their admiration and confidence, strained every nerve to keep their +own province in perfect order, whilst they hurled every available +soldier, European and Sikh, against that city. Sir John wrote to +the commander-in-chief to "hang on to the rebels' noses before +Delhi," while the troops pressed on by forced marches under +Nicholson, "the tramp of whose war-horse might be heard miles off," +as was afterwards said of him by a rough Sikh who wept over his +grave. + +The siege and storming of Delhi was the most illustrious event +which occurred in the course of that gigantic struggle, although +the leaguer of Lucknow, during which the merest skeleton of a +British regiment--the 32nd--held out, under the heroic Inglis, for +six months against two hundred thousand armed enemies, has perhaps +excited more intense interest. At Delhi, too, the British were +really the besieged, though ostensibly the besiegers; they were a +mere handful of men "in the open"--not more than 3,700 bayonets, +European and native--and they were assailed from day to day by an +army of rebels numbering at one time as many as 75,000 men, trained +to European discipline by English officers, and supplied with all +but exhaustless munitions of war. The heroic little band sat down +before the city under the burning rays of a tropical sun. Death, +wounds, and fever failed to turn them from their purpose. Thirty +times they were attacked by overwhelming numbers, and thirty times +did they drive back the enemy behind their defences. As Captain +Hodson--himself one of the bravest there--has said, "I venture to +aver that no other nation in the world would have remained here, or +avoided defeat if they had attempted to do so." Never for an +instant did these heroes falter at their work; with sublime +endurance they held on, fought on, and never relaxed until, dashing +through the "imminent deadly breach," the place was won, and the +British flag was again unfurled on the walls of Delhi. All were +great--privates, officers, and generals. Common soldiers who had +been inured to a life of hardship, and young officers who had been +nursed in luxurious homes, alike proved their manhood, and emerged +from that terrible trial with equal honour. The native strength +and soundness of the English race, and of manly English training +and discipline, were never more powerfully exhibited; and it was +there emphatically proved that the Men of England are, after all, +its greatest products. A terrible price was paid for this great +chapter in our history, but if those who survive, and those who +come after, profit by the lesson and example, it may not have been +purchased at too great a cost. + +But not less energy and courage have been displayed in India and +the East by men of various nations, in other lines of action more +peaceful and beneficent than that of war. And while the heroes of +the sword are remembered, the heroes of the gospel ought not to be +forgotten. From Xavier to Martyn and Williams, there has been a +succession of illustrious missionary labourers, working in a spirit +of sublime self-sacrifice, without any thought of worldly honour, +inspired solely by the hope of seeking out and rescuing the lost +and fallen of their race. Borne up by invincible courage and +never-failing patience, these men have endured privations, braved +dangers, walked through pestilence, and borne all toils, fatigues, +and sufferings, yet held on their way rejoicing, glorying even in +martyrdom itself. Of these one of the first and most illustrious +was Francis Xavier. Born of noble lineage, and with pleasure, +power, and honour within his reach, he proved by his life that +there are higher objects in the world than rank, and nobler +aspirations than the accumulation of wealth. He was a true +gentleman in manners and sentiment; brave, honourable, generous; +easily led, yet capable of leading; easily persuaded, yet himself +persuasive; a most patient, resolute and energetic man. At the age +of twenty-two he was earning his living as a public teacher of +philosophy at the University of Paris. There Xavier became the +intimate friend and associate of Loyola, and shortly afterwards he +conducted the pilgrimage of the first little band of proselytes to +Rome. + +When John III. of Portugal resolved to plant Christianity in the +Indian territories subject to his influence, Bobadilla was first +selected as his missionary; but being disabled by illness, it was +found necessary to make another selection, and Xavier was chosen. +Repairing his tattered cassock, and with no other baggage than his +breviary, he at once started for Lisbon and embarked for the East. +The ship in which he set sail for Goa had the Governor on board, +with a reinforcement of a thousand men for the garrison of the +place. Though a cabin was placed at his disposal, Xavier slept on +deck throughout the voyage with his head on a coil of ropes, +messing with the sailors. By ministering to their wants, inventing +innocent sports for their amusement, and attending them in their +sickness, he wholly won their hearts, and they regarded him with +veneration. + +Arrived at Goa, Xavier was shocked at the depravity of the people, +settlers as well as natives; for the former had imported the vices +without the restraints of civilization, and the latter had only +been too apt to imitate their bad example. Passing along the +streets of the city, sounding his handbell as he went, he implored +the people to send him their children to be instructed. He shortly +succeeded in collecting a large number of scholars, whom he +carefully taught day by day, at the same time visiting the sick, +the lepers, and the wretched of all classes, with the object of +assuaging their miseries, and bringing them to the Truth. No cry +of human suffering which reached him was disregarded. Hearing of +the degradation and misery of the pearl fishers of Manaar, he set +out to visit them, and his bell again rang out the invitation of +mercy. He baptized and he taught, but the latter he could only do +through interpreters. His most eloquent teaching was his +ministration to the wants and the sufferings of the wretched. + +On he went, his hand-bell sounding along the coast of Comorin, +among the towns and villages, the temples and the bazaars, +summoning the natives to gather about him and be instructed. He +had translations made of the Catechism, the Apostles' Creed, the +Commandments, the Lord's Prayer, and some of the devotional offices +of the Church. Committing these to memory in their own tongue he +recited them to the children, until they had them by heart; after +which he sent them forth to teach the words to their parents and +neighbours. At Cape Comorin, he appointed thirty teachers, who +under himself presided over thirty Christian Churches, though the +Churches were but humble, in most cases consisting only of a +cottage surmounted by a cross. Thence he passed to Travancore, +sounding his way from village to village, baptizing until his hands +dropped with weariness, and repeating his formulas until his voice +became almost inaudible. According to his own account, the success +of his mission surpassed his highest expectations. His pure, +earnest, and beautiful life, and the irresistible eloquence of his +deeds, made converts wherever he went; and by sheer force of +sympathy, those who saw him and listened to him insensibly caught a +portion of his ardour. + +Burdened with the thought that "the harvest is great and the +labourers are few," Xavier next sailed to Malacca and Japan, where +he found himself amongst entirely new races speaking other tongues. +The most that he could do here was to weep and pray, to smooth the +pillow and watch by the sick-bed, sometimes soaking the sleeve of +his surplice in water, from which to squeeze out a few drops and +baptize the dying. Hoping all things, and fearing nothing, this +valiant soldier of the truth was borne onward throughout by faith +and energy. "Whatever form of death or torture," said he, "awaits +me, I am ready to suffer it ten thousand times for the salvation of +a single soul." He battled with hunger, thirst, privations and +dangers of all kinds, still pursuing his mission of love, unresting +and unwearying. At length, after eleven years' labour, this great +good man, while striving to find a way into China, was stricken +with fever in the Island of Sanchian, and there received his crown +of glory. A hero of nobler mould, more pure, self-denying, and +courageous, has probably never trod this earth. + +Other missionaries have followed Xavier in the same field of work, +such as Schwartz, Carey, and Marshman in India; Gutzlaff and +Morrison in China; Williams in the South Seas; Campbell, Moffatt +and Livingstone in Africa. John Williams, the martyr of Erromanga, +was originally apprenticed to a furnishing ironmonger. Though +considered a dull boy, he was handy at his trade, in which he +acquired so much skill that his master usually entrusted him with +any blacksmiths work that required the exercise of more than +ordinary care. He was also fond of bell-hanging and other +employments which took him away from the shop. A casual sermon +which he heard gave his mind a serious bias, and he became a +Sunday-school teacher. The cause of missions having been brought +under his notice at some of his society's meetings, he determined +to devote himself to this work. His services were accepted by the +London Missionary Society; and his master allowed him to leave the +ironmonger's shop before the expiry of his indentures. The islands +of the Pacific Ocean were the principal scene of his labours--more +particularly Huahine in Tahiti, Raiatea, and Rarotonga. Like the +Apostles he worked with his hands,--at blacksmith work, gardening, +shipbuilding; and he endeavoured to teach the islanders the art of +civilised life, at the same time that he instructed them in the +truths of religion. It was in the course of his indefatigable +labours that he was massacred by savages on the shore of Erromanga- +-none worthier than he to wear the martyr's crown. + +The career of Dr. Livingstone is one of the most interesting of +all. He has told the story of his life in that modest and +unassuming manner which is so characteristic of the man himself. +His ancestors were poor but honest Highlanders, and it is related +of one of them, renowned in his district for wisdom and prudence, +that when on his death-bed he called his children round him and +left them these words, the only legacy he had to bequeath--"In my +life-time," said he, "I have searched most carefully through all +the traditions I could find of our family, and I never could +discover that there was a dishonest man among our forefathers: if, +therefore, any of you or any of your children should take to +dishonest ways, it will not be because it runs in our blood; it +does not belong to you: I leave this precept with you--Be honest." +At the age of ten Livingstone was sent to work in a cotton factory +near Glasgow as a "piecer." With part of his first week's wages he +bought a Latin grammar, and began to learn that language, pursuing +the study for years at a night school. He would sit up conning his +lessons till twelve or later, when not sent to bed by his mother, +for he had to be up and at work in the factory every morning by +six. In this way he plodded through Virgil and Horace, also +reading extensively all books, excepting novels, that came in his +way, but more especially scientific works and books of travels. He +occupied his spare hours, which were but few, in the pursuit of +botany, scouring the neighbourhood to collect plants. He even +carried on his reading amidst the roar of the factory machinery, so +placing the book upon the spinning jenny which he worked that he +could catch sentence after sentence as he passed it. In this way +the persevering youth acquired much useful knowledge; and as he +grew older, the desire possessed him of becoming a missionary to +the heathen. With this object he set himself to obtain a medical +education, in order the better to be qualified for the work. He +accordingly economised his earnings, and saved as much money as +enabled him to support himself while attending the Medical and +Greek classes, as well as the Divinity Lectures, at Glasgow, for +several winters, working as a cotton spinner during the remainder +of each year. He thus supported himself, during his college +career, entirely by his own earnings as a factory workman, never +having received a farthing of help from any other source. "Looking +back now," he honestly says, "at that life of toil, I cannot but +feel thankful that it formed such a material part of my early +education; and, were it possible, I should like to begin life over +again in the same lowly style, and to pass through the same hardy +training." At length he finished his medical curriculum, wrote his +Latin thesis, passed his examinations, and was admitted a +licentiate of the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons. At first he +thought of going to China, but the war then waging with that +country prevented his following out the idea; and having offered +his services to the London Missionary Society, he was by them sent +out to Africa, which he reached in 1840. He had intended to +proceed to China by his own efforts; and he says the only pang he +had in going to Africa at the charge of the London Missionary +Society was, because "it was not quite agreeable to one accustomed +to work his own way to become, in a manner, dependent upon others." +Arrived in Africa he set to work with great zeal. He could not +brook the idea of merely entering upon the labours of others, but +cut out a large sphere of independent work, preparing himself for +it by undertaking manual labour in building and other handicraft +employment, in addition to teaching, which, he says, "made me +generally as much exhausted and unfit for study in the evenings as +ever I had been when a cotton-spinner." Whilst labouring amongst +the Bechuanas, he dug canals, built houses, cultivated fields, +reared cattle, and taught the natives to work as well as worship. +When he first started with a party of them on foot upon a long +journey, he overheard their observations upon his appearance and +powers--"He is not strong," said they; "he is quite slim, and only +appears stout because he puts himself into those bags (trowsers): +he will soon knock up." This caused the missionary's Highland +blood to rise, and made him despise the fatigue of keeping them all +at the top of their speed for days together, until he heard them +expressing proper opinions of his pedestrian powers. What he did +in Africa, and how he worked, may be learnt from his own +'Missionary Travels,' one of the most fascinating books of its kind +that has ever been given to the public. One of his last known acts +is thoroughly characteristic of the man. The 'Birkenhead' steam +launch, which he took out with him to Africa, having proved a +failure, he sent home orders for the construction of another vessel +at an estimated cost of 2000l. This sum he proposed to defray out +of the means which he had set aside for his children arising from +the profits of his books of travels. "The children must make it up +themselves," was in effect his expression in sending home the order +for the appropriation of the money. + +The career of John Howard was throughout a striking illustration of +the same power of patient purpose. His sublime life proved that +even physical weakness could remove mountains in the pursuit of an +end recommended by duty. The idea of ameliorating the condition of +prisoners engrossed his whole thoughts and possessed him like a +passion; and no toil, nor danger, nor bodily suffering could turn +him from that great object of his life. Though a man of no genius +and but moderate talent, his heart was pure and his will was +strong. Even in his own time he achieved a remarkable degree of +success; and his influence did not die with him, for it has +continued powerfully to affect not only the legislation of England, +but of all civilised nations, down to the present hour. + +Jonas Hanway was another of the many patient and persevering men +who have made England what it is--content simply to do with energy +the work they have been appointed to do, and go to their rest +thankfully when it is done - + + +"Leaving no memorial but a world +Made better by their lives." + + +He was born in 1712, at Portsmouth, where his father, a storekeeper +in the dockyard, being killed by an accident, he was left an orphan +at an early age. His mother removed with her children to London, +where she had them put to school, and struggled hard to bring them +up respectably. At seventeen Jonas was sent to Lisbon to be +apprenticed to a merchant, where his close attention to business, +his punctuality, and his strict honour and integrity, gained for +him the respect and esteem of all who knew him. Returning to +London in 1743, he accepted the offer of a partnership in an +English mercantile house at St. Petersburg engaged in the Caspian +trade, then in its infancy. Hanway went to Russia for the purpose +of extending the business; and shortly after his arrival at the +capital he set out for Persia, with a caravan of English bales of +cloth making twenty carriage loads. At Astracan he sailed for +Astrabad, on the south-eastern shore of the Caspian; but he had +scarcely landed his bales, when an insurrection broke out, his +goods were seized, and though he afterwards recovered the principal +part of them, the fruits of his enterprise were in a great measure +lost. A plot was set on foot to seize himself and his party; so he +took to sea and, after encountering great perils, reached Ghilan in +safety. His escape on this occasion gave him the first idea of the +words which he afterwards adopted as the motto of his life--"NEVER +DESPAIR." He afterwards resided in St. Petersburg for five years, +carrying on a prosperous business. But a relative having left him +some property, and his own means being considerable, he left +Russia, and arrived in his native country in 1755. His object in +returning to England was, as he himself expressed it, "to consult +his own health (which was extremely delicate), and do as much good +to himself and others as he was able." The rest of his life was +spent in deeds of active benevolence and usefulness to his fellow +men. He lived in a quiet style, in order that he might employ a +larger share of his income in works of benevolence. One of the +first public improvements to which he devoted himself was that of +the highways of the metropolis, in which he succeeded to a large +extent. The rumour of a French invasion being prevalent in 1755, +Mr. Hanway turned his attention to the best mode of keeping up the +supply of seamen. He summoned a meeting of merchants and +shipowners at the Royal Exchange, and there proposed to them to +form themselves into a society for fitting out landsmen volunteers +and boys, to serve on board the king's ships. The proposal was +received with enthusiasm: a society was formed, and officers were +appointed, Mr. Hanway directing its entire operations. The result +was the establishment in 1756 of The Marine Society, an institution +which has proved of much national advantage, and is to this day of +great and substantial utility. Within six years from its +formation, 5451 boys and 4787 landsmen volunteers had been trained +and fitted out by the society and added to the navy, and to this +day it is in active operation, about 600 poor boys, after a careful +education, being annually apprenticed as sailors, principally in +the merchant service. + +Mr. Hanway devoted the other portions of his spare time to +improving or establishing important public institutions in the +metropolis. From an early period he took an active interest in the +Foundling Hospital, which had been started by Thomas Coram many +years before, but which, by encouraging parents to abandon their +children to the charge of a charity, was threatening to do more +harm than good. He determined to take steps to stem the evil, +entering upon the work in the face of the fashionable philanthropy +of the time; but by holding to his purpose he eventually succeeded +in bringing the charity back to its proper objects; and time and +experience have proved that he was right. The Magdalen Hospital +was also established in a great measure through Mr. Hanway's +exertions. But his most laborious and persevering efforts were in +behalf of the infant parish poor. The misery and neglect amidst +which the children of the parish poor then grew up, and the +mortality which prevailed amongst them, were frightful; but there +was no fashionable movement on foot to abate the suffering, as in +the case of the foundlings. So Jonas Hanway summoned his energies +to the task. Alone and unassisted he first ascertained by personal +inquiry the extent of the evil. He explored the dwellings of the +poorest classes in London, and visited the poorhouse sick wards, by +which he ascertained the management in detail of every workhouse in +and near the metropolis. He next made a journey into France and +through Holland, visiting the houses for the reception of the poor, +and noting whatever he thought might be adopted at home with +advantage. He was thus employed for five years; and on his return +to England he published the results of his observations. The +consequence was that many of the workhouses were reformed and +improved. In 1761 he obtained an Act obliging every London parish +to keep an annual register of all the infants received, discharged, +and dead; and he took care that the Act should work, for he himself +superintended its working with indefatigable watchfulness. He went +about from workhouse to workhouse in the morning, and from one +member of parliament to another in the afternoon, for day after +day, and for year after year, enduring every rebuff, answering +every objection, and accommodating himself to every humour. At +length, after a perseverance hardly to be equalled, and after +nearly ten years' labour, he obtained another Act, at his sole +expense (7 Geo. III. c. 39), directing that all parish infants +belonging to the parishes within the bills of mortality should not +be nursed in the workhouses, but be sent to nurse a certain number +of miles out of town, until they were six years old, under the care +of guardians to be elected triennially. The poor people called +this "the Act for keeping children alive;" and the registers for +the years which followed its passing, as compared with those which +preceded it, showed that thousands of lives had been preserved +through the judicious interference of this good and sensible man. + +Wherever a philanthropic work was to be done in London, be sure +that Jonas Hanway's hand was in it. One of the first Acts for the +protection of chimney-sweepers' boys was obtained through his +influence. A destructive fire at Montreal, and another at +Bridgetown, Barbadoes, afforded him the opportunity for raising a +timely subscription for the relief of the sufferers. His name +appeared in every list, and his disinterestedness and sincerity +were universally recognized. But he was not suffered to waste his +little fortune entirely in the service of others. Five leading +citizens of London, headed by Mr. Hoare, the banker, without Mr. +Hanway's knowledge, waited on Lord Bute, then prime minister, in a +body, and in the names of their fellow-citizens requested that some +notice might be taken of this good man's disinterested services to +his country. The result was, his appointment shortly after, as one +of the commissioners for victualling the navy. + +Towards the close of his life Mr. Hanway's health became very +feeble, and although he found it necessary to resign his office at +the Victualling Board, he could not be idle; but laboured at the +establishment of Sunday Schools,--a movement then in its infancy,-- +or in relieving poor blacks, many of whom wandered destitute about +the streets of the metropolis,--or, in alleviating the sufferings +of some neglected and destitute class of society. Notwithstanding +his familiarity with misery in all its shapes, he was one of the +most cheerful of beings; and, but for his cheerfulness he could +never, with so delicate a frame, have got through so vast an amount +of self-imposed work. He dreaded nothing so much as inactivity. +Though fragile, he was bold and indefatigable; and his moral +courage was of the first order. It may be regarded as a trivial +matter to mention that he was the first who ventured to walk the +streets of London with an umbrella over his head. But let any +modern London merchant venture to walk along Cornhill in a peaked +Chinese hat, and he will find it takes some degree of moral courage +to persevere in it. After carrying an umbrella for thirty years, +Mr. Hanway saw the article at length come into general use. + +Hanway was a man of strict honour, truthfulness, and integrity; and +every word he said might be relied upon. He had so great a +respect, amounting almost to a reverence, for the character of the +honest merchant, that it was the only subject upon which he was +ever seduced into a eulogium. He strictly practised what he +professed, and both as a merchant, and afterwards as a commissioner +for victualling the navy, his conduct was without stain. He would +not accept the slightest favour of any sort from a contractor; and +when any present was sent to him whilst at the Victualling Office, +he would politely return it, with the intimation that "he had made +it a rule not to accept anything from any person engaged with the +office." When he found his powers failing, he prepared for death +with as much cheerfulness as he would have prepared himself for a +journey into the country. He sent round and paid all his +tradesmen, took leave of his friends, arranged his affairs, had his +person neatly disposed of, and parted with life serenely and +peacefully in his 74th year. The property which he left did not +amount to two thousand pounds, and, as he had no relatives who +wanted it, he divided it amongst sundry orphans and poor persons +whom he had befriended during his lifetime. Such, in brief, was +the beautiful life of Jonas Hanway,--as honest, energetic, hard- +working, and true-hearted a man as ever lived. + +The life of Granville Sharp is another striking example of the same +power of individual energy--a power which was afterwards transfused +into the noble band of workers in the cause of Slavery Abolition, +prominent among whom were Clarkson, Wilberforce, Buxton, and +Brougham. But, giants though these men were in this cause, +Granville Sharp was the first, and perhaps the greatest of them +all, in point of perseverance, energy, and intrepidity. He began +life as apprentice to a linen-draper on Tower Hill; but, leaving +that business after his apprenticeship was out, he next entered as +a clerk in the Ordnance Office; and it was while engaged in that +humble occupation that he carried on in his spare hours the work of +Negro Emancipation. He was always, even when an apprentice, ready +to undertake any amount of volunteer labour where a useful purpose +was to be served. Thus, while learning the linen-drapery business, +a fellow apprentice who lodged in the same house, and was a +Unitarian, led him into frequent discussions on religious subjects. +The Unitarian youth insisted that Granville's Trinitarian +misconception of certain passages of Scripture arose from his want +of acquaintance with the Greek tongue; on which he immediately set +to work in his evening hours, and shortly acquired an intimate +knowledge of Greek. A similar controversy with another fellow- +apprentice, a Jew, as to the interpretation of the prophecies, led +him in like manner to undertake and overcome the difficulties of +Hebrew. + +But the circumstance which gave the bias and direction to the main +labours of his life originated in his generosity and benevolence. +His brother William, a surgeon in Mincing Lane, gave gratuitous +advice to the poor, and amongst the numerous applicants for relief +at his surgery was a poor African named Jonathan Strong. It +appeared that the negro had been brutally treated by his master, a +Barbadoes lawyer then in London, and became lame, almost blind, and +unable to work; on which his owner, regarding him as of no further +value as a chattel, cruelly turned him adrift into the streets to +starve. This poor man, a mass of disease, supported himself by +begging for a time, until he found his way to William Sharp, who +gave him some medicine, and shortly after got him admitted to St. +Bartholomew's hospital, where he was cured. On coming out of the +hospital, the two brothers supported the negro in order to keep him +off the streets, but they had not the least suspicion at the time +that any one had a claim upon his person. They even succeeded in +obtaining a situation for Strong with an apothecary, in whose +service he remained for two years; and it was while he was +attending his mistress behind a hackney coach, that his former +owner, the Barbadoes lawyer, recognized him, and determined to +recover possession of the slave, again rendered valuable by the +restoration of his health. The lawyer employed two of the Lord +Mayor's officers to apprehend Strong, and he was lodged in the +Compter, until he could be shipped off to the West Indies. The +negro, bethinking him in his captivity of the kind services which +Granville Sharp had rendered him in his great distress some years +before, despatched a letter to him requesting his help. Sharp had +forgotten the name of Strong, but he sent a messenger to make +inquiries, who returned saying that the keepers denied having any +such person in their charge. His suspicions were roused, and he +went forthwith to the prison, and insisted upon seeing Jonathan +Strong. He was admitted, and recognized the poor negro, now in +custody as a recaptured slave. Mr. Sharp charged the master of the +prison at his own peril not to deliver up Strong to any person +whatever, until he had been carried before the Lord Mayor, to whom +Sharp immediately went, and obtained a summons against those +persons who had seized and imprisoned Strong without a warrant. +The parties appeared before the Lord Mayor accordingly, and it +appeared from the proceedings that Strong's former master had +already sold him to a new one, who produced the bill of sale and +claimed the negro as his property. As no charge of offence was +made against Strong, and as the Lord Mayor was incompetent to deal +with the legal question of Strong's liberty or otherwise, he +discharged him, and the slave followed his benefactor out of court, +no one daring to touch him. The man's owner immediately gave Sharp +notice of an action to recover possession of his negro slave, of +whom he declared he had been robbed. + +About that time (1767), the personal liberty of the Englishman, +though cherished as a theory, was subject to grievous +infringements, and was almost daily violated. The impressment of +men for the sea service was constantly practised, and, besides the +press-gangs, there were regular bands of kidnappers employed in +London and all the large towns of the kingdom, to seize men for the +East India Company's service. And when the men were not wanted for +India, they were shipped off to the planters in the American +colonies. Negro slaves were openly advertised for sale in the +London and Liverpool newspapers. Rewards were offered for +recovering and securing fugitive slaves, and conveying them down to +certain specified ships in the river. + +The position of the reputed slave in England was undefined and +doubtful. The judgments which had been given in the courts of law +were fluctuating and various, resting on no settled principle. +Although it was a popular belief that no slave could breathe in +England, there were legal men of eminence who expressed a directly +contrary opinion. The lawyers to whom Mr. Sharp resorted for +advice, in defending himself in the action raised against him in +the case of Jonathan Strong, generally concurred in this view, and +he was further told by Jonathan Strong's owner, that the eminent +Lord Chief Justice Mansfield, and all the leading counsel, were +decidedly of opinion that the slave, by coming into England, did +not become free, but might legally be compelled to return again to +the plantations. Such information would have caused despair in a +mind less courageous and earnest than that of Granville Sharp; but +it only served to stimulate his resolution to fight the battle of +the negroes' freedom, at least in England. "Forsaken," he said, +"by my professional defenders, I was compelled, through the want of +regular legal assistance, to make a hopeless attempt at self- +defence, though I was totally unacquainted either with the practice +of the law or the foundations of it, having never opened a law book +(except the Bible) in my life, until that time, when I most +reluctantly undertook to search the indexes of a law library, which +my bookseller had lately purchased." + +The whole of his time during the day was occupied with the business +of the ordnance department, where he held the most laborious post +in the office; he was therefore under the necessity of conducting +his new studies late at night or early in the morning. He +confessed that he was himself becoming a sort of slave. Writing to +a clerical friend to excuse himself for delay in replying to a +letter, he said, "I profess myself entirely incapable of holding a +literary correspondence. What little time I have been able to save +from sleep at night, and early in the morning, has been necessarily +employed in the examination of some points of law, which admitted +of no delay, and yet required the most diligent researches and +examination in my study." + +Mr. Sharp gave up every leisure moment that he could command during +the next two years, to the close study of the laws of England +affecting personal liberty,--wading through an immense mass of dry +and repulsive literature, and making extracts of all the most +important Acts of Parliament, decisions of the courts, and opinions +of eminent lawyers, as he went along. In this tedious and +protracted inquiry he had no instructor, nor assistant, nor +adviser. He could not find a single lawyer whose opinion was +favourable to his undertaking. The results of his inquiries were, +however, as gratifying to himself, as they were surprising to the +gentlemen of the law. "God be thanked," he wrote, "there is +nothing in any English law or statute--at least that I am able to +find out--that can justify the enslaving of others." He had +planted his foot firm, and now he doubted nothing. He drew up the +result of his studies in a summary form; it was a plain, clear, and +manly statement, entitled, 'On the Injustice of Tolerating Slavery +in England;' and numerous copies, made by himself, were circulated +by him amongst the most eminent lawyers of the time. Strong's +owner, finding the sort of man he had to deal with, invented +various pretexts for deferring the suit against Sharp, and at +length offered a compromise, which was rejected. Granville went on +circulating his manuscript tract among the lawyers, until at length +those employed against Jonathan Strong were deterred from +proceeding further, and the result was, that the plaintiff was +compelled to pay treble costs for not bringing forward his action. +The tract was then printed in 1769. + +In the mean time other cases occurred of the kidnapping of negroes +in London, and their shipment to the West Indies for sale. +Wherever Sharp could lay hold of any such case, he at once took +proceedings to rescue the negro. Thus the wife of one Hylas, an +African, was seized, and despatched to Barbadoes; on which Sharp, +in the name of Hylas, instituted legal proceedings against the +aggressor, obtained a verdict with damages, and Hylas's wife was +brought back to England free. + +Another forcible capture of a negro, attended with great cruelty, +having occurred in 1770, he immediately set himself on the track of +the aggressors. An African, named Lewis, was seized one dark night +by two watermen employed by the person who claimed the negro as his +property, dragged into the water, hoisted into a boat, where he was +gagged, and his limbs were tied; and then rowing down river, they +put him on board a ship bound for Jamaica, where he was to be sold +for a slave upon his arrival in the island. The cries of the poor +negro had, however, attracted the attention of some neighbours; one +of whom proceeded direct to Mr. Granville Sharp, now known as the +negro's friend, and informed him of the outrage. Sharp immediately +got a warrant to bring back Lewis, and he proceeded to Gravesend, +but on arrival there the ship had sailed for the Downs. A writ of +Habeas Corpus was obtained, sent down to Spithead, and before the +ship could leave the shores of England the writ was served. The +slave was found chained to the main-mast bathed in tears, casting +mournful looks on the land from which he was about to be torn. He +was immediately liberated, brought back to London, and a warrant +was issued against the author of the outrage. The promptitude of +head, heart, and hand, displayed by Mr. Sharp in this transaction +could scarcely have been surpassed, and yet he accused himself of +slowness. The case was tried before Lord Mansfield--whose opinion, +it will be remembered, had already been expressed as decidedly +opposed to that entertained by Granville Sharp. The judge, +however, avoided bringing the question to an issue, or offering any +opinion on the legal question as to the slave's personal liberty or +otherwise, but discharged the negro because the defendant could +bring no evidence that Lewis was even nominally his property. + +The question of the personal liberty of the negro in England was +therefore still undecided; but in the mean time Mr. Sharp continued +steady in his benevolent course, and by his indefatigable exertions +and promptitude of action, many more were added to the list of the +rescued. At length the important case of James Somerset occurred; +a case which is said to have been selected, at the mutual desire of +Lord Mansfield and Mr. Sharp, in order to bring the great question +involved to a clear legal issue. Somerset had been brought to +England by his master, and left there. Afterwards his master +sought to apprehend him and send him off to Jamaica, for sale. Mr. +Sharp, as usual, at once took the negro's case in hand, and +employed counsel to defend him. Lord Mansfield intimated that the +case was of such general concern, that he should take the opinion +of all the judges upon it. Mr. Sharp now felt that he would have +to contend with all the force that could be brought against him, +but his resolution was in no wise shaken. Fortunately for him, in +this severe struggle, his exertions had already begun to tell: +increasing interest was taken in the question, and many eminent +legal gentlemen openly declared themselves to be upon his side. + +The cause of personal liberty, now at stake, was fairly tried +before Lord Mansfield, assisted by the three justices,--and tried +on the broad principle of the essential and constitutional right of +every man in England to the liberty of his person, unless forfeited +by the law. It is unnecessary here to enter into any account of +this great trial; the arguments extended to a great length, the +cause being carried over to another term,--when it was adjourned +and re-adjourned,--but at length judgment was given by Lord +Mansfield, in whose powerful mind so gradual a change had been +worked by the arguments of counsel, based mainly on Granville +Sharp's tract, that he now declared the court to be so clearly of +one opinion, that there was no necessity for referring the case to +the twelve judges. He then declared that the claim of slavery +never can be supported; that the power claimed never was in use in +England, nor acknowledged by the law; therefore the man James +Somerset must be discharged. By securing this judgment Granville +Sharp effectually abolished the Slave Trade until then carried on +openly in the streets of Liverpool and London. But he also firmly +established the glorious axiom, that as soon as any slave sets his +foot on English ground, that moment he becomes free; and there can +be no doubt that this great decision of Lord Mansfield was mainly +owing to Mr. Sharp's firm, resolute, and intrepid prosecution of +the cause from the beginning to the end. + +It is unnecessary further to follow the career of Granville Sharp. +He continued to labour indefatigably in all good works. He was +instrumental in founding the colony of Sierra Leone as an asylum +for rescued negroes. He laboured to ameliorate the condition of +the native Indians in the American colonies. He agitated the +enlargement and extension of the political rights of the English +people; and he endeavoured to effect the abolition of the +impressment of seamen. Granville held that the British seamen, as +well as the African negro, was entitled to the protection of the +law; and that the fact of his choosing a seafaring life did not in +any way cancel his rights and privileges as an Englishman--first +amongst which he ranked personal freedom. Mr. Sharp also laboured, +but ineffectually, to restore amity between England and her +colonies in America; and when the fratricidal war of the American +Revolution was entered on, his sense of integrity was so scrupulous +that, resolving not in any way to be concerned in so unnatural a +business, he resigned his situation at the Ordnance Office. + +To the last he held to the great object of his life--the abolition +of slavery. To carry on this work, and organize the efforts of the +growing friends of the cause, the Society for the Abolition of +Slavery was founded, and new men, inspired by Sharp's example and +zeal, sprang forward to help him. His energy became theirs, and +the self-sacrificing zeal in which he had so long laboured single- +handed, became at length transfused into the nation itself. His +mantle fell upon Clarkson, upon Wilberforce, upon Brougham, and +upon Buxton, who laboured as he had done, with like energy and +stedfastness of purpose, until at length slavery was abolished +throughout the British dominions. But though the names last +mentioned may be more frequently identified with the triumph of +this great cause, the chief merit unquestionably belongs to +Granville Sharp. He was encouraged by none of the world's huzzas +when he entered upon his work. He stood alone, opposed to the +opinion of the ablest lawyers and the most rooted prejudices of the +times; and alone he fought out, by his single exertions, and at his +individual expense, the most memorable battle for the constitution +of this country and the liberties of British subjects, of which +modern times afford a record. What followed was mainly the +consequence of his indefatigable constancy. He lighted the torch +which kindled other minds, and it was handed on until the +illumination became complete. + +Before the death of Granville Sharp, Clarkson had already turned +his attention to the question of Negro Slavery. He had even +selected it for the subject of a college Essay; and his mind became +so possessed by it that he could not shake it off. The spot is +pointed out near Wade's Mill, in Hertfordshire, where, alighting +from his horse one day, he sat down disconsolate on the turf by the +road side, and after long thinking, determined to devote himself +wholly to the work. He translated his Essay from Latin into +English, added fresh illustrations, and published it. Then fellow +labourers gathered round him. The Society for Abolishing the Slave +Trade, unknown to him, had already been formed, and when he heard +of it he joined it. He sacrificed all his prospects in life to +prosecute this cause. Wilberforce was selected to lead in +parliament; but upon Clarkson chiefly devolved the labour of +collecting and arranging the immense mass of evidence offered in +support of the abolition. A remarkable instance of Clarkson's +sleuth-hound sort of perseverance may be mentioned. The abettors +of slavery, in the course of their defence of the system, +maintained that only such negroes as were captured in battle were +sold as slaves, and if not so sold, then they were reserved for a +still more frightful doom in their own country. Clarkson knew of +the slave-hunts conducted by the slave-traders, but had no +witnesses to prove it. Where was one to be found? Accidentally, a +gentleman whom he met on one of his journeys informed him of a +young sailor, in whose company he had been about a year before, who +had been actually engaged in one of such slave-hunting expeditions. +The gentleman did not know his name, and could but indefinitely +describe his person. He did not know where he was, further than +that he belonged to a ship of war in ordinary, but at what port he +could not tell. With this mere glimmering of information, Clarkson +determined to produce this man as a witness. He visited personally +all the seaport towns where ships in ordinary lay; boarded and +examined every ship without success, until he came to the very LAST +port, and found the young man, his prize, in the very LAST ship +that remained to be visited. The young man proved to be one of his +most valuable and effective witnesses. + +During several years Clarkson conducted a correspondence with +upwards of four hundred persons, travelling more than thirty-five +thousand miles during the same time in search of evidence. He was +at length disabled and exhausted by illness, brought on by his +continuous exertions; but he was not borne from the field until his +zeal had fully awakened the public mind, and excited the ardent +sympathies of all good men on behalf of the slave. + +After years of protracted struggle, the slave trade was abolished. +But still another great achievement remained to be accomplished-- +the abolition of slavery itself throughout the British dominions. +And here again determined energy won the day. Of the leaders in +the cause, none was more distinguished than Fowell Buxton, who took +the position formerly occupied by Wilberforce in the House of +Commons. Buxton was a dull, heavy boy, distinguished for his +strong self-will, which first exhibited itself in violent, +domineering, and headstrong obstinacy. His father died when he was +a child; but fortunately he had a wise mother, who trained his will +with great care, constraining him to obey, but encouraging the +habit of deciding and acting for himself in matters which might +safely be left to him. His mother believed that a strong will, +directed upon worthy objects, was a valuable manly quality if +properly guided, and she acted accordingly. When others about her +commented on the boy's self-will, she would merely say, "Never +mind--he is self-willed now--you will see it will turn out well in +the end." Fowell learnt very little at school, and was regarded as +a dunce and an idler. He got other boys to do his exercises for +him, while he romped and scrambled about. He returned home at +fifteen, a great, growing, awkward lad, fond only of boating, +shooting, riding, and field sports,--spending his time principally +with the gamekeeper, a man possessed of a good heart,--an +intelligent observer of life and nature, though he could neither +read nor write. Buxton had excellent raw material in him, but he +wanted culture, training, and development. At this juncture of his +life, when his habits were being formed for good or evil, he was +happily thrown into the society of the Gurney family, distinguished +for their fine social qualities not less than for their +intellectual culture and public-spirited philanthropy. This +intercourse with the Gurneys, he used afterwards to say, gave the +colouring to his life. They encouraged his efforts at self- +culture; and when he went to the University of Dublin and gained +high honours there, the animating passion in his mind, he said, +"was to carry back to them the prizes which they prompted and +enabled me to win." He married one of the daughters of the family, +and started in life, commencing as a clerk to his uncles Hanbury, +the London brewers. His power of will, which made him so difficult +to deal with as a boy, now formed the backbone of his character, +and made him most indefatigable and energetic in whatever he +undertook. He threw his whole strength and bulk right down upon +his work; and the great giant--"Elephant Buxton" they called him, +for he stood some six feet four in height--became one of the most +vigorous and practical of men. "I could brew," he said, "one +hour,--do mathematics the next,--and shoot the next,--and each with +my whole soul." There was invincible energy and determination in +whatever he did. Admitted a partner, he became the active manager +of the concern; and the vast business which he conducted felt his +influence through every fibre, and prospered far beyond its +previous success. Nor did he allow his mind to lie fallow, for he +gave his evenings diligently to self-culture, studying and +digesting Blackstone, Montesquieu, and solid commentaries on +English law. His maxims in reading were, "never to begin a book +without finishing it;" "never to consider a book finished until it +is mastered;" and "to study everything with the whole mind." + +When only thirty-two, Buxton entered parliament, and at once +assumed that position of influence there, of which every honest, +earnest, well-informed man is secure, who enters that assembly of +the first gentlemen in the world. The principal question to which +he devoted himself was the complete emancipation of the slaves in +the British colonies. He himself used to attribute the interest +which he early felt in this question to the influence of Priscilla +Gurney, one of the Earlham family,--a woman of a fine intellect and +warm heart, abounding in illustrious virtues. When on her +deathbed, in 1821, she repeatedly sent for Buxton, and urged him +"to make the cause of the slaves the great object of his life." +Her last act was to attempt to reiterate the solemn charge, and she +expired in the ineffectual effort. Buxton never forgot her +counsel; he named one of his daughters after her; and on the day on +which she was married from his house, on the 1st of August, 1834,-- +the day of Negro emancipation--after his Priscilla had been +manumitted from her filial service, and left her father's home in +the company of her husband, Buxton sat down and thus wrote to a +friend: "The bride is just gone; everything has passed off to +admiration; and THERE IS NOT A SLAVE IN THE BRITISH COLONIES!" + +Buxton was no genius--not a great intellectual leader nor +discoverer, but mainly an earnest, straightforward, resolute, +energetic man. Indeed, his whole character is most forcibly +expressed in his own words, which every young man might well stamp +upon his soul: "The longer I live," said he, "the more I am +certain that the great difference between men, between the feeble +and the powerful, the great and the insignificant, is ENERGY-- +INVINCIBLE DETERMINATION--a purpose once fixed, and then death or +victory! That quality will do anything that can be done in this +world; and no talents, no circumstances, no opportunities, will +make a two-legged creature a Man without it." + + + +CHAPTER IX--MEN OF BUSINESS + + + +"Seest thou a man diligent in his business? he shall stand before +kings."--Proverbs of Solomon. + +"That man is but of the lower part of the world that is not brought +up to business and affairs."--Owen Feltham + + +Hazlitt, in one of his clever essays, represents the man of +business as a mean sort of person put in a go-cart, yoked to a +trade or profession; alleging that all he has to do is, not to go +out of the beaten track, but merely to let his affairs take their +own course. "The great requisite," he says, "for the prosperous +management of ordinary business is the want of imagination, or of +any ideas but those of custom and interest on the narrowest scale." +{24} But nothing could be more one-sided, and in effect untrue, +than such a definition. Of course, there are narrow-minded men of +business, as there are narrow-minded scientific men, literary men, +and legislators; but there are also business men of large and +comprehensive minds, capable of action on the very largest scale. +As Burke said in his speech on the India Bill, he knew statesmen +who were pedlers, and merchants who acted in the spirit of +statesmen. + +If we take into account the qualities necessary for the successful +conduct of any important undertaking,--that it requires special +aptitude, promptitude of action on emergencies, capacity for +organizing the labours often of large numbers of men, great tact +and knowledge of human nature, constant self-culture, and growing +experience in the practical affairs of life,--it must, we think, be +obvious that the school of business is by no means so narrow as +some writers would have us believe. Mr. Helps had gone much nearer +the truth when he said that consummate men of business are as rare +almost as great poets,--rarer, perhaps, than veritable saints and +martyrs. Indeed, of no other pursuit can it so emphatically be +said, as of this, that "Business makes men." + +It has, however, been a favourite fallacy with dunces in all times, +that men of genius are unfitted for business, as well as that +business occupations unfit men for the pursuits of genius. The +unhappy youth who committed suicide a few years since because he +had been "born to be a man and condemned to be a grocer," proved by +the act that his soul was not equal even to the dignity of grocery. +For it is not the calling that degrades the man, but the man that +degrades the calling. All work that brings honest gain is +honourable, whether it be of hand or mind. The fingers may be +soiled, yet the heart remain pure; for it is not material so much +as moral dirt that defiles--greed far more than grime, and vice +than verdigris. + +The greatest have not disdained to labour honestly and usefully for +a living, though at the same time aiming after higher things. +Thales, the first of the seven sages, Solon, the second founder of +Athens, and Hyperates, the mathematician, were all traders. Plato, +called the Divine by reason of the excellence of his wisdom, +defrayed his travelling expenses in Egypt by the profits derived +from the oil which he sold during his journey. Spinoza maintained +himself by polishing glasses while he pursued his philosophical +investigations. Linnaeus, the great botanist, prosecuted his +studies while hammering leather and making shoes. Shakespeare was +a successful manager of a theatre--perhaps priding himself more +upon his practical qualities in that capacity than on his writing +of plays and poetry. Pope was of opinion that Shakespeare's +principal object in cultivating literature was to secure an honest +independence. Indeed he seems to have been altogether indifferent +to literary reputation. It is not known that he superintended the +publication of a single play, or even sanctioned the printing of +one; and the chronology of his writings is still a mystery. It is +certain, however, that he prospered in his business, and realized +sufficient to enable him to retire upon a competency to his native +town of Stratford-upon-Avon. + +Chaucer was in early life a soldier, and afterwards an effective +Commissioner of Customs, and Inspector of Woods and Crown Lands. +Spencer was Secretary to the Lord Deputy of Ireland, was afterwards +Sheriff of Cork, and is said to have been shrewd and attentive in +matters of business. Milton, originally a schoolmaster, was +elevated to the post of Secretary to the Council of State during +the Commonwealth; and the extant Order-book of the Council, as well +as many of Milton's letters which are preserved, give abundant +evidence of his activity and usefulness in that office. Sir Isaac +Newton proved himself an efficient Master of the Mint; the new +coinage of 1694 having been carried on under his immediate personal +superintendence. Cowper prided himself upon his business +punctuality, though he confessed that he "never knew a poet, except +himself, who was punctual in anything." But against this we may +set the lives of Wordsworth and Scott--the former a distributor of +stamps, the latter a clerk to the Court of Session,--both of whom, +though great poets, were eminently punctual and practical men of +business. David Ricardo, amidst the occupations of his daily +business as a London stock-jobber, in conducting which he acquired +an ample fortune, was able to concentrate his mind upon his +favourite subject--on which he was enabled to throw great light-- +the principles of political economy; for he united in himself the +sagacious commercial man and the profound philosopher. Baily, the +eminent astronomer, was another stockbroker; and Allen, the +chemist, was a silk manufacturer. + +We have abundant illustrations, in our own day, of the fact that +the highest intellectual power is not incompatible with the active +and efficient performance of routine duties. Grote, the great +historian of Greece, was a London banker. And it is not long since +John Stuart Mill, one of our greatest living thinkers, retired from +the Examiner's department of the East India Company, carrying with +him the admiration and esteem of his fellow officers, not on +account of his high views of philosophy, but because of the high +standard of efficiency which he had established in his office, and +the thoroughly satisfactory manner in which he had conducted the +business of his department. + +The path of success in business is usually the path of common +sense. Patient labour and application are as necessary here as in +the acquisition of knowledge or the pursuit of science. The old +Greeks said, "to become an able man in any profession, three things +are necessary--nature, study, and practice." In business, +practice, wisely and diligently improved, is the great secret of +success. Some may make what are called "lucky hits," but like +money earned by gambling, such "hits" may only serve to lure one to +ruin. Bacon was accustomed to say that it was in business as in +ways--the nearest way was commonly the foulest, and that if a man +would go the fairest way he must go somewhat about. The journey +may occupy a longer time, but the pleasure of the labour involved +by it, and the enjoyment of the results produced, will be more +genuine and unalloyed. To have a daily appointed task of even +common drudgery to do makes the rest of life feel all the sweeter. + +The fable of the labours of Hercules is the type of all human doing +and success. Every youth should be made to feel that his happiness +and well-doing in life must necessarily rely mainly on himself and +the exercise of his own energies, rather than upon the help and +patronage of others. The late Lord Melbourne embodied a piece of +useful advice in a letter which he wrote to Lord John Russell, in +reply to an application for a provision for one of Moore the poet's +sons: "My dear John," he said, "I return you Moore's letter. I +shall be ready to do what you like about it when we have the means. +I think whatever is done should be done for Moore himself. This is +more distinct, direct, and intelligible. Making a small provision +for young men is hardly justifiable; and it is of all things the +most prejudicial to themselves. They think what they have much +larger than it really is; and they make no exertion. The young +should never hear any language but this: 'You have your own way to +make, and it depends upon your own exertions whether you starve or +not.' Believe me, &c., MELBOURNE." + +Practical industry, wisely and vigorously applied, always produces +its due effects. It carries a man onward, brings out his +individual character, and stimulates the action of others. All may +not rise equally, yet each, on the whole, very much according to +his deserts. "Though all cannot live on the piazza," as the Tuscan +proverb has it, "every one may feel the sun." + +On the whole, it is not good that human nature should have the road +of life made too easy. Better to be under the necessity of working +hard and faring meanly, than to have everything done ready to our +hand and a pillow of down to repose upon. Indeed, to start in life +with comparatively small means seems so necessary as a stimulus to +work, that it may almost be set down as one of the conditions +essential to success in life. Hence, an eminent judge, when asked +what contributed most to success at the bar, replied, "Some succeed +by great talent, some by high connexions, some by miracle, but the +majority by commencing without a shilling." + +We have heard of an architect of considerable accomplishments,--a +man who had improved himself by long study, and travel in the +classical lands of the East,--who came home to commence the +practice of his profession. He determined to begin anywhere, +provided he could be employed; and he accordingly undertook a +business connected with dilapidations,--one of the lowest and least +remunerative departments of the architect's calling. But he had +the good sense not to be above his trade, and he had the resolution +to work his way upward, so that he only got a fair start. One hot +day in July a friend found him sitting astride of a house roof +occupied with his dilapidation business. Drawing his hand across +his perspiring countenance, he exclaimed, "Here's a pretty business +for a man who has been all over Greece!" However, he did his work, +such as it was, thoroughly and well; he persevered until he +advanced by degrees to more remunerative branches of employment, +and eventually he rose to the highest walks of his profession. + +The necessity of labour may, indeed, be regarded as the main root +and spring of all that we call progress in individuals, and +civilization in nations; and it is doubtful whether any heavier +curse could be imposed on man than the complete gratification of +all his wishes without effort on his part, leaving nothing for his +hopes, desires or struggles. The feeling that life is destitute of +any motive or necessity for action, must be of all others the most +distressing and insupportable to a rational being. The Marquis de +Spinola asking Sir Horace Vere what his brother died of, Sir Horace +replied, "He died, Sir, of having nothing to do." "Alas!" said +Spinola, "that is enough to kill any general of us all." + +Those who fail in life are however very apt to assume a tone of +injured innocence, and conclude too hastily that everybody +excepting themselves has had a hand in their personal misfortunes. +An eminent writer lately published a book, in which he described +his numerous failures in business, naively admitting, at the same +time, that he was ignorant of the multiplication table; and he came +to the conclusion that the real cause of his ill-success in life +was the money-worshipping spirit of the age. Lamartine also did +not hesitate to profess his contempt for arithmetic; but, had it +been less, probably we should not have witnessed the unseemly +spectacle of the admirers of that distinguished personage engaged +in collecting subscriptions for his support in his old age. + +Again, some consider themselves born to ill luck, and make up their +minds that the world invariably goes against them without any fault +on their own part. We have heard of a person of this sort, who +went so far as to declare his belief that if he had been a hatter +people would have been born without heads! There is however a +Russian proverb which says that Misfortune is next door to +Stupidity; and it will often be found that men who are constantly +lamenting their luck, are in some way or other reaping the +consequences of their own neglect, mismanagement, improvidence, or +want of application. Dr. Johnson, who came up to London with a +single guinea in his pocket, and who once accurately described +himself in his signature to a letter addressed to a noble lord, as +Impransus, or Dinnerless, has honestly said, "All the complaints +which are made of the world are unjust; I never knew a man of merit +neglected; it was generally by his own fault that he failed of +success." + +Washington Irying, the American author, held like views. "As for +the talk," said he, "about modest merit being neglected, it is too +often a cant, by which indolent and irresolute men seek to lay +their want of success at the door of the public. Modest merit is, +however, too apt to be inactive, or negligent, or uninstructed +merit. Well matured and well disciplined talent is always sure of +a market, provided it exerts itself; but it must not cower at home +and expect to be sought for. There is a good deal of cant too +about the success of forward and impudent men, while men of +retiring worth are passed over with neglect. But it usually +happens that those forward men have that valuable quality of +promptness and activity without which worth is a mere inoperative +property. A barking dog is often more useful than a sleeping +lion." + +Attention, application, accuracy, method, punctuality, and +despatch, are the principal qualities required for the efficient +conduct of business of any sort. These, at first sight, may appear +to be small matters; and yet they are of essential importance to +human happiness, well-being, and usefulness. They are little +things, it is true; but human life is made up of comparative +trifles. It is the repetition of little acts which constitute not +only the sum of human character, but which determine the character +of nations. And where men or nations have broken down, it will +almost invariably be found that neglect of little things was the +rock on which they split. Every human being has duties to be +performed, and, therefore, has need of cultivating the capacity for +doing them; whether the sphere of action be the management of a +household, the conduct of a trade or profession, or the government +of a nation. + +The examples we have already given of great workers in various +branches of industry, art, and science, render it unnecessary +further to enforce the importance of persevering application in any +department of life. It is the result of every-day experience that +steady attention to matters of detail lies at the root of human +progress; and that diligence, above all, is the mother of good +luck. Accuracy is also of much importance, and an invariable mark +of good training in a man. Accuracy in observation, accuracy in +speech, accuracy in the transaction of affairs. What is done in +business must be well done; for it is better to accomplish +perfectly a small amount of work, than to half-do ten times as +much. A wise man used to say, "Stay a little, that we may make an +end the sooner." + +Too little attention, however, is paid to this highly important +quality of accuracy. As a man eminent in practical science lately +observed to us, "It is astonishing how few people I have met with +in the course of my experience, who can DEFINE A FACT accurately." +Yet in business affairs, it is the manner in which even small +matters are transacted, that often decides men for or against you. +With virtue, capacity, and good conduct in other respects, the +person who is habitually inaccurate cannot be trusted; his work has +to be gone over again; and he thus causes an infinity of annoyance, +vexation, and trouble. + +It was one of the characteristic qualities of Charles James Fox, +that he was thoroughly pains-taking in all that he did. When +appointed Secretary of State, being piqued at some observation as +to his bad writing, he actually took a writing-master, and wrote +copies like a schoolboy until he had sufficiently improved himself. +Though a corpulent man, he was wonderfully active at picking up cut +tennis balls, and when asked how he contrived to do so, he +playfully replied, "Because I am a very pains-taking man." The +same accuracy in trifling matters was displayed by him in things of +greater importance; and he acquired his reputation, like the +painter, by "neglecting nothing." + +Method is essential, and enables a larger amount of work to be got +through with satisfaction. "Method," said the Reverend Richard +Cecil, "is like packing things in a box; a good packer will get in +half as much again as a bad one." Cecil's despatch of business was +extraordinary, his maxim being, "The shortest way to do many things +is to do only one thing at once;" and he never left a thing undone +with a view of recurring to it at a period of more leisure. When +business pressed, he rather chose to encroach on his hours of meals +and rest than omit any part of his work. De Witt's maxim was like +Cecil's: "One thing at a time." "If," said he, "I have any +necessary despatches to make, I think of nothing else till they are +finished; if any domestic affairs require my attention, I give +myself wholly up to them till they are set in order." + +A French minister, who was alike remarkable for his despatch of +business and his constant attendance at places of amusement, being +asked how he contrived to combine both objects, replied, "Simply by +never postponing till to-morrow what should be done to-day." Lord +Brougham has said that a certain English statesman reversed the +process, and that his maxim was, never to transact to-day what +could be postponed till to-morrow. Unhappily, such is the practice +of many besides that minister, already almost forgotten; the +practice is that of the indolent and the unsuccessful. Such men, +too, are apt to rely upon agents, who are not always to be relied +upon. Important affairs must be attended to in person. "If you +want your business done," says the proverb, "go and do it; if you +don't want it done, send some one else." + +An indolent country gentleman had a freehold estate producing about +five hundred a-year. Becoming involved in debt, he sold half the +estate, and let the remainder to an industrious farmer for twenty +years. About the end of the term the farmer called to pay his +rent, and asked the owner whether he would sell the farm. "Will +YOU buy it?" asked the owner, surprised. "Yes, if we can agree +about the price." "That is exceedingly strange," observed the +gentleman; "pray, tell me how it happens that, while I could not +live upon twice as much land for which I paid no rent, you are +regularly paying me two hundred a-year for your farm, and are able, +in a few years, to purchase it." "The reason is plain," was the +reply; "you sat still and said GO, I got up and said COME; you laid +in bed and enjoyed your estate, I rose in the morning and minded my +business." + +Sir Walter Scott, writing to a youth who had obtained a situation +and asked for his advice, gave him in reply this sound counsel: +"Beware of stumbling over a propensity which easily besets you from +not having your time fully employed--I mean what the women call +DAWDLING. Your motto must be, Hoc age. Do instantly whatever is +to be done, and take the hours of recreation after business, never +before it. When a regiment is under march, the rear is often +thrown into confusion because the front do not move steadily and +without interruption. It is the same with business. If that which +is first in hand is not instantly, steadily, and regularly +despatched, other things accumulate behind, till affairs begin to +press all at once, and no human brain can stand the confusion." + +Promptitude in action may be stimulated by a due consideration of +the value of time. An Italian philosopher was accustomed to call +time his estate: an estate which produces nothing of value without +cultivation, but, duly improved, never fails to recompense the +labours of the diligent worker. Allowed to lie waste, the product +will be only noxious weeds and vicious growths of all kinds. One +of the minor uses of steady employment is, that it keeps one out of +mischief, for truly an idle brain is the devil's workshop, and a +lazy man the devil's bolster. To be occupied is to be possessed as +by a tenant, whereas to be idle is to be empty; and when the doors +of the imagination are opened, temptation finds a ready access, and +evil thoughts come trooping in. It is observed at sea, that men +are never so much disposed to grumble and mutiny as when least +employed. Hence an old captain, when there was nothing else to do, +would issue the order to "scour the anchor!" + +Men of business are accustomed to quote the maxim that Time is +money; but it is more; the proper improvement of it is self- +culture, self-improvement, and growth of character. An hour wasted +daily on trifles or in indolence, would, if devoted to self- +improvement, make an ignorant man wise in a few years, and employed +in good works, would make his life fruitful, and death a harvest of +worthy deeds. Fifteen minutes a day devoted to self-improvement, +will be felt at the end of the year. Good thoughts and carefully +gathered experience take up no room, and may be carried about as +our companions everywhere, without cost or incumbrance. An +economical use of time is the true mode of securing leisure: it +enables us to get through business and carry it forward, instead of +being driven by it. On the other hand, the miscalculation of time +involves us in perpetual hurry, confusion, and difficulties; and +life becomes a mere shuffle of expedients, usually followed by +disaster. Nelson once said, "I owe all my success in life to +having been always a quarter of an hour before my time." + +Some take no thought of the value of money until they have come to +an end of it, and many do the same with their time. The hours are +allowed to flow by unemployed, and then, when life is fast waning, +they bethink themselves of the duty of making a wiser use of it. +But the habit of listlessness and idleness may already have become +confirmed, and they are unable to break the bonds with which they +have permitted themselves to become bound. Lost wealth may be +replaced by industry, lost knowledge by study, lost health by +temperance or medicine, but lost time is gone for ever. + +A proper consideration of the value of time, will also inspire +habits of punctuality. "Punctuality," said Louis XIV., "is the +politeness of kings." It is also the duty of gentlemen, and the +necessity of men of business. Nothing begets confidence in a man +sooner than the practice of this virtue, and nothing shakes +confidence sooner than the want of it. He who holds to his +appointment and does not keep you waiting for him, shows that he +has regard for your time as well as for his own. Thus punctuality +is one of the modes by which we testify our personal respect for +those whom we are called upon to meet in the business of life. It +is also conscientiousness in a measure; for an appointment is a +contract, express or implied, and he who does not keep it breaks +faith, as well as dishonestly uses other people's time, and thus +inevitably loses character. We naturally come to the conclusion +that the person who is careless about time will be careless about +business, and that he is not the one to be trusted with the +transaction of matters of importance. When Washington's secretary +excused himself for the lateness of his attendance and laid the +blame upon his watch, his master quietly said, "Then you must get +another watch, or I another secretary." + +The person who is negligent of time and its employment is usually +found to be a general disturber of others' peace and serenity. It +was wittily said by Lord Chesterfield of the old Duke of Newcastle- +-"His Grace loses an hour in the morning, and is looking for it all +the rest of the day." Everybody with whom the unpunctual man has +to do is thrown from time to time into a state of fever: he is +systematically late; regular only in his irregularity. He conducts +his dawdling as if upon system; arrives at his appointment after +time; gets to the railway station after the train has started; +posts his letter when the box has closed. Thus business is thrown +into confusion, and everybody concerned is put out of temper. It +will generally be found that the men who are thus habitually behind +time are as habitually behind success; and the world generally +casts them aside to swell the ranks of the grumblers and the +railers against fortune. + +In addition to the ordinary working qualities the business man of +the highest class requires quick perception and firmness in the +execution of his plans. Tact is also important; and though this is +partly the gift of nature, it is yet capable of being cultivated +and developed by observation and experience. Men of this quality +are quick to see the right mode of action, and if they have +decision of purpose, are prompt to carry out their undertakings to +a successful issue. These qualities are especially valuable, and +indeed indispensable, in those who direct the action of other men +on a large scale, as for instance, in the case of the commander of +an army in the field. It is not merely necessary that the general +should be great as a warrior but also as a man of business. He +must possess great tact, much knowledge of character, and ability +to organize the movements of a large mass of men, whom he has to +feed, clothe, and furnish with whatever may be necessary in order +that they may keep the field and win battles. In these respects +Napoleon and Wellington were both first-rate men of business. + +Though Napoleon had an immense love for details, he had also a +vivid power of imagination, which enabled him to look along +extended lines of action, and deal with those details on a large +scale, with judgment and rapidity. He possessed such knowledge of +character as enabled him to select, almost unerringly, the best +agents for the execution of his designs. But he trusted as little +as possible to agents in matters of great moment, on which +important results depended. This feature in his character is +illustrated in a remarkable degree by the 'Napoleon +Correspondence,' now in course of publication, and particularly by +the contents of the 15th volume, {25} which include the letters, +orders, and despatches, written by the Emperor at Finkenstein, a +little chateau on the frontier of Poland in the year 1807, shortly +after the victory of Eylau. + +The French army was then lying encamped along the river Passarge +with the Russians before them, the Austrians on their right flank, +and the conquered Prussians in their rear. A long line of +communications had to be maintained with France, through a hostile +country; but so carefully, and with such foresight was this +provided for, that it is said Napoleon never missed a post. The +movements of armies, the bringing up of reinforcements from remote +points in France, Spain, Italy, and Germany, the opening of canals +and the levelling of roads to enable the produce of Poland and +Prussia to be readily transported to his encampments, had his +unceasing attention, down to the minutest details. We find him +directing where horses were to be obtained, making arrangements for +an adequate supply of saddles, ordering shoes for the soldiers, and +specifying the number of rations of bread, biscuit, and spirits, +that were to be brought to camp, or stored in magazines for the use +of the troops. At the same time we find him writing to Paris +giving directions for the reorganization of the French College, +devising a scheme of public education, dictating bulletins and +articles for the 'Moniteur,' revising the details of the budgets, +giving instructions to architects as to alterations to be made at +the Tuileries and the Church of the Madelaine, throwing an +occasional sarcasm at Madame de Stael and the Parisian journals, +interfering to put down a squabble at the Grand Opera, carrying on +a correspondence with the Sultan of Turkey and the Schah of Persia, +so that while his body was at Finkenstein, his mind seemed to be +working at a hundred different places in Paris, in Europe, and +throughout the world. + +We find him in one letter asking Ney if he has duly received the +muskets which have been sent him; in another he gives directions to +Prince Jerome as to the shirts, greatcoats, clothes, shoes, shakos, +and arms, to be served out to the Wurtemburg regiments; again he +presses Cambaceres to forward to the army a double stock of corn-- +"The IFS and the BUTS," said he, "are at present out of season, and +above all it must be done with speed." Then he informs Daru that +the army want shirts, and that they don't come to hand. To Massena +he writes, "Let me know if your biscuit and bread arrangements are +yet completed." To the Grand due de Berg, he gives directions as +to the accoutrements of the cuirassiers--"They complain that the +men want sabres; send an officer to obtain them at Posen. It is +also said they want helmets; order that they be made at Ebling. . . +. It is not by sleeping that one can accomplish anything." Thus no +point of detail was neglected, and the energies of all were +stimulated into action with extraordinary power. Though many of +the Emperor's days were occupied by inspections of his troops,--in +the course of which he sometimes rode from thirty to forty leagues +a day,--and by reviews, receptions, and affairs of state, leaving +but little time for business matters, he neglected nothing on that +account; but devoted the greater part of his nights, when +necessary, to examining budgets, dictating dispatches, and +attending to the thousand matters of detail in the organization and +working of the Imperial Government; the machinery of which was for +the most part concentrated in his own head. + +Like Napoleon, the Duke of Wellington was a first-rate man of +business; and it is not perhaps saying too much to aver that it was +in no small degree because of his possession of a business faculty +amounting to genius, that the Duke never lost a battle. + +While a subaltern, he became dissatisfied with the slowness of his +promotion, and having passed from the infantry to the cavalry +twice, and back again, without advancement, he applied to Lord +Camden, then Viceroy of Ireland, for employment in the Revenue or +Treasury Board. Had he succeeded, no doubt he would have made a +first-rate head of a department, as he would have made a first-rate +merchant or manufacturer. But his application failed, and he +remained with the army to become the greatest of British generals. + +The Duke began his active military career under the Duke of York +and General Walmoden, in Flanders and Holland, where he learnt, +amidst misfortunes and defeats, how bad business arrangements and +bad generalship serve to ruin the morale of an army. Ten years +after entering the army we find him a colonel in India, reported by +his superiors as an officer of indefatigable energy and +application. He entered into the minutest details of the service, +and sought to raise the discipline of his men to the highest +standard. "The regiment of Colonel Wellesley," wrote General +Harris in 1799, "is a model regiment; on the score of soldierly +bearing, discipline, instruction, and orderly behaviour it is above +all praise." Thus qualifying himself for posts of greater +confidence, he was shortly after nominated governor of the capital +of Mysore. In the war with the Mahrattas he was first called upon +to try his hand at generalship; and at thirty-four he won the +memorable battle of Assaye, with an army composed of 1500 British +and 5000 sepoys, over 20,000 Mahratta infantry and 30,000 cavalry. +But so brilliant a victory did not in the least disturb his +equanimity, or affect the perfect honesty of his character. + +Shortly after this event the opportunity occurred for exhibiting +his admirable practical qualities as an administrator. Placed in +command of an important district immediately after the capture of +Seringapatam, his first object was to establish rigid order and +discipline among his own men. Flushed with victory, the troops +were found riotous and disorderly. "Send me the provost marshal," +said he, "and put him under my orders: till some of the marauders +are hung, it is impossible to expect order or safety." This rigid +severity of Wellington in the field, though it was the dread, +proved the salvation of his troops in many campaigns. His next +step was to re-establish the markets and re-open the sources of +supply. General Harris wrote to the Governor-general, strongly +commending Colonel Wellesley for the perfect discipline he had +established, and for his "judicious and masterly arrangements in +respect to supplies, which opened an abundant free market, and +inspired confidence into dealers of every description." The same +close attention to, and mastery of details, characterized him +throughout his Indian career; and it is remarkable that one of his +ablest despatches to Lord Clive, full of practical information as +to the conduct of the campaign, was written whilst the column he +commanded was crossing the Toombuddra, in the face of the vastly +superior army of Dhoondiah, posted on the opposite bank, and while +a thousand matters of the deepest interest were pressing upon the +commander's mind. But it was one of his most remarkable +characteristics, thus to be able to withdraw himself temporarily +from the business immediately in hand, and to bend his full powers +upon the consideration of matters totally distinct; even the most +difficult circumstances on such occasions failing to embarrass or +intimidate him. + +Returned to England with a reputation for generalship, Sir Arthur +Wellesley met with immediate employment. In 1808 a corps of 10,000 +men destined to liberate Portugal was placed under his charge. He +landed, fought, and won two battles, and signed the Convention of +Cintra. After the death of Sir John Moore he was entrusted with +the command of a new expedition to Portugal. But Wellington was +fearfully overmatched throughout his Peninsular campaigns. From +1809 to 1813 he never had more than 30,000 British troops under his +command, at a time when there stood opposed to him in the Peninsula +some 350,000 French, mostly veterans, led by some of Napoleon's +ablest generals. How was he to contend against such immense forces +with any fair prospect of success? His clear discernment and +strong common sense soon taught him that he must adopt a different +policy from that of the Spanish generals, who were invariably +beaten and dispersed whenever they ventured to offer battle in the +open plains. He perceived he had yet to create the army that was +to contend against the French with any reasonable chance of +success. Accordingly, after the battle of Talavera in 1809, when +he found himself encompassed on all sides by superior forces of +French, he retired into Portugal, there to carry out the settled +policy on which he had by this time determined. It was, to +organise a Portuguese army under British officers, and teach them +to act in combination with his own troops, in the mean time +avoiding the peril of a defeat by declining all engagements. He +would thus, he conceived, destroy the morale of the French, who +could not exist without victories; and when his army was ripe for +action, and the enemy demoralized, he would then fall upon them +with all his might. + +The extraordinary qualities displayed by Lord Wellington throughout +these immortal campaigns, can only be appreciated after a perusal +of his despatches, which contain the unvarnished tale of the +manifold ways and means by which he laid the foundations of his +success. Never was man more tried by difficulty and opposition, +arising not less from the imbecility, falsehoods and intrigues of +the British Government of the day, than from the selfishness, +cowardice, and vanity of the people he went to save. It may, +indeed, be said of him, that he sustained the war in Spain by his +individual firmness and self-reliance, which never failed him even +in the midst of his great discouragements. He had not only to +fight Napoleon's veterans, but also to hold in check the Spanish +juntas and the Portuguese regency. He had the utmost difficulty in +obtaining provisions and clothing for his troops; and it will +scarcely be credited that, while engaged with the enemy in the +battle of Talavera, the Spaniards, who ran away, fell upon the +baggage of the British army, and the ruffians actually plundered +it! These and other vexations the Duke bore with a sublime +patience and self-control, and held on his course, in the face of +ingratitude, treachery, and opposition, with indomitable firmness. +He neglected nothing, and attended to every important detail of +business himself. When he found that food for his troops was not +to be obtained from England, and that he must rely upon his own +resources for feeding them, he forthwith commenced business as a +corn merchant on a large scale, in copartnery with the British +Minister at Lisbon. Commissariat bills were created, with which +grain was bought in the ports of the Mediterranean and in South +America. When he had thus filled his magazines, the overplus was +sold to the Portuguese, who were greatly in want of provisions. He +left nothing whatever to chance, but provided for every +contingency. He gave his attention to the minutest details of the +service; and was accustomed to concentrate his whole energies, from +time to time, on such apparently ignominious matters as soldiers' +shoes, camp-kettles, biscuits and horse fodder. His magnificent +business qualities were everywhere felt, and there can be no doubt +that, by the care with which he provided for every contingency, and +the personal attention which he gave to every detail, he laid the +foundations of his great success. {26} By such means he +transformed an army of raw levies into the best soldiers in Europe, +with whom he declared it to be possible to go anywhere and do +anything. + +We have already referred to his remarkable power of abstracting +himself from the work, no matter how engrossing, immediately in +hand, and concentrating his energies upon the details of some +entirely different business. Thus Napier relates that it was while +he was preparing to fight the battle of Salamanca that he had to +expose to the Ministers at home the futility of relying upon a +loan; it was on the heights of San Christoval, on the field of +battle itself, that he demonstrated the absurdity of attempting to +establish a Portuguese bank; it was in the trenches of Burgos that +he dissected Funchal's scheme of finance, and exposed the folly of +attempting the sale of church property; and on each occasion, he +showed himself as well acquainted with these subjects as with the +minutest detail in the mechanism of armies. + +Another feature in his character, showing the upright man of +business, was his thorough honesty. Whilst Soult ransacked and +carried away with him from Spain numerous pictures of great value, +Wellington did not appropriate to himself a single farthing's worth +of property. Everywhere he paid his way, even when in the enemy's +country. When he had crossed the French frontier, followed by +40,000 Spaniards, who sought to "make fortunes" by pillage and +plunder, he first rebuked their officers, and then, finding his +efforts to restrain them unavailing, he sent them back into their +own country. It is a remarkable fact, that, even in France the +peasantry fled from their own countrymen, and carried their +valuables within the protection of the British lines! At the very +same time, Wellington was writing home to the British Ministry, "We +are overwhelmed with debts, and I can scarcely stir out of my house +on account of public creditors waiting to demand payment of what is +due to them." Jules Maurel, in his estimate of the Duke's +character, says, "Nothing can be grander or more nobly original +than this admission. This old soldier, after thirty years' +service, this iron man and victorious general, established in an +enemy's country at the head of an immense army, is afraid of his +creditors! This is a kind of fear that has seldom troubled the +mind of conquerors and invaders; and I doubt if the annals of war +could present anything comparable to this sublime simplicity." But +the Duke himself, had the matter been put to him, would most +probably have disclaimed any intention of acting even grandly or +nobly in the matter; merely regarding the punctual payment of his +debts as the best and most honourable mode of conducting his +business. + +The truth of the good old maxim, that "Honesty is the best policy," +is upheld by the daily experience of life; uprightness and +integrity being found as successful in business as in everything +else. As Hugh Miller's worthy uncle used to advise him, "In all +your dealings give your neighbour the cast of the bank--'good +measure, heaped up, and running over,'--and you will not lose by it +in the end." A well-known brewer of beer attributed his success to +the liberality with which he used his malt. Going up to the vat +and tasting it, he would say, "Still rather poor, my lads; give it +another cast of the malt." The brewer put his character into his +beer, and it proved generous accordingly, obtaining a reputation in +England, India, and the colonies, which laid the foundation of a +large fortune. Integrity of word and deed ought to be the very +cornerstone of all business transactions. To the tradesman, the +merchant, and manufacturer, it should be what honour is to the +soldier, and charity to the Christian. In the humblest calling +there will always be found scope for the exercise of this +uprightness of character. Hugh Miller speaks of the mason with +whom he served his apprenticeship, as one who "PUT HIS CONSCIENCE +INTO EVERY STONE THAT HE LAID." So the true mechanic will pride +himself upon the thoroughness and solidity of his work, and the +high-minded contractor upon the honesty of performance of his +contract in every particular. The upright manufacturer will find +not only honour and reputation, but substantial success, in the +genuineness of the article which he produces, and the merchant in +the honesty of what he sells, and that it really is what it seems +to be. Baron Dupin, speaking of the general probity of Englishmen, +which he held to be a principal cause of their success, observed, +"We may succeed for a time by fraud, by surprise, by violence; but +we can succeed permanently only by means directly opposite. It is +not alone the courage, the intelligence, the activity, of the +merchant and manufacturer which maintain the superiority of their +productions and the character of their country; it is far more +their wisdom, their economy, and, above all, their probity. If +ever in the British Islands the useful citizen should lose these +virtues, we may be sure that, for England, as for every other +country, the vessels of a degenerate commerce, repulsed from every +shore, would speedily disappear from those seas whose surface they +now cover with the treasures of the universe, bartered for the +treasures of the industry of the three kingdoms." + +It must be admitted, that Trade tries character perhaps more +severely than any other pursuit in life. It puts to the severest +tests honesty, self-denial, justice, and truthfulness; and men of +business who pass through such trials unstained are perhaps worthy +of as great honour as soldiers who prove their courage amidst the +fire and perils of battle. And, to the credit of the multitudes of +men engaged in the various departments of trade, we think it must +be admitted that on the whole they pass through their trials nobly. +If we reflect but for a moment on the vast amount of wealth daily +entrusted even to subordinate persons, who themselves probably earn +but a bare competency--the loose cash which is constantly passing +through the hands of shopmen, agents, brokers, and clerks in +banking houses,--and note how comparatively few are the breaches of +trust which occur amidst all this temptation, it will probably be +admitted that this steady daily honesty of conduct is most +honourable to human nature, if it do not even tempt us to be proud +of it. The same trust and confidence reposed by men of business in +each other, as implied by the system of Credit, which is mainly +based upon the principle of honour, would be surprising if it were +not so much a matter of ordinary practice in business transactions. +Dr. Chalmers has well said, that the implicit trust with which +merchants are accustomed to confide in distant agents, separated +from them perhaps by half the globe--often consigning vast wealth +to persons, recommended only by their character, whom perhaps they +have never seen--is probably the finest act of homage which men can +render to one another. + +Although common honesty is still happily in the ascendant amongst +common people, and the general business community of England is +still sound at heart, putting their honest character into their +respective callings,--there are unhappily, as there have been in +all times, but too many instances of flagrant dishonesty and fraud, +exhibited by the unscrupulous, the over-speculative, and the +intensely selfish in their haste to be rich. There are tradesmen +who adulterate, contractors who "scamp," manufacturers who give us +shoddy instead of wool, "dressing" instead of cotton, cast-iron +tools instead of steel, needles without eyes, razors made only "to +sell," and swindled fabrics in many shapes. But these we must hold +to be the exceptional cases, of low-minded and grasping men, who, +though they may gain wealth which they probably cannot enjoy, will +never gain an honest character, nor secure that without which +wealth is nothing--a heart at peace. "The rogue cozened not me, +but his own conscience," said Bishop Latimer of a cutler who made +him pay twopence for a knife not worth a penny. Money, earned by +screwing, cheating, and overreaching, may for a time dazzle the +eyes of the unthinking; but the bubbles blown by unscrupulous +rogues, when full-blown, usually glitter only to burst. The +Sadleirs, Dean Pauls, and Redpaths, for the most part, come to a +sad end even in this world; and though the successful swindles of +others may not be "found out," and the gains of their roguery may +remain with them, it will be as a curse and not as a blessing. + +It is possible that the scrupulously honest man may not grow rich +so fast as the unscrupulous and dishonest one; but the success will +be of a truer kind, earned without fraud or injustice. And even +though a man should for a time be unsuccessful, still he must be +honest: better lose all and save character. For character is +itself a fortune; and if the high-principled man will but hold on +his way courageously, success will surely come,--nor will the +highest reward of all be withheld from him. Wordsworth well +describes the "Happy Warrior," as he + + +"Who comprehends his trust, and to the same +Keeps faithful with a singleness of aim; +And therefore does not stoop, nor lie in wait +For wealth, or honour, or for worldly state; +Whom they must follow, on whose head must fall, +Like showers of manna, if they come at all." + + +As an example of the high-minded mercantile man trained in upright +habits of business, and distinguished for justice, truthfulness, +and honesty of dealing in all things, the career of the well-known +David Barclay, grandson of Robert Barclay, of Ury, the author of +the celebrated 'Apology for the Quakers,' may be briefly referred +to. For many years he was the head of an extensive house in +Cheapside, chiefly engaged in the American trade; but like +Granville Sharp, he entertained so strong an opinion against the +war with our American colonies, that he determined to retire +altogether from the trade. Whilst a merchant, he was as much +distinguished for his talents, knowledge, integrity, and power, as +he afterwards was for his patriotism and munificent philanthropy. +He was a mirror of truthfulness and honesty; and, as became the +good Christian and true gentleman, his word was always held to be +as good as his bond. His position, and his high character, induced +the Ministers of the day on many occasions to seek his advice; and, +when examined before the House of Commons on the subject of the +American dispute, his views were so clearly expressed, and his +advice was so strongly justified by the reasons stated by him, that +Lord North publicly acknowledged that he had derived more +information from David Barclay than from all others east of Temple +Bar. On retiring from business, it was not to rest in luxurious +ease, but to enter upon new labours of usefulness for others. With +ample means, he felt that he still owed to society the duty of a +good example. He founded a house of industry near his residence at +Walthamstow, which he supported at a heavy outlay for several +years, until at length he succeeded in rendering it a source of +comfort as well as independence to the well-disposed families of +the poor in that neighbourhood. When an estate in Jamaica fell to +him, he determined, though at a cost of some 10,000l., at once to +give liberty to the whole of the slaves on the property. He sent +out an agent, who hired a ship, and he had the little slave +community transported to one of the free American states, where +they settled down and prospered. Mr. Barclay had been assured that +the negroes were too ignorant and too barbarous for freedom, and it +was thus that he determined practically to demonstrate the fallacy +of the assertion. In dealing with his accumulated savings, he made +himself the executor of his own will, and instead of leaving a +large fortune to be divided among his relatives at his death, he +extended to them his munificent aid during his life, watched and +aided them in their respective careers, and thus not only laid the +foundation, but lived to see the maturity, of some of the largest +and most prosperous business concerns in the metropolis. We +believe that to this day some of our most eminent merchants--such +as the Gurneys, Hanburys, and Buxtons--are proud to acknowledge +with gratitude the obligations they owe to David Barclay for the +means of their first introduction to life, and for the benefits of +his counsel and countenance in the early stages of their career. +Such a man stands as a mark of the mercantile honesty and integrity +of his country, and is a model and example for men of business in +all time to come. + + + +CHAPTER X--MONEY--ITS USE AND ABUSE + + + +"Not for to hide it in a hedge, +Nor for a train attendant, +But for the glorious privilege +Of being independent."--Burns. + +"Neither a borrower nor a lender be: +For loan oft loses both itself and friend; +And borrowing dulls the edge of husbandry."--Shakepeare. + +Never treat money affairs with levity--Money is character.--Sir E. +L. Bulwer Lytton. + + +How a man uses money--makes it, saves it, and spends it--is perhaps +one of the best tests of practical wisdom. Although money ought by +no means to be regarded as a chief end of man's life, neither is it +a trifling matter, to be held in philosophic contempt, representing +as it does to so large an extent, the means of physical comfort and +social well-being. Indeed, some of the finest qualities of human +nature are intimately related to the right use of money; such as +generosity, honesty, justice, and self-sacrifice; as well as the +practical virtues of economy and providence. On the other hand, +there are their counterparts of avarice, fraud, injustice, and +selfishness, as displayed by the inordinate lovers of gain; and the +vices of thriftlessness, extravagance, and improvidence, on the +part of those who misuse and abuse the means entrusted to them. +"So that," as is wisely observed by Henry Taylor in his thoughtful +'Notes from Life,' "a right measure and manner in getting, saving, +spending, giving, taking, lending, borrowing, and bequeathing, +would almost argue a perfect man." + +Comfort in worldly circumstances is a con ion which every man is +justified in striving to attain by all worthy means. It secures +that physical satisfaction, which is necessary for the culture of +the better part of his nature; and enables him to provide for those +of his own household, without which, says the Apostle, a man is +"worse than an infidel." Nor ought the duty to be any the less +indifferent to us, that the respect which our fellow-men entertain +for us in no slight degree depends upon the manner in which we +exercise the opportunities which present themselves for our +honourable advancement in life. The very effort required to be +made to succeed in life with this object, is of itself an +education; stimulating a man's sense of self-respect, bringing out +his practical qualities, and disciplining him in the exercise of +patience, perseverance, and such like virtues. The provident and +careful man must necessarily be a thoughtful man, for he lives not +merely for the present, but with provident forecast makes +arrangements for the future. He must also be a temperate man, and +exercise the virtue of self-denial, than which nothing is so much +calculated to give strength to the character. John Sterling says +truly, that "the worst education which teaches self denial, is +better than the best which teaches everything else, and not that." +The Romans rightly employed the same word (virtus) to designate +courage, which is in a physical sense what the other is in a moral; +the highest virtue of all being victory over ourselves. + +Hence the lesson of self-denial--the sacrificing of a present +gratification for a future good--is one of the last that is learnt. +Those classes which work the hardest might naturally be expected to +value the most the money which they earn. Yet the readiness with +which so many are accustomed to eat up and drink up their earnings +as they go, renders them to a great extent helpless and dependent +upon the frugal. There are large numbers of persons among us who, +though enjoying sufficient means of comfort and independence, are +often found to be barely a day's march ahead of actual want when a +time of pressure occurs; and hence a great cause of social +helplessness and suffering. On one occasion a deputation waited on +Lord John Russell, respecting the taxation levied on the working +classes of the country, when the noble lord took the opportunity of +remarking, "You may rely upon it that the Government of this +country durst not tax the working classes to anything like the +extent to which they tax themselves in their expenditure upon +intoxicating drinks alone!" Of all great public questions, there +is perhaps none more important than this,--no great work of reform +calling more loudly for labourers. But it must be admitted that +"self-denial and self-help" would make a poor rallying cry for the +hustings; and it is to be feared that the patriotism of this day +has but little regard for such common things as individual economy +and providence, although it is by the practice of such virtues only +that the genuine independence of the industrial classes is to be +secured. "Prudence, frugality, and good management," said Samuel +Drew, the philosophical shoemaker, "are excellent artists for +mending bad times: they occupy but little room in any dwelling, +but would furnish a more effectual remedy for the evils of life +than any Reform Bill that ever passed the Houses of Parliament." +Socrates said, "Let him that would move the world move first +himself. " Or as the old rhyme runs - + + +"If every one would see +To his own reformation, +How very easily +You might reform a nation." + + +It is, however, generally felt to be a far easier thing to reform +the Church and the State than to reform the least of our own bad +habits; and in such matters it is usually found more agreeable to +our tastes, as it certainly is the common practice, to begin with +our neighbours rather than with ourselves. + +Any class of men that lives from hand to mouth will ever be an +inferior class. They will necessarily remain impotent and +helpless, hanging on to the skirts of society, the sport of times +and seasons. Having no respect for themselves, they will fail in +securing the respect of others. In commercial crises, such men +must inevitably go to the wall. Wanting that husbanded power which +a store of savings, no matter how small, invariably gives them, +they will be at every man's mercy, and, if possessed of right +feelings, they cannot but regard with fear and trembling the future +possible fate of their wives and children. "The world," once said +Mr. Cobden to the working men of Huddersfield, "has always been +divided into two classes,--those who have saved, and those who have +spent--the thrifty and the extravagant. The building of all the +houses, the mills, the bridges, and the ships, and the +accomplishment of all other great works which have rendered man +civilized and happy, has been done by the savers, the thrifty; and +those who have wasted their resources have always been their +slaves. It has been the law of nature and of Providence that this +should be so; and I were an impostor if I promised any class that +they would advance themselves if they were improvident, +thoughtless, and idle." + +Equally sound was the advice given by Mr. Bright to an assembly of +working men at Rochdale, in 1847, when, after expressing his belief +that, "so far as honesty was concerned, it was to be found in +pretty equal amount among all classes," he used the following +words:- "There is only one way that is safe for any man, or any +number of men, by which they can maintain their present position if +it be a good one, or raise themselves above it if it be a bad one,- +-that is, by the practice of the virtues of industry, frugality, +temperance, and honesty. There is no royal road by which men can +raise themselves from a position which they feel to be +uncomfortable and unsatisfactory, as regards their mental or +physical condition, except by the practice of those virtues by +which they find numbers amongst them are continually advancing and +bettering themselves." + +There is no reason why the condition of the average workman should +not be a useful, honourable, respectable, and happy one. The whole +body of the working classes might, (with few exceptions) be as +frugal, virtuous, well-informed, and well-conditioned as many +individuals of the same class have already made themselves. What +some men are, all without difficulty might be. Employ the same +means, and the same results will follow. That there should be a +class of men who live by their daily labour in every state is the +ordinance of God, and doubtless is a wise and righteous one; but +that this class should be otherwise than frugal, contented, +intelligent, and happy, is not the design of Providence, but +springs solely from the weakness, self-indulgence, and perverseness +of man himself. The healthy spirit of self-help created amongst +working people would more than any other measure serve to raise +them as a class, and this, not by pulling down others, but by +levelling them up to a higher and still advancing standard of +religion, intelligence, and virtue. "All moral philosophy," says +Montaigne, "is as applicable to a common and private life as to the +most splendid. Every man carries the entire form of the human +condition within him." + +When a man casts his glance forward, he will find that the three +chief temporal contingencies for which he has to provide are want +of employment, sickness, and death. The two first he may escape, +but the last is inevitable. It is, however, the duty of the +prudent man so to live, and so to arrange, that the pressure of +suffering, in event of either contingency occurring, shall be +mitigated to as great an extent as possible, not only to himself, +but also to those who are dependent upon him for their comfort and +subsistence. Viewed in this light the honest earning and the +frugal use of money are of the greatest importance. Rightly +earned, it is the representative of patient industry and untiring +effort, of temptation resisted, and hope rewarded; and rightly +used, it affords indications of prudence, forethought and self- +denial--the true basis of manly character. Though money represents +a crowd of objects without any real worth or utility, it also +represents many things of great value; not only food, clothing, and +household satisfaction, but personal self-respect and independence. +Thus a store of savings is to the working man as a barricade +against want; it secures him a footing, and enables him to wait, it +may be in cheerfulness and hope, until better days come round. The +very endeavour to gain a firmer position in the world has a certain +dignity in it, and tends to make a man stronger and better. At all +events it gives him greater freedom of action, and enables him to +husband his strength for future effort. + +But the man who is always hovering on the verge of want is in a +state not far removed from that of slavery. He is in no sense his +own master, but is in constant peril of falling under the bondage +of others, and accepting the terms which they dictate to him. He +cannot help being, in a measure, servile, for he dares not look the +world boldly in the face; and in adverse times he must look either +to alms or the poor's rates. If work fails him altogether, he has +not the means of moving to another field of employment; he is fixed +to his parish like a limpet to its rock, and can neither migrate +nor emigrate. + +To secure independence, the practice of simple economy is all that +is necessary. Economy requires neither superior courage nor +eminent virtue; it is satisfied with ordinary energy, and the +capacity of average minds. Economy, at bottom, is but the spirit +of order applied in the administration of domestic affairs: it +means management, regularity, prudence, and the avoidance of waste. +The spirit of economy was expressed by our Divine Master in the +words 'Gather up the fragments that remain, so that nothing may be +lost.' His omnipotence did not disdain the small things of life; +and even while revealing His infinite power to the multitude, he +taught the pregnant lesson of carefulness of which all stand so +much in need. + +Economy also means the power of resisting present gratification for +the purpose of securing a future good, and in this light it +represents the ascendancy of reason over the animal instincts. It +is altogether different from penuriousness: for it is economy that +can always best afford to be generous. It does not make money an +idol, but regards it as a useful agent. As Dean Swift observes, +"we must carry money in the head, not in the heart." Economy may +be styled the daughter of Prudence, the sister of Temperance, and +the mother of Liberty. It is evidently conservative--conservative +of character, of domestic happiness, and social well-being. It is, +in short, the exhibition of self-help in one of its best forms. + +Francis Horner's father gave him this advice on entering life:- +"Whilst I wish you to be comfortable in every respect, I cannot too +strongly inculcate economy. It is a necessary virtue to all; and +however the shallow part of mankind may despise it, it certainly +leads to independence, which is a grand object to every man of a +high spirit." Burns' lines, quoted at the head of this chapter, +contain the right idea; but unhappily his strain of song was higher +than his practice; his ideal better than his habit. When laid on +his death-bed he wrote to a friend, "Alas! Clarke, I begin to feel +the worst. Burns' poor widow, and half a dozen of his dear little +ones helpless orphans;--there I am weak as a woman's tear. Enough +of this;--'tis half my disease." + +Every man ought so to contrive as to live within his means. This +practice is of the very essence of honesty. For if a man do not +manage honestly to live within his own means, he must necessarily +be living dishonestly upon the means of somebody else. Those who +are careless about personal expenditure, and consider merely their +own gratification, without regard for the comfort of others, +generally find out the real uses of money when it is too late. +Though by nature generous, these thriftless persons are often +driven in the end to do very shabby things. They waste their money +as they do their time; draw bills upon the future; anticipate their +earnings; and are thus under the necessity of dragging after them a +load of debts and obligations which seriously affect their action +as free and independent men. + +It was a maxim of Lord Bacon, that when it was necessary to +economize, it was better to look after petty savings than to +descend to petty gettings. The loose cash which many persons throw +away uselessly, and worse, would often form a basis of fortune and +independence for life. These wasters are their own worst enemies, +though generally found amongst the ranks of those who rail at the +injustice of "the world." But if a man will not be his own friend, +how can he expect that others will? Orderly men of moderate means +have always something left in their pockets to help others; whereas +your prodigal and careless fellows who spend all never find an +opportunity for helping anybody. It is poor economy, however, to +be a scrub. Narrowmindedness in living and in dealing is generally +short-sighted, and leads to failure. The penny soul, it is said, +never came to twopence. Generosity and liberality, like honesty, +prove the best policy after all. Though Jenkinson, in the 'Vicar +of Wakefield,' cheated his kind-hearted neighbour Flamborough in +one way or another every year, "Flamborough," said he, "has been +regularly growing in riches, while I have come to poverty and a +gaol." And practical life abounds in cases of brilliant results +from a course of generous and honest policy. + +The proverb says that "an empty bag cannot stand upright;" neither +can a man who is in debt. It is also difficult for a man who is in +debt to be truthful; hence it is said that lying rides on debt's +back. The debtor has to frame excuses to his creditor for +postponing payment of the money he owes him; and probably also to +contrive falsehoods. It is easy enough for a man who will exercise +a healthy resolution, to avoid incurring the first obligation; but +the facility with which that has been incurred often becomes a +temptation to a second; and very soon the unfortunate borrower +becomes so entangled that no late exertion of industry can set him +free. The first step in debt is like the first step in falsehood; +almost involving the necessity of proceeding in the same course, +debt following debt, as lie follows lie. Haydon, the painter, +dated his decline from the day on which he first borrowed money. +He realized the truth of the proverb, "Who goes a-borrowing, goes +a-sorrowing." The significant entry in his diary is: "Here began +debt and obligation, out of which I have never been and never shall +be extricated as long as I live." His Autobiography shows but too +painfully how embarrassment in money matters produces poignant +distress of mind, utter incapacity for work, and constantly +recurring humiliations. The written advice which he gave to a +youth when entering the navy was as follows: "Never purchase any +enjoyment if it cannot be procured without borrowing of others. +Never borrow money: it is degrading. I do not say never lend, but +never lend if by lending you render yourself unable to pay what you +owe; but under any circumstances never borrow." Fichte, the poor +student, refused to accept even presents from his still poorer +parents. + +Dr. Johnson held that early debt is ruin. His words on the subject +are weighty, and worthy of being held in remembrance. "Do not," +said he, "accustom yourself to consider debt only as an +inconvenience; you will find it a calamity. Poverty takes away so +many means of doing good, and produces so much inability to resist +evil, both natural and moral, that it is by all virtuous means to +be avoided. . . . Let it be your first care, then, not to be in any +man's debt. Resolve not to be poor; whatever you have spend less. +Poverty is a great enemy to human happiness; it certainly destroys +liberty, and it makes some virtues impracticable and others +extremely difficult. Frugality is not only the basis of quiet, but +of beneficence. No man can help others that wants help himself; we +must have enough before we have to spare." + +It is the bounden duty of every man to look his affairs in the +face, and to keep an account of his incomings and outgoings in +money matters. The exercise of a little simple arithmetic in this +way will be found of great value. Prudence requires that we shall +pitch our scale of living a degree below our means, rather than up +to them; but this can only be done by carrying out faithfully a +plan of living by which both ends may be made to meet. John Locke +strongly advised this course: "Nothing," said he, "is likelier to +keep a man within compass than having constantly before his eyes +the state of his affairs in a regular course of account." The Duke +of Wellington kept an accurate detailed account of all the moneys +received and expended by him. "I make a point," said he to Mr. +Gleig, "of paying my own bills, and I advise every one to do the +same; formerly I used to trust a confidential servant to pay them, +but I was cured of that folly by receiving one morning, to my great +surprise, duns of a year or two's standing. The fellow had +speculated with my money, and left my bills unpaid." Talking of +debt his remark was, "It makes a slave of a man. I have often +known what it was to be in want of money, but I never got into +debt." Washington was as particular as Wellington was, in matters +of business detail; and it is a remarkable fact, that he did not +disdain to scrutinize the smallest outgoings of his household-- +determined as he was to live honestly within his means--even while +holding the high office of President of the American Union. + +Admiral Jervis, Earl St. Vincent, has told the story of his early +struggles, and, amongst other things, of his determination to keep +out of debt. "My father had a very large family," said he, "with +limited means. He gave me twenty pounds at starting, and that was +all he ever gave me. After I had been a considerable time at the +station [at sea], I drew for twenty more, but the bill came back +protested. I was mortified at this rebuke, and made a promise, +which I have ever kept, that I would never draw another bill +without a certainty of its being paid. I immediately changed my +mode of living, quitted my mess, lived alone, and took up the +ship's allowance, which I found quite sufficient; washed and mended +my own clothes; made a pair of trousers out of the ticking of my +bed; and having by these means saved as much money as would redeem +my honour, I took up my bill, and from that time to this I have +taken care to keep within my means." Jervis for six years endured +pinching privation, but preserved his integrity, studied his +profession with success, and gradually and steadily rose by merit +and bravery to the highest rank. + +Mr. Hume hit the mark when he once stated in the House of Commons-- +though his words were followed by "laughter"--that the tone of +living in England is altogether too high. Middle-class people are +too apt to live up to their incomes, if not beyond them: affecting +a degree of "style" which is most unhealthy in its effects upon +society at large. There is an ambition to bring up boys as +gentlemen, or rather "genteel" men; though the result frequently +is, only to make them gents. They acquire a taste for dress, +style, luxuries, and amusements, which can never form any solid +foundation for manly or gentlemanly character; and the result is, +that we have a vast number of gingerbread young gentry thrown upon +the world, who remind one of the abandoned hulls sometimes picked +up at sea, with only a monkey on board. + +There is a dreadful ambition abroad for being "genteel." We keep +up appearances, too often at the expense of honesty; and, though we +may not be rich, yet we must seem to be so. We must be +"respectable," though only in the meanest sense--in mere vulgar +outward show. We have not the courage to go patiently onward in +the condition of life in which it has pleased God to call us; but +must needs live in some fashionable state to which we ridiculously +please to call ourselves, and all to gratify the vanity of that +unsubstantial genteel world of which we form a part. There is a +constant struggle and pressure for front seats in the social +amphitheatre; in the midst of which all noble self-denying resolve +is trodden down, and many fine natures are inevitably crushed to +death. What waste, what misery, what bankruptcy, come from all +this ambition to dazzle others with the glare of apparent worldly +success, we need not describe. The mischievous results show +themselves in a thousand ways--in the rank frauds committed by men +who dare to be dishonest, but do not dare to seem poor; and in the +desperate dashes at fortune, in which the pity is not so much for +those who fail, as for the hundreds of innocent families who are so +often involved in their ruin. + +The late Sir Charles Napier, in taking leave of his command in +India, did a bold and honest thing in publishing his strong +protest, embodied in his last General Order to the officers of the +Indian army, against the "fast" life led by so many young officers +in that service, involving them in ignominious obligations. Sir +Charles strongly urged, in that famous document--what had almost +been lost sight of that "honesty is inseparable from the character +of a thorough-bred gentleman;" and that "to drink unpaid-for +champagne and unpaid-for beer, and to ride unpaid-for horses, is to +be a cheat, and not a gentleman." Men who lived beyond their means +and were summoned, often by their own servants, before Courts of +Requests for debts contracted in extravagant living, might be +officers by virtue of their commissions, but they were not +gentlemen. The habit of being constantly in debt, the Commander- +in-chief held, made men grow callous to the proper feelings of a +gentleman. It was not enough that an officer should be able to +fight: that any bull-dog could do. But did he hold his word +inviolate?--did he pay his debts? These were among the points of +honour which, he insisted, illuminated the true gentleman's and +soldier's career. As Bayard was of old, so would Sir Charles +Napier have all British officers to be. He knew them to be +"without fear," but he would also have them "without reproach." +There are, however, many gallant young fellows, both in India and +at home, capable of mounting a breach on an emergency amidst +belching fire, and of performing the most desperate deeds of +valour, who nevertheless cannot or will not exercise the moral +courage necessary to enable them to resist a petty temptation +presented to their senses. They cannot utter their valiant "No," +or "I can't afford it," to the invitations of pleasure and self- +enjoyment; and they are found ready to brave death rather than the +ridicule of their companions. + +The young man, as he passes through life, advances through a long +line of tempters ranged on either side of him; and the inevitable +effect of yielding, is degradation in a greater or a less degree. +Contact with them tends insensibly to draw away from him some +portion of the divine electric element with which his nature is +charged; and his only mode of resisting them is to utter and to act +out his "no" manfully and resolutely. He must decide at once, not +waiting to deliberate and balance reasons; for the youth, like "the +woman who deliberates, is lost." Many deliberate, without +deciding; but "not to resolve, IS to resolve." A perfect knowledge +of man is in the prayer, "Lead us not into temptation." But +temptation will come to try the young man's strength; and once +yielded to, the power to resist grows weaker and weaker. Yield +once, and a portion of virtue has gone. Resist manfully, and the +first decision will give strength for life; repeated, it will +become a habit. It is in the outworks of the habits formed in +early life that the real strength of the defence must lie; for it +has been wisely ordained, that the machinery of moral existence +should be carried on principally through the medium of the habits, +so as to save the wear and tear of the great principles within. It +is good habits, which insinuate themselves into the thousand +inconsiderable acts of life, that really constitute by far the +greater part of man's moral conduct. + +Hugh Miller has told how, by an act of youthful decision, he saved +himself from one of the strong temptations so peculiar to a life of +toil. When employed as a mason, it was usual for his fellow- +workmen to have an occasional treat of drink, and one day two +glasses of whisky fell to his share, which he swallowed. When he +reached home, he found, on opening his favourite book--'Bacon's +Essays'--that the letters danced before his eyes, and that he could +no longer master the sense. "The condition," he says, "into which +I had brought myself was, I felt, one of degradation. I had sunk, +by my own act, for the time, to a lower level of intelligence than +that on which it was my privilege to be placed; and though the +state could have been no very favourable one for forming a +resolution, I in that hour determined that I should never again +sacrifice my capacity of intellectual enjoyment to a drinking +usage; and, with God's help, I was enabled to hold by the +determination." It is such decisions as this that often form the +turning-points in a man's life, and furnish the foundation of his +future character. And this rock, on which Hugh Miller might have +been wrecked, if he had not at the right moment put forth his moral +strength to strike away from it, is one that youth and manhood +alike need to be constantly on their guard against. It is about +one of the worst and most deadly, as well as extravagant, +temptations which lie in the way of youth. Sir Walter Scott used +to say that "of all vices drinking is the most incompatible with +greatness." Not only so, but it is incompatible with economy, +decency, health, and honest living. When a youth cannot restrain, +he must abstain. Dr. Johnson's case is the case of many. He said, +referring to his own habits, "Sir, I can abstain; but I can't be +moderate." + +But to wrestle vigorously and successfully with any vicious habit, +we must not merely be satisfied with contending on the low ground +of worldly prudence, though that is of use, but take stand upon a +higher moral elevation. Mechanical aids, such as pledges, may be +of service to some, but the great thing is to set up a high +standard of thinking and acting, and endeavour to strengthen and +purify the principles as well as to reform the habits. For this +purpose a youth must study himself, watch his steps, and compare +his thoughts and acts with his rule. The more knowledge of himself +he gains, the more humble will he be, and perhaps the less +confident in his own strength. But the discipline will be always +found most valuable which is acquired by resisting small present +gratifications to secure a prospective greater and higher one. It +is the noblest work in self-education--for + + +"Real glory +Springs from the silent conquest of ourselves, +And without that the conqueror is nought +But the first slave." + + +Many popular books have been written for the purpose of +communicating to the public the grand secret of making money. But +there is no secret whatever about it, as the proverbs of every +nation abundantly testify. "Take care of the pennies and the +pounds will take care of themselves." "Diligence is the mother of +good luck." "No pains no gains." "No sweat no sweet." "Work and +thou shalt have." "The world is his who has patience and +industry." "Better go to bed supperless than rise in debt." Such +are specimens of the proverbial philosophy, embodying the hoarded +experience of many generations, as to the best means of thriving in +the world. They were current in people's mouths long before books +were invented; and like other popular proverbs they were the first +codes of popular morals. Moreover they have stood the test of +time, and the experience of every day still bears witness to their +accuracy, force, and soundness. The proverbs of Solomon are full +of wisdom as to the force of industry, and the use and abuse of +money:- "He that is slothful in work is brother to him that is a +great waster." "Go to the ant, thou sluggard; consider her ways, +and be wise." Poverty, says the preacher, shall come upon the +idler, "as one that travelleth, and want as an armed man;" but of +the industrious and upright, "the hand of the diligent maketh +rich." "The drunkard and the glutton shall come to poverty; and +drowsiness shall clothe a man with rags." "Seest thou a man +diligent in his business? he shall stand before kings." But above +all, "It is better to get wisdom than gold; for wisdom is better +than rubies, and all the things that may be desired are not to be +compared to it." + +Simple industry and thrift will go far towards making any person of +ordinary working faculty comparatively independent in his means. +Even a working man may be so, provided he will carefully husband +his resources, and watch the little outlets of useless expenditure. +A penny is a very small matter, yet the comfort of thousands of +families depends upon the proper spending and saving of pennies. +If a man allows the little pennies, the results of his hard work, +to slip out of his fingers--some to the beershop, some this way and +some that--he will find that his life is little raised above one of +mere animal drudgery. On the other hand, if he take care of the +pennies--putting some weekly into a benefit society or an insurance +fund, others into a savings' bank, and confiding the rest to his +wife to be carefully laid out, with a view to the comfortable +maintenance and education of his family--he will soon find that +this attention to small matters will abundantly repay him, in +increasing means, growing comfort at home, and a mind comparatively +free from fears as to the future. And if a working man have high +ambition and possess richness in spirit,--a kind of wealth which +far transcends all mere worldly possessions--he may not only help +himself, but be a profitable helper of others in his path through +life. That this is no impossible thing even for a common labourer +in a workshop, may be illustrated by the remarkable career of +Thomas Wright of Manchester, who not only attempted but succeeded +in the reclamation of many criminals while working for weekly wages +in a foundry. + +Accident first directed Thomas Wright's attention to the difficulty +encountered by liberated convicts in returning to habits of honest +industry. His mind was shortly possessed by the subject; and to +remedy the evil became the purpose of his life. Though he worked +from six in the morning till six at night, still there were leisure +minutes that he could call his own--more especially his Sundays-- +and these he employed in the service of convicted criminals; a +class then far more neglected than they are now. But a few minutes +a day, well employed, can effect a great deal; and it will scarcely +be credited, that in ten years this working man, by steadfastly +holding to his purpose, succeeded in rescuing not fewer than three +hundred felons from continuance in a life of villany! He came to +be regarded as the moral physician of the Manchester Old Bailey; +and where the Chaplain and all others failed, Thomas Wright often +succeeded. Children he thus restored reformed to their parents; +sons and daughters otherwise lost, to their homes; and many a +returned convict did he contrive to settle down to honest and +industrious pursuits. The task was by no means easy. It required +money, time, energy, prudence, and above all, character, and the +confidence which character invariably inspires. The most +remarkable circumstance was that Wright relieved many of these poor +outcasts out of the comparatively small wages earned by him at +foundry work. He did all this on an income which did not average, +during his working career, 100l. per annum; and yet, while he was +able to bestow substantial aid on criminals, to whom he owed no +more than the service of kindness which every human being owes to +another, he also maintained his family in comfort, and was, by +frugality and carefulness, enabled to lay by a store of savings +against his approaching old age. Every week he apportioned his +income with deliberate care; so much for the indispensable +necessaries of food and clothing, so much for the landlord, so much +for the schoolmaster, so much for the poor and needy; and the lines +of distribution were resolutely observed. By such means did this +humble workman pursue his great work, with the results we have so +briefly described. Indeed, his career affords one of the most +remarkable and striking illustrations of the force of purpose in a +man, of the might of small means carefully and sedulously applied, +and, above all, of the power which an energetic and upright +character invariably exercises upon the lives and conduct of +others. + +There is no discredit, but honour, in every right walk of industry, +whether it be in tilling the ground, making tools, weaving fabrics, +or selling the products behind a counter. A youth may handle a +yard-stick, or measure a piece of ribbon; and there will be no +discredit in doing so, unless he allows his mind to have no higher +range than the stick and ribbon; to be as short as the one, and as +narrow as the other. "Let not those blush who HAVE," said Fuller, +"but those who HAVE NOT a lawful calling." And Bishop Hall said, +"Sweet is the destiny of all trades, whether of the brow or of the +mind." Men who have raised themselves from a humble calling, need +not be ashamed, but rather ought to be proud of the difficulties +they have surmounted. An American President, when asked what was +his coat-of-arms, remembering that he had been a hewer of wood in +his youth, replied, "A pair of shirt sleeves." A French doctor +once taunted Flechier, Bishop of Nismes, who had been a tallow- +chandler in his youth, with the meanness of his origin, to which +Flechier replied, "If you had been born in the same condition that +I was, you would still have been but a maker of candles." + +Nothing is more common than energy in money-making, quite +independent of any higher object than its accumulation. A man who +devotes himself to this pursuit, body and soul, can scarcely fail +to become rich. Very little brains will do; spend less than you +earn; add guinea to guinea; scrape and save; and the pile of gold +will gradually rise. Osterwald, the Parisian banker, began life a +poor man. He was accustomed every evening to drink a pint of beer +for supper at a tavern which he visited, during which he collected +and pocketed all the corks that he could lay his hands on. In +eight years he had collected as many corks as sold for eight louis +d'ors. With that sum he laid the foundations of his fortune-- +gained mostly by stock-jobbing; leaving at his death some three +millions of francs. John Foster has cited a striking illustration +of what this kind of determination will do in money-making. A +young man who ran through his patrimony, spending it in profligacy, +was at length reduced to utter want and despair. He rushed out of +his house intending to put an end to his life, and stopped on +arriving at an eminence overlooking what were once his estates. He +sat down, ruminated for a time, and rose with the determination +that he would recover them. He returned to the streets, saw a load +of coals which had been shot out of a cart on to the pavement +before a house, offered to carry them in, and was employed. He +thus earned a few pence, requested some meat and drink as a +gratuity, which was given him, and the pennies were laid by. +Pursuing this menial labour, he earned and saved more pennies; +accumulated sufficient to enable him to purchase some cattle, the +value of which he understood, and these he sold to advantage. He +proceeded by degrees to undertake larger transactions, until at +length he became rich. The result was, that he more than recovered +his possessions, and died an inveterate miser. When he was buried, +mere earth went to earth. With a nobler spirit, the same +determination might have enabled such a man to be a benefactor to +others as well as to himself. But the life and its end in this +case were alike sordid. + +To provide for others and for our own comfort and independence in +old age, is honourable, and greatly to be commended; but to hoard +for mere wealth's sake is the characteristic of the narrow-souled +and the miserly. It is against the growth of this habit of +inordinate saving that the wise man needs most carefully to guard +himself: else, what in youth was simple economy, may in old age +grow into avarice, and what was a duty in the one case, may become +a vice in the other. It is the LOVE of money--not money itself-- +which is "the root of evil,"--a love which narrows and contracts +the soul, and closes it against generous life and action. Hence, +Sir Walter Scott makes one of his characters declare that "the +penny siller slew more souls than the naked sword slew bodies." It +is one of the defects of business too exclusively followed, that it +insensibly tends to a mechanism of character. The business man +gets into a rut, and often does not look beyond it. If he lives +for himself only, he becomes apt to regard other human beings only +in so far as they minister to his ends. Take a leaf from such +men's ledger and you have their life. + +Worldly success, measured by the accumulation of money, is no doubt +a very dazzling thing; and all men are naturally more or less the +admirers of worldly success. But though men of persevering, sharp, +dexterous, and unscrupulous habits, ever on the watch to push +opportunities, may and do "get on" in the world, yet it is quite +possible that they may not possess the slightest elevation of +character, nor a particle of real goodness. He who recognizes no +higher logic than that of the shilling, may become a very rich man, +and yet remain all the while an exceedingly poor creature. For +riches are no proof whatever of moral worth; and their glitter +often serves only to draw attention to the worthlessness of their +possessor, as the light of the glowworm reveals the grub. + +The manner in which many allow themselves to be sacrificed to their +love of wealth reminds one of the cupidity of the monkey--that +caricature of our species. In Algiers, the Kabyle peasant attaches +a gourd, well fixed, to a tree, and places within it some rice. +The gourd has an opening merely sufficient to admit the monkey's +paw. The creature comes to the tree by night, inserts his paw, and +grasps his booty. He tries to draw it back, but it is clenched, +and he has not the wisdom to unclench it. So there he stands till +morning, when he is caught, looking as foolish as may be, though +with the prize in his grasp. The moral of this little story is +capable of a very extensive application in life. + +The power of money is on the whole over-estimated. The greatest +things which have been done for the world have not been +accomplished by rich men, nor by subscription lists, but by men +generally of small pecuniary means. Christianity was propagated +over half the world by men of the poorest class; and the greatest +thinkers, discoverers, inventors, and artists, have been men of +moderate wealth, many of them little raised above the condition of +manual labourers in point of worldly circumstances. And it will +always be so. Riches are oftener an impediment than a stimulus to +action; and in many cases they are quite as much a misfortune as a +blessing. The youth who inherits wealth is apt to have life made +too easy for him, and he soon grows sated with it, because he has +nothing left to desire. Having no special object to struggle for, +he finds time hang heavy on his hands; he remains morally and +spiritually asleep; and his position in society is often no higher +than that of a polypus over which the tide floats. + + +"His only labour is to kill the time, +And labour dire it is, and weary woe." + + +Yet the rich man, inspired by a right spirit, will spurn idleness +as unmanly; and if he bethink himself of the responsibilities which +attach to the possession of wealth and property he will feel even a +higher call to work than men of humbler lot. This, however, must +be admitted to be by no means the practice of life. The golden +mean of Agur's perfect prayer is, perhaps, the best lot of all, did +we but know it: "Give me neither poverty nor riches; feed me with +food convenient for me." The late Joseph Brotherton, M.P., left a +fine motto to be recorded upon his monument in the Peel Park at +Manchester,--the declaration in his case being strictly true: "My +richness consisted not in the greatness of my possessions, but in +the smallness of my wants." He rose from the humblest station, +that of a factory boy, to an eminent position of usefulness, by the +simple exercise of homely honesty, industry, punctuality, and self- +denial. Down to the close of his life, when not attending +Parliament, he did duty as minister in a small chapel in Manchester +to which he was attached; and in all things he made it appear, to +those who knew him in private life, that the glory he sought was +NOT "to be seen of men," or to excite their praise, but to earn the +consciousness of discharging the every-day duties of life, down to +the smallest and humblest of them, in an honest, upright, truthful, +and loving spirit. + +"Respectability," in its best sense, is good. The respectable man +is one worthy of regard, literally worth turning to look at. But +the respectability that consists in merely keeping up appearances +is not worth looking at in any sense. Far better and more +respectable is the good poor man than the bad rich one--better the +humble silent man than the agreeable well-appointed rogue who keeps +his gig. A well balanced and well-stored mind, a life full of +useful purpose, whatever the position occupied in it may be, is of +far greater importance than average worldly respectability. The +highest object of life we take to be, to form a manly character, +and to work out the best development possible, of body and spirit-- +of mind, conscience, heart, and soul. This is the end: all else +ought to be regarded but as the means. Accordingly, that is not +the most successful life in which a man gets the most pleasure, the +most money, the most power or place, honour or fame; but that in +which a man gets the most manhood, and performs the greatest amount +of useful work and of human duty. Money is power after its sort, +it is true; but intelligence, public spirit, and moral virtue, are +powers too, and far nobler ones. "Let others plead for pensions," +wrote Lord Collingwood to a friend; "I can be rich without money, +by endeavouring to be superior to everything poor. I would have my +services to my country unstained by any interested motive; and old +Scott {27} and I can go on in our cabbage-garden without much +greater expense than formerly." On another occasion he said, "I +have motives for my conduct which I would not give in exchange for +a hundred pensions." + +The making of a fortune may no doubt enable some people to "enter +society," as it is called; but to be esteemed there, they must +possess qualities of mind, manners, or heart, else they are merely +rich people, nothing more. There are men "in society" now, as rich +as Croesus, who have no consideration extended towards them, and +elicit no respect. For why? They are but as money-bags: their +only power is in their till. The men of mark in society--the +guides and rulers of opinion--the really successful and useful men- +-are not necessarily rich men; but men of sterling character, of +disciplined experience, and of moral excellence. Even the poor +man, like Thomas Wright, though he possess but little of this +world's goods, may, in the enjoyment of a cultivated nature, of +opportunities used and not abused, of a life spent to the best of +his means and ability, look down, without the slightest feeling of +envy, upon the person of mere worldly success, the man of money- +bags and acres. + + + +CHAPTER XI--SELF-CULTURE--FACILITIES AND DIFFICULTIES + + + +"Every person has two educations, one which he receives from +others, and one, more important, which he gives to himself."-- +Gibbon. + +"Is there one whom difficulties dishearten--who bends to the storm? +He will do little. Is there one who will conquer? That kind of +man never fails."--John Hunter. + +"The wise and active conquer difficulties, +By daring to attempt them: sloth and folly +Shiver and shrink at sight of toil and danger, +And MAKE the impossibility they fear."--Rowe. + + +"The best part of every man's education," said Sir Walter Scott, +"is that which he gives to himself." The late Sir Benjamin Brodie +delighted to remember this saying, and he used to congratulate +himself on the fact that professionally he was self-taught. But +this is necessarily the case with all men who have acquired +distinction in letters, science, or art. The education received at +school or college is but a beginning, and is valuable mainly +inasmuch as it trains the mind and habituates it to continuous +application and study. That which is put into us by others is +always far less ours than that which we acquire by our own diligent +and persevering effort. Knowledge conquered by labour becomes a +possession--a property entirely our own. A greater vividness and +permanency of impression is secured; and facts thus acquired become +registered in the mind in a way that mere imparted information can +never effect. This kind of self-culture also calls forth power and +cultivates strength. The solution of one problem helps the mastery +of another; and thus knowledge is carried into faculty. Our own +active effort is the essential thing; and no facilities, no books, +no teachers, no amount of lessons learnt by rote will enable us to +dispense with it. + +The best teachers have been the readiest to recognize the +importance of self-culture, and of stimulating the student to +acquire knowledge by the active exercise of his own faculties. +They have relied more upon TRAINING than upon telling, and sought +to make their pupils themselves active parties to the work in which +they were engaged; thus making teaching something far higher than +the mere passive reception of the scraps and details of knowledge. +This was the spirit in which the great Dr. Arnold worked; he strove +to teach his pupils to rely upon themselves, and develop their +powers by their own active efforts, himself merely guiding, +directing, stimulating, and encouraging them. "I would far +rather," he said, "send a boy to Van Diemen's Land, where he must +work for his bread, than send him to Oxford to live in luxury, +without any desire in his mind to avail himself of his advantages." +"If there be one thing on earth," he observed on another occasion, +"which is truly admirable, it is to see God's wisdom blessing an +inferiority of natural powers, when they have been honestly, truly, +and zealously cultivated." Speaking of a pupil of this character, +he said, "I would stand to that man hat in hand." Once at Laleham, +when teaching a rather dull boy, Arnold spoke somewhat sharply to +him, on which the pupil looked up in his face and said, "Why do you +speak angrily, sir? INDEED, I am doing the best I can." Years +afterwards, Arnold used to tell the story to his children, and +added, "I never felt so much in my life--that look and that speech +I have never forgotten." + +From the numerous instances already cited of men of humble station +who have risen to distinction in science and literature, it will be +obvious that labour is by no means incompatible with the highest +intellectual culture. Work in moderation is healthy, as well as +agreeable to the human constitution. Work educates the body, as +study educates the mind; and that is the best state of society in +which there is some work for every man's leisure, and some leisure +for every man's work. Even the leisure classes are in a measure +compelled to work, sometimes as a relief from ennui, but in most +cases to gratify an instinct which they cannot resist. Some go +foxhunting in the English counties, others grouse-shooting on the +Scotch hills, while many wander away every summer to climb +mountains in Switzerland. Hence the boating, running, cricketing, +and athletic sports of the public schools, in which our young men +at the same time so healthfully cultivate their strength both of +mind and body. It is said that the Duke of Wellington, when once +looking on at the boys engaged in their sports in the play-ground +at Eton, where he had spent many of his own younger days, made the +remark, "It was there that the battle of Waterloo was won!" + +Daniel Malthus urged his son when at college to be most diligent in +the cultivation of knowledge, but he also enjoined him to pursue +manly sports as the best means of keeping up the full working power +of his mind, as well as of enjoying the pleasures of intellect. +"Every kind of knowledge," said he, "every acquaintance with nature +and art, will amuse and strengthen your mind, and I am perfectly +pleased that cricket should do the same by your arms and legs; I +love to see you excel in exercises of the body, and I think myself +that the better half, and much the most agreeable part, of the +pleasures of the mind is best enjoyed while one is upon one's +legs." But a still more important use of active employment is that +referred to by the great divine, Jeremy Taylor. "Avoid idleness," +he says, "and fill up all the spaces of thy time with severe and +useful employment; for lust easily creeps in at those emptinesses +where the soul is unemployed and the body is at ease; for no easy, +healthful, idle person was ever chaste if he could be tempted; but +of all employments bodily labour is the most useful, and of the +greatest benefit for driving away the devil." + +Practical success in life depends more upon physical health than is +generally imagined. Hodson, of Hodson's Horse, writing home to a +friend in England, said, "I believe, if I get on well in India, it +will be owing, physically speaking, to a sound digestion." The +capacity for continuous working in any calling must necessarily +depend in a great measure upon this; and hence the necessity for +attending to health, even as a means of intellectual labour. It is +perhaps to the neglect of physical exercise that we find amongst +students so frequent a tendency towards discontent, unhappiness, +inaction, and reverie,--displaying itself in contempt for real life +and disgust at the beaten tracks of men,--a tendency which in +England has been called Byronism, and in Germany Wertherism. Dr. +Channing noted the same growth in America, which led him to make +the remark, that "too many of our young men grow up in a school of +despair." The only remedy for this green-sickness in youth is +physical exercise--action, work, and bodily occupation. + +The use of early labour in self-imposed mechanical employments may +be illustrated by the boyhood of Sir Isaac Newton. Though a +comparatively dull scholar, he was very assiduous in the use of his +saw, hammer, and hatchet--"knocking and hammering in his lodging +room"--making models of windmills, carriages, and machines of all +sorts; and as he grew older, he took delight in making little +tables and cupboards for his friends. Smeaton, Watt, and +Stephenson, were equally handy with tools when mere boys; and but +for such kind of self-culture in their youth, it is doubtful +whether they would have accomplished so much in their manhood. +Such was also the early training of the great inventors and +mechanics described in the preceding pages, whose contrivance and +intelligence were practically trained by the constant use of their +hands in early life. Even where men belonging to the manual labour +class have risen above it, and become more purely intellectual +labourers, they have found the advantages of their early training +in their later pursuits. Elihu Burritt says he found hard labour +NECESSARY to enable him to study with effect; and more than once he +gave up school-teaching and study, and, taking to his leather-apron +again, went back to his blacksmith's forge and anvil for his health +of body and mind's sake. + +The training of young men in the use of tools would, at the same +time that it educated them in "common things," teach them the use +of their hands and arms, familiarize them with healthy work, +exercise their faculties upon things tangible and actual, give them +some practical acquaintance with mechanics, impart to them the +ability of being useful, and implant in them the habit of +persevering physical effort. This is an advantage which the +working classes, strictly so called, certainly possess over the +leisure classes,--that they are in early life under the necessity +of applying themselves laboriously to some mechanical pursuit or +other,--thus acquiring manual dexterity and the use of their +physical powers. The chief disadvantage attached to the calling of +the laborious classes is, not that they are employed in physical +work, but that they are too exclusively so employed, often to the +neglect of their moral and intellectual faculties. While the +youths of the leisure classes, having been taught to associate +labour with servility, have shunned it, and been allowed to grow up +practically ignorant, the poorer classes, confining themselves +within the circle of their laborious callings, have been allowed to +grow up in a large proportion of cases absolutely illiterate. It +seems possible, however, to avoid both these evils by combining +physical training or physical work with intellectual culture: and +there are various signs abroad which seem to mark the gradual +adoption of this healthier system of education. + +The success of even professional men depends in no slight degree on +their physical health; and a public writer has gone so far as to +say that "the greatness of our great men is quite as much a bodily +affair as a mental one." {28} A healthy breathing apparatus is as +indispensable to the successful lawyer or politician as a well- +cultured intellect. The thorough aeration of the blood by free +exposure to a large breathing surface in the lungs, is necessary to +maintain that full vital power on which the vigorous working of the +brain in so large a measure depends. The lawyer has to climb the +heights of his profession through close and heated courts, and the +political leader has to bear the fatigue and excitement of long and +anxious debates in a crowded House. Hence the lawyer in full +practice and the parliamentary leader in full work are called upon +to display powers of physical endurance and activity even more +extraordinary than those of the intellect,--such powers as have +been exhibited in so remarkable a degree by Brougham, Lyndhurst, +and Campbell; by Peel, Graham, and Palmerston--all full-chested +men. + +Though Sir Walter Scott, when at Edinburgh College, went by the +name of "The Greek Blockhead," he was, notwithstanding his +lameness, a remarkably healthy youth: he could spear a salmon with +the best fisher on the Tweed, and ride a wild horse with any hunter +in Yarrow. When devoting himself in after life to literary +pursuits, Sir Walter never lost his taste for field sports; but +while writing 'Waverley' in the morning, he would in the afternoon +course hares. Professor Wilson was a very athlete, as great at +throwing the hammer as in his flights of eloquence and poetry; and +Burns, when a youth, was remarkable chiefly for his leaping, +putting, and wrestling. Some of our greatest divines were +distinguished in their youth for their physical energies. Isaac +Barrow, when at the Charterhouse School, was notorious for his +pugilistic encounters, in which he got many a bloody nose; Andrew +Fuller, when working as a farmer's lad at Soham, was chiefly famous +for his skill in boxing; and Adam Clarke, when a boy, was only +remarkable for the strength displayed by him in "rolling large +stones about,"--the secret, possibly, of some of the power which he +subsequently displayed in rolling forth large thoughts in his +manhood. + +While it is necessary, then, in the first place to secure this +solid foundation of physical health, it must also be observed that +the cultivation of the habit of mental application is quite +indispensable for the education of the student. The maxim that +"Labour conquers all things" holds especially true in the case of +the conquest of knowledge. The road into learning is alike free to +all who will give the labour and the study requisite to gather it; +nor are there any difficulties so great that the student of +resolute purpose may not surmount and overcome them. It was one of +the characteristic expressions of Chatterton, that God had sent his +creatures into the world with arms long enough to reach anything if +they chose to be at the trouble. In study, as in business, energy +is the great thing. There must be the "fervet opus": we must not +only strike the iron while it is hot, but strike it till it is made +hot. It is astonishing how much may be accomplished in self- +culture by the energetic and the persevering, who are careful to +avail themselves of opportunities, and use up the fragments of +spare time which the idle permit to run to waste. Thus Ferguson +learnt astronomy from the heavens, while wrapt in a sheep-skin on +the highland hills. Thus Stone learnt mathematics while working as +a journeyman gardener; thus Drew studied the highest philosophy in +the intervals of cobbling shoes; and thus Miller taught himself +geology while working as a day labourer in a quarry. + +Sir Joshua Reynolds, as we have already observed, was so earnest a +believer in the force of industry that he held that all men might +achieve excellence if they would but exercise the power of +assiduous and patient working. He held that drudgery lay on the +road to genius, and that there was no limit to the proficiency of +an artist except the limit of his own painstaking. He would not +believe in what is called inspiration, but only in study and +labour. "Excellence," he said, "is never granted to man but as the +reward of labour." "If you have great talents, industry will +improve them; if you have but moderate abilities, industry will +supply their deficiency. Nothing is denied to well-directed +labour; nothing is to be obtained without it." Sir Fowell Buxton +was an equal believer in the power of study; and he entertained the +modest idea that he could do as well as other men if he devoted to +the pursuit double the time and labour that they did. He placed +his great confidence in ordinary means and extraordinary +application. + +"I have known several men in my life," says Dr. Ross, "who may be +recognized in days to come as men of genius, and they were all +plodders, hard-working, INTENT men. Genius is known by its works; +genius without works is a blind faith, a dumb oracle. But +meritorious works are the result of time and labour, and cannot be +accomplished by intention or by a wish. . . . Every great work is +the result of vast preparatory training. Facility comes by labour. +Nothing seems easy, not even walking, that was not difficult at +first. The orator whose eye flashes instantaneous fire, and whose +lips pour out a flood of noble thoughts, startling by their +unexpectedness, and elevating by their wisdom and truth, has +learned his secret by patient repetition, and after many bitter +disappointments." {29} + +Thoroughness and accuracy are two principal points to be aimed at +in study. Francis Horner, in laying down rules for the cultivation +of his mind, placed great stress upon the habit of continuous +application to one subject for the sake of mastering it thoroughly; +he confined himself, with this object, to only a few books, and +resisted with the greatest firmness "every approach to a habit of +desultory reading." The value of knowledge to any man consists not +in its quantity, but mainly in the good uses to which he can apply +it. Hence a little knowledge, of an exact and perfect character, +is always found more valuable for practical purposes than any +extent of superficial learning. + +One of Ignatius Loyola's maxims was, "He who does well one work at +a time, does more than all." By spreading our efforts over too +large a surface we inevitably weaken our force, hinder our +progress, and acquire a habit of fitfulness and ineffective +working. Lord St. Leonards once communicated to Sir Fowell Buxton +the mode in which he had conducted his studies, and thus explained +the secret of his success. "I resolved," said he, "when beginning +to read law, to make everything I acquired perfectly my own, and +never to go to a second thing till I had entirely accomplished the +first. Many of my competitors read as much in a day as I read in a +week; but, at the end of twelve months, my knowledge was as fresh +as the day it was acquired, while theirs had glided away from +recollection." + +It is not the quantity of study that one gets through, or the +amount of reading, that makes a wise man; but the appositeness of +the study to the purpose for which it is pursued; the concentration +of the mind for the time being on the subject under consideration; +and the habitual discipline by which the whole system of mental +application is regulated. Abernethy was even of opinion that there +was a point of saturation in his own mind, and that if he took into +it something more than it could hold, it only had the effect of +pushing something else out. Speaking of the study of medicine, he +said, "If a man has a clear idea of what he desires to do, he will +seldom fail in selecting the proper means of accomplishing it." + +The most profitable study is that which is conducted with a +definite aim and object. By thoroughly mastering any given branch +of knowledge we render it more available for use at any moment. +Hence it is not enough merely to have books, or to know where to +read for information as we want it. Practical wisdom, for the +purposes of life, must be carried about with us, and be ready for +use at call. It is not sufficient that we have a fund laid up at +home, but not a farthing in the pocket: we must carry about with +us a store of the current coin of knowledge ready for exchange on +all occasions, else we are comparatively helpless when the +opportunity for using it occurs. + +Decision and promptitude are as requisite in self-culture as in +business. The growth of these qualities may be encouraged by +accustoming young people to rely upon their own resources, leaving +them to enjoy as much freedom of action in early life as is +practicable. Too much guidance and restraint hinder the formation +of habits of self-help. They are like bladders tied under the arms +of one who has not taught himself to swim. Want of confidence is +perhaps a greater obstacle to improvement than is generally +imagined. It has been said that half the failures in life arise +from pulling in one's horse while he is leaping. Dr. Johnson was +accustomed to attribute his success to confidence in his own +powers. True modesty is quite compatible with a due estimate of +one's own merits, and does not demand the abnegation of all merit. +Though there are those who deceive themselves by putting a false +figure before their ciphers, the want of confidence, the want of +faith in one's self, and consequently the want of promptitude in +action, is a defect of character which is found to stand very much +in the way of individual progress; and the reason why so little is +done, is generally because so little is attempted. + +There is usually no want of desire on the part of most persons to +arrive at the results of self-culture, but there is a great +aversion to pay the inevitable price for it, of hard work. Dr. +Johnson held that "impatience of study was the mental disease of +the present generation;" and the remark is still applicable. We +may not believe that there is a royal road to learning, but we seem +to believe very firmly in a "popular" one. In education, we invent +labour-saving processes, seek short cuts to science, learn French +and Latin "in twelve lessons," or "without a master." We resemble +the lady of fashion, who engaged a master to teach her on condition +that he did not plague her with verbs and participles. We get our +smattering of science in the same way; we learn chemistry by +listening to a short course of lectures enlivened by experiments, +and when we have inhaled laughing gas, seen green water turned to +red, and phosphorus burnt in oxygen, we have got our smattering, of +which the most that can be said is, that though it may be better +than nothing, it is yet good for nothing. Thus we often imagine we +are being educated while we are only being amused. + +The facility with which young people are thus induced to acquire +knowledge, without study and labour, is not education. It occupies +but does not enrich the mind. It imparts a stimulus for the time, +and produces a sort of intellectual keenness and cleverness; but, +without an implanted purpose and a higher object than mere +pleasure, it will bring with it no solid advantage. In such cases +knowledge produces but a passing impression; a sensation, but no +more; it is, in fact, the merest epicurism of intelligence-- +sensuous, but certainly not intellectual. Thus the best qualities +of many minds, those which are evoked by vigorous effort and +independent action, sleep a deep sleep, and are often never called +to life, except by the rough awakening of sudden calamity or +suffering, which, in such cases, comes as a blessing, if it serves +to rouse up a courageous spirit that, but for it, would have slept +on. + +Accustomed to acquire information under the guise of amusement, +young people will soon reject that which is presented to them under +the aspect of study and labour. Learning their knowledge and +science in sport, they will be too apt to make sport of both; while +the habit of intellectual dissipation, thus engendered, cannot +fail, in course of time, to produce a thoroughly emasculating +effect both upon their mind and character. "Multifarious reading," +said Robertson of Brighton, "weakens the mind like smoking, and is +an excuse for its lying dormant. It is the idlest of all +idlenesses, and leaves more of impotency than any other." + +The evil is a growing one, and operates in various ways. Its least +mischief is shallowness; its greatest, the aversion to steady +labour which it induces, and the low and feeble tone of mind which +it encourages. If we would be really wise, we must diligently +apply ourselves, and confront the same continuous application which +our forefathers did; for labour is still, and ever will be, the +inevitable price set upon everything which is valuable. We must be +satisfied to work with a purpose, and wait the results with +patience. All progress, of the best kind, is slow; but to him who +works faithfully and zealously the reward will, doubtless, be +vouchsafed in good time. The spirit of industry, embodied in a +man's daily life, will gradually lead him to exercise his powers on +objects outside himself, of greater dignity and more extended +usefulness. And still we must labour on; for the work of self- +culture is never finished. "To be employed," said the poet Gray, +"is to be happy." "It is better to wear out than rust out," said +Bishop Cumberland. "Have we not all eternity to rest in?" +exclaimed Arnauld. "Repos ailleurs" was the motto of Marnix de St. +Aldegonde, the energetic and ever-working friend of William the +Silent. + +It is the use we make of the powers entrusted to us, which +constitutes our only just claim to respect. He who employs his one +talent aright is as much to be honoured as he to whom ten talents +have been given. There is really no more personal merit attaching +to the possession of superior intellectual powers than there is in +the succession to a large estate. How are those powers used--how +is that estate employed? The mind may accumulate large stores of +knowledge without any useful purpose; but the knowledge must be +allied to goodness and wisdom, and embodied in upright character, +else it is naught. Pestalozzi even held intellectual training by +itself to be pernicious; insisting that the roots of all knowledge +must strike and feed in the soil of the rightly-governed will. The +acquisition of knowledge may, it is true, protect a man against the +meaner felonies of life; but not in any degree against its selfish +vices, unless fortified by sound principles and habits. Hence do +we find in daily life so many instances of men who are well- +informed in intellect, but utterly deformed in character; filled +with the learning of the schools, yet possessing little practical +wisdom, and offering examples for warning rather than imitation. +An often quoted expression at this day is that "Knowledge is +power;" but so also are fanaticism, despotism, and ambition. +Knowledge of itself, unless wisely directed, might merely make bad +men more dangerous, and the society in which it was regarded as the +highest good, little better than a pandemonium. + +It is possible that at this day we may even exaggerate the +importance of literary culture. We are apt to imagine that because +we possess many libraries, institutes, and museums, we are making +great progress. But such facilities may as often be a hindrance as +a help to individual self-culture of the highest kind. The +possession of a library, or the free use of it, no more constitutes +learning, than the possession of wealth constitutes generosity. +Though we undoubtedly possess great facilities it is nevertheless +true, as of old, that wisdom and understanding can only become the +possession of individual men by travelling the old road of +observation, attention, perseverance, and industry. The possession +of the mere materials of knowledge is something very different from +wisdom and understanding, which are reached through a higher kind +of discipline than that of reading,--which is often but a mere +passive reception of other men's thoughts; there being little or no +active effort of mind in the transaction. Then how much of our +reading is but the indulgence of a sort of intellectual dram- +drinking, imparting a grateful excitement for the moment, without +the slightest effect in improving and enriching the mind or +building up the character. Thus many indulge themselves in the +conceit that they are cultivating their minds, when they are only +employed in the humbler occupation of killing time, of which +perhaps the best that can be said is that it keeps them from doing +worse things. + +It is also to be borne in mind that the experience gathered from +books, though often valuable, is but of the nature of LEARNING; +whereas the experience gained from actual life is of the nature of +WISDOM; and a small store of the latter is worth vastly more than +any stock of the former. Lord Bolingbroke truly said that +"Whatever study tends neither directly nor indirectly to make us +better men and citizens, is at best but a specious and ingenious +sort of idleness, and the knowledge we acquire by it, only a +creditable kind of ignorance--nothing more." + +Useful and instructive though good reading may be, it is yet only +one mode of cultivating the mind; and is much less influential than +practical experience and good example in the formation of +character. There were wise, valiant, and true-hearted men bred in +England, long before the existence of a reading public. Magna +Charta was secured by men who signed the deed with their marks. +Though altogether unskilled in the art of deciphering the literary +signs by which principles were denominated upon paper, they yet +understood and appreciated, and boldly contended for, the things +themselves. Thus the foundations of English liberty were laid by +men, who, though illiterate, were nevertheless of the very highest +stamp of character. And it must be admitted that the chief object +of culture is, not merely to fill the mind with other men's +thoughts, and to be the passive recipient of their impressions of +things, but to enlarge our individual intelligence, and render us +more useful and efficient workers in the sphere of life to which we +may be called. Many of our most energetic and useful workers have +been but sparing readers. Brindley and Stephenson did not learn to +read and write until they reached manhood, and yet they did great +works and lived manly lives; John Hunter could barely read or write +when he was twenty years old, though he could make tables and +chairs with any carpenter in the trade. "I never read," said the +great physiologist when lecturing before his class; "this"-- +pointing to some part of the subject before him--"this is the work +that you must study if you wish to become eminent in your +profession." When told that one of his contemporaries had charged +him with being ignorant of the dead languages, he said, "I would +undertake to teach him that on the dead body which he never knew in +any language, dead or living." + +It is not then how much a man may know, that is of importance, but +the end and purpose for which he knows it. The object of knowledge +should be to mature wisdom and improve character, to render us +better, happier, and more useful; more benevolent, more energetic, +and more efficient in the pursuit of every high purpose in life. +"When people once fall into the habit of admiring and encouraging +ability as such, without reference to moral character--and +religious and political opinions are the concrete form of moral +character--they are on the highway to all sorts of degradation." +{30} We must ourselves BE and DO, and not rest satisfied merely +with reading and meditating over what other men have been and done. +Our best light must be made life, and our best thought action. At +least we ought to be able to say, as Richter did, "I have made as +much out of myself as could be made of the stuff, and no man should +require more;" for it is every man's duty to discipline and guide +himself, with God's help, according to his responsibilities and the +faculties with which he has been endowed. + +Self-discipline and self-control are the beginnings of practical +wisdom; and these must have their root in self-respect. Hope +springs from it--hope, which is the companion of power, and the +mother of success; for whoso hopes strongly has within him the gift +of miracles. The humblest may say, "To respect myself, to develop +myself--this is my true duty in life. An integral and responsible +part of the great system of society, I owe it to society and to its +Author not to degrade or destroy either my body, mind, or +instincts. On the contrary, I am bound to the best of my power to +give to those parts of my constitution the highest degree of +perfection possible. I am not only to suppress the evil, but to +evoke the good elements in my nature. And as I respect myself, so +am I equally bound to respect others, as they on their part are +bound to respect me." Hence mutual respect, justice, and order, of +which law becomes the written record and guarantee. + +Self-respect is the noblest garment with which a man may clothe +himself--the most elevating feeling with which the mind can be +inspired. One of Pythagoras's wisest maxims, in his 'Golden +Verses,' is that with which he enjoins the pupil to "reverence +himself." Borne up by this high idea, he will not defile his body +by sensuality, nor his mind by servile thoughts. This sentiment, +carried into daily life, will be found at the root of all the +virtues--cleanliness, sobriety, chastity, morality, and religion. +"The pious and just honouring of ourselves," said Milton, may be +thought the radical moisture and fountain-head from whence every +laudable and worthy enterprise issues forth." To think meanly of +one's self, is to sink in one's own estimation as well as in the +estimation of others. And as the thoughts are, so will the acts +be. Man cannot aspire if he look down; if he will rise, he must +look up. The very humblest may be sustained by the proper +indulgence of this feeling. Poverty itself may be lifted and +lighted up by self-respect; and it is truly a noble sight to see a +poor man hold himself upright amidst his temptations, and refuse to +demean himself by low actions. + +One way in which self-culture may be degraded is by regarding it +too exclusively as a means of "getting on." Viewed in this light, +it is unquestionable that education is one of the best investments +of time and labour. In any line of life, intelligence will enable +a man to adapt himself more readily to circumstances, suggest +improved methods of working, and render him more apt, skilled and +effective in all respects. He who works with his head as well as +his hands, will come to look at his business with a clearer eye; +and he will become conscious of increasing power--perhaps the most +cheering consciousness the human mind can cherish. The power of +self-help will gradually grow; and in proportion to a man's self- +respect, will he be armed against the temptation of low +indulgences. Society and its action will be regarded with quite a +new interest, his sympathies will widen and enlarge, and he will +thus be attracted to work for others as well as for himself. + +Self-culture may not, however, end in eminence, as in the numerous +instances above cited. The great majority of men, in all times, +however enlightened, must necessarily be engaged in the ordinary +avocations of industry; and no degree of culture which can be +conferred upon the community at large will ever enable them--even +were it desirable, which it is not--to get rid of the daily work of +society, which must be done. But this, we think, may also be +accomplished. We can elevate the condition of labour by allying it +to noble thoughts, which confer a grace upon the lowliest as well +as the highest rank. For no matter how poor or humble a man may +be, the great thinker of this and other days may come in and sit +down with him, and be his companion for the time, though his +dwelling be the meanest hut. It is thus that the habit of well- +directed reading may become a source of the greatest pleasure and +self-improvement, and exercise a gentle coercion, with the most +beneficial results, over the whole tenour of a man's character and +conduct. And even though self-culture may not bring wealth, it +will at all events give one the companionship of elevated thoughts. +A nobleman once contemptuously asked of a sage, "What have you got +by all your philosophy?" "At least I have got society in myself," +was the wise man's reply. + +But many are apt to feel despondent, and become discouraged in the +work of self-culture, because they do not "get on" in the world so +fast as they think they deserve to do. Having planted their acorn, +they expect to see it grow into an oak at once. They have perhaps +looked upon knowledge in the light of a marketable commodity, and +are consequently mortified because it does not sell as they +expected it would do. Mr. Tremenheere, in one of his 'Education +Reports' (for 1840-1), states that a schoolmaster in Norfolk, +finding his school rapidly falling off, made inquiry into the +cause, and ascertained that the reason given by the majority of the +parents for withdrawing their children was, that they had expected +"education was to make them better off than they were before," but +that having found it had "done them no good," they had taken their +children from school, and would give themselves no further trouble +about education! + +The same low idea of self-culture is but too prevalent in other +classes, and is encouraged by the false views of life which are +always more or less current in society. But to regard self-culture +either as a means of getting past others in the world, or of +intellectual dissipation and amusement, rather than as a power to +elevate the character and expand the spiritual nature, is to place +it on a very low level. To use the words of Bacon, "Knowledge is +not a shop for profit or sale, but a rich storehouse for the glory +of the Creator and the relief of man's estate." It is doubtless +most honourable for a man to labour to elevate himself, and to +better his condition in society, but this is not to be done at the +sacrifice of himself. To make the mind the mere drudge of the +body, is putting it to a very servile use; and to go about whining +and bemoaning our pitiful lot because we fail in achieving that +success in life which, after all, depends rather upon habits of +industry and attention to business details than upon knowledge, is +the mark of a small, and often of a sour mind. Such a temper +cannot better be reproved than in the words of Robert Southey, who +thus wrote to a friend who sought his counsel: "I would give you +advice if it could be of use; but there is no curing those who +choose to be diseased. A good man and a wise man may at times be +angry with the world, at times grieved for it; but be sure no man +was ever discontented with the world if he did his duty in it. If +a man of education, who has health, eyes, hands, and leisure, wants +an object, it is only because God Almighty has bestowed all those +blessings upon a man who does not deserve them." + +Another way in which education may be prostituted is by employing +it as a mere means of intellectual dissipation and amusement. Many +are the ministers to this taste in our time. There is almost a +mania for frivolity and excitement, which exhibits itself in many +forms in our popular literature. To meet the public taste, our +books and periodicals must now be highly spiced, amusing, and +comic, not disdaining slang, and illustrative of breaches of all +laws, human and divine. Douglas Jerrold once observed of this +tendency, "I am convinced the world will get tired (at least I hope +so) of this eternal guffaw about all things. After all, life has +something serious in it. It cannot be all a comic history of +humanity. Some men would, I believe, write a Comic Sermon on the +Mount. Think of a Comic History of England, the drollery of +Alfred, the fun of Sir Thomas More, the farce of his daughter +begging the dead head and clasping it in her coffin on her bosom. +Surely the world will be sick of this blasphemy." John Sterling, +in a like spirit, said:- "Periodicals and novels are to all in this +generation, but more especially to those whose minds are still +unformed and in the process of formation, a new and more effectual +substitute for the plagues of Egypt, vermin that corrupt the +wholesome waters and infest our chambers." + +As a rest from toil and a relaxation from graver pursuits, the +perusal of a well-written story, by a writer of genius, is a high +intellectual pleasure; and it is a description of literature to +which all classes of readers, old and young, are attracted as by a +powerful instinct; nor would we have any of them debarred from its +enjoyment in a reasonable degree. But to make it the exclusive +literary diet, as some do,--to devour the garbage with which the +shelves of circulating libraries are filled,--and to occupy the +greater portion of the leisure hours in studying the preposterous +pictures of human life which so many of them present, is worse than +waste of time: it is positively pernicious. The habitual novel- +reader indulges in fictitious feelings so much, that there is great +risk of sound and healthy feeling becoming perverted or benumbed. +"I never go to hear a tragedy," said a gay man once to the +Archbishop of York, "it wears my heart out." The literary pity +evoked by fiction leads to no corresponding action; the +susceptibilities which it excites involve neither inconvenience nor +self-sacrifice; so that the heart that is touched too often by the +fiction may at length become insensible to the reality. The steel +is gradually rubbed out of the character, and it insensibly loses +its vital spring. "Drawing fine pictures of virtue in one's mind," +said Bishop Butler, "is so far from necessarily or certainly +conducive to form a HABIT of it in him who thus employs himself, +that it may even harden the mind in a contrary course, and render +it gradually more insensible." + +Amusement in moderation is wholesome, and to be commended; but +amusement in excess vitiates the whole nature, and is a thing to be +carefully guarded against. The maxim is often quoted of "All work +and no play makes Jack a dull boy;" but all play and no work makes +him something greatly worse. Nothing can be more hurtful to a +youth than to have his soul sodden with pleasure. The best +qualities of his mind are impaired; common enjoyments become +tasteless; his appetite for the higher kind of pleasures is +vitiated; and when he comes to face the work and the duties of +life, the result is usually aversion and disgust. "Fast" men waste +and exhaust the powers of life, and dry up the sources of true +happiness. Having forestalled their spring, they can produce no +healthy growth of either character or intellect. A child without +simplicity, a maiden without innocence, a boy without truthfulness, +are not more piteous sights than the man who has wasted and thrown +away his youth in self-indulgence. Mirabeau said of himself, "My +early years have already in a great measure disinherited the +succeeding ones, and dissipated a great part of my vital powers." +As the wrong done to another to-day returns upon ourselves to- +morrow, so the sins of our youth rise up in our age to scourge us. +When Lord Bacon says that "strength of nature in youth passeth over +many excesses which are owing a man until he is old," he exposes a +physical as well as a moral fact which cannot be too well weighed +in the conduct of life. "I assure you," wrote Giusti the Italian +to a friend, "I pay a heavy price for existence. It is true that +our lives are not at our own disposal. Nature pretends to give +them gratis at the beginning, and then sends in her account." The +worst of youthful indiscretions is, not that they destroy health, +so much as that they sully manhood. The dissipated youth becomes a +tainted man; and often he cannot be pure, even if he would. If +cure there be, it is only to be found in inoculating the mind with +a fervent spirit of duty, and in energetic application to useful +work. + +One of the most gifted of Frenchmen, in point of great intellectual +endowments, was Benjamin Constant; but, blase at twenty, his life +was only a prolonged wail, instead of a harvest of the great deeds +which he was capable of accomplishing with ordinary diligence and +self-control. He resolved upon doing so many things, which he +never did, that people came to speak of him as Constant the +Inconstant. He was a fluent and brilliant writer, and cherished +the ambition of writing works, "which the world would not willingly +let die." But whilst Constant affected the highest thinking, +unhappily he practised the lowest living; nor did the +transcendentalism of his books atone for the meanness of his life. +He frequented the gaming-tables while engaged in preparing his work +upon religion, and carried on a disreputable intrigue while writing +his 'Adolphe.' With all his powers of intellect, he was powerless, +because he had no faith in virtue. "Bah!" said he, "what are +honour and dignity? The longer I live, the more clearly I see +there is nothing in them." It was the howl of a miserable man. He +described himself as but "ashes and dust." "I pass," said he, +"like a shadow over the earth, accompanied by misery and ennui." +He wished for Voltaire's energy, which he would rather have +possessed than his genius. But he had no strength of purpose-- +nothing but wishes: his life, prematurely exhausted, had become +but a heap of broken links. He spoke of himself as a person with +one foot in the air. He admitted that he had no principles, and no +moral consistency. Hence, with his splendid talents, he contrived +to do nothing; and, after living many years miserable, he died worn +out and wretched. + +The career of Augustin Thierry, the author of the 'History of the +Norman Conquest,' affords an admirable contrast to that of +Constant. His entire life presented a striking example of +perseverance, diligence, self culture, and untiring devotion to +knowledge. In the pursuit he lost his eyesight, lost his health, +but never lost his love of truth. When so feeble that he was +carried from room to room, like a helpless infant, in the arms of a +nurse, his brave spirit never failed him; and blind and helpless +though he was, he concluded his literary career in the following +noble words:- "If, as I think, the interest of science is counted +in the number of great national interests, I have given my country +all that the soldier, mutilated on the field of battle, gives her. +Whatever may be the fate of my labours, this example, I hope, will +not be lost. I would wish it to serve to combat the species of +moral weakness which is THE DISEASE of our present generation; to +bring back into the straight road of life some of those enervated +souls that complain of wanting faith, that know not what to do, and +seek everywhere, without finding it, an object of worship and +admiration. Why say, with so much bitterness, that in the world, +constituted as it is, there is no air for all lungs--no employment +for all minds? Is not calm and serious study there? and is not +that a refuge, a hope, a field within the reach of all of us? With +it, evil days are passed over without their weight being felt. +Every one can make his own destiny--every one employ his life +nobly. This is what I have done, and would do again if I had to +recommence my career; I would choose that which has brought me +where I am. Blind, and suffering without hope, and almost without +intermission, I may give this testimony, which from me will not +appear suspicious. There is something in the world better than +sensual enjoyments, better than fortune, better than health itself- +-it is devotion to knowledge." + +Coleridge, in many respects, resembled Constant. He possessed +equally brilliant powers, but was similarly infirm of purpose. +With all his great intellectual gifts, he wanted the gift of +industry, and was averse to continuous labour. He wanted also the +sense of independence, and thought it no degradation to leave his +wife and children to be maintained by the brain-work of the noble +Southey, while he himself retired to Highgate Grove to discourse +transcendentalism to his disciples, looking down contemptuously +upon the honest work going forward beneath him amidst the din and +smoke of London. With remunerative employment at his command he +stooped to accept the charity of friends; and, notwithstanding his +lofty ideas of philosophy, he condescended to humiliations from +which many a day-labourer would have shrunk. How different in +spirit was Southey! labouring not merely at work of his own choice, +and at taskwork often tedious and distasteful, but also +unremittingly and with the utmost eagerness seeking and storing +knowledge purely for the love of it. Every day, every hour had its +allotted employment: engagements to publishers requiring punctual +fulfilment; the current expenses of a large household duty to +provide: for Southey had no crop growing while his pen was idle. +"My ways," he used to say, "are as broad as the king's high-road, +and my means lie in an inkstand." + +Robert Nicoll wrote to a friend, after reading the 'Recollections +of Coleridge,' "What a mighty intellect was lost in that man for +want of a little energy--a little determination!" Nicoll himself +was a true and brave spirit, who died young, but not before he had +encountered and overcome great difficulties in life. At his +outset, while carrying on a small business as a bookseller, he +found himself weighed down with a debt of only twenty pounds, which +he said he felt "weighing like a millstone round his neck," and +that, "if he had it paid he never would borrow again from mortal +man." Writing to his mother at the time he said, "Fear not for me, +dear mother, for I feel myself daily growing firmer and more +hopeful in spirit. The more I think and reflect--and thinking, not +reading, is now my occupation--I feel that, whether I be growing +richer or not, I am growing a wiser man, which is far better. +Pain, poverty, and all the other wild beasts of life which so +affrighten others, I am so bold as to think I could look in the +face without shrinking, without losing respect for myself, faith in +man's high destinies, or trust in God. There is a point which it +costs much mental toil and struggling to gain, but which, when once +gained, a man can look down from, as a traveller from a lofty +mountain, on storms raging below, while he is walking in sunshine. +That I have yet gained this point in life I will not say, but I +feel myself daily nearer to it." + +It is not ease, but effort--not facility, but difficulty, that +makes men. There is, perhaps, no station in life, in which +difficulties have not to be encountered and overcome before any +decided measure of success can be achieved. Those difficulties +are, however, our best instructors, as our mistakes often form our +best experience. Charles James Fox was accustomed to say that he +hoped more from a man who failed, and yet went on in spite of his +failure, than from the buoyant career of the successful. "It is +all very well," said he, "to tell me that a young man has +distinguished himself by a brilliant first speech. He may go on, +or he may be satisfied with his first triumph; but show me a young +man who has NOT succeeded at first, and nevertheless has gone on, +and I will back that young man to do better than most of those who +have succeeded at the first trial." + +We learn wisdom from failure much more than from success. We often +discover what WILL do, by finding out what will not do; and +probably he who never made a mistake never made a discovery. It +was the failure in the attempt to make a sucking-pump act, when the +working bucket was more than thirty-three feet above the surface of +the water to be raised, that led observant men to study the law of +atmospheric pressure, and opened a new field of research to the +genius of Galileo, Torrecelli, and Boyle. John Hunter used to +remark that the art of surgery would not advance until professional +men had the courage to publish their failures as well as their +successes. Watt the engineer said, of all things most wanted in +mechanical engineering was a history of failures: "We want," he +said, "a book of blots." When Sir Humphry Davy was once shown a +dexterously manipulated experiment, he said--"I thank God I was not +made a dexterous manipulator, for the most important of my +discoveries have been suggested to me by failures." Another +distinguished investigator in physical science has left it on +record that, whenever in the course of his researches he +encountered an apparently insuperable obstacle, he generally found +himself on the brink of some discovery. The very greatest things-- +great thoughts, discoveries, inventions--have usually been nurtured +in hardship, often pondered over in sorrow, and at length +established with difficulty. + +Beethoven said of Rossini, that he had in him the stuff to have +made a good musician if he had only, when a boy, been well flogged; +but that he had been spoilt by the facility with which he produced. +Men who feel their strength within them need not fear to encounter +adverse opinions; they have far greater reason to fear undue praise +and too friendly criticism. When Mendelssohn was about to enter +the orchestra at Birmingham, on the first performance of his +'Elijah,' he said laughingly to one of his friends and critics, +"Stick your claws into me! Don't tell me what you like, but what +you don't like!" + +It has been said, and truly, that it is the defeat that tries the +general more than the victory. Washington lost more battles than +he gained; but he succeeded in the end. The Romans, in their most +victorious campaigns, almost invariably began with defeats. Moreau +used to be compared by his companions to a drum, which nobody hears +of except it be beaten. Wellington's military genius was perfected +by encounter with difficulties of apparently the most overwhelming +character, but which only served to nerve his resolution, and bring +out more prominently his great qualities as a man and a general. +So the skilful mariner obtains his best experience amidst storms +and tempests, which train him to self-reliance, courage, and the +highest discipline; and we probably own to rough seas and wintry +nights the best training of our race of British seamen, who are, +certainly, not surpassed by any in the world. + +Necessity may be a hard schoolmistress, but she is generally found +the best. Though the ordeal of adversity is one from which we +naturally shrink, yet, when it comes, we must bravely and manfully +encounter it. Burns says truly, + + +"Though losses and crosses +Be lessons right severe, +There's wit there, you'll get there, +You'll find no other where." + + +"Sweet indeed are the uses of adversity." They reveal to us our +powers, and call forth our energies. If there be real worth in the +character, like sweet herbs, it will give forth its finest +fragrance when pressed. "Crosses," says the old proverb, "are the +ladders that lead to heaven." "What is even poverty itself," asks +Richter, "that a man should murmur under it? It is but as the pain +of piercing a maiden's ear, and you hang precious jewels in the +wound." In the experience of life it is found that the wholesome +discipline of adversity in strong natures usually carries with it a +self-preserving influence. Many are found capable of bravely +bearing up under privations, and cheerfully encountering +obstructions, who are afterwards found unable to withstand the more +dangerous influences of prosperity. It is only a weak man whom the +wind deprives of his cloak: a man of average strength is more in +danger of losing it when assailed by the beams of a too genial sun. +Thus it often needs a higher discipline and a stronger character to +bear up under good fortune than under adverse. Some generous +natures kindle and warm with prosperity, but there are many on whom +wealth has no such influence. Base hearts it only hardens, making +those who were mean and servile, mean and proud. But while +prosperity is apt to harden the heart to pride, adversity in a man +of resolution will serve to ripen it into fortitude. To use the +words of Burke, "Difficulty is a severe instructor, set over us by +the supreme ordinance of a parental guardian and instructor, who +knows us better than we know ourselves, as He loves us better too. +He that wrestles with us strengthens our nerves, and sharpens our +skill: our antagonist is thus our helper." Without the necessity +of encountering difficulty, life might be easier, but men would be +worth less. For trials, wisely improved, train the character, and +teach self-help; thus hardship itself may often prove the +wholesomest discipline for us, though we recognise it not. When +the gallant young Hodson, unjustly removed from his Indian command, +felt himself sore pressed down by unmerited calumny and reproach, +he yet preserved the courage to say to a friend, "I strive to look +the worst boldly in the face, as I would an enemy in the field, and +to do my appointed work resolutely and to the best of my ability, +satisfied that there is a reason for all; and that even irksome +duties well done bring their own reward, and that, if not, still +they ARE duties." + +The battle of life is, in most cases, fought up-hill; and to win it +without a struggle were perhaps to win it without honour. If there +were no difficulties there would be no success; if there were +nothing to struggle for, there would be nothing to be achieved. +Difficulties may intimidate the weak, but they act only as a +wholesome stimulus to men of resolution and valour. All experience +of life indeed serves to prove that the impediments thrown in the +way of human advancement may for the most part be overcome by +steady good conduct, honest zeal, activity, perseverance, and above +all by a determined resolution to surmount difficulties, and stand +up manfully against misfortune. + +The school of Difficulty is the best school of moral discipline, +for nations as for individuals. Indeed, the history of difficulty +would be but a history of all the great and good things that have +yet been accomplished by men. It is hard to say how much northern +nations owe to their encounter with a comparatively rude and +changeable climate and an originally sterile soil, which is one of +the necessities of their condition,--involving a perennial struggle +with difficulties such as the natives of sunnier climes know +nothing of. And thus it may be, that though our finest products +are exotic, the skill and industry which have been necessary to +rear them, have issued in the production of a native growth of men +not surpassed on the globe. + +Wherever there is difficulty, the individual man must come out for +better for worse. Encounter with it will train his strength, and +discipline his skill; heartening him for future effort, as the +racer, by being trained to run against the hill, at length courses +with facility. The road to success may be steep to climb, and it +puts to the proof the energies of him who would reach the summit. +But by experience a man soon learns that obstacles are to be +overcome by grappling with them,--that the nettle feels as soft as +silk when it is boldly grasped,--and that the most effective help +towards realizing the object proposed is the moral conviction that +we can and will accomplish it. Thus difficulties often fall away +of themselves before the determination to overcome them. + +Much will be done if we do but try. Nobody knows what he can do +till he has tried; and few try their best till they have been +forced to do it. "IF I could do such and such a thing," sighs the +desponding youth. But nothing will be done if he only wishes. The +desire must ripen into purpose and effort; and one energetic +attempt is worth a thousand aspirations. It is these thorny "ifs"- +-the mutterings of impotence and despair--which so often hedge +round the field of possibility, and prevent anything being done or +even attempted. "A difficulty," said Lord Lyndhurst, "is a thing +to be overcome;" grapple with it at once; facility will come with +practice, and strength and fortitude with repeated effort. Thus +the mind and character may be trained to an almost perfect +discipline, and enabled to act with a grace, spirit, and liberty, +almost incomprehensible to those who have not passed through a +similar experience. + +Everything that we learn is the mastery of a difficulty; and the +mastery of one helps to the mastery of others. Things which may at +first sight appear comparatively valueless in education--such as +the study of the dead languages, and the relations of lines and +surfaces which we call mathematics--are really of the greatest +practical value, not so much because of the information which they +yield, as because of the development which they compel. The +mastery of these studies evokes effort, and cultivates powers of +application, which otherwise might have lain dormant, Thus one +thing leads to another, and so the work goes on through life-- +encounter with difficulty ending only when life and culture end. +But indulging in the feeling of discouragement never helped any one +over a difficulty, and never will. D'Alembert's advice to the +student who complained to him about his want of success in +mastering the first elements of mathematics was the right one--"Go +on, sir, and faith and strength will come to you." + +The danseuse who turns a pirouette, the violinist who plays a +sonata, have acquired their dexterity by patient repetition and +after many failures. Carissimi, when praised for the ease and +grace of his melodies, exclaimed, "Ah! you little know with what +difficulty this ease has been acquired." Sir Joshua Reynolds, when +once asked how long it had taken him to paint a certain picture, +replied, "All my life." Henry Clay, the American orator, when +giving advice to young men, thus described to them the secret of +his success in the cultivation of his art: "I owe my success in +life," said he, "chiefly to one circumstance--that at the age of +twenty-seven I commenced, and continued for years, the process of +daily reading and speaking upon the contents of some historical or +scientific book. These off-hand efforts were made, sometimes in a +cornfield, at others in the forest, and not unfrequently in some +distant barn, with the horse and the ox for my auditors. It is to +this early practice of the art of all arts that I am indebted for +the primary and leading impulses that stimulated me onward and have +shaped and moulded my whole subsequent destiny." + +Curran, the Irish orator, when a youth, had a strong defect in his +articulation, and at school he was known as "stuttering Jack +Curran." While he was engaged in the study of the law, and still +struggling to overcome his defect, he was stung into eloquence by +the sarcasms of a member of a debating club, who characterised him +as "Orator Mum;" for, like Cowper, when he stood up to speak on a +previous occasion, Curran had not been able to utter a word. The +taunt stung him and he replied in a triumphant speech. This +accidental discovery in himself of the gift of eloquence encouraged +him to proceed in his studies with renewed energy. He corrected +his enunciation by reading aloud, emphatically and distinctly, the +best passages in literature, for several hours every day, studying +his features before a mirror, and adopting a method of +gesticulation suited to his rather awkward and ungraceful figure. +He also proposed cases to himself, which he argued with as much +care as if he had been addressing a jury. Curran began business +with the qualification which Lord Eldon stated to be the first +requisite for distinction, that is, "to be not worth a shilling." +While working his way laboriously at the bar, still oppressed by +the diffidence which had overcome him in his debating club, he was +on one occasion provoked by the Judge (Robinson) into making a very +severe retort. In the case under discussion, Curran observed "that +he had never met the law as laid down by his lordship in any book +in his library." "That may be, sir," said the judge, in a +contemptuous tone, "but I suspect that YOUR library is very small." +His lordship was notoriously a furious political partisan, the +author of several anonymous pamphlets characterised by unusual +violence and dogmatism. Curran, roused by the allusion to his +straitened circumstances, replied thus; "It is very true, my lord, +that I am poor, and the circumstance has certainly curtailed my +library; my books are not numerous, but they are select, and I hope +they have been perused with proper dispositions. I have prepared +myself for this high profession by the study of a few good works, +rather than by the composition of a great many bad ones. I am not +ashamed of my poverty; but I should be ashamed of my wealth, could +I have stooped to acquire it by servility and corruption. If I +rise not to rank, I shall at least be honest; and should I ever +cease to be so, many an example shows me that an ill-gained +elevation, by making me the more conspicuous, would only make me +the more universally and the more notoriously contemptible." + +The extremest poverty has been no obstacle in the way of men +devoted to the duty of self-culture. Professor Alexander Murray, +the linguist, learnt to write by scribbling his letters on an old +wool-card with the end of a burnt heather stem. The only book +which his father, who was a poor shepherd, possessed, was a penny +Shorter Catechism; but that, being thought too valuable for common +use, was carefully preserved in a cupboard for the Sunday +catechisings. Professor Moor, when a young man, being too poor to +purchase Newton's 'Principia,' borrowed the book, and copied the +whole of it with his own hand. Many poor students, while labouring +daily for their living, have only been able to snatch an atom of +knowledge here and there at intervals, as birds do their food in +winter time when the fields are covered with snow. They have +struggled on, and faith and hope have come to them. A well-known +author and publisher, William Chambers, of Edinburgh, speaking +before an assemblage of young men in that city, thus briefly +described to them his humble beginnings, for their encouragement: +"I stand before you," he said, "a self-educated man. My education +was that which is supplied at the humble parish schools of +Scotland; and it was only when I went to Edinburgh, a poor boy, +that I devoted my evenings, after the labours of the day, to the +cultivation of that intellect which the Almighty has given me. +From seven or eight in the morning till nine or ten at night was I +at my business as a bookseller's apprentice, and it was only during +hours after these, stolen from sleep, that I could devote myself to +study. I did not read novels: my attention was devoted to +physical science, and other useful matters. I also taught myself +French. I look back to those times with great pleasure, and am +almost sorry I have not to go through the same experience again; +for I reaped more pleasure when I had not a sixpence in my pocket, +studying in a garret in Edinburgh, then I now find when sitting +amidst all the elegancies and comforts of a parlour." + +William Cobbett's account of how he learnt English Grammar is full +of interest and instruction for all students labouring under +difficulties. "I learned grammar," said he, "when I was a private +soldier on the pay of sixpence a day. The edge of my berth, or +that of my guard-bed, was my seat to study in; my knapsack was my +book-case; a bit of board lying on my lap was my writing-table; and +the task did not demand anything like a year of my life. I had no +money to purchase candle or oil; in winter time it was rarely that +I could get any evening light but that of the fire, and only my +turn even of that. And if I, under such circumstances, and without +parent or friend to advise or encourage me, accomplished this +undertaking, what excuse can there be for any youth, however poor, +however pressed with business, or however circumstanced as to room +or other conveniences? To buy a pen or a sheet of paper I was +compelled to forego some portion of food, though in a state of +half-starvation: I had no moment of time that I could call my own; +and I had to read and to write amidst the talking, laughing, +singing, whistling, and brawling of at least half a score of the +most thoughtless of men, and that, too, in the hours of their +freedom from all control. Think not lightly of the farthing that I +had to give, now and then, for ink, pen, or paper! That farthing +was, alas! a great sum to me! I was as tall as I am now; I had +great health and great exercise. The whole of the money, not +expended for us at market, was two-pence a week for each man. I +remember, and well I may! that on one occasion I, after all +necessary expenses, had, on a Friday, made shifts to have a +halfpenny in reserve, which I had destined for the purchase of a +redherring in the morning; but, when I pulled off my clothes at +night, so hungry then as to be hardly able to endure life, I found +that I had lost my halfpenny! I buried my head under the miserable +sheet and rug, and cried like a child! And again I say, if, I, +under circumstances like these, could encounter and overcome this +task, is there, can there be, in the whole world, a youth to find +an excuse for the non-performance?" + +We have been informed of an equally striking instance of +perseverance and application in learning on the part of a French +political exile in London. His original occupation was that of a +stonemason, at which he found employment for some time; but work +becoming slack, he lost his place, and poverty stared him in the +face. In his dilemma he called upon a fellow exile profitably +engaged in teaching French, and consulted him what he ought to do +to earn a living. The answer was, "Become a professor!" "A +professor?" answered the mason--"I, who am only a workman, speaking +but a patois! Surely you are jesting?" "On the contrary, I am +quite serious," said the other, "and again I advise you--become a +professor; place yourself under me, and I will undertake to teach +you how to teach others." "No, no!" replied the mason, "it is +impossible; I am too old to learn; I am too little of a scholar; I +cannot be a professor." He went away, and again he tried to obtain +employment at his trade. From London he went into the provinces, +and travelled several hundred miles in vain; he could not find a +master. Returning to London, he went direct to his former adviser, +and said, "I have tried everywhere for work, and failed; I will now +try to be a professor!" He immediately placed himself under +instruction; and being a man of close application, of quick +apprehension, and vigorous intelligence, he speedily mastered the +elements of grammar, the rules of construction and composition, and +(what he had still in a great measure to learn) the correct +pronunciation of classical French. When his friend and instructor +thought him sufficiently competent to undertake the teaching of +others, an appointment, advertised as vacant, was applied for and +obtained; and behold our artisan at length become professor! It so +happened, that the seminary to which he was appointed was situated +in a suburb of London where he had formerly worked as a stonemason; +and every morning the first thing which met his eyes on looking out +of his dressing-room window was a stack of cottage chimneys which +he had himself built! He feared for a time lest he should be +recognised in the village as the quondam workman, and thus bring +discredit on his seminary, which was of high standing. But he need +have been under no such apprehension, as he proved a most efficient +teacher, and his pupils were on more than one occasion publicly +complimented for their knowledge of French. Meanwhile, he secured +the respect and friendship of all who knew him--fellow-professors +as well as pupils; and when the story of his struggles, his +difficulties, and his past history, became known to them, they +admired him more than ever. + +Sir Samuel Romilly was not less indefatigable as a self-cultivator. +The son of a jeweller, descended from a French refugee, he received +little education in his early years, but overcame all his +disadvantages by unwearied application, and by efforts constantly +directed towards the same end. "I determined," he says, in his +autobiography, "when I was between fifteen and sixteen years of +age, to apply myself seriously to learning Latin, of which I, at +that time, knew little more than some of the most familiar rules of +grammar. In the course of three or four years, during which I thus +applied myself, I had read almost every prose writer of the age of +pure Latinity, except those who have treated merely of technical +subjects, such as Varro, Columella, and Celsus. I had gone three +times through the whole of Livy, Sallust, and Tacitus. I had +studied the most celebrated orations of Cicero, and translated a +great deal of Homer. Terence, Virgil, Horace, Ovid, and Juvenal, I +had read over and over again." He also studied geography, natural +history, and natural philosophy, and obtained a considerable +acquaintance with general knowledge. At sixteen he was articled to +a clerk in Chancery; worked hard; was admitted to the bar; and his +industry and perseverance ensured success. He became Solicitor- +General under the Fox administration in 1806, and steadily worked +his way to the highest celebrity in his profession. Yet he was +always haunted by a painful and almost oppressive sense of his own +disqualifications, and never ceased labouring to remedy them. His +autobiography is a lesson of instructive facts, worth volumes of +sentiment, and well deserves a careful perusal. + +Sir Walter Scott was accustomed to cite the case of his young +friend John Leyden as one of the most remarkable illustrations of +the power of perseverance which he had ever known. The son of a +shepherd in one of the wildest valleys of Roxburghshire, he was +almost entirely self educated. Like many Scotch shepherds' sons-- +like Hogg, who taught himself to write by copying the letters of a +printed book as he lay watching his flock on the hill-side--like +Cairns, who from tending sheep on the Lammermoors, raised himself +by dint of application and industry to the professor's chair which +he now so worthily holds--like Murray, Ferguson, and many more, +Leyden was early inspired by a thirst for knowledge. When a poor +barefooted boy, he walked six or eight miles across the moors daily +to learn reading at the little village schoolhouse of Kirkton; and +this was all the education he received; the rest he acquired for +himself. He found his way to Edinburgh to attend the college +there, setting the extremest penury at defiance. He was first +discovered as a frequenter of a small bookseller's shop kept by +Archibald Constable, afterwards so well known as a publisher. He +would pass hour after hour perched on a ladder in mid-air, with +some great folio in his hand, forgetful of the scanty meal of bread +and water which awaited him at his miserable lodging. Access to +books and lectures comprised all within the bounds of his wishes. +Thus he toiled and battled at the gates of science until his +unconquerable perseverance carried everything before it. Before he +had attained his nineteenth year he had astonished all the +professors in Edinburgh by his profound knowledge of Greek and +Latin, and the general mass of information he had acquired. Having +turned his views to India, he sought employment in the civil +service, but failed. He was however informed that a surgeon's +assistant's commission was open to him. But he was no surgeon, and +knew no more of the profession than a child. He could however +learn. Then he was told that he must be ready to pass in six +months! Nothing daunted, he set to work, to acquire in six months +what usually required three years. At the end of six months he +took his degree with honour. Scott and a few friends helped to fit +him out; and he sailed for India, after publishing his beautiful +poem 'The Scenes of Infancy.' In India he promised to become one +of the greatest of oriental scholars, but was unhappily cut off by +fever caught by exposure, and died at an early age. + +The life of the late Dr. Lee, Professor of Hebrew at Cambridge, +furnishes one of the most remarkable instances in modern times of +the power of patient perseverance and resolute purpose in working +out an honourable career in literature. He received his education +at a charity school at Lognor, near Shrewsbury, but so little +distinguished himself there, that his master pronounced him one of +the dullest boys that ever passed through his hands. He was put +apprentice to a carpenter, and worked at that trade until he +arrived at manhood. To occupy his leisure hours he took to +reading; and, some of the books containing Latin quotations, he +became desirous of ascertaining what they meant. He bought a Latin +grammar, and proceeded to learn Latin. As Stone, the Duke of +Argyle's gardener, said, long before, "Does one need to know +anything more than the twenty-four letters in order to learn +everything else that one wishes?" Lee rose early and sat up late, +and he succeeded in mastering the Latin before his apprenticeship +was out. Whilst working one day in some place of worship, a copy +of a Greek Testament fell in his way, and he was immediately filled +with the desire to learn that language. He accordingly sold some +of his Latin books, and purchased a Greek Grammar and Lexicon. +Taking pleasure in learning, he soon mastered the language. Then +he sold his Greek books, and bought Hebrew ones, and learnt that +language, unassisted by any instructor, without any hope of fame or +reward, but simply following the bent of his genius. He next +proceeded to learn the Chaldee, Syriac, and Samaritan dialects. +But his studies began to tell upon his health, and brought on +disease in his eyes through his long night watchings with his +books. Having laid them aside for a time and recovered his health, +he went on with his daily work. His character as a tradesman being +excellent, his business improved, and his means enabled him to +marry, which he did when twenty-eight years old. He determined now +to devote himself to the maintenance of his family, and to renounce +the luxury of literature; accordingly he sold all his books. He +might have continued a working carpenter all his life, had not the +chest of tools upon which he depended for subsistence been +destroyed by fire, and destitution stared him in the face. He was +too poor to buy new tools, so he bethought him of teaching children +their letters,--a profession requiring the least possible capital. +But though he had mastered many languages, he was so defective in +the common branches of knowledge, that at first he could not teach +them. Resolute of purpose, however, he assiduously set to work, +and taught himself arithmetic and writing to such a degree as to be +able to impart the knowledge of these branches to little children. +His unaffected, simple, and beautiful character gradually attracted +friends, and the acquirements of the "learned carpenter" became +bruited abroad. Dr. Scott, a neighbouring clergyman, obtained for +him the appointment of master of a charity school in Shrewsbury, +and introduced him to a distinguished Oriental scholar. These +friends supplied him with books, and Lee successively mastered +Arabic, Persic, and Hindostanee. He continued to pursue his +studies while on duty as a private in the local militia of the +county; gradually acquiring greater proficiency in languages. At +length his kind patron, Dr. Scott, enabled Lee to enter Queen's +College, Cambridge; and after a course of study, in which he +distinguished himself by his mathematical acquirements, a vacancy +occurring in the professorship of Arabic and Hebrew, he was +worthily elected to fill the honourable office. Besides ably +performing his duties as a professor, he voluntarily gave much of +his time to the instruction of missionaries going forth to preach +the Gospel to eastern tribes in their own tongue. He also made +translations of the Bible into several Asiatic dialects; and having +mastered the New Zealand language, he arranged a grammar and +vocabulary for two New Zealand chiefs who were then in England, +which books are now in daily use in the New Zealand schools. Such, +in brief, is the remarkable history of Dr. Samuel Lee; and it is +but the counterpart of numerous similarly instructive examples of +the power of perseverance in self-culture, as displayed in the +lives of many of the most distinguished of our literary and +scientific men. + +There are many other illustrious names which might be cited to +prove the truth of the common saying that "it is never too late to +learn." Even at advanced years men can do much, if they will +determine on making a beginning. Sir Henry Spelman did not begin +the study of science until he was between fifty and sixty years of +age. Franklin was fifty before he fully entered upon the study of +Natural Philosophy. Dryden and Scott were not known as authors +until each was in his fortieth year. Boccaccio was thirty-five +when he commenced his literary career, and Alfieri was forty-six +when he began the study of Greek. Dr. Arnold learnt German at an +advanced age, for the purpose of reading Niebuhr in the original; +and in like manner James Watt, when about forty, while working at +his trade of an instrument maker in Glasgow, learnt French, German, +and Italian, to enable himself to peruse the valuable works on +mechanical philosophy which existed in those languages. Thomas +Scott was fifty-six before he began to learn Hebrew. Robert Hall +was once found lying upon the floor, racked by pain, learning +Italian in his old age, to enable him to judge of the parallel +drawn by Macaulay between Milton and Dante. Handel was forty-eight +before he published any of his great works. Indeed hundreds of +instances might be given of men who struck out an entirely new +path, and successfully entered on new studies, at a comparatively +advanced time of life. None but the frivolous or the indolent will +say, "I am too old to learn." {31} + +And here we would repeat what we have said before, that it is not +men of genius who move the world and take the lead in it, so much +as men of steadfastness, purpose, and indefatigable industry. +Notwithstanding the many undeniable instances of the precocity of +men of genius, it is nevertheless true that early cleverness gives +no indication of the height to which the grown man will reach. +Precocity is sometimes a symptom of disease rather than of +intellectual vigour. What becomes of all the "remarkably clever +children?" Where are the duxes and prize boys? Trace them through +life, and it will frequently be found that the dull boys, who were +beaten at school, have shot ahead of them. The clever boys are +rewarded, but the prizes which they gain by their greater quickness +and facility do not always prove of use to them. What ought rather +to be rewarded is the endeavour, the struggle, and the obedience; +for it is the youth who does his best, though endowed with an +inferiority of natural powers, that ought above all others to be +encouraged. + +An interesting chapter might be written on the subject of +illustrious dunces--dull boys, but brilliant men. We have room, +however, for only a few instances. Pietro di Cortona, the painter, +was thought so stupid that he was nicknamed "Ass's Head" when a +boy; and Tomaso Guidi was generally known as "Heavy Tom" (Massaccio +Tomasaccio), though by diligence he afterwards raised himself to +the highest eminence. Newton, when at school, stood at the bottom +of the lowest form but one. The boy above Newton having kicked +him, the dunce showed his pluck by challenging him to a fight, and +beat him. Then he set to work with a will, and determined also to +vanquish his antagonist as a scholar, which he did, rising to the +top of his class. Many of our greatest divines have been anything +but precocious. Isaac Barrow, when a boy at the Charterhouse +School, was notorious chiefly for his strong temper, pugnacious +habits, and proverbial idleness as a scholar; and he caused such +grief to his parents that his father used to say that, if it +pleased God to take from him any of his children, he hoped it might +be Isaac, the least promising of them all. Adam Clarke, when a +boy, was proclaimed by his father to be "a grievous dunce;" though +he could roll large stones about. Dean Swift was "plucked" at +Dublin University, and only obtained his recommendation to Oxford +"speciali gratia." The well-known Dr. Chalmers and Dr. Cook {32} +were boys together at the parish school of St. Andrew's; and they +were found so stupid and mischievous, that the master, irritated +beyond measure, dismissed them both as incorrigible dunces. + +The brilliant Sheridan showed so little capacity as a boy, that he +was presented to a tutor by his mother with the complimentary +accompaniment that he was an incorrigible dunce. Walter Scott was +all but a dunce when a boy, always much readier for a "bicker," +than apt at his lessons. At the Edinburgh University, Professor +Dalzell pronounced upon him the sentence that "Dunce he was, and +dunce he would remain." Chatterton was returned on his mother's +hands as "a fool, of whom nothing could be made." Burns was a dull +boy, good only at athletic exercises. Goldsmith spoke of himself, +as a plant that flowered late. Alfieri left college no wiser than +he entered it, and did not begin the studies by which he +distinguished himself, until he had run half over Europe. Robert +Clive was a dunce, if not a reprobate, when a youth; but always +full of energy, even in badness. His family, glad to get rid of +him, shipped him off to Madras; and he lived to lay the foundations +of the British power in India. Napoleon and Wellington were both +dull boys, not distinguishing themselves in any way at school. {33} +Of the former the Duchess d'Abrantes says, "he had good health, but +was in other respects like other boys." + +Ulysses Grant, the Commander-in-Chief of the United States, was +called "Useless Grant" by his mother--he was so dull and unhandy +when a boy; and Stonewall Jackson, Lee's greatest lieutenant, was, +in his youth, chiefly noted for his slowness. While a pupil at +West Point Military Academy he was, however, equally remarkable for +his indefatigable application and perseverance. When a task was +set him, he never left it until he had mastered it; nor did he ever +feign to possess knowledge which he had not entirely acquired. +"Again and again," wrote one who knew him, "when called upon to +answer questions in the recitation of the day, he would reply, 'I +have not yet looked at it; I have been engaged in mastering the +recitation of yesterday or the day before.' The result was that he +graduated seventeenth in a class of seventy. There was probably in +the whole class not a boy to whom Jackson at the outset was not +inferior in knowledge and attainments; but at the end of the race +he had only sixteen before him, and had outstripped no fewer than +fifty-three. It used to be said of him by his contemporaries, that +if the course had been for ten years instead of four, Jackson would +have graduated at the head of his class." {34} + +John Howard, the philanthropist, was another illustrious dunce, +learning next to nothing during the seven years that he was at +school. Stephenson, as a youth, was distinguished chiefly for his +skill at putting and wrestling, and attention to his work. The +brilliant Sir Humphry Davy was no cleverer than other boys: his +teacher, Dr. Cardew, once said of him, "While he was with me I +could not discern the faculties by which he was so much +distinguished." Indeed, Davy himself in after life considered it +fortunate that he had been left to "enjoy so much idleness" at +school. Watt was a dull scholar, notwithstanding the stories told +about his precocity; but he was, what was better, patient and +perseverant, and it was by such qualities, and by his carefully +cultivated inventiveness, that he was enabled to perfect his steam- +engine. + +What Dr. Arnold said of boys is equally true of men--that the +difference between one boy and another consists not so much in +talent as in energy. Given perseverance and energy soon becomes +habitual. Provided the dunce has persistency and application he +will inevitably head the cleverer fellow without those qualities. +Slow but sure wins the race. It is perseverance that explains how +the position of boys at school is so often reversed in real life; +and it is curious to note how some who were then so clever have +since become so commonplace; whilst others, dull boys, of whom +nothing was expected, slow in their faculties but sure in their +pace, have assumed the position of leaders of men. The author of +this book, when a boy, stood in the same class with one of the +greatest of dunces. One teacher after another had tried his skill +upon him and failed. Corporal punishment, the fool's cap, coaxing, +and earnest entreaty, proved alike fruitless. Sometimes the +experiment was tried of putting him at the top of his class, and it +was curious to note the rapidity with which he gravitated to the +inevitable bottom. The youth was given up by his teachers as an +incorrigible dunce--one of them pronouncing him to be a "stupendous +booby." Yet, slow though he was, this dunce had a sort of dull +energy of purpose in him, which grew with his muscles and his +manhood; and, strange to say, when he at length came to take part +in the practical business of life, he was found heading most of his +school companions, and eventually left the greater number of them +far behind. The last time the author heard of him, he was chief +magistrate of his native town. + +The tortoise in the right road will beat a racer in the wrong. It +matters not though a youth be slow, if he be but diligent. +Quickness of parts may even prove a defect, inasmuch as the boy who +learns readily will often forget as readily; and also because he +finds no need of cultivating that quality of application and +perseverance which the slower youth is compelled to exercise, and +which proves so valuable an element in the formation of every +character. Davy said "What I am I have made myself;" and the same +holds true universally. + +To conclude: the best culture is not obtained from teachers when +at school or college, so much as by our own diligent self-education +when we have become men. Hence parents need not be in too great +haste to see their children's talents forced into bloom. Let them +watch and wait patiently, letting good example and quiet training +do their work, and leave the rest to Providence. Let them see to +it that the youth is provided, by free exercise of his bodily +powers, with a full stock of physical health; set him fairly on the +road of self-culture; carefully train his habits of application and +perseverance; and as he grows older, if the right stuff be in him, +he will be enabled vigorously and effectively to cultivate himself. + + + +CHAPTER XII--EXAMPLE--MODELS + + + +"Ever their phantoms rise before us, +Our loftier brothers, but one in blood; +By bed and table they lord it o'er us, +With looks of beauty and words of good."--John Sterling. + +"Children may be strangled, but Deeds never; they have an +indestructible life, both in and out of our consciousness."--George +Eliot. + +"There is no action of man in this life, which is not the beginning +of so long a chain of consequences, as that no human providence is +high enough to give us a prospect to the end."--Thomas of +Malmesbury. + + +Example is one of the most potent of instructors, though it teaches +without a tongue. It is the practical school of mankind, working +by action, which is always more forcible than words. Precept may +point to us the way, but it is silent continuous example, conveyed +to us by habits, and living with us in fact, that carries us along. +Good advice has its weight: but without the accompaniment of a +good example it is of comparatively small influence; and it will be +found that the common saying of "Do as I say, not as I do," is +usually reversed in the actual experience of life. + +All persons are more or less apt to learn through the eye rather +than the ear; and, whatever is seen in fact, makes a far deeper +impression than anything that is merely read or heard. This is +especially the case in early youth, when the eye is the chief inlet +of knowledge. Whatever children see they unconsciously imitate. +They insensibly come to resemble those who are about them--as +insects take the colour of the leaves they feed on. Hence the vast +importance of domestic training. For whatever may be the +efficiency of schools, the examples set in our Homes must always be +of vastly greater influence in forming the characters of our future +men and women. The Home is the crystal of society--the nucleus of +national character; and from that source, be it pure or tainted, +issue the habits, principles and maxims, which govern public as +well as private life. The nation comes from the nursery. Public +opinion itself is for the most part the outgrowth of the home; and +the best philanthropy comes from the fireside. "To love the little +platoon we belong to in society," says Burke, "is the germ of all +public affections." From this little central spot, the human +sympathies may extend in an ever widening circle, until the world +is embraced; for, though true philanthropy, like charity, begins at +home, assuredly it does not end there. + +Example in conduct, therefore, even in apparently trivial matters, +is of no light moment, inasmuch as it is constantly becoming +inwoven with the lives of others, and contributing to form their +natures for better or for worse. The characters of parents are +thus constantly repeated in their children; and the acts of +affection, discipline, industry, and self-control, which they daily +exemplify, live and act when all else which may have been learned +through the ear has long been forgotten. Hence a wise man was +accustomed to speak of his children as his "future state." Even +the mute action and unconscious look of a parent may give a stamp +to the character which is never effaced; and who can tell how much +evil act has been stayed by the thought of some good parent, whose +memory their children may not sully by the commission of an +unworthy deed, or the indulgence of an impure thought? The veriest +trifles thus become of importance in influencing the characters of +men. "A kiss from my mother," said West, "made me a painter." It +is on the direction of such seeming trifles when children that the +future happiness and success of men mainly depend. Fowell Buxton, +when occupying an eminent and influential station in life, wrote to +his mother, "I constantly feel, especially in action and exertion +for others, the effects of principles early implanted by you in my +mind." Buxton was also accustomed to remember with gratitude the +obligations which he owed to an illiterate man, a gamekeeper, named +Abraham Plastow, with whom he played, and rode, and sported--a man +who could neither read nor write, but was full of natural good +sense and mother-wit. "What made him particularly valuable," says +Buxton, "were his principles of integrity and honour. He never +said or did a thing in the absence of my mother of which she would +have disapproved. He always held up the highest standard of +integrity, and filled our youthful minds with sentiments as pure +and as generous as could be found in the writings of Seneca or +Cicero. Such was my first instructor, and, I must add, my best." + +Lord Langdale, looking back upon the admirable example set him by +his mother, declared, "If the whole world were put into one scale, +and my mother into the other, the world would kick the beam." Mrs. +Schimmel Penninck, in her old age, was accustomed to call to mind +the personal influence exercised by her mother upon the society +amidst which she moved. When she entered a room it had the effect +of immediately raising the tone of the conversation, and as if +purifying the moral atmosphere--all seeming to breathe more freely, +and stand more erectly. "In her presence," says the daughter, "I +became for the time transformed into another person." So much does +she moral health depend upon the moral atmosphere that is breathed, +and so great is the influence daily exercised by parents over their +children by living a life before their eyes, that perhaps the best +system of parental instruction might be summed up in these two +words: "Improve thyself." + +There is something solemn and awful in the thought that there is +not an act done or a word uttered by a human being but carries with +it a train of consequences, the end of which we may never trace. +Not one but, to a certain extent, gives a colour to our life, and +insensibly influences the lives of those about us. The good deed +or word will live, even though we may not see it fructify, but so +will the bad; and no person is so insignificant as to be sure that +his example will not do good on the one hand, or evil on the other. +The spirits of men do not die: they still live and walk abroad +among us. It was a fine and a true thought uttered by Mr. Disraeli +in the House of Commons on the death of Richard Cobden, that "he +was one of those men who, though not present, were still members of +that House, who were independent of dissolutions, of the caprices +of constituencies, and even of the course of time." + +There is, indeed, an essence of immortality in the life of man, +even in this world. No individual in the universe stands alone; he +is a component part of a system of mutual dependencies; and by his +several acts he either increases or diminishes the sum of human +good now and for ever. As the present is rooted in the past, and +the lives and examples of our forefathers still to a great extent +influence us, so are we by our daily acts contributing to form the +condition and character of the future. Man is a fruit formed and +ripened by the culture of all the foregoing centuries; and the +living generation continues the magnetic current of action and +example destined to bind the remotest past with the most distant +future. No man's acts die utterly; and though his body may resolve +into dust and air, his good or his bad deeds will still be bringing +forth fruit after their kind, and influencing future generations +for all time to come. It is in this momentous and solemn fact that +the great peril and responsibility of human existence lies. + +Mr. Babbage has so powerfully expressed this idea in a noble +passage in one of his writings that we here venture to quote his +words: "Every atom," he says, "impressed with good or ill, retains +at once the motions which philosophers and sages have imparted to +it, mixed and combined in ten thousand ways with all that is +worthless and base; the air itself is one vast library, on whose +pages are written FOR EVER all that man has ever said or whispered. +There, in their immutable but unerring characters, mixed with the +earliest as well as the latest sighs of mortality, stand for ever +recorded vows unredeemed, promises unfulfilled; perpetuating, in +the united movements of each particle, the testimony of man's +changeful will. But, if the air we breathe is the never-failing +historian of the sentiments we have uttered, earth, air, and ocean, +are, in like manner, the eternal witnesses of the acts we have +done; the same principle of the equality of action and reaction +applies to them. No motion impressed by natural causes, or by +human agency, is ever obliterated. . . . If the Almighty stamped on +the brow of the first murderer the indelible and visible mark of +his guilt, He has also established laws by which every succeeding +criminal is not less irrevocably chained to the testimony of his +crime; for every atom of his mortal frame, through whatever changes +its severed particles may migrate, will still retain adhering to +it, through every combination, some movement derived from that very +muscular effort by which the crime itself was perpetrated." + +Thus, every act we do or word we utter, as well as every act we +witness or word we hear, carries with it an influence which extends +over, and gives a colour, not only to the whole of our future life, +but makes itself felt upon the whole frame of society. We may not, +and indeed cannot, possibly, trace the influence working itself +into action in its various ramifications amongst our children, our +friends, or associates; yet there it is assuredly, working on for +ever. And herein lies the great significance of setting forth a +good example,--a silent teaching which even the poorest and least +significant person can practise in his daily life. There is no one +so humble, but that he owes to others this simple but priceless +instruction. Even the meanest condition may thus be made useful; +for the light set in a low place shines as faithfully as that set +upon a hill. Everywhere, and under almost all circumstances, +however externally adverse--in moorland shielings, in cottage +hamlets, in the close alleys of great towns--the true man may grow. +He who tills a space of earth scarce bigger than is needed for his +grave, may work as faithfully, and to as good purpose, as the heir +to thousands. The commonest workshop may thus be a school of +industry, science, and good morals, on the one hand; or of +idleness, folly, and depravity, on the other. It all depends on +the individual men, and the use they make of the opportunities for +good which offer themselves. + +A life well spent, a character uprightly sustained, is no slight +legacy to leave to one's children, and to the world; for it is the +most eloquent lesson of virtue and the severest reproof of vice, +while it continues an enduring source of the best kind of riches. +Well for those who can say, as Pope did, in rejoinder to the +sarcasm of Lord Hervey, "I think it enough that my parents, such as +they were, never cost me a blush, and that their son, such as he +is, never cost them a tear." + +It is not enough to tell others what they are to do, but to exhibit +the actual example of doing. What Mrs. Chisholm described to Mrs. +Stowe as the secret of her success, applies to all life. "I +found," she said, "that if we want anything DONE, we must go to +work and DO: it is of no use merely to talk--none whatever." It +is poor eloquence that only shows how a person can talk. Had Mrs. +Chisholm rested satisfied with lecturing, her project, she was +persuaded, would never have got beyond the region of talk; but when +people saw what she was doing and had actually accomplished, they +fell in with her views and came forward to help her. Hence the +most beneficent worker is not he who says the most eloquent things, +or even who thinks the most loftily, but he who does the most +eloquent acts. + +True-hearted persons, even in the humblest station in life, who are +energetic doers, may thus give an impulse to good works out of all +proportion, apparently, to their actual station in society. Thomas +Wright might have talked about the reclamation of criminals, and +John Pounds about the necessity for Ragged Schools, and yet done +nothing; instead of which they simply set to work without any other +idea in their minds than that of doing, not talking. And how the +example of even the poorest man may tell upon society, hear what +Dr. Guthrie, the apostle of the Ragged School movement, says of the +influence which the example of John Pounds, the humble Portsmouth +cobbler, exercised upon his own working career:- + +"The interest I have been led to take in this cause is an example +of how, in Providence, a man's destiny--his course of life, like +that of a river--may be determined and affected by very trivial +circumstances. It is rather curious--at least it is interesting to +me to remember--that it was by a picture I was first led to take an +interest in ragged schools--by a picture in an old, obscure, +decaying burgh that stands on the shores of the Frith of Forth, the +birthplace of Thomas Chalmers. I went to see this place many years +ago; and, going into an inn for refreshment, I found the room +covered with pictures of shepherdesses with their crooks, and +sailors in holiday attire, not particularly interesting. But above +the chimney-piece there was a large print, more respectable than +its neighbours, which represented a cobbler's room. The cobbler +was there himself, spectacles on nose, an old shoe between his +knees--the massive forehead and firm mouth indicating great +determination of character, and, beneath his bushy eyebrows, +benevolence gleamed out on a number of poor ragged boys and girls +who stood at their lessons round the busy cobbler. My curiosity +was awakened; and in the inscription I read how this man, John +Pounds, a cobbler in Portsmouth, taking pity on the multitude of +poor ragged children left by ministers and magistrates, and ladies +and gentlemen, to go to ruin on the streets--how, like a good +shepherd, he gathered in these wretched outcasts--how he had +trained them to God and to the world--and how, while earning his +daily bread by the sweat of his brow, he had rescued from misery +and saved to society not less than five hundred of these children. +I felt ashamed of myself. I felt reproved for the little I had +done. My feelings were touched. I was astonished at this man's +achievements; and I well remember, in the enthusiasm of the moment, +saying to my companion (and I have seen in my cooler and calmer +moments no reason for unsaying the saying)--'That man is an honour +to humanity, and deserves the tallest monument ever raised within +the shores of Britain.' I took up that man's history, and I found +it animated by the spirit of Him who 'had compassion on the +multitude.' John Pounds was a clever man besides; and, like Paul, +if he could not win a poor boy any other way, he won him by art. +He would be seen chasing a ragged boy along the quays, and +compelling him to come to school, not by the power of a policeman, +but by the power of a hot potato. He knew the love an Irishman had +for a potato; and John Pounds might be seen running holding under +the boy's nose a potato, like an Irishman, very hot, and with a +coat as ragged as himself. When the day comes when honour will be +done to whom honour is due, I can fancy the crowd of those whose +fame poets have sung, and to whose memory monuments have been +raised, dividing like the wave, and, passing the great, and the +noble, and the mighty of the land, this poor, obscure old man +stepping forward and receiving the especial notice of Him who said +'Inasmuch as ye did it to one of the least of these, ye did it also +to Me.'" + +The education of character is very much a question of models; we +mould ourselves so unconsciously after the characters, manners, +habits, and opinions of those who are about us. Good rules may do +much, but good models far more; for in the latter we have +instruction in action--wisdom at work. Good admonition and bad +example only build with one hand to pull down with the other. +Hence the vast importance of exercising great care in the selection +of companions, especially in youth. There is a magnetic affinity +in young persons which insensibly tends to assimilate them to each +other's likeness. Mr. Edgeworth was so strongly convinced that +from sympathy they involuntarily imitated or caught the tone of the +company they frequented, that he held it to be of the most +essential importance that they should be taught to select the very +best models. "No company, or good company," was his motto. Lord +Collingwood, writing to a young friend, said, "Hold it as a maxim +that you had better be alone than in mean company. Let your +companions be such as yourself, or superior; for the worth of a man +will always be ruled by that of his company." It was a remark of +the famous Dr. Sydenham that everybody some time or other would be +the better or the worse for having but spoken to a good or a bad +man. As Sir Peter Lely made it a rule never to look at a bad +picture if he could help it, believing that whenever he did so his +pencil caught a taint from it, so, whoever chooses to gaze often +upon a debased specimen of humanity and to frequent his society, +cannot help gradually assimilating himself to that sort of model. + +It is therefore advisable for young men to seek the fellowship of +the good, and always to aim at a higher standard than themselves. +Francis Horner, speaking of the advantages to himself of direct +personal intercourse with high-minded, intelligent men, said, "I +cannot hesitate to decide that I have derived more intellectual +improvement from them than from all the books I have turned over." +Lord Shelburne (afterwards Marquis of Lansdowne), when a young man, +paid a visit to the venerable Malesherbes, and was so much +impressed by it, that he said,--"I have travelled much, but I have +never been so influenced by personal contact with any man; and if I +ever accomplish any good in the course of my life, I am certain +that the recollection of M. de Malesherbes will animate my soul." +So Fowell Buxton was always ready to acknowledge the powerful +influence exercised upon the formation of his character in early +life by the example of the Gurney family: "It has given a colour +to my life," he used to say. Speaking of his success at the Dublin +University, he confessed, "I can ascribe it to nothing but my +Earlham visits." It was from the Gurneys he "caught the infection" +of self-improvement. + +Contact with the good never fails to impart good, and we carry away +with us some of the blessing, as travellers' garments retain the +odour of the flowers and shrubs through which they have passed. +Those who knew the late John Sterling intimately, have spoken of +the beneficial influence which he exercised on all with whom he +came into personal contact. Many owed to him their first awakening +to a higher being; from him they learnt what they were, and what +they ought to be. Mr. Trench says of him:- "It was impossible to +come in contact with his noble nature without feeling one's self in +some measure ENNOBLED and LIFTED UP, as I ever felt when I left +him, into a higher region of objects and aims than that in which +one is tempted habitually to dwell." It is thus that the noble +character always acts; we become insensibly elevated by him, and +cannot help feeling as he does and acquiring the habit of looking +at things in the same light. Such is the magical action and +reaction of minds upon each other. + +Artists, also, feel themselves elevated by contact with artists +greater than themselves. Thus Haydn's genius was first fired by +Handel. Hearing him play, Haydn's ardour for musical composition +was at once excited, and but for this circumstance, he himself +believed that he would never have written the 'Creation.' Speaking +of Handel, he said, "When he chooses, he strikes like the +thunderbolt;" and at another time, "There is not a note of him but +draws blood." Scarlatti was another of Handel's ardent admirers, +following him all over Italy; afterwards, when speaking of the +great master, he would cross himself in token of admiration. True +artists never fail generously to recognise each other's greatness. +Thus Beethoven's admiration for Cherubini was regal: and he +ardently hailed the genius of Schubert: "Truly," said he, "in +Schubert dwells a divine fire." When Northcote was a mere youth he +had such an admiration for Reynolds that, when the great painter +was once attending a public meeting down in Devonshire, the boy +pushed through the crowd, and got so near Reynolds as to touch the +skirt of his coat, "which I did," says Northcote, "with great +satisfaction to my mind,"--a true touch of youthful enthusiasm in +its admiration of genius. + +The example of the brave is an inspiration to the timid, their +presence thrilling through every fibre. Hence the miracles of +valour so often performed by ordinary men under the leadership of +the heroic. The very recollection of the deeds of the valiant +stirs men's blood like the sound of a trumpet. Ziska bequeathed +his skin to be used as a drum to inspire the valour of the +Bohemians. When Scanderbeg, prince of Epirus, was dead, the Turks +wished to possess his bones, that each might wear a piece next his +heart, hoping thus to secure some portion of the courage he had +displayed while living, and which they had so often experienced in +battle. When the gallant Douglas, bearing the heart of Bruce to +the Holy Land, saw one of his knights surrounded and sorely pressed +by the Saracens, he took from his neck the silver case containing +the hero's bequest, and throwing it amidst the thickest press of +his foes, cried, "Pass first in fight, as thou wert wont to do, and +Douglas will follow thee, or die;" and so saying, he rushed forward +to the place where it fell, and was there slain. + +The chief use of biography consists in the noble models of +character in which it abounds. Our great forefathers still live +among us in the records of their lives, as well as in the acts they +have done, which live also; still sit by us at table, and hold us +by the hand; furnishing examples for our benefit, which we may +still study, admire and imitate. Indeed, whoever has left behind +him the record of a noble life, has bequeathed to posterity an +enduring source of good, for it serves as a model for others to +form themselves by in all time to come; still breathing fresh life +into men, helping them to reproduce his life anew, and to +illustrate his character in other forms. Hence a book containing +the life of a true man is full of precious seed. It is a still +living voice; it is an intellect. To use Milton's words, "it is +the precious life-blood of a master spirit, embalmed and treasured +up on purpose to a life beyond life." Such a book never ceases to +exercise an elevating and ennobling influence. But, above all, +there is the Book containing the very highest Example set before us +to shape our lives by in this world--the most suitable for all the +necessities of our mind and heart--an example which we can only +follow afar off and feel after, + + +"Like plants or vines which never saw the sun, +But dream of him and guess where he may be, +And do their best to climb and get to him." + + +Again, no young man can rise from the perusal of such lives as +those of Buxton and Arnold, without feeling his mind and heart made +better, and his best resolves invigorated. Such biographies +increase a man's self-reliance by demonstrating what men can be, +and what they can do; fortifying his hopes and elevating his aims +in life. Sometimes a young man discovers himself in a biography, +as Correggio felt within him the risings of genius on contemplating +the works of Michael Angelo: "And I too, am a painter," he +exclaimed. Sir Samuel Romilly, in his autobiography, confessed +himself to have been powerfully influenced by the life of the great +and noble-minded French Chancellor Daguesseau:- "The works of +Thomas," says he, "had fallen into my hands, and I had read with +admiration his 'Eloge of Daguesseau;' and the career of honour +which he represented that illustrious magistrate to have run, +excited to a great degree my ardour and ambition, and opened to my +imagination new paths of glory." + +Franklin was accustomed to attribute his usefulness and eminence to +his having early read Cotton Mather's 'Essays to do Good'--a book +which grew out of Mather's own life. And see how good example +draws other men after it, and propagates itself through future +generations in all lands. For Samuel Drew avers that he framed his +own life, and especially his business habits, after the model left +on record by Benjamin Franklin. Thus it is impossible to say where +a good example may not reach, or where it will end, if indeed it +have an end. Hence the advantage, in literature as in life, of +keeping the best society, reading the best books, and wisely +admiring and imitating the best things we find in them. "In +literature," said Lord Dudley, "I am fond of confining myself to +the best company, which consists chiefly of my old acquaintance, +with whom I am desirous of becoming more intimate; and I suspect +that nine times out of ten it is more profitable, if not more +agreeable, to read an old book over again, than to read a new one +for the first time." + +Sometimes a book containing a noble exemplar of life, taken up at +random, merely with the object of reading it as a pastime, has been +known to call forth energies whose existence had not before been +suspected. Alfieri was first drawn with passion to literature by +reading 'Plutarch's Lives.' Loyola, when a soldier serving at the +siege of Pampeluna, and laid up by a dangerous wound in his leg, +asked for a book to divert his thoughts: the 'Lives of the Saints' +was brought to him, and its perusal so inflamed his mind, that he +determined thenceforth to devote himself to the founding of a +religious order. Luther, in like manner, was inspired to undertake +the great labours of his life by a perusal of the 'Life and +Writings of John Huss.' Dr. Wolff was stimulated to enter upon his +missionary career by reading the 'Life of Francis Xavier;' and the +book fired his youthful bosom with a passion the most sincere and +ardent to devote himself to the enterprise of his life. William +Carey, also, got the first idea of entering upon his sublime +labours as a missionary from a perusal of the Voyages of Captain +Cook. + +Francis Horner was accustomed to note in his diary and letters the +books by which he was most improved and influenced. Amongst these +were Condorcet's 'Eloge of Haller,' Sir Joshua Reynolds' +'Discourses,' the writings of Bacon, and 'Burnet's Account of Sir +Matthew Hale.' The perusal of the last-mentioned book--the +portrait of a prodigy of labour--Horner says, filled him with +enthusiasm. Of Condorcet's 'Eloge of Haller,' he said: "I never +rise from the account of such men without a sort of thrilling +palpitation about me, which I know not whether I should call +admiration, ambition, or despair." And speaking of the +'Discourses' of Sir Joshua Reynolds, he said: "Next to the +writings of Bacon, there is no book which has more powerfully +impelled me to self-culture. He is one of the first men of genius +who has condescended to inform the world of the steps by which +greatness is attained. The confidence with which he asserts the +omnipotence of human labour has the effect of familiarising his +reader with the idea that genius is an acquisition rather than a +gift; whilst with all there is blended so naturally and eloquently +the most elevated and passionate admiration of excellence, that +upon the whole there is no book of a more INFLAMMATORY effect." It +is remarkable that Reynolds himself attributed his first passionate +impulse towards the study of art, to reading Richardson's account +of a great painter; and Haydon was in like manner afterwards +inflamed to follow the same pursuit by reading of the career of +Reynolds. Thus the brave and aspiring life of one man lights a +flame in the minds of others of like faculties and impulse; and +where there is equally vigorous efforts like distinction and +success will almost surely follow. Thus the chain of example is +carried down through time in an endless succession of links,-- +admiration exciting imitation, and perpetuating the true +aristocracy of genius. + +One of the most valuable, and one of the most infectious examples +which can be set before the young, is that of cheerful working. +Cheerfulness gives elasticity to the spirit. Spectres fly before +it; difficulties cause no despair, for they are encountered with +hope, and the mind acquires that happy disposition to improve +opportunities which rarely fails of success. The fervent spirit is +always a healthy and happy spirit; working cheerfully itself, and +stimulating others to work. It confers a dignity on even the most +ordinary occupations. The most effective work, also, is usually +the full-hearted work--that which passes through the hands or the +head of him whose heart is glad. Hume was accustomed to say that +he would rather possess a cheerful disposition--inclined always to +look at the bright side of things--than with a gloomy mind to be +the master of an estate of ten thousand a year. Granville Sharp, +amidst his indefatigable labours on behalf of the slave, solaced +himself in the evenings by taking part in glees and instrumental +concerts at his brother's house, singing, or playing on the flute, +the clarionet or the oboe; and, at the Sunday evening oratorios, +when Handel was played, he beat the kettle-drums. He also +indulged, though sparingly, in caricature drawing. Fowell Buxton +also was an eminently cheerful man; taking special pleasure in +field sports, in riding about the country with his children, and in +mixing in all their domestic amusements. + +In another sphere of action, Dr. Arnold was a noble and a cheerful +worker, throwing himself into the great business of his life, the +training and teaching of young men, with his whole heart and soul. +It is stated in his admirable biography, that "the most remarkable +thing in the Laleham circle was the wonderful healthiness of tone +which prevailed there. It was a place where a new comer at once +felt that a great and earnest work was going forward. Every pupil +was made to feel that there was a work for him to do; that his +happiness, as well as his duty, lay in doing that work well. Hence +an indescribable zest was communicated to a young man's feeling +about life; a strange joy came over him on discerning that he had +the means of being useful, and thus of being happy; and a deep +respect and ardent attachment sprang up towards him who had taught +him thus to value life and his own self, and his work and mission +in the world. All this was founded on the breadth and +comprehensiveness of Arnold's character, as well as its striking +truth and reality; on the unfeigned regard he had for work of all +kinds, and the sense he had of its value, both for the complex +aggregate of society and the growth and protection of the +individual. In all this there was no excitement; no predilection +for one class of work above another; no enthusiasm for any one- +sided object: but a humble, profound, and most religious +consciousness that work is the appointed calling of man on earth; +the end for which his various faculties were given; the element in +which his nature is ordained to develop itself, and in which his +progressive advance towards heaven is to lie." Among the many +valuable men trained for public life and usefulness by Arnold, was +the gallant Hodson, of Hodson's Horse, who, writing home from +India, many years after, thus spoke of his revered master: "The +influence he produced has been most lasting and striking in its +effects. It is felt even in India; I cannot say more than THAT." + +The useful influence which a right-hearted man of energy and +industry may exercise amongst his neighbours and dependants, and +accomplish for his country, cannot, perhaps, be better illustrated +than by the career of Sir John Sinclair; characterized by the Abbe +Gregoire as "the most indefatigable man in Europe." He was +originally a country laird, born to a considerable estate situated +near John o' Groat's House, almost beyond the beat of civilization, +in a bare wild country fronting the stormy North Sea. His father +dying while he was a youth of sixteen, the management of the family +property thus early devolved upon him; and at eighteen he began a +course of vigorous improvement in the county of Caithness, which +eventually spread all over Scotland. Agriculture then was in a +most backward state; the fields were unenclosed, the lands +undrained; the small farmers of Caithness were so poor that they +could scarcely afford to keep a horse or shelty; the hard work was +chiefly done, and the burdens borne, by the women; and if a cottier +lost a horse it was not unusual for him to marry a wife as the +cheapest substitute. The country was without roads or bridges; and +drovers driving their cattle south had to swim the rivers along +with their beasts. The chief track leading into Caithness lay +along a high shelf on a mountain side, the road being some hundred +feet of clear perpendicular height above the sea which dashed +below. Sir John, though a mere youth, determined to make a new +road over the hill of Ben Cheilt, the old let-alone proprietors, +however, regarding his scheme with incredulity and derision. But +he himself laid out the road, assembled some twelve hundred workmen +early one summer's morning, set them simultaneously to work, +superintending their labours, and stimulating them by his presence +and example; and before night, what had been a dangerous sheep +track, six miles in length, hardly passable for led horses, was +made practicable for wheel-carriages as if by the power of magic. +It was an admirable example of energy and well-directed labour, +which could not fail to have a most salutary influence upon the +surrounding population. He then proceeded to make more roads, to +erect mills, to build bridges, and to enclose and cultivate the +waste lands. He introduced improved methods of culture, and +regular rotation of crops, distributing small premiums to encourage +industry; and he thus soon quickened the whole frame of society +within reach of his influence, and infused an entirely new spirit +into the cultivators of the soil. From being one of the most +inaccessible districts of the north--the very ultima Thule of +civilization--Caithness became a pattern county for its roads, its +agriculture, and its fisheries. In Sinclair's youth, the post was +carried by a runner only once a week, and the young baronet then +declared that he would never rest till a coach drove daily to +Thurso. The people of the neighbourhood could not believe in any +such thing, and it became a proverb in the county to say of an +utterly impossible scheme, "Ou, ay, that will come to pass when Sir +John sees the daily mail at Thurso!" But Sir John lived to see his +dream realized, and the daily mail established to Thurso. + +The circle of his benevolent operation gradually widened. +Observing the serious deterioration which had taken place in the +quality of British wool,--one of the staple commodities of the +country,--he forthwith, though but a private and little-known +country gentleman, devoted himself to its improvement. By his +personal exertions he established the British Wool Society for the +purpose, and himself led the way to practical improvement by +importing 800 sheep from all countries, at his own expense. The +result was, the introduction into Scotland of the celebrated +Cheviot breed. Sheep farmers scouted the idea of south country +flocks being able to thrive in the far north. But Sir John +persevered; and in a few years there were not fewer than 300,000 +Cheviots diffused over the four northern counties alone. The value +of all grazing land was thus enormously increased; and Scotch +estates, which before were comparatively worthless, began to yield +large rentals. + +Returned by Caithness to Parliament, in which he remained for +thirty years, rarely missing a division, his position gave him +farther opportunities of usefulness, which he did not neglect to +employ. Mr. Pitt, observing his persevering energy in all useful +public projects, sent for him to Downing Street, and voluntarily +proposed his assistance in any object he might have in view. +Another man might have thought of himself and his own promotion; +but Sir John characteristically replied, that he desired no favour +for himself, but intimated that the reward most gratifying to his +feelings would be Mr. Pitt's assistance in the establishment of a +National Board of Agriculture. Arthur Young laid a bet with the +baronet that his scheme would never be established, adding, "Your +Board of Agriculture will be in the moon!" But vigorously setting +to work, he roused public attention to the subject, enlisted a +majority of Parliament on his side, and eventually established the +Board, of which he was appointed President. The result of its +action need not be described, but the stimulus which it gave to +agriculture and stock-raising was shortly felt throughout the whole +United Kingdom, and tens of thousands of acres were redeemed from +barrenness by its operation. He was equally indefatigable in +encouraging the establishment of fisheries; and the successful +founding of these great branches of British industry at Thurso and +Wick was mainly due to his exertions. He urged for long years, and +at length succeeded in obtaining the enclosure of a harbour for the +latter place, which is perhaps the greatest and most prosperous +fishing town in the world. + +Sir John threw his personal energy into every work in which he +engaged, rousing the inert, stimulating the idle, encouraging the +hopeful, and working with all. When a French invasion was +threatened, he offered to Mr. Pitt to raise a regiment on his own +estate, and he was as good as his word. He went down to the north, +and raised a battalion of 600 men, afterwards increased to 1000; +and it was admitted to be one of the finest volunteer regiments +ever raised, inspired throughout by his own noble and patriotic +spirit. While commanding officer of the camp at Aberdeen he held +the offices of a Director of the Bank of Scotland, Chairman of the +British Wool Society, Provost of Wick, Director of the British +Fishery Society, Commissioner for issuing Exchequer Bills, Member +of Parliament for Caithness, and President of the Board of +Agriculture. Amidst all this multifarious and self-imposed work, +he even found time to write books, enough of themselves to +establish a reputation. When Mr. Rush, the American Ambassador, +arrived in England, he relates that he inquired of Mr. Coke of +Holkham, what was the best work on Agriculture, and was referred to +Sir John Sinclair's; and when he further asked of Mr. Vansittart, +Chancellor of the Exchequer, what was the best work on British +Finance, he was again referred to a work by Sir John Sinclair, his +'History of the Public Revenue.' But the great monument of his +indefatigable industry, a work that would have appalled other men, +but only served to rouse and sustain his energy, was his +'Statistical Account of Scotland,' in twenty-one volumes, one of +the most valuable practical works ever published in any age or +country. Amid a host of other pursuits it occupied him nearly +eight years of hard labour, during which he received, and attended +to, upwards of 20,000 letters on the subject. It was a thoroughly +patriotic undertaking, from which he derived no personal advantage +whatever, beyond the honour of having completed it. The whole of +the profits were assigned by him to the Society for the Sons of the +Clergy in Scotland. The publication of the book led to great +public improvements; it was followed by the immediate abolition of +several oppressive feudal rights, to which it called attention; the +salaries of schoolmasters and clergymen in many parishes were +increased; and an increased stimulus was given to agriculture +throughout Scotland. Sir John then publicly offered to undertake +the much greater labour of collecting and publishing a similar +Statistical Account of England; but unhappily the then Archbishop +of Canterbury refused to sanction it, lest it should interfere with +the tithes of the clergy, and the idea was abandoned. + +A remarkable illustration of his energetic promptitude was the +manner in which he once provided, on a great emergency, for the +relief of the manufacturing districts. In 1793 the stagnation +produced by the war led to an unusual number of bankruptcies, and +many of the first houses in Manchester and Glasgow were tottering, +not so much from want of property, but because the usual sources of +trade and credit were for the time closed up. A period of intense +distress amongst the labouring classes seemed imminent, when Sir +John urged, in Parliament, that Exchequer notes to the amount of +five millions should be issued immediately as a loan to such +merchants as could give security. This suggestion was adopted, and +his offer to carry out his plan, in conjunction with certain +members named by him, was also accepted. The vote was passed late +at night, and early next morning Sir John, anticipating the delays +of officialism and red tape, proceeded to bankers in the city, and +borrowed of them, on his own personal security, the sum of +70,000l., which he despatched the same evening to those merchants +who were in the most urgent need of assistance. Pitt meeting Sir +John in the House, expressed his great regret that the pressing +wants of Manchester and Glasgow could not be supplied so soon as +was desirable, adding, "The money cannot be raised for some days." +"It is already gone! it left London by to-night's mail!" was Sir +John's triumphant reply; and in afterwards relating the anecdote he +added, with a smile of pleasure, "Pitt was as much startled as if I +had stabbed him." To the last this great, good man worked on +usefully and cheerfully, setting a great example for his family and +for his country. In so laboriously seeking others' good, it might +be said that he found his own--not wealth, for his generosity +seriously impaired his private fortune, but happiness, and self- +satisfaction, and the peace that passes knowledge. A great +patriot, with magnificent powers of work, he nobly did his duty to +his country; yet he was not neglectful of his own household and +home. His sons and daughters grew up to honour and usefulness; and +it was one of the proudest things Sir John could say, when verging +on his eightieth year, that he had lived to see seven sons grown +up, not one of whom had incurred a debt he could not pay, or caused +him a sorrow that could have been avoided. + + + +CHAPTER XIII--CHARACTER--THE TRUE GENTLEMAN + + + +"For who can always act? but he, +To whom a thousand memories call, +Not being less but more than all +The gentleness he seemed to be, + +But seemed the thing he was, and joined +Each office of the social hour +To noble manners, as the flower +And native growth of noble mind; + +And thus he bore without abuse +The grand old name of Gentleman."--Tennyson. + +"Es bildet ein Talent sich in der Stille, +Sich ein Charakter in dem Strom der Welt."--Goethe. + +"That which raises a country, that which strengthens a country, and +that which dignifies a country,--that which spreads her power, +creates her moral influence, and makes her respected and submitted +to, bends the hearts of millions, and bows down the pride of +nations to her--the instrument of obedience, the fountain of +supremacy, the true throne, crown, and sceptre of a nation;--this +aristocracy is not an aristocracy of blood, not an aristocracy of +fashion, not an aristocracy of talent only; it is an aristocracy of +Character. That is the true heraldry of man."--The Times. + + +The crown and glory of life is Character. It is the noblest +possession of a man, constituting a rank in itself, and an estate +in the general goodwill; dignifying every station, and exalting +every position in society. It exercises a greater power than +wealth, and secures all the honour without the jealousies of fame. +It carries with it an influence which always tells; for it is the +result of proved honour, rectitude, and consistency--qualities +which, perhaps more than any other, command the general confidence +and respect of mankind. + +Character is human nature in its best form. It is moral order +embodied in the individual. Men of character are not only the +conscience of society, but in every well-governed State they are +its best motive power; for it is moral qualities in the main which +rule the world. Even in war, Napoleon said the moral is to the +physical as ten to one. The strength, the industry, and the +civilisation of nations--all depend upon individual character; and +the very foundations of civil security rest upon it. Laws and +institutions are but its outgrowth. In the just balance of nature, +individuals, nations, and races, will obtain just so much as they +deserve, and no more. And as effect finds its cause, so surely +does quality of character amongst a people produce its befitting +results. + +Though a man have comparatively little culture, slender abilities, +and but small wealth, yet, if his character be of sterling worth, +he will always command an influence, whether it be in the workshop, +the counting-house, the mart, or the senate. Canning wisely wrote +in 1801, "My road must be through Character to power; I will try no +other course; and I am sanguine enough to believe that this course, +though not perhaps the quickest, is the surest." You may admire +men of intellect; but something more is necessary before you will +trust them. Hence Lord John Russell once observed in a sentence +full of truth, "It is the nature of party in England to ask the +assistance of men of genius, but to follow the guidance of men of +character." This was strikingly illustrated in the career of the +late Francis Horner--a man of whom Sydney Smith said that the Ten +Commandments were stamped upon his countenance. "The valuable and +peculiar light," says Lord Cockburn, "in which his history is +calculated to inspire every right-minded youth, is this. He died +at the age of thirty-eight; possessed of greater public influence +than any other private man; and admired, beloved, trusted, and +deplored by all, except the heartless or the base. No greater +homage was ever paid in Parliament to any deceased member. Now let +every young man ask--how was this attained? By rank? He was the +son of an Edinburgh merchant. By wealth? Neither he, nor any of +his relations, ever had a superfluous sixpence. By office? He +held but one, and only for a few years, of no influence, and with +very little pay. By talents? His were not splendid, and he had no +genius. Cautious and slow, his only ambition was to be right. By +eloquence? He spoke in calm, good taste, without any of the +oratory that either terrifies or seduces. By any fascination of +manner? His was only correct and agreeable. By what, then, was +it? Merely by sense, industry, good principles, and a good heart-- +qualities which no well-constituted mind need ever despair of +attaining. It was the force of his character that raised him; and +this character not impressed upon him by nature, but formed, out of +no peculiarly fine elements, by himself. There were many in the +House of Commons of far greater ability and eloquence. But no one +surpassed him in the combination of an adequate portion of these +with moral worth. Horner was born to show what moderate powers, +unaided by anything whatever except culture and goodness, may +achieve, even when these powers are displayed amidst the +competition and jealousy of public life." + +Franklin, also, attributed his success as a public man, not to his +talents or his powers of speaking--for these were but moderate--but +to his known integrity of character. Hence it was, he says, "that +I had so much weight with my fellow citizens. I was but a bad +speaker, never eloquent, subject to much hesitation in my choice of +words, hardly correct in language, and yet I generally carried my +point." Character creates confidence in men in high station as +well as in humble life. It was said of the first Emperor Alexander +of Russia, that his personal character was equivalent to a +constitution. During the wars of the Fronde, Montaigne was the +only man amongst the French gentry who kept his castle gates +unbarred; and it was said of him, that his personal character was a +better protection for him than a regiment of horse would have been. + +That character is power, is true in a much higher sense than that +knowledge is power. Mind without heart, intelligence without +conduct, cleverness without goodness, are powers in their way, but +they may be powers only for mischief. We may be instructed or +amused by them; but it is sometimes as difficult to admire them as +it would be to admire the dexterity of a pickpocket or the +horsemanship of a highwayman. + +Truthfulness, integrity, and goodness--qualities that hang not on +any man's breath--form the essence of manly character, or, as one +of our old writers has it, "that inbred loyalty unto Virtue which +can serve her without a livery." He who possesses these qualities, +united with strength of purpose, carries with him a power which is +irresistible. He is strong to do good, strong to resist evil, and +strong to bear up under difficulty and misfortune. When Stephen of +Colonna fell into the hands of his base assailants, and they asked +him in derision, "Where is now your fortress?" "Here," was his +bold reply, placing his hand upon his heart. It is in misfortune +that the character of the upright man shines forth with the +greatest lustre; and when all else fails, he takes stand upon his +integrity and his courage. + +The rules of conduct followed by Lord Erskine--a man of sterling +independence of principle and scrupulous adherence to truth--are +worthy of being engraven on every young man's heart. "It was a +first command and counsel of my earliest youth," he said, "always +to do what my conscience told me to be a duty, and to leave the +consequence to God. I shall carry with me the memory, and I trust +the practice, of this parental lesson to the grave. I have +hitherto followed it, and I have no reason to complain that my +obedience to it has been a temporal sacrifice. I have found it, on +the contrary, the road to prosperity and wealth, and I shall point +out the same path to my children for their pursuit." + +Every man is bound to aim at the possession of a good character as +one of the highest objects of life. The very effort to secure it +by worthy means will furnish him with a motive for exertion; and +his idea of manhood, in proportion as it is elevated, will steady +and animate his motive. It is well to have a high standard of +life, even though we may not be able altogether to realize it. +"The youth," says Mr. Disraeli, "who does not look up will look +down; and the spirit that does not soar is destined perhaps to +grovel." George Herbert wisely writes, + + +"Pitch thy behaviour low, thy projects high, +So shall thou humble and magnanimous be. +Sink not in spirit; who aimeth at the sky +Shoots higher much than he that means a tree." + + +He who has a high standard of living and thinking will certainly do +better than he who has none at all. "Pluck at a gown of gold," +says the Scotch proverb, "and you may get a sleeve o't." Whoever +tries for the highest results cannot fail to reach a point far in +advance of that from which he started; and though the end attained +may fall short of that proposed, still, the very effort to rise, of +itself cannot fail to prove permanently beneficial. + +There are many counterfeits of character, but the genuine article +is difficult to be mistaken. Some, knowing its money value, would +assume its disguise for the purpose of imposing upon the unwary. +Colonel Charteris said to a man distinguished for his honesty, "I +would give a thousand pounds for your good name." "Why?" "Because +I could make ten thousand by it," was the knave's reply. + +Integrity in word and deed is the backbone of character; and loyal +adherence to veracity its most prominent characteristic. One of +the finest testimonies to the character of the late Sir Robert Peel +was that borne by the Duke of Wellington in the House of Lords, a +few days after the great statesman's death. "Your lordships," he +said, "must all feel the high and honourable character of the late +Sir Robert Peel. I was long connected with him in public life. We +were both in the councils of our Sovereign together, and I had long +the honour to enjoy his private friendship. In all the course of +my acquaintance with him I never knew a man in whose truth and +justice I had greater confidence, or in whom I saw a more +invariable desire to promote the public service. In the whole +course of my communication with him, I never knew an instance in +which he did not show the strongest attachment to truth; and I +never saw in the whole course of my life the smallest reason for +suspecting that he stated anything which he did not firmly believe +to be the fact." And this high-minded truthfulness of the +statesman was no doubt the secret of no small part of his influence +and power. + +There is a truthfulness in action as well as in words, which is +essential to uprightness of character. A man must really be what +he seems or purposes to be. When an American gentleman wrote to +Granville Sharp, that from respect for his great virtues he had +named one of his sons after him, Sharp replied: "I must request +you to teach him a favourite maxim of the family whose name you +have given him--ALWAYS ENDEAVOUR TO BE REALLY WHAT YOU WOULD WISH +TO APPEAR. This maxim, as my father informed me, was carefully and +humbly practised by HIS father, whose sincerity, as a plain and +honest man, thereby became the principal feature of his character, +both in public and private life." Every man who respects himself, +and values the respect of others, will carry out the maxim in act-- +doing honestly what he proposes to do--putting the highest +character into his work, scamping nothing, but priding himself upon +his integrity and conscientiousness. Once Cromwell said to +Bernard,--a clever but somewhat unscrupulous lawyer, "I understand +that you have lately been vastly wary in your conduct; do not be +too confident of this; subtlety may deceive you, integrity never +will." Men whose acts are at direct variance with their words, +command no respect, and what they say has but little weight; even +truths, when uttered by them, seem to come blasted from their lips. + +The true character acts rightly, whether in secret or in the sight +of men. That boy was well trained who, when asked why he did not +pocket some pears, for nobody was there to see, replied, "Yes, +there was: I was there to see myself; and I don't intend ever to +see myself do a dishonest thing."--This is a simple but not +inappropriate illustration of principle, or conscience, dominating +in the character, and exercising a noble protectorate over it; not +merely a passive influence, but an active power regulating the +life. Such a principle goes on moulding the character hourly and +daily, growing with a force that operates every moment. Without +this dominating influence, character has no protection, but is +constantly liable to fall away before temptation; and every such +temptation succumbed to, every act of meanness or dishonesty, +however slight, causes self-degradation. It matters not whether +the act be successful or not, discovered or concealed; the culprit +is no longer the same, but another person; and he is pursued by a +secret uneasiness, by self-reproach, or the workings of what we +call conscience, which is the inevitable doom of the guilty. + +And here it may be observed how greatly the character may be +strengthened and supported by the cultivation of good habits. Man, +it has been said, is a bundle of habits; and habit is second +nature. Metastasio entertained so strong an opinion as to the +power of repetition in act and thought, that he said, "All is habit +in mankind, even virtue itself." Butler, in his 'Analogy,' +impresses the importance of careful self-discipline and firm +resistance to temptation, as tending to make virtue habitual, so +that at length it may become more easy to be good than to give way +to sin. "As habits belonging to the body," he says, "are produced +by external acts, so habits of the mind are produced by the +execution of inward practical purposes, i.e., carrying them into +act, or acting upon them--the principles of obedience, veracity, +justice, and charity." And again, Lord Brougham says, when +enforcing the immense importance of training and example in youth, +"I trust everything under God to habit, on which, in all ages, the +lawgiver, as well as the schoolmaster, has mainly placed his +reliance; habit, which makes everything easy, and casts the +difficulties upon the deviation from a wonted course." Thus, make +sobriety a habit, and intemperance will be hateful; make prudence a +habit, and reckless profligacy will become revolting to every +principle of conduct which regulates the life of the individual. +Hence the necessity for the greatest care and watchfulness against +the inroad of any evil habit; for the character is always weakest +at that point at which it has once given way; and it is long before +a principle restored can become so firm as one that has never been +moved. It is a fine remark of a Russian writer, that "Habits are a +necklace of pearls: untie the knot, and the whole unthreads." + +Wherever formed, habit acts involuntarily, and without effort; and, +it is only when you oppose it, that you find how powerful it has +become. What is done once and again, soon gives facility and +proneness. The habit at first may seem to have no more strength +than a spider's web; but, once formed, it binds as with a chain of +iron. The small events of life, taken singly, may seem exceedingly +unimportant, like snow that falls silently, flake by flake; yet +accumulated, these snow-flakes form the avalanche. + +Self-respect, self-help, application, industry, integrity--all are +of the nature of habits, not beliefs. Principles, in fact, are but +the names which we assign to habits; for the principles are words, +but the habits are the things themselves: benefactors or tyrants, +according as they are good or evil. It thus happens that as we +grow older, a portion of our free activity and individuality +becomes suspended in habit; our actions become of the nature of +fate; and we are bound by the chains which we have woven around +ourselves. + +It is indeed scarcely possible to over-estimate the importance of +training the young to virtuous habits. In them they are the +easiest formed, and when formed they last for life; like letters +cut on the bark of a tree they grow and widen with age. "Train up +a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not +depart from it." The beginning holds within it the end; the first +start on the road of life determines the direction and the +destination of the journey; ce n'est que le premier pas qui coute. +"Remember," said Lord Collingwood to a young man whom he loved, +"before you are five-and-twenty you must establish a character that +will serve you all your life." As habit strengthens with age, and +character becomes formed, any turning into a new path becomes more +and more difficult. Hence, it is often harder to unlearn than to +learn; and for this reason the Grecian flute-player was justified +who charged double fees to those pupils who had been taught by an +inferior master. To uproot an old habit is sometimes a more +painful thing, and vastly more difficult, than to wrench out a +tooth. Try and reform a habitually indolent, or improvident, or +drunken person, and in a large majority of cases you will fail. +For the habit in each case has wound itself in and through the life +until it has become an integral part of it, and cannot be uprooted. +Hence, as Mr. Lynch observes, "the wisest habit of all is the habit +of care in the formation of good habits." + +Even happiness itself may become habitual. There is a habit of +looking at the bright side of things, and also of looking at the +dark side. Dr. Johnson has said that the habit of looking at the +best side of a thing is worth more to a man than a thousand pounds +a year. And we possess the power, to a great extent, of so +exercising the will as to direct the thoughts upon objects +calculated to yield happiness and improvement rather than their +opposites. In this way the habit of happy thought may be made to +spring up like any other habit. And to bring up men or women with +a genial nature of this sort, a good temper, and a happy frame of +mind, is perhaps of even more importance, in many cases, than to +perfect them in much knowledge and many accomplishments. + +As daylight can be seen through very small holes, so little things +will illustrate a person's character. Indeed character consists in +little acts, well and honourably performed; daily life being the +quarry from which we build it up, and rough-hew the habits which +form it. One of the most marked tests of character is the manner +in which we conduct ourselves towards others. A graceful behaviour +towards superiors, inferiors, and equals, is a constant source of +pleasure. It pleases others because it indicates respect for their +personality; but it gives tenfold more pleasure to ourselves. +Every man may to a large extent be a self-educator in good +behaviour, as in everything else; he can be civil and kind, if he +will, though he have not a penny in his purse. Gentleness in +society is like the silent influence of light, which gives colour +to all nature; it is far more powerful than loudness or force, and +far more fruitful. It pushes its way quietly and persistently, +like the tiniest daffodil in spring, which raises the clod and +thrusts it aside by the simple persistency of growing. + +Even a kind look will give pleasure and confer happiness. In one +of Robertson of Brighton's letters, he tells of a lady who related +to him "the delight, the tears of gratitude, which she had +witnessed in a poor girl to whom, in passing, I gave a kind look on +going out of church on Sunday. What a lesson! How cheaply +happiness can be given! What opportunities we miss of doing an +angel's work! I remember doing it, full of sad feelings, passing +on, and thinking no more about it; and it gave an hour's sunshine +to a human life, and lightened the load of life to a human heart +for a time!" {35} + +Morals and manners, which give colour to life, are of much greater +importance than laws, which are but their manifestations. The law +touches us here and there, but manners are about us everywhere, +pervading society like the air we breathe. Good manners, as we +call them, are neither more nor less than good behaviour; +consisting of courtesy and kindness; benevolence being the +preponderating element in all kinds of mutually beneficial and +pleasant intercourse amongst human beings. "Civility," said Lady +Montague, "costs nothing and buys everything." The cheapest of all +things is kindness, its exercise requiring the least possible +trouble and self-sacrifice. "Win hearts," said Burleigh to Queen +Elizabeth, "and you have all men's hearts and purses." If we would +only let nature act kindly, free from affectation and artifice, the +results on social good humour and happiness would be incalculable. +The little courtesies which form the small change of life, may +separately appear of little intrinsic value, but they acquire their +importance from repetition and accumulation. They are like the +spare minutes, or the groat a day, which proverbially produce such +momentous results in the course of a twelvemonth, or in a lifetime. + +Manners are the ornament of action; and there is a way of speaking +a kind word, or of doing a kind thing, which greatly enhances their +value. What seems to be done with a grudge, or as an act of +condescension, is scarcely accepted as a favour. Yet there are men +who pride themselves upon their gruffness; and though they may +possess virtue and capacity, their manner is often such as to +render them almost insupportable. It is difficult to like a man +who, though he may not pull your nose, habitually wounds your self- +respect, and takes a pride in saying disagreeable things to you. +There are others who are dreadfully condescending, and cannot avoid +seizing upon every small opportunity of making their greatness +felt. When Abernethy was canvassing for the office of surgeon to +St. Bartholomew Hospital, he called upon such a person--a rich +grocer, one of the governors. The great man behind the counter +seeing the great surgeon enter, immediately assumed the grand air +towards the supposed suppliant for his vote. "I presume, Sir, you +want my vote and interest at this momentous epoch of your life?" +Abernethy, who hated humbugs, and felt nettled at the tone, +replied: "No, I don't: I want a pennyworth of figs; come, look +sharp and wrap them up; I want to be off!" + +The cultivation of manner--though in excess it is foppish and +foolish--is highly necessary in a person who has occasion to +negociate with others in matters of business. Affability and good +breeding may even be regarded as essential to the success of a man +in any eminent station and enlarged sphere of life; for the want of +it has not unfrequently been found in a great measure to neutralise +the results of much industry, integrity, and honesty of character. +There are, no doubt, a few strong tolerant minds which can bear +with defects and angularities of manner, and look only to the more +genuine qualities; but the world at large is not so forbearant, and +cannot help forming its judgments and likings mainly according to +outward conduct. + +Another mode of displaying true politeness is consideration for the +opinions of others. It has been said of dogmatism, that it is only +puppyism come to its full growth; and certainly the worst form this +quality can assume, is that of opinionativeness and arrogance. Let +men agree to differ, and, when they do differ, bear and forbear. +Principles and opinions may be maintained with perfect suavity, +without coming to blows or uttering hard words; and there are +circumstances in which words are blows, and inflict wounds far less +easy to heal. As bearing upon this point, we quote an instructive +little parable spoken some time since by an itinerant preacher of +the Evangelical Alliance on the borders of Wales:- "As I was going +to the hills," said he, "early one misty morning, I saw something +moving on a mountain side, so strange looking that I took it for a +monster. When I came nearer to it I found it was a man. When I +came up to him I found he was my brother." + +The inbred politeness which springs from right-heartedness and +kindly feelings, is of no exclusive rank or station. The mechanic +who works at the bench may possess it, as well as the clergyman or +the peer. It is by no means a necessary condition of labour that +it should, in any respect, be either rough or coarse. The +politeness and refinement which distinguish all classes of the +people in many continental countries show that those qualities +might become ours too--as doubtless they will become with increased +culture and more general social intercourse--without sacrificing +any of our more genuine qualities as men. From the highest to the +lowest, the richest to the poorest, to no rank or condition in life +has nature denied her highest boon--the great heart. There never +yet existed a gentleman but was lord of a great heart. And this +may exhibit itself under the hodden grey of the peasant as well as +under the laced coat of the noble. Robert Burns was once taken to +task by a young Edinburgh blood, with whom he was walking, for +recognising an honest farmer in the open street. "Why you +fantastic gomeral," exclaimed Burns, "it was not the great coat, +the scone bonnet, and the saunders-boot hose that I spoke to, but +THE MAN that was in them; and the man, sir, for true worth, would +weigh down you and me, and ten more such, any day." There may be a +homeliness in externals, which may seem vulgar to those who cannot +discern the heart beneath; but, to the right-minded, character will +always have its clear insignia. + +William and Charles Grant were the sons of a farmer in Inverness- +shire, whom a sudden flood stripped of everything, even to the very +soil which he tilled. The farmer and his sons, with the world +before them where to choose, made their way southward in search of +employment until they arrived in the neighbourhood of Bury in +Lancashire. From the crown of the hill near Walmesley they +surveyed the wide extent of country which lay before them, the +river Irwell making its circuitous course through the valley. They +were utter strangers in the neighbourhood, and knew not which way +to turn. To decide their course they put up a stick, and agreed to +pursue the direction in which it fell. Thus their decision was +made, and they journeyed on accordingly until they reached the +village of Ramsbotham, not far distant. They found employment in a +print-work, in which William served his apprenticeship; and they +commanded themselves to their employers by their diligence, +sobriety, and strict integrity. They plodded on, rising from one +station to another, until at length the two men themselves became +employers, and after many long years of industry, enterprise, and +benevolence, they became rich, honoured, and respected by all who +knew them. Their cotton-mills and print-works gave employment to a +large population. Their well-directed diligence made the valley +teem with activity, joy, health, and opulence. Out of their +abundant wealth they gave liberally to all worthy objects, erecting +churches, founding schools, and in all ways promoting the well- +being of the class of working-men from which they had sprung. They +afterwards erected, on the top of the hill above Walmesley, a lofty +tower in commemoration of the early event in their history which +had determined the place of their settlement. The brothers Grant +became widely celebrated for their benevolence and their various +goodness, and it is said that Mr. Dickens had them in his mind's +eye when delineating the character of the brothers Cheeryble. One +amongst many anecdotes of a similar kind may be cited to show that +the character was by no means exaggerated. A Manchester +warehouseman published an exceedingly scurrilous pamphlet against +the firm of Grant Brothers, holding up the elder partner to +ridicule as "Billy Button." William was informed by some one of +the nature of the pamphlet, and his observation was that the man +would live to repent of it. "Oh!" said the libeller, when informed +of the remark, "he thinks that some time or other I shall be in his +debt; but I will take good care of that." It happens, however, +that men in business do not always foresee who shall be their +creditor, and it so turned out that the Grants' libeller became a +bankrupt, and could not complete his certificate and begin business +again without obtaining their signature. It seemed to him a +hopeless case to call upon that firm for any favour, but the +pressing claims of his family forced him to make the application. +He appeared before the man whom he had ridiculed as "Billy Button" +accordingly. He told his tale and produced his certificate. "You +wrote a pamphlet against us once?" said Mr. Grant. The supplicant +expected to see his document thrown into the fire; instead of which +Grant signed the name of the firm, and thus completed the necessary +certificate. "We make it a rule," said he, handing it back, "never +to refuse signing the certificate of an honest tradesman, and we +have never heard that you were anything else." The tears started +into the man's eyes. "Ah," continued Mr. Grant, "you see my saying +was true, that you would live to repent writing that pamphlet. I +did not mean it as a threat--I only meant that some day you would +know us better, and repent having tried to injure us." "I do, I +do, indeed, repent it." "Well, well, you know us now. But how do +you get on--what are you going to do?" The poor man stated that he +had friends who would assist him when his certificate was obtained. +"But how are you off in the mean time?" The answer was, that, +having given up every farthing to his creditors, he had been +compelled to stint his family in even the common necessaries of +life, that he might be enabled to pay for his certificate. "My +good fellow, this will never do; your wife and family must not +suffer in this way; be kind enough to take this ten-pound note to +your wife from me: there, there, now--don't cry, it will be all +well with you yet; keep up your spirits, set to work like a man, +and you will raise your head among the best of us yet." The +overpowered man endeavoured with choking utterance to express his +gratitude, but in vain; and putting his hand to his face, he went +out of the room sobbing like a child. + +The True Gentleman is one whose nature has been fashioned after the +highest models. It is a grand old name, that of Gentleman, and has +been recognized as a rank and power in all stages of society. "The +Gentleman is always the Gentleman," said the old French General to +his regiment of Scottish gentry at Rousillon, "and invariably +proves himself such in need and in danger." To possess this +character is a dignity of itself, commanding the instinctive homage +of every generous mind, and those who will not bow to titular rank, +will yet do homage to the gentleman. His qualities depend not upon +fashion or manners, but upon moral worth--not on personal +possessions, but on personal qualities. The Psalmist briefly +describes him as one "that walketh uprightly, and worketh +righteousness, and speaketh the truth in his heart." + +The gentleman is eminently distinguished for his self-respect. He +values his character,--not so much of it only as can be seen of +others, but as he sees it himself; having regard for the approval +of his inward monitor. And, as he respects himself, so, by the +same law, does he respect others. Humanity is sacred in his eyes: +and thence proceed politeness and forbearance, kindness and +charity. It is related of Lord Edward Fitzgerald that, while +travelling in Canada, in company with the Indians, he was shocked +by the sight of a poor squaw trudging along laden with her +husband's trappings, while the chief himself walked on +unencumbered. Lord Edward at once relieved the squaw of her pack +by placing it upon his own shoulders,--a beautiful instance of what +the French call politesse de coeur--the inbred politeness of the +true gentleman. + +The true gentleman has a keen sense of honour,--scrupulously +avoiding mean actions. His standard of probity in word and action +is high. He does not shuffle or prevaricate, dodge or skulk; but +is honest, upright, and straightforward. His law is rectitude-- +action in right lines. When he says YES, it is a law: and he +dares to say the valiant NO at the fitting season. The gentleman +will not be bribed; only the low-minded and unprincipled will sell +themselves to those who are interested in buying them. When the +upright Jonas Hanway officiated as commissioner in the victualling +department, he declined to receive a present of any kind from a +contractor; refusing thus to be biassed in the performance of his +public duty. A fine trait of the same kind is to be noted in the +life of the Duke of Wellington. Shortly after the battle of +Assaye, one morning the Prime Minister of the Court of Hyderabad +waited upon him for the purpose of privately ascertaining what +territory and what advantages had been reserved for his master in +the treaty of peace between the Mahratta princes and the Nizam. To +obtain this information the minister offered the general a very +large sum--considerably above 100,000l. Looking at him quietly for +a few seconds, Sir Arthur said, "It appears, then, that you are +capable of keeping a secret?" "Yes, certainly," replied the +minister. "THEN SO AM I," said the English general, smiling, and +bowed the minister out. It was to Wellington's great honour, that +though uniformly successful in India, and with the power of earning +in such modes as this enormous wealth, he did not add a farthing to +his fortune, and returned to England a comparatively poor man. + +A similar sensitiveness and high-mindedness characterised his noble +relative, the Marquis of Wellesley, who, on one occasion, +positively refused a present of 100,000l. proposed to be given him +by the Directors of the East India Company on the conquest of +Mysore. "It is not necessary," said he, "for me to allude to the +independence of my character, and the proper dignity attaching to +my office; other reasons besides these important considerations +lead me to decline this testimony, which is not suitable to me. I +THINK OF NOTHING BUT OUR ARMY. I should be much distressed to +curtail the share of those brave soldiers." And the Marquis's +resolution to refuse the present remained unalterable. + +Sir Charles Napier exhibited the same noble self-denial in the +course of his Indian career. He rejected all the costly gifts +which barbaric princes were ready to lay at his feet, and said with +truth, "Certainly I could have got 30,000l. since my coming to +Scinde, but my hands do not want washing yet. Our dear father's +sword which I wore in both battles (Meanee and Hyderabad) is +unstained." + +Riches and rank have no necessary connexion with genuine +gentlemanly qualities. The poor man may be a true gentleman,--in +spirit and in daily life. He may be honest, truthful, upright, +polite, temperate, courageous, self-respecting, and self-helping,-- +that is, be a true gentleman. The poor man with a rich spirit is +in all ways superior to the rich man with a poor spirit. To borrow +St. Paul's words, the former is as "having nothing, yet possessing +all things," while the other, though possessing all things, has +nothing. The first hopes everything, and fears nothing; the last +hopes nothing, and fears everything. Only the poor in spirit are +really poor. He who has lost all, but retains his courage, +cheerfulness, hope, virtue, and self-respect, is still rich. For +such a man, the world is, as it were, held in trust; his spirit +dominating over its grosser cares, he can still walk erect, a true +gentleman. + +Occasionally, the brave and gentle character may be found under the +humblest garb. Here is an old illustration, but a fine one. Once +on a time, when the Adige suddenly overflowed its banks, the bridge +of Verona was carried away, with the exception of the centre arch, +on which stood a house, whose inhabitants supplicated help from the +windows, while the foundations were visibly giving way. "I will +give a hundred French louis," said the Count Spolverini, who stood +by, "to any person who will venture to deliver these unfortunate +people." A young peasant came forth from the crowd, seized a boat, +and pushed into the stream. He gained the pier, received the whole +family into the boat, and made for the shore, where he landed them +in safety. "Here is your money, my brave young fellow," said the +count. "No," was the answer of the young man, "I do not sell my +life; give the money to this poor family, who have need of it." +Here spoke the true spirit of the gentleman, though he was but in +the garb of a peasant. + +Not less touching was the heroic conduct of a party of Deal boatmen +in rescuing the crew of a collier-brig in the Downs but a short +time ago. {36} A sudden storm which set in from the north-east +drove several ships from their anchors, and it being low water, one +of them struck the ground at a considerable distance from the +shore, when the sea made a clean breach over her. There was not a +vestige of hope for the vessel, such was the fury of the wind and +the violence of the waves. There was nothing to tempt the boatmen +on shore to risk their lives in saving either ship or crew, for not +a farthing of salvage was to be looked for. But the daring +intrepidity of the Deal boatmen was not wanting at this critical +moment. No sooner had the brig grounded than Simon Pritchard, one +of the many persons assembled along the beach, threw off his coat +and called out, "Who will come with me and try to save that crew?" +Instantly twenty men sprang forward, with "I will," "and I." But +seven only were wanted; and running down a galley punt into the +surf, they leaped in and dashed through the breakers, amidst the +cheers of those on shore. How the boat lived in such a sea seemed +a miracle; but in a few minutes, impelled by the strong arms of +these gallant men, she flew on and reached the stranded ship, +"catching her on the top of a wave"; and in less than a quarter of +an hour from the time the boat left the shore, the six men who +composed the crew of the collier were landed safe on Walmer Beach. +A nobler instance of indomitable courage and disinterested heroism +on the part of the Deal boatmen--brave though they are always known +to be--perhaps cannot be cited; and we have pleasure in here +placing it on record. + +Mr. Turnbull, in his work on 'Austria,' relates an anecdote of the +late Emperor Francis, in illustration of the manner in which the +Government of that country has been indebted, for its hold upon the +people, to the personal qualities of its princes. "At the time +when the cholera was raging at Vienna, the emperor, with an aide- +de-camp, was strolling about the streets of the city and suburbs, +when a corpse was dragged past on a litter unaccompanied by a +single mourner. The unusual circumstance attracted his attention, +and he learnt, on inquiry, that the deceased was a poor person who +had died of cholera, and that the relatives had not ventured on +what was then considered the very dangerous office of attending the +body to the grave. 'Then,' said Francis, 'we will supply their +place, for none of my poor people should go to the grave without +that last mark of respect;' and he followed the body to the distant +place of interment, and, bare-headed, stood to see every rite and +observance respectfully performed." + +Fine though this illustration may be of the qualities of the +gentleman, we can match it by another equally good, of two English +navvies in Paris, as related in a morning paper a few years ago. +"One day a hearse was observed ascending the steep Rue de Clichy on +its way to Montmartre, bearing a coffin of poplar wood with its +cold corpse. Not a soul followed--not even the living dog of the +dead man, if he had one. The day was rainy and dismal; passers by +lifted the hat as is usual when a funeral passes, and that was all. +At length it passed two English navvies, who found themselves in +Paris on their way from Spain. A right feeling spoke from beneath +their serge jackets. 'Poor wretch!' said the one to the other, 'no +one follows him; let us two follow!' And the two took off their +hats, and walked bare-headed after the corpse of a stranger to the +cemetery of Montmartre." + +Above all, the gentleman is truthful. He feels that truth is the +"summit of being," and the soul of rectitude in human affairs. +Lord Chesterfield declared that Truth made the success of a +gentleman. The Duke of Wellington, writing to Kellerman, on the +subject of prisoners on parole, when opposed to that general in the +peninsula, told him that if there was one thing on which an English +officer prided himself more than another, excepting his courage, it +was his truthfulness. "When English officers," said he, "have +given their parole of honour not to escape, be sure they will not +break it. Believe me--trust to their word; the word of an English +officer is a surer guarantee than the vigilance of sentinels." + +True courage and gentleness go hand in hand. The brave man is +generous and forbearant, never unforgiving and cruel. It was +finely said of Sir John Franklin by his friend Parry, that "he was +a man who never turned his back upon a danger, yet of that +tenderness that he would not brush away a mosquito." A fine trait +of character--truly gentle, and worthy of the spirit of Bayard--was +displayed by a French officer in the cavalry combat of El Bodon in +Spain. He had raised his sword to strike Sir Felton Harvey, but +perceiving his antagonist had only one arm, he instantly stopped, +brought down his sword before Sir Felton in the usual salute, and +rode past. To this may be added a noble and gentle deed of Ney +during the same Peninsular War. Charles Napier was taken prisoner +at Corunna, desperately wounded; and his friends at home did not +know whether he was alive or dead. A special messenger was sent +out from England with a frigate to ascertain his fate. Baron +Clouet received the flag, and informed Ney of the arrival. "Let +the prisoner see his friends," said Ney, "and tell them he is well, +and well treated." Clouet lingered, and Ney asked, smiling, "what +more he wanted"? "He has an old mother, a widow, and blind." "Has +he? then let him go himself and tell her he is alive." As the +exchange of prisoners between the countries was not then allowed, +Ney knew that he risked the displeasure of the Emperor by setting +the young officer at liberty; but Napoleon approved the generous +act. + +Notwithstanding the wail which we occasionally hear for the +chivalry that is gone, our own age has witnessed deeds of bravery +and gentleness--of heroic self-denial and manly tenderness--which +are unsurpassed in history. The events of the last few years have +shown that our countrymen are as yet an undegenerate race. On the +bleak plateau of Sebastopol, in the dripping perilous trenches of +that twelvemonth's leaguer, men of all classes proved themselves +worthy of the noble inheritance of character which their +forefathers have bequeathed to them. But it was in the hour of the +great trial in India that the qualities of our countrymen shone +forth the brightest. The march of Neill on Cawnpore, of Havelock +on Lucknow--officers and men alike urged on by the hope of rescuing +the women and the children--are events which the whole history of +chivalry cannot equal. Outram's conduct to Havelock, in resigning +to him, though his inferior officer, the honour of leading the +attack on Lucknow, was a trait worthy of Sydney, and alone +justifies the title which has been awarded to him of, "the Bayard +of India." The death of Henry Lawrence--that brave and gentle +spirit--his last words before dying, "Let there be no fuss about +me; let me be buried WITH THE MEN,"--the anxious solicitude of Sir +Colin Campbell to rescue the beleaguered of Lucknow, and to conduct +his long train of women and children by night from thence to +Cawnpore, which he reached amidst the all but overpowering assault +of the enemy,--the care with which he led them across the perilous +bridge, never ceasing his charge over them until he had seen the +precious convoy safe on the road to Allahabad, and then burst upon +the Gwalior contingent like a thunder-clap;--such things make us +feel proud of our countrymen and inspire the conviction that the +best and purest glow of chivalry is not dead, but vigorously lives +among us yet. + +Even the common soldiers proved themselves gentlemen under their +trials. At Agra, where so many poor fellows had been scorched and +wounded in their encounter with the enemy, they were brought into +the fort, and tenderly nursed by the ladies; and the rough, gallant +fellows proved gentle as any children. During the weeks that the +ladies watched over their charge, never a word was said by any +soldier that could shock the ear of the gentlest. And when all was +over--when the mortally-wounded had died, and the sick and maimed +who survived were able to demonstrate their gratitude--they invited +their nurses and the chief people of Agra to an entertainment in +the beautiful gardens of the Taj, where, amidst flowers and music, +the rough veterans, all scarred and mutilated as they were, stood +up to thank their gentle countrywomen who had clothed and fed them, +and ministered to their wants during their time of sore distress. +In the hospitals at Scutari, too, many wounded and sick blessed the +kind English ladies who nursed them; and nothing can be finer than +the thought of the poor sufferers, unable to rest through pain, +blessing the shadow of Florence Nightingale as it fell upon their +pillow in the night watches. + +The wreck of the Birkenhead off the coast of Africa on the 27th of +February, 1852, affords another memorable illustration of the +chivalrous spirit of common men acting in this nineteenth century, +of which any age might be proud. The vessel was steaming along the +African coast with 472 men and 166 women and children on board. +The men belonged to several regiments then serving at the Cape, and +consisted principally of recruits who had been only a short time in +the service. At two o'clock in the morning, while all were asleep +below, the ship struck with violence upon a hidden rock which +penetrated her bottom; and it was at once felt that she must go +down. The roll of the drums called the soldiers to arms on the +upper deck, and the men mustered as if on parade. The word was +passed to SAVE THE WOMEN AND CHILDREN; and the helpless creatures +were brought from below, mostly undressed, and handed silently into +the boats. When they had all left the ship's side, the commander +of the vessel thoughtlessly called out, "All those that can swim, +jump overboard and make for the boats." But Captain Wright, of the +91st Highlanders, said, "No! if you do that, THE BOATS WITH THE +WOMEN MUST BE SWAMPED;" and the brave men stood motionless. There +was no boat remaining, and no hope of safety; but not a heart +quailed; no one flinched from his duty in that trying moment. +"There was not a murmur nor a cry amongst them," said Captain +Wright, a survivor, "until the vessel made her final plunge." Down +went the ship, and down went the heroic band, firing a feu de joie +as they sank beneath the waves. Glory and honour to the gentle and +the brave! The examples of such men never die, but, like their +memories, are immortal. + +There are many tests by which a gentleman may be known; but there +is one that never fails--How does he EXERCISE POWER over those +subordinate to him? How does he conduct himself towards women and +children? How does the officer treat his men, the employer his +servants, the master his pupils, and man in every station those who +are weaker than himself? The discretion, forbearance, and +kindliness, with which power in such cases is used, may indeed be +regarded as the crucial test of gentlemanly character. When La +Motte was one day passing through a crowd, he accidentally trod +upon the foot of a young fellow, who forthwith struck him on the +face: "Ah, sire," said La Motte, "you will surely be sorry for +what you have done, when you know that I AM BLIND." He who bullies +those who are not in a position to resist may be a snob, but cannot +be a gentleman. He who tyrannizes over the weak and helpless may +be a coward, but no true man. The tyrant, it has been said, is but +a slave turned inside out. Strength, and the consciousness of +strength, in a right-hearted man, imparts a nobleness to his +character; but he will be most careful how he uses it; for + + +"It is excellent +To have a giant's strength; but it is tyrannous +To use it like a giant." + + +Gentleness is indeed the best test of gentlemanliness. A +consideration for the feelings of others, for his inferiors and +dependants as well as his equals, and respect for their self- +respect, will pervade the true gentleman's whole conduct. He will +rather himself suffer a small injury, than by an uncharitable +construction of another's behaviour, incur the risk of committing a +great wrong. He will be forbearant of the weaknesses, the +failings, and the errors, of those whose advantages in life have +not been equal to his own. He will be merciful even to his beast. +He will not boast of his wealth, or his strength, or his gifts. He +will not be puffed up by success, or unduly depressed by failure. +He will not obtrude his views on others, but speak his mind freely +when occasion calls for it. He will not confer favours with a +patronizing air. Sir Walter Scott once said of Lord Lothian, "He +is a man from whom one may receive a favour, and that's saying a +great deal in these days." + +Lord Chatham has said that the gentleman is characterised by his +sacrifice of self and preference of others to himself in the little +daily occurrences of life. In illustration of this ruling spirit +of considerateness in a noble character, we may cite the anecdote +of the gallant Sir Ralph Abercromby, of whom it is related, that +when mortally wounded in the battle of Aboukir, he was carried in a +litter on board the 'Foudroyant;' and, to ease his pain, a +soldier's blanket was placed under his head, from which he +experienced considerable relief. He asked what it was. "It's only +a soldier's blanket," was the reply. "WHOSE blanket is it?" said +he, half lifting himself up. "Only one of the men's." "I wish to +know the name of the man whose blanket this is." "It is Duncan +Roy's, of the 42nd, Sir Ralph." "Then see that Duncan Roy gets his +blanket this very night." {37} Even to ease his dying agony the +general would not deprive the private soldier of his blanket for +one night. The incident is as good in its way as that of the dying +Sydney handing his cup of water to the private soldier on the field +of Zutphen. + +The quaint old Fuller sums up in a few words the character of the +true gentleman and man of action in describing that of the great +admiral, Sir Francis Drake: "Chaste in his life, just in his +dealings, true of his word; merciful to those that were under him, +and hating nothing so much as idlenesse; in matters especially of +moment, he was never wont to rely on other men's care, how trusty +or skilful soever they might seem to be, but, always contemning +danger, and refusing no toyl, he was wont himself to be one +(whoever was a second) at every turn, where courage, skill, or +industry, was to be employed." + + + +Footnotes: + + +{1} Napoleon III., 'Life of Caesar.' + +{2} Soult received but little education in his youth, and learnt +next to no geography until he became foreign minister of France, +when the study of this branch of knowledge is said to have given +him the greatest pleasure.--'OEuvres, &c., d'Alexis de Tocqueville. +Par G. de Beaumont.' Paris, 1861. I. 52 + +{3} 'OEuvres et Correspondance inedite d'Alexis de Tocqueville. +Par Gustave de Beaumont.' I. 398. + +{4} "I have seen," said he, "a hundred times in the course of my +life, a weak man exhibit genuine public virtue, because supported +by a wife who sustained hint in his course, not so much by advising +him to such and such acts, as by exercising a strengthening +influence over the manner in which duty or even ambition was to be +regarded. Much oftener, however, it must be confessed, have I seen +private and domestic life gradually transform a man to whom nature +had given generosity, disinterestedness, and even some capacity for +greatness, into an ambitious, mean-spirited, vulgar, and selfish +creature who, in matters relating to his country, ended by +considering them only in so far as they rendered his own particular +condition more comfortable and easy."--'OEuvres de Tocqueville.' +II. 349. + +{5} Since the original publication of this book, the author has in +another work, 'The Lives of Boulton and Watt,' endeavoured to +portray in greater detail the character and achievements of these +two remarkable men. + +{6} The following entry, which occurs in the account of monies +disbursed by the burgesses of Sheffield in 1573 [?] is supposed by +some to refer to the inventor of the stocking frame:- "Item gyven +to Willm-Lee, a poore scholler in Sheafield, towards the settyng +him to the Universitie of Chambrydge, and buying him bookes and +other furnyture [which money was afterwards returned] xiii iiii +[13s. 4d.]."--Hunter, 'History of Hallamshire,' 141. + +{7} 'History of the Framework Knitters.' + +{8} There are, however, other and different accounts. One is to +the effect that Lee set about studying the contrivance of the +stocking-loom for the purpose of lessening the labour of a young +country-girl to whom he was attached, whose occupation was +knitting; another, that being married and poor, his wife was under +the necessity of contributing to their joint support by knitting; +and that Lee, while watching the motion of his wife's fingers, +conceived the idea of imitating their movements by a machine. The +latter story seems to have been invented by Aaron Hill, Esq., in +his 'Account of the Rise and Progress of the Beech Oil +manufacture,' London, 1715; but his statement is altogether +unreliable. Thus he makes Lee to have been a Fellow of a college +at Oxford, from which he was expelled for marrying an innkeeper's +daughter; whilst Lee neither studied at Oxford, nor married there, +nor was a Fellow of any college; and he concludes by alleging that +the result of his invention was to "make Lee and his family happy;" +whereas the invention brought him only a heritage of misery, and he +died abroad destitute. + +{9} Blackner, 'History of Nottingham.' The author adds, "We have +information, handed down in direct succession from father to son, +that it was not till late in the seventeenth century that one man +could manage the working of a frame. The man who was considered +the workman employed a labourer, who stood behind the frame to work +the slur and pressing motions; but the application of traddles and +of the feet eventually rendered the labour unnecessary." + +{10} Palissy's own words are:- "Le bois m'ayant failli, je fus +contraint brusler les estapes (etaies) qui soustenoyent les tailles +de mon jardin, lesquelles estant bruslees, je fus constraint +brusler les tables et plancher de la maison, afin de faire fondre +la seconde composition. J'estois en une telle angoisse que je ne +scaurois dire: car j'estois tout tari et deseche a cause du labeur +et de la chaleur du fourneau; il y avoit plus d'un mois que ma +chemise n'avoit seiche sur moy, encores pour me consoler on se +moquoit de moy, et mesme ceux qui me devoient secourir alloient +crier par la ville que je faisois brusler le plancher: et par tel +moyen l'on me faisoit perdre mon credit et m'estimoit-on estre fol. +Les autres disoient que je cherchois a faire la fausse monnoye, qui +estoit un mal qui me faisoit seicher sur les pieds; et m'en allois +par les rues tout baisse comme un homme honteux: . . . personne ne +me secouroit: Mais au contraire ils se mocquoyent de moy, en +disant: Il luy appartient bien de mourir de faim, par ce qu'il +delaisse son mestier. Toutes ces nouvelles venoyent a mes +aureilles quand je passois par la rue." 'OEuvres Completes de +Palissy. Paris, 1844;' De l'Art de Terre, p. 315. + +{11} "Toutes ces fautes m'ont cause un tel lasseur et tristesse +d'esprit, qu'auparavant que j'aye rendu mes emaux fusible a un +mesme degre de feu, j'ay cuide entrer jusques a la porte du +sepulchre: aussi en me travaillant a tels affaires je me suis +trouve l'espace de plus se dix ans si fort escoule en ma personne, +qu'il n'y avoit aucune forme ny apparence de bosse aux bras ny aux +jambes: ains estoyent mes dites jambes toutes d'une venue: de +sorte que les liens de quoy j'attachois mes bas de chausses +estoyent, soudain que je cheminois, sur les talons avec le residu +de mes chausses."--'OEuvres, 319-20. + +{12} At the sale of Mr. Bernal's articles of vertu in London a few +years since, one of Palissy's small dishes, 12 inches in diameter, +with a lizard in the centre, sold for 162l. + +{13} Within the last few months, Mr. Charles Read, a gentleman +curious in matters of Protestant antiquarianism in France, has +discovered one of the ovens in which Palissy baked his chefs- +d'oeuvre. Several moulds of faces, plants, animals, &c., were dug +up in a good state of preservation, bearing his well-known stamp. +It is situated under the gallery of the Louvre, in the Place du +Carrousel. + +{14} D'Aubigne, 'Histoire Universelle.' The historian adds, +"Voyez l'impudence de ce bilistre! vous diriez qu'il auroit lu ce +vers de Seneque: 'On ne peut contraindre celui qui sait mourir: +Qui mori scit, cogi nescit.'" + +{15} The subject of Palissy's life and labours has been ably and +elaborately treated by Professor Morley in his well-known work. In +the above brief narrative we have for the most part followed +Palissy's own account of his experiments as given in his 'Art de +Terre.' + +{16} "Almighty God, the great Creator, +Has changed a goldmaker to a potter." + +{17} The whole of the Chinese and Japanese porcelain was formerly +known as Indian porcelain--probably because it was first brought by +the Portuguese from India to Europe, after the discovery of the +Cape of Good Hope by Vasco da Gama. + +{18} 'Wedgwood: an Address delivered at Burslem, Oct. 26th, +1863.' By the Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone, M.P. + +{19} It was characteristic of Mr. Hume, that, during his +professional voyages between England and India, he should +diligently apply his spare time to the study of navigation and +seamanship; and many years after, it proved of use to him in a +remarkable manner. In 1825, when on his passage from London to +Leith by a sailing smack, the vessel had scarcely cleared the mouth +of the Thames when a sudden storm came on, she was driven out of +her course, and, in the darkness of the night, she struck on the +Goodwin Sands. The captain, losing his presence of mind, seemed +incapable of giving coherent orders, and it is probable that the +vessel would have become a total wreck, had not one of the +passengers suddenly taken the command and directed the working of +the ship, himself taking the helm while the danger lasted. The +vessel was saved, and the stranger was Mr. Hume. + +{20} 'Saturday Review,' July 3rd, 1858. + +{21} Mrs. Grote's 'Memoir of the Life of Ary Scheffer,' p. 67. + +{22} While the sheets of this revised edition are passing through +the press, the announcement appears in the local papers of the +death of Mr. Jackson at the age of fifty. His last work, completed +shortly before his death, was a cantata, entitled 'The Praise of +Music.' The above particulars of his early life were communicated +by himself to the author several years since, while he was still +carrying on his business of a tallow-chandler at Masham. + +{23} Mansfield owed nothing to his noble relations, who were poor +and uninfluential. His success was the legitimate and logical +result of the means which he sedulously employed to secure it. +When a boy he rode up from Scotland to London on a pony--taking two +months to make the journey. After a course of school and college, +he entered upon the profession of the law, and he closed a career +of patient and ceaseless labour as Lord Chief Justice of England-- +the functions of which he is universally admitted to have performed +with unsurpassed ability, justice, and honour. + +{24} On 'Thought and Action.' + +{25} 'Correspondance de Napoleon Ier.,' publiee par ordre de +l'Empereur Napoleon III, Paris, 1864. + +{26} The recently published correspondence of Napoleon with his +brother Joseph, and the Memoirs of the Duke of Ragusa, abundantly +confirm this view. The Duke overthrew Napoleon's generals by the +superiority of his routine. He used to say that, if he knew +anything at all, he knew how to feed an army. + +{27} His old gardener. Collingwood's favourite amusement was +gardening. Shortly after the battle of Trafalgar a brother admiral +called upon him, and, after searching for his lordship all over the +garden, he at last discovered him, with old Scott, in the bottom of +a deep trench which they were busily employed in digging. + +{28} Article in the 'Times.' + +{29} 'Self-Development: an Address to Students,' by George Ross, +M.D., pp. 1-20, reprinted from the 'Medical Circular.' This +address, to which we acknowledge our obligations, contains many +admirable thoughts on self-culture, is thoroughly healthy in its +tone, and well deserves republication in an enlarged form. + +{30} 'Saturday Review.' + +{31} See the admirable and well-known book, 'The Pursuit of +Knowledge under Difficulties.' + +{32} Late Professor of Moral Philosophy at St. Andrew's. + +{33} A writer in the 'Edinburgh Review' (July, 1859) observes that +"the Duke's talents seem never to have developed themselves until +some active and practical field for their display was placed +immediately before him. He was long described by his Spartan +mother, who thought him a dunce, as only 'food for powder.' He +gained no sort of distinction, either at Eton or at the French +Military College of Angers." It is not improbable that a +competitive examination, at this day, might have excluded him from +the army. + +{34} Correspondent of 'The Times,' 11th June, 1863. + +{35} Robertson's 'Life and Letters,' i. 258. + +{36} On the 11th January, 1866. + +{37} Brown's 'Horae Subsecivae.' + + + + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, SELF HELP *** + +This file should be named selfh10.txt or selfh10.zip +Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, selfh11.txt +VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, selfh10a.txt + +Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US +unless a copyright notice is included. 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FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END* + diff --git a/old/selfh10.zip b/old/selfh10.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..33c003e --- /dev/null +++ b/old/selfh10.zip diff --git a/old/selfh10h.htm b/old/selfh10h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..cd519f1 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/selfh10h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,12534 @@ +<!DOCTYPE html + PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" + "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> +<html> +<head> +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" /> +<title>Self Help</title> +</head> +<body> +<h2> +<a href="#startoftext">Self Help, by Samuel Smiles</a> +</h2> +<pre> +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Self Help, by Samuel Smiles + +Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the +copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing +this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook. + +This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project +Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the +header without written permission. + +Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the +eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is +important information about your specific rights and restrictions in +how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a +donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved. + + +**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** + +**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** + +*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!***** + + +Title: Self Help + +Author: Samuel Smiles + +Release Date: June, 1997 [EBook #935] +[This file was first posted on June 10, 1997] +[Most recently updated: May 20, 2003] + +Edition: 10 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: US-ASCII +</pre> +<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p> +<p>Transcribed by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines3"><br /><br /><br /></div> +<h1>SELF HELP; WITH ILLUSTRATIONS OF CONDUCT AND PERSEVERANCE </h1> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines3"><br /><br /><br /></div> +<h2>CHAPTER I—SELF-HELP—NATIONAL AND INDIVIDUAL</h2> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<p>“The worth of a State, in the long run, is the worth of the +individuals composing it.”—J. S. Mill<i>.</i></p> +<p>“We put too much faith in systems, and look too little to men.”—B. +Disraeli.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>“Heaven helps those who help themselves” is a well-tried +maxim, embodying in a small compass the results of vast human experience. +The spirit of self-help is the root of all genuine growth in the individual; +and, exhibited in the lives of many, it constitutes the true source +of national vigour and strength. Help from without is often enfeebling +in its effects, but help from within invariably invigorates. Whatever +is done <i>for</i> men or classes, to a certain extent takes away the +stimulus and necessity of doing for themselves; and where men are subjected +to over-guidance and over-government, the inevitable tendency is to +render them comparatively helpless.</p> +<p>Even the best institutions can give a man no active help. Perhaps +the most they can do is, to leave him free to develop himself and improve +his individual condition. But in all times men have been prone +to believe that their happiness and well-being were to be secured by +means of institutions rather than by their own conduct. Hence +the value of legislation as an agent in human advancement has usually +been much over-estimated. To constitute the millionth part of +a Legislature, by voting for one or two men once in three or five years, +however conscientiously this duty may be performed, can exercise but +little active influence upon any man’s life and character. +Moreover, it is every day becoming more clearly understood, that the +function of Government is negative and restrictive, rather than positive +and active; being resolvable principally into protection—protection +of life, liberty, and property. Laws, wisely administered, will +secure men in the enjoyment of the fruits of their labour, whether of +mind or body, at a comparatively small personal sacrifice; but no laws, +however stringent, can make the idle industrious, the thriftless provident, +or the drunken sober. Such reforms can only be effected by means +of individual action, economy, and self-denial; by better habits, rather +than by greater rights.</p> +<p>The Government of a nation itself is usually found to be but the +reflex of the individuals composing it. The Government that is +ahead of the people will inevitably be dragged down to their level, +as the Government that is behind them will in the long run be dragged +up. In the order of nature, the collective character of a nation +will as surely find its befitting results in its law and government, +as water finds its own level. The noble people will be nobly ruled, +and the ignorant and corrupt ignobly. Indeed all experience serves +to prove that the worth and strength of a State depend far less upon +the form of its institutions than upon the character of its men. +For the nation is only an aggregate of individual conditions, and civilization +itself is but a question of the personal improvement of the men, women, +and children of whom society is composed.</p> +<p>National progress is the sum of individual industry, energy, and +uprightness, as national decay is of individual idleness, selfishness, +and vice. What we are accustomed to decry as great social evils, +will, for the most part, be found to be but the outgrowth of man’s +own perverted life; and though we may endeavour to cut them down and +extirpate them by means of Law, they will only spring up again with +fresh luxuriance in some other form, unless the conditions of personal +life and character are radically improved. If this view be correct, +then it follows that the highest patriotism and philanthropy consist, +not so much in altering laws and modifying institutions, as in helping +and stimulating men to elevate and improve themselves by their own free +and independent individual action.</p> +<p>It may be of comparatively little consequence how a man is governed +from without, whilst everything depends upon how he governs himself +from within. The greatest slave is not he who is ruled by a despot, +great though that evil be, but he who is the thrall of his own moral +ignorance, selfishness, and vice. Nations who are thus enslaved +at heart cannot be freed by any mere changes of masters or of institutions; +and so long as the fatal delusion prevails, that liberty solely depends +upon and consists in government, so long will such changes, no matter +at what cost they may be effected, have as little practical and lasting +result as the shifting of the figures in a phantasmagoria. The +solid foundations of liberty must rest upon individual character; which +is also the only sure guarantee for social security and national progress. +John Stuart Mill truly observes that “even despotism does not +produce its worst effects so long as individuality exists under it; +and whatever crushes individuality <i>is</i> despotism, by whatever +name it be called.”</p> +<p>Old fallacies as to human progress are constantly turning up. +Some call for Caesars, others for Nationalities, and others for Acts +of Parliament. We are to wait for Caesars, and when they are found, +“happy the people who recognise and follow them.” <a name="citation1"></a><a href="#footnote1">{1}</a> +This doctrine shortly means, everything <i>for</i> the people, nothing +<i>by</i> them,—a doctrine which, if taken as a guide, must, by +destroying the free conscience of a community, speedily prepare the +way for any form of despotism. Caesarism is human idolatry in +its worst form—a worship of mere power, as degrading in its effects +as the worship of mere wealth would be. A far healthier doctrine +to inculcate among the nations would be that of Self-Help; and so soon +as it is thoroughly understood and carried into action, Caesarism will +be no more. The two principles are directly antagonistic; and +what Victor Hugo said of the Pen and the Sword alike applies to them, +“Ceci tuera cela.” [This will kill that.]</p> +<p>The power of Nationalities and Acts of Parliament is also a prevalent +superstition. What William Dargan, one of Ireland’s truest +patriots, said at the closing of the first Dublin Industrial Exhibition, +may well be quoted now. “To tell the truth,” he said, +“I never heard the word independence mentioned that my own country +and my own fellow townsmen did not occur to my mind. I have heard +a great deal about the independence that we were to get from this, that, +and the other place, and of the great expectations we were to have from +persons from other countries coming amongst us. Whilst I value +as much as any man the great advantages that must result to us from +that intercourse, I have always been deeply impressed with the feeling +that our industrial independence is dependent upon ourselves. +I believe that with simple industry and careful exactness in the utilization +of our energies, we never had a fairer chance nor a brighter prospect +than the present. We have made a step, but perseverance is the +great agent of success; and if we but go on zealously, I believe in +my conscience that in a short period we shall arrive at a position of +equal comfort, of equal happiness, and of equal independence, with that +of any other people.”</p> +<p>All nations have been made what they are by the thinking and the +working of many generations of men. Patient and persevering labourers +in all ranks and conditions of life, cultivators of the soil and explorers +of the mine, inventors and discoverers, manufacturers, mechanics and +artisans, poets, philosophers, and politicians, all have contributed +towards the grand result, one generation building upon another’s +labours, and carrying them forward to still higher stages. This +constant succession of noble workers—the artisans of civilisation—has +served to create order out of chaos in industry, science, and art; and +the living race has thus, in the course of nature, become the inheritor +of the rich estate provided by the skill and industry of our forefathers, +which is placed in our hands to cultivate, and to hand down, not only +unimpaired but improved, to our successors.</p> +<p>The spirit of self-help, as exhibited in the energetic action of +individuals, has in all times been a marked feature in the English character, +and furnishes the true measure of our power as a nation. Rising +above the heads of the mass, there were always to be found a series +of individuals distinguished beyond others, who commanded the public +homage. But our progress has also been owing to multitudes of +smaller and less known men. Though only the generals’ names +may be remembered in the history of any great campaign, it has been +in a great measure through the individual valour and heroism of the +privates that victories have been won. And life, too, is “a +soldiers’ battle,”—men in the ranks having in all +times been amongst the greatest of workers. Many are the lives +of men unwritten, which have nevertheless as powerfully influenced civilisation +and progress as the more fortunate Great whose names are recorded in +biography. Even the humblest person, who sets before his fellows +an example of industry, sobriety, and upright honesty of purpose in +life, has a present as well as a future influence upon the well-being +of his country; for his life and character pass unconsciously into the +lives of others, and propagate good example for all time to come.</p> +<p>Daily experience shows that it is energetic individualism which produces +the most powerful effects upon the life and action of others, and really +constitutes the best practical education. Schools, academies, +and colleges, give but the merest beginnings of culture in comparison +with it. Far more influential is the life-education daily given +in our homes, in the streets, behind counters, in workshops, at the +loom and the plough, in counting-houses and manufactories, and in the +busy haunts of men. This is that finishing instruction as members +of society, which Schiller designated “the education of the human +race,” consisting in action, conduct, self-culture, self-control,—all +that tends to discipline a man truly, and fit him for the proper performance +of the duties and business of life,—a kind of education not to +be learnt from books, or acquired by any amount of mere literary training. +With his usual weight of words Bacon observes, that “Studies teach +not their own use; but that is a wisdom without them, and above them, +won by observation;” a remark that holds true of actual life, +as well as of the cultivation of the intellect itself. For all +experience serves to illustrate and enforce the lesson, that a man perfects +himself by work more than by reading,—that it is life rather than +literature, action rather than study, and character rather than biography, +which tend perpetually to renovate mankind.</p> +<p>Biographies of great, but especially of good men, are nevertheless +most instructive and useful, as helps, guides, and incentives to others. +Some of the best are almost equivalent to gospels—teaching high +living, high thinking, and energetic action for their own and the world’s +good. The valuable examples which they furnish of the power of +self-help, of patient purpose, resolute working, and steadfast integrity, +issuing in the formation of truly noble and manly character, exhibit +in language not to be misunderstood, what it is in the power of each +to accomplish for himself; and eloquently illustrate the efficacy of +self-respect and self-reliance in enabling men of even the humblest +rank to work out for themselves an honourable competency and a solid +reputation.</p> +<p>Great men of science, literature, and art—apostles of great +thoughts and lords of the great heart—have belonged to no exclusive +class nor rank in life. They have come alike from colleges, workshops, +and farmhouses,—from the huts of poor men and the mansions of +the rich. Some of God’s greatest apostles have come from +“the ranks.” The poorest have sometimes taken the +highest places; nor have difficulties apparently the most insuperable +proved obstacles in their way. Those very difficulties, in many +instances, would ever seem to have been their best helpers, by evoking +their powers of labour and endurance, and stimulating into life faculties +which might otherwise have lain dormant. The instances of obstacles +thus surmounted, and of triumphs thus achieved, are indeed so numerous, +as almost to justify the proverb that “with Will one can do anything.” +Take, for instance, the remarkable fact, that from the barber’s +shop came Jeremy Taylor, the most poetical of divines; Sir Richard Arkwright, +the inventor of the spinning-jenny and founder of the cotton manufacture; +Lord Tenterden, one of the most distinguished of Lord Chief Justices; +and Turner, the greatest among landscape painters.</p> +<p>No one knows to a certainty what Shakespeare was; but it is unquestionable +that he sprang from a humble rank. His father was a butcher and +grazier; and Shakespeare himself is supposed to have been in early life +a woolcomber; whilst others aver that he was an usher in a school and +afterwards a scrivener’s clerk. He truly seems to have been +“not one, but all mankind’s epitome.” For such +is the accuracy of his sea phrases that a naval writer alleges that +he must have been a sailor; whilst a clergyman infers, from internal +evidence in his writings, that he was probably a parson’s clerk; +and a distinguished judge of horse-flesh insists that he must have been +a horse-dealer. Shakespeare was certainly an actor, and in the +course of his life “played many parts,” gathering his wonderful +stores of knowledge from a wide field of experience and observation. +In any event, he must have been a close student and a hard worker; and +to this day his writings continue to exercise a powerful influence on +the formation of English character.</p> +<p>The common class of day labourers has given us Brindley the engineer, +Cook the navigator, and Burns the poet. Masons and bricklayers +can boast of Ben Jonson, who worked at the building of Lincoln’s +Inn, with a trowel in his hand and a book in his pocket, Edwards and +Telford the engineers, Hugh Miller the geologist, and Allan Cunningham +the writer and sculptor; whilst among distinguished carpenters we find +the names of Inigo Jones the architect, Harrison the chronometer-maker, +John Hunter the physiologist, Romney and Opie the painters, Professor +Lee the Orientalist, and John Gibson the sculptor.</p> +<p>From the weaver class have sprung Simson the mathematician, Bacon +the sculptor, the two Milners, Adam Walker, John Foster, Wilson the +ornithologist, Dr. Livingstone the missionary traveller, and Tannahill +the poet. Shoemakers have given us Sir Cloudesley Shovel the great +Admiral, Sturgeon the electrician, Samuel Drew the essayist, Gifford +the editor of the ‘Quarterly Review,’ Bloomfield the poet, +and William Carey the missionary; whilst Morrison, another laborious +missionary, was a maker of shoe-lasts. Within the last few years, +a profound naturalist has been discovered in the person of a shoemaker +at Banff, named Thomas Edwards, who, while maintaining himself by his +trade, has devoted his leisure to the study of natural science in all +its branches, his researches in connexion with the smaller crustaceae +having been rewarded by the discovery of a new species, to which the +name of “Praniza Edwardsii” has been given by naturalists.</p> +<p>Nor have tailors been undistinguished. John Stow, the historian, +worked at the trade during some part of his life. Jackson, the +painter, made clothes until he reached manhood. The brave Sir +John Hawkswood, who so greatly distinguished himself at Poictiers, and +was knighted by Edward III. for his valour, was in early life apprenticed +to a London tailor. Admiral Hobson, who broke the boom at Vigo +in 1702, belonged to the same calling. He was working as a tailor’s +apprentice near Bonchurch, in the Isle of Wight, when the news flew +through the village that a squadron of men-of-war was sailing off the +island. He sprang from the shopboard, and ran down with his comrades +to the beach, to gaze upon the glorious sight. The boy was suddenly +inflamed with the ambition to be a sailor; and springing into a boat, +he rowed off to the squadron, gained the admiral’s ship, and was +accepted as a volunteer. Years after, he returned to his native +village full of honours, and dined off bacon and eggs in the cottage +where he had worked as an apprentice. But the greatest tailor +of all is unquestionably Andrew Johnson, the present President of the +United States—a man of extraordinary force of character and vigour +of intellect. In his great speech at Washington, when describing +himself as having begun his political career as an alderman, and run +through all the branches of the legislature, a voice in the crowd cried, +“From a tailor up.” It was characteristic of Johnson +to take the intended sarcasm in good part, and even to turn it to account. +“Some gentleman says I have been a tailor. That does not +disconcert me in the least; for when I was a tailor I had the reputation +of being a good one, and making close fits; I was always punctual with +my customers, and always did good work.”</p> +<p>Cardinal Wolsey, De Foe, Akenside, and Kirke White were the sons +of butchers; Bunyan was a tinker, and Joseph Lancaster a basket-maker. +Among the great names identified with the invention of the steam-engine +are those of Newcomen, Watt, and Stephenson; the first a blacksmith, +the second a maker of mathematical instruments, and the third an engine-fireman. +Huntingdon the preacher was originally a coalheaver, and Bewick, the +father of wood-engraving, a coalminer. Dodsley was a footman, +and Holcroft a groom. Baffin the navigator began his seafaring +career as a man before the mast, and Sir Cloudesley Shovel as a cabin-boy. +Herschel played the oboe in a military band. Chantrey was a journeyman +carver, Etty a journeyman printer, and Sir Thomas Lawrence the son of +a tavern-keeper. Michael Faraday, the son of a blacksmith, was +in early life apprenticed to a bookbinder, and worked at that trade +until he reached his twenty-second year: he now occupies the very first +rank as a philosopher, excelling even his master, Sir Humphry Davy, +in the art of lucidly expounding the most difficult and abstruse points +in natural science.</p> +<p>Among those who have given the greatest impulse to the sublime science +of astronomy, we find Copernicus, the son of a Polish baker; Kepler, +the son of a German public-house keeper, and himself the “garçon +de cabaret;” d’Alembert, a foundling picked up one winter’s +night on the steps of the church of St. Jean le Rond at Paris, and brought +up by the wife of a glazier; and Newton and Laplace, the one the son +of a small freeholder near Grantham, the other the son of a poor peasant +of Beaumont-en-Auge, near Honfleur. Notwithstanding their comparatively +adverse circumstances in early life, these distinguished men achieved +a solid and enduring reputation by the exercise of their genius, which +all the wealth in the world could not have purchased. The very +possession of wealth might indeed have proved an obstacle greater even +than the humble means to which they were born. The father of Lagrange, +the astronomer and mathematician, held the office of Treasurer of War +at Turin; but having ruined himself by speculations, his family were +reduced to comparative poverty. To this circumstance Lagrange +was in after life accustomed partly to attribute his own fame and happiness. +“Had I been rich,” said he, “I should probably not +have become a mathematician.”</p> +<p>The sons of clergymen and ministers of religion generally, have particularly +distinguished themselves in our country’s history. Amongst +them we find the names of Drake and Nelson, celebrated in naval heroism; +of Wollaston, Young, Playfair, and Bell, in science; of Wren, Reynolds, +Wilson, and Wilkie, in art; of Thurlow and Campbell, in law; and of +Addison, Thomson, Goldsmith, Coleridge, and Tennyson, in literature. +Lord Hardinge, Colonel Edwardes, and Major Hodson, so honourably known +in Indian warfare, were also the sons of clergymen. Indeed, the +empire of England in India was won and held chiefly by men of the middle +class—such as Clive, Warren Hastings, and their successors—men +for the most part bred in factories and trained to habits of business.</p> +<p>Among the sons of attorneys we find Edmund Burke, Smeaton the engineer, +Scott and Wordsworth, and Lords Somers, Hardwick, and Dunning. +Sir William Blackstone was the posthumous son of a silk-mercer. +Lord Gifford’s father was a grocer at Dover; Lord Denman’s +a physician; judge Talfourd’s a country brewer; and Lord Chief +Baron Pollock’s a celebrated saddler at Charing Cross. Layard, +the discoverer of the monuments of Nineveh, was an articled clerk in +a London solicitor’s office; and Sir William Armstrong, the inventor +of hydraulic machinery and of the Armstrong ordnance, was also trained +to the law and practised for some time as an attorney. Milton +was the son of a London scrivener, and Pope and Southey were the sons +of linendrapers. Professor Wilson was the son of a Paisley manufacturer, +and Lord Macaulay of an African merchant. Keats was a druggist, +and Sir Humphry Davy a country apothecary’s apprentice. +Speaking of himself, Davy once said, “What I am I have made myself: +I say this without vanity, and in pure simplicity of heart.” +Richard Owen, the Newton of Natural History, began life as a midshipman, +and did not enter upon the line of scientific research in which he has +since become so distinguished, until comparatively late in life. +He laid the foundations of his great knowledge while occupied in cataloguing +the magnificent museum accumulated by the industry of John Hunter, a +work which occupied him at the College of Surgeons during a period of +about ten years.</p> +<p>Foreign not less than English biography abounds in illustrations +of men who have glorified the lot of poverty by their labours and their +genius. In Art we find Claude, the son of a pastrycook; Geefs, +of a baker; Leopold Robert, of a watchmaker; and Haydn, of a wheelwright; +whilst Daguerre was a scene-painter at the Opera. The father of +Gregory VII. was a carpenter; of Sextus V., a shepherd; and of Adrian +VI., a poor bargeman. When a boy, Adrian, unable to pay for a +light by which to study, was accustomed to prepare his lessons by the +light of the lamps in the streets and the church porches, exhibiting +a degree of patience and industry which were the certain forerunners +of his future distinction. Of like humble origin were Hauy, the +mineralogist, who was the son of a weaver of Saint-Just; Hautefeuille, +the mechanician, of a baker at Orleans; Joseph Fourier, the mathematician, +of a tailor at Auxerre; Durand, the architect, of a Paris shoemaker; +and Gesner, the naturalist, of a skinner or worker in hides, at Zurich. +This last began his career under all the disadvantages attendant on +poverty, sickness, and domestic calamity; none of which, however, were +sufficient to damp his courage or hinder his progress. His life +was indeed an eminent illustration of the truth of the saying, that +those who have most to do and are willing to work, will find the most +time. Pierre Ramus was another man of like character. He +was the son of poor parents in Picardy, and when a boy was employed +to tend sheep. But not liking the occupation he ran away to Paris. +After encountering much misery, he succeeded in entering the College +of Navarre as a servant. The situation, however, opened for him +the road to learning, and he shortly became one of the most distinguished +men of his time.</p> +<p>The chemist Vauquelin was the son of a peasant of Saint-André-d’Herbetot, +in the Calvados. When a boy at school, though poorly clad, he +was full of bright intelligence; and the master, who taught him to read +and write, when praising him for his diligence, used to say, “Go +on, my boy; work, study, Colin, and one day you will go as well dressed +as the parish churchwarden!” A country apothecary who visited +the school, admired the robust boy’s arms, and offered to take +him into his laboratory to pound his drugs, to which Vauquelin assented, +in the hope of being able to continue his lessons. But the apothecary +would not permit him to spend any part of his time in learning; and +on ascertaining this, the youth immediately determined to quit his service. +He therefore left Saint-André and took the road for Paris with +his havresac on his back. Arrived there, he searched for a place +as apothecary’s boy, but could not find one. Worn out by +fatigue and destitution, Vauquelin fell ill, and in that state was taken +to the hospital, where he thought he should die. But better things +were in store for the poor boy. He recovered, and again proceeded +in his search of employment, which he at length found with an apothecary. +Shortly after, he became known to Fourcroy the eminent chemist, who +was so pleased with the youth that he made him his private secretary; +and many years after, on the death of that great philosopher, Vauquelin +succeeded him as Professor of Chemistry. Finally, in 1829, the +electors of the district of Calvados appointed him their representative +in the Chamber of Deputies, and he re-entered in triumph the village +which he had left so many years before, so poor and so obscure.</p> +<p>England has no parallel instances to show, of promotions from the +ranks of the army to the highest military offices; which have been so +common in France since the first Revolution. “La carrière +ouverte aux talents” has there received many striking illustrations, +which would doubtless be matched among ourselves were the road to promotion +as open. Hoche, Humbert, and Pichegru, began their respective +careers as private soldiers. Hoche, while in the King’s +army, was accustomed to embroider waistcoats to enable him to earn money +wherewith to purchase books on military science. Humbert was a +scapegrace when a youth; at sixteen he ran away from home, and was by +turns servant to a tradesman at Nancy, a workman at Lyons, and a hawker +of rabbit skins. In 1792, he enlisted as a volunteer; and in a +year he was general of brigade. Kleber, Lefèvre, Suchet, +Victor, Lannes, Soult, Massena, St. Cyr, D’Erlon, Murat, Augereau, +Bessières, and Ney, all rose from the ranks. In some cases +promotion was rapid, in others it was slow. Saint Cyr, the son +of a tanner of Toul, began life as an actor, after which he enlisted +in the Chasseurs, and was promoted to a captaincy within a year. +Victor, Duc de Belluno, enlisted in the Artillery in 1781: during the +events preceding the Revolution he was discharged; but immediately on +the outbreak of war he re-enlisted, and in the course of a few months +his intrepidity and ability secured his promotion as Adjutant-Major +and chief of battalion. Murat, “le beau sabreur,” +was the son of a village innkeeper in Perigord, where he looked after +the horses. He first enlisted in a regiment of Chasseurs, from +which he was dismissed for insubordination: but again enlisting, he +shortly rose to the rank of Colonel. Ney enlisted at eighteen +in a hussar regiment, and gradually advanced step by step: Kleber soon +discovered his merits, surnaming him “The Indefatigable,” +and promoted him to be Adjutant-General when only twenty-five. +On the other hand, Soult <a name="citation2"></a><a href="#footnote2">{2}</a> +was six years from the date of his enlistment before he reached the +rank of sergeant. But Soult’s advancement was rapid compared +with that of Massena, who served for fourteen years before he was made +sergeant; and though he afterwards rose successively, step by step, +to the grades of Colonel, General of Division, and Marshal, he declared +that the post of sergeant was the step which of all others had cost +him the most labour to win. Similar promotions from the ranks, +in the French army, have continued down to our own day. Changarnier +entered the King’s bodyguard as a private in 1815. Marshal +Bugeaud served four years in the ranks, after which he was made an officer. +Marshal Randon, the present French Minister of War, began his military +career as a drummer boy; and in the portrait of him in the gallery at +Versailles, his hand rests upon a drum-head, the picture being thus +painted at his own request. Instances such as these inspire French +soldiers with enthusiasm for their service, as each private feels that +he may possibly carry the baton of a marshal in his knapsack.</p> +<p>The instances of men, in this and other countries, who, by dint of +persevering application and energy, have raised themselves from the +humblest ranks of industry to eminent positions of usefulness and influence +in society, are indeed so numerous that they have long ceased to be +regarded as exceptional. Looking at some of the more remarkable, +it might almost be said that early encounter with difficulty and adverse +circumstances was the necessary and indispensable condition of success. +The British House of Commons has always contained a considerable number +of such self-raised men—fitting representatives of the industrial +character of the people; and it is to the credit of our Legislature +that they have been welcomed and honoured there. When the late +Joseph Brotherton, member for Salford, in the course of the discussion +on the Ten Hours Bill, detailed with true pathos the hardships and fatigues +to which he had been subjected when working as a factory boy in a cotton +mill, and described the resolution which he had then formed, that if +ever it was in his power he would endeavour to ameliorate the condition +of that class, Sir James Graham rose immediately after him, and declared, +amidst the cheers of the House, that he did not before know that Mr. +Brotherton’s origin had been so humble, but that it rendered him +more proud than he had ever before been of the House of Commons, to +think that a person risen from that condition should be able to sit +side by side, on equal terms, with the hereditary gentry of the land.</p> +<p>The late Mr. Fox, member for Oldham, was accustomed to introduce +his recollections of past times with the words, “when I was working +as a weaver boy at Norwich;” and there are other members of parliament, +still living, whose origin has been equally humble. Mr. Lindsay, +the well-known ship owner, until recently member for Sunderland, once +told the simple story of his life to the electors of Weymouth, in answer +to an attack made upon him by his political opponents. He had +been left an orphan at fourteen, and when he left Glasgow for Liverpool +to push his way in the world, not being able to pay the usual fare, +the captain of the steamer agreed to take his labour in exchange, and +the boy worked his passage by trimming the coals in the coal hole. +At Liverpool he remained for seven weeks before he could obtain employment, +during which time he lived in sheds and fared hardly; until at last +he found shelter on board a West Indiaman. He entered as a boy, +and before he was nineteen, by steady good conduct he had risen to the +command of a ship. At twenty-three he retired from the sea, and +settled on shore, after which his progress was rapid “he had prospered,” +he said, “by steady industry, by constant work, and by ever keeping +in view the great principle of doing to others as you would be done +by.”</p> +<p>The career of Mr. William Jackson, of Birkenhead, the present member +for North Derbyshire, bears considerable resemblance to that of Mr. +Lindsay. His father, a surgeon at Lancaster, died, leaving a family +of eleven children, of whom William Jackson was the seventh son. +The elder boys had been well educated while the father lived, but at +his death the younger members had to shift for themselves. William, +when under twelve years old, was taken from school, and put to hard +work at a ship’s side from six in the morning till nine at night. +His master falling ill, the boy was taken into the counting-house, where +he had more leisure. This gave him an opportunity of reading, +and having obtained access to a set of the ‘Encyclopaedia Britannica,’ +he read the volumes through from A to Z, partly by day, but chiefly +at night. He afterwards put himself to a trade, was diligent, +and succeeded in it. Now he has ships sailing on almost every +sea, and holds commercial relations with nearly every country on the +globe.</p> +<p>Among like men of the same class may be ranked the late Richard Cobden, +whose start in life was equally humble. The son of a small farmer +at Midhurst in Sussex, he was sent at an early age to London and employed +as a boy in a warehouse in the City. He was diligent, well conducted, +and eager for information. His master, a man of the old school, +warned him against too much reading; but the boy went on in his own +course, storing his mind with the wealth found in books. He was +promoted from one position of trust to another—became a traveller +for his house—secured a large connection, and eventually started +in business as a calico printer at Manchester. Taking an interest +in public questions, more especially in popular education, his attention +was gradually drawn to the subject of the Corn Laws, to the repeal of +which he may be said to have devoted his fortune and his life. +It may be mentioned as a curious fact that the first speech he delivered +in public was a total failure. But he had great perseverance, +application, and energy; and with persistency and practice, he became +at length one of the most persuasive and effective of public speakers, +extorting the disinterested eulogy of even Sir Robert Peel himself. +M. Drouyn de Lhuys, the French Ambassador, has eloquently said of Mr. +Cobden, that he was “a living proof of what merit, perseverance, +and labour can accomplish; one of the most complete examples of those +men who, sprung from the humblest ranks of society, raise themselves +to the highest rank in public estimation by the effect of their own +worth and of their personal services; finally, one of the rarest examples +of the solid qualities inherent in the English character.”</p> +<p>In all these cases, strenuous individual application was the price +paid for distinction; excellence of any sort being invariably placed +beyond the reach of indolence. It is the diligent hand and head +alone that maketh rich—in self-culture, growth in wisdom, and +in business. Even when men are born to wealth and high social +position, any solid reputation which they may individually achieve can +only be attained by energetic application; for though an inheritance +of acres may be bequeathed, an inheritance of knowledge and wisdom cannot. +The wealthy man may pay others for doing his work for him, but it is +impossible to get his thinking done for him by another, or to purchase +any kind of self-culture. Indeed, the doctrine that excellence +in any pursuit is only to be achieved by laborious application, holds +as true in the case of the man of wealth as in that of Drew and Gifford, +whose only school was a cobbler’s stall, or Hugh Miller, whose +only college was a Cromarty stone quarry.</p> +<p>Riches and ease, it is perfectly clear, are not necessary for man’s +highest culture, else had not the world been so largely indebted in +all times to those who have sprung from the humbler ranks. An +easy and luxurious existence does not train men to effort or encounter +with difficulty; nor does it awaken that consciousness of power which +is so necessary for energetic and effective action in life. Indeed, +so far from poverty being a misfortune, it may, by vigorous self-help, +be converted even into a blessing; rousing a man to that struggle with +the world in which, though some may purchase ease by degradation, the +right-minded and true-hearted find strength, confidence, and triumph. +Bacon says, “Men seem neither to understand their riches nor their +strength: of the former they believe greater things than they should; +of the latter much less. Self-reliance and self-denial will teach +a man to drink out of his own cistern, and eat his own sweet bread, +and to learn and labour truly to get his living, and carefully to expend +the good things committed to his trust.”</p> +<p>Riches are so great a temptation to ease and self-indulgence, to +which men are by nature prone, that the glory is all the greater of +those who, born to ample fortunes, nevertheless take an active part +in the work of their generation—who “scorn delights and +live laborious days.” It is to the honour of the wealthier +ranks in this country that they are not idlers; for they do their fair +share of the work of the state, and usually take more than their fair +share of its dangers. It was a fine thing said of a subaltern +officer in the Peninsular campaigns, observed trudging alone through +mud and mire by the side of his regiment, “There goes 15,000<i>l</i>. +a year!” and in our own day, the bleak slopes of Sebastopol and +the burning soil of India have borne witness to the like noble self-denial +and devotion on the part of our gentler classes; many a gallant and +noble fellow, of rank and estate, having risked his life, or lost it, +in one or other of those fields of action, in the service of his country.</p> +<p>Nor have the wealthier classes been undistinguished in the more peaceful +pursuits of philosophy and science. Take, for instance, the great +names of Bacon, the father of modern philosophy, and of Worcester, Boyle, +Cavendish, Talbot, and Rosse, in science. The last named may be +regarded as the great mechanic of the peerage; a man who, if he had +not been born a peer, would probably have taken the highest rank as +an inventor. So thorough is his knowledge of smith-work that he +is said to have been pressed on one occasion to accept the foremanship +of a large workshop, by a manufacturer to whom his rank was unknown. +The great Rosse telescope, of his own fabrication, is certainly the +most extraordinary instrument of the kind that has yet been constructed.</p> +<p>But it is principally in the departments of politics and literature +that we find the most energetic labourers amongst our higher classes. +Success in these lines of action, as in all others, can only be achieved +through industry, practice, and study; and the great Minister, or parliamentary +leader, must necessarily be amongst the very hardest of workers. +Such was Palmerston; and such are Derby and Russell, Disraeli and Gladstone. +These men have had the benefit of no Ten Hours Bill, but have often, +during the busy season of Parliament, worked “double shift,” +almost day and night. One of the most illustrious of such workers +in modern times was unquestionably the late Sir Robert Peel. He +possessed in an extraordinary degree the power of continuous intellectual +labour, nor did he spare himself. His career, indeed, presented +a remarkable example of how much a man of comparatively moderate powers +can accomplish by means of assiduous application and indefatigable industry. +During the forty years that he held a seat in Parliament, his labours +were prodigious. He was a most conscientious man, and whatever +he undertook to do, he did thoroughly. All his speeches bear evidence +of his careful study of everything that had been spoken or written on +the subject under consideration. He was elaborate almost to excess; +and spared no pains to adapt himself to the various capacities of his +audience. Withal, he possessed much practical sagacity, great +strength of purpose, and power to direct the issues of action with steady +hand and eye. In one respect he surpassed most men: his principles +broadened and enlarged with time; and age, instead of contracting, only +served to mellow and ripen his nature. To the last he continued +open to the reception of new views, and, though many thought him cautious +to excess, he did not allow himself to fall into that indiscriminating +admiration of the past, which is the palsy of many minds similarly educated, +and renders the old age of many nothing but a pity.</p> +<p>The indefatigable industry of Lord Brougham has become almost proverbial. +His public labours have extended over a period of upwards of sixty years, +during which he has ranged over many fields—of law, literature, +politics, and science,—and achieved distinction in them all. +How he contrived it, has been to many a mystery. Once, when Sir +Samuel Romilly was requested to undertake some new work, he excused +himself by saying that he had no time; “but,” he added, +“go with it to that fellow Brougham, he seems to have time for +everything.” The secret of it was, that he never left a +minute unemployed; withal he possessed a constitution of iron. +When arrived at an age at which most men would have retired from the +world to enjoy their hard-earned leisure, perhaps to doze away their +time in an easy chair, Lord Brougham commenced and prosecuted a series +of elaborate investigations as to the laws of Light, and he submitted +the results to the most scientific audiences that Paris and London could +muster. About the same time, he was passing through the press +his admirable sketches of the ‘Men of Science and Literature of +the Reign of George III.,’ and taking his full share of the law +business and the political discussions in the House of Lords. +Sydney Smith once recommended him to confine himself to only the transaction +of so much business as three strong men could get through. But +such was Brougham’s love of work—long become a habit—that +no amount of application seems to have been too great for him; and such +was his love of excellence, that it has been said of him that if his +station in life had been only that of a shoe-black, he would never have +rested satisfied until he had become the best shoe-black in England.</p> +<p>Another hard-working man of the same class is Sir E. Bulwer Lytton. +Few writers have done more, or achieved higher distinction in various +walks—as a novelist, poet, dramatist, historian, essayist, orator, +and politician. He has worked his way step by step, disdainful +of ease, and animated throughout by the ardent desire to excel. +On the score of mere industry, there are few living English writers +who have written so much, and none that have produced so much of high +quality. The industry of Bulwer is entitled to all the greater +praise that it has been entirely self-imposed. To hunt, and shoot, +and live at ease,—to frequent the clubs and enjoy the opera, with +the variety of London visiting and sight-seeing during the “season,” +and then off to the country mansion, with its well-stocked preserves, +and its thousand delightful out-door pleasures,—to travel abroad, +to Paris, Vienna, or Rome,—all this is excessively attractive +to a lover of pleasure and a man of fortune, and by no means calculated +to make him voluntarily undertake continuous labour of any kind. +Yet these pleasures, all within his reach, Bulwer must, as compared +with men born to similar estate, have denied himself in assuming the +position and pursuing the career of a literary man. Like Byron, +his first effort was poetical (‘Weeds and Wild Flowers’), +and a failure. His second was a novel (‘Falkland’), +and it proved a failure too. A man of weaker nerve would have +dropped authorship; but Bulwer had pluck and perseverance; and he worked +on, determined to succeed. He was incessantly industrious, read +extensively, and from failure went courageously onwards to success. +‘Pelham’ followed ‘Falkland’ within a year, +and the remainder of Bulwer’s literary life, now extending over +a period of thirty years, has been a succession of triumphs.</p> +<p>Mr. Disraeli affords a similar instance of the power of industry +and application in working out an eminent public career. His first +achievements were, like Bulwer’s, in literature; and he reached +success only through a succession of failures. His ‘Wondrous +Tale of Alroy’ and ‘Revolutionary Epic’ were laughed +at, and regarded as indications of literary lunacy. But he worked +on in other directions, and his ‘Coningsby,’ ‘Sybil,’ +and ‘Tancred,’ proved the sterling stuff of which he was +made. As an orator too, his first appearance in the House of Commons +was a failure. It was spoken of as “more screaming than +an Adelphi farce.” Though composed in a grand and ambitious +strain, every sentence was hailed with “loud laughter.” +‘Hamlet’ played as a comedy were nothing to it. But +he concluded with a sentence which embodied a prophecy. Writhing +under the laughter with which his studied eloquence had been received, +he exclaimed, “I have begun several times many things, and have +succeeded in them at last. I shall sit down now, but the time +will come when you will hear me.” The time did come; and +how Disraeli succeeded in at length commanding the attention of the +first assembly of gentlemen in the world, affords a striking illustration +of what energy and determination will do; for Disraeli earned his position +by dint of patient industry. He did not, as many young men do, +having once failed, retire dejected, to mope and whine in a corner, +but diligently set himself to work. He carefully unlearnt his +faults, studied the character of his audience, practised sedulously +the art of speech, and industriously filled his mind with the elements +of parliamentary knowledge. He worked patiently for success; and +it came, but slowly: then the House laughed with him, instead of at +him. The recollection of his early failure was effaced, and by +general consent he was at length admitted to be one of the most finished +and effective of parliamentary speakers.</p> +<p>Although much may be accomplished by means of individual industry +and energy, as these and other instances set forth in the following +pages serve to illustrate, it must at the same time be acknowledged +that the help which we derive from others in the journey of life is +of very great importance. The poet Wordsworth has well said that +“these two things, contradictory though they may seem, must go +together—manly dependence and manly independence, manly reliance +and manly self-reliance.” From infancy to old age, all are +more or less indebted to others for nurture and culture; and the best +and strongest are usually found the readiest to acknowledge such help. +Take, for example, the career of the late Alexis de Tocqueville, a man +doubly well-born, for his father was a distinguished peer of France, +and his mother a grand-daughter of Malesherbes. Through powerful +family influence, he was appointed Judge Auditor at Versailles when +only twenty-one; but probably feeling that he had not fairly won the +position by merit, he determined to give it up and owe his future advancement +in life to himself alone. “A foolish resolution,” +some will say; but De Tocqueville bravely acted it out. He resigned +his appointment, and made arrangements to leave France for the purpose +of travelling through the United States, the results of which were published +in his great book on ‘Democracy in America.’ His friend +and travelling companion, Gustave de Beaumont, has described his indefatigable +industry during this journey. “His nature,” he says, +“was wholly averse to idleness, and whether he was travelling +or resting, his mind was always at work. . . . With Alexis, the most +agreeable conversation was that which was the most useful. The +worst day was the lost day, or the day ill spent; the least loss of +time annoyed him.” Tocqueville himself wrote to a friend—“There +is no time of life at which one can wholly cease from action, for effort +without one’s self, and still more effort within, is equally necessary, +if not more so, when we grow old, as it is in youth. I compare +man in this world to a traveller journeying without ceasing towards +a colder and colder region; the higher he goes, the faster he ought +to walk. The great malady of the soul is cold. And in resisting +this formidable evil, one needs not only to be sustained by the action +of a mind employed, but also by contact with one’s fellows in +the business of life.” <a name="citation3"></a><a href="#footnote3">{3}</a></p> +<p>Notwithstanding de Tocqueville’s decided views as to the necessity +of exercising individual energy and self-dependence, no one could be +more ready than he was to recognise the value of that help and support +for which all men are indebted to others in a greater or less degree. +Thus, he often acknowledged, with gratitude, his obligations to his +friends De Kergorlay and Stofells,—to the former for intellectual +assistance, and to the latter for moral support and sympathy. +To De Kergorlay he wrote—“Thine is the only soul in which +I have confidence, and whose influence exercises a genuine effect upon +my own. Many others have influence upon the details of my actions, +but no one has so much influence as thou on the origination of fundamental +ideas, and of those principles which are the rule of conduct.” +De Tocqueville was not less ready to confess the great obligations which +he owed to his wife, Marie, for the preservation of that temper and +frame of mind which enabled him to prosecute his studies with success. +He believed that a noble-minded woman insensibly elevated the character +of her husband, while one of a grovelling nature as certainly tended +to degrade it. <a name="citation4"></a><a href="#footnote4">{4}</a></p> +<p>In fine, human character is moulded by a thousand subtle influences; +by example and precept; by life and literature; by friends and neighbours; +by the world we live in as well as by the spirits of our forefathers, +whose legacy of good words and deeds we inherit. But great, unquestionably, +though these influences are acknowledged to be, it is nevertheless equally +clear that men must necessarily be the active agents of their own well-being +and well-doing; and that, however much the wise and the good may owe +to others, they themselves must in the very nature of things be their +own best helpers.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<h2>CHAPTER II—LEADERS OF INDUSTRY—INVENTORS AND PRODUCERS</h2> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<p>“Le travail et la Science sont désormais les maîtres +du monde.”—De Salvandy.</p> +<p>“Deduct all that men of the humbler classes have done for England +in the way of inventions only, and see where she would have been but +for them.”—Arthur Helps.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>One of the most strongly-marked features of the English people is +their spirit of industry, standing out prominent and distinct in their +past history, and as strikingly characteristic of them now as at any +former period. It is this spirit, displayed by the commons of +England, which has laid the foundations and built up the industrial +greatness of the empire. This vigorous growth of the nation has +been mainly the result of the free energy of individuals, and it has +been contingent upon the number of hands and minds from time to time +actively employed within it, whether as cultivators of the soil, producers +of articles of utility, contrivers of tools and machines, writers of +books, or creators of works of art. And while this spirit of active +industry has been the vital principle of the nation, it has also been +its saving and remedial one, counteracting from time to time the effects +of errors in our laws and imperfections in our constitution.</p> +<p>The career of industry which the nation has pursued, has also proved +its best education. As steady application to work is the healthiest +training for every individual, so is it the best discipline of a state. +Honourable industry travels the same road with duty; and Providence +has closely linked both with happiness. The gods, says the poet, +have placed labour and toil on the way leading to the Elysian fields. +Certain it is that no bread eaten by man is so sweet as that earned +by his own labour, whether bodily or mental. By labour the earth +has been subdued, and man redeemed from barbarism; nor has a single +step in civilization been made without it. Labour is not only +a necessity and a duty, but a blessing: only the idler feels it to be +a curse. The duty of work is written on the thews and muscles +of the limbs, the mechanism of the hand, the nerves and lobes of the +brain—the sum of whose healthy action is satisfaction and enjoyment. +In the school of labour is taught the best practical wisdom; nor is +a life of manual employment, as we shall hereafter find, incompatible +with high mental culture.</p> +<p>Hugh Miller, than whom none knew better the strength and the weakness +belonging to the lot of labour, stated the result of his experience +to be, that Work, even the hardest, is full of pleasure and materials +for self-improvement. He held honest labour to be the best of +teachers, and that the school of toil is the noblest of schools—save +only the Christian one,—that it is a school in which the ability +of being useful is imparted, the spirit of independence learnt, and +the habit of persevering effort acquired. He was even of opinion +that the training of the mechanic,—by the exercise which it gives +to his observant faculties, from his daily dealing with things actual +and practical, and the close experience of life which he acquires,—better +fits him for picking his way along the journey of life, and is more +favourable to his growth as a Man, emphatically speaking, than the training +afforded by any other condition.</p> +<p>The array of great names which we have already cursorily cited, of +men springing from the ranks of the industrial classes, who have achieved +distinction in various walks of life—in science, commerce, literature, +and art—shows that at all events the difficulties interposed by +poverty and labour are not insurmountable. As respects the great +contrivances and inventions which have conferred so much power and wealth +upon the nation, it is unquestionable that for the greater part of them +we have been indebted to men of the humblest rank. Deduct what +they have done in this particular line of action, and it will be found +that very little indeed remains for other men to have accomplished.</p> +<p>Inventors have set in motion some of the greatest industries of the +world. To them society owes many of its chief necessaries, comforts, +and luxuries; and by their genius and labour daily life has been rendered +in all respects more easy as well as enjoyable. Our food, our +clothing, the furniture of our homes, the glass which admits the light +to our dwellings at the same time that it excludes the cold, the gas +which illuminates our streets, our means of locomotion by land and by +sea, the tools by which our various articles of necessity and luxury +are fabricated, have been the result of the labour and ingenuity of +many men and many minds. Mankind at large are all the happier +for such inventions, and are every day reaping the benefit of them in +an increase of individual well-being as well as of public enjoyment.</p> +<p>Though the invention of the working steam-engine—the king of +machines—belongs, comparatively speaking, to our own epoch, the +idea of it was born many centuries ago. Like other contrivances +and discoveries, it was effected step by step—one man transmitting +the result of his labours, at the time apparently useless, to his successors, +who took it up and carried it forward another stage,—the prosecution +of the inquiry extending over many generations. Thus the idea +promulgated by Hero of Alexandria was never altogether lost; but, like +the grain of wheat hid in the hand of the Egyptian mummy, it sprouted +and again grew vigorously when brought into the full light of modern +science. The steam-engine was nothing, however, until it emerged +from the state of theory, and was taken in hand by practical mechanics; +and what a noble story of patient, laborious investigation, of difficulties +encountered and overcome by heroic industry, does not that marvellous +machine tell of! It is indeed, in itself, a monument of the power +of self-help in man. Grouped around it we find Savary, the military +engineer; Newcomen, the Dartmouth blacksmith; Cawley, the glazier; Potter, +the engine-boy; Smeaton, the civil engineer; and, towering above all, +the laborious, patient, never-tiring James Watt, the mathematical-instrument +maker.</p> +<p>Watt was one of the most industrious of men; and the story of his +life proves, what all experience confirms, that it is not the man of +the greatest natural vigour and capacity who achieves the highest results, +but he who employs his powers with the greatest industry and the most +carefully disciplined skill—the skill that comes by labour, application, +and experience. Many men in his time knew far more than Watt, +but none laboured so assiduously as he did to turn all that he did know +to useful practical purposes. He was, above all things, most persevering +in the pursuit of facts. He cultivated carefully that habit of +active attention on which all the higher working qualities of the mind +mainly depend. Indeed, Mr. Edgeworth entertained the opinion, +that the difference of intellect in men depends more upon the early +cultivation of this <i>habit of attention</i>, than upon any great disparity +between the powers of one individual and another.</p> +<p>Even when a boy, Watt found science in his toys. The quadrants +lying about his father’s carpenter’s shop led him to the +study of optics and astronomy; his ill health induced him to pry into +the secrets of physiology; and his solitary walks through the country +attracted him to the study of botany and history. While carrying +on the business of a mathematical-instrument maker, he received an order +to build an organ; and, though without an ear for music, he undertook +the study of harmonics, and successfully constructed the instrument. +And, in like manner, when the little model of Newcomen’s steam-engine, +belonging to the University of Glasgow, was placed in his hands to repair, +he forthwith set himself to learn all that was then known about heat, +evaporation, and condensation,—at the same time plodding his way +in mechanics and the science of construction,—the results of which +he at length embodied in his condensing steam-engine.</p> +<p>For ten years he went on contriving and inventing—with little +hope to cheer him, and with few friends to encourage him. He went +on, meanwhile, earning bread for his family by making and selling quadrants, +making and mending fiddles, flutes, and musical instruments; measuring +mason-work, surveying roads, superintending the construction of canals, +or doing anything that turned up, and offered a prospect of honest gain. +At length, Watt found a fit partner in another eminent leader of industry—Matthew +Boulton, of Birmingham; a skilful, energetic, and far-seeing man, who +vigorously undertook the enterprise of introducing the condensing-engine +into general use as a working power; and the success of both is now +matter of history. <a name="citation5"></a><a href="#footnote5">{5}</a></p> +<p>Many skilful inventors have from time to time added new power to +the steam-engine; and, by numerous modifications, rendered it capable +of being applied to nearly all the purposes of manufacture—driving +machinery, impelling ships, grinding corn, printing books, stamping +money, hammering, planing, and turning iron; in short, of performing +every description of mechanical labour where power is required. +One of the most useful modifications in the engine was that devised +by Trevithick, and eventually perfected by George Stephenson and his +son, in the form of the railway locomotive, by which social changes +of immense importance have been brought about, of even greater consequence, +considered in their results on human progress and civilization, than +the condensing-engine of Watt.</p> +<p>One of the first grand results of Watt’s invention,—which +placed an almost unlimited power at the command of the producing classes,—was +the establishment of the cotton-manufacture. The person most closely +identified with the foundation of this great branch of industry was +unquestionably Sir Richard Arkwright, whose practical energy and sagacity +were perhaps even more remarkable than his mechanical inventiveness. +His originality as an inventor has indeed been called in question, like +that of Watt and Stephenson. Arkwright probably stood in the same +relation to the spinning-machine that Watt did to the steam-engine and +Stephenson to the locomotive. He gathered together the scattered +threads of ingenuity which already existed, and wove them, after his +own design, into a new and original fabric. Though Lewis Paul, +of Birmingham, patented the invention of spinning by rollers thirty +years before Arkwright, the machines constructed by him were so imperfect +in their details, that they could not be profitably worked, and the +invention was practically a failure. Another obscure mechanic, +a reed-maker of Leigh, named Thomas Highs, is also said to have invented +the water-frame and spinning-jenny; but they, too, proved unsuccessful.</p> +<p>When the demands of industry are found to press upon the resources +of inventors, the same idea is usually found floating about in many +minds;—such has been the case with the steam-engine, the safety-lamp, +the electric telegraph, and other inventions. Many ingenious minds +are found labouring in the throes of invention, until at length the +master mind, the strong practical man, steps forward, and straightway +delivers them of their idea, applies the principle successfully, and +the thing is done. Then there is a loud outcry among all the smaller +contrivers, who see themselves distanced in the race; and hence men +such as Watt, Stephenson, and Arkwright, have usually to defend their +reputation and their rights as practical and successful inventors.</p> +<p>Richard Arkwright, like most of our great mechanicians, sprang from +the ranks. He was born in Preston in 1732. His parents were +very poor, and he was the youngest of thirteen children. He was +never at school: the only education he received he gave to himself; +and to the last he was only able to write with difficulty. When +a boy, he was apprenticed to a barber, and after learning the business, +he set up for himself in Bolton, where he occupied an underground cellar, +over which he put up the sign, “Come to the subterraneous barber—he +shaves for a penny.” The other barbers found their customers +leaving them, and reduced their prices to his standard, when Arkwright, +determined to push his trade, announced his determination to give “A +clean shave for a halfpenny.” After a few years he quitted +his cellar, and became an itinerant dealer in hair. At that time +wigs were worn, and wig-making formed an important branch of the barbering +business. Arkwright went about buying hair for the wigs. +He was accustomed to attend the hiring fairs throughout Lancashire resorted +to by young women, for the purpose of securing their long tresses; and +it is said that in negotiations of this sort he was very successful. +He also dealt in a chemical hair dye, which he used adroitly, and thereby +secured a considerable trade. But he does not seem, notwithstanding +his pushing character, to have done more than earn a bare living.</p> +<p>The fashion of wig-wearing having undergone a change, distress fell +upon the wig-makers; and Arkwright, being of a mechanical turn, was +consequently induced to turn machine inventor or “conjurer,” +as the pursuit was then popularly termed. Many attempts were made +about that time to invent a spinning-machine, and our barber determined +to launch his little bark on the sea of invention with the rest. +Like other self-taught men of the same bias, he had already been devoting +his spare time to the invention of a perpetual-motion machine; and from +that the transition to a spinning-machine was easy. He followed +his experiments so assiduously that he neglected his business, lost +the little money he had saved, and was reduced to great poverty. +His wife—for he had by this time married—was impatient at +what she conceived to be a wanton waste of time and money, and in a +moment of sudden wrath she seized upon and destroyed his models, hoping +thus to remove the cause of the family privations. Arkwright was +a stubborn and enthusiastic man, and he was provoked beyond measure +by this conduct of his wife, from whom he immediately separated.</p> +<p>In travelling about the country, Arkwright had become acquainted +with a person named Kay, a clockmaker at Warrington, who assisted him +in constructing some of the parts of his perpetual-motion machinery. +It is supposed that he was informed by Kay of the principle of spinning +by rollers; but it is also said that the idea was first suggested to +him by accidentally observing a red-hot piece of iron become elongated +by passing between iron rollers. However this may be, the idea +at once took firm possession of his mind, and he proceeded to devise +the process by which it was to be accomplished, Kay being able to tell +him nothing on this point. Arkwright now abandoned his business +of hair collecting, and devoted himself to the perfecting of his machine, +a model of which, constructed by Kay under his directions, he set up +in the parlour of the Free Grammar School at Preston. Being a +burgess of the town, he voted at the contested election at which General +Burgoyne was returned; but such was his poverty, and such the tattered +state of his dress, that a number of persons subscribed a sum sufficient +to have him put in a state fit to appear in the poll-room. The +exhibition of his machine in a town where so many workpeople lived by +the exercise of manual labour proved a dangerous experiment; ominous +growlings were heard outside the school-room from time to time, and +Arkwright,—remembering the fate of Kay, who was mobbed and compelled +to fly from Lancashire because of his invention of the fly-shuttle, +and of poor Hargreaves, whose spinning-jenny had been pulled to pieces +only a short time before by a Blackburn mob,—wisely determined +on packing up his model and removing to a less dangerous locality. +He went accordingly to Nottingham, where he applied to some of the local +bankers for pecuniary assistance; and the Messrs. Wright consented to +advance him a sum of money on condition of sharing in the profits of +the invention. The machine, however, not being perfected so soon +as they had anticipated, the bankers recommended Arkwright to apply +to Messrs. Strutt and Need, the former of whom was the ingenious inventor +and patentee of the stocking-frame. Mr. Strutt at once appreciated +the merits of the invention, and a partnership was entered into with +Arkwright, whose road to fortune was now clear. The patent was +secured in the name of “Richard Arkwright, of Nottingham, clockmaker,” +and it is a circumstance worthy of note, that it was taken out in 1769, +the same year in which Watt secured the patent for his steam-engine. +A cotton-mill was first erected at Nottingham, driven by horses; and +another was shortly after built, on a much larger scale, at Cromford, +in Derbyshire, turned by a water-wheel, from which circumstance the +spinning-machine came to be called the water-frame.</p> +<p>Arkwright’s labours, however, were, comparatively speaking, +only begun. He had still to perfect all the working details of +his machine. It was in his hands the subject of constant modification +and improvement, until eventually it was rendered practicable and profitable +in an eminent degree. But success was only secured by long and +patient labour: for some years, indeed, the speculation was disheartening +and unprofitable, swallowing up a very large amount of capital without +any result. When success began to appear more certain, then the +Lancashire manufacturers fell upon Arkwright’s patent to pull +it in pieces, as the Cornish miners fell upon Boulton and Watt to rob +them of the profits of their steam-engine. Arkwright was even +denounced as the enemy of the working people; and a mill which he built +near Chorley was destroyed by a mob in the presence of a strong force +of police and military. The Lancashire men refused to buy his +materials, though they were confessedly the best in the market. +Then they refused to pay patent-right for the use of his machines, and +combined to crush him in the courts of law. To the disgust of +right-minded people, Arkwright’s patent was upset. After +the trial, when passing the hotel at which his opponents were staying, +one of them said, loud enough to be heard by him, “Well, we’ve +done the old shaver at last;” to which he coolly replied, “Never +mind, I’ve a razor left that will shave you all.” +He established new mills in Lancashire, Derbyshire, and at New Lanark, +in Scotland. The mills at Cromford also came into his hands at +the expiry of his partnership with Strutt, and the amount and the excellence +of his products were such, that in a short time he obtained so complete +a control of the trade, that the prices were fixed by him, and he governed +the main operations of the other cotton-spinners.</p> +<p>Arkwright was a man of great force of character, indomitable courage, +much worldly shrewdness, with a business faculty almost amounting to +genius. At one period his time was engrossed by severe and continuous +labour, occasioned by the organising and conducting of his numerous +manufactories, sometimes from four in the morning till nine at night. +At fifty years of age he set to work to learn English grammar, and improve +himself in writing and orthography. After overcoming every obstacle, +he had the satisfaction of reaping the reward of his enterprise. +Eighteen years after he had constructed his first machine, he rose to +such estimation in Derbyshire that he was appointed High Sheriff of +the county, and shortly after George III. conferred upon him the honour +of knighthood. He died in 1792. Be it for good or for evil, +Arkwright was the founder in England of the modern factory system, a +branch of industry which has unquestionably proved a source of immense +wealth to individuals and to the nation.</p> +<p>All the other great branches of industry in Britain furnish like +examples of energetic men of business, the source of much benefit to +the neighbourhoods in which they have laboured, and of increased power +and wealth to the community at large. Amongst such might be cited +the Strutts of Belper; the Tennants of Glasgow; the Marshalls and Gotts +of Leeds; the Peels, Ashworths, Birleys, Fieldens, Ashtons, Heywoods, +and Ainsworths of South Lancashire, some of whose descendants have since +become distinguished in connection with the political history of England. +Such pre-eminently were the Peels of South Lancashire.</p> +<p>The founder of the Peel family, about the middle of last century, +was a small yeoman, occupying the Hole House Farm, near Blackburn, from +which he afterwards removed to a house situated in Fish Lane in that +town. Robert Peel, as he advanced in life, saw a large family +of sons and daughters growing up about him; but the land about Blackburn +being somewhat barren, it did not appear to him that agricultural pursuits +offered a very encouraging prospect for their industry. The place +had, however, long been the seat of a domestic manufacture—the +fabric called “Blackburn greys,” consisting of linen weft +and cotton warp, being chiefly made in that town and its neighbourhood. +It was then customary—previous to the introduction of the factory +system—for industrious yeomen with families to employ the time +not occupied in the fields in weaving at home; and Robert Peel accordingly +began the domestic trade of calico-making. He was honest, and +made an honest article; thrifty and hardworking, and his trade prospered. +He was also enterprising, and was one of the first to adopt the carding +cylinder, then recently invented.</p> +<p>But Robert Peel’s attention was principally directed to the +<i>printing</i> of calico—then a comparatively unknown art—and +for some time he carried on a series of experiments with the object +of printing by machinery. The experiments were secretly conducted +in his own house, the cloth being ironed for the purpose by one of the +women of the family. It was then customary, in such houses as +the Peels, to use pewter plates at dinner. Having sketched a figure +or pattern on one of the plates, the thought struck him that an impression +might be got from it in reverse, and printed on calico with colour. +In a cottage at the end of the farm-house lived a woman who kept a calendering +machine, and going into her cottage, he put the plate with colour rubbed +into the figured part and some calico over it, through the machine, +when it was found to leave a satisfactory impression. Such is +said to have been the origin of roller printing on calico. Robert +Peel shortly perfected his process, and the first pattern he brought +out was a parsley leaf; hence he is spoken of in the neighbourhood of +Blackburn to this day as “Parsley Peel.” The process +of calico printing by what is called the mule machine—that is, +by means of a wooden cylinder in relief, with an engraved copper cylinder—was +afterwards brought to perfection by one of his sons, the head of the +firm of Messrs. Peel and Co., of Church. Stimulated by his success, +Robert Peel shortly gave up farming, and removing to Brookside, a village +about two miles from Blackburn, he devoted himself exclusively to the +printing business. There, with the aid of his sons, who were as +energetic as himself, he successfully carried on the trade for several +years; and as the young men grew up towards manhood, the concern branched +out into various firms of Peels, each of which became a centre of industrial +activity and a source of remunerative employment to large numbers of +people.</p> +<p>From what can now be learnt of the character of the original and +untitled Robert Peel, he must have been a remarkable man—shrewd, +sagacious, and far-seeing. But little is known of him excepting +from traditions and the sons of those who knew him are fast passing +away. His son, Sir Robert, thus modestly spoke of him:- “My +father may be truly said to have been the founder of our family; and +he so accurately appreciated the importance of commercial wealth in +a national point of view, that he was often heard to say that the gains +to individuals were small compared with the national gains arising from +trade.”</p> +<p>Sir Robert Peel, the first baronet and the second manufacturer of +the name, inherited all his father’s enterprise, ability, and +industry. His position, at starting in life, was little above +that of an ordinary working man; for his father, though laying the foundations +of future prosperity, was still struggling with the difficulties arising +from insufficient capital. When Robert was only twenty years of +age, he determined to begin the business of cotton-printing, which he +had by this time learnt from his father, on his own account. His +uncle, James Haworth, and William Yates of Blackburn, joined him in +his enterprise; the whole capital which they could raise amongst them +amounting to only about 500<i>l</i>., the principal part of which was +supplied by William Yates. The father of the latter was a householder +in Blackburn, where he was well known and much respected; and having +saved money by his business, he was willing to advance sufficient to +give his son a start in the lucrative trade of cotton-printing, then +in its infancy. Robert Peel, though comparatively a mere youth, +supplied the practical knowledge of the business; but it was said of +him, and proved true, that he “carried an old head on young shoulders.” +A ruined corn-mill, with its adjoining fields, was purchased for a comparatively +small sum, near the then insignificant town of Bury, where the works +long after continued to be known as “The Ground;” and a +few wooden sheds having been run up, the firm commenced their cotton-printing +business in a very humble way in the year 1770, adding to it that of +cotton-spinning a few years later. The frugal style in which the +partners lived may be inferred from the following incident in their +early career. William Yates, being a married man with a family, +commenced housekeeping on a small scale, and, to oblige Peel, who was +single, he agreed to take him as a lodger. The sum which the latter +first paid for board and lodging was only 8<i>s</i>. a week; but Yates, +considering this too little, insisted on the weekly payment being increased +a shilling, to which Peel at first demurred, and a difference between +the partners took place, which was eventually compromised by the lodger +paying an advance of sixpence a week. William Yates’s eldest +child was a girl named Ellen, and she very soon became an especial favourite +with the young lodger. On returning from his hard day’s +work at “The Ground,” he would take the little girl upon +his knee, and say to her, “Nelly, thou bonny little dear, wilt +be my wife?” to which the child would readily answer “Yes,” +as any child would do. “Then I’ll wait for thee, Nelly; +I’ll wed thee, and none else.” And Robert Peel did +wait. As the girl grew in beauty towards womanhood, his determination +to wait for her was strengthened; and after the lapse of ten years—years +of close application to business and rapidly increasing prosperity—Robert +Peel married Ellen Yates when she had completed her seventeenth year; +and the pretty child, whom her mother’s lodger and father’s +partner had nursed upon his knee, became Mrs. Peel, and eventually Lady +Peel, the mother of the future Prime Minister of England. Lady +Peel was a noble and beautiful woman, fitted to grace any station in +life. She possessed rare powers of mind, and was, on every emergency, +the high-souled and faithful counsellor of her husband. For many +years after their marriage, she acted as his amanuensis, conducting +the principal part of his business correspondence, for Mr. Peel himself +was an indifferent and almost unintelligible writer. She died +in 1803, only three years after the Baronetcy had been conferred upon +her husband. It is said that London fashionable life—so +unlike what she had been accustomed to at home—proved injurious +to her health; and old Mr. Yates afterwards used to say, “if Robert +hadn’t made our Nelly a ‘Lady,’ she might ha’ +been living yet.”</p> +<p>The career of Yates, Peel, & Co., was throughout one of great +and uninterrupted prosperity. Sir Robert Peel himself was the +soul of the firm; to great energy and application uniting much practical +sagacity, and first-rate mercantile abilities—qualities in which +many of the early cotton-spinners were exceedingly deficient. +He was a man of iron mind and frame, and toiled unceasingly. In +short, he was to cotton printing what Arkwright was to cotton-spinning, +and his success was equally great. The excellence of the articles +produced by the firm secured the command of the market, and the character +of the firm stood pre-eminent in Lancashire. Besides greatly benefiting +Bury, the partnership planted similar extensive works in the neighbourhood, +on the Irwell and the Roch; and it was cited to their honour, that, +while they sought to raise to the highest perfection the quality of +their manufactures, they also endeavoured, in all ways, to promote the +well-being and comfort of their workpeople; for whom they contrived +to provide remunerative employment even in the least prosperous times.</p> +<p>Sir Robert Peel readily appreciated the value of all new processes +and inventions; in illustration of which we may allude to his adoption +of the process for producing what is called <i>resist work</i> in calico +printing. This is accomplished by the use of a paste, or resist, +on such parts of the cloth as were intended to remain white. The +person who discovered the paste was a traveller for a London house, +who sold it to Mr. Peel for an inconsiderable sum. It required +the experience of a year or two to perfect the system and make it practically +useful; but the beauty of its effect, and the extreme precision of outline +in the pattern produced, at once placed the Bury establishment at the +head of all the factories for calico printing in the country. +Other firms, conducted with like spirit, were established by members +of the same family at Burnley, Foxhill bank, and Altham, in Lancashire; +Salley Abbey, in Yorkshire; and afterwards at Burton-on-Trent, in Staffordshire; +these various establishments, whilst they brought wealth to their proprietors, +setting an example to the whole cotton trade, and training up many of +the most successful printers and manufacturers in Lancashire.</p> +<p>Among other distinguished founders of industry, the Rev. William +Lee, inventor of the Stocking Frame, and John Heathcoat, inventor of +the Bobbin-net Machine, are worthy of notice, as men of great mechanical +skill and perseverance, through whose labours a vast amount of remunerative +employment has been provided for the labouring population of Nottingham +and the adjacent districts. The accounts which have been preserved +of the circumstances connected with the invention of the Stocking Frame +are very confused, and in many respects contradictory, though there +is no doubt as to the name of the inventor. This was William Lee, +born at Woodborough, a village some seven miles from Nottingham, about +the year 1563. According to some accounts, he was the heir to +a small freehold, while according to others he was a poor scholar, <a name="citation6"></a><a href="#footnote6">{6}</a> +and had to struggle with poverty from his earliest years. He entered +as a sizar at Christ College, Cambridge, in May, 1579, and subsequently +removed to St. John’s, taking his degree of B.A. in 1582-3. +It is believed that he commenced M.A. in 1586; but on this point there +appears to be some confusion in the records of the University. +The statement usually made that he was expelled for marrying contrary +to the statutes, is incorrect, as he was never a Fellow of the University, +and therefore could not be prejudiced by taking such a step.</p> +<p>At the time when Lee invented the Stocking Frame he was officiating +as curate of Calverton, near Nottingham; and it is alleged by some writers +that the invention had its origin in disappointed affection. The +curate is said to have fallen deeply in love with a young lady of the +village, who failed to reciprocate his affections; and when he visited +her, she was accustomed to pay much more attention to the process of +knitting stockings and instructing her pupils in the art, than to the +addresses of her admirer. This slight is said to have created +in his mind such an aversion to knitting by hand, that he formed the +determination to invent a machine that should supersede it and render +it a gainless employment. For three years he devoted himself to +the prosecution of the invention, sacrificing everything to his new +idea. At the prospect of success opened before him, he abandoned +his curacy, and devoted himself to the art of stocking making by machinery. +This is the version of the story given by Henson <a name="citation7"></a><a href="#footnote7">{7}</a> +on the authority of an old stocking-maker, who died in Collins’s +Hospital, Nottingham, aged ninety-two, and was apprenticed in the town +during the reign of Queen Anne. It is also given by Deering and +Blackner as the traditional account in the neighbourhood, and it is +in some measure borne out by the arms of the London Company of Frame-Work +Knitters, which consists of a stocking frame without the wood-work, +with a clergyman on one side and a woman on the other as supporters. +<a name="citation8"></a><a href="#footnote8">{8}</a></p> +<p>Whatever may have been the actual facts as to the origin of the invention +of the Stocking Loom, there can be no doubt as to the extraordinary +mechanical genius displayed by its inventor. That a clergyman +living in a remote village, whose life had for the most part been spent +with books, should contrive a machine of such delicate and complicated +movements, and at once advance the art of knitting from the tedious +process of linking threads in a chain of loops by three skewers in the +fingers of a woman, to the beautiful and rapid process of weaving by +the stocking frame, was indeed an astonishing achievement, which may +be pronounced almost unequalled in the history of mechanical invention. +Lee’s merit was all the greater, as the handicraft arts were then +in their infancy, and little attention had as yet been given to the +contrivance of machinery for the purposes of manufacture. He was +under the necessity of extemporising the parts of his machine as he +best could, and adopting various expedients to overcome difficulties +as they arose. His tools were imperfect, and his materials imperfect; +and he had no skilled workmen to assist him. According to tradition, +the first frame he made was a twelve gauge, without lead sinkers, and +it was almost wholly of wood; the needles being also stuck in bits of +wood. One of Lee’s principal difficulties consisted in the +formation of the stitch, for want of needle eyes; but this he eventually +overcame by forming eyes to the needles with a three-square file. <a name="citation9"></a><a href="#footnote9">{9}</a> +At length, one difficulty after another was successfully overcome, and +after three years’ labour the machine was sufficiently complete +to be fit for use. The quondam curate, full of enthusiasm for +his art, now began stocking weaving in the village of Calverton, and +he continued to work there for several years, instructing his brother +James and several of his relations in the practice of the art.</p> +<p>Having brought his frame to a considerable degree of perfection, +and being desirous of securing the patronage of Queen Elizabeth, whose +partiality for knitted silk stockings was well known, Lee proceeded +to London to exhibit the loom before her Majesty. He first showed +it to several members of the court, among others to Sir William (afterwards +Lord) Hunsdon, whom he taught to work it with success; and Lee was, +through their instrumentality, at length admitted to an interview with +the Queen, and worked the machine in her presence. Elizabeth, +however, did not give him the encouragement that he had expected; and +she is said to have opposed the invention on the ground that it was +calculated to deprive a large number of poor people of their employment +of hand knitting. Lee was no more successful in finding other +patrons, and considering himself and his invention treated with contempt, +he embraced the offer made to him by Sully, the sagacious minister of +Henry IV., to proceed to Rouen and instruct the operatives of that town—then +one of the most important manufacturing centres of France—in the +construction and use of the stocking-frame. Lee accordingly transferred +himself and his machines to France, in 1605, taking with him his brother +and seven workmen. He met with a cordial reception at Rouen, and +was proceeding with the manufacture of stockings on a large scale—having +nine of his frames in full work,—when unhappily ill fortune again +overtook him. Henry IV., his protector, on whom he had relied +for the rewards, honours, and promised grant of privileges, which had +induced Lee to settle in France, was murdered by the fanatic Ravaillac; +and the encouragement and protection which had heretofore been extended +to him were at once withdrawn. To press his claims at court, Lee +proceeded to Paris; but being a protestant as well as a foreigner, his +representations were treated with neglect; and worn out with vexation +and grief, this distinguished inventor shortly after died at Paris, +in a state of extreme poverty and distress.</p> +<p>Lee’s brother, with seven of the workmen, succeeded in escaping +from France with their frames, leaving two behind. On James Lee’s +return to Nottinghamshire, he was joined by one Ashton, a miller of +Thoroton, who had been instructed in the art of frame-work knitting +by the inventor himself before he left England. These two, with +the workmen and their frames, began the stocking manufacture at Thoroton, +and carried it on with considerable success. The place was favourably +situated for the purpose, as the sheep pastured in the neighbouring +district of Sherwood yielded a kind of wool of the longest staple. +Ashton is said to have introduced the method of making the frames with +lead sinkers, which was a great improvement. The number of looms +employed in different parts of England gradually increased; and the +machine manufacture of stockings eventually became an important branch +of the national industry.</p> +<p>One of the most important modifications in the Stocking-Frame was +that which enabled it to be applied to the manufacture of lace on a +large scale. In 1777, two workmen, Frost and Holmes, were both +engaged in making point-net by means of the modifications they had introduced +in the stocking-frame; and in the course of about thirty years, so rapid +was the growth of this branch of production that 1500 point-net frames +were at work, giving employment to upwards of 15,000 people. Owing, +however, to the war, to change of fashion, and to other circumstances, +the Nottingham lace manufacture rapidly fell off; and it continued in +a decaying state until the invention of the Bobbin-net Machine by John +Heathcoat, late M.P. for Tiverton, which had the effect of at once re-establishing +the manufacture on solid foundations.</p> +<p>John Heathcoat was the youngest son of a respectable small farmer +at Duffield, Derbyshire, where he was born in 1783. When at school +he made steady and rapid progress, but was early removed from it to +be apprenticed to a frame-smith near Loughborough. The boy soon +learnt to handle tools with dexterity, and he acquired a minute knowledge +of the parts of which the stocking-frame was composed, as well as of +the more intricate warp-machine. At his leisure he studied how +to introduce improvements in them, and his friend, Mr. Bazley, M.P., +states that as early as the age of sixteen, he conceived the idea of +inventing a machine by which lace might be made similar to Buckingham +or French lace, then all made by hand. The first practical improvement +he succeeded in introducing was in the warp-frame, when, by means of +an ingenious apparatus, he succeeded in producing “mitts” +of a lacy appearance, and it was this success which determined him to +pursue the study of mechanical lace-making. The stocking-frame +had already, in a modified form, been applied to the manufacture of +point-net lace, in which the mesh was <i>looped</i> as in a stocking, +but the work was slight and frail, and therefore unsatisfactory. +Many ingenious Nottingham mechanics had, during a long succession of +years, been labouring at the problem of inventing a machine by which +the mesh of threads should be <i>twisted</i> round each other on the +formation of the net. Some of these men died in poverty, some +were driven insane, and all alike failed in the object of their search. +The old warp-machine held its ground.</p> +<p>When a little over twenty-one years of age, Heathcoat went to Nottingham, +where he readily found employment, for which he soon received the highest +remuneration, as a setter-up of hosiery and warp-frames, and was much +respected for his talent for invention, general intelligence, and the +sound and sober principles that governed his conduct. He also +continued to pursue the subject on which his mind had before been occupied, +and laboured to compass the contrivance of a twist traverse-net machine. +He first studied the art of making the Buckingham or pillow-lace by +hand, with the object of effecting the same motions by mechanical means. +It was a long and laborious task, requiring the exercise of great perseverance +and ingenuity. His master, Elliot, described him at that time +as inventive, patient, self-denying, and taciturn, undaunted by failures +and mistakes, full of resources and expedients, and entertaining the +most perfect confidence that his application of mechanical principles +would eventually be crowned with success.</p> +<p>It is difficult to describe in words an invention so complicated +as the bobbin-net machine. It was, indeed, a mechanical pillow +for making lace, imitating in an ingenious manner the motions of the +lace-maker’s fingers in intersecting or tying the meshes of the +lace upon her pillow. On analysing the component parts of a piece +of hand-made lace, Heathcoat was enabled to classify the threads into +longitudinal and diagonal. He began his experiments by fixing +common pack-threads lengthwise on a sort of frame for the warp, and +then passing the weft threads between them by common plyers, delivering +them to other plyers on the opposite side; then, after giving them a +sideways motion and twist, the threads were repassed back between the +next adjoining cords, the meshes being thus tied in the same way as +upon pillows by hand. He had then to contrive a mechanism that +should accomplish all these nice and delicate movements, and to do this +cost him no small amount of mental toil. Long after he said, “The +single difficulty of getting the diagonal threads to twist in the allotted +space was so great that if it had now to be done, I should probably +not attempt its accomplishment.” His next step was to provide +thin metallic discs, to be used as bobbins for conducting the threads +backwards and forwards through the warp. These discs, being arranged +in carrier-frames placed on each side of the warp, were moved by suitable +machinery so as to conduct the threads from side to side in forming +the lace. He eventually succeeded in working out his principle +with extraordinary skill and success; and, at the age of twenty-four, +he was enabled to secure his invention by a patent.</p> +<p>During this time his wife was kept in almost as great anxiety as +himself, for she well knew of his trials and difficulties while he was +striving to perfect his invention. Many years after they had been +successfully overcome, the conversation which took place one eventful +evening was vividly remembered. “Well,” said the anxious +wife, “will it work?” “No,” was the sad +answer; “I have had to take it all to pieces again.” +Though he could still speak hopefully and cheerfully, his poor wife +could restrain her feelings no longer, but sat down and cried bitterly. +She had, however, only a few more weeks to wait, for success long laboured +for and richly deserved, came at last, and a proud and happy man was +John Heathcoat when he brought home the first narrow strip of bobbin-net +made by his machine, and placed it in the hands of his wife.</p> +<p>As in the case of nearly all inventions which have proved productive, +Heathcoat’s rights as a patentee were disputed, and his claims +as an inventor called in question. On the supposed invalidity +of the patent, the lace-makers boldly adopted the bobbin-net machine, +and set the inventor at defiance. But other patents were taken +out for alleged improvements and adaptations; and it was only when these +new patentees fell out and went to law with each other that Heathcoat’s +rights became established. One lace-manufacturer having brought +an action against another for an alleged infringement of his patent, +the jury brought in a verdict for the defendant, in which the judge +concurred, on the ground that <i>both</i> the machines in question were +infringements of Heathcoat’s patent. It was on the occasion +of this trial, “Boville v. Moore,” that Sir John Copley +(afterwards Lord Lyndhurst), who was retained for the defence in the +interest of Mr. Heathcoat, learnt to work the bobbin-net machine in +order that he might master the details of the invention. On reading +over his brief, he confessed that he did not quite understand the merits +of the case; but as it seemed to him to be one of great importance, +he offered to go down into the country forthwith and study the machine +until he understood it; “and then,” said he, “I will +defend you to the best of my ability.” He accordingly put +himself into that night’s mail, and went down to Nottingham to +get up his case as perhaps counsel never got it up before. Next +morning the learned sergeant placed himself in a lace-loom, and he did +not leave it until he could deftly make a piece of bobbin-net with his +own hands, and thoroughly understood the principle as well as the details +of the machine. When the case came on for trial, the learned sergeant +was enabled to work the model on the table with such case and skill, +and to explain the precise nature of the invention with such felicitous +clearness, as to astonish alike judge, jury, and spectators; and the +thorough conscientiousness and mastery with which he handled the case +had no doubt its influence upon the decision of the court.</p> +<p>After the trial was over, Mr. Heathcoat, on inquiry, found about +six hundred machines at work after his patent, and he proceeded to levy +royalty upon the owners of them, which amounted to a large sum. +But the profits realised by the manufacturers of lace were very great, +and the use of the machines rapidly extended; while the price of the +article was reduced from five pounds the square yard to about five pence +in the course of twenty-five years. During the same period the +average annual returns of the lace-trade have been at least four millions +sterling, and it gives remunerative employment to about 150,000 workpeople.</p> +<p>To return to the personal history of Mr. Heathcoat. In 1809 +we find him established as a lace-manufacturer at Loughborough, in Leicestershire. +There he carried on a prosperous business for several years, giving +employment to a large number of operatives, at wages varying from 5<i>l</i>. +to 10<i>l</i>. a week. Notwithstanding the great increase in the +number of hands employed in lace-making through the introduction of +the new machines, it began to be whispered about among the workpeople +that they were superseding labour, and an extensive conspiracy was formed +for the purpose of destroying them wherever found. As early as +the year 1811 disputes arose between the masters and men engaged in +the stocking and lace trades in the south-western parts of Nottinghamshire +and the adjacent parts of Derbyshire and Leicestershire, the result +of which was the assembly of a mob at Sutton, in Ashfield, who proceeded +in open day to break the stocking and lace-frames of the manufacturers. +Some of the ringleaders having been seized and punished, the disaffected +learnt caution; but the destruction of the machines was nevertheless +carried on secretly wherever a safe opportunity presented itself. +As the machines were of so delicate a construction that a single blow +of a hammer rendered them useless, and as the manufacture was carried +on for the most part in detached buildings, often in private dwellings +remote from towns, the opportunities of destroying them were unusually +easy. In the neighbourhood of Nottingham, which was the focus +of turbulence, the machine-breakers organized themselves in regular +bodies, and held nocturnal meetings at which their plans were arranged. +Probably with the view of inspiring confidence, they gave out that they +were under the command of a leader named Ned Ludd, or General Ludd, +and hence their designation of Luddites. Under this organization +machine-breaking was carried on with great vigour during the winter +of 1811, occasioning great distress, and throwing large numbers of workpeople +out of employment. Meanwhile, the owners of the frames proceeded +to remove them from the villages and lone dwellings in the country, +and brought them into warehouses in the towns for their better protection.</p> +<p>The Luddites seem to have been encouraged by the lenity of the sentences +pronounced on such of their confederates as had been apprehended and +tried; and, shortly after, the mania broke out afresh, and rapidly extended +over the northern and midland manufacturing districts. The organization +became more secret; an oath was administered to the members binding +them to obedience to the orders issued by the heads of the confederacy; +and the betrayal of their designs was decreed to be death. All +machines were doomed by them to destruction, whether employed in the +manufacture of cloth, calico, or lace; and a reign of terror began which +lasted for years. In Yorkshire and Lancashire mills were boldly +attacked by armed rioters, and in many cases they were wrecked or burnt; +so that it became necessary to guard them by soldiers and yeomanry. +The masters themselves were doomed to death; many of them were assaulted, +and some were murdered. At length the law was vigorously set in +motion; numbers of the misguided Luddites were apprehended; some were +executed; and after several years’ violent commotion from this +cause, the machine-breaking riots were at length quelled.</p> +<p>Among the numerous manufacturers whose works were attacked by the +Luddites, was the inventor of the bobbin-net machine himself. +One bright sunny day, in the summer of 1816, a body of rioters entered +his factory at Loughborough with torches, and set fire to it, destroying +thirty-seven lace-machines, and above 10,000<i>l</i>. worth of property. +Ten of the men were apprehended for the felony, and eight of them were +executed. Mr. Heathcoat made a claim upon the county for compensation, +and it was resisted; but the Court of Queen’s Bench decided in +his favour, and decreed that the county must make good his loss of 10,000<i>l</i>. +The magistrates sought to couple with the payment of the damage the +condition that Mr. Heathcoat should expend the money in the county of +Leicester; but to this he would not assent, having already resolved +on removing his manufacture elsewhere. At Tiverton, in Devonshire, +he found a large building which had been formerly used as a woollen +manufactory; but the Tiverton cloth trade having fallen into decay, +the building remained unoccupied, and the town itself was generally +in a very poverty-stricken condition. Mr. Heathcoat bought the +old mill, renovated and enlarged it, and there recommenced the manufacture +of lace upon a larger scale than before; keeping in full work as many +as three hundred machines, and employing a large number of artisans +at good wages. Not only did he carry on the manufacture of lace, +but the various branches of business connected with it—yarn-doubling, +silk-spinning, net-making, and finishing. He also established +at Tiverton an iron-foundry and works for the manufacture of agricultural +implements, which proved of great convenience to the district. +It was a favourite idea of his that steam power was capable of being +applied to perform all the heavy drudgery of life, and he laboured for +a long time at the invention of a steam-plough. In 1832 he so +far completed his invention as to be enabled to take out a patent for +it; and Heathcoat’s steam-plough, though it has since been superseded +by Fowler’s, was considered the best machine of the kind that +had up to that time been invented.</p> +<p>Mr. Heathcoat was a man of great natural gifts. He possessed +a sound understanding, quick perception, and a genius for business of +the highest order. With these he combined uprightness, honesty, +and integrity—qualities which are the true glory of human character. +Himself a diligent self-educator, he gave ready encouragement to deserving +youths in his employment, stimulating their talents and fostering their +energies. During his own busy life, he contrived to save time +to master French and Italian, of which he acquired an accurate and grammatical +knowledge. His mind was largely stored with the results of a careful +study of the best literature, and there were few subjects on which he +had not formed for himself shrewd and accurate views. The two +thousand workpeople in his employment regarded him almost as a father, +and he carefully provided for their comfort and improvement. Prosperity +did not spoil him, as it does so many; nor close his heart against the +claims of the poor and struggling, who were always sure of his sympathy +and help. To provide for the education of the children of his +workpeople, he built schools for them at a cost of about 6000<i>l</i>. +He was also a man of singularly cheerful and buoyant disposition, a +favourite with men of all classes and most admired and beloved by those +who knew him best.</p> +<p>In 1831 the electors of Tiverton, of which town Mr. Heathcoat had +proved himself so genuine a benefactor, returned him to represent them +in Parliament, and he continued their member for nearly thirty years. +During a great part of that time he had Lord Palmerston for his colleague, +and the noble lord, on more than one public occasion, expressed the +high regard which he entertained for his venerable friend. On +retiring from the representation in 1859, owing to advancing age and +increasing infirmities, thirteen hundred of his workmen presented him +with a silver inkstand and gold pen, in token of their esteem. +He enjoyed his leisure for only two more years, dying in January, 1861, +at the age of seventy-seven, and leaving behind him a character for +probity, virtue, manliness, and mechanical genius, of which his descendants +may well be proud.</p> +<p>We next turn to a career of a very different kind, that of the illustrious +but unfortunate Jacquard, whose life also illustrates in a remarkable +manner the influence which ingenious men, even of the humblest rank, +may exercise upon the industry of a nation. Jacquard was the son +of a hard-working couple of Lyons, his father being a weaver, and his +mother a pattern reader. They were too poor to give him any but +the most meagre education. When he was of age to learn a trade, +his father placed him with a book-binder. An old clerk, who made +up the master’s accounts, gave Jacquard some lessons in mathematics. +He very shortly began to display a remarkable turn for mechanics, and +some of his contrivances quite astonished the old clerk, who advised +Jacquard’s father to put him to some other trade, in which his +peculiar abilities might have better scope than in bookbinding. +He was accordingly put apprentice to a cutler; but was so badly treated +by his master, that he shortly afterwards left his employment, on which +he was placed with a type-founder.</p> +<p>His parents dying, Jacquard found himself in a measure compelled +to take to his father’s two looms, and carry on the trade of a +weaver. He immediately proceeded to improve the looms, and became +so engrossed with his inventions that he forgot his work, and very soon +found himself at the end of his means. He then sold the looms +to pay his debts, at the same time that he took upon himself the burden +of supporting a wife. He became still poorer, and to satisfy his +creditors, he next sold his cottage. He tried to find employment, +but in vain, people believing him to be an idler, occupied with mere +dreams about his inventions. At length he obtained employment +with a line-maker of Bresse, whither he went, his wife remaining at +Lyons, earning a precarious living by making straw bonnets.</p> +<p>We hear nothing further of Jacquard for some years, but in the interval +he seems to have prosecuted his improvement in the drawloom for the +better manufacture of figured fabrics; for, in 1790, he brought out +his contrivance for selecting the warp threads, which, when added to +the loom, superseded the services of a draw-boy. The adoption +of this machine was slow but steady, and in ten years after its introduction, +4000 of them were found at work in Lyons. Jacquard’s pursuits +were rudely interrupted by the Revolution, and, in 1792, we find him +fighting in the ranks of the Lyonnaise Volunteers against the Army of +the Convention under the command of Dubois Crancé. The +city was taken; Jacquard fled and joined the Army of the Rhine, where +he rose to the rank of sergeant. He might have remained a soldier, +but that, his only son having been shot dead at his side, he deserted +and returned to Lyons to recover his wife. He found her in a garret +still employed at her old trade of straw-bonnet making. While +living in concealment with her, his mind reverted to the inventions +over which he had so long brooded in former years; but he had no means +wherewith to prosecute them. Jacquard found it necessary, however, +to emerge from his hiding-place and try to find some employment. +He succeeded in obtaining it with an intelligent manufacturer, and while +working by day he went on inventing by night. It had occurred +to him that great improvements might still be introduced in looms for +figured goods, and he incidentally mentioned the subject one day to +his master, regretting at the same time that his limited means prevented +him from carrying out his ideas. Happily his master appreciated +the value of the suggestions, and with laudable generosity placed a +sum of money at his disposal, that he might prosecute the proposed improvements +at his leisure.</p> +<p>In three months Jacquard had invented a loom to substitute mechanical +action for the irksome and toilsome labour of the workman. The +loom was exhibited at the Exposition of National Industry at Paris in +1801, and obtained a bronze medal. Jacquard was further honoured +by a visit at Lyons from the Minister Carnot, who desired to congratulate +him in person on the success of his invention. In the following +year the Society of Arts in London offered a prize for the invention +of a machine for manufacturing fishing-nets and boarding-netting for +ships. Jacquard heard of this, and while walking one day in the +fields according to his custom, he turned the subject over in his mind, +and contrived the plan of a machine for the purpose. His friend, +the manufacturer, again furnished him with the means of carrying out +his idea, and in three weeks Jacquard had completed his invention.</p> +<p>Jacquard’s achievement having come to the knowledge of the +Prefect of the Department, he was summoned before that functionary, +and, on his explanation of the working of the machine, a report on the +subject was forwarded to the Emperor. The inventor was forthwith +summoned to Paris with his machine, and brought into the presence of +the Emperor, who received him with the consideration due to his genius. +The interview lasted two hours, during which Jacquard, placed at his +ease by the Emperor’s affability, explained to him the improvements +which he proposed to make in the looms for weaving figured goods. +The result was, that he was provided with apartments in the Conservatoire +des Arts et Métiers, where he had the use of the workshop during +his stay, and was provided with a suitable allowance for his maintenance.</p> +<p>Installed in the Conservatoire, Jacquard proceeded to complete the +details of his improved loom. He had the advantage of minutely +inspecting the various exquisite pieces of mechanism contained in that +great treasury of human ingenuity. Among the machines which more +particularly attracted his attention, and eventually set him upon the +track of his discovery, was a loom for weaving flowered silk, made by +Vaucanson the celebrated automaton-maker.</p> +<p>Vaucanson was a man of the highest order of constructive genius. +The inventive faculty was so strong in him that it may almost be said +to have amounted to a passion, and could not be restrained. The +saying that the poet is born, not made, applies with equal force to +the inventor, who, though indebted, like the other, to culture and improved +opportunities, nevertheless contrives and constructs new combinations +of machinery mainly to gratify his own instinct. This was peculiarly +the case with Vaucanson; for his most elaborate works were not so much +distinguished for their utility as for the curious ingenuity which they +displayed. While a mere boy attending Sunday conversations with +his mother, he amused himself by watching, through the chinks of a partition +wall, part of the movements of a clock in the adjoining apartment. +He endeavoured to understand them, and by brooding over the subject, +after several months he discovered the principle of the escapement.</p> +<p>From that time the subject of mechanical invention took complete +possession of him. With some rude tools which he contrived, he +made a wooden clock that marked the hours with remarkable exactness; +while he made for a miniature chapel the figures of some angels which +waved their wings, and some priests that made several ecclesiastical +movements. With the view of executing some other automata he had +designed, he proceeded to study anatomy, music, and mechanics, which +occupied him for several years. The sight of the Flute-player +in the Gardens of the Tuileries inspired him with the resolution to +invent a similar figure that should <i>play</i>; and after several years’ +study and labour, though struggling with illness, he succeeded in accomplishing +his object. He next produced a Flageolet-player, which was succeeded +by a Duck—the most ingenious of his contrivances,—which +swam, dabbled, drank, and quacked like a real duck. He next invented +an asp, employed in the tragedy of ‘Cléopâtre,’ +which hissed and darted at the bosom of the actress.</p> +<p>Vaucanson, however, did not confine himself merely to the making +of automata. By reason of his ingenuity, Cardinal de Fleury appointed +him inspector of the silk manufactories of France; and he was no sooner +in office, than with his usual irrepressible instinct to invent, he +proceeded to introduce improvements in silk machinery. One of +these was his mill for thrown silk, which so excited the anger of the +Lyons operatives, who feared the loss of employment through its means, +that they pelted him with stones and had nearly killed him. He +nevertheless went on inventing, and next produced a machine for weaving +flowered silks, with a contrivance for giving a dressing to the thread, +so as to render that of each bobbin or skein of an equal thickness.</p> +<p>When Vaucanson died in 1782, after a long illness, he bequeathed +his collection of machines to the Queen, who seems to have set but small +value on them, and they were shortly after dispersed. But his +machine for weaving flowered silks was happily preserved in the Conservatoire +des Arts et Métiers, and there Jacquard found it among the many +curious and interesting articles in the collection. It proved +of the utmost value to him, for it immediately set him on the track +of the principal modification which he introduced in his improved loom.</p> +<p>One of the chief features of Vaucanson’s machine was a pierced +cylinder which, according to the holes it presented when revolved, regulated +the movement of certain needles, and caused the threads of the warp +to deviate in such a manner as to produce a given design, though only +of a simple character. Jacquard seized upon the suggestion with +avidity, and, with the genius of the true inventor, at once proceeded +to improve upon it. At the end of a month his weaving-machine +was completed. To the cylinder of Vancanson, he added an endless +piece of pasteboard pierced with a number of holes, through which the +threads of the warp were presented to the weaver; while another piece +of mechanism indicated to the workman the colour of the shuttle which +he ought to throw. Thus the drawboy and the reader of designs +were both at once superseded. The first use Jacquard made of his +new loom was to weave with it several yards of rich stuff which he presented +to the Empress Josephine. Napoleon was highly gratified with the +result of the inventor’s labours, and ordered a number of the +looms to be constructed by the best workmen, after Jacquard’s +model, and presented to him; after which he returned to Lyons.</p> +<p>There he experienced the frequent fate of inventors. He was +regarded by his townsmen as an enemy, and treated by them as Kay, Hargreaves, +and Arkwright had been in Lancashire. The workmen looked upon +the new loom as fatal to their trade, and feared lest it should at once +take the bread from their mouths. A tumultuous meeting was held +on the Place des Terreaux, when it was determined to destroy the machines. +This was however prevented by the military. But Jacquard was denounced +and hanged in effigy. The ‘Conseil des prud’hommes’ +in vain endeavoured to allay the excitement, and they were themselves +denounced. At length, carried away by the popular impulse, the +prud’hommes, most of whom had been workmen and sympathized with +the class, had one of Jacquard’s looms carried off and publicly +broken in pieces. Riots followed, in one of which Jacquard was +dragged along the quay by an infuriated mob intending to drown him, +but he was rescued.</p> +<p>The great value of the Jacquard loom, however, could not be denied, +and its success was only a question of time. Jacquard was urged +by some English silk manufacturers to pass over into England and settle +there. But notwithstanding the harsh and cruel treatment he had +received at the hands of his townspeople, his patriotism was too strong +to permit him to accept their offer. The English manufacturers, +however, adopted his loom. Then it was, and only then, that Lyons, +threatened to be beaten out of the field, adopted it with eagerness; +and before long the Jacquard machine was employed in nearly all kinds +of weaving. The result proved that the fears of the workpeople +had been entirely unfounded. Instead of diminishing employment, +the Jacquard loom increased it at least tenfold. The number of +persons occupied in the manufacture of figured goods in Lyons, was stated +by M. Leon Faucher to have been 60,000 in 1833; and that number has +since been considerably increased.</p> +<p>As for Jacquard himself, the rest of his life passed peacefully, +excepting that the workpeople who dragged him along the quay to drown +him were shortly after found eager to bear him in triumph along the +same route in celebration of his birthday. But his modesty would +not permit him to take part in such a demonstration. The Municipal +Council of Lyons proposed to him that he should devote himself to improving +his machine for the benefit of the local industry, to which Jacquard +agreed in consideration of a moderate pension, the amount of which was +fixed by himself. After perfecting his invention accordingly, +he retired at sixty to end his days at Oullins, his father’s native +place. It was there that he received, in 1820, the decoration +of the Legion of Honour; and it was there that he died and was buried +in 1834. A statue was erected to his memory, but his relatives +remained in poverty; and twenty years after his death, his two nieces +were under the necessity of selling for a few hundred francs the gold +medal bestowed upon their uncle by Louis XVIII. “Such,” +says a French writer, “was the gratitude of the manufacturing +interests of Lyons to the man to whom it owes so large a portion of +its splendour.”</p> +<p>It would be easy to extend the martyrology of inventors, and to cite +the names of other equally distinguished men who have, without any corresponding +advantage to themselves, contributed to the industrial progress of the +age,—for it has too often happened that genius has planted the +tree, of which patient dulness has gathered the fruit; but we will confine +ourselves for the present to a brief account of an inventor of comparatively +recent date, by way of illustration of the difficulties and privations +which it is so frequently the lot of mechanical genius to surmount. +We allude to Joshua Heilmann, the inventor of the Combing Machine.</p> +<p>Heilmann was born in 1796 at Mulhouse, the principal seat of the +Alsace cotton manufacture. His father was engaged in that business; +and Joshua entered his office at fifteen. He remained there for +two years, employing his spare time in mechanical drawing. He +afterwards spent two years in his uncle’s banking-house in Paris, +prosecuting the study of mathematics in the evenings. Some of +his relatives having established a small cotton-spinning factory at +Mulhouse, young Heilmann was placed with Messrs. Tissot and Rey, at +Paris, to learn the practice of that firm. At the same time he +became a student at the Conservatoire des Arts et Métiers, where +he attended the lectures, and studied the machines in the museum. +He also took practical lessons in turning from a toymaker. After +some time, thus diligently occupied, he returned to Alsace, to superintend +the construction of the machinery for the new factory at Vieux-Thann, +which was shortly finished and set to work. The operations of +the manufactory were, however, seriously affected by a commercial crisis +which occurred, and it passed into other hands, on which Heilmann returned +to his family at Mulhouse.</p> +<p>He had in the mean time been occupying much of his leisure with inventions, +more particularly in connection with the weaving of cotton and the preparation +of the staple for spinning. One of his earliest contrivances was +an embroidering-machine, in which twenty needles were employed, working +simultaneously; and he succeeded in accomplishing his object after about +six months’ labour. For this invention, which he exhibited +at the Exposition of 1834, he received a gold medal, and was decorated +with the Legion of Honour. Other inventions quickly followed—an +improved loom, a machine for measuring and folding fabrics, an improvement +of the “bobbin and fly frames” of the English spinners, +and a weft winding-machine, with various improvements in the machinery +for preparing, spinning, and weaving silk and cotton. One of his +most ingenious contrivances was his loom for weaving simultaneously +two pieces of velvet or other piled fabric, united by the pile common +to both, with a knife and traversing apparatus for separating the two +fabrics when woven. But by far the most beautiful and ingenious +of his inventions was the combing-machine, the history of which we now +proceed shortly to describe.</p> +<p>Heilmann had for some years been diligently studying the contrivance +of a machine for combing long-stapled cotton, the ordinary carding-machine +being found ineffective in preparing the raw material for spinning, +especially the finer sorts of yarn, besides causing considerable waste. +To avoid these imperfections, the cotton-spinners of Alsace offered +a prize of 5000 francs for an improved combing-machine, and Heilmann +immediately proceeded to compete for the reward. He was not stimulated +by the desire of gain, for he was comparatively rich, having acquired +a considerable fortune by his wife. It was a saying of his that +“one will never accomplish great things who is constantly asking +himself, how much gain will this bring me?” What mainly +impelled him was the irrepressible instinct of the inventor, who no +sooner has a mechanical problem set before him than he feels impelled +to undertake its solution. The problem in this case was, however, +much more difficult than he had anticipated. The close study of +the subject occupied him for several years, and the expenses in which +he became involved in connection with it were so great, that his wife’s +fortune was shortly swallowed up, and he was reduced to poverty, without +being able to bring his machine to perfection. From that time +he was under the necessity of relying mainly on the help of his friends +to enable him to prosecute the invention.</p> +<p>While still struggling with poverty and difficulties, Heilmann’s +wife died, believing her husband ruined; and shortly after he proceeded +to England and settled for a time at Manchester, still labouring at +his machine. He had a model made for him by the eminent machine-makers, +Sharpe, Roberts, and Company; but still he could not make it work satisfactorily, +and he was at length brought almost to the verge of despair. He +returned to France to visit his family, still pursuing his idea, which +had obtained complete possession of his mind. While sitting by +his hearth one evening, meditating upon the hard fate of inventors and +the misfortunes in which their families so often become involved, he +found himself almost unconsciously watching his daughters coming their +long hair and drawing it out at full length between their fingers. +The thought suddenly struck him that if he could successfully imitate +in a machine the process of combing out the longest hair and forcing +back the short by reversing the action of the comb, it might serve to +extricate him from his difficulty. It may be remembered that this +incident in the life of Heilmann has been made the subject of a beautiful +picture by Mr. Elmore, R.A., which was exhibited at the Royal Academy +Exhibition of 1862.</p> +<p>Upon this idea he proceeded, introduced the apparently simple but +really most intricate process of machine-combing, and after great labour +he succeeded in perfecting the invention. The singular beauty +of the process can only be appreciated by those who have witnessed the +machine at work, when the similarity of its movements to that of combing +the hair, which suggested the invention, is at once apparent. +The machine has been described as “acting with almost the delicacy +of touch of the human fingers.” It combs the lock of cotton +<i>at both ends</i>, places the fibres exactly parallel with each other, +separates the long from the short, and unites the long fibres in one +sliver and the short ones in another. In fine, the machine not +only acts with the delicate accuracy of the human fingers, but apparently +with the delicate intelligence of the human mind.</p> +<p>The chief commercial value of the invention consisted in its rendering +the commoner sorts of cotton available for fine spinning. The +manufacturers were thereby enabled to select the most suitable fibres +for high-priced fabrics, and to produce the finer sorts of yarn in much +larger quantities. It became possible by its means to make thread +so fine that a length of 334 miles might be spun from a single pound +weight of the prepared cotton, and, worked up into the finer sorts of +lace, the original shilling’s worth of cotton-wool, before it +passed into the hands of the consumer, might thus be increased to the +value of between 300<i>l</i>. and 400<i>l</i>. sterling.</p> +<p>The beauty and utility of Heilmann’s invention were at once +appreciated by the English cotton-spinners. Six Lancashire firms +united and purchased the patent for cotton-spinning for England for +the sum of 30,000<i>l</i>; the wool-spinners paid the same sum for the +privilege of applying the process to wool; and the Messrs. Marshall, +of Leeds, 20,000<i>l</i>. for the privilege of applying it to flax. +Thus wealth suddenly flowed in upon poor Heilmann at last. But +he did not live to enjoy it. Scarcely had his long labours been +crowned by success than he died, and his son, who had shared in his +privations, shortly followed him.</p> +<p>It is at the price of lives such as these that the wonders of civilisation +are achieved.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<h2>CHAPTER III—THE GREAT POTTERS—PALISSY, BÖTTGHER, +WEDGWOOD</h2> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<p>“Patience is the finest and worthiest part of fortitude, and +the rarest too . . . Patience lies at the root of all pleasures, as +well as of all powers. Hope herself ceases to be happiness when +Impatience companions her.”—John Ruskin.</p> +<p>“Il y a vingt et cinq ans passez qu’il ne me fut monstré +une coupe de terre, tournée et esmaillée d’une telle +beauté que . . . dèslors, sans avoir esgard que je n’avois +nulle connoissance des terres argileuses, je me mis a chercher les émaux, +comme un homme qui taste en ténèbres.”—Bernard +Palissy.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>It so happens that the history of Pottery furnishes some of the most +remarkable instances of patient perseverance to be found in the whole +range of biography. Of these we select three of the most striking, +as exhibited in the lives of Bernard Palissy, the Frenchman; Johann +Friedrich Böttgher, the German; and Josiah Wedgwood, the Englishman.</p> +<p>Though the art of making common vessels of clay was known to most +of the ancient nations, that of manufacturing enamelled earthenware +was much less common. It was, however, practised by the ancient +Etruscans, specimens of whose ware are still to be found in antiquarian +collections. But it became a lost art, and was only recovered +at a comparatively recent date. The Etruscan ware was very valuable +in ancient times, a vase being worth its weight in gold in the time +of Augustus. The Moors seem to have preserved amongst them a knowledge +of the art, which they were found practising in the island of Majorca +when it was taken by the Pisans in 1115. Among the spoil carried away +were many plates of Moorish earthenware, which, in token of triumph, +were embedded in the walls of several of the ancient churches of Pisa, +where they are to be seen to this day. About two centuries later +the Italians began to make an imitation enamelled ware, which they named +Majolica, after the Moorish place of manufacture.</p> +<p>The reviver or re-discoverer of the art of enamelling in Italy was +Luca della Robbia, a Florentine sculptor. Vasari describes him +as a man of indefatigable perseverance, working with his chisel all +day and practising drawing during the greater part of the night. +He pursued the latter art with so much assiduity, that when working +late, to prevent his feet from freezing with the cold, he was accustomed +to provide himself with a basket of shavings, in which he placed them +to keep himself warm and enable him to proceed with his drawings. +“Nor,” says Vasari, “am I in the least astonished +at this, since no man ever becomes distinguished in any art whatsoever +who does not early begin to acquire the power of supporting heat, cold, +hunger, thirst, and other discomforts; whereas those persons deceive +themselves altogether who suppose that when taking their ease and surrounded +by all the enjoyments of the world they may still attain to honourable +distinction,—for it is not by sleeping, but by waking, watching, +and labouring continually, that proficiency is attained and reputation +acquired.”</p> +<p>But Luca, notwithstanding all his application and industry, did not +succeed in earning enough money by sculpture to enable him to live by +the art, and the idea occurred to him that he might nevertheless be +able to pursue his modelling in some material more facile and less dear +than marble. Hence it was that he began to make his models in +clay, and to endeavour by experiment so to coat and bake the clay as +to render those models durable. After many trials he at length +discovered a method of covering the clay with a material, which, when +exposed to the intense heat of a furnace, became converted into an almost +imperishable enamel. He afterwards made the further discovery +of a method of imparting colour to the enamel, thus greatly adding to +its beauty.</p> +<p>The fame of Luca’s work extended throughout Europe, and specimens +of his art became widely diffused. Many of them were sent into +France and Spain, where they were greatly prized. At that time +coarse brown jars and pipkins were almost the only articles of earthenware +produced in France; and this continued to be the case, with comparatively +small improvement, until the time of Palissy—a man who toiled +and fought against stupendous difficulties with a heroism that sheds +a glow almost of romance over the events of his chequered life.</p> +<p>Bernard Palissy is supposed to have been born in the south of France, +in the diocese of Agen, about the year 1510. His father was probably +a worker in glass, to which trade Bernard was brought up. His +parents were poor people—too poor to give him the benefit of any +school education. “I had no other books,” said he +afterwards, “than heaven and earth, which are open to all.” +He learnt, however, the art of glass-painting, to which he added that +of drawing, and afterwards reading and writing.</p> +<p>When about eighteen years old, the glass trade becoming decayed, +Palissy left his father’s house, with his wallet on his back, +and went out into the world to search whether there was any place in +it for him. He first travelled towards Gascony, working at his +trade where he could find employment, and occasionally occupying part +of his time in land-measuring. Then he travelled northwards, sojourning +for various periods at different places in France, Flanders, and Lower +Germany.</p> +<p>Thus Palissy occupied about ten more years of his life, after which +he married, and ceased from his wanderings, settling down to practise +glass-painting and land-measuring at the small town of Saintes, in the +Lower Charente. There children were born to him; and not only +his responsibilities but his expenses increased, while, do what he could, +his earnings remained too small for his needs. It was therefore +necessary for him to bestir himself. Probably he felt capable +of better things than drudging in an employment so precarious as glass-painting; +and hence he was induced to turn his attention to the kindred art of +painting and enamelling earthenware. Yet on this subject he was +wholly ignorant; for he had never seen earth baked before he began his +operations. He had therefore everything to learn by himself, without +any helper. But he was full of hope, eager to learn, of unbounded +perseverance and inexhaustible patience.</p> +<p>It was the sight of an elegant cup of Italian manufacture—most +probably one of Luca della Robbia’s make—which first set +Palissy a-thinking about the new art. A circumstance so apparently +insignificant would have produced no effect upon an ordinary mind, or +even upon Palissy himself at an ordinary time; but occurring as it did +when he was meditating a change of calling, he at once became inflamed +with the desire of imitating it. The sight of this cup disturbed +his whole existence; and the determination to discover the enamel with +which it was glazed thenceforward possessed him like a passion. +Had he been a single man he might have travelled into Italy in search +of the secret; but he was bound to his wife and his children, and could +not leave them; so he remained by their side groping in the dark in +the hope of finding out the process of making and enamelling earthenware.</p> +<p>At first he could merely guess the materials of which the enamel +was composed; and he proceeded to try all manner of experiments to ascertain +what they really were. He pounded all the substances which he +supposed were likely to produce it. Then he bought common earthen +pots, broke them into pieces, and, spreading his compounds over them, +subjected them to the heat of a furnace which he erected for the purpose +of baking them. His experiments failed; and the results were broken +pots and a waste of fuel, drugs, time, and labour. Women do not +readily sympathise with experiments whose only tangible effect is to +dissipate the means of buying clothes and food for their children; and +Palissy’s wife, however dutiful in other respects, could not be +reconciled to the purchase of more earthen pots, which seemed to her +to be bought only to be broken. Yet she must needs submit; for +Palissy had become thoroughly possessed by the determination to master +the secret of the enamel, and would not leave it alone.</p> +<p>For many successive months and years Palissy pursued his experiments. +The first furnace having proved a failure, he proceeded to erect another +out of doors. There he burnt more wood, spoiled more drugs and +pots, and lost more time, until poverty stared him and his family in +the face. “Thus,” said he, “I fooled away several +years, with sorrow and sighs, because I could not at all arrive at my +intention.” In the intervals of his experiments he occasionally +worked at his former callings, painting on glass, drawing portraits, +and measuring land; but his earnings from these sources were very small. +At length he was no longer able to carry on his experiments in his own +furnace because of the heavy cost of fuel; but he bought more potsherds, +broke them up as before into three or four hundred pieces, and, covering +them with chemicals, carried them to a tile-work a league and a half +distant from Saintes, there to be baked in an ordinary furnace. +After the operation he went to see the pieces taken out; and, to his +dismay, the whole of the experiments were failures. But though +disappointed, he was not yet defeated; for he determined on the very +spot to “begin afresh.”</p> +<p>His business as a land-measurer called him away for a brief season +from the pursuit of his experiments. In conformity with an edict +of the State, it became necessary to survey the salt-marshes in the +neighbourhood of Saintes for the purpose of levying the land-tax. +Palissy was employed to make this survey, and prepare the requisite +map. The work occupied him some time, and he was doubtless well +paid for it; but no sooner was it completed than he proceeded, with +redoubled zeal, to follow up his old investigations “in the track +of the enamels.” He began by breaking three dozen new earthen +pots, the pieces of which he covered with different materials which +he had compounded, and then took them to a neighbouring glass-furnace +to be baked. The results gave him a glimmer of hope. The +greater heat of the glass-furnace had melted some of the compounds; +but though Palissy searched diligently for the white enamel he could +find none.</p> +<p>For two more years he went on experimenting without any satisfactory +result, until the proceeds of his survey of the salt-marshes having +become nearly spent, he was reduced to poverty again. But he resolved +to make a last great effort; and he began by breaking more pots than +ever. More than three hundred pieces of pottery covered with his +compounds were sent to the glass-furnace; and thither he himself went +to watch the results of the baking. Four hours passed, during +which he watched; and then the furnace was opened. The material +on <i>one</i> only of the three hundred pieces of potsherd had melted, +and it was taken out to cool. As it hardened, it grew white-white +and polished! The piece of potsherd was covered with white enamel, +described by Palissy as “singularly beautiful!” And +beautiful it must no doubt have been in his eyes after all his weary +waiting. He ran home with it to his wife, feeling himself, as +he expressed it, quite a new creature. But the prize was not yet +won—far from it. The partial success of this intended last +effort merely had the effect of luring him on to a succession of further +experiments and failures.</p> +<p>In order that he might complete the invention, which he now believed +to be at hand, he resolved to build for himself a glass-furnace near +his dwelling, where he might carry on his operations in secret. +He proceeded to build the furnace with his own hands, carrying the bricks +from the brick-field upon his back. He was bricklayer, labourer, +and all. From seven to eight more months passed. At last +the furnace was built and ready for use. Palissy had in the mean +time fashioned a number of vessels of clay in readiness for the laying +on of the enamel. After being subjected to a preliminary process +of baking, they were covered with the enamel compound, and again placed +in the furnace for the grand crucial experiment. Although his +means were nearly exhausted, Palissy had been for some time accumulating +a great store of fuel for the final effort; and he thought it was enough. +At last the fire was lit, and the operation proceeded. All day +he sat by the furnace, feeding it with fuel. He sat there watching +and feeding all through the long night. But the enamel did not +melt. The sun rose upon his labours. His wife brought him +a portion of the scanty morning meal,—for he would not stir from +the furnace, into which he continued from time to time to heave more +fuel. The second day passed, and still the enamel did not melt. +The sun set, and another night passed. The pale, haggard, unshorn, +baffled yet not beaten Palissy sat by his furnace eagerly looking for +the melting of the enamel. A third day and night passed—a +fourth, a fifth, and even a sixth,—yes, for six long days and +nights did the unconquerable Palissy watch and toil, fighting against +hope; and still the enamel would not melt.</p> +<p>It then occurred to him that there might be some defect in the materials +for the enamel—perhaps something wanting in the flux; so he set +to work to pound and compound fresh materials for a new experiment. +Thus two or three more weeks passed. But how to buy more pots?—for +those which he had made with his own hands for the purposes of the first +experiment were by long baking irretrievably spoilt for the purposes +of a second. His money was now all spent; but he could borrow. +His character was still good, though his wife and the neighbours thought +him foolishly wasting his means in futile experiments. Nevertheless +he succeeded. He borrowed sufficient from a friend to enable him +to buy more fuel and more pots, and he was again ready for a further +experiment. The pots were covered with the new compound, placed +in the furnace, and the fire was again lit.</p> +<p>It was the last and most desperate experiment of the whole. +The fire blazed up; the heat became intense; but still the enamel did +not melt. The fuel began to run short! How to keep up the +fire? There were the garden palings: these would burn. They +must be sacrificed rather than that the great experiment should fail. +The garden palings were pulled up and cast into the furnace. They +were burnt in vain! The enamel had not yet melted. Ten minutes +more heat might do it. Fuel must be had at whatever cost. +There remained the household furniture and shelving. A crashing +noise was heard in the house; and amidst the screams of his wife and +children, who now feared Palissy’s reason was giving way, the +tables were seized, broken up, and heaved into the furnace. The +enamel had not melted yet! There remained the shelving. +Another noise of the wrenching of timber was heard within the house; +and the shelves were torn down and hurled after the furniture into the +fire. Wife and children then rushed from the house, and went frantically +through the town, calling out that poor Palissy had gone mad, and was +breaking up his very furniture for firewood! <a name="citation10"></a><a href="#footnote10">{10}</a></p> +<p>For an entire month his shirt had not been off his back, and he was +utterly worn out—wasted with toil, anxiety, watching, and want +of food. He was in debt, and seemed on the verge of ruin. +But he had at length mastered the secret; for the last great burst of +heat had melted the enamel. The common brown household jars, when +taken out of the furnace after it had become cool, were found covered +with a white glaze! For this he could endure reproach, contumely, +and scorn, and wait patiently for the opportunity of putting his discovery +into practice as better days came round.</p> +<p>Palissy next hired a potter to make some earthen vessels after designs +which he furnished; while he himself proceeded to model some medallions +in clay for the purpose of enamelling them. But how to maintain +himself and his family until the wares were made and ready for sale? +Fortunately there remained one man in Saintes who still believed in +the integrity, if not in the judgment, of Palissy—an inn-keeper, +who agreed to feed and lodge him for six months, while he went on with +his manufacture. As for the working potter whom he had hired, +Palissy soon found that he could not pay him the stipulated wages. +Having already stripped his dwelling, he could but strip himself; and +he accordingly parted with some of his clothes to the potter, in part +payment of the wages which he owed him.</p> +<p>Palissy next erected an improved furnace, but he was so unfortunate +as to build part of the inside with flints. When it was heated, +these flints cracked and burst, and the spiculae were scattered over +the pieces of pottery, sticking to them. Though the enamel came +out right, the work was irretrievably spoilt, and thus six more months’ +labour was lost. Persons were found willing to buy the articles +at a low price, notwithstanding the injury they had sustained; but Palissy +would not sell them, considering that to have done so would be to “decry +and abate his honour;” and so he broke in pieces the entire batch. +“Nevertheless,” says he, “hope continued to inspire +me, and I held on manfully; sometimes, when visitors called, I entertained +them with pleasantry, while I was really sad at heart. . . . Worst of +all the sufferings I had to endure, were the mockeries and persecutions +of those of my own household, who were so unreasonable as to expect +me to execute work without the means of doing so. For years my +furnaces were without any covering or protection, and while attending +them I have been for nights at the mercy of the wind and the rain, without +help or consolation, save it might be the wailing of cats on the one +side and the howling of dogs on the other. Sometimes the tempest +would beat so furiously against the furnaces that I was compelled to +leave them and seek shelter within doors. Drenched by rain, and +in no better plight than if I had been dragged through mire, I have +gone to lie down at midnight or at daybreak, stumbling into the house +without a light, and reeling from one side to another as if I had been +drunken, but really weary with watching and filled with sorrow at the +loss of my labour after such long toiling. But alas! my home proved +no refuge; for, drenched and besmeared as I was, I found in my chamber +a second persecution worse than the first, which makes me even now marvel +that I was not utterly consumed by my many sorrows.”</p> +<p>At this stage of his affairs, Palissy became melancholy and almost +hopeless, and seems to have all but broken down. He wandered gloomily +about the fields near Saintes, his clothes hanging in tatters, and himself +worn to a skeleton. In a curious passage in his writings he describes +how that the calves of his legs had disappeared and were no longer able +with the help of garters to hold up his stockings, which fell about +his heels when he walked. <a name="citation11"></a><a href="#footnote11">{11}</a> +The family continued to reproach him for his recklessness, and his neighbours +cried shame upon him for his obstinate folly. So he returned for +a time to his former calling; and after about a year’s diligent +labour, during which he earned bread for his household and somewhat +recovered his character among his neighbours, he again resumed his darling +enterprise. But though he had already spent about ten years in +the search for the enamel, it cost him nearly eight more years of experimental +plodding before he perfected his invention. He gradually learnt +dexterity and certainty of result by experience, gathering practical +knowledge out of many failures. Every mishap was a fresh lesson +to him, teaching him something new about the nature of enamels, the +qualities of argillaceous earths, the tempering of clays, and the construction +and management of furnaces.</p> +<p>At last, after about sixteen years’ labour, Palissy took heart +and called himself Potter. These sixteen years had been his term +of apprenticeship to the art; during which he had wholly to teach himself, +beginning at the very beginning. He was now able to sell his wares +and thereby maintain his family in comfort. But he never rested +satisfied with what he had accomplished. He proceeded from one +step of improvement to another; always aiming at the greatest perfection +possible. He studied natural objects for patterns, and with such +success that the great Buffon spoke of him as “so great a naturalist +as Nature only can produce.” His ornamental pieces are now +regarded as rare gems in the cabinets of virtuosi, and sell at almost +fabulous prices. <a name="citation12"></a><a href="#footnote12">{12}</a> +The ornaments on them are for the most part accurate models from life, +of wild animals, lizards, and plants, found in the fields about Saintes, +and tastefully combined as ornaments into the texture of a plate or +vase. When Palissy had reached the height of his art he styled +himself “Ouvrier de Terre et Inventeur des Rustics Figulines.”</p> +<p>We have not, however, come to an end of the sufferings of Palissy, +respecting which a few words remain to be said. Being a Protestant, +at a time when religious persecution waxed hot in the south of France, +and expressing his views without fear, he was regarded as a dangerous +heretic. His enemies having informed against him, his house at +Saintes was entered by the officers of “justice,” and his +workshop was thrown open to the rabble, who entered and smashed his +pottery, while he himself was hurried off by night and cast into a dungeon +at Bordeaux, to wait his turn at the stake or the scaffold. He +was condemned to be burnt; but a powerful noble, the Constable de Montmorency, +interposed to save his life—not because he had any special regard +for Palissy or his religion, but because no other artist could be found +capable of executing the enamelled pavement for his magnificent château +then in course of erection at Ecouen, about four leagues from Paris. +By his influence an edict was issued appointing Palissy Inventor of +Rustic Figulines to the King and to the Constable, which had the effect +of immediately removing him from the jurisdiction of Bourdeaux. +He was accordingly liberated, and returned to his home at Saintes only +to find it devastated and broken up. His workshop was open to the sky, +and his works lay in ruins. Shaking the dust of Saintes from his +feet he left the place never to return to it, and removed to Paris to +carry on the works ordered of him by the Constable and the Queen Mother, +being lodged in the Tuileries <a name="citation13"></a><a href="#footnote13">{13}</a> +while so occupied.</p> +<p>Besides carrying on the manufacture of pottery, with the aid of his +two sons, Palissy, during the latter part of his life, wrote and published +several books on the potter’s art, with a view to the instruction +of his countrymen, and in order that they might avoid the many mistakes +which he himself had made. He also wrote on agriculture, on fortification, +and natural history, on which latter subject he even delivered lectures +to a limited number of persons. He waged war against astrology, +alchemy, witchcraft, and like impostures. This stirred up against +him many enemies, who pointed the finger at him as a heretic, and he +was again arrested for his religion and imprisoned in the Bastille. +He was now an old man of seventy-eight, trembling on the verge of the +grave, but his spirit was as brave as ever. He was threatened +with death unless he recanted; but he was as obstinate in holding to +his religion as he had been in hunting out the secret of the enamel. +The king, Henry III., even went to see him in prison to induce him to +abjure his faith. “My good man,” said the King, “you +have now served my mother and myself for forty-five years. We +have put up with your adhering to your religion amidst fires and massacres: +now I am so pressed by the Guise party as well as by my own people, +that I am constrained to leave you in the hands of your enemies, and +to-morrow you will be burnt unless you become converted.” +“Sire,” answered the unconquerable old man, “I am +ready to give my life for the glory of God. You have said many +times that you have pity on me; and now I have pity on you, who have +pronounced the words <i>I am constrained</i>! It is not spoken +like a king, sire; it is what you, and those who constrain you, the +Guisards and all your people, can never effect upon me, for I know how +to die.” <a name="citation14"></a><a href="#footnote14">{14}</a> +Palissy did indeed die shortly after, a martyr, though not at the stake. +He died in the Bastille, after enduring about a year’s imprisonment,—there +peacefully terminating a life distinguished for heroic labour, extraordinary +endurance, inflexible rectitude, and the exhibition of many rare and +noble virtues. <a name="citation15"></a><a href="#footnote15">{15}</a></p> +<p>The life of John Frederick Böttgher, the inventor of hard porcelain, +presents a remarkable contrast to that of Palissy; though it also contains +many points of singular and almost romantic interest. Böttgher +was born at Schleiz, in the Voightland, in 1685, and at twelve years +of age was placed apprentice with an apothecary at Berlin. He +seems to have been early fascinated by chemistry, and occupied most +of his leisure in making experiments. These for the most part +tended in one direction—the art of converting common on metals +into gold. At the end of several years, Böttgher pretended +to have discovered the universal solvent of the alchemists, and professed +that he had made gold by its means. He exhibited its powers before +his master, the apothecary Zörn, and by some trick or other succeeded +in making him and several other witnesses believe that he had actually +converted copper into gold.</p> +<p>The news spread abroad that the apothecary’s apprentice had +discovered the grand secret, and crowds collected about the shop to +get a sight of the wonderful young “gold-cook.” The +king himself expressed a wish to see and converse with him, and when +Frederick I. was presented with a piece of the gold pretended to have +been converted from copper, he was so dazzled with the prospect of securing +an infinite quantity of it—Prussia being then in great straits +for money—that he determined to secure Böttgher and employ +him to make gold for him within the strong fortress of Spandau. +But the young apothecary, suspecting the king’s intention, and +probably fearing detection, at once resolved on flight, and he succeeded +in getting across the frontier into Saxony.</p> +<p>A reward of a thousand thalers was offered for Böttgher’s +apprehension, but in vain. He arrived at Wittenberg, and appealed +for protection to the Elector of Saxony, Frederick Augustus I. (King +of Poland), surnamed “the Strong.” Frederick was himself +very much in want of money at the time, and he was overjoyed at the +prospect of obtaining gold in any quantity by the aid of the young alchemist. +Böttgher was accordingly conveyed in secret to Dresden, accompanied +by a royal escort. He had scarcely left Wittenberg when a battalion +of Prussian grenadiers appeared before the gates demanding the gold-maker’s +extradition. But it was too late: Böttgher had already arrived +in Dresden, where he was lodged in the Golden House, and treated with +every consideration, though strictly watched and kept under guard.</p> +<p>The Elector, however, must needs leave him there for a time, having +to depart forthwith to Poland, then almost in a state of anarchy. +But, impatient for gold, he wrote Böttgher from Warsaw, urging +him to communicate the secret, so that he himself might practise the +art of commutation. The young “gold-cook,” thus pressed, +forwarded to Frederick a small phial containing “a reddish fluid,” +which, it was asserted, changed all metals, when in a molten state, +into gold. This important phial was taken in charge by the Prince +Fürst von Fürstenburg, who, accompanied by a regiment of Guards, +hurried with it to Warsaw. Arrived there, it was determined to +make immediate trial of the process. The King and the Prince locked +themselves up in a secret chamber of the palace, girt themselves about +with leather aprons, and like true “gold-cooks” set to work +melting copper in a crucible and afterwards applying to it the red fluid +of Böttgher. But the result was unsatisfactory; for notwithstanding +all that they could do, the copper obstinately remained copper. +On referring to the alchemist’s instructions, however, the King +found that, to succeed with the process, it was necessary that the fluid +should be used “in great purity of heart;” and as his Majesty +was conscious of having spent the evening in very bad company he attributed +the failure of the experiment to that cause. A second trial was +followed by no better results, and then the King became furious; for +he had confessed and received absolution before beginning the second +experiment.</p> +<p>Frederick Augustus now resolved on forcing Böttgher to disclose +the golden secret, as the only means of relief from his urgent pecuniary +difficulties. The alchemist, hearing of the royal intention, again +determined to fly. He succeeded in escaping his guard, and, after +three days’ travel, arrived at Ens in Austria, where he thought +himself safe. The agents of the Elector were, however, at his +heels; they had tracked him to the “Golden Stag,” which +they surrounded, and seizing him in his bed, notwithstanding his resistance +and appeals to the Austrian authorities for help, they carried him by +force to Dresden. From this time he was more strictly watched +than ever, and he was shortly after transferred to the strong fortress +of Köningstein. It was communicated to him that the royal +exchequer was completely empty, and that ten regiments of Poles in arrears +of pay were waiting for his gold. The King himself visited him, +and told him in a severe tone that if he did not at once proceed to +make gold, he would be hung! (“<i>Thu mir zurecht</i>, <i>Böttgher</i>, +<i>sonst lass ich dich hangen</i>”).</p> +<p>Years passed, and still Böttgher made no gold; but he was not +hung. It was reserved for him to make a far more important discovery +than the conversion of copper into gold, namely, the conversion of clay +into porcelain. Some rare specimens of this ware had been brought +by the Portuguese from China, which were sold for more than their weight +in gold. Böttgher was first induced to turn his attention +to the subject by Walter von Tschirnhaus, a maker of optical instruments, +also an alchemist. Tschirnhaus was a man of education and distinction, +and was held in much esteem by Prince Fürstenburg as well as by +the Elector. He very sensibly said to Böttgher, still in +fear of the gallows—“If you can’t make gold, try and +do something else; make porcelain.”</p> +<p>The alchemist acted on the hint, and began his experiments, working +night and day. He prosecuted his investigations for a long time +with great assiduity, but without success. At length some red +clay, brought to him for the purpose of making his crucibles, set him +on the right track. He found that this clay, when submitted to +a high temperature, became vitrified and retained its shape; and that +its texture resembled that of porcelain, excepting in colour and opacity. +He had in fact accidentally discovered red porcelain, and he proceeded +to manufacture it and sell it as porcelain.</p> +<p>Böttgher was, however, well aware that the white colour was +an essential property of true porcelain; and he therefore prosecuted +his experiments in the hope of discovering the secret. Several +years thus passed, but without success; until again accident stood his +friend, and helped him to a knowledge of the art of making white porcelain. +One day, in the year 1707, he found his perruque unusually heavy, and +asked of his valet the reason. The answer was, that it was owing +to the powder with which the wig was dressed, which consisted of a kind +of earth then much used for hair powder. Böttgher’s +quick imagination immediately seized upon the idea. This white +earthy powder might possibly be the very earth of which he was in search—at +all events the opportunity must not be let slip of ascertaining what +it really was. He was rewarded for his painstaking care and watchfulness; +for he found, on experiment, that the principal ingredient of the hair-powder +consisted of <i>kaolin</i>, the want of which had so long formed an +insuperable difficulty in the way of his inquiries.</p> +<p>The discovery, in Böttgher’s intelligent hands, led to +great results, and proved of far greater importance than the discovery +of the philosopher’s stone would have been. In October, +1707, he presented his first piece of porcelain to the Elector, who +was greatly pleased with it; and it was resolved that Böttgher +should be furnished with the means necessary for perfecting his invention. +Having obtained a skilled workman from Delft, he began to <i>turn</i> +porcelain with great success. He now entirely abandoned alchemy +for pottery, and inscribed over the door of his workshop this distich:-</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>“<i>Es machte Gott</i>, <i>der grosse Schöpfer,<br />Aus +einem Goldmacher einen Töpfer</i>.” <a name="citation16"></a><a href="#footnote16">{16}</a></p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>Böttgher, however, was still under strict surveillance, for +fear lest he should communicate his secret to others or escape the Elector’s +control. The new workshops and furnaces which were erected for +him, were guarded by troops night and day, and six superior officers +were made responsible for the personal security of the potter.</p> +<p>Böttgher’s further experiments with his new furnaces proving +very successful, and the porcelain which he manufactured being found +to fetch large prices, it was next determined to establish a Royal Manufactory +of porcelain. The manufacture of delft ware was known to have +greatly enriched Holland. Why should not the manufacture of porcelain +equally enrich the Elector? Accordingly, a decree went forth, +dated the 23rd of January, 1710, for the establishment of “a large +manufactory of porcelain” at the Albrechtsburg in Meissen. +In this decree, which was translated into Latin, French, and Dutch, +and distributed by the Ambassadors of the Elector at all the European +Courts, Frederick Augustus set forth that to promote the welfare of +Saxony, which had suffered much through the Swedish invasion, he had +“directed his attention to the subterranean treasures (<i>unterirdischen +Schätze</i>)” of the country, and having employed some able +persons in the investigation, they had succeeded in manufacturing “a +sort of red vessels (<i>eine</i> <i>Art rother Gefässe</i>) far +superior to the Indian terra sigillata;” <a name="citation17"></a><a href="#footnote17">{17}</a> +as also “coloured ware and plates (<i>buntes Geschirr und</i> +<i>Tafeln</i>) which may be cut, ground, and polished, and are quite +equal to Indian vessels,” and finally that “specimens of +white porcelain (<i>Proben von weissem Porzellan</i>)” had already +been obtained, and it was hoped that this quality, too, would soon be +manufactured in considerable quantities. The royal decree concluded +by inviting “foreign artists and handicraftmen” to come +to Saxony and engage as assistants in the new factory, at high wages, +and under the patronage of the King. This royal edict probably +gives the best account of the actual state of Böttgher’s +invention at the time.</p> +<p>It has been stated in German publications that Böttgher, for +the great services rendered by him to the Elector and to Saxony, was +made Manager of the Royal Porcelain Works, and further promoted to the +dignity of Baron. Doubtless he deserved these honours; but his +treatment was of an altogether different character, for it was shabby, +cruel, and inhuman. Two royal officials, named Matthieu and Nehmitz, +were put over his head as directors of the factory, while he himself +only held the position of foreman of potters, and at the same time was +detained the King’s prisoner. During the erection of the +factory at Meissen, while his assistance was still indispensable, he +was conducted by soldiers to and from Dresden; and even after the works +were finished, he was locked up nightly in his room. All this +preyed upon his mind, and in repeated letters to the King he sought +to obtain mitigation of his fate. Some of these letters are very +touching. “I will devote my whole soul to the art of making +porcelain,” he writes on one occasion, “I will do more than +any inventor ever did before; only give me liberty, liberty!”</p> +<p>To these appeals, the King turned a deaf ear. He was ready +to spend money and grant favours; but liberty he would not give. +He regarded Böttgher as his slave. In this position, the +persecuted man kept on working for some time, till, at the end of a +year or two, he grew negligent. Disgusted with the world and with +himself, he took to drinking. Such is the force of example, that +it no sooner became known that Böttgher had betaken himself to +this vice, than the greater number of the workmen at the Meissen factory +became drunkards too. Quarrels and fightings without end were +the consequence, so that the troops were frequently called upon to interfere +and keep peace among the “Porzellanern,” as they were nicknamed. +After a while, the whole of them, more than three hundred, were shut +up in the Albrechtsburg, and treated as prisoners of state.</p> +<p>Böttgher at last fell seriously ill, and in May, 1713, his dissolution +was hourly expected. The King, alarmed at losing so valuable a +slave, now gave him permission to take carriage exercise under a guard; +and, having somewhat recovered, he was allowed occasionally to go to +Dresden. In a letter written by the King in April, 1714, Böttgher +was promised his full liberty; but the offer came too late. Broken +in body and mind, alternately working and drinking, though with occasional +gleams of nobler intention, and suffering under constant ill-health, +the result of his enforced confinement, Böttgher lingered on for +a few years more, until death freed him from his sufferings on the 13th +March, 1719, in the thirty-fifth year of his age. He was buried +<i>at night—</i>as if he had been a dog—in the Johannis +Cemetery of Meissen. Such was the treatment and such the unhappy +end, of one of Saxony’s greatest benefactors.</p> +<p>The porcelain manufacture immediately opened up an important source +of public revenue, and it became so productive to the Elector of Saxony, +that his example was shortly after followed by most European monarchs. +Although soft porcelain had been made at St. Cloud fourteen years before +Böttgher’s discovery, the superiority of the hard porcelain +soon became generally recognised. Its manufacture was begun at +Sèvres in 1770, and it has since almost entirely superseded the +softer material. This is now one of the most thriving branches +of French industry, of which the high quality of the articles produced +is certainly indisputable.</p> +<p>The career of Josiah Wedgwood, the English potter, was less chequered +and more prosperous than that of either Palissy or Böttgher, and +his lot was cast in happier times. Down to the middle of last +century England was behind most other nations of the first order in +Europe in respect of skilled industry. Although there were many +potters in Staffordshire—and Wedgwood himself belonged to a numerous +clan of potters of the same name—their productions were of the +rudest kind, for the most part only plain brown ware, with the patterns +scratched in while the clay was wet. The principal supply of the +better articles of earthenware came from Delft in Holland, and of drinking +stone pots from Cologne. Two foreign potters, the brothers Elers +from Nuremberg, settled for a time in Staffordshire, and introduced +an improved manufacture, but they shortly after removed to Chelsea, +where they confined themselves to the manufacture of ornamental pieces. +No porcelain capable of resisting a scratch with a hard point had yet +been made in England; and for a long time the “white ware” +made in Staffordshire was not white, but of a dirty cream colour. +Such, in a few words, was the condition of the pottery manufacture when +Josiah Wedgwood was born at Burslem in 1730. By the time that +he died, sixty-four years later, it had become completely changed. +By his energy, skill, and genius, he established the trade upon a new +and solid foundation; and, in the words of his epitaph, “converted +a rude and inconsiderable manufacture into an elegant art and an important +branch of national commerce.”</p> +<p>Josiah Wedgwood was one of those indefatigable men who from time +to time spring from the ranks of the common people, and by their energetic +character not only practically educate the working population in habits +of industry, but by the example of diligence and perseverance which +they set before them, largely influence the public activity in all directions, +and contribute in a great degree to form the national character. +He was, like Arkwright, the youngest of a family of thirteen children. +His grandfather and granduncle were both potters, as was also his father +who died when he was a mere boy, leaving him a patrimony of twenty pounds. +He had learned to read and write at the village school; but on the death +of his father he was taken from it and set to work as a “thrower” +in a small pottery carried on by his elder brother. There he began +life, his working life, to use his own words, “at the lowest round +of the ladder,” when only eleven years old. He was shortly +after seized by an attack of virulent smallpox, from the effects of +which he suffered during the rest of his life, for it was followed by +a disease in the right knee, which recurred at frequent intervals, and +was only got rid of by the amputation of the limb many years later. +Mr. Gladstone, in his eloquent Éloge on Wedgwood recently delivered +at Burslem, well observed that the disease from which he suffered was +not improbably the occasion of his subsequent excellence. “It +prevented him from growing up to be the active, vigorous English workman, +possessed of all his limbs, and knowing right well the use of them; +but it put him upon considering whether, as he could not be that, he +might not be something else, and something greater. It sent his +mind inwards; it drove him to meditate upon the laws and secrets of +his art. The result was, that he arrived at a perception and a +grasp of them which might, perhaps, have been envied, certainly have +been owned, by an Athenian potter.” <a name="citation18"></a><a href="#footnote18">{18}</a></p> +<p>When he had completed his apprenticeship with his brother, Josiah +joined partnership with another workman, and carried on a small business +in making knife-hafts, boxes, and sundry articles for domestic use. +Another partnership followed, when he proceeded to make melon table +plates, green pickle leaves, candlesticks, snuffboxes, and such like +articles; but he made comparatively little progress until he began business +on his own account at Burslem in the year 1759. There he diligently +pursued his calling, introducing new articles to the trade, and gradually +extending his business. What he chiefly aimed at was to manufacture +cream-coloured ware of a better quality than was then produced in Staffordshire +as regarded shape, colour, glaze, and durability. To understand +the subject thoroughly, he devoted his leisure to the study of chemistry; +and he made numerous experiments on fluxes, glazes, and various sorts +of clay. Being a close inquirer and accurate observer, he noticed +that a certain earth containing silica, which was black before calcination, +became white after exposure to the heat of a furnace. This fact, +observed and pondered on, led to the idea of mixing silica with the +red powder of the potteries, and to the discovery that the mixture becomes +white when calcined. He had but to cover this material with a +vitrification of transparent glaze, to obtain one of the most important +products of fictile art—that which, under the name of English +earthenware, was to attain the greatest commercial value and become +of the most extensive utility.</p> +<p>Wedgwood was for some time much troubled by his furnaces, though +nothing like to the same extent that Palissy was; and he overcame his +difficulties in the same way—by repeated experiments and unfaltering +perseverance. His first attempts at making porcelain for table +use was a succession of disastrous failures,—the labours of months +being often destroyed in a day. It was only after a long series +of trials, in the course of which he lost time, money, and labour, that +he arrived at the proper sort of glaze to be used; but he would not +be denied, and at last he conquered success through patience. +The improvement of pottery became his passion, and was never lost sight +of for a moment. Even when he had mastered his difficulties, and +become a prosperous man—manufacturing white stone ware and cream-coloured +ware in large quantities for home and foreign use—he went forward +perfecting his manufactures, until, his example extending in all directions, +the action of the entire district was stimulated, and a great branch +of British industry was eventually established on firm foundations. +He aimed throughout at the highest excellence, declaring his determination +“to give over manufacturing any article, whatsoever it might be, +rather than to degrade it.”</p> +<p>Wedgwood was cordially helped by many persons of rank and influence; +for, working in the truest spirit, he readily commanded the help and +encouragement of other true workers. He made for Queen Charlotte +the first royal table-service of English manufacture, of the kind afterwards +called “Queen’s-ware,” and was appointed Royal Potter; +a title which he prized more than if he had been made a baron. +Valuable sets of porcelain were entrusted to him for imitation, in which +he succeeded to admiration. Sir William Hamilton lent him specimens +of ancient art from Herculaneum, of which he produced accurate and beautiful +copies. The Duchess of Portland outbid him for the Barberini Vase +when that article was offered for sale. He bid as high as seventeen +hundred guineas for it: her grace secured it for eighteen hundred; but +when she learnt Wedgwood’s object she at once generously lent +him the vase to copy. He produced fifty copies at a cost of about +2500<i>l</i>., and his expenses were not covered by their sale; but +he gained his object, which was to show that whatever had been done, +that English skill and energy could and would accomplish.</p> +<p>Wedgwood called to his aid the crucible of the chemist, the knowledge +of the antiquary, and the skill of the artist. He found out Flaxman +when a youth, and while he liberally nurtured his genius drew from him +a large number of beautiful designs for his pottery and porcelain; converting +them by his manufacture into objects of taste and excellence, and thus +making them instrumental in the diffusion of classical art amongst the +people. By careful experiment and study he was even enabled to +rediscover the art of painting on porcelain or earthenware vases and +similar articles—an art practised by the ancient Etruscans, but +which had been lost since the time of Pliny. He distinguished +himself by his own contributions to science, and his name is still identified +with the Pyrometer which he invented. He was an indefatigable +supporter of all measures of public utility; and the construction of +the Trent and Mersey Canal, which completed the navigable communication +between the eastern and western sides of the island, was mainly due +to his public-spirited exertions, allied to the engineering skill of +Brindley. The road accommodation of the district being of an execrable +character, he planned and executed a turnpike-road through the Potteries, +ten miles in length. The reputation he achieved was such that +his works at Burslem, and subsequently those at Etruria, which he founded +and built, became a point of attraction to distinguished visitors from +all parts of Europe.</p> +<p>The result of Wedgwood’s labours was, that the manufacture +of pottery, which he found in the very lowest condition, became one +of the staples of England; and instead of importing what we needed for +home use from abroad, we became large exporters to other countries, +supplying them with earthenware even in the face of enormous prohibitory +duties on articles of British produce. Wedgwood gave evidence +as to his manufactures before Parliament in 1785, only some thirty years +after he had begun his operations; from which it appeared, that instead +of providing only casual employment to a small number of inefficient +and badly remunerated workmen, about 20,000 persons then derived their +bread directly from the manufacture of earthenware, without taking into +account the increased numbers to which it gave employment in coal-mines, +and in the carrying trade by land and sea, and the stimulus which it +gave to employment in many ways in various parts of the country. +Yet, important as had been the advances made in his time, Mr. Wedgwood +was of opinion that the manufacture was but in its infancy, and that +the improvements which he had effected were of but small amount compared +with those to which the art was capable of attaining, through the continued +industry and growing intelligence of the manufacturers, and the natural +facilities and political advantages enjoyed by Great Britain; an opinion +which has been fully borne out by the progress which has since been +effected in this important branch of industry. In 1852 not fewer +than 84,000,000 pieces of pottery were exported from England to other +countries, besides what were made for home use. But it is not +merely the quantity and value of the produce that is entitled to consideration, +but the improvement of the condition of the population by whom this +great branch of industry is conducted. When Wedgwood began his +labours, the Staffordshire district was only in a half-civilized state. +The people were poor, uncultivated, and few in number. When Wedgwood’s +manufacture was firmly established, there was found ample employment +at good wages for three times the number of population; while their +moral advancement had kept pace with their material improvement.</p> +<p>Men such as these are fairly entitled to take rank as the Industrial +Heroes of the civilized world. Their patient self-reliance amidst +trials and difficulties, their courage and perseverance in the pursuit +of worthy objects, are not less heroic of their kind than the bravery +and devotion of the soldier and the sailor, whose duty and pride it +is heroically to defend what these valiant leaders of industry have +so heroically achieved.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<h2>CHAPTER IV—APPLICATION AND PERSEVERANCE</h2> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<p>“Rich are the diligent, who can command<br />Time, nature’s +stock! and could his hour-glass fall,<br />Would, as for seed of stars, +stoop for the sand,<br />And, by incessant labour, gather all.”—D’Avenant.<br />“Allez +en avant, et la foi vous viendra!”—D’Alembert.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>The greatest results in life are usually attained by simple means, +and the exercise of ordinary qualities. The common life of every +day, with its cares, necessities, and duties, affords ample opportunity +for acquiring experience of the best kind; and its most beaten paths +provide the true worker with abundant scope for effort and room for +self-improvement. The road of human welfare lies along the old +highway of steadfast well-doing; and they who are the most persistent, +and work in the truest spirit, will usually be the most successful.</p> +<p>Fortune has often been blamed for her blindness; but fortune is not +so blind as men are. Those who look into practical life will find +that fortune is usually on the side of the industrious, as the winds +and waves are on the side of the best navigators. In the pursuit +of even the highest branches of human inquiry, the commoner qualities +are found the most useful—such as common sense, attention, application, +and perseverance. Genius may not be necessary, though even genius +of the highest sort does not disdain the use of these ordinary qualities. +The very greatest men have been among the least believers in the power +of genius, and as worldly wise and persevering as successful men of +the commoner sort. Some have even defined genius to be only common +sense intensified. A distinguished teacher and president of a +college spoke of it as the power of making efforts. John Foster +held it to be the power of lighting one’s own fire. Buffon +said of genius “it is patience.”</p> +<p>Newton’s was unquestionably a mind of the very highest order, +and yet, when asked by what means he had worked out his extraordinary +discoveries, he modestly answered, “By always thinking unto them.” +At another time he thus expressed his method of study: “I keep +the subject continually before me, and wait till the first dawnings +open slowly by little and little into a full and clear light.” +It was in Newton’s case, as in every other, only by diligent application +and perseverance that his great reputation was achieved. Even +his recreation consisted in change of study, laying down one subject +to take up another. To Dr. Bentley he said: “If I have done +the public any service, it is due to nothing but industry and patient +thought.” So Kepler, another great philosopher, speaking +of his studies and his progress, said: “As in Virgil, ‘Fama +mobilitate viget, vires acquirit eundo,’ so it was with me, that +the diligent thought on these things was the occasion of still further +thinking; until at last I brooded with the whole energy of my mind upon +the subject.”</p> +<p>The extraordinary results effected by dint of sheer industry and +perseverance, have led many distinguished men to doubt whether the gift +of genius be so exceptional an endowment as it is usually supposed to +be. Thus Voltaire held that it is only a very slight line of separation +that divides the man of genius from the man of ordinary mould. +Beccaria was even of opinion that all men might be poets and orators, +and Reynolds that they might be painters and sculptors. If this +were really so, that stolid Englishman might not have been so very far +wrong after all, who, on Canova’s death, inquired of his brother +whether it was “his intention to carry on the business!” +Locke, Helvetius, and Diderot believed that all men have an equal aptitude +for genius, and that what some are able to effect, under the laws which +regulate the operations of the intellect, must also be within the reach +of others who, under like circumstances, apply themselves to like pursuits. +But while admitting to the fullest extent the wonderful achievements +of labour, and recognising the fact that men of the most distinguished +genius have invariably been found the most indefatigable workers, it +must nevertheless be sufficiently obvious that, without the original +endowment of heart and brain, no amount of labour, however well applied, +could have produced a Shakespeare, a Newton, a Beethoven, or a Michael +Angelo.</p> +<p>Dalton, the chemist, repudiated the notion of his being “a +genius,” attributing everything which he had accomplished to simple +industry and accumulation. John Hunter said of himself, “My +mind is like a beehive; but full as it is of buzz and apparent confusion, +it is yet full of order and regularity, and food collected with incessant +industry from the choicest stores of nature.” We have, indeed, +but to glance at the biographies of great men to find that the most +distinguished inventors, artists, thinkers, and workers of all kinds, +owe their success, in a great measure, to their indefatigable industry +and application. They were men who turned all things to gold—even +time itself. Disraeli the elder held that the secret of success +consisted in being master of your subject, such mastery being attainable +only through continuous application and study. Hence it happens +that the men who have most moved the world, have not been so much men +of genius, strictly so called, as men of intense mediocre abilities, +and untiring perseverance; not so often the gifted, of naturally bright +and shining qualities, as those who have applied themselves diligently +to their work, in whatsoever line that might lie. “Alas!” +said a widow, speaking of her brilliant but careless son, “he +has not the gift of continuance.” Wanting in perseverance, +such volatile natures are outstripped in the race of life by the diligent +and even the dull. “Che va piano, va longano, e va lontano,” +says the Italian proverb: Who goes slowly, goes long, and goes far.</p> +<p>Hence, a great point to be aimed at is to get the working quality +well trained. When that is done, the race will be found comparatively +easy. We must repeat and again repeat; facility will come with +labour. Not even the simplest art can be accomplished without +it; and what difficulties it is found capable of achieving! It +was by early discipline and repetition that the late Sir Robert Peel +cultivated those remarkable, though still mediocre powers, which rendered +him so illustrious an ornament of the British Senate. When a boy +at Drayton Manor, his father was accustomed to set him up at table to +practise speaking extempore; and he early accustomed him to repeat as +much of the Sunday’s sermon as he could remember. Little +progress was made at first, but by steady perseverance the habit of +attention became powerful, and the sermon was at length repeated almost +verbatim. When afterwards replying in succession to the arguments +of his parliamentary opponents—an art in which he was perhaps +unrivalled—it was little surmised that the extraordinary power +of accurate remembrance which he displayed on such occasions had been +originally trained under the discipline of his father in the parish +church of Drayton.</p> +<p>It is indeed marvellous what continuous application will effect in +the commonest of things. It may seem a simple affair to play upon +a violin; yet what a long and laborious practice it requires! +Giardini said to a youth who asked him how long it would take to learn +it, “Twelve hours a day for twenty years together.” +Industry, it is said, <i>fait l’ours danser</i>. The poor +figurante must devote years of incessant toil to her profitless task +before she can shine in it. When Taglioni was preparing herself +for her evening exhibition, she would, after a severe two hours’ +lesson from her father, fall down exhausted, and had to be undressed, +sponged, and resuscitated totally unconscious. The agility and +bounds of the evening were insured only at a price like this.</p> +<p>Progress, however, of the best kind, is comparatively slow. +Great results cannot be achieved at once; and we must be satisfied to +advance in life as we walk, step by step. De Maistre says that +“to know <i>how to wait</i> is the great secret of success.” +We must sow before we can reap, and often have to wait long, content +meanwhile to look patiently forward in hope; the fruit best worth waiting +for often ripening the slowest. But “time and patience,” +says the Eastern proverb, “change the mulberry leaf to satin.”</p> +<p>To wait patiently, however, men must work cheerfully. Cheerfulness +is an excellent working quality, imparting great elasticity to the character. +As a bishop has said, “Temper is nine-tenths of Christianity;” +so are cheerfulness and diligence nine-tenths of practical wisdom. +They are the life and soul of success, as well as of happiness; perhaps +the very highest pleasure in life consisting in clear, brisk, conscious +working; energy, confidence, and every other good quality mainly depending +upon it. Sydney Smith, when labouring as a parish priest at Foston-le-Clay, +in Yorkshire,—though he did not feel himself to be in his proper +element,—went cheerfully to work in the firm determination to +do his best. “I am resolved,” he said, “to like +it, and reconcile myself to it, which is more manly than to feign myself +above it, and to send up complaints by the post of being thrown away, +and being desolate, and such like trash.” So Dr. Hook, when +leaving Leeds for a new sphere of labour said, “Wherever I may +be, I shall, by God’s blessing, do with my might what my hand +findeth to do; and if I do not find work, I shall make it.”</p> +<p>Labourers for the public good especially, have to work long and patiently, +often uncheered by the prospect of immediate recompense or result. +The seeds they sow sometimes lie hidden under the winter’s snow, +and before the spring comes the husbandman may have gone to his rest. +It is not every public worker who, like Rowland Hill, sees his great +idea bring forth fruit in his life-time. Adam Smith sowed the +seeds of a great social amelioration in that dingy old University of +Glasgow where he so long laboured, and laid the foundations of his ‘Wealth +of Nations;’ but seventy years passed before his work bore substantial +fruits, nor indeed are they all gathered in yet.</p> +<p>Nothing can compensate for the loss of hope in a man: it entirely +changes the character. “How can I work—how can I be +happy,” said a great but miserable thinker, “when I have +lost all hope?” One of the most cheerful and courageous, +because one of the most hopeful of workers, was Carey, the missionary. +When in India, it was no uncommon thing for him to weary out three pundits, +who officiated as his clerks, in one day, he himself taking rest only +in change of employment. Carey, the son of a shoe-maker, was supported +in his labours by Ward, the son of a carpenter, and Marsham, the son +of a weaver. By their labours, a magnificent college was erected +at Serampore; sixteen flourishing stations were established; the Bible +was translated into sixteen languages, and the seeds were sown of a +beneficent moral revolution in British India. Carey was never +ashamed of the humbleness of his origin. On one occasion, when +at the Governor-General’s table he over-heard an officer opposite +him asking another, loud enough to be heard, whether Carey had not once +been a shoemaker: “No, sir,” exclaimed Carey immediately; +“only a cobbler.” An eminently characteristic anecdote +has been told of his perseverance as a boy. When climbing a tree +one day, his foot slipped, and he fell to the ground, breaking his leg +by the fall. He was confined to his bed for weeks, but when he +recovered and was able to walk without support, the very first thing +he did was to go and climb that tree. Carey had need of this sort +of dauntless courage for the great missionary work of his life, and +nobly and resolutely he did it.</p> +<p>It was a maxim of Dr. Young, the philosopher, that “Any man +can do what any other man has done;” and it is unquestionable +that he himself never recoiled from any trials to which he determined +to subject himself. It is related of him, that the first time +he mounted a horse, he was in company with the grandson of Mr. Barclay +of Ury, the well-known sportsman; when the horseman who preceded them +leapt a high fence. Young wished to imitate him, but fell off +his horse in the attempt. Without saying a word, he remounted, +made a second effort, and was again unsuccessful, but this time he was +not thrown further than on to the horse’s neck, to which he clung. +At the third trial, he succeeded, and cleared the fence.</p> +<p>The story of Timour the Tartar learning a lesson of perseverance +under adversity from the spider is well known. Not less interesting +is the anecdote of Audubon, the American ornithologist, as related by +himself: “An accident,” he says, “which happened to +two hundred of my original drawings, nearly put a stop to my researches +in ornithology. I shall relate it, merely to show how far enthusiasm—for +by no other name can I call my perseverance—may enable the preserver +of nature to surmount the most disheartening difficulties. I left +the village of Henderson, in Kentucky, situated on the banks of the +Ohio, where I resided for several years, to proceed to Philadelphia +on business. I looked to my drawings before my departure, placed +them carefully in a wooden box, and gave them in charge of a relative, +with injunctions to see that no injury should happen to them. +My absence was of several months; and when I returned, after having +enjoyed the pleasures of home for a few days, I inquired after my box, +and what I was pleased to call my treasure. The box was produced +and opened; but reader, feel for me—a pair of Norway rats had +taken possession of the whole, and reared a young family among the gnawed +bits of paper, which, but a month previous, represented nearly a thousand +inhabitants of air! The burning beat which instantly rushed through +my brain was too great to be endured without affecting my whole nervous +system. I slept for several nights, and the days passed like days +of oblivion—until the animal powers being recalled into action +through the strength of my constitution, I took up my gun, my notebook, +and my pencils, and went forth to the woods as gaily as if nothing had +happened. I felt pleased that I might now make better drawings +than before; and, ere a period not exceeding three years had elapsed, +my portfolio was again filled.”</p> +<p>The accidental destruction of Sir Isaac Newton’s papers, by +his little dog ‘Diamond’ upsetting a lighted taper upon +his desk, by which the elaborate calculations of many years were in +a moment destroyed, is a well-known anecdote, and need not be repeated: +it is said that the loss caused the philosopher such profound grief +that it seriously injured his health, and impaired his understanding. +An accident of a somewhat similar kind happened to the MS. of Mr. Carlyle’s +first volume of his ‘French Revolution.’ He had lent +the MS. to a literary neighbour to peruse. By some mischance, +it had been left lying on the parlour floor, and become forgotten. +Weeks ran on, and the historian sent for his work, the printers being +loud for “copy.” Inquiries were made, and it was found +that the maid-of-all-work, finding what she conceived to be a bundle +of waste paper on the floor, had used it to light the kitchen and parlour +fires with! Such was the answer returned to Mr. Carlyle; and his +feelings may be imagined. There was, however, no help for him +but to set resolutely to work to re-write the book; and he turned to +and did it. He had no draft, and was compelled to rake up from +his memory facts, ideas, and expressions, which had been long since +dismissed. The composition of the book in the first instance had +been a work of pleasure; the re-writing of it a second time was one +of pain and anguish almost beyond belief. That he persevered and +finished the volume under such circumstances, affords an instance of +determination of purpose which has seldom been surpassed.</p> +<p>The lives of eminent inventors are eminently illustrative of the +same quality of perseverance. George Stephenson, when addressing +young men, was accustomed to sum up his best advice to them, in the +words, “Do as I have done—persevere.” He had +worked at the improvement of his locomotive for some fifteen years before +achieving his decisive victory at Rainhill; and Watt was engaged for +some thirty years upon the condensing-engine before he brought it to +perfection. But there are equally striking illustrations of perseverance +to be found in every other branch of science, art, and industry. +Perhaps one of the most interesting is that connected with the disentombment +of the Nineveh marbles, and the discovery of the long-lost cuneiform +or arrow-headed character in which the inscriptions on them are written—a +kind of writing which had been lost to the world since the period of +the Macedonian conquest of Persia.</p> +<p>An intelligent cadet of the East India Company, stationed at Kermanshah, +in Persia, had observed the curious cuneiform inscriptions on the old +monuments in the neighbourhood—so old that all historical traces +of them had been lost,—and amongst the inscriptions which he copied +was that on the celebrated rock of Behistun—a perpendicular rock +rising abruptly some 1700 feet from the plain, the lower part bearing +inscriptions for the space of about 300 feet in three languages—Persian, +Scythian, and Assyrian. Comparison of the known with the unknown, +of the language which survived with the language that had been lost, +enabled this cadet to acquire some knowledge of the cuneiform character, +and even to form an alphabet. Mr. (afterwards Sir Henry) Rawlinson +sent his tracings home for examination. No professors in colleges +as yet knew anything of the cuneiform character; but there was a ci-devant +clerk of the East India House—a modest unknown man of the name +of Norris—who had made this little-understood subject his study, +to whom the tracings were submitted; and so accurate was his knowledge, +that, though he had never seen the Behistun rock, he pronounced that +the cadet had not copied the puzzling inscription with proper exactness. +Rawlinson, who was still in the neighbourhood of the rock, compared +his copy with the original, and found that Norris was right; and by +further comparison and careful study the knowledge of the cuneiform +writing was thus greatly advanced.</p> +<p>But to make the learning of these two self-taught men of avail, a +third labourer was necessary in order to supply them with material for +the exercise of their skill. Such a labourer presented himself +in the person of Austen Layard, originally an articled clerk in the +office of a London solicitor. One would scarcely have expected +to find in these three men, a cadet, an India-House clerk, and a lawyer’s +clerk, the discoverers of a forgotten language, and of the buried history +of Babylon; yet it was so. Layard was a youth of only twenty-two, +travelling in the East, when he was possessed with a desire to penetrate +the regions beyond the Euphrates. Accompanied by a single companion, +trusting to his arms for protection, and, what was better, to his cheerfulness, +politeness, and chivalrous bearing, he passed safely amidst tribes at +deadly war with each other; and, after the lapse of many years, with +comparatively slender means at his command, but aided by application +and perseverance, resolute will and purpose, and almost sublime patience,—borne +up throughout by his passionate enthusiasm for discovery and research,—he +succeeded in laying bare and digging up an amount of historical treasures, +the like of which has probably never before been collected by the industry +of any one man. Not less than two miles of bas-reliefs were thus +brought to light by Mr. Layard. The selection of these valuable +antiquities, now placed in the British Museum, was found so curiously +corroborative of the scriptural records of events which occurred some +three thousand years ago, that they burst upon the world almost like +a new revelation. And the story of the disentombment of these +remarkable works, as told by Mr. Layard himself in his ‘Monuments +of Nineveh,’ will always be regarded as one of the most charming +and unaffected records which we possess of individual enterprise, industry, +and energy.</p> +<p>The career of the Comte de Buffon presents another remarkable illustration +of the power of patient industry as well as of his own saying, that +“Genius is patience.” Notwithstanding the great results +achieved by him in natural history, Buffon, when a youth, was regarded +as of mediocre talents. His mind was slow in forming itself, and +slow in reproducing what it had acquired. He was also constitutionally +indolent; and being born to good estate, it might be supposed that he +would indulge his liking for ease and luxury. Instead of which, +he early formed the resolution of denying himself pleasure, and devoting +himself to study and self-culture. Regarding time as a treasure +that was limited, and finding that he was losing many hours by lying +a-bed in the mornings, he determined to break himself of the habit. +He struggled hard against it for some time, but failed in being able +to rise at the hour he had fixed. He then called his servant, +Joseph, to his help, and promised him the reward of a crown every time +that he succeeded in getting him up before six. At first, when +called, Buffon declined to rise—pleaded that he was ill, or pretended +anger at being disturbed; and on the Count at length getting up, Joseph +found that he had earned nothing but reproaches for having permitted +his master to lie a-bed contrary to his express orders. At length +the valet determined to earn his crown; and again and again he forced +Buffon to rise, notwithstanding his entreaties, expostulations, and +threats of immediate discharge from his service. One morning Buffon +was unusually obstinate, and Joseph found it necessary to resort to +the extreme measure of dashing a basin of ice-cold water under the bed-clothes, +the effect of which was instantaneous. By the persistent use of +such means, Buffon at length conquered his habit; and he was accustomed +to say that he owed to Joseph three or four volumes of his Natural History.</p> +<p>For forty years of his life, Buffon worked every morning at his desk +from nine till two, and again in the evening from five till nine. +His diligence was so continuous and so regular that it became habitual. +His biographer has said of him, “Work was his necessity; his studies +were the charm of his life; and towards the last term of his glorious +career he frequently said that he still hoped to be able to consecrate +to them a few more years.” He was a most conscientious worker, +always studying to give the reader his best thoughts, expressed in the +very best manner. He was never wearied with touching and retouching +his compositions, so that his style may be pronounced almost perfect. +He wrote the ‘Epoques de la Nature’ not fewer than eleven +times before he was satisfied with it; although he had thought over +the work about fifty years. He was a thorough man of business, +most orderly in everything; and he was accustomed to say that genius +without order lost three-fourths of its power. His great success +as a writer was the result mainly of his painstaking labour and diligent +application. “Buffon,” observed Madame Necker, “strongly +persuaded that genius is the result of a profound attention directed +to a particular subject, said that he was thoroughly wearied out when +composing his first writings, but compelled himself to return to them +and go over them carefully again, even when he thought he had already +brought them to a certain degree of perfection; and that at length he +found pleasure instead of weariness in this long and elaborate correction.” +It ought also to be added that Buffon wrote and published all his great +works while afflicted by one of the most painful diseases to which the +human frame is subject.</p> +<p>Literary life affords abundant illustrations of the same power of +perseverance; and perhaps no career is more instructive, viewed in this +light, than that of Sir Walter Scott. His admirable working qualities +were trained in a lawyer’s office, where he pursued for many years +a sort of drudgery scarcely above that of a copying clerk. His +daily dull routine made his evenings, which were his own, all the more +sweet; and he generally devoted them to reading and study. He +himself attributed to his prosaic office discipline that habit of steady, +sober diligence, in which mere literary men are so often found wanting. +As a copying clerk he was allowed 3<i>d</i>. for every page containing +a certain number of words; and he sometimes, by extra work, was able +to copy as many as 120 pages in twenty-four hours, thus earning some +30<i>s</i>.; out of which he would occasionally purchase an odd volume, +otherwise beyond his means.</p> +<p>During his after-life Scott was wont to pride himself upon being +a man of business, and he averred, in contradiction to what he called +the cant of sonneteers, that there was no necessary connection between +genius and an aversion or contempt for the common duties of life. +On the contrary, he was of opinion that to spend some fair portion of +every day in any matter-of-fact occupation was good for the higher faculties +themselves in the upshot. While afterwards acting as clerk to +the Court of Session in Edinburgh, he performed his literary work chiefly +before breakfast, attending the court during the day, where he authenticated +registered deeds and writings of various kinds. On the whole, +says Lockhart, “it forms one of the most remarkable features in +his history, that throughout the most active period of his literary +career, he must have devoted a large proportion of his hours, during +half at least of every year, to the conscientious discharge of professional +duties.” It was a principle of action which he laid down +for himself, that he must earn his living by business, and not by literature. +On one occasion he said, “I determined that literature should +be my staff, not my crutch, and that the profits of my literary labour, +however convenient otherwise, should not, if I could help it, become +necessary to my ordinary expenses.”</p> +<p>His punctuality was one of the most carefully cultivated of his habits, +otherwise it had not been possible for him to get through so enormous +an amount of literary labour. He made it a rule to answer every +letter received by him on the same day, except where inquiry and deliberation +were requisite. Nothing else could have enabled him to keep abreast +with the flood of communications that poured in upon him and sometimes +put his good nature to the severest test. It was his practice +to rise by five o’clock, and light his own fire. He shaved +and dressed with deliberation, and was seated at his desk by six o’clock, +with his papers arranged before him in the most accurate order, his +works of reference marshalled round him on the floor, while at least +one favourite dog lay watching his eye, outside the line of books. +Thus by the time the family assembled for breakfast, between nine and +ten, he had done enough—to use his own words—to break the +neck of the day’s work. But with all his diligent and indefatigable +industry, and his immense knowledge, the result of many years’ +patient labour, Scott always spoke with the greatest diffidence of his +own powers. On one occasion he said, “Throughout every part +of my career I have felt pinched and hampered by my own ignorance.”</p> +<p>Such is true wisdom and humility; for the more a man really knows, +the less conceited he will be. The student at Trinity College +who went up to his professor to take leave of him because he had “finished +his education,” was wisely rebuked by the professor’s reply, +“Indeed! I am only beginning mine.” The superficial +person who has obtained a smattering of many things, but knows nothing +well, may pride himself upon his gifts; but the sage humbly confesses +that “all he knows is, that he knows nothing,” or like Newton, +that he has been only engaged in picking shells by the sea shore, while +the great ocean of truth lies all unexplored before him.</p> +<p>The lives of second-rate literary men furnish equally remarkable +illustrations of the power of perseverance. The late John Britton, +author of ‘The Beauties of England and Wales,’ and of many +valuable architectural works, was born in a miserable cot in Kingston, +Wiltshire. His father had been a baker and maltster, but was ruined +in trade and became insane while Britton was yet a child. The +boy received very little schooling, but a great deal of bad example, +which happily did not corrupt him. He was early in life set to +labour with an uncle, a tavern-keeper in Clerkenwell, under whom he +bottled, corked, and binned wine for more than five years. His +health failing him, his uncle turned him adrift in the world, with only +two guineas, the fruits of his five years’ service, in his pocket. +During the next seven years of his life he endured many vicissitudes +and hardships. Yet he says, in his autobiography, “in my +poor and obscure lodgings, at eighteenpence a week, I indulged in study, +and often read in bed during the winter evenings, because I could not +afford a fire.” Travelling on foot to Bath, he there obtained +an engagement as a cellarman, but shortly after we find him back in +the metropolis again almost penniless, shoeless, and shirtless. +He succeeded, however, in obtaining employment as a cellarman at the +London Tavern, where it was his duty to be in the cellar from seven +in the morning until eleven at night. His health broke down under +this confinement in the dark, added to the heavy work; and he then engaged +himself, at fifteen shillings a week, to an attorney,—for he had +been diligently cultivating the art of writing during the few spare +minutes that he could call his own. While in this employment, +he devoted his leisure principally to perambulating the bookstalls, +where he read books by snatches which he could not buy, and thus picked +up a good deal of odd knowledge. Then he shifted to another office, +at the advanced wages of twenty shillings a week, still reading and +studying. At twenty-eight he was able to write a book, which he +published under the title of ‘The Enterprising Adventures of Pizarro;’ +and from that time until his death, during a period of about fifty-five +years, Britton was occupied in laborious literary occupation. +The number of his published works is not fewer than eighty-seven; the +most important being ‘The Cathedral Antiquities of England,’ +in fourteen volumes, a truly magnificent work; itself the best monument +of John Britton’s indefatigable industry.</p> +<p>London, the landscape gardener, was a man of somewhat similar character, +possessed of an extraordinary working power. The son of a farmer +near Edinburgh, he was early inured to work. His skill in drawing +plans and making sketches of scenery induced his father to train him +for a landscape gardener. During his apprenticeship he sat up +two whole nights every week to study; yet he worked harder during the +day than any labourer. In the course of his night studies he learnt +French, and before he was eighteen he translated a life of Abelard for +an Encyclopaedia. He was so eager to make progress in life, that +when only twenty, while working as a gardener in England, he wrote down +in his note-book, “I am now twenty years of age, and perhaps a +third part of my life has passed away, and yet what have I done to benefit +my fellow men?” an unusual reflection for a youth of only twenty. +From French he proceeded to learn German, and rapidly mastered that +language. Having taken a large farm, for the purpose of introducing +Scotch improvements in the art of agriculture, he shortly succeeded +in realising a considerable income. The continent being thrown +open at the end of the war, he travelled abroad for the purpose of inquiring +into the system of gardening and agriculture in other countries. +He twice repeated his journeys, and the results were published in his +Encyclopaedias, which are among the most remarkable works of their kind,—distinguished +for the immense mass of useful matter which they contain, collected +by an amount of industry and labour which has rarely been equalled.</p> +<p>The career of Samuel Drew is not less remarkable than any of those +which we have cited. His father was a hard-working labourer of +the parish of St. Austell, in Cornwall. Though poor, he contrived +to send his two sons to a penny-a-week school in the neighbourhood. +Jabez, the elder, took delight in learning, and made great progress +in his lessons; but Samuel, the younger, was a dunce, notoriously given +to mischief and playing truant. When about eight years old he +was put to manual labour, earning three-halfpence a day as a buddle-boy +at a tin mine. At ten he was apprenticed to a shoemaker, and while +in this employment he endured much hardship,—living, as he used +to say, “like a toad under a harrow.” He often thought +of running away and becoming a pirate, or something of the sort, and +he seems to have grown in recklessness as he grew in years. In +robbing orchards he was usually a leader; and, as he grew older, he +delighted to take part in any poaching or smuggling adventure. +When about seventeen, before his apprenticeship was out, he ran away, +intending to enter on board a man-of-war; but, sleeping in a hay-field +at night cooled him a little, and he returned to his trade.</p> +<p>Drew next removed to the neighbourhood of Plymouth to work at his +shoemaking business, and while at Cawsand he won a prize for cudgel-playing, +in which he seems to have been an adept. While living there, he +had nearly lost his life in a smuggling exploit which he had joined, +partly induced by the love of adventure, and partly by the love of gain, +for his regular wages were not more than eight shillings a-week. +One night, notice was given throughout Crafthole, that a smuggler was +off the coast, ready to land her cargo; on which the male population +of the place—nearly all smugglers—made for the shore. +One party remained on the rocks to make signals and dispose of the goods +as they were landed; and another manned the boats, Drew being of the +latter party. The night was intensely dark, and very little of +the cargo had been landed, when the wind rose, with a heavy sea. +The men in the boats, however, determined to persevere, and several +trips were made between the smuggler, now standing farther out to sea, +and the shore. One of the men in the boat in which Drew was, had +his hat blown off by the wind, and in attempting to recover it, the +boat was upset. Three of the men were immediately drowned; the +others clung to the boat for a time, but finding it drifting out to +sea, they took to swimming. They were two miles from land, and +the night was intensely dark. After being about three hours in +the water, Drew reached a rock near the shore, with one or two others, +where he remained benumbed with cold till morning, when he and his companions +were discovered and taken off, more dead than alive. A keg of +brandy from the cargo just landed was brought, the head knocked in with +a hatchet, and a bowlfull of the liquid presented to the survivors; +and, shortly after, Drew was able to walk two miles through deep snow, +to his lodgings.</p> +<p>This was a very unpromising beginning of a life; and yet this same +Drew, scapegrace, orchard-robber, shoemaker, cudgel-player, and smuggler, +outlived the recklessness of his youth and became distinguished as a +minister of the Gospel and a writer of good books. Happily, before +it was too late, the energy which characterised him was turned into +a more healthy direction, and rendered him as eminent in usefulness +as he had before been in wickedness. His father again took him +back to St. Austell, and found employment for him as a journeyman shoemaker. +Perhaps his recent escape from death had tended to make the young man +serious, as we shortly find him attracted by the forcible preaching +of Dr. Adam Clarke, a minister of the Wesleyan Methodists. His +brother having died about the same time, the impression of seriousness +was deepened; and thenceforward he was an altered man. He began +anew the work of education, for he had almost forgotten how to read +and write; and even after several years’ practice, a friend compared +his writing to the traces of a spider dipped in ink set to crawl upon +paper. Speaking of himself, about that time, Drew afterwards said, +“The more I read, the more I felt my own ignorance; and the more +I felt my ignorance, the more invincible became my energy to surmount +it. Every leisure moment was now employed in reading one thing +or another. Having to support myself by manual labour, my time +for reading was but little, and to overcome this disadvantage, my usual +method was to place a book before me while at meat, and at every repast +I read five or six pages.” The perusal of Locke’s +‘Essay on the Understanding’ gave the first metaphysical +turn to his mind. “It awakened me from my stupor,” +said he, “and induced me to form a resolution to abandon the grovelling +views which I had been accustomed to entertain.”</p> +<p>Drew began business on his own account, with a capital of a few shillings; +but his character for steadiness was such that a neighbouring miller +offered him a loan, which was accepted, and, success attending his industry, +the debt was repaid at the end of a year. He started with a determination +to “owe no man anything,” and he held to it in the midst +of many privations. Often he went to bed supperless, to avoid +rising in debt. His ambition was to achieve independence by industry +and economy, and in this he gradually succeeded. In the midst +of incessant labour, he sedulously strove to improve his mind, studying +astronomy, history, and metaphysics. He was induced to pursue +the latter study chiefly because it required fewer books to consult +than either of the others. “It appeared to be a thorny path,” +he said, “but I determined, nevertheless, to enter, and accordingly +began to tread it.”</p> +<p>Added to his labours in shoemaking and metaphysics, Drew became a +local preacher and a class leader. He took an eager interest in +politics, and his shop became a favourite resort with the village politicians. +And when they did not come to him, he went to them to talk over public +affairs. This so encroached upon his time that he found it necessary +sometimes to work until midnight to make up for the hours lost during +the day. His political fervour become the talk of the village. +While busy one night hammering away at a shoe-sole, a little boy, seeing +a light in the shop, put his mouth to the keyhole of the door, and called +out in a shrill pipe, “Shoemaker! shoe-maker! work by night and +run about by day!” A friend, to whom Drew afterwards told +the story, asked, “And did not you run after the boy, and strap +him?” “No, no,” was the reply; “had a +pistol been fired off at my ear, I could not have been more dismayed +or confounded. I dropped my work, and said to myself, ‘True, +true! but you shall never have that to say of me again.’ +To me that cry was as the voice of God, and it has been a word in season +throughout my life. I learnt from it not to leave till to-morrow +the work of to-day, or to idle when I ought to be working.”</p> +<p>From that moment Drew dropped politics, and stuck to his work, reading +and studying in his spare hours: but he never allowed the latter pursuit +to interfere with his business, though it frequently broke in upon his +rest. He married, and thought of emigrating to America; but he +remained working on. His literary taste first took the direction +of poetical composition; and from some of the fragments which have been +preserved, it appears that his speculations as to the immateriality +and immortality of the soul had their origin in these poetical musings. +His study was the kitchen, where his wife’s bellows served him +for a desk; and he wrote amidst the cries and cradlings of his children. +Paine’s ‘Age of Reason’ having appeared about this +time and excited much interest, he composed a pamphlet in refutation +of its arguments, which was published. He used afterwards to say +that it was the ‘Age of Reason’ that made him an author. +Various pamphlets from his pen shortly appeared in rapid succession, +and a few years later, while still working at shoemaking, he wrote and +published his admirable ‘Essay on the Immateriality and Immortality +of the Human Soul,’ which he sold for twenty pounds, a great sum +in his estimation at the time. The book went through many editions, +and is still prized.</p> +<p>Drew was in no wise puffed up by his success, as many young authors +are, but, long after he had become celebrated as a writer, used to be +seen sweeping the street before his door, or helping his apprentices +to carry in the winter’s coals. Nor could he, for some time, +bring himself to regard literature as a profession to live by. +His first care was, to secure an honest livelihood by his business, +and to put into the “lottery of literary success,” as he +termed it, only the surplus of his time. At length, however, he +devoted himself wholly to literature, more particularly in connection +with the Wesleyan body; editing one of their magazines, and superintending +the publication of several of their denominational works. He also +wrote in the ‘Eclectic Review,’ and compiled and published +a valuable history of his native county, Cornwall, with numerous other +works. Towards the close of his career, he said of himself,—“Raised +from one of the lowest stations in society, I have endeavoured through +life to bring my family into a state of respectability, by honest industry, +frugality, and a high regard for my moral character. Divine providence +has smiled on my exertions, and crowned my wishes with success.”</p> +<p>The late Joseph Hume pursued a very different career, but worked +in an equally persevering spirit. He was a man of moderate parts, +but of great industry and unimpeachable honesty of purpose. The +motto of his life was “Perseverance,” and well, he acted +up to it. His father dying while he was a mere child, his mother +opened a small shop in Montrose, and toiled hard to maintain her family +and bring them up respectably. Joseph she put apprentice to a +surgeon, and educated for the medical profession. Having got his +diploma, he made several voyages to India as ship’s surgeon, <a name="citation19"></a><a href="#footnote19">{19}</a> +and afterwards obtained a cadetship in the Company’s service. +None worked harder, or lived more temperately, than he did, and, securing +the confidence of his superiors, who found him a capable man in the +performance of his duty, they gradually promoted him to higher offices. +In 1803 he was with the division of the army under General Powell, in +the Mahratta war; and the interpreter having died, Hume, who had meanwhile +studied and mastered the native languages, was appointed in his stead. +He was next made chief of the medical staff. But as if this were +not enough to occupy his full working power, he undertook in addition +the offices of paymaster and post-master, and filled them satisfactorily. +He also contracted to supply the commissariat, which he did with advantage +to the army and profit to himself. After about ten years’ +unremitting labour, he returned to England with a competency; and one +of his first acts was to make provision for the poorer members of his +family.</p> +<p>But Joseph Hume was not a man to enjoy the fruits of his industry +in idleness. Work and occupation had become necessary for his +comfort and happiness. To make himself fully acquainted with the +actual state of his own country, and the condition of the people, he +visited every town in the kingdom which then enjoyed any degree of manufacturing +celebrity. He afterwards travelled abroad for the purpose of obtaining +a knowledge of foreign states. Returned to England, he entered Parliament +in 1812, and continued a member of that assembly, with a short interruption, +for a period of about thirty-four years. His first recorded speech +was on the subject of public education, and throughout his long and +honourable career he took an active and earnest interest in that and +all other questions calculated to elevate and improve the condition +of the people—criminal reform, savings-banks, free trade, economy +and retrenchment, extended representation, and such like measures, all +of which he indefatigably promoted. Whatever subject he undertook, +he worked at with all his might. He was not a good speaker, but +what he said was believed to proceed from the lips of an honest, single-minded, +accurate man. If ridicule, as Shaftesbury says, be the test of +truth, Joseph Hume stood the test well. No man was more laughed +at, but there he stood perpetually, and literally, “at his post.” +He was usually beaten on a division, but the influence which he exercised +was nevertheless felt, and many important financial improvements were +effected by him even with the vote directly against him. The amount +of hard work which he contrived to get through was something extraordinary. +He rose at six, wrote letters and arranged his papers for parliament; +then, after breakfast, he received persons on business, sometimes as +many as twenty in a morning. The House rarely assembled without +him, and though the debate might be prolonged to two or three o’clock +in the morning, his name was seldom found absent from the division. +In short, to perform the work which he did, extending over so long a +period, in the face of so many Administrations, week after week, year +after year,—to be outvoted, beaten, laughed at, standing on many +occasions almost alone,—to persevere in the face of every discouragement, +preserving his temper unruffled, never relaxing in his energy or his +hope, and living to see the greater number of his measures adopted with +acclamation, must be regarded as one of the most remarkable illustrations +of the power of human perseverance that biography can exhibit.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<h2>CHAPTER V—HELPS AND OPPORTUNITIES—SCIENTIFIC PURSUITS</h2> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<p>“Neither the naked hand, nor the understanding, left to itself, +can do much; the work is accomplished by instruments and helps, of which +the need is not less for the understanding than the hand.”—Bacon.</p> +<p>“Opportunity has hair in front, behind she is bald; if you +seize her by the forelock you may hold her, but, if suffered to escape, +not Jupiter himself can catch her again.”—From the Latin.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>Accident does very little towards the production of any great result +in life. Though sometimes what is called “a happy hit” +may be made by a bold venture, the common highway of steady industry +and application is the only safe road to travel. It is said of +the landscape painter Wilson, that when he had nearly finished a picture +in a tame, correct manner, he would step back from it, his pencil fixed +at the end of a long stick, and after gazing earnestly on the work, +he would suddenly walk up and by a few bold touches give a brilliant +finish to the painting. But it will not do for every one who would +produce an effect, to throw his brush at the canvas in the hope of producing +a picture. The capability of putting in these last vital touches +is acquired only by the labour of a life; and the probability is, that +the artist who has not carefully trained himself beforehand, in attempting +to produce a brilliant effect at a dash, will only produce a blotch.</p> +<p>Sedulous attention and painstaking industry always mark the true +worker. The greatest men are not those who “despise the +day of small things,” but those who improve them the most carefully. +Michael Angelo was one day explaining to a visitor at his studio, what +he had been doing at a statue since his previous visit. “I +have retouched this part—polished that—softened this feature—brought +out that muscle—given some expression to this lip, and more energy +to that limb.” “But these are trifles,” remarked +the visitor. “It may be so,” replied the sculptor, +“but recollect that trifles make perfection, and perfection is +no trifle.” So it was said of Nicholas Poussin, the painter, +that the rule of his conduct was, that “whatever was worth doing +at all was worth doing well;” and when asked, late in life, by +his friend Vigneul de Marville, by what means he had gained so high +a reputation among the painters of Italy, Poussin emphatically answered, +“Because I have neglected nothing.”</p> +<p>Although there are discoveries which are said to have been made by +accident, if carefully inquired into, it will be found that there has +really been very little that was accidental about them. For the +most part, these so-called accidents have only been opportunities, carefully +improved by genius. The fall of the apple at Newton’s feet +has often been quoted in proof of the accidental character of some discoveries. +But Newton’s whole mind had already been devoted for years to +the laborious and patient investigation of the subject of gravitation; +and the circumstance of the apple falling before his eyes was suddenly +apprehended only as genius could apprehend it, and served to flash upon +him the brilliant discovery then opening to his sight. In like +manner, the brilliantly-coloured soap-bubbles blown from a common tobacco +pipe—though “trifles light as air” in most eyes—suggested +to Dr. Young his beautiful theory of “interferences,” and +led to his discovery relating to the diffraction of light. Although +great men are popularly supposed only to deal with great things, men +such as Newton and Young were ready to detect the significance of the +most familiar and simple facts; their greatness consisting mainly in +their wise interpretation of them.</p> +<p>The difference between men consists, in a great measure, in the intelligence +of their observation. The Russian proverb says of the non-observant +man, “He goes through the forest and sees no firewood.” +“The wise man’s eyes are in his head,” says Solomon, +“but the fool walketh in darkness.” “Sir,” +said Johnson, on one occasion, to a fine gentleman just returned from +Italy, “some men will learn more in the Hampstead stage than others +in the tour of Europe.” It is the mind that sees as well +as the eye. Where unthinking gazers observe nothing, men of intelligent +vision penetrate into the very fibre of the phenomena presented to them, +attentively noting differences, making comparisons, and recognizing +their underlying idea. Many before Galileo had seen a suspended +weight swing before their eyes with a measured beat; but he was the +first to detect the value of the fact. One of the vergers in the +cathedral at Pisa, after replenishing with oil a lamp which hung from +the roof, left it swinging to and fro; and Galileo, then a youth of +only eighteen, noting it attentively, conceived the idea of applying +it to the measurement of time. Fifty years of study and labour, +however, elapsed, before he completed the invention of his Pendulum,—the +importance of which, in the measurement of time and in astronomical +calculations, can scarcely be overrated. In like manner, Galileo, +having casually heard that one Lippershey, a Dutch spectacle-maker, +had presented to Count Maurice of Nassau an instrument by means of which +distant objects appeared nearer to the beholder, addressed himself to +the cause of such a phenomenon, which led to the invention of the telescope, +and proved the beginning of the modern science of astronomy. Discoveries +such as these could never have been made by a negligent observer, or +by a mere passive listener.</p> +<p>While Captain (afterwards Sir Samuel) Brown was occupied in studying +the construction of bridges, with the view of contriving one of a cheap +description to be thrown across the Tweed, near which he lived, he was +walking in his garden one dewy autumn morning, when he saw a tiny spider’s +net suspended across his path. The idea immediately occurred to +him, that a bridge of iron ropes or chains might be constructed in like +manner, and the result was the invention of his Suspension Bridge. +So James Watt, when consulted about the mode of carrying water by pipes +under the Clyde, along the unequal bed of the river, turned his attention +one day to the shell of a lobster presented at table; and from that +model he invented an iron tube, which, when laid down, was found effectually +to answer the purpose. Sir Isambert Brunel took his first lessons +in forming the Thames Tunnel from the tiny shipworm: he saw how the +little creature perforated the wood with its well-armed head, first +in one direction and then in another, till the archway was complete, +and then daubed over the roof and sides with a kind of varnish; and +by copying this work exactly on a large scale, Brunel was at length +enabled to construct his shield and accomplish his great engineering +work.</p> +<p>It is the intelligent eye of the careful observer which gives these +apparently trivial phenomena their value. So trifling a matter +as the sight of seaweed floating past his ship, enabled Columbus to +quell the mutiny which arose amongst his sailors at not discovering +land, and to assure them that the eagerly sought New World was not far +off. There is nothing so small that it should remain forgotten; +and no fact, however trivial, but may prove useful in some way or other +if carefully interpreted. Who could have imagined that the famous +“chalk cliffs of Albion” had been built up by tiny insects—detected +only by the help of the microscope—of the same order of creatures +that have gemmed the sea with islands of coral! And who that contemplates +such extraordinary results, arising from infinitely minute operations, +will venture to question the power of little things?</p> +<p>It is the close observation of little things which is the secret +of success in business, in art, in science, and in every pursuit in +life. Human knowledge is but an accumulation of small facts, made +by successive generations of men, the little bits of knowledge and experience +carefully treasured up by them growing at length into a mighty pyramid. +Though many of these facts and observations seemed in the first instance +to have but slight significance, they are all found to have their eventual +uses, and to fit into their proper places. Even many speculations +seemingly remote, turn out to be the basis of results the most obviously +practical. In the case of the conic sections discovered by Apollonius +Pergaeus, twenty centuries elapsed before they were made the basis of +astronomy—a science which enables the modern navigator to steer +his way through unknown seas and traces for him in the heavens an unerring +path to his appointed haven. And had not mathematicians toiled +for so long, and, to uninstructed observers, apparently so fruitlessly, +over the abstract relations of lines and surfaces, it is probable that +but few of our mechanical inventions would have seen the light.</p> +<p>When Franklin made his discovery of the identity of lightning and +electricity, it was sneered at, and people asked, “Of what use +is it?” To which his reply was, “What is the use of +a child? It may become a man!” When Galvani discovered +that a frog’s leg twitched when placed in contact with different +metals, it could scarcely have been imagined that so apparently insignificant +a fact could have led to important results. Yet therein lay the +germ of the Electric Telegraph, which binds the intelligence of continents +together, and, probably before many years have elapsed, will “put +a girdle round the globe.” So too, little bits of stone +and fossil, dug out of the earth, intelligently interpreted, have issued +in the science of geology and the practical operations of mining, in +which large capitals are invested and vast numbers of persons profitably +employed.</p> +<p>The gigantic machinery employed in pumping our mines, working our +mills and manufactures, and driving our steam-ships and locomotives, +in like manner depends for its supply of power upon so slight an agency +as little drops of water expanded by heat,—that familiar agency +called steam, which we see issuing from that common tea-kettle spout, +but which, when put up within an ingeniously contrived mechanism, displays +a force equal to that of millions of horses, and contains a power to +rebuke the waves and set even the hurricane at defiance. The same +power at work within the bowels of the earth has been the cause of those +volcanoes and earthquakes which have played so mighty a part in the +history of the globe.</p> +<p>It is said that the Marquis of Worcester’s attention was first +accidentally directed to the subject of steam power, by the tight cover +of a vessel containing hot water having been blown off before his eyes, +when confined a prisoner in the Tower. He published the result +of his observations in his ‘Century of Inventions,’ which +formed a sort of text-book for inquirers into the powers of steam for +a time, until Savary, Newcomen, and others, applying it to practical +purposes, brought the steam-engine to the state in which Watt found +it when called upon to repair a model of Newcomen’s engine, which +belonged to the University of Glasgow. This accidental circumstance +was an opportunity for Watt, which he was not slow to improve; and it +was the labour of his life to bring the steam-engine to perfection.</p> +<p>This art of seizing opportunities and turning even accidents to account, +bending them to some purpose is a great secret of success. Dr. +Johnson has defined genius to be “a mind of large general powers +accidentally determined in some particular direction.” Men +who are resolved to find a way for themselves, will always find opportunities +enough; and if they do not lie ready to their hand, they will make them. +It is not those who have enjoyed the advantages of colleges, museums, +and public galleries, that have accomplished the most for science and +art; nor have the greatest mechanics and inventors been trained in mechanics’ +institutes. Necessity, oftener than facility, has been the mother +of invention; and the most prolific school of all has been the school +of difficulty. Some of the very best workmen have had the most +indifferent tools to work with. But it is not tools that make +the workman, but the trained skill and perseverance of the man himself. +Indeed it is proverbial that the bad workman never yet had a good tool. +Some one asked Opie by what wonderful process he mixed his colours. +“I mix them with my brains, sir,” was his reply. It +is the same with every workman who would excel. Ferguson made +marvellous things—such as his wooden clock, that accurately measured +the hours—by means of a common penknife, a tool in everybody’s +hand; but then everybody is not a Ferguson. A pan of water and +two thermometers were the tools by which Dr. Black discovered latent +heat; and a prism, a lens, and a sheet of pasteboard enabled Newton +to unfold the composition of light and the origin of colours. +An eminent foreign <i>savant</i> once called upon Dr. Wollaston, and +requested to be shown over his laboratories in which science had been +enriched by so many important discoveries, when the doctor took him +into a little study, and, pointing to an old tea-tray on the table, +containing a few watch-glasses, test papers, a small balance, and a +blowpipe, said, “There is all the laboratory that I have!”</p> +<p>Stothard learnt the art of combining colours by closely studying +butterflies’ wings: he would often say that no one knew what he +owed to these tiny insects. A burnt stick and a barn door served +Wilkie in lieu of pencil and canvas. Bewick first practised drawing +on the cottage walls of his native village, which he covered with his +sketches in chalk; and Benjamin West made his first brushes out of the +cat’s tail. Ferguson laid himself down in the fields at +night in a blanket, and made a map of the heavenly bodies by means of +a thread with small beads on it stretched between his eye and the stars. +Franklin first robbed the thundercloud of its lightning by means of +a kite made with two cross sticks and a silk handkerchief. Watt +made his first model of the condensing steam-engine out of an old anatomist’s +syringe, used to inject the arteries previous to dissection. Gifford +worked his first problems in mathematics, when a cobbler’s apprentice, +upon small scraps of leather, which he beat smooth for the purpose; +whilst Rittenhouse, the astronomer, first calculated eclipses on his +plough handle.</p> +<p>The most ordinary occasions will furnish a man with opportunities +or suggestions for improvement, if he be but prompt to take advantage +of them. Professor Lee was attracted to the study of Hebrew by +finding a Bible in that tongue in a synagogue, while working as a common +carpenter at the repairs of the benches. He became possessed with +a desire to read the book in the original, and, buying a cheap second-hand +copy of a Hebrew grammar, he set to work and learnt the language for +himself. As Edmund Stone said to the Duke of Argyle, in answer +to his grace’s inquiry how he, a poor gardener’s boy, had +contrived to be able to read Newton’s Principia in Latin, “One +needs only to know the twenty-four letters of the alphabet in order +to learn everything else that one wishes.” Application and +perseverance, and the diligent improvement of opportunities, will do +the rest.</p> +<p>Sir Walter Scott found opportunities for self-improvement in every +pursuit, and turned even accidents to account. Thus it was in +the discharge of his functions as a writer’s apprentice that he +first visited the Highlands, and formed those friendships among the +surviving heroes of 1745 which served to lay the foundation of a large +class of his works. Later in life, when employed as quartermaster +of the Edinburgh Light Cavalry, he was accidentally disabled by the +kick of a horse, and confined for some time to his house; but Scott +was a sworn enemy to idleness, and he forthwith set his mind to work. +In three days he had composed the first canto of ‘The Lay of the +Last Minstrel,’ which he shortly after finished,—his first +great original work.</p> +<p>The attention of Dr. Priestley, the discoverer of so many gases, +was accidentally drawn to the subject of chemistry through his living +in the neighbourhood of a brewery. When visiting the place one +day, he noted the peculiar appearances attending the extinction of lighted +chips in the gas floating over the fermented liquor. He was forty +years old at the time, and knew nothing of chemistry. He consulted +books to ascertain the cause, but they told him little, for as yet nothing +was known on the subject. Then he began to experiment, with some +rude apparatus of his own contrivance. The curious results of +his first experiments led to others, which in his hands shortly became +the science of pneumatic chemistry. About the same time, Scheele +was obscurely working in the same direction in a remote Swedish village; +and he discovered several new gases, with no more effective apparatus +at his command than a few apothecaries’ phials and pigs’ +bladders.</p> +<p>Sir Humphry Davy, when an apothecary’s apprentice, performed +his first experiments with instruments of the rudest description. +He extemporised the greater part of them himself, out of the motley +materials which chance threw in his way,—the pots and pans of +the kitchen, and the phials and vessels of his master’s surgery. +It happened that a French ship was wrecked off the Land’s End, +and the surgeon escaped, bearing with him his case of instruments, amongst +which was an old-fashioned glyster apparatus; this article he presented +to Davy, with whom he had become acquainted. The apothecary’s +apprentice received it with great exultation, and forthwith employed +it as a part of a pneumatic apparatus which he contrived, afterwards +using it to perform the duties of an air-pump in one of his experiments +on the nature and sources of heat.</p> +<p>In like manner Professor Faraday, Sir Humphry Davy’s scientific +successor, made his first experiments in electricity by means of an +old bottle, white he was still a working bookbinder. And it is +a curious fact that Faraday was first attracted to the study of chemistry +by hearing one of Sir Humphry Davy’s lectures on the subject at +the Royal Institution. A gentleman, who was a member, calling +one day at the shop where Faraday was employed in binding books, found +him poring over the article “Electricity” in an Encyclopaedia +placed in his hands to bind. The gentleman, having made inquiries, +found that the young bookbinder was curious about such subjects, and +gave him an order of admission to the Royal Institution, where he attended +a course of four lectures delivered by Sir Humphry. He took notes +of them, which he showed to the lecturer, who acknowledged their scientific +accuracy, and was surprised when informed of the humble position of +the reporter. Faraday then expressed his desire to devote himself +to the prosecution of chemical studies, from which Sir Humphry at first +endeavoured to dissuade him: but the young man persisting, he was at +length taken into the Royal Institution as an assistant; and eventually +the mantle of the brilliant apothecary’s boy fell upon the worthy +shoulders of the equally brilliant bookbinder’s apprentice.</p> +<p>The words which Davy entered in his note-book, when about twenty +years of age, working in Dr. Beddoes’ laboratory at Bristol, were +eminently characteristic of him: “I have neither riches, nor power, +nor birth to recommend me; yet if I live, I trust I shall not be of +less service to mankind and my friends, than if I had been born with +all these advantages.” Davy possessed the capability, as +Faraday does, of devoting the whole power of his mind to the practical +and experimental investigation of a subject in all its bearings; and +such a mind will rarely fail, by dint of mere industry and patient thinking, +in producing results of the highest order. Coleridge said of Davy, +“There is an energy and elasticity in his mind, which enables +him to seize on and analyze all questions, pushing them to their legitimate +consequences. Every subject in Davy’s mind has the principle +of vitality. Living thoughts spring up like turf under his feet.” +Davy, on his part, said of Coleridge, whose abilities he greatly admired, +“With the most exalted genius, enlarged views, sensitive heart, +and enlightened mind, he will be the victim of a want of order, precision, +and regularity.”</p> +<p>The great Cuvier was a singularly accurate, careful, and industrious +observer. When a boy, he was attracted to the subject of natural +history by the sight of a volume of Buffon which accidentally fell in +his way. He at once proceeded to copy the drawings, and to colour +them after the descriptions given in the text. While still at +school, one of his teachers made him a present of ‘Linnaeus’s +System of Nature;’ and for more than ten years this constituted +his library of natural history. At eighteen he was offered the +situation of tutor in a family residing near Fécamp, in Normandy. +Living close to the sea-shore, he was brought face to face with the +wonders of marine life. Strolling along the sands one day, he +observed a stranded cuttlefish. He was attracted by the curious +object, took it home to dissect, and thus began the study of the molluscae, +in the pursuit of which he achieved so distinguished a reputation. +He had no books to refer to, excepting only the great book of Nature +which lay open before him. The study of the novel and interesting +objects which it daily presented to his eyes made a much deeper impression +on his mind than any written or engraved descriptions could possibly +have done. Three years thus passed, during which he compared the +living species of marine animals with the fossil remains found in the +neighbourhood, dissected the specimens of marine life that came under +his notice, and, by careful observation, prepared the way for a complete +reform in the classification of the animal kingdom. About this +time Cuvier became known to the learned Abbé Teissier, who wrote +to Jussieu and other friends in Paris on the subject of the young naturalist’s +inquiries, in terms of such high commendation, that Cuvier was requested +to send some of his papers to the Society of Natural History; and he +was shortly after appointed assistant-superintendent at the Jardin des +Plantes. In the letter written by Teissier to Jussieu, introducing +the young naturalist to his notice, he said, “You remember that +it was I who gave Delambre to the Academy in another branch of science: +this also will be a Delambre.” We need scarcely add that +the prediction of Teissier was more than fulfilled.</p> +<p>It is not accident, then, that helps a man in the world so much as +purpose and persistent industry. To the feeble, the sluggish and +purposeless, the happiest accidents avail nothing,—they pass them +by, seeing no meaning in them. But it is astonishing how much +can be accomplished if we are prompt to seize and improve the opportunities +for action and effort which are constantly presenting themselves. +Watt taught himself chemistry and mechanics while working at his trade +of a mathematical-instrument maker, at the same time that he was learning +German from a Swiss dyer. Stephenson taught himself arithmetic +and mensuration while working as an engineman during the night shifts; +and when he could snatch a few moments in the intervals allowed for +meals during the day, he worked his sums with a bit of chalk upon the +sides of the colliery waggons. Dalton’s industry was the +habit of his life. He began from his boyhood, for he taught a +little village-school when he was only about twelve years old,—keeping +the school in winter, and working upon his father’s farm in summer. +He would sometimes urge himself and companions to study by the stimulus +of a bet, though bred a Quaker; and on one occasion, by his satisfactory +solution of a problem, he won as much as enabled him to buy a winter’s +store of candles. He continued his meteorological observations +until a day or two before he died,—having made and recorded upwards +of 200,000 in the course of his life.</p> +<p>With perseverance, the very odds and ends of time may be worked up +into results of the greatest value. An hour in every day withdrawn +from frivolous pursuits would, if profitably employed, enable a person +of ordinary capacity to go far towards mastering a science. It +would make an ignorant man a well-informed one in less than ten years. +Time should not be allowed to pass without yielding fruits, in the form +of something learnt worthy of being known, some good principle cultivated, +or some good habit strengthened. Dr. Mason Good translated Lucretius +while riding in his carriage in the streets of London, going the round +of his patients. Dr. Darwin composed nearly all his works in the +same way while driving about in his “sulky” from house to +house in the country,—writing down his thoughts on little scraps +of paper, which he carried about with him for the purpose. Hale +wrote his ‘Contemplations’ while travelling on circuit. +Dr. Burney learnt French and Italian while travelling on horseback from +one musical pupil to another in the course of his profession. +Kirke White learnt Greek while walking to and from a lawyer’s +office; and we personally know a man of eminent position who learnt +Latin and French while going messages as an errand-boy in the streets +of Manchester.</p> +<p>Daguesseau, one of the great Chancellors of France, by carefully +working up his odd bits of time, wrote a bulky and able volume in the +successive intervals of waiting for dinner, and Madame de Genlis composed +several of her charming volumes while waiting for the princess to whom +she gave her daily lessons. Elihu Burritt attributed his first +success in self-improvement, not to genius, which he disclaimed, but +simply to the careful employment of those invaluable fragments of time, +called “odd moments.” While working and earning his +living as a blacksmith, he mastered some eighteen ancient and modern +languages, and twenty-two European dialects.</p> +<p>What a solemn and striking admonition to youth is that inscribed +on the dial at All Souls, Oxford—“Pereunt et imputantur”—the +hours perish, and are laid to our charge. Time is the only little +fragment of Eternity that belongs to man; and, like life, it can never +be recalled. “In the dissipation of worldly treasure,” +says Jackson of Exeter, “the frugality of the future may balance +the extravagance of the past; but who can say, ‘I will take from +minutes to-morrow to compensate for those I have lost to-day’?” +Melancthon noted down the time lost by him, that he might thereby reanimate +his industry, and not lose an hour. An Italian scholar put over +his door an inscription intimating that whosoever remained there should +join in his labours. “We are afraid,” said some visitors +to Baxter, “that we break in upon your time.” “To +be sure you do,” replied the disturbed and blunt divine. +Time was the estate out of which these great workers, and all other +workers, formed that rich treasury of thoughts and deeds which they +have left to their successors.</p> +<p>The mere drudgery undergone by some men in carrying on their undertakings +has been something extraordinary, but the drudgery they regarded as +the price of success. Addison amassed as much as three folios +of manuscript materials before he began his ‘Spectator.’ +Newton wrote his ‘Chronology’ fifteen times over before +he was satisfied with it; and Gibbon wrote out his ‘Memoir’ +nine times. Hale studied for many years at the rate of sixteen +hours a day, and when wearied with the study of the law, he would recreate +himself with philosophy and the study of the mathematics. Hume +wrote thirteen hours a day while preparing his ‘History of England.’ +Montesquieu, speaking of one part of his writings, said to a friend, +“You will read it in a few hours; but I assure you it has cost +me so much labour that it has whitened my hair.”</p> +<p>The practice of writing down thoughts and facts for the purpose of +holding them fast and preventing their escape into the dim region of +forgetfulness, has been much resorted to by thoughtful and studious +men. Lord Bacon left behind him many manuscripts entitled “Sudden +thoughts set down for use.” Erskine made great extracts +from Burke; and Eldon copied Coke upon Littleton twice over with his +own hand, so that the book became, as it were, part of his own mind. +The late Dr. Pye Smith, when apprenticed to his father as a bookbinder, +was accustomed to make copious memoranda of all the books he read, with +extracts and criticisms. This indomitable industry in collecting +materials distinguished him through life, his biographer describing +him as “always at work, always in advance, always accumulating.” +These note-books afterwards proved, like Richter’s “quarries,” +the great storehouse from which he drew his illustrations.</p> +<p>The same practice characterized the eminent John Hunter, who adopted +it for the purpose of supplying the defects of memory; and he was accustomed +thus to illustrate the advantages which one derives from putting one’s +thoughts in writing: “It resembles,” he said, “a tradesman +taking stock, without which he never knows either what he possesses +or in what he is deficient.” John Hunter—whose observation +was so keen that Abernethy was accustomed to speak of him as “the +Argus-eyed”—furnished an illustrious example of the power +of patient industry. He received little or no education till he +was about twenty years of age, and it was with difficulty that he acquired +the arts of reading and writing. He worked for some years as a +common carpenter at Glasgow, after which he joined his brother William, +who had settled in London as a lecturer and anatomical demonstrator. +John entered his dissecting-room as an assistant, but soon shot ahead +of his brother, partly by virtue of his great natural ability, but mainly +by reason of his patient application and indefatigable industry. +He was one of the first in this country to devote himself assiduously +to the study of comparative anatomy, and the objects he dissected and +collected took the eminent Professor Owen no less than ten years to +arrange. The collection contains some twenty thousand specimens, +and is the most precious treasure of the kind that has ever been accumulated +by the industry of one man. Hunter used to spend every morning +from sunrise until eight o’clock in his museum; and throughout +the day he carried on his extensive private practice, performed his +laborious duties as surgeon to St. George’s Hospital and deputy +surgeon-general to the army; delivered lectures to students, and superintended +a school of practical anatomy at his own house; finding leisure, amidst +all, for elaborate experiments on the animal economy, and the composition +of various works of great scientific importance. To find time +for this gigantic amount of work, he allowed himself only four hours +of sleep at night, and an hour after dinner. When once asked what +method he had adopted to insure success in his undertakings, he replied, +“My rule is, deliberately to consider, before I commence, whether +the thing be practicable. If it be not practicable, I do not attempt +it. If it be practicable, I can accomplish it if I give sufficient +pains to it; and having begun, I never stop till the thing is done. +To this rule I owe all my success.”</p> +<p>Hunter occupied a great deal of his time in collecting definite facts +respecting matters which, before his day, were regarded as exceedingly +trivial. Thus it was supposed by many of his contemporaries that +he was only wasting his time and thought in studying so carefully as +he did the growth of a deer’s horn. But Hunter was impressed +with the conviction that no accurate knowledge of scientific facts is +without its value. By the study referred to, he learnt how arteries +accommodate themselves to circumstances, and enlarge as occasion requires; +and the knowledge thus acquired emboldened him, in a case of aneurism +in a branch artery, to tie the main trunk where no surgeon before him +had dared to tie it, and the life of his patient was saved. Like +many original men, he worked for a long time as it were underground, +digging and laying foundations. He was a solitary and self-reliant +genius, holding on his course without the solace of sympathy or approbation,—for +but few of his contemporaries perceived the ultimate object of his pursuits. +But like all true workers, he did not fail in securing his best reward—that +which depends less upon others than upon one’s self—the +approval of conscience, which in a right-minded man invariably follows +the honest and energetic performance of duty.</p> +<p>Ambrose Paré, the great French surgeon, was another illustrious +instance of close observation, patient application, and indefatigable +perseverance. He was the son of a barber at Laval, in Maine, where +he was born in 1509. His parents were too poor to send him to +school, but they placed him as foot-boy with the curé of the +village, hoping that under that learned man he might pick up an education +for himself. But the curé kept him so busily employed in +grooming his mule and in other menial offices that the boy found no +time for learning. While in his service, it happened that the +celebrated lithotomist, Cotot, came to Laval to operate on one of the +curé’s ecclesiastical brethren. Paré was present +at the operation, and was so much interested by it that he is said to +have from that time formed the determination of devoting himself to +the art of surgery.</p> +<p>Leaving the curé’s household service, Paré apprenticed +himself to a barber-surgeon named Vialot, under whom he learnt to let +blood, draw teeth, and perform the minor operations. After four +years’ experience of this kind, he went to Paris to study at the +school of anatomy and surgery, meanwhile maintaining himself by his +trade of a barber. He afterwards succeeded in obtaining an appointment +as assistant at the Hôtel Dieu, where his conduct was so exemplary, +and his progress so marked, that the chief surgeon, Goupil, entrusted +him with the charge of the patients whom he could not himself attend +to. After the usual course of instruction, Paré was admitted +a master barber-surgeon, and shortly after was appointed to a charge +with the French army under Montmorenci in Piedmont. Paré +was not a man to follow in the ordinary ruts of his profession, but +brought the resources of an ardent and original mind to bear upon his +daily work, diligently thinking out for himself the <i>rationale</i> +of diseases and their befitting remedies. Before his time the +wounded suffered much more at the hands of their surgeons than they +did at those of their enemies. To stop bleeding from gunshot wounds, +the barbarous expedient was resorted to of dressing them with boiling +oil. Haemorrhage was also stopped by searing the wounds with a +red-hot iron; and when amputation was necessary, it was performed with +a red-hot knife. At first Paré treated wounds according +to the approved methods; but, fortunately, on one occasion, running +short of boiling oil, he substituted a mild and emollient application. +He was in great fear all night lest he should have done wrong in adopting +this treatment; but was greatly relieved next morning on finding his +patients comparatively comfortable, while those whose wounds had been +treated in the usual way were writhing in torment. Such was the +casual origin of one of Paré’s greatest improvements in +the treatment of gun-shot wounds; and he proceeded to adopt the emollient +treatment in all future cases. Another still more important improvement +was his employment of the ligature in tying arteries to stop haemorrhage, +instead of the actual cautery. Paré, however, met with +the usual fate of innovators and reformers. His practice was denounced +by his surgical brethren as dangerous, unprofessional, and empirical; +and the older surgeons banded themselves together to resist its adoption. +They reproached him for his want of education, more especially for his +ignorance of Latin and Greek; and they assailed him with quotations +from ancient writers, which he was unable either to verify or refute. +But the best answer to his assailants was the success of his practice. +The wounded soldiers called out everywhere for Paré, and he was +always at their service: he tended them carefully and affectionately; +and he usually took leave of them with the words, “I have dressed +you; may God cure you.”</p> +<p>After three years’ active service as army-surgeon, Paré +returned to Paris with such a reputation that he was at once appointed +surgeon in ordinary to the King. When Metz was besieged by the +Spanish army, under Charles V., the garrison suffered heavy loss, and +the number of wounded was very great. The surgeons were few and +incompetent, and probably slew more by their bad treatment than the +Spaniards did by the sword. The Duke of Guise, who commanded the +garrison, wrote to the King imploring him to send Paré to his +help. The courageous surgeon at once set out, and, after braving +many dangers (to use his own words, “d’estre pendu, estranglé +ou mis en pièces”), he succeeded in passing the enemy’s +lines, and entered Metz in safety. The Duke, the generals, and +the captains gave him an affectionate welcome; while the soldiers, when +they heard of his arrival, cried, “We no longer fear dying of +our wounds; our friend is among us.” In the following year +Paré was in like manner with the besieged in the town of Hesdin, +which shortly fell before the Duke of Savoy, and he was taken prisoner. +But having succeeded in curing one of the enemy’s chief officers +of a serious wound, he was discharged without ransom, and returned in +safety to Paris.</p> +<p>The rest of his life was occupied in study, in self-improvement, +in piety, and in good deeds. Urged by some of the most learned +among his contemporaries, he placed on record the results of his surgical +experience, in twenty-eight books, which were published by him at different +times. His writings are valuable and remarkable chiefly on account +of the great number of facts and cases contained in them, and the care +with which he avoids giving any directions resting merely upon theory +unsupported by observation. Paré continued, though a Protestant, +to hold the office of surgeon in ordinary to the King; and during the +Massacre of St. Bartholomew he owed his life to the personal friendship +of Charles IX., whom he had on one occasion saved from the dangerous +effects of a wound inflicted by a clumsy surgeon in performing the operation +of venesection. Brantôme, in his ‘Mémoires,’ +thus speaks of the King’s rescue of Paré on the night of +Saint Bartholomew—“He sent to fetch him, and to remain during +the night in his chamber and wardrobe-room, commanding him not to stir, +and saying that it was not reasonable that a man who had preserved the +lives of so many people should himself be massacred.” Thus +Paré escaped the horrors of that fearful night, which he survived +for many years, and was permitted to die in peace, full of age and honours.</p> +<p>Harvey was as indefatigable a labourer as any we have named. +He spent not less than eight long years of investigation and research +before he published his views of the circulation of the blood. +He repeated and verified his experiments again and again, probably anticipating +the opposition he would have to encounter from the profession on making +known his discovery. The tract in which he at length announced +his views, was a most modest one,—but simple, perspicuous, and +conclusive. It was nevertheless received with ridicule, as the +utterance of a crack-brained impostor. For some time, he did not +make a single convert, and gained nothing but contumely and abuse. +He had called in question the revered authority of the ancients; and +it was even averred that his views were calculated to subvert the authority +of the Scriptures and undermine the very foundations of morality and +religion. His little practice fell away, and he was left almost +without a friend. This lasted for some years, until the great +truth, held fast by Harvey amidst all his adversity, and which had dropped +into many thoughtful minds, gradually ripened by further observation, +and after a period of about twenty-five years, it became generally recognised +as an established scientific truth.</p> +<p>The difficulties encountered by Dr. Jenner in promulgating and establishing +his discovery of vaccination as a preventive of small-pox, were even +greater than those of Harvey. Many, before him, had witnessed +the cow-pox, and had heard of the report current among the milkmaids +in Gloucestershire, that whoever had taken that disease was secure against +small-pox. It was a trifling, vulgar rumour, supposed to have +no significance whatever; and no one had thought it worthy of investigation, +until it was accidentally brought under the notice of Jenner. +He was a youth, pursuing his studies at Sodbury, when his attention +was arrested by the casual observation made by a country girl who came +to his master’s shop for advice. The small-pox was mentioned, +when the girl said, “I can’t take that disease, for I have +had cow-pox.” The observation immediately riveted Jenner’s +attention, and he forthwith set about inquiring and making observations +on the subject. His professional friends, to whom he mentioned +his views as to the prophylactic virtues of cow-pox, laughed at him, +and even threatened to expel him from their society, if he persisted +in harassing them with the subject. In London he was so fortunate +as to study under John Hunter, to whom he communicated his views. +The advice of the great anatomist was thoroughly characteristic: “Don’t +think, but <i>try</i>; be patient, be accurate.” Jenner’s +courage was supported by the advice, which conveyed to him the true +art of philosophical investigation. He went back to the country +to practise his profession and make observations and experiments, which +he continued to pursue for a period of twenty years. His faith +in his discovery was so implicit that he vaccinated his own son on three +several occasions. At length he published his views in a quarto +of about seventy pages, in which he gave the details of twenty-three +cases of successful vaccination of individuals, to whom it was found +afterwards impossible to communicate the small-pox either by contagion +or inoculation. It was in 1798 that this treatise was published; +though he had been working out his ideas since the year 1775, when they +had begun to assume a definite form.</p> +<p>How was the discovery received? First with indifference, then +with active hostility. Jenner proceeded to London to exhibit to +the profession the process of vaccination and its results; but not a +single medical man could be induced to make trial of it, and after fruitlessly +waiting for nearly three months, he returned to his native village. +He was even caricatured and abused for his attempt to “bestialize” +his species by the introduction into their systems of diseased matter +from the cow’s udder. Vaccination was denounced from the +pulpit as “diabolical.” It was averred that vaccinated +children became “ox-faced,” that abscesses broke out to +“indicate sprouting horns,” and that the countenance was +gradually “transmuted into the visage of a cow, the voice into +the bellowing of bulls.” Vaccination, however, was a truth, +and notwithstanding the violence of the opposition, belief in it spread +slowly. In one village, where a gentleman tried to introduce the +practice, the first persons who permitted themselves to be vaccinated +were absolutely pelted and driven into their houses if they appeared +out of doors. Two ladies of title—Lady Ducie and the Countess +of Berkeley—to their honour be it remembered—had the courage +to vaccinate their children; and the prejudices of the day were at once +broken through. The medical profession gradually came round, and +there were several who even sought to rob Dr. Jenner of the merit of +the discovery, when its importance came to be recognised. Jenner’s +cause at last triumphed, and he was publicly honoured and rewarded. +In his prosperity he was as modest as he had been in his obscurity. +He was invited to settle in London, and told that he might command a +practice of 10,000<i>l</i>. a year. But his answer was, “No! +In the morning of my days I have sought the sequestered and lowly paths +of life—the valley, and not the mountain,—and now, in the +evening of my days, it is not meet for me to hold myself up as an object +for fortune and for fame.” During Jenner’s own life-time +the practice of vaccination became adopted all over the civilized world; +and when he died, his title as a Benefactor of his kind was recognised +far and wide. Cuvier has said, “If vaccine were the only +discovery of the epoch, it would serve to render it illustrious for +ever; yet it knocked twenty times in vain at the doors of the Academies.”</p> +<p>Not less patient, resolute, and persevering was Sir Charles Bell +in the prosecution of his discoveries relating to the nervous system. +Previous to his time, the most confused notions prevailed as to the +functions of the nerves, and this branch of study was little more advanced +than it had been in the times of Democritus and Anaxagoras three thousand +years before. Sir Charles Bell, in the valuable series of papers +the publication of which was commenced in 1821, took an entirely original +view of the subject, based upon a long series of careful, accurate, +and oft-repeated experiments. Elaborately tracing the development +of the nervous system up from the lowest order of animated being, to +man—the lord of the animal kingdom,—he displayed it, to +use his own words, “as plainly as if it were written in our mother-tongue.” +His discovery consisted in the fact, that the spinal nerves are double +in their function, and arise by double roots from the spinal marrow,—volition +being conveyed by that part of the nerves springing from the one root, +and sensation by the other. The subject occupied the mind of Sir +Charles Bell for a period of forty years, when, in 1840, he laid his +last paper before the Royal Society. As in the cases of Harvey +and Jenner, when he had lived down the ridicule and opposition with +which his views were first received, and their truth came to be recognised, +numerous claims for priority in making the discovery were set up at +home and abroad. Like them, too, he lost practice by the publication +of his papers; and he left it on record that, after every step in his +discovery, he was obliged to work harder than ever to preserve his reputation +as a practitioner. The great merits of Sir Charles Bell were, +however, at length fully recognised; and Cuvier himself, when on his +death-bed, finding his face distorted and drawn to one side, pointed +out the symptom to his attendants as a proof of the correctness of Sir +Charles Bell’s theory.</p> +<p>An equally devoted pursuer of the same branch of science was the +late Dr. Marshall Hall, whose name posterity will rank with those of +Harvey, Hunter, Jenner, and Bell. During the whole course of his +long and useful life he was a most careful and minute observer; and +no fact, however apparently insignificant, escaped his attention. +His important discovery of the diastaltic nervous system, by which his +name will long be known amongst scientific men, originated in an exceedingly +simple circumstance. When investigating the pneumonic circulation +in the Triton, the decapitated object lay upon the table; and on separating +the tail and accidentally pricking the external integument, he observed +that it moved with energy, and became contorted into various forms. +He had not touched a muscle or a muscular nerve; what then was the nature +of these movements? The same phenomena had probably been often +observed before, but Dr. Hall was the first to apply himself perseveringly +to the investigation of their causes; and he exclaimed on the occasion, +“I will never rest satisfied until I have found all this out, +and made it clear.” His attention to the subject was almost +incessant; and it is estimated that in the course of his life he devoted +not less than 25,000 hours to its experimental and chemical investigation. +He was at the same time carrying on an extensive private practice, and +officiating as lecturer at St. Thomas’s Hospital and other Medical +Schools. It will scarcely be credited that the paper in which +he embodied his discovery was rejected by the Royal Society, and was +only accepted after the lapse of seventeen years, when the truth of +his views had become acknowledged by scientific men both at home and +abroad.</p> +<p>The life of Sir William Herschel affords another remarkable illustration +of the force of perseverance in another branch of science. His +father was a poor German musician, who brought up his four sons to the +same calling. William came over to England to seek his fortune, +and he joined the band of the Durham Militia, in which he played the +oboe. The regiment was lying at Doncaster, where Dr. Miller first +became acquainted with Herschel, having heard him perform a solo on +the violin in a surprising manner. The Doctor entered into conversation +with the youth, and was so pleased with him, that he urged him to leave +the militia and take up his residence at his house for a time. +Herschel did so, and while at Doncaster was principally occupied in +violin-playing at concerts, availing himself of the advantages of Dr. +Miller’s library to study at his leisure hours. A new organ +having been built for the parish church of Halifax, an organist was +advertised for, on which Herschel applied for the office, and was selected. +Leading the wandering life of an artist, he was next attracted to Bath, +where he played in the Pump-room band, and also officiated as organist +in the Octagon chapel. Some recent discoveries in astronomy having +arrested his mind, and awakened in him a powerful spirit of curiosity, +he sought and obtained from a friend the loan of a two-foot Gregorian +telescope. So fascinated was the poor musician by the science, +that he even thought of purchasing a telescope, but the price asked +by the London optician was so alarming, that he determined to make one. +Those who know what a reflecting telescope is, and the skill which is +required to prepare the concave metallic speculum which forms the most +important part of the apparatus, will be able to form some idea of the +difficulty of this undertaking. Nevertheless, Herschel succeeded, +after long and painful labour, in completing a five-foot reflector, +with which he had the gratification of observing the ring and satellites +of Saturn. Not satisfied with his triumph, he proceeded to make +other instruments in succession, of seven, ten, and even twenty feet. +In constructing the seven-foot reflector, he finished no fewer than +two hundred specula before he produced one that would bear any power +that was applied to it,—a striking instance of the persevering +laboriousness of the man. While gauging the heavens with his instruments, +he continued patiently to earn his bread by piping to the fashionable +frequenters of the Pump-room. So eager was he in his astronomical +observations, that he would steal away from the room during an interval +of the performance, give a little turn at his telescope, and contentedly +return to his oboe. Thus working away, Herschel discovered the +Georgium Sidus, the orbit and rate of motion of which he carefully calculated, +and sent the result to the Royal Society; when the humble oboe player +found himself at once elevated from obscurity to fame. He was +shortly after appointed Astronomer Royal, and by the kindness of George +III. was placed in a position of honourable competency for life. +He bore his honours with the same meekness and humility which had distinguished +him in the days of his obscurity. So gentle and patient, and withal +so distinguished and successful a follower of science under difficulties, +perhaps cannot be found in the entire history of biography.</p> +<p>The career of William Smith, the father of English geology, though +perhaps less known, is not less interesting and instructive as an example +of patient and laborious effort, and the diligent cultivation of opportunities. +He was born in 1769, the son of a yeoman farmer at Churchill, in Oxfordshire. +His father dying when he was but a child, he received a very sparing +education at the village school, and even that was to a considerable +extent interfered with by his wandering and somewhat idle habits as +a boy. His mother having married a second time, he was taken in +charge by an uncle, also a farmer, by whom he was brought up. +Though the uncle was by no means pleased with the boy’s love of +wandering about, collecting “poundstones,” “pundips,” +and other stony curiosities which lay scattered about the adjoining +land, he yet enabled him to purchase a few of the necessary books wherewith +to instruct himself in the rudiments of geometry and surveying; for +the boy was already destined for the business of a land-surveyor. +One of his marked characteristics, even as a youth, was the accuracy +and keenness of his observation; and what he once clearly saw he never +forgot. He began to draw, attempted to colour, and practised the +arts of mensuration and surveying, all without regular instruction; +and by his efforts in self-culture, he shortly became so proficient, +that he was taken on as assistant to a local surveyor of ability in +the neighbourhood. In carrying on his business he was constantly +under the necessity of traversing Oxfordshire and the adjoining counties. +One of the first things he seriously pondered over, was the position +of the various soils and strata that came under his notice on the lands +which he surveyed or travelled over; more especially the position of +the red earth in regard to the lias and superincumbent rocks. +The surveys of numerous collieries which he was called upon to make, +gave him further experience; and already, when only twenty-three years +of age, he contemplated making a model of the strata of the earth.</p> +<p>While engaged in levelling for a proposed canal in Gloucestershire, +the idea of a general law occurred to him relating to the strata of +that district. He conceived that the strata lying above the coal +were not laid horizontally, but inclined, and in one direction, towards +the east; resembling, on a large scale, “the ordinary appearance +of superposed slices of bread and butter.” The correctness +of this theory he shortly after confirmed by observations of the strata +in two parallel valleys, the “red ground,” “lias,” +and “freestone” or “oolite,” being found to +come down in an eastern direction, and to sink below the level, yielding +place to the next in succession. He was shortly enabled to verify +the truth of his views on a larger scale, having been appointed to examine +personally into the management of canals in England and Wales. +During his journeys, which extended from Bath to Newcastle-on-Tyne, +returning by Shropshire and Wales, his keen eyes were never idle for +a moment. He rapidly noted the aspect and structure of the country +through which he passed with his companions, treasuring up his observations +for future use. His geologic vision was so acute, that though +the road along which he passed from York to Newcastle in the post chaise +was from five to fifteen miles distant from the hills of chalk and oolite +on the east, he was satisfied as to their nature, by their contours +and relative position, and their ranges on the surface in relation to +the lias and “red ground” occasionally seen on the road.</p> +<p>The general results of his observation seem to have been these. +He noted that the rocky masses of country in the western parts of England +generally inclined to the east and south-east; that the red sandstones +and marls above the coal measures passed beneath the lias, clay, and +limestone, that these again passed beneath the sands, yellow limestones +and clays, forming the table-land of the Cotswold Hills, while these +in turn passed beneath the great chalk deposits occupying the eastern +parts of England. He further observed, that each layer of clay, +sand, and limestone held its own peculiar classes of fossils; and pondering +much on these things, he at length came to the then unheard-of conclusion, +that each distinct deposit of marine animals, in these several strata, +indicated a distinct sea-bottom, and that each layer of clay, sand, +chalk, and stone, marked a distinct epoch of time in the history of +the earth.</p> +<p>This idea took firm possession of his mind, and he could talk and +think of nothing else. At canal boards, at sheep-shearings, at +county meetings, and at agricultural associations, ‘Strata Smith,’ +as he came to be called, was always running over with the subject that +possessed him. He had indeed made a great discovery, though he +was as yet a man utterly unknown in the scientific world. He proceeded +to project a map of the stratification of England; but was for some +time deterred from proceeding with it, being fully occupied in carrying +out the works of the Somersetshire coal canal, which engaged him for +a period of about six years. He continued, nevertheless, to be +unremitting in his observation of facts; and he became so expert in +apprehending the internal structure of a district and detecting the +lie of the strata from its external configuration, that he was often +consulted respecting the drainage of extensive tracts of land, in which, +guided by his geological knowledge, he proved remarkably successful, +and acquired an extensive reputation.</p> +<p>One day, when looking over the cabinet collection of fossils belonging +to the Rev. Samuel Richardson, at Bath, Smith astonished his friend +by suddenly disarranging his classification, and re-arranging the fossils +in their stratigraphical order, saying—“These came from +the blue lias, these from the over-lying sand and freestone, these from +the fuller’s earth, and these from the Bath building stone.” +A new light flashed upon Mr. Richardson’s mind, and he shortly +became a convert to and believer in William Smith’s doctrine. +The geologists of the day were not, however, so easily convinced; and +it was scarcely to be tolerated that an unknown land-surveyor should +pretend to teach them the science of geology. But William Smith +had an eye and mind to penetrate deep beneath the skin of the earth; +he saw its very fibre and skeleton, and, as it were, divined its organization. +His knowledge of the strata in the neighbourhood of Bath was so accurate, +that one evening, when dining at the house of the Rev. Joseph Townsend, +he dictated to Mr. Richardson the different strata according to their +order of succession in descending order, twenty-three in number, commencing +with the chalk and descending in continuous series down to the coal, +below which the strata were not then sufficiently determined. +To this was added a list of the more remarkable fossils which had been +gathered in the several layers of rock. This was printed and extensively +circulated in 1801.</p> +<p>He next determined to trace out the strata through districts as remote +from Bath as his means would enable him to reach. For years he +journeyed to and fro, sometimes on foot, sometimes on horseback, riding +on the tops of stage coaches, often making up by night-travelling the +time he had lost by day, so as not to fail in his ordinary business +engagements. When he was professionally called away to any distance +from home—as, for instance, when travelling from Bath to Holkham, +in Norfolk, to direct the irrigation and drainage of Mr. Coke’s +land in that county—he rode on horseback, making frequent detours +from the road to note the geological features of the country which he +traversed.</p> +<p>For several years he was thus engaged in his journeys to distant +quarters in England and Ireland, to the extent of upwards of ten thousand +miles yearly; and it was amidst this incessant and laborious travelling, +that he contrived to commit to paper his fast-growing generalizations +on what he rightly regarded as a new science. No observation, +howsoever trivial it might appear, was neglected, and no opportunity +of collecting fresh facts was overlooked. Whenever he could, he +possessed himself of records of borings, natural and artificial sections, +drew them to a constant scale of eight yards to the inch, and coloured +them up. Of his keenness of observation take the following illustration. +When making one of his geological excursions about the country near +Woburn, as he was drawing near to the foot of the Dunstable chalk hills, +he observed to his companion, “If there be any broken ground about +the foot of these hills, we may find <i>shark’s teeth</i>;” +and they had not proceeded far, before they picked up six from the white +bank of a new fence-ditch. As he afterwards said of himself, “The +habit of observation crept on me, gained a settlement in my mind, became +a constant associate of my life, and started up in activity at the first +thought of a journey; so that I generally went off well prepared with +maps, and sometimes with contemplations on its objects, or on those +on the road, reduced to writing before it commenced. My mind was, +therefore, like the canvas of a painter, well prepared for the first +and best impressions.”</p> +<p>Notwithstanding his courageous and indefatigable industry, many circumstances +contributed to prevent the promised publication of William Smith’s +‘Map of the Strata of England and Wales,’ and it was not +until 1814 that he was enabled, by the assistance of some friends, to +give to the world the fruits of his twenty years’ incessant labour. +To prosecute his inquiries, and collect the extensive series of facts +and observations requisite for his purpose, he had to expend the whole +of the profits of his professional labours during that period; and he +even sold off his small property to provide the means of visiting remoter +parts of the island. Meanwhile he had entered on a quarrying speculation +near Bath, which proved unsuccessful, and he was under the necessity +of selling his geological collection (which was purchased by the British +Museum), his furniture and library, reserving only his papers, maps, +and sections, which were useless save to himself. He bore his +losses and misfortunes with exemplary fortitude; and amidst all, he +went on working with cheerful courage and untiring patience. He +died at Northampton, in August, 1839, while on his way to attend the +meeting of the British Association at Birmingham.</p> +<p>It is difficult to speak in terms of too high praise of the first +geological map of England, which we owe to the industry of this courageous +man of science. An accomplished writer says of it, “It was +a work so masterly in conception and so correct in general outline, +that in principle it served as a basis not only for the production of +later maps of the British Islands, but for geological maps of all other +parts of the world, wherever they have been undertaken. In the +apartments of the Geological Society Smith’s map may yet be seen—a +great historical document, old and worn, calling for renewal of its +faded tints. Let any one conversant with the subject compare it +with later works on a similar scale, and he will find that in all essential +features it will not suffer by the comparison—the intricate anatomy +of the Silurian rocks of Wales and the north of England by Murchison +and Sedgwick being the chief additions made to his great generalizations.” +<a name="citation20"></a><a href="#footnote20">{20}</a> The genius +of the Oxfordshire surveyor did not fail to be duly recognised and honoured +by men of science during his lifetime. In 1831 the Geological +Society of London awarded to him the Wollaston medal, “in consideration +of his being a great original discoverer in English geology, and especially +for his being the first in this country to discover and to teach the +identification of strata, and to determine their succession by means +of their imbedded fossils.” William Smith, in his simple, +earnest way, gained for himself a name as lasting as the science he +loved so well. To use the words of the writer above quoted, “Till +the manner as well as the fact of the first appearance of successive +forms of life shall be solved, it is not easy to surmise how any discovery +can be made in geology equal in value to that which we owe to the genius +of William Smith.”</p> +<p>Hugh Miller was a man of like observant faculties, who studied literature +as well as science with zeal and success. The book in which he +has told the story of his life, (‘My Schools and Schoolmasters’), +is extremely interesting, and calculated to be eminently useful. +It is the history of the formation of a truly noble character in the +humblest condition of life; and inculcates most powerfully the lessons +of self-help, self-respect, and self-dependence. While Hugh was +but a child, his father, who was a sailor, was drowned at sea, and he +was brought up by his widowed mother. He had a school training +after a sort, but his best teachers were the boys with whom he played, +the men amongst whom he worked, the friends and relatives with whom +he lived. He read much and miscellaneously, and picked up odd +sorts of knowledge from many quarters,—from workmen, carpenters, +fishermen and sailors, and above all, from the old boulders strewed +along the shores of the Cromarty Frith. With a big hammer which +had belonged to his great-grandfather, an old buccaneer, the boy went +about chipping the stones, and accumulating specimens of mica, porphyry, +garnet, and such like. Sometimes he had a day in the woods, and +there, too, the boy’s attention was excited by the peculiar geological +curiosities which came in his way. While searching among the rocks +on the beach, he was sometimes asked, in irony, by the farm servants +who came to load their carts with sea-weed, whether he “was gettin’ +siller in the stanes,” but was so unlucky as never to be able +to answer in the affirmative. When of a suitable age he was apprenticed +to the trade of his choice—that of a working stonemason; and he +began his labouring career in a quarry looking out upon the Cromarty +Frith. This quarry proved one of his best schools. The remarkable +geological formations which it displayed awakened his curiosity. +The bar of deep-red stone beneath, and the bar of pale-red clay above, +were noted by the young quarryman, who even in such unpromising subjects +found matter for observation and reflection. Where other men saw +nothing, he detected analogies, differences, and peculiarities, which +set him a-thinking. He simply kept his eyes and his mind open; +was sober, diligent, and persevering; and this was the secret of his +intellectual growth.</p> +<p>His curiosity was excited and kept alive by the curious organic remains, +principally of old and extinct species of fishes, ferns, and ammonites, +which were revealed along the coast by the washings of the waves, or +were exposed by the stroke of his mason’s hammer. He never +lost sight of the subject; but went on accumulating observations and +comparing formations, until at length, many years afterwards, when no +longer a working mason, he gave to the world his highly interesting +work on the Old Red Sandstone, which at once established his reputation +as a scientific geologist. But this work was the fruit of long +years of patient observation and research. As he modestly states +in his autobiography, “the only merit to which I lay claim in +the case is that of patient research—a merit in which whoever +wills may rival or surpass me; and this humble faculty of patience, +when rightly developed, may lead to more extraordinary developments +of idea than even genius itself.”</p> +<p>The late John Brown, the eminent English geologist, was, like Miller, +a stonemason in his early life, serving an apprenticeship to the trade +at Colchester, and afterwards working as a journeyman mason at Norwich. +He began business as a builder on his own account at Colchester, where +by frugality and industry he secured a competency. It was while +working at his trade that his attention was first drawn to the study +of fossils and shells; and he proceeded to make a collection of them, +which afterwards grew into one of the finest in England. His researches +along the coasts of Essex, Kent, and Sussex brought to light some magnificent +remains of the elephant and rhinoceros, the most valuable of which were +presented by him to the British Museum. During the last few years +of his life he devoted considerable attention to the study of the Foraminifera +in chalk, respecting which he made several interesting discoveries. +His life was useful, happy, and honoured; and he died at Stanway, in +Essex, in November 1859, at the ripe age of eighty years.</p> +<p>Not long ago, Sir Roderick Murchison discovered at Thurso, in the +far north of Scotland, a profound geologist, in the person of a baker +there, named Robert Dick. When Sir Roderick called upon him at +the bakehouse in which he baked and earned his bread, Robert Dick delineated +to him, by means of flour upon the board, the geographical features +and geological phenomena of his native county, pointing out the imperfections +in the existing maps, which he had ascertained by travelling over the +country in his leisure hours. On further inquiry, Sir Roderick +ascertained that the humble individual before him was not only a capital +baker and geologist, but a first-rate botanist. “I found,” +said the President of the Geographical Society, “to my great humiliation +that the baker knew infinitely more of botanical science, ay, ten times +more, than I did; and that there were only some twenty or thirty specimens +of flowers which he had not collected. Some he had obtained as +presents, some he had purchased, but the greater portion had been accumulated +by his industry, in his native county of Caithness; and the specimens +were all arranged in the most beautiful order, with their scientific +names affixed.”</p> +<p>Sir Roderick Murchison himself is an illustrious follower of these +and kindred branches of science. A writer in the ‘Quarterly +Review’ cites him as a “singular instance of a man who, +having passed the early part of his life as a soldier, never having +had the advantage, or disadvantage as the case might have been, of a +scientific training, instead of remaining a fox-hunting country gentleman, +has succeeded by his own native vigour and sagacity, untiring industry +and zeal, in making for himself a scientific reputation that is as wide +as it is likely to be lasting. He took first of all an unexplored +and difficult district at home, and, by the labour of many years, examined +its rock-formations, classed them in natural groups, assigned to each +its characteristic assemblage of fossils, and was the first to decipher +two great chapters in the world’s geological history, which must +always henceforth carry his name on their title-page. Not only +so, but he applied the knowledge thus acquired to the dissection of +large districts, both at home and abroad, so as to become the geological +discoverer of great countries which had formerly been ‘terrae +incognitae.’” But Sir Roderick Murchison is not merely +a geologist. His indefatigable labours in many branches of knowledge +have contributed to render him among the most accomplished and complete +of scientific men.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<h2>CHAPTER VI—WORKERS IN ART</h2> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<p>“If what shone afar so grand,<br />Turn to nothing in thy hand,<br />On +again; the virtue lies<br />In struggle, not the prize.”—R. +M. Milnes.</p> +<p>“Excelle, et tu vivras.”—Joubert.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>Excellence in art, as in everything else, can only be achieved by +dint of painstaking labour.</p> +<p>There is nothing less accidental than the painting of a fine picture +or the chiselling of a noble statue. Every skilled touch of the +artist’s brush or chisel, though guided by genius, is the product +of unremitting study.</p> +<p>Sir Joshua Reynolds was such a believer in the force of industry, +that he held that artistic excellence, “however expressed by genius, +taste, or the gift of heaven, may be acquired.” Writing +to Barry he said, “Whoever is resolved to excel in painting, or +indeed any other art, must bring all his mind to bear upon that one +object from the moment that he rises till he goes to bed.” +And on another occasion he said, “Those who are resolved to excel +must go to their work, willing or unwilling, morning, noon, and night: +they will find it no play, but very hard labour.” But although +diligent application is no doubt absolutely necessary for the achievement +of the highest distinction in art, it is equally true that without the +inborn genius, no amount of mere industry, however well applied, will +make an artist. The gift comes by nature, but is perfected by +self-culture, which is of more avail than all the imparted education +of the schools.</p> +<p>Some of the greatest artists have had to force their way upward in +the face of poverty and manifold obstructions. Illustrious instances +will at once flash upon the reader’s mind. Claude Lorraine, +the pastrycook; Tintoretto, the dyer; the two Caravaggios, the one a +colour-grinder, the other a mortar-carrier at the Vatican; Salvator +Rosa, the associate of bandits; Giotto, the peasant boy; Zingaro, the +gipsy; Cavedone, turned out of doors to beg by his father; Canova, the +stone-cutter; these, and many other well-known artists, succeeded in +achieving distinction by severe study and labour, under circumstances +the most adverse.</p> +<p>Nor have the most distinguished artists of our own country been born +in a position of life more than ordinarily favourable to the culture +of artistic genius. Gainsborough and Bacon were the sons of cloth-workers; +Barry was an Irish sailor boy, and Maclise a banker’s apprentice +at Cork; Opie and Romney, like Inigo Jones, were carpenters; West was +the son of a small Quaker farmer in Pennsylvania; Northcote was a watchmaker, +Jackson a tailor, and Etty a printer; Reynolds, Wilson, and Wilkie, +were the sons of clergymen; Lawrence was the son of a publican, and +Turner of a barber. Several of our painters, it is true, originally +had some connection with art, though in a very humble way,—such +as Flaxman, whose father sold plaster casts; Bird, who ornamented tea-trays; +Martin, who was a coach-painter; Wright and Gilpin, who were ship-painters; +Chantrey, who was a carver and gilder; and David Cox, Stanfield, and +Roberts, who were scene-painters.</p> +<p>It was not by luck or accident that these men achieved distinction, +but by sheer industry and hard work. Though some achieved wealth, +yet this was rarely, if ever, the ruling motive. Indeed, no mere +love of money could sustain the efforts of the artist in his early career +of self-denial and application. The pleasure of the pursuit has +always been its best reward; the wealth which followed but an accident. +Many noble-minded artists have preferred following the bent of their +genius, to chaffering with the public for terms. Spagnoletto verified +in his life the beautiful fiction of Xenophon, and after he had acquired +the means of luxury, preferred withdrawing himself from their influence, +and voluntarily returned to poverty and labour. When Michael Angelo +was asked his opinion respecting a work which a painter had taken great +pains to exhibit for profit, he said, “I think that he will be +a poor fellow so long as he shows such an extreme eagerness to become +rich.”</p> +<p>Like Sir Joshua Reynolds, Michael Angelo was a great believer in +the force of labour; and he held that there was nothing which the imagination +conceived, that could not be embodied in marble, if the hand were made +vigorously to obey the mind. He was himself one of the most indefatigable +of workers; and he attributed his power of studying for a greater number +of hours than most of his contemporaries, to his spare habits of living. +A little bread and wine was all he required for the chief part of the +day when employed at his work; and very frequently he rose in the middle +of the night to resume his labours. On these occasions, it was +his practice to fix the candle, by the light of which he chiselled, +on the summit of a paste-board cap which he wore. Sometimes he +was too wearied to undress, and he slept in his clothes, ready to spring +to his work so soon as refreshed by sleep. He had a favourite +device of an old man in a go-cart, with an hour-glass upon it bearing +the inscription, <i>Ancora imparo</i>! Still I am learning.</p> +<p>Titian, also, was an indefatigable worker. His celebrated “Pietro +Martire” was eight years in hand, and his “Last Supper” +seven. In his letter to Charles V. he said, “I send your +Majesty the ‘Last Supper’ after working at it almost daily +for seven years—<i>dopo sette anni lavorandovi</i> <i>quasi continuamente</i>.” +Few think of the patient labour and long training involved in the greatest +works of the artist. They seem easy and quickly accomplished, +yet with how great difficulty has this ease been acquired. “You +charge me fifty sequins,” said the Venetian nobleman to the sculptor, +“for a bust that cost you only ten days’ labour.” +“You forget,” said the artist, “that I have been thirty +years learning to make that bust in ten days.” Once when +Domenichino was blamed for his slowness in finishing a picture which +was bespoken, he made answer, “I am continually painting it within +myself.” It was eminently characteristic of the industry +of the late Sir Augustus Callcott, that he made not fewer than forty +separate sketches in the composition of his famous picture of “Rochester.” +This constant repetition is one of the main conditions of success in +art, as in life itself.</p> +<p>No matter how generous nature has been in bestowing the gift of genius, +the pursuit of art is nevertheless a long and continuous labour. +Many artists have been precocious, but without diligence their precocity +would have come to nothing. The anecdote related of West is well +known. When only seven years old, struck with the beauty of the +sleeping infant of his eldest sister whilst watching by its cradle, +he ran to seek some paper and forthwith drew its portrait in red and +black ink. The little incident revealed the artist in him, and +it was found impossible to draw him from his bent. West might +have been a greater painter, had he not been injured by too early success: +his fame, though great, was not purchased by study, trials, and difficulties, +and it has not been enduring.</p> +<p>Richard Wilson, when a mere child, indulged himself with tracing +figures of men and animals on the walls of his father’s house, +with a burnt stick. He first directed his attention to portrait +painting; but when in Italy, calling one day at the house of Zucarelli, +and growing weary with waiting, he began painting the scene on which +his friend’s chamber window looked. When Zucarelli arrived, +he was so charmed with the picture, that he asked if Wilson had not +studied landscape, to which he replied that he had not. “Then, +I advise you,” said the other, “to try; for you are sure +of great success.” Wilson adopted the advice, studied and +worked hard, and became our first great English landscape painter.</p> +<p>Sir Joshua Reynolds, when a boy, forgot his lessons, and took pleasure +only in drawing, for which his father was accustomed to rebuke him. +The boy was destined for the profession of physic, but his strong instinct +for art could not be repressed, and he became a painter. Gainsborough +went sketching, when a schoolboy, in the woods of Sudbury; and at twelve +he was a confirmed artist: he was a keen observer and a hard worker,—no +picturesque feature of any scene he had once looked upon, escaping his +diligent pencil. William Blake, a hosier’s son, employed +himself in drawing designs on the backs of his father’s shop-bills, +and making sketches on the counter. Edward Bird, when a child +only three or four years old, would mount a chair and draw figures on +the walls, which he called French and English soldiers. A box +of colours was purchased for him, and his father, desirous of turning +his love of art to account, put him apprentice to a maker of tea-trays! +Out of this trade he gradually raised himself, by study and labour, +to the rank of a Royal Academician.</p> +<p>Hogarth, though a very dull boy at his lessons, took pleasure in +making drawings of the letters of the alphabet, and his school exercises +were more remarkable for the ornaments with which he embellished them, +than for the matter of the exercises themselves. In the latter +respect he was beaten by all the blockheads of the school, but in his +adornments he stood alone. His father put him apprentice to a +silversmith, where he learnt to draw, and also to engrave spoons and +forks with crests and ciphers. From silver-chasing, he went on +to teach himself engraving on copper, principally griffins and monsters +of heraldry, in the course of which practice he became ambitious to +delineate the varieties of human character. The singular excellence +which he reached in this art, was mainly the result of careful observation +and study. He had the gift, which he sedulously cultivated, of +committing to memory the precise features of any remarkable face, and +afterwards reproducing them on paper; but if any singularly fantastic +form or <i>outré</i> face came in his way, he would make a sketch +of it on the spot, upon his thumb-nail, and carry it home to expand +at his leisure. Everything fantastical and original had a powerful +attraction for him, and he wandered into many out-of-the-way places +for the purpose of meeting with character. By this careful storing +of his mind, he was afterwards enabled to crowd an immense amount of +thought and treasured observation into his works. Hence it is +that Hogarth’s pictures are so truthful a memorial of the character, +the manners, and even the very thoughts of the times in which he lived. +True painting, he himself observed, can only be learnt in one school, +and that is kept by Nature. But he was not a highly cultivated +man, except in his own walk. His school education had been of +the slenderest kind, scarcely even perfecting him in the art of spelling; +his self-culture did the rest. For a long time he was in very +straitened circumstances, but nevertheless worked on with a cheerful +heart. Poor though he was, he contrived to live within his small +means, and he boasted, with becoming pride, that he was “a punctual +paymaster.” When he had conquered all his difficulties and +become a famous and thriving man, he loved to dwell upon his early labours +and privations, and to fight over again the battle which ended so honourably +to him as a man and so gloriously as an artist. “I remember +the time,” said he on one occasion, “when I have gone moping +into the city with scarce a shilling, but as soon as I have received +ten guineas there for a plate, I have returned home, put on my sword, +and sallied out with all the confidence of a man who had thousands in +his pockets.”</p> +<p>“Industry and perseverance” was the motto of the sculptor +Banks, which he acted on himself, and strongly recommended to others. +His well-known kindness induced many aspiring youths to call upon him +and ask for his advice and assistance; and it is related that one day +a boy called at his door to see him with this object, but the servant, +angry at the loud knock he had given, scolded him, and was about sending +him away, when Banks overhearing her, himself went out. The little +boy stood at the door with some drawings in his hand. “What +do you want with me?” asked the sculptor. “I want, +sir, if you please, to be admitted to draw at the Academy.” +Banks explained that he himself could not procure his admission, but +he asked to look at the boy’s drawings. Examining them, +he said, “Time enough for the Academy, my little man! go home—mind +your schooling—try to make a better drawing of the Apollo—and +in a month come again and let me see it.” The boy went home—sketched +and worked with redoubled diligence—and, at the end of the month, +called again on the sculptor. The drawing was better; but again +Banks sent him back, with good advice, to work and study. In a +week the boy was again at his door, his drawing much improved; and Banks +bid him be of good cheer, for if spared he would distinguish himself. +The boy was Mulready; and the sculptor’s augury was amply fulfilled.</p> +<p>The fame of Claude Lorraine is partly explained by his indefatigable +industry. Born at Champagne, in Lorraine, of poor parents, he +was first apprenticed to a pastrycook. His brother, who was a +wood-carver, afterwards took him into his shop to learn that trade. +Having there shown indications of artistic skill, a travelling dealer +persuaded the brother to allow Claude to accompany him to Italy. +He assented, and the young man reached Rome, where he was shortly after +engaged by Agostino Tassi, the landscape painter, as his house-servant. +In that capacity Claude first learnt landscape painting, and in course +of time he began to produce pictures. We next find him making +the tour of Italy, France, and Germany, occasionally resting by the +way to paint landscapes, and thereby replenish his purse. On returning +to Rome he found an increasing demand for his works, and his reputation +at length became European. He was unwearied in the study of nature +in her various aspects. It was his practice to spend a great part +of his time in closely copying buildings, bits of ground, trees, leaves, +and such like, which he finished in detail, keeping the drawings by +him in store for the purpose of introducing them in his studied landscapes. +He also gave close attention to the sky, watching it for whole days +from morning till night, and noting the various changes occasioned by +the passing clouds and the increasing and waning light. By this +constant practice he acquired, although it is said very slowly, such +a mastery of hand and eye as eventually secured for him the first rank +among landscape painters.</p> +<p>Turner, who has been styled “the English Claude,” pursued +a career of like laborious industry. He was destined by his father +for his own trade of a barber, which he carried on in London, until +one day the sketch which the boy had made of a coat of arms on a silver +salver having attracted the notice of a customer whom his father was +shaving, the latter was urged to allow his son to follow his bias, and +he was eventually permitted to follow art as a profession. Like +all young artists, Turner had many difficulties to encounter, and they +were all the greater that his circumstances were so straitened. +But he was always willing to work, and to take pains with his work, +no matter how humble it might be. He was glad to hire himself +out at half-a-crown a night to wash in skies in Indian ink upon other +people’s drawings, getting his supper into the bargain. +Thus he earned money and acquired expertness. Then he took to +illustrating guide-books, almanacs, and any sort of books that wanted +cheap frontispieces. “What could I have done better?” +said he afterwards; “it was first-rate practice.” +He did everything carefully and conscientiously, never slurring over +his work because he was ill-remunerated for it. He aimed at learning +as well as living; always doing his best, and never leaving a drawing +without having made a step in advance upon his previous work. +A man who thus laboured was sure to do much; and his growth in power +and grasp of thought was, to use Ruskin’s words, “as steady +as the increasing light of sunrise.” But Turner’s +genius needs no panegyric; his best monument is the noble gallery of +pictures bequeathed by him to the nation, which will ever be the most +lasting memorial of his fame.</p> +<p>To reach Rome, the capital of the fine arts, is usually the highest +ambition of the art student. But the journey to Rome is costly, +and the student is often poor. With a will resolute to overcome +difficulties, Rome may however at last be reached. Thus François +Perrier, an early French painter, in his eager desire to visit the Eternal +City, consented to act as guide to a blind vagrant. After long +wanderings he reached the Vatican, studied and became famous. +Not less enthusiasm was displayed by Jacques Callot in his determination +to visit Rome. Though opposed by his father in his wish to be +an artist, the boy would not be baulked, but fled from home to make +his way to Italy. Having set out without means, he was soon reduced +to great straits; but falling in with a band of gipsies, he joined their +company, and wandered about with them from one fair to another, sharing +in their numerous adventures. During this remarkable journey Callot +picked up much of that extraordinary knowledge of figure, feature, and +character which he afterwards reproduced, sometimes in such exaggerated +forms, in his wonderful engravings.</p> +<p>When Callot at length reached Florence, a gentleman, pleased with +his ingenious ardour, placed him with an artist to study; but he was +not satisfied to stop short of Rome, and we find him shortly on his +way thither. At Rome he made the acquaintance of Porigi and Thomassin, +who, on seeing his crayon sketches, predicted for him a brilliant career +as an artist. But a friend of Callot’s family having accidentally +encountered him, took steps to compel the fugitive to return home. +By this time he had acquired such a love of wandering that he could +not rest; so he ran away a second time, and a second time he was brought +back by his elder brother, who caught him at Turin. At last the +father, seeing resistance was in vain, gave his reluctant consent to +Callot’s prosecuting his studies at Rome. Thither he went +accordingly; and this time he remained, diligently studying design and +engraving for several years, under competent masters. On his way +back to France, he was encouraged by Cosmo II. to remain at Florence, +where he studied and worked for several years more. On the death +of his patron he returned to his family at Nancy, where, by the use +of his burin and needle, he shortly acquired both wealth and fame. +When Nancy was taken by siege during the civil wars, Callot was requested +by Richelieu to make a design and engraving of the event, but the artist +would not commemorate the disaster which had befallen his native place, +and he refused point-blank. Richelieu could not shake his resolution, +and threw him into prison. There Callot met with some of his old +friends the gipsies, who had relieved his wants on his first journey +to Rome. When Louis XIII. heard of his imprisonment, he not only +released him, but offered to grant him any favour he might ask. +Callot immediately requested that his old companions, the gipsies, might +be set free and permitted to beg in Paris without molestation. +This odd request was granted on condition that Callot should engrave +their portraits, and hence his curious book of engravings entitled “The +Beggars.” Louis is said to have offered Callot a pension +of 3000 livres provided he would not leave Paris; but the artist was +now too much of a Bohemian, and prized his liberty too highly to permit +him to accept it; and he returned to Nancy, where he worked till his +death. His industry may be inferred from the number of his engravings +and etchings, of which he left not fewer than 1600. He was especially +fond of grotesque subjects, which he treated with great skill; his free +etchings, touched with the graver, being executed with especial delicacy +and wonderful minuteness.</p> +<p>Still more romantic and adventurous was the career of Benvenuto Cellini, +the marvellous gold worker, painter, sculptor, engraver, engineer, and +author. His life, as told by himself, is one of the most extraordinary +autobiographies ever written. Giovanni Cellini, his father, was +one of the Court musicians to Lorenzo de Medici at Florence; and his +highest ambition concerning his son Benvenuto was that he should become +an expert player on the flute. But Giovanni having lost his appointment, +found it necessary to send his son to learn some trade, and he was apprenticed +to a goldsmith. The boy had already displayed a love of drawing +and of art; and, applying himself to his business, he soon became a +dexterous workman. Having got mixed up in a quarrel with some +of the townspeople, he was banished for six months, during which period +he worked with a goldsmith at Sienna, gaining further experience in +jewellery and gold-working.</p> +<p>His father still insisting on his becoming a flute-player, Benvenuto +continued to practise on the instrument, though he detested it. +His chief pleasure was in art, which he pursued with enthusiasm. +Returning to Florence, he carefully studied the designs of Leonardo +da Vinci and Michael Angelo; and, still further to improve himself in +gold-working, he went on foot to Rome, where he met with a variety of +adventures. He returned to Florence with the reputation of being +a most expert worker in the precious metals, and his skill was soon +in great request. But being of an irascible temper, he was constantly +getting into scrapes, and was frequently under the necessity of flying +for his life. Thus he fled from Florence in the disguise of a +friar, again taking refuge at Sienna, and afterwards at Rome.</p> +<p>During his second residence in Rome, Cellini met with extensive patronage, +and he was taken into the Pope’s service in the double capacity +of goldsmith and musician. He was constantly studying and improving +himself by acquaintance with the works of the best masters. He +mounted jewels, finished enamels, engraved seals, and designed and executed +works in gold, silver, and bronze, in such a style as to excel all other +artists. Whenever he heard of a goldsmith who was famous in any +particular branch, he immediately determined to surpass him. Thus +it was that he rivalled the medals of one, the enamels of another, and +the jewellery of a third; in fact, there was not a branch of his business +that he did not feel impelled to excel in.</p> +<p>Working in this spirit, it is not so wonderful that Cellini should +have been able to accomplish so much. He was a man of indefatigable +activity, and was constantly on the move. At one time we find +him at Florence, at another at Rome; then he is at Mantua, at Rome, +at Naples, and back to Florence again; then at Venice, and in Paris, +making all his long journeys on horseback. He could not carry +much luggage with him; so, wherever he went, he usually began by making +his own tools. He not only designed his works, but executed them +himself,—hammered and carved, and cast and shaped them with his +own hands. Indeed, his works have the impress of genius so clearly +stamped upon them, that they could never have been designed by one person, +and executed by another. The humblest article—a buckle for +a lady’s girdle, a seal, a locket, a brooch, a ring, or a button—became +in his hands a beautiful work of art.</p> +<p>Cellini was remarkable for his readiness and dexterity in handicraft. +One day a surgeon entered the shop of Raffaello del Moro, the goldsmith, +to perform an operation on his daughter’s hand. On looking +at the surgeon’s instruments, Cellini, who was present, found +them rude and clumsy, as they usually were in those days, and he asked +the surgeon to proceed no further with the operation for a quarter of +an hour. He then ran to his shop, and taking a piece of the finest +steel, wrought out of it a beautifully finished knife, with which the +operation was successfully performed.</p> +<p>Among the statues executed by Cellini, the most important are the +silver figure of Jupiter, executed at Paris for Francis I., and the +Perseus, executed in bronze for the Grand Duke Cosmo of Florence. +He also executed statues in marble of Apollo, Hyacinthus, Narcissus, +and Neptune. The extraordinary incidents connected with the casting +of the Perseus were peculiarly illustrative of the remarkable character +of the man.</p> +<p>The Grand Duke having expressed a decided opinion that the model, +when shown to him in wax, could not possibly be cast in bronze, Cellini +was immediately stimulated by the predicted impossibility, not only +to attempt, but to do it. He first made the clay model, baked +it, and covered it with wax, which he shaped into the perfect form of +a statue. Then coating the wax with a sort of earth, he baked +the second covering, during which the wax dissolved and escaped, leaving +the space between the two layers for the reception of the metal. +To avoid disturbance, the latter process was conducted in a pit dug +immediately under the furnace, from which the liquid metal was to be +introduced by pipes and apertures into the mould prepared for it.</p> +<p>Cellini had purchased and laid in several loads of pine-wood, in +anticipation of the process of casting, which now began. The furnace +was filled with pieces of brass and bronze, and the fire was lit. +The resinous pine-wood was soon in such a furious blaze, that the shop +took fire, and part of the roof was burnt; while at the same time the +wind blowing and the rain filling on the furnace, kept down the heat, +and prevented the metals from melting. For hours Cellini struggled +to keep up the heat, continually throwing in more wood, until at length +he became so exhausted and ill, that he feared he should die before +the statue could be cast. He was forced to leave to his assistants +the pouring in of the metal when melted, and betook himself to his bed. +While those about him were condoling with him in his distress, a workman +suddenly entered the room, lamenting that “Poor Benvenuto’s +work was irretrievably spoiled!” On hearing this, Cellini +immediately sprang from his bed and rushed to the workshop, where he +found the fire so much gone down that the metal had again become hard.</p> +<p>Sending across to a neighbour for a load of young oak which had been +more than a year in drying, he soon had the fire blazing again and the +metal melting and glittering. The wind was, however, still blowing +with fury, and the rain falling heavily; so, to protect himself, Cellini +had some tables with pieces of tapestry and old clothes brought to him, +behind which he went on hurling the wood into the furnace. A mass +of pewter was thrown in upon the other metal, and by stirring, sometimes +with iron and sometimes with long poles, the whole soon became completely +melted. At this juncture, when the trying moment was close at +hand, a terrible noise as of a thunderbolt was heard, and a glittering +of fire flashed before Cellini’s eyes. The cover of the +furnace had burst, and the metal began to flow! Finding that it +did not run with the proper velocity, Cellini rushed into the kitchen, +bore away every piece of copper and pewter that it contained—some +two hundred porringers, dishes, and kettles of different kinds—and +threw them into the furnace. Then at length the metal flowed freely, +and thus the splendid statue of Perseus was cast.</p> +<p>The divine fury of genius in which Cellini rushed to his kitchen +and stripped it of its utensils for the purposes of his furnace, will +remind the reader of the like act of Pallissy in breaking up his furniture +for the purpose of baking his earthenware. Excepting, however, +in their enthusiasm, no two men could be less alike in character. +Cellini was an Ishmael against whom, according to his own account, every +man’s hand was turned. But about his extraordinary skill +as a workman, and his genius as an artist, there cannot be two opinions.</p> +<p>Much less turbulent was the career of Nicolas Poussin, a man as pure +and elevated in his ideas of art as he was in his daily life, and distinguished +alike for his vigour of intellect, his rectitude of character, and his +noble simplicity. He was born in a very humble station, at Andeleys, +near Rouen, where his father kept a small school. The boy had +the benefit of his parent’s instruction, such as it was, but of +that he is said to have been somewhat negligent, preferring to spend +his time in covering his lesson-books and his slate with drawings. +A country painter, much pleased with his sketches, besought his parents +not to thwart him in his tastes. The painter agreed to give Poussin +lessons, and he soon made such progress that his master had nothing +more to teach him. Becoming restless, and desirous of further +improving himself, Poussin, at the age of 18, set out for Paris, painting +signboards on his way for a maintenance.</p> +<p>At Paris a new world of art opened before him, exciting his wonder +and stimulating his emulation. He worked diligently in many studios, +drawing, copying, and painting pictures. After a time, he resolved, +if possible, to visit Rome, and set out on his journey; but he only +succeeded in getting as far as Florence, and again returned to Paris. +A second attempt which he made to reach Rome was even less successful; +for this time he only got as far as Lyons. He was, nevertheless, +careful to take advantage of all opportunities for improvement which +came in his way, and continued as sedulous as before in studying and +working.</p> +<p>Thus twelve years passed, years of obscurity and toil, of failures +and disappointments, and probably of privations. At length Poussin +succeeded in reaching Rome. There he diligently studied the old +masters, and especially the ancient statues, with whose perfection he +was greatly impressed. For some time he lived with the sculptor +Duquesnoi, as poor as himself, and assisted him in modelling figures +after the antique. With him he carefully measured some of the +most celebrated statues in Rome, more particularly the ‘Antinous:’ +and it is supposed that this practice exercised considerable influence +on the formation of his future style. At the same time he studied +anatomy, practised drawing from the life, and made a great store of +sketches of postures and attitudes of people whom he met, carefully +reading at his leisure such standard books on art as he could borrow +from his friends.</p> +<p>During all this time he remained very poor, satisfied to be continually +improving himself. He was glad to sell his pictures for whatever +they would bring. One, of a prophet, he sold for eight livres; +and another, the ‘Plague of the Philistines,’ he sold for +60 crowns—a picture afterwards bought by Cardinal de Richelieu +for a thousand. To add to his troubles, he was stricken by a cruel +malady, during the helplessness occasioned by which the Chevalier del +Posso assisted him with money. For this gentleman Poussin afterwards +painted the ‘Rest in the Desert,’ a fine picture, which +far more than repaid the advances made during his illness.</p> +<p>The brave man went on toiling and learning through suffering. +Still aiming at higher things, he went to Florence and Venice, enlarging +the range of his studies. The fruits of his conscientious labour +at length appeared in the series of great pictures which he now began +to produce,—his ‘Death of Germanicus,’ followed by +‘Extreme Unction,’ the ‘Testament of Eudamidas,’ +the ‘Manna,’ and the ‘Abduction of the Sabines.’</p> +<p>The reputation of Poussin, however, grew but slowly. He was +of a retiring disposition and shunned society. People gave him +credit for being a thinker much more than a painter. When not +actually employed in painting, he took long solitary walks in the country, +meditating the designs of future pictures. One of his few friends +while at Rome was Claude Lorraine, with whom he spent many hours at +a time on the terrace of La Trinité-du-Mont, conversing about +art and antiquarianism. The monotony and the quiet of Rome were +suited to his taste, and, provided he could earn a moderate living by +his brush, he had no wish to leave it.</p> +<p>But his fame now extended beyond Rome, and repeated invitations were +sent him to return to Paris. He was offered the appointment of +principal painter to the King. At first he hesitated; quoted the +Italian proverb, <i>Chi sta bene non si</i> <i>muove</i>; said he had +lived fifteen years in Rome, married a wife there, and looked forward +to dying and being buried there. Urged again, he consented, and +returned to Paris. But his appearance there awakened much professional +jealousy, and he soon wished himself back in Rome again. While +in Paris he painted some of his greatest works—his ‘Saint +Xavier,’ the ‘Baptism,’ and the ‘Last Supper.’ +He was kept constantly at work. At first he did whatever he was +asked to do, such as designing frontispieces for the royal books, more +particularly a Bible and a Virgil, cartoons for the Louvre, and designs +for tapestry; but at length he expostulated:- “It is impossible +for me,” he said to M. de Chanteloup, “to work at the same +time at frontispieces for books, at a Virgin, at a picture of the Congregation +of St. Louis, at the various designs for the gallery, and, finally, +at designs for the royal tapestry. I have only one pair of hands +and a feeble head, and can neither be helped nor can my labours be lightened +by another.”</p> +<p>Annoyed by the enemies his success had provoked and whom he was unable +to conciliate, he determined, at the end of less than two years’ +labour in Paris, to return to Rome. Again settled there in his +humble dwelling on Mont Pincio, he employed himself diligently in the +practice of his art during the remaining years of his life, living in +great simplicity and privacy. Though suffering much from the disease +which afflicted him, he solaced himself by study, always striving after +excellence. “In growing old,” he said, “I feel +myself becoming more and more inflamed with the desire of surpassing +myself and reaching the highest degree of perfection.” Thus +toiling, struggling, and suffering, Poussin spent his later years. +He had no children; his wife died before him; all his friends were gone: +so that in his old age he was left absolutely alone in Rome, so full +of tombs, and died there in 1665, bequeathing to his relatives at Andeleys +the savings of his life, amounting to about 1000 crowns; and leaving +behind him, as a legacy to his race, the great works of his genius.</p> +<p>The career of Ary Scheffer furnishes one of the best examples in +modern times of a like high-minded devotion to art. Born at Dordrecht, +the son of a German artist, he early manifested an aptitude for drawing +and painting, which his parents encouraged. His father dying while +he was still young, his mother resolved, though her means were but small, +to remove the family to Paris, in order that her son might obtain the +best opportunities for instruction. There young Scheffer was placed +with Guérin the painter. But his mother’s means were +too limited to permit him to devote himself exclusively to study. +She had sold the few jewels she possessed, and refused herself every +indulgence, in order to forward the instruction of her other children. +Under such circumstances, it was natural that Ary should wish to help +her; and by the time he was eighteen years of age he began to paint +small pictures of simple subjects, which met with a ready sale at moderate +prices. He also practised portrait painting, at the same time +gathering experience and earning honest money. He gradually improved +in drawing, colouring, and composition. The ‘Baptism’ +marked a new epoch in his career, and from that point he went on advancing, +until his fame culminated in his pictures illustrative of ‘Faust,’ +his ‘Francisca de Rimini,’ ‘Christ the Consoler,’ +the ‘Holy Women,’ ‘St. Monica and St. Augustin,’ +and many other noble works.</p> +<p>“The amount of labour, thought, and attention,” says +Mrs. Grote, “which Scheffer brought to the production of the ‘Francisca,’ +must have been enormous. In truth, his technical education having +been so imperfect, he was forced to climb the steep of art by drawing +upon his own resources, and thus, whilst his hand was at work, his mind +was engaged in meditation. He had to try various processes of +handling, and experiments in colouring; to paint and repaint, with tedious +and unremitting assiduity. But Nature had endowed him with that +which proved in some sort an equivalent for shortcomings of a professional +kind. His own elevation of character, and his profound sensibility, +aided him in acting upon the feelings of others through the medium of +the pencil.” <a name="citation21"></a><a href="#footnote21">{21}</a></p> +<p>One of the artists whom Scheffer most admired was Flaxman; and he +once said to a friend, “If I have unconsciously borrowed from +any one in the design of the ‘Francisca,’ it must have been +from something I had seen among Flaxman’s drawings.” +John Flaxman was the son of a humble seller of plaster casts in New +Street, Covent Garden. When a child, he was such an invalid that +it was his custom to sit behind his father’s shop counter propped +by pillows, amusing himself with drawing and reading. A benevolent +clergyman, the Rev. Mr. Matthews, calling at the shop one day, saw the +boy trying to read a book, and on inquiring what it was, found it to +be a Cornelius Nepos, which his father had picked up for a few pence +at a bookstall. The gentleman, after some conversation with the +boy, said that was not the proper book for him to read, but that he +would bring him one. The next day he called with translations +of Homer and ‘Don Quixote,’ which the boy proceeded to read +with great avidity. His mind was soon filled with the heroism +which breathed through the pages of the former, and, with the stucco +Ajaxes and Achilleses about him, ranged along the shop shelves, the +ambition took possession of him, that he too would design and embody +in poetic forms those majestic heroes.</p> +<p>Like all youthful efforts, his first designs were crude. The +proud father one day showed some of them to Roubilliac the sculptor, +who turned from them with a contemptuous “pshaw!” +But the boy had the right stuff in him; he had industry and patience; +and he continued to labour incessantly at his books and drawings. +He then tried his young powers in modelling figures in plaster of Paris, +wax, and clay. Some of these early works are still preserved, +not because of their merit, but because they are curious as the first +healthy efforts of patient genius. It was long before the boy +could walk, and he only learnt to do so by hobbling along upon crutches. +At length he became strong enough to walk without them.</p> +<p>The kind Mr. Matthews invited him to his house, where his wife explained +Homer and Milton to him. They helped him also in his self-culture—giving +him lessons in Greek and Latin, the study of which he prosecuted at +home. By dint of patience and perseverance, his drawing improved +so much that he obtained a commission from a lady, to execute six original +drawings in black chalk of subjects in Homer. His first commission! +What an event in the artist’s life! A surgeon’s first +fee, a lawyer’s first retainer, a legislator’s first speech, +a singer’s first appearance behind the foot-lights, an author’s +first book, are not any of them more full of interest to the aspirant +for fame than the artist’s first commission. The boy at +once proceeded to execute the order, and he was both well praised and +well paid for his work.</p> +<p>At fifteen Flaxman entered a pupil at the Royal Academy. Notwithstanding +his retiring disposition, he soon became known among the students, and +great things were expected of him. Nor were their expectations +disappointed: in his fifteenth year he gained the silver prize, and +next year he became a candidate for the gold one. Everybody prophesied +that he would carry off the medal, for there was none who surpassed +him in ability and industry. Yet he lost it, and the gold medal +was adjudged to a pupil who was not afterwards heard of. This +failure on the part of the youth was really of service to him; for defeats +do not long cast down the resolute-hearted, but only serve to call forth +their real powers. “Give me time,” said he to his +father, “and I will yet produce works that the Academy will be +proud to recognise.” He redoubled his efforts, spared no +pains, designed and modelled incessantly, and made steady if not rapid +progress. But meanwhile poverty threatened his father’s +household; the plaster-cast trade yielded a very bare living; and young +Flaxman, with resolute self-denial, curtailed his hours of study, and +devoted himself to helping his father in the humble details of his business. +He laid aside his Homer to take up the plaster-trowel. He was +willing to work in the humblest department of the trade so that his +father’s family might be supported, and the wolf kept from the +door. To this drudgery of his art he served a long apprenticeship; +but it did him good. It familiarised him with steady work, and +cultivated in him the spirit of patience. The discipline may have +been hard, but it was wholesome.</p> +<p>Happily, young Flaxman’s skill in design had reached the knowledge +of Josiah Wedgwood, who sought him out for the purpose of employing +him to design improved patterns of china and earthenware. It may +seem a humble department of art for such a genius as Flaxman to work +in; but it really was not so. An artist may be labouring truly +in his vocation while designing a common teapot or water-jug. +Articles in daily use amongst the people, which are before their eyes +at every meal, may be made the vehicles of education to all, and minister +to their highest culture. The most ambitious artist way thus confer +a greater practical benefit on his countrymen than by executing an elaborate +work which he may sell for thousands of pounds to be placed in some +wealthy man’s gallery where it is hidden away from public sight. +Before Wedgwood’s time the designs which figured upon our china +and stoneware were hideous both in drawing and execution, and he determined +to improve both. Flaxman did his best to carry out the manufacturer’s +views. He supplied him from time to time with models and designs +of various pieces of earthenware, the subjects of which were principally +from ancient verse and history. Many of them are still in existence, +and some are equal in beauty and simplicity to his after designs for +marble. The celebrated Etruscan vases, specimens of which were +to be found in public museums and in the cabinets of the curious, furnished +him with the best examples of form, and these he embellished with his +own elegant devices. Stuart’s ‘Athens,’ then +recently published, furnished him with specimens of the purest-shaped +Greek utensils; of these he adopted the best, and worked them into new +shapes of elegance and beauty. Flaxman then saw that he was labouring +in a great work—no less than the promotion of popular education; +and he was proud, in after life, to allude to his early labours in this +walk, by which he was enabled at the same time to cultivate his love +of the beautiful, to diffuse a taste for art among the people, and to +replenish his own purse, while he promoted the prosperity of his friend +and benefactor.</p> +<p>At length, in the year 1782, when twenty-seven years of age, he quitted +his father’s roof and rented a small house and studio in Wardour +Street, Soho; and what was more, he married—Ann Denman was the +name of his wife—and a cheerful, bright-souled, noble woman she +was. He believed that in marrying her he should be able to work +with an intenser spirit; for, like him, she had a taste for poetry and +art; and besides was an enthusiastic admirer of her husband’s +genius. Yet when Sir Joshua Reynolds—himself a bachelor—met +Flaxman shortly after his marriage, he said to him, “So, Flaxman, +I am told you are married; if so, sir, I tell you you are ruined for +an artist.” Flaxman went straight home, sat down beside +his wife, took her hand in his, and said, “Ann, I am ruined for +an artist.” “How so, John? How has it happened? +and who has done it?” “It happened,” he replied, +“in the church, and Ann Denman has done it.” He then +told her of Sir Joshua’s remark—whose opinion was well known, +and had often been expressed, that if students would excel they must +bring the whole powers of their mind to bear upon their art, from the +moment they rose until they went to bed; and also, that no man could +be a <i>great</i> artist unless he studied the grand works of Raffaelle, +Michael Angelo, and others, at Rome and Florence. “And I,” +said Flaxman, drawing up his little figure to its full height, “<i>I</i> +would be a great artist.” “And a great artist you +shall be,” said his wife, “and visit Rome too, if that be +really necessary to make you great.” “But how?” +asked Flaxman. “<i>Work</i> <i>and economise</i>,” +rejoined the brave wife; “I will never have it said that Ann Denman +ruined John Flaxman for an artist.” And so it was determined +by the pair that the journey to Rome was to be made when their means +would admit. “I will go to Rome,” said Flaxman, “and +show the President that wedlock is for a man’s good rather than +his harm; and you, Ann, shall accompany me.”</p> +<p>Patiently and happily the affectionate couple plodded on during five +years in their humble little home in Wardour Street, always with the +long journey to Rome before them. It was never lost sight of for +a moment, and not a penny was uselessly spent that could be saved towards +the necessary expenses. They said no word to any one about their +project; solicited no aid from the Academy; but trusted only to their +own patient labour and love to pursue and achieve their object. +During this time Flaxman exhibited very few works. He could not +afford marble to experiment in original designs; but he obtained frequent +commissions for monuments, by the profits of which he maintained himself. +He still worked for Wedgwood, who was a prompt paymaster; and, on the +whole, he was thriving, happy, and hopeful. His local respectability +was even such as to bring local honours and local work upon him; for +he was elected by the ratepayers to collect the watch-rate for the Parish +of St. Anne, when he might be seen going about with an ink-bottle suspended +from his button-hole, collecting the money.</p> +<p>At length Flaxman and his wife having accumulated a sufficient store +of savings, set out for Rome. Arrived there, he applied himself +diligently to study, maintaining himself, like other poor artists, by +making copies from the antique. English visitors sought his studio, +and gave him commissions; and it was then that he composed his beautiful +designs illustrative of Homer, AEschylus, and Dante. The price +paid for them was moderate—only fifteen shillings a-piece; but +Flaxman worked for art as well as money; and the beauty of the designs +brought him other friends and patrons. He executed Cupid and Aurora +for the munificent Thomas Hope, and the Fury of Athamas for the Earl +of Bristol. He then prepared to return to England, his taste improved +and cultivated by careful study; but before he left Italy, the Academies +of Florence and Carrara recognised his merit by electing him a member.</p> +<p>His fame had preceded him to London, where he soon found abundant +employment. While at Rome he had been commissioned to execute +his famous monument in memory of Lord Mansfield, and it was erected +in the north transept of Westminster Abbey shortly after his return. +It stands there in majestic grandeur, a monument to the genius of Flaxman +himself—calm, simple, and severe. No wonder that Banks, +the sculptor, then in the heyday of his fame, exclaimed when he saw +it, “This little man cuts us all out!”</p> +<p>When the members of the Royal Academy heard of Flaxman’s return, +and especially when they had an opportunity of seeing and admiring his +portrait-statue of Mansfield, they were eager to have him enrolled among +their number. He allowed his name to be proposed in the candidates’ +list of associates, and was immediately elected. Shortly after, +he appeared in an entirely new character. The little boy who had +begun his studies behind the plaster-cast-seller’s shop-counter +in New Street, Covent Garden, was now a man of high intellect and recognised +supremacy in art, to instruct students, in the character of Professor +of Sculpture to the Royal Academy! And no man better deserved +to fill that distinguished office; for none is so able to instruct others +as he who, for himself and by his own efforts, has learnt to grapple +with and overcome difficulties.</p> +<p>After a long, peaceful, and happy life, Flaxman found himself growing +old. The loss which he sustained by the death of his affectionate +wife Ann, was a severe shock to him; but he survived her several years, +during which he executed his celebrated “Shield of Achilles,” +and his noble “Archangel Michael vanquishing Satan,”—perhaps +his two greatest works.</p> +<p>Chantrey was a more robust man;—somewhat rough, but hearty +in his demeanour; proud of his successful struggle with the difficulties +which beset him in early life; and, above all, proud of his independence. +He was born a poor man’s child, at Norton, near Sheffield. +His father dying when he was a mere boy, his mother married again. +Young Chantrey used to drive an ass laden with milk-cans across its +back into the neighbouring town of Sheffield, and there serve his mother’s +customers with milk. Such was the humble beginning of his industrial +career; and it was by his own strength that he rose from that position, +and achieved the highest eminence as an artist. Not taking kindly +to his step-father, the boy was sent to trade, and was first placed +with a grocer in Sheffield. The business was very distasteful +to him; but, passing a carver’s shop window one day, his eye was +attracted by the glittering articles it contained, and, charmed with +the idea of being a carver, he begged to be released from the grocery +business with that object. His friends consented, and he was bound +apprentice to the carver and gilder for seven years. His new master, +besides being a carver in wood, was also a dealer in prints and plaster +models; and Chantrey at once set about imitating both, studying with +great industry and energy. All his spare hours were devoted to +drawing, modelling, and self-improvement, and he often carried his labours +far into the night. Before his apprenticeship was out—at +the ace of twenty-one—he paid over to his master the whole wealth +which he was able to muster—a sum of 50<i>l</i>.—to cancel +his indentures, determined to devote himself to the career of an artist. +He then made the best of his way to London, and with characteristic +good sense, sought employment as an assistant carver, studying painting +and modelling at his bye-hours. Among the jobs on which he was +first employed as a journeyman carver, was the decoration of the dining-room +of Mr. Rogers, the poet—a room in which he was in after years +a welcome visitor; and he usually took pleasure in pointing out his +early handywork to the guests whom he met at his friend’s table.</p> +<p>Returning to Sheffield on a professional visit, he advertised himself +in the local papers as a painter of portraits in crayons and miniatures, +and also in oil. For his first crayon portrait he was paid a guinea +by a cutler; and for a portrait in oil, a confectioner paid him as much +as 5<i>l</i>. and a pair of top boots! Chantrey was soon in London +again to study at the Royal Academy; and next time he returned to Sheffield +he advertised himself as ready to model plaster busts of his townsmen, +as well as paint portraits of them. He was even selected to design +a monument to a deceased vicar of the town, and executed it to the general +satisfaction. When in London he used a room over a stable as a +studio, and there he modelled his first original work for exhibition. +It was a gigantic head of Satan. Towards the close of Chantrey’s +life, a friend passing through his studio was struck by this model lying +in a corner. “That head,” said the sculptor, “was +the first thing that I did after I came to London. I worked at +it in a garret with a paper cap on my head; and as I could then afford +only one candle, I stuck that one in my cap that it might move along +with me, and give me light whichever way I turned.” Flaxman +saw and admired this head at the Academy Exhibition, and recommended +Chantrey for the execution of the busts of four admirals, required for +the Naval Asylum at Greenwich. This commission led to others, +and painting was given up. But for eight years before, he had +not earned 5<i>l</i>. by his modelling. His famous head of Horne +Tooke was such a success that, according to his own account, it brought +him commissions amounting to 12,000<i>l.</i></p> +<p>Chantrey had now succeeded, but he had worked hard, and fairly earned +his good fortune. He was selected from amongst sixteen competitors +to execute the statue of George III. for the city of London. A +few years later, he produced the exquisite monument of the Sleeping +Children, now in Lichfield Cathedral,—a work of great tenderness +and beauty; and thenceforward his career was one of increasing honour, +fame, and prosperity. His patience, industry, and steady perseverance +were the means by which he achieved his greatness. Nature endowed +him with genius, and his sound sense enabled him to employ the precious +gift as a blessing. He was prudent and shrewd, like the men amongst +whom he was born; the pocket-book which accompanied him on his Italian +tour containing mingled notes on art, records of daily expenses, and +the current prices of marble. His tastes were simple, and he made +his finest subjects great by the mere force of simplicity. His +statue of Watt, in Handsworth church, seems to us the very consummation +of art; yet it is perfectly artless and simple. His generosity +to brother artists in need was splendid, but quiet and unostentatious. +He left the principal part of his fortune to the Royal Academy for the +promotion of British art.</p> +<p>The same honest and persistent industry was throughout distinctive +of the career of David Wilkie. The son of a Scotch minister, he +gave early indications of an artistic turn; and though he was a negligent +and inapt scholar, he was a sedulous drawer of faces and figures. +A silent boy, he already displayed that quiet concentrated energy of +character which distinguished him through life. He was always +on the look-out for an opportunity to draw,—and the walls of the +manse, or the smooth sand by the river side, were alike convenient for +his purpose. Any sort of tool would serve him; like Giotto, he +found a pencil in a burnt stick, a prepared canvas in any smooth stone, +and the subject for a picture in every ragged mendicant he met. +When he visited a house, he generally left his mark on the walls as +an indication of his presence, sometimes to the disgust of cleanly housewives. +In short, notwithstanding the aversion of his father, the minister, +to the “sinful” profession of painting, Wilkie’s strong +propensity was not to be thwarted, and he became an artist, working +his way manfully up the steep of difficulty. Though rejected on +his first application as a candidate for admission to the Scottish Academy, +at Edinburgh, on account of the rudeness and inaccuracy of his introductory +specimens, he persevered in producing better, until he was admitted. +But his progress was slow. He applied himself diligently to the +drawing of the human figure, and held on with the determination to succeed, +as if with a resolute confidence in the result. He displayed none +of the eccentric humour and fitful application of many youths who conceive +themselves geniuses, but kept up the routine of steady application to +such an extent that he himself was afterwards accustomed to attribute +his success to his dogged perseverance rather than to any higher innate +power. “The single element,” he said, “in all +the progressive movements of my pencil was persevering industry.” +At Edinburgh he gained a few premiums, thought of turning his attention +to portrait painting, with a view to its higher and more certain remuneration, +but eventually went boldly into the line in which he earned his fame,—and +painted his Pitlessie Fair. What was bolder still, he determined +to proceed to London, on account of its presenting so much wider a field +for study and work; and the poor Scotch lad arrived in town, and painted +his Village Politicians while living in a humble lodging on eighteen +shillings a week.</p> +<p>Notwithstanding the success of this picture, and the commissions +which followed it, Wilkie long continued poor. The prices which +his works realized were not great, for he bestowed upon them so much +time and labour, that his earnings continued comparatively small for +many years. Every picture was carefully studied and elaborated +beforehand; nothing was struck off at a heat; many occupied him for +years—touching, retouching, and improving them until they finally +passed out of his hands. As with Reynolds, his motto was “Work! +work! work!” and, like him, he expressed great dislike for talking +artists. Talkers may sow, but the silent reap. “Let +us be <i>doing</i> something,” was his oblique mode of rebuking +the loquacious and admonishing the idle. He once related to his +friend Constable that when he studied at the Scottish Academy, Graham, +the master of it, was accustomed to say to the students, in the words +of Reynolds, “If you have genius, industry will improve it; if +you have none, industry will supply its place.” “So,” +said Wilkie, “I was determined to be very industrious, for I knew +I had no genius.” He also told Constable that when Linnell +and Burnett, his fellow-students in London, were talking about art, +he always contrived to get as close to them as he could to hear all +they said, “for,” said he, “they know a great deal, +and I know very little.” This was said with perfect sincerity, +for Wilkie was habitually modest. One of the first things that +he did with the sum of thirty pounds which he obtained from Lord Mansfield +for his Village Politicians, was to buy a present—of bonnets, +shawls, and dresses—for his mother and sister at home, though +but little able to afford it at the time. Wilkie’s early +poverty had trained him in habits of strict economy, which were, however, +consistent with a noble liberality, as appears from sundry passages +in the Autobiography of Abraham Raimbach the engraver.</p> +<p>William Etty was another notable instance of unflagging industry +and indomitable perseverance in art. His father was a ginger-bread +and spicemaker at York, and his mother—a woman of considerable +force and originality of character—was the daughter of a ropemaker. +The boy early displayed a love of drawing, covering walls, floors, and +tables with specimens of his skill; his first crayon being a farthing’s +worth of chalk, and this giving place to a piece of coal or a bit of +charred stick. His mother, knowing nothing of art, put the boy +apprentice to a trade—that of a printer. But in his leisure +hours he went on with the practice of drawing; and when his time was +out he determined to follow his bent—he would be a painter and +nothing else. Fortunately his uncle and elder brother were able +and willing to help him on in his new career, and they provided him +with the means of entering as pupil at the Royal Academy. We observe, +from Leslie’s Autobiography, that Etty was looked upon by his +fellow students as a worthy but dull, plodding person, who would never +distinguish himself. But he had in him the divine faculty of work, +and diligently plodded his way upward to eminence in the highest walks +of art.</p> +<p>Many artists have had to encounter privations which have tried their +courage and endurance to the utmost before they succeeded. What +number may have sunk under them we can never know. Martin encountered +difficulties in the course of his career such as perhaps fall to the +lot of few. More than once he found himself on the verge of starvation +while engaged on his first great picture. It is related of him +that on one occasion he found himself reduced to his last shilling—a +<i>bright</i> shilling—which he had kept because of its very brightness, +but at length he found it necessary to exchange it for bread. +He went to a baker’s shop, bought a loaf, and was taking it away, +when the baker snatched it from him, and tossed back the shilling to +the starving painter. The bright shilling had failed him in his +hour of need—it was a bad one! Returning to his lodgings, +he rummaged his trunk for some remaining crust to satisfy his hunger. +Upheld throughout by the victorious power of enthusiasm, he pursued +his design with unsubdued energy. He had the courage to work on +and to wait; and when, a few days after, he found an opportunity to +exhibit his picture, he was from that time famous. Like many other +great artists, his life proves that, in despite of outward circumstances, +genius, aided by industry, will be its own protector, and that fame, +though she comes late, will never ultimately refuse her favours to real +merit</p> +<p>The most careful discipline and training after academic methods will +fail in making an artist, unless he himself take an active part in the +work. Like every highly cultivated man, he must be mainly self-educated. +When Pugin, who was brought up in his father’s office, had learnt +all that he could learn of architecture according to the usual formulas, +he still found that he had learned but little; and that he must begin +at the beginning, and pass through the discipline of labour. Young +Pugin accordingly hired himself out as a common carpenter at Covent +Garden Theatre—first working under the stage, then behind the +flys, then upon the stage itself. He thus acquired a familiarity +with work, and cultivated an architectural taste, to which the diversity +of the mechanical employment about a large operatic establishment is +peculiarly favourable. When the theatre closed for the season, +he worked a sailing-ship between London and some of the French ports, +carrying on at the same time a profitable trade. At every opportunity +he would land and make drawings of any old building, and especially +of any ecclesiastical structure which fell in his way. Afterwards +he would make special journeys to the Continent for the same purpose, +and returned home laden with drawings. Thus he plodded and laboured +on, making sure of the excellence and distinction which he eventually +achieved.</p> +<p>A similar illustration of plodding industry in the same walk is presented +in the career of George Kemp, the architect of the beautiful Scott Monument +at Edinburgh. He was the son of a poor shepherd, who pursued his +calling on the southern slope of the Pentland Hills. Amidst that +pastoral solitude the boy had no opportunity of enjoying the contemplation +of works of art. It happened, however, that in his tenth year +he was sent on a message to Roslin, by the farmer for whom his father +herded sheep, and the sight of the beautiful castle and chapel there +seems to have made a vivid and enduring impression on his mind. +Probably to enable him to indulge his love of architectural construction, +the boy besought his father to let him be a joiner; and he was accordingly +put apprentice to a neighbouring village carpenter. Having served +his time, he went to Galashiels to seek work. As he was plodding +along the valley of the Tweed with his tools upon his back, a carriage +overtook him near Elibank Tower; and the coachman, doubtless at the +suggestion of his master, who was seated inside, having asked the youth +how far he had to walk, and learning that he was on his way to Galashiels, +invited him to mount the box beside him, and thus to ride thither. +It turned out that the kindly gentleman inside was no other than Sir +Walter Scott, then travelling on his official duty as Sheriff of Selkirkshire. +Whilst working at Galashiels, Kemp had frequent opportunities of visiting +Melrose, Dryburgh, and Jedburgh Abbeys, which he studied carefully. +Inspired by his love of architecture, he worked his way as a carpenter +over the greater part of the north of England, never omitting an opportunity +of inspecting and making sketches of any fine Gothic building. +On one occasion, when working in Lancashire, he walked fifty miles to +York, spent a week in carefully examining the Minster, and returned +in like manner on foot. We next find him in Glasgow, where he +remained four years, studying the fine cathedral there during his spare +time. He returned to England again, this time working his way +further south; studying Canterbury, Winchester, Tintern, and other well-known +structures. In 1824 he formed the design of travelling over Europe +with the same object, supporting himself by his trade. Reaching +Boulogne, he proceeded by Abbeville and Beauvais to Paris, spending +a few weeks making drawings and studies at each place. His skill +as a mechanic, and especially his knowledge of mill-work, readily secured +him employment wherever he went; and he usually chose the site of his +employment in the neighbourhood of some fine old Gothic structure, in +studying which he occupied his leisure. After a year’s working, +travel, and study abroad, he returned to Scotland. He continued +his studies, and became a proficient in drawing and perspective: Melrose +was his favourite ruin; and he produced several elaborate drawings of +the building, one of which, exhibiting it in a “restored” +state, was afterwards engraved. He also obtained employment as +a modeller of architectural designs; and made drawings for a work begun +by an Edinburgh engraver, after the plan of Britton’s ‘Cathedral +Antiquities.’ This was a task congenial to his tastes, and +he laboured at it with an enthusiasm which ensured its rapid advance; +walking on foot for the purpose over half Scotland, and living as an +ordinary mechanic, whilst executing drawings which would have done credit +to the best masters in the art. The projector of the work having +died suddenly, the publication was however stopped, and Kemp sought +other employment. Few knew of the genius of this man—for +he was exceedingly taciturn and habitually modest—when the Committee +of the Scott Monument offered a prize for the best design. The +competitors were numerous—including some of the greatest names +in classical architecture; but the design unanimously selected was that +of George Kemp, who was working at Kilwinning Abbey in Ayrshire, many +miles off, when the letter reached him intimating the decision of the +committee. Poor Kemp! Shortly after this event he met an +untimely death, and did not live to see the first result of his indefatigable +industry and self-culture embodied in stone,—one of the most beautiful +and appropriate memorials ever erected to literary genius.</p> +<p>John Gibson was another artist full of a genuine enthusiasm and love +for his art, which placed him high above those sordid temptations which +urge meaner natures to make time the measure of profit. He was +born at Gyffn, near Conway, in North Wales—the son of a gardener. +He early showed indications of his talent by the carvings in wood which +he made by means of a common pocket knife; and his father, noting the +direction of his talent, sent him to Liverpool and bound him apprentice +to a cabinet-maker and wood-carver. He rapidly improved at his +trade, and some of his carvings were much admired. He was thus +naturally led to sculpture, and when eighteen years old he modelled +a small figure of Time in wax, which attracted considerable notice. +The Messrs. Franceys, sculptors, of Liverpool, having purchased the +boy’s indentures, took him as their apprentice for six years, +during which his genius displayed itself in many original works. +From thence he proceeded to London, and afterwards to Rome; and his +fame became European.</p> +<p>Robert Thorburn, the Royal Academician, like John Gibson, was born +of poor parents. His father was a shoe-maker at Dumfries. +Besides Robert there were two other sons; one of whom is a skilful carver +in wood. One day a lady called at the shoemaker’s and found +Robert, then a mere boy, engaged in drawing upon a stool which served +him for a table. She examined his work, and observing his abilities, +interested herself in obtaining for him some employment in drawing, +and enlisted in his behalf the services of others who could assist him +in prosecuting the study of art. The boy was diligent, pains-taking, +staid, and silent, mixing little with his companions, and forming but +few intimacies. About the year 1830, some gentlemen of the town +provided him with the means of proceeding to Edinburgh, where he was +admitted a student at the Scottish Academy. There he had the advantage +of studying under competent masters, and the progress which he made +was rapid. From Edinburgh he removed to London, where, we understand, +he had the advantage of being introduced to notice under the patronage +of the Duke of Buccleuch. We need scarcely say, however, that +of whatever use patronage may have been to Thorburn in giving him an +introduction to the best circles, patronage of no kind could have made +him the great artist that he unquestionably is, without native genius +and diligent application.</p> +<p>Noel Paton, the well-known painter, began his artistic career at +Dunfermline and Paisley, as a drawer of patterns for table-cloths and +muslin embroidered by hand; meanwhile working diligently at higher subjects, +including the drawing of the human figure. He was, like Turner, +ready to turn his hand to any kind of work, and in 1840, when a mere +youth, we find him engaged, among his other labours, in illustrating +the ‘Renfrewshire Annual.’ He worked his way step +by step, slowly yet surely; but he remained unknown until the exhibition +of the prize cartoons painted for the houses of Parliament, when his +picture of the Spirit of Religion (for which he obtained one of the +first prizes) revealed him to the world as a genuine artist; and the +works which he has since exhibited—such as the ‘Reconciliation +of Oberon and Titania,’ ‘Home,’ and ‘The bluidy +Tryste’—have shown a steady advance in artistic power and +culture.</p> +<p>Another striking exemplification of perseverance and industry in +the cultivation of art in humble life is presented in the career of +James Sharples, a working blacksmith at Blackburn. He was born +at Wakefield in Yorkshire, in 1825, one of a family of thirteen children. +His father was a working ironfounder, and removed to Bury to follow +his business. The boys received no school education, but were +all sent to work as soon as they were able; and at about ten James was +placed in a foundry, where he was employed for about two years as smithy-boy. +After that he was sent into the engine-shop where his father worked +as engine-smith. The boy’s employment was to heat and carry +rivets for the boiler-makers. Though his hours of labour were +very long—often from six in the morning until eight at night—his +father contrived to give him some little teaching after working hours; +and it was thus that he partially learned his letters. An incident +occurred in the course of his employment among the boiler-makers, which +first awakened in him the desire to learn drawing. He had occasionally +been employed by the foreman to hold the chalked line with which he +made the designs of boilers upon the floor of the workshop; and on such +occasions the foreman was accustomed to hold the line, and direct the +boy to make the necessary dimensions. James soon became so expert +at this as to be of considerable service to the foreman; and at his +leisure hours at home his great delight was to practise drawing designs +of boilers upon his mother’s floor. On one occasion, when +a female relative was expected from Manchester to pay the family a visit, +and the house had been made as decent as possible for her reception, +the boy, on coming in from the foundry in the evening, began his usual +operations upon the floor. He had proceeded some way with his +design of a large boiler in chalk, when his mother arrived with the +visitor, and to her dismay found the boy unwashed and the floor chalked +all over. The relative, however, professed to be pleased with +the boy’s industry, praised his design, and recommended his mother +to provide “the little sweep,” as she called him, with paper +and pencils.</p> +<p>Encouraged by his elder brother, he began to practise figure and +landscape drawing, making copies of lithographs, but as yet without +any knowledge of the rules of perspective and the principles of light +and shade. He worked on, however, and gradually acquired expertness +in copying. At sixteen, he entered the Bury Mechanic’s Institution +in order to attend the drawing class, taught by an amateur who followed +the trade of a barber. There he had a lesson a week during three +months. The teacher recommended him to obtain from the library +Burnet’s ‘Practical Treatise on Painting;’ but as +he could not yet read with ease, he was under the necessity of getting +his mother, and sometimes his elder brother, to read passages from the +book for him while he sat by and listened. Feeling hampered by +his ignorance of the art of reading, and eager to master the contents +of Burnet’s book, he ceased attending the drawing class at the +Institute after the first quarter, and devoted himself to learning reading +and writing at home. In this he soon succeeded; and when he again +entered the Institute and took out ‘Burnet’ a second time, +he was not only able to read it, but to make written extracts for further +use. So ardently did he study the volume, that he used to rise +at four o’clock in the morning to read it and copy out passages; +after which he went to the foundry at six, worked until six and sometimes +eight in the evening; and returned home to enter with fresh zest upon +the study of Burnet, which he continued often until a late hour. +Parts of his nights were also occupied in drawing and making copies +of drawings. On one of these—a copy of Leonardo da Vinci’s +“Last Supper”—he spent an entire night. He went +to bed indeed, but his mind was so engrossed with the subject that he +could not sleep, and rose again to resume his pencil.</p> +<p>He next proceeded to try his hand at painting in oil, for which purpose +he procured some canvas from a draper, stretched it on a frame, coated +it over with white lead, and began painting on it with colours bought +from a house-painter. But his work proved a total failure; for +the canvas was rough and knotty, and the paint would not dry. +In his extremity he applied to his old teacher, the barber, from whom +he first learnt that prepared canvas was to be had, and that there were +colours and varnishes made for the special purpose of oil-painting. +As soon therefore, as his means would allow, he bought a small stock +of the necessary articles and began afresh,—his amateur master +showing him how to paint; and the pupil succeeded so well that he excelled +the master’s copy. His first picture was a copy from an +engraving called “Sheep-shearing,” and was afterwards sold +by him for half-a-crown. Aided by a shilling Guide to Oil-painting, +he went on working at his leisure hours, and gradually acquired a better +knowledge of his materials. He made his own easel and palette, +palette-knife, and paint-chest; he bought his paint, brushes, and canvas, +as he could raise the money by working over-time. This was the +slender fund which his parents consented to allow him for the purpose; +the burden of supporting a very large family precluding them from doing +more. Often he would walk to Manchester and back in the evenings +to buy two or three shillings’ worth of paint and canvas, returning +almost at midnight, after his eighteen miles’ walk, sometimes +wet through and completely exhausted, but borne up throughout by his +inexhaustible hope and invincible determination. The further progress +of the self-taught artist is best narrated in his own words, as communicated +by him in a letter to the author:-</p> +<p>“The next pictures I painted,” he says, “were a +Landscape by Moonlight, a Fruitpiece, and one or two others; after which +I conceived the idea of painting ‘The Forge.’ I had +for some time thought about it, but had not attempted to embody the +conception in a drawing. I now, however, made a sketch of the +subject upon paper, and then proceeded to paint it on canvas. +The picture simply represents the interior of a large workshop such +as I have been accustomed to work in, although not of any particular +shop. It is, therefore, to this extent, an original conception. +Having made an outline of the subject, I found that, before I could +proceed with it successfully, a knowledge of anatomy was indispensable +to enable me accurately to delineate the muscles of the figures. +My brother Peter came to my assistance at this juncture, and kindly +purchased for me Flaxman’s ‘Anatomical studies,’—a +work altogether beyond my means at the time, for it cost twenty-four +shillings. This book I looked upon as a great treasure, and I +studied it laboriously, rising at three o’clock in the morning +to draw after it, and occasionally getting my brother Peter to stand +for me as a model at that untimely hour. Although I gradually +improved myself by this practice, it was some time before I felt sufficient +confidence to go on with my picture. I also felt hampered by my +want of knowledge of perspective, which I endeavoured to remedy by carefully +studying Brook Taylor’s ‘Principles;’ and shortly +after I resumed my painting. While engaged in the study of perspective +at home, I used to apply for and obtain leave to work at the heavier +kinds of smith work at the foundry, and for this reason—the time +required for heating the heaviest iron work is so much longer than that +required for heating the lighter, that it enabled me to secure a number +of spare minutes in the course of the day, which I carefully employed +in making diagrams in perspective upon the sheet iron casing in front +of the hearth at which I worked.”</p> +<p>Thus assiduously working and studying, James Sharples steadily advanced +in his knowledge of the principles of art, and acquired greater facility +in its practice. Some eighteen months after the expiry of his +apprenticeship he painted a portrait of his father, which attracted +considerable notice in the town; as also did the picture of “The +Forge,” which he finished soon after. His success in portrait-painting +obtained for him a commission from the foreman of the shop to paint +a family group, and Sharples executed it so well that the foreman not +only paid him the agreed price of eighteen pounds, but thirty shillings +to boot. While engaged on this group he ceased to work at the +foundry, and he had thoughts of giving up his trade altogether and devoting +himself exclusively to painting. He proceeded to paint several +pictures, amongst others a head of Christ, an original conception, life-size, +and a view of Bury; but not obtaining sufficient employment at portraits +to occupy his time, or give him the prospect of a steady income, he +had the good sense to resume his leather apron, and go on working at +his honest trade of a blacksmith; employing his leisure hours in engraving +his picture of “The Forge,” since published. He was +induced to commence the engraving by the following circumstance. +A Manchester picture-dealer, to whom he showed the painting, let drop +the observation, that in the hands of a skilful engraver it would make +a very good print. Sharples immediately conceived the idea of +engraving it himself, though altogether ignorant of the art. The +difficulties which he encountered and successfully overcame in carrying +out his project are thus described by himself:-</p> +<p>“I had seen an advertisement of a Sheffield steel-plate maker, +giving a list of the prices at which he supplied plates of various sizes, +and, fixing upon one of suitable dimensions, I remitted the amount, +together with a small additional sum for which I requested him to send +me a few engraving tools. I could not specify the articles wanted, +for I did not then know anything about the process of engraving. +However, there duly arrived with the plate three or four gravers and +an etching needle; the latter I spoiled before I knew its use. +While working at the plate, the Amalgamated Society of Engineers offered +a premium for the best design for an emblematical picture, for which +I determined to compete, and I was so fortunate as to win the prize. +Shortly after this I removed to Blackburn, where I obtained employment +at Messrs. Yates’, engineers, as an engine-smith; and continued +to employ my leisure time in drawing, painting, and engraving, as before. +With the engraving I made but very slow progress, owing to the difficulties +I experienced from not possessing proper tools. I then determined +to try to make some that would suit my purpose, and after several failures +I succeeded in making many that I have used in the course of my engraving. +I was also greatly at a loss for want of a proper magnifying glass, +and part of the plate was executed with no other assistance of this +sort than what my father’s spectacles afforded, though I afterwards +succeeded in obtaining a proper magnifier, which was of the utmost use +to me. An incident occurred while I was engraving the plate, which +had almost caused me to abandon it altogether. It sometimes happened +that I was obliged to lay it aside for a considerable time, when other +work pressed; and in order to guard it against rust, I was accustomed +to rub over the graven parts with oil. But on examining the plate +after one of such intervals, I found that the oil had become a dark +sticky substance extremely difficult to get out. I tried to pick +it out with a needle, but found that it would almost take as much time +as to engrave the parts afresh. I was in great despair at this, +but at length hit upon the expedient of boiling it in water containing +soda, and afterwards rubbing the engraved parts with a tooth-brush; +and to my delight found the plan succeeded perfectly. My greatest +difficulties now over, patience and perseverance were all that were +needed to bring my labours to a successful issue. I had neither +advice nor assistance from any one in finishing the plate. If, +therefore, the work possess any merit, I can claim it as my own; and +if in its accomplishment I have contributed to show what can be done +by persevering industry and determination, it is all the honour I wish +to lay claim to.”</p> +<p>It would be beside our purpose to enter upon any criticism of “The +Forge” as an engraving; its merits having been already fully recognised +by the art journals. The execution of the work occupied Sharples’s +leisure evening hours during a period of five years; and it was only +when he took the plate to the printer that he for the first time saw +an engraved plate produced by any other man. To this unvarnished +picture of industry and genius, we add one other trait, and it is a +domestic one. “I have been married seven years,” says +he, “and during that time my greatest pleasure, after I have finished +my daily labour at the foundry, has been to resume my pencil or graver, +frequently until a late hour of the evening, my wife meanwhile sitting +by my side and reading to me from some interesting book,”—a +simple but beautiful testimony to the thorough common sense as well +as the genuine right-heartedness of this most interesting and deserving +workman.</p> +<p>The same industry and application which we have found to be necessary +in order to acquire excellence in painting and sculpture, are equally +required in the sister art of music—the one being the poetry of +form and colour, the other of the sounds of nature. Handel was +an indefatigable and constant worker; he was never cast down by defeat, +but his energy seemed to increase the more that adversity struck him. +When a prey to his mortifications as an insolvent debtor, he did not +give way for a moment, but in one year produced his ‘Saul,’ +‘Israel,’ the music for Dryden’s ‘Ode,’ +his ‘Twelve Grand Concertos,’ and the opera of ‘Jupiter +in Argos,’ among the finest of his works. As his biographer +says of him, “He braved everything, and, by his unaided self, +accomplished the work of twelve men.”</p> +<p>Haydn, speaking of his art, said, “It consists in taking up +a subject and pursuing it.” “Work,” said Mozart, +“is my chief pleasure.” Beethoven’s favourite +maxim was, “The barriers are not erected which can say to aspiring +talents and industry, ‘Thus far and no farther.’” +When Moscheles submitted his score of ‘Fidelio’ for the +pianoforte to Beethoven, the latter found written at the bottom of the +last page, “Finis, with God’s help.” Beethoven +immediately wrote underneath, “O man! help thyself!” +This was the motto of his artistic life. John Sebastian Bach said +of himself, “I was industrious; whoever is equally sedulous, will +be equally successful.” But there is no doubt that Bach +was born with a passion for music, which formed the mainspring of his +industry, and was the true secret of his success. When a mere +youth, his elder brother, wishing to turn his abilities in another direction, +destroyed a collection of studies which the young Sebastian, being denied +candles, had copied by moonlight; proving the strong natural bent of +the boy’s genius. Of Meyerbeer, Bayle thus wrote from Milan +in 1820:- “He is a man of some talent, but no genius; he lives +solitary, working fifteen hours a day at music.” Years passed, +and Meyerbeer’s hard work fully brought out his genius, as displayed +in his ‘Roberto,’ ‘Huguenots,’ ‘Prophète,’ +and other works, confessedly amongst the greatest operas which have +been produced in modern times.</p> +<p>Although musical composition is not an art in which Englishmen have +as yet greatly distinguished themselves, their energies having for the +most part taken other and more practical directions, we are not without +native illustrations of the power of perseverance in this special pursuit. +Arne was an upholsterer’s son, intended by his father for the +legal profession; but his love of music was so great, that he could +not be withheld from pursuing it. While engaged in an attorney’s +office, his means were very limited, but, to gratify his tastes, he +was accustomed to borrow a livery and go into the gallery of the Opera, +then appropriated to domestics. Unknown to his father he made +great progress with the violin, and the first knowledge his father had +of the circumstance was when accidentally calling at the house of a +neighbouring gentleman, to his surprise and consternation he found his +son playing the leading instrument with a party of musicians. +This incident decided the fate of Arne. His father offered no +further opposition to his wishes; and the world thereby lost a lawyer, +but gained a musician of much taste and delicacy of feeling, who added +many valuable works to our stores of English music.</p> +<p>The career of the late William Jackson, author of ‘The Deliverance +of Israel,’ an oratorio which has been successfully performed +in the principal towns of his native county of York, furnishes an interesting +illustration of the triumph of perseverance over difficulties in the +pursuit of musical science. He was the son of a miller at Masham, +a little town situated in the valley of the Yore, in the north-west +corner of Yorkshire. Musical taste seems to have been hereditary +in the family, for his father played the fife in the band of the Masham +Volunteers, and was a singer in the parish choir. His grandfather +also was leading singer and ringer at Masham Church; and one of the +boy’s earliest musical treats was to be present at the bell pealing +on Sunday mornings. During the service, his wonder was still more +excited by the organist’s performance on the barrel-organ, the +doors of which were thrown open behind to let the sound fully into the +church, by which the stops, pipes, barrels, staples, keyboard, and jacks, +were fully exposed, to the wonderment of the little boys sitting in +the gallery behind, and to none more than our young musician. +At eight years of age he began to play upon his father’s old fife, +which, however, would not sound D; but his mother remedied the difficulty +by buying for him a one-keyed flute; and shortly after, a gentleman +of the neighbourhood presented him with a flute with four silver keys. +As the boy made no progress with his “book learning,” being +fonder of cricket, fives, and boxing, than of his school lessons—the +village schoolmaster giving him up as “a bad job”—his +parents sent him off to a school at Pateley Bridge. While there +he found congenial society in a club of village choral singers at Brighouse +Gate, and with them he learnt the sol-fa-ing gamut on the old English +plan. He was thus well drilled in the reading of music, in which +he soon became a proficient. His progress astonished the club, +and he returned home full of musical ambition. He now learnt to +play upon his father’s old piano, but with little melodious result; +and he became eager to possess a finger-organ, but had no means of procuring +one. About this time, a neighbouring parish clerk had purchased, +for an insignificant sum, a small disabled barrel-organ, which had gone +the circuit of the northern counties with a show. The clerk tried +to revive the tones of the instrument, but failed; at last he bethought +him that he would try the skill of young Jackson, who had succeeded +in making some alterations and improvements in the hand-organ of the +parish church. He accordingly brought it to the lad’s house +in a donkey cart, and in a short time the instrument was repaired, and +played over its old tunes again, greatly to the owner’s satisfaction.</p> +<p>The thought now haunted the youth that he could make a barrel-organ, +and he determined to do so. His father and he set to work, and +though without practice in carpentering, yet, by dint of hard labour +and after many failures, they at last succeeded; and an organ was constructed +which played ten tunes very decently, and the instrument was generally +regarded as a marvel in the neighbourhood. Young Jackson was now +frequently sent for to repair old church organs, and to put new music +upon the barrels which he added to them. All this he accomplished +to the satisfaction of his employers, after which he proceeded with +the construction of a four-stop finger-organ, adapting to it the keys +of an old harpsichord. This he learnt to play upon,—studying +‘Callcott’s Thorough Bass’ in the evening, and working +at his trade of a miller during the day; occasionally also tramping +about the country as a “cadger,” with an ass and a cart. +During summer he worked in the fields, at turnip-time, hay-time, and +harvest, but was never without the solace of music in his leisure evening +hours. He next tried his hand at musical composition, and twelve +of his anthems were shown to the late Mr. Camidge, of York, as “the +production of a miller’s lad of fourteen.” Mr. Camidge +was pleased with them, marked the objectionable passages, and returned +them with the encouraging remark, that they did the youth great credit, +and that he must “go on writing.”</p> +<p>A village band having been set on foot at Masham, young Jackson joined +it, and was ultimately appointed leader. He played all the instruments +by turns, and thus acquired a considerable practical knowledge of his +art: he also composed numerous tunes for the band. A new finger-organ +having been presented to the parish church, he was appointed the organist. +He now gave up his employment as a journeyman miller, and commenced +tallow-chandling, still employing his spare hours in the study of music. +In 1839 he published his first anthem—‘For joy let fertile +valleys sing;’ and in the following year he gained the first prize +from the Huddersfield Glee Club, for his ‘Sisters of the Lea.’ +His other anthem ‘God be merciful to us,’ and the 103rd +Psalm, written for a double chorus and orchestra, are well known. +In the midst of these minor works, Jackson proceeded with the composition +of his oratorio,—‘The Deliverance of Israel from Babylon.’ +His practice was, to jot down a sketch of the ideas as they presented +themselves to his mind, and to write them out in score in the evenings, +after he had left his work in the candle-shop. His oratorio was +published in parts, in the course of 1844-5, and he published the last +chorus on his twenty-ninth birthday. The work was exceedingly +well received, and has been frequently performed with much success in +the northern towns. Mr. Jackson eventually settled as a professor +of music at Bradford, where he contributed in no small degree to the +cultivation of the musical taste of that town and its neighbourhood. +Some years since he had the honour of leading his fine company of Bradford +choral singers before Her Majesty at Buckingham Palace; on which occasion, +as well as at the Crystal Palace, some choral pieces of his composition, +were performed with great effect. <a name="citation22"></a><a href="#footnote22">{22}</a></p> +<p>Such is a brief outline of the career of a self-taught musician, +whose life affords but another illustration of the power of self-help, +and the force of courage and industry in enabling a man to surmount +and overcome early difficulties and obstructions of no ordinary kind.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<h2>CHAPTER VII—INDUSTRY AND THE PEERAGE</h2> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<p>“He either fears his fate too much,<br />Or his deserts are +small,<br />That dares not put it to the touch,<br />To gain or lose +it all.”—Marquis of Montrose.</p> +<p>“He hath put down the mighty from their seats; and exalted +them of low degree.”—St. Luke.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>We have already referred to some illustrious Commoners raised from +humble to elevated positions by the power of application and industry; +and we might point to even the Peerage itself as affording equally instructive +examples. One reason why the Peerage of England has succeeded +so well in holding its own, arises from the fact that, unlike the peerages +of other countries, it has been fed, from time to time, by the best +industrial blood of the country—the very “liver, heart, +and brain of Britain.” Like the fabled Antaeus, it has been +invigorated and refreshed by touching its mother earth, and mingling +with that most ancient order of nobility—the working order.</p> +<p>The blood of all men flows from equally remote sources; and though +some are unable to trace their line directly beyond their grandfathers, +all are nevertheless justified in placing at the head of their pedigree +the great progenitors of the race, as Lord Chesterfield did when he +wrote, “ADAM <i>de Stanhope—</i>EVE<i> de Stanhope</i>.” +No class is ever long stationary. The mighty fall, and the humble +are exalted. New families take the place of the old, who disappear +among the ranks of the common people. Burke’s ‘Vicissitudes +of Families’ strikingly exhibit this rise and fall of families, +and show that the misfortunes which overtake the rich and noble are +greater in proportion than those which overwhelm the poor. This +author points out that of the twenty-five barons selected to enforce +the observance of Magna Charta, there is not now in the House of Peers +a single male descendant. Civil wars and rebellions ruined many +of the old nobility and dispersed their families. Yet their descendants +in many cases survive, and are to be found among the ranks of the people. +Fuller wrote in his ‘Worthies,’ that “some who justly +hold the surnames of Bohuns, Mortimers, and Plantagenets, are hid in +the heap of common men.” Thus Burke shows that two of the +lineal descendants of the Earl of Kent, sixth son of Edward I., were +discovered in a butcher and a toll-gatherer; that the great grandson +of Margaret Plantagenet, daughter of the Duke of Clarance, sank to the +condition of a cobbler at Newport, in Shropshire; and that among the +lineal descendants of the Duke of Gloucester, son of Edward III., was +the late sexton of St George’s, Hanover Square. It is understood +that the lineal descendant of Simon de Montfort, England’s premier +baron, is a saddler in Tooley Street. One of the descendants of +the “Proud Percys,” a claimant of the title of Duke of Northumberland, +was a Dublin trunk-maker; and not many years since one of the claimants +for the title of Earl of Perth presented himself in the person of a +labourer in a Northumberland coal-pit. Hugh Miller, when working +as a stone-mason near Edinburgh, was served by a hodman, who was one +of the numerous claimants for the earldom of Crauford—all that +was wanted to establish his claim being a missing marriage certificate; +and while the work was going on, the cry resounded from the walls many +times in the day, of—“John, Yearl Crauford, bring us anither +hod o’lime.” One of Oliver Cromwell’s great +grandsons was a grocer on Snow Hill, and others of his descendants died +in great poverty. Many barons of proud names and titles have perished, +like the sloth, upon their family tree, after eating up all the leaves; +while others have been overtaken by adversities which they have been +unable to retrieve, and sunk at last into poverty and obscurity. +Such are the mutabilities of rank and fortune.</p> +<p>The great bulk of our peerage is comparatively modern, so far as +the titles go; but it is not the less noble that it has been recruited +to so large an extent from the ranks of honourable industry. In +olden times, the wealth and commerce of London, conducted as it was +by energetic and enterprising men, was a prolific source of peerages. +Thus, the earldom of Cornwallis was founded by Thomas Cornwallis, the +Cheapside merchant; that of Essex by William Capel, the draper; and +that of Craven by William Craven, the merchant tailor. The modern +Earl of Warwick is not descended from the “King-maker,” +but from William Greville, the woolstapler; whilst the modern dukes +of Northumberland find their head, not in the Percies, but in Hugh Smithson, +a respectable London apothecary. The founders of the families +of Dartmouth, Radnor, Ducie, and Pomfret, were respectively a skinner, +a silk manufacturer, a merchant tailor, and a Calais merchant; whilst +the founders of the peerages of Tankerville, Dormer, and Coventry, were +mercers. The ancestors of Earl Romney, and Lord Dudley and Ward, +were goldsmiths and jewellers; and Lord Dacres was a banker in the reign +of Charles I., as Lord Overstone is in that of Queen Victoria. +Edward Osborne, the founder of the Dukedom of Leeds, was apprentice +to William Hewet, a rich clothworker on London Bridge, whose only daughter +he courageously rescued from drowning, by leaping into the Thames after +her, and eventually married. Among other peerages founded by trade +are those of Fitzwilliam, Leigh, Petre, Cowper, Darnley, Hill, and Carrington. +The founders of the houses of Foley and Normanby were remarkable men +in many respects, and, as furnishing striking examples of energy of +character, the story of their lives is worthy of preservation.</p> +<p>The father of Richard Foley, the founder of the family, was a small +yeoman living in the neighbourhood of Stourbridge in the time of Charles +I. That place was then the centre of the iron manufacture of the +midland districts, and Richard was brought up to work at one of the +branches of the trade—that of nail-making. He was thus a +daily observer of the great labour and loss of time caused by the clumsy +process then adopted for dividing the rods of iron in the manufacture +of nails. It appeared that the Stourbridge nailers were gradually +losing their trade in consequence of the importation of nails from Sweden, +by which they were undersold in the market. It became known that +the Swedes were enabled to make their nails so much cheaper, by the +use of splitting mills and machinery, which had completely superseded +the laborious process of preparing the rods for nail-making then practised +in England.</p> +<p>Richard Foley, having ascertained this much, determined to make himself +master of the new process. He suddenly disappeared from the neighbourhood +of Stourbridge, and was not heard of for several years. No one +knew whither he had gone, not even his own family; for he had not informed +them of his intention, lest he should fail. He had little or no +money in his pocket, but contrived to get to Hull, where he engaged +himself on board a ship bound for a Swedish port, and worked his passage +there. The only article of property which he possessed was his +fiddle, and on landing in Sweden he begged and fiddled his way to the +Dannemora mines, near Upsala. He was a capital musician, as well +as a pleasant fellow, and soon ingratiated himself with the iron-workers. +He was received into the works, to every part of which he had access; +and he seized the opportunity thus afforded him of storing his mind +with observations, and mastering, as he thought, the mechanism of iron +splitting. After a continued stay for this purpose, he suddenly +disappeared from amongst his kind friends the miners—no one knew +whither.</p> +<p>Returned to England, he communicated the results of his voyage to +Mr. Knight and another person at Stourbridge, who had sufficient confidence +in him to advance the requisite funds for the purpose of erecting buildings +and machinery for splitting iron by the new process. But when +set to work, to the great vexation and disappointment of all, and especially +of Richard Foley, it was found that the machinery would not act—at +all events it would not split the bars of iron. Again Foley disappeared. +It was thought that shame and mortification at his failure had driven +him away for ever. Not so! Foley had determined to master +this secret of iron-splitting, and he would yet do it. He had +again set out for Sweden, accompanied by his fiddle as before, and found +his way to the iron works, where he was joyfully welcomed by the miners; +and, to make sure of their fiddler, they this time lodged him in the +very splitting-mill itself. There was such an apparent absence +of intelligence about the man, except in fiddle-playing, that the miners +entertained no suspicions as to the object of their minstrel, whom they +thus enabled to attain the very end and aim of his life. He now +carefully examined the works, and soon discovered the cause of his failure. +He made drawings or tracings of the machinery as well as he could, though +this was a branch of art quite new to him; and after remaining at the +place long enough to enable him to verify his observations, and to impress +the mechanical arrangements clearly and vividly on his mind, he again +left the miners, reached a Swedish port, and took ship for England. +A man of such purpose could not but succeed. Arrived amongst his +surprised friends, he now completed his arrangements, and the results +were entirely successful. By his skill and his industry he soon +laid the foundations of a large fortune, at the same time that he restored +the business of an extensive district. He himself continued, during +his life, to carry on his trade, aiding and encouraging all works of +benevolence in his neighbourhood. He founded and endowed a school +at Stourbridge; and his son Thomas (a great benefactor of Kidderminster), +who was High Sheriff of Worcestershire in the time of “The Rump,” +founded and endowed an hospital, still in existence, for the free education +of children at Old Swinford. All the early Foleys were Puritans. +Richard Baxter seems to have been on familiar and intimate terms with +various members of the family, and makes frequent mention of them in +his ‘Life and Times.’ Thomas Foley, when appointed +high sheriff of the county, requested Baxter to preach the customary +sermon before him; and Baxter in his ‘Life’ speaks of him +as “of so just and blameless dealing, that all men he ever had +to do with magnified his great integrity and honesty, which were questioned +by none.” The family was ennobled in the reign of Charles +the Second.</p> +<p>William Phipps, the founder of the Mulgrave or Normanby family, was +a man quite as remarkable in his way as Richard Foley. His father +was a gunsmith—a robust Englishman settled at Woolwich, in Maine, +then forming part of our English colonies in America. He was born +in 1651, one of a family of not fewer than twenty-six children (of whom +twenty-one were sons), whose only fortune lay in their stout hearts +and strong arms. William seems to have had a dash of the Danish-sea +blood in his veins, and did not take kindly to the quiet life of a shepherd +in which he spent his early years. By nature bold and adventurous, +he longed to become a sailor and roam through the world. He sought +to join some ship; but not being able to find one, he apprenticed himself +to a shipbuilder, with whom he thoroughly learnt his trade, acquiring +the arts of reading and writing during his leisure hours. Having +completed his apprenticeship and removed to Boston, he wooed and married +a widow of some means, after which he set up a little shipbuilding yard +of his own, built a ship, and, putting to sea in her, he engaged in +the lumber trade, which he carried on in a plodding and laborious way +for the space of about ten years.</p> +<p>It happened that one day, whilst passing through the crooked streets +of old Boston, he overheard some sailors talking to each other of a +wreck which had just taken place off the Bahamas; that of a Spanish +ship, supposed to have much money on board. His adventurous spirit +was at once kindled, and getting together a likely crew without loss +of time, he set sail for the Bahamas. The wreck being well in-shore, +he easily found it, and succeeded in recovering a great deal of its +cargo, but very little money; and the result was, that he barely defrayed +his expenses. His success had been such, however, as to stimulate +his enterprising spirit; and when he was told of another and far more +richly laden vessel which had been wrecked near Port de la Plata more +than half a century before, he forthwith formed the resolution of raising +the wreck, or at all events of fishing up the treasure.</p> +<p>Being too poor, however, to undertake such an enterprise without +powerful help, he set sail for England in the hope that he might there +obtain it. The fame of his success in raising the wreck off the +Bahamas had already preceded him. He applied direct to the Government. +By his urgent enthusiasm, he succeeded in overcoming the usual inertia +of official minds; and Charles II. eventually placed at his disposal +the “Rose Algier,” a ship of eighteen guns and ninety-five +men, appointing him to the chief command.</p> +<p>Phipps then set sail to find the Spanish ship and fish up the treasure. +He reached the coast of Hispaniola in safety; but how to find the sunken +ship was the great difficulty. The fact of the wreck was more +than fifty years old; and Phipps had only the traditionary rumours of +the event to work upon. There was a wide coast to explore, and +an outspread ocean without any trace whatever of the argosy which lay +somewhere at its bottom. But the man was stout in heart and full +of hope. He set his seamen to work to drag along the coast, and +for weeks they went on fishing up sea-weed, shingle, and bits of rock. +No occupation could be more trying to seamen, and they began to grumble +one to another, and to whisper that the man in command had brought them +on a fool’s errand.</p> +<p>At length the murmurers gained head, and the men broke into open +mutiny. A body of them rushed one day on to the quarter-deck, +and demanded that the voyage should be relinquished. Phipps, however, +was not a man to be intimidated; he seized the ringleaders, and sent +the others back to their duty. It became necessary to bring the +ship to anchor close to a small island for the purpose of repairs; and, +to lighten her, the chief part of the stores was landed. Discontent +still increasing amongst the crew, a new plot was laid amongst the men +on shore to seize the ship, throw Phipps overboard, and start on a piratical +cruize against the Spaniards in the South Seas. But it was necessary +to secure the services of the chief ship carpenter, who was consequently +made privy to the pilot. This man proved faithful, and at once +told the captain of his danger. Summoning about him those whom +he knew to be loyal, Phipps had the ship’s guns loaded which commanded +the shore, and ordered the bridge communicating with the vessel to be +drawn up. When the mutineers made their appearance, the captain +hailed them, and told the men he would fire upon them if they approached +the stores (still on land),—when they drew back; on which Phipps +had the stores reshipped under cover of his guns. The mutineers, +fearful of being left upon the barren island, threw down their arms +and implored to be permitted to return to their duty. The request +was granted, and suitable precautions were taken against future mischief. +Phipps, however, took the first opportunity of landing the mutinous +part of the crew, and engaging other men in their places; but, by the +time that he could again proceed actively with his explorations, he +found it absolutely necessary to proceed to England for the purpose +of repairing the ship. He had now, however, gained more precise +information as to the spot where the Spanish treasure ship had sunk; +and, though as yet baffled, he was more confident than ever of the eventual +success of his enterprise.</p> +<p>Returned to London, Phipps reported the result of his voyage to the +Admiralty, who professed to be pleased with his exertions; but he had +been unsuccessful, and they would not entrust him with another king’s +ship. James II. was now on the throne, and the Government was +in trouble; so Phipps and his golden project appealed to them in vain. +He next tried to raise the requisite means by a public subscription. +At first he was laughed at; but his ceaseless importunity at length +prevailed, and after four years’ dinning of his project into the +ears of the great and influential—during which time he lived in +poverty—he at length succeeded. A company was formed in +twenty shares, the Duke of Albermarle, son of General Monk, taking the +chief interest in it, and subscribing the principal part of the necessary +fund for the prosecution of the enterprise.</p> +<p>Like Foley, Phipps proved more fortunate in his second voyage than +in his first. The ship arrived without accident at Port de la +Plata, in the neighbourhood of the reef of rocks supposed to have been +the scene of the wreck. His first object was to build a stout +boat capable of carrying eight or ten oars, in constructing which Phipps +used the adze himself. It is also said that he constructed a machine +for the purpose of exploring the bottom of the sea similar to what is +now known as the Diving Bell. Such a machine was found referred +to in books, but Phipps knew little of books, and may be said to have +re-invented the apparatus for his own use. He also engaged Indian +divers, whose feats of diving for pearls, and in submarine operations, +were very remarkable. The tender and boat having been taken to +the reef, the men were set to work, the diving bell was sunk, and the +various modes of dragging the bottom of the sea were employed continuously +for many weeks, but without any prospect of success. Phipps, however, +held on valiantly, hoping almost against hope. At length, one +day, a sailor, looking over the boat’s side down into the clear +water, observed a curious sea-plant growing in what appeared to be a +crevice of the rock; and he called upon an Indian diver to go down and +fetch it for him. On the red man coming up with the weed, he reported +that a number of ships guns were lying in the same place. The +intelligence was at first received with incredulity, but on further +investigation it proved to be correct. Search was made, and presently +a diver came up with a solid bar of silver in his arms. When Phipps +was shown it, he exclaimed, “Thanks be to God! we are all made +men.” Diving bell and divers now went to work with a will, +and in a few days, treasure was brought up to the value of about £300,000, +with which Phipps set sail for England. On his arrival, it was +urged upon the king that he should seize the ship and its cargo, under +the pretence that Phipps, when soliciting his Majesty’s permission, +had not given accurate information respecting the business. But +the king replied, that he knew Phipps to be an honest man, and that +he and his friends should divide the whole treasure amongst them, even +though he had returned with double the value. Phipps’s share +was about £20,000, and the king, to show his approval of his energy +and honesty in conducting the enterprise, conferred upon him the honour +of knighthood. He was also made High Sheriff of New England; and +during the time he held the office, he did valiant service for the mother +country and the colonists against the French, by expeditions against +Port Royal and Quebec. He also held the post of Governor of Massachusetts, +from which he returned to England, and died in London in 1695.</p> +<p>Phipps throughout the latter part of his career, was not ashamed +to allude to the lowness of his origin, and it was matter of honest +pride to him that he had risen from the condition of common ship carpenter +to the honours of knighthood and the government of a province. +When perplexed with public business, he would often declare that it +would be easier for him to go back to his broad axe again. He +left behind him a character for probity, honesty, patriotism, and courage, +which is certainly not the least noble inheritance of the house of Normanby.</p> +<p>William Petty, the founder of the house of Lansdowne, was a man of +like energy and public usefulness in his day. He was the son of +a clothier in humble circumstances, at Romsey, in Hampshire, where he +was born in 1623. In his boyhood he obtained a tolerable education +at the grammar school of his native town; after which he determined +to improve himself by study at the University of Caen, in Normandy. +Whilst there he contrived to support himself unassisted by his father, +carrying on a sort of small pedler’s trade with “a little +stock of merchandise.” Returning to England, he had himself +bound apprentice to a sea captain, who “drubbed him with a rope’s +end” for the badness of his sight. He left the navy in disgust, +taking to the study of medicine. When at Paris he engaged in dissection, +during which time he also drew diagrams for Hobbes, who was then writing +his treatise on Optics. He was reduced to such poverty that he +subsisted for two or three weeks entirely on walnuts. But again +he began to trade in a small way, turning an honest penny, and he was +enabled shortly to return to England with money in his pocket. +Being of an ingenious mechanical turn, we find him taking out a patent +for a letter-copying machine. He began to write upon the arts +and sciences, and practised chemistry and physic with such success that +his reputation shortly became considerable. Associating with men +of science, the project of forming a Society for its prosecution was +discussed, and the first meetings of the infant Royal Society were held +at his lodgings. At Oxford he acted for a time as deputy to the +anatomical professor there, who had a great repugnance to dissection. +In 1652 his industry was rewarded by the appointment of physician to +the army in Ireland, whither he went; and whilst there he was the medical +attendant of three successive lords-lieutenant, Lambert, Fleetwood, +and Henry Cromwell. Large grants of forfeited land having been +awarded to the Puritan soldiery, Petty observed that the lands were +very inaccurately measured; and in the midst of his many avocations +he undertook to do the work himself. His appointments became so +numerous and lucrative that he was charged by the envious with corruption, +and removed from them all; but he was again taken into favour at the +Restoration.</p> +<p>Petty was a most indefatigable contriver, inventor, and organizer +of industry. One of his inventions was a double-bottomed ship, +to sail against wind and tide. He published treatises on dyeing, +on naval philosophy, on woollen cloth manufacture, on political arithmetic, +and many other subjects. He founded iron works, opened lead mines, +and commenced a pilchard fishery and a timber trade; in the midst of +which he found time to take part in the discussions of the Royal Society, +to which he largely contributed. He left an ample fortune to his +sons, the eldest of whom was created Baron Shelburne. His will +was a curious document, singularly illustrative of his character; containing +a detail of the principal events of his life, and the gradual advancement +of his fortune. His sentiments on pauperism are characteristic: +“As for legacies for the poor,” said he, “I am at +a stand; as for beggars by trade and election, I give them nothing; +as for impotents by the hand of God, the public ought to maintain them; +as for those who have been bred to no calling nor estate, they should +be put upon their kindred;” . . . “wherefore I am +contented that I have assisted all my poor relations, and put many into +a way of getting their own bread; have laboured in public works; and +by inventions have sought out real objects of charity; and I do hereby +conjure all who partake of my estate, from time to time, to do the same +at their peril. Nevertheless to answer custom, and to take the +surer side, I give 20<i>l</i>. to the most wanting of the parish wherein +I die.” He was interred in the fine old Norman church of +Romsey—the town wherein he was born a poor man’s son—and +on the south side of the choir is still to be seen a plain slab, with +the inscription, cut by an illiterate workman, “Here Layes Sir +William Petty.”</p> +<p>Another family, ennobled by invention and trade in our own day, is +that of Strutt of Belper. Their patent of nobility was virtually +secured by Jedediah Strutt in 1758, when he invented his machine for +making ribbed stockings, and thereby laid the foundations of a fortune +which the subsequent bearers of the name have largely increased and +nobly employed. The father of Jedediah was a farmer and malster, +who did but little for the education of his children; yet they all prospered. +Jedediah was the second son, and when a boy assisted his father in the +work of the farm. At an early age he exhibited a taste for mechanics, +and introduced several improvements in the rude agricultural implements +of the period. On the death of his uncle he succeeded to a farm +at Blackwall, near Normanton, long in the tenancy of the family, and +shortly after he married Miss Wollatt, the daughter of a Derby hosier. +Having learned from his wife’s brother that various unsuccessful +attempts had been made to manufacture ribbed-stockings, he proceeded +to study the subject with a view to effect what others had failed in +accomplishing. He accordingly obtained a stocking-frame, and after +mastering its construction and mode of action, he proceeded to introduce +new combinations, by means of which he succeeded in effecting a variation +in the plain looped-work of the frame, and was thereby enabled to turn +out “ribbed” hosiery. Having secured a patent for +the improved machine, he removed to Derby, and there entered largely +on the manufacture of ribbed-stockings, in which he was very successful. +He afterwards joined Arkwright, of the merits of whose invention he +fully satisfied himself, and found the means of securing his patent, +as well as erecting a large cotton-mill at Cranford, in Derbyshire. +After the expiry of the partnership with Arkwright, the Strutts erected +extensive cotton-mills at Milford, near Belper, which worthily gives +its title to the present head of the family. The sons of the founder +were, like their father, distinguished for their mechanical ability. +Thus William Strutt, the eldest, is said to have invented a self-acting +mule, the success of which was only prevented by the mechanical skill +of that day being unequal to its manufacture. Edward, the son +of William, was a man of eminent mechanical genius, having early discovered +the principle of suspension-wheels for carriages: he had a wheelbarrow +and two carts made on the principle, which were used on his farm near +Belper. It may be added that the Strutts have throughout been +distinguished for their noble employment of the wealth which their industry +and skill have brought them; that they have sought in all ways to improve +the moral and social condition of the work-people in their employment; +and that they have been liberal donors in every good cause—of +which the presentation, by Mr. Joseph Strutt, of the beautiful park +or Arboretum at Derby, as a gift to the townspeople for ever, affords +only one of many illustrations. The concluding words of the short +address which he delivered on presenting this valuable gift are worthy +of being quoted and remembered:- “As the sun has shone brightly +on me through life, it would be ungrateful in me not to employ a portion +of the fortune I possess in promoting the welfare of those amongst whom +I live, and by whose industry I have been aided in its organisation.”</p> +<p>No less industry and energy have been displayed by the many brave +men, both in present and past times, who have earned the peerage by +their valour on land and at sea. Not to mention the older feudal +lords, whose tenure depended upon military service, and who so often +led the van of the English armies in great national encounters, we may +point to Nelson, St. Vincent, and Lyons—to Wellington, Hill, Hardinge, +Clyde, and many more in recent times, who have nobly earned their rank +by their distinguished services. But plodding industry has far +oftener worked its way to the peerage by the honourable pursuit of the +legal profession, than by any other. No fewer than seventy British +peerages, including two dukedoms, have been founded by successful lawyers. +Mansfield and Erskine were, it is true, of noble family; but the latter +used to thank God that out of his own family he did not know a lord. +<a name="citation23"></a><a href="#footnote23">{23}</a> The others +were, for the most part, the sons of attorneys, grocers, clergymen, +merchants, and hardworking members of the middle class. Out of +this profession have sprung the peerages of Howard and Cavendish, the +first peers of both families having been judges; those of Aylesford, +Ellenborough, Guildford, Shaftesbury, Hardwicke, Cardigan, Clarendon, +Camden, Ellesmere, Rosslyn; and others nearer our own day, such as Tenterden, +Eldon, Brougham, Denman, Truro, Lyndhurst, St. Leonards, Cranworth, +Campbell, and Chelmsford.</p> +<p>Lord Lyndhurst’s father was a portrait painter, and that of +St. Leonards a perfumer and hairdresser in Burlington Street. +Young Edward Sugden was originally an errand-boy in the office of the +late Mr. Groom, of Henrietta Street, Cavendish Square, a certificated +conveyancer; and it was there that the future Lord Chancellor of Ireland +obtained his first notions of law. The origin of the late Lord +Tenterden was perhaps the humblest of all, nor was he ashamed of it; +for he felt that the industry, study, and application, by means of which +he achieved his eminent position, were entirely due to himself. +It is related of him, that on one occasion he took his son Charles to +a little shed, then standing opposite the western front of Canterbury +Cathedral, and pointing it out to him, said, “Charles, you see +this little shop; I have brought you here on purpose to show it you. +In that shop your grandfather used to shave for a penny: that is the +proudest reflection of my life.” When a boy, Lord Tenterden +was a singer in the Cathedral, and it is a curious circumstance that +his destination in life was changed by a disappointment. When +he and Mr. Justice Richards were going the Home Circuit together, they +went to service in the cathedral; and on Richards commending the voice +of a singing man in the choir, Lord Tenterden said, “Ah! that +is the only man I ever envied! When at school in this town, we +were candidates for a chorister’s place, and he obtained it.”</p> +<p>Not less remarkable was the rise to the same distinguished office +of Lord Chief Justice, of the rugged Kenyon and the robust Ellenborough; +nor was he a less notable man who recently held the same office—the +astute Lord Campbell, late Lord Chancellor of England, son of a parish +minister in Fifeshire. For many years he worked hard as a reporter +for the press, while diligently preparing himself for the practice of +his profession. It is said of him, that at the beginning of his +career, he was accustomed to walk from county town to county town when +on circuit, being as yet too poor to afford the luxury of posting. +But step by step he rose slowly but surely to that eminence and distinction +which ever follow a career of industry honourably and energetically +pursued, in the legal, as in every other profession.</p> +<p>There have been other illustrious instances of Lords Chancellors +who have plodded up the steep of fame and honour with equal energy and +success. The career of the late Lord Eldon is perhaps one of the +most remarkable examples. He was the son of a Newcastle coal-fitter; +a mischievous rather than a studious boy; a great scapegrace at school, +and the subject of many terrible thrashings,—for orchard-robbing +was one of the favourite exploits of the future Lord Chancellor. +His father first thought of putting him apprentice to a grocer, and +afterwards had almost made up his mind to bring him up to his own trade +of a coal-fitter. But by this time his eldest son William (afterwards +Lord Stowell) who had gained a scholarship at Oxford, wrote to his father, +“Send Jack up to me, I can do better for him.” John +was sent up to Oxford accordingly, where, by his brother’s influence +and his own application, he succeeded in obtaining a fellowship. +But when at home during the vacation, he was so unfortunate—or +rather so fortunate, as the issue proved—as to fall in love; and +running across the Border with his eloped bride, he married, and as +his friends thought, ruined himself for life. He had neither house +nor home when he married, and had not yet earned a penny. He lost +his fellowship, and at the same time shut himself out from preferment +in the Church, for which he had been destined. He accordingly +turned his attention to the study of the law. To a friend he wrote, +“I have married rashly; but it is my determination to work hard +to provide for the woman I love.”</p> +<p>John Scott came up to London, and took a small house in Cursitor +Lane, where he settled down to the study of the law. He worked +with great diligence and resolution; rising at four every morning and +studying till late at night, binding a wet towel round his head to keep +himself awake. Too poor to study under a special pleader, he copied +out three folio volumes from a manuscript collection of precedents. +Long after, when Lord Chancellor, passing down Cursitor Lane one day, +he said to his secretary, “Here was my first perch: many a time +do I recollect coming down this street with sixpence in my hand to buy +sprats for supper.” When at length called to the bar, he +waited long for employment. His first year’s earnings amounted +to only nine shillings. For four years he assiduously attended +the London Courts and the Northern Circuit, with little better success. +Even in his native town, he seldom had other than pauper cases to defend. +The results were indeed so discouraging, that he had almost determined +to relinquish his chance of London business, and settle down in some +provincial town as a country barrister. His brother William wrote +home, “Business is dull with poor Jack, very dull indeed!” +But as he had escaped being a grocer, a coal-fitter, and a country parson +so did he also escape being a country lawyer.</p> +<p>An opportunity at length occurred which enabled John Scott to exhibit +the large legal knowledge which he had so laboriously acquired. +In a case in which he was engaged, he urged a legal point against the +wishes both of the attorney and client who employed him. The Master +of the Rolls decided against him, but on an appeal to the House of Lords, +Lord Thurlow reversed the decision on the very point that Scott had +urged. On leaving the House that day, a solicitor tapped him on +the shoulder and said, “Young man, your bread and butter’s +cut for life.” And the prophecy proved a true one. +Lord Mansfield used to say that he knew no interval between no business +and 3000<i>l</i>. a-year, and Scott might have told the same story; +for so rapid was his progress, that in 1783, when only thirty-two, he +was appointed King’s Counsel, was at the head of the Northern +Circuit, and sat in Parliament for the borough of Weobley. It +was in the dull but unflinching drudgery of the early part of his career +that he laid the foundation of his future success. He won his +spurs by perseverance, knowledge, and ability, diligently cultivated. +He was successively appointed to the offices of solicitor and attorney-general, +and rose steadily upwards to the highest office that the Crown had to +bestow—that of Lord Chancellor of England, which he held for a +quarter of a century.</p> +<p>Henry Bickersteth was the son of a surgeon at Kirkby Lonsdale, in +Westmoreland, and was himself educated to that profession. As +a student at Edinburgh, he distinguished himself by the steadiness with +which he worked, and the application which he devoted to the science +of medicine. Returned to Kirkby Lonsdale, he took an active part +in his father’s practice; but he had no liking for the profession, +and grew discontented with the obscurity of a country town. He +went on, nevertheless, diligently improving himself, and engaged on +speculations in the higher branches of physiology. In conformity +with his own wish, his father consented to send him to Cambridge, where +it was his intention to take a medical degree with the view of practising +in the metropolis. Close application to his studies, however, +threw him out of health, and with a view to re-establishing his strength +he accepted the appointment of travelling physician to Lord Oxford. +While abroad he mastered Italian, and acquired a great admiration for +Italian literature, but no greater liking for medicine than before. +On the contrary, he determined to abandon it; but returning to Cambridge, +he took his degree; and that he worked hard may be inferred from the +fact that he was senior wrangler of his year. Disappointed in +his desire to enter the army, he turned to the bar, and entered a student +of the Inner Temple. He worked as hard at law as he had done at +medicine. Writing to his father, he said, “Everybody says +to me, ‘You are certain of success in the end—only persevere;’ +and though I don’t well understand how this is to happen, I try +to believe it as much as I can, and I shall not fail to do everything +in my power.” At twenty-eight he was called to the bar, +and had every step in life yet to make. His means were straitened, +and he lived upon the contributions of his friends. For years +he studied and waited. Still no business came. He stinted +himself in recreation, in clothes, and even in the necessaries of life; +struggling on indefatigably through all. Writing home, he “confessed +that he hardly knew how he should be able to struggle on till he had +fair time and opportunity to establish himself.” After three +years’ waiting, still without success, he wrote to his friends +that rather than be a burden upon them longer, he was willing to give +the matter up and return to Cambridge, “where he was sure of support +and some profit.” The friends at home sent him another small +remittance, and he persevered. Business gradually came in. +Acquitting himself creditably in small matters, he was at length entrusted +with cases of greater importance. He was a man who never missed +an opportunity, nor allowed a legitimate chance of improvement to escape +him. His unflinching industry soon began to tell upon his fortunes; +a few more years and he was not only enabled to do without assistance +from home, but he was in a position to pay back with interest the debts +which he had incurred. The clouds had dispersed, and the after +career of Henry Bickersteth was one of honour, of emolument, and of +distinguished fame. He ended his career as Master of the Rolls, +sitting in the House of Peers as Baron Langdale. His life affords +only another illustration of the power of patience, perseverance, and +conscientious working, in elevating the character of the individual, +and crowning his labours with the most complete success.</p> +<p>Such are a few of the distinguished men who have honourably worked +their way to the highest position, and won the richest rewards of their +profession, by the diligent exercise of qualities in many respects of +an ordinary character, but made potent by the force of application and +industry.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<h2>CHAPTER VIII—ENERGY AND COURAGE</h2> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<p>“A coeur vaillant rien d’impossible.”—Jacques +Coeur.</p> +<p>“Den Muthigen gehört die Welt.”—German Proverb.</p> +<p>“In every work that he began . . . he did it with all his heart, +and prospered.”—II. Chron. XXXI. 21.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>There is a famous speech recorded of an old Norseman, thoroughly +characteristic of the Teuton. “I believe neither in idols +nor demons,” said he, “I put my sole trust in my own strength +of body and soul.” The ancient crest of a pickaxe with the +motto of “Either I will find a way or make one,” was an +expression of the same sturdy independence which to this day distinguishes +the descendants of the Northmen. Indeed nothing could be more +characteristic of the Scandinavian mythology, than that it had a god +with a hammer. A man’s character is seen in small matters; +and from even so slight a test as the mode in which a man wields a hammer, +his energy may in some measure be inferred. Thus an eminent Frenchman +hit off in a single phrase the characteristic quality of the inhabitants +of a particular district, in which a friend of his proposed to settle +and buy land. “Beware,” said he, “of making +a purchase there; I know the men of that department; the pupils who +come from it to our veterinary school at Paris <i>do nor strike hard</i> +<i>upon the anvil</i>; they want energy; and you will not get a satisfactory +return on any capital you may invest there.” A fine and +just appreciation of character, indicating the thoughtful observer; +and strikingly illustrative of the fact that it is the energy of the +individual men that gives strength to a State, and confers a value even +upon the very soil which they cultivate. As the French proverb +has it: “Tant vaut l’homme, tant vaut sa terre.”</p> +<p>The cultivation of this quality is of the greatest importance; resolute +determination in the pursuit of worthy objects being the foundation +of all true greatness of character. Energy enables a man to force +his way through irksome drudgery and dry details, and carries him onward +and upward in every station in life. It accomplishes more than +genius, with not one-half the disappointment and peril. It is +not eminent talent that is required to ensure success in any pursuit, +so much as purpose,—not merely the power to achieve, but the will +to labour energetically and perseveringly. Hence energy of will +may be defined to be the very central power of character in a man—in +a word, it is the Man himself. It gives impulse to his every action, +and soul to every effort. True hope is based on it,—and +it is hope that gives the real perfume to life. There is a fine +heraldic motto on a broken helmet in Battle Abbey, “L’espoir +est ma force,” which might be the motto of every man’s life. +“Woe unto him that is fainthearted,” says the son of Sirach. +There is, indeed, no blessing equal to the possession of a stout heart. +Even if a man fail in his efforts, it will be a satisfaction to him +to enjoy the consciousness of having done his best. In humble +life nothing can be more cheering and beautiful than to see a man combating +suffering by patience, triumphing in his integrity, and who, when his +feet are bleeding and his limbs failing him, still walks upon his courage.</p> +<p>Mere wishes and desires but engender a sort of green sickness in +young minds, unless they are promptly embodied in act and deed. +It will not avail merely to wait as so many do, “until Blucher +comes up,” but they must struggle on and persevere in the mean +time, as Wellington did. The good purpose once formed must be +carried out with alacrity and without swerving. In most conditions +of life, drudgery and toil are to be cheerfully endured as the best +and most wholesome discipline. “In life,” said Ary +Scheffer, “nothing bears fruit except by labour of mind or body. +To strive and still strive—such is life; and in this respect mine +is fulfilled; but I dare to say, with just pride, that nothing has ever +shaken my courage. With a strong soul, and a noble aim, one can +do what one wills, morally speaking.”</p> +<p>Hugh Miller said the only school in which he was properly taught +was “that world-wide school in which toil and hardship are the +severe but noble teachers.” He who allows his application +to falter, or shirks his work on frivolous pretexts, is on the sure +road to ultimate failure. Let any task be undertaken as a thing +not possible to be evaded, and it will soon come to be performed with +alacrity and cheerfulness. Charles IX. of Sweden was a firm believer +in the power of will, even in youth. Laying his hand on the head +of his youngest son when engaged on a difficult task, he exclaimed, +“He <i>shall</i> do it! he <i>shall</i> do it!” The +habit of application becomes easy in time, like every other habit. +Thus persons with comparatively moderate powers will accomplish much, +if they apply themselves wholly and indefatigably to one thing at a +time. Fowell Buxton placed his confidence in ordinary means and +extraordinary application; realizing the scriptural injunction, “Whatsoever +thy hand findeth to do, do it with all thy might;” and he attributed +his own success in life to his practice of “being a whole man +to one thing at a time.”</p> +<p>Nothing that is of real worth can be achieved without courageous +working. Man owes his growth chiefly to that active striving of +the will, that encounter with difficulty, which we call effort; and +it is astonishing to find how often results apparently impracticable +are thus made possible. An intense anticipation itself transforms +possibility into reality; our desires being often but the precursors +of the things which we are capable of performing. On the contrary, +the timid and hesitating find everything impossible, chiefly because +it seems so. It is related of a young French officer, that he +used to walk about his apartment exclaiming, “I <i>will</i> be +Marshal of France and a great general.” His ardent desire +was the presentiment of his success; for the young officer did become +a distinguished commander, and he died a Marshal of France.</p> +<p>Mr. Walker, author of the ‘Original,’ had so great a +faith in the power of will, that he says on one occasion he <i>determined</i> +to be well, and he was so. This may answer once; but, though safer +to follow than many prescriptions, it will not always succeed. +The power of mind over body is no doubt great, but it may be strained +until the physical power breaks down altogether. It is related +of Muley Moluc, the Moorish leader, that, when lying ill, almost worn +out by an incurable disease, a battle took place between his troops +and the Portuguese; when, starting from his litter at the great crisis +of the fight, he rallied his army, led them to victory, and instantly +afterwards sank exhausted and expired.</p> +<p>It is will,—force of purpose,—that enables a man to do +or be whatever he sets his mind on being or doing. A holy man +was accustomed to say, “Whatever you wish, that you are: for such +is the force of our will, joined to the Divine, that whatever we wish +to be, seriously, and with a true intention, that we become. No +one ardently wishes to be submissive, patient, modest, or liberal, who +does not become what he wishes.” The story is told of a +working carpenter, who was observed one day planing a magistrate’s +bench which he was repairing, with more than usual carefulness; and +when asked the reason, he replied, “Because I wish to make it +easy against the time when I come to sit upon it myself.” +And singularly enough, the man actually lived to sit upon that very +bench as a magistrate.</p> +<p>Whatever theoretical conclusions logicians may have formed as to +the freedom of the will, each individual feels that practically he is +free to choose between good and evil—that he is not as a mere +straw thrown upon the water to mark the direction of the current, but +that he has within him the power of a strong swimmer, and is capable +of striking out for himself, of buffeting with the waves, and directing +to a great extent his own independent course. There is no absolute +constraint upon our volitions, and we feel and know that we are not +bound, as by a spell, with reference to our actions. It would +paralyze all desire of excellence were we to think otherwise. +The entire business and conduct of life, with its domestic rules, its +social arrangements, and its public institutions, proceed upon the practical +conviction that the will is free. Without this where would be +responsibility?—and what the advantage of teaching, advising, +preaching, reproof, and correction? What were the use of laws, +were it not the universal belief, as it is the universal fact, that +men obey them or not, very much as they individually determine? +In every moment of our life, conscience is proclaiming that our will +is free. It is the only thing that is wholly ours, and it rests +solely with ourselves individually, whether we give it the right or +the wrong direction. Our habits or our temptations are not our +masters, but we of them. Even in yielding, conscience tells us +we might resist; and that were we determined to master them, there would +not be required for that purpose a stronger resolution than we know +ourselves to be capable of exercising.</p> +<p>“You are now at the age,” said Lamennais once, addressing +a gay youth, “at which a decision must be formed by you; a little +later, and you may have to groan within the tomb which you yourself +have dug, without the power of rolling away the stone. That which +the easiest becomes a habit in us is the will. Learn then to will +strongly and decisively; thus fix your floating life, and leave it no +longer to be carried hither and thither, like a withered leaf, by every +wind that blows.”</p> +<p>Buxton held the conviction that a young man might be very much what +he pleased, provided he formed a strong resolution and held to it. +Writing to one of his sons, he said to him, “You are now at that +period of life, in which you must make a turn to the right or the left. +You must now give proofs of principle, determination, and strength of +mind; or you must sink into idleness, and acquire the habits and character +of a desultory, ineffective young man; and if once you fall to that +point, you will find it no easy matter to rise again. I am sure +that a young man may be very much what he pleases. In my own case +it was so. . . . Much of my happiness, and all my prosperity in life, +have resulted from the change I made at your age. If you seriously +resolve to be energetic and industrious, depend upon it that you will +for your whole life have reason to rejoice that you were wise enough +to form and to act upon that determination.” As will, considered +without regard to direction, is simply constancy, firmness, perseverance, +it will be obvious that everything depends upon right direction and +motives. Directed towards the enjoyment of the senses, the strong +will may be a demon, and the intellect merely its debased slave; but +directed towards good, the strong will is a king, and the intellect +the minister of man’s highest well-being.</p> +<p>“Where there is a will there is a way,” is an old and +true saying. He who resolves upon doing a thing, by that very +resolution often scales the barriers to it, and secures its achievement. +To think we are able, is almost to be so—to determine upon attainment +is frequently attainment itself. Thus, earnest resolution has +often seemed to have about it almost a savour of omnipotence. +The strength of Suwarrow’s character lay in his power of willing, +and, like most resolute persons, he preached it up as a system. +“You can only half will,” he would say to people who failed. +Like Richelieu and Napoleon, he would have the word “impossible” +banished from the dictionary. “I don’t know,” +“I can’t,” and “impossible,” were words +which he detested above all others. “Learn! Do! +Try!” he would exclaim. His biographer has said of him, +that he furnished a remarkable illustration of what may be effected +by the energetic development and exercise of faculties, the germs of +which at least are in every human heart.</p> +<p>One of Napoleon’s favourite maxims was, “The truest wisdom +is a resolute determination.” His life, beyond most others, +vividly showed what a powerful and unscrupulous will could accomplish. +He threw his whole force of body and mind direct upon his work. +Imbecile rulers and the nations they governed went down before him in +succession. He was told that the Alps stood in the way of his +armies—“There shall be no Alps,” he said, and the +road across the Simplon was constructed, through a district formerly +almost inaccessible. “Impossible,” said he, “is +a word only to be found in the dictionary of fools.” He +was a man who toiled terribly; sometimes employing and exhausting four +secretaries at a time. He spared no one, not even himself. +His influence inspired other men, and put a new life into them. +“I made my generals out of mud,” he said. But all +was of no avail; for Napoleon’s intense selfishness was his ruin, +and the ruin of France, which he left a prey to anarchy. His life +taught the lesson that power, however energetically wielded, without +beneficence, is fatal to its possessor and its subjects; and that knowledge, +or knowingness, without goodness, is but the incarnate principle of +Evil.</p> +<p>Our own Wellington was a far greater man. Not less resolute, +firm, and persistent, but more self-denying, conscientious, and truly +patriotic. Napoleon’s aim was “Glory;” Wellington’s +watchword, like Nelson’s, was “Duty.” The former +word, it is said, does not once occur in his despatches; the latter +often, but never accompanied by any high-sounding professions. +The greatest difficulties could neither embarrass nor intimidate Wellington; +his energy invariably rising in proportion to the obstacles to be surmounted. +The patience, the firmness, the resolution, with which he bore through +the maddening vexations and gigantic difficulties of the Peninsular +campaigns, is, perhaps, one of the sublimest things to be found in history. +In Spain, Wellington not only exhibited the genius of the general, but +the comprehensive wisdom of the statesman. Though his natural +temper was irritable in the extreme, his high sense of duty enabled +him to restrain it; and to those about him his patience seemed absolutely +inexhaustible. His great character stands untarnished by ambition, +by avarice, or any low passion. Though a man of powerful individuality, +he yet displayed a great variety of endowment. The equal of Napoleon +in generalship, he was as prompt, vigorous, and daring as Clive; as +wise a statesman as Cromwell; and as pure and high-minded as Washington. +The great Wellington left behind him an enduring reputation, founded +on toilsome campaigns won by skilful combination, by fortitude which +nothing could exhaust, by sublime daring, and perhaps by still sublimer +patience.</p> +<p>Energy usually displays itself in promptitude and decision. +When Ledyard the traveller was asked by the African Association when +he would be ready to set out for Africa, he immediately answered, “To-morrow +morning.” Blucher’s promptitude obtained for him the +cognomen of “Marshal Forwards” throughout the Prussian army. +When John Jervis, afterwards Earl St. Vincent, was asked when he would +be ready to join his ship, he replied, “Directly.” +And when Sir Colin Campbell, appointed to the command of the Indian +army, was asked when he could set out, his answer was, “To-morrow,”—an +earnest of his subsequent success. For it is rapid decision, and +a similar promptitude in action, such as taking instant advantage of +an enemy’s mistakes, that so often wins battles. “At +Arcola,” said Napoleon, “I won the battle with twenty-five +horsemen. I seized a moment of lassitude, gave every man a trumpet, +and gained the day with this handful. Two armies are two bodies +which meet and endeavour to frighten each other: a moment of panic occurs, +and <i>that moment</i> must be turned to advantage.” “Every +moment lost,” said he at another time, “gives an opportunity +for misfortune;” and he declared that he beat the Austrians because +they never knew the value of time: while they dawdled, he overthrew +them.</p> +<p>India has, during the last century, been a great field for the display +of British energy. From Clive to Havelock and Clyde there is a +long and honourable roll of distinguished names in Indian legislation +and warfare,—such as Wellesley, Metcalfe, Outram, Edwardes, and +the Lawrences. Another great but sullied name is that of Warren +Hastings—a man of dauntless will and indefatigable industry. +His family was ancient and illustrious; but their vicissitudes of fortune +and ill-requited loyalty in the cause of the Stuarts, brought them to +poverty, and the family estate at Daylesford, of which they had been +lords of the manor for hundreds of years, at length passed from their +hands. The last Hastings of Daylesford had, however, presented +the parish living to his second son; and it was in his house, many years +later, that Warren Hastings, his grandson, was born. The boy learnt +his letters at the village school, on the same bench with the children +of the peasantry. He played in the fields which his fathers had +owned; and what the loyal and brave Hastings of Daylesford <i>had</i> +been, was ever in the boy’s thoughts. His young ambition +was fired, and it is said that one summer’s day, when only seven +years old, as he laid him down on the bank of the stream which flowed +through the domain, he formed in his mind the resolution that he would +yet recover possession of the family lands. It was the romantic +vision of a boy; yet he lived to realize it. The dream became +a passion, rooted in his very life; and he pursued his determination +through youth up to manhood, with that calm but indomitable force of +will which was the most striking peculiarity of his character. +The orphan boy became one of the most powerful men of his time; he retrieved +the fortunes of his line; bought back the old estate, and rebuilt the +family mansion. “When, under a tropical sun,” says +Macaulay, “he ruled fifty millions of Asiatics, his hopes, amidst +all the cares of war, finance, and legislation, still pointed to Daylesford. +And when his long public life, so singularly chequered with good and +evil, with glory and obloquy, had at length closed for ever, it was +to Daylesford that he retired to die.”</p> +<p>Sir Charles Napier was another Indian leader of extraordinary courage +and determination. He once said of the difficulties with which +he was surrounded in one of his campaigns, “They only make my +feet go deeper into the ground.” His battle of Meeanee was +one of the most extraordinary feats in history. With 2000 men, +of whom only 400 were Europeans, he encountered an army of 35,000 hardy +and well-armed Beloochees. It was an act, apparently, of the most +daring temerity, but the general had faith in himself and in his men. +He charged the Belooch centre up a high bank which formed their rampart +in front, and for three mortal hours the battle raged. Each man +of that small force, inspired by the chief, became for the time a hero. +The Beloochees, though twenty to one, were driven back, but with their +faces to the foe. It is this sort of pluck, tenacity, and determined +perseverance which wins soldiers’ battles, and, indeed, every +battle. It is the one neck nearer that wins the race and shows +the blood; it is the one march more that wins the campaign; the five +minutes’ more persistent courage that wins the fight. Though +your force be less than another’s, you equal and outmaster your +opponent if you continue it longer and concentrate it more. The +reply of the Spartan father, who said to his son, when complaining that +his sword was too short, “Add a step to it,” is applicable +to everything in life.</p> +<p>Napier took the right method of inspiring his men with his own heroic +spirit. He worked as hard as any private in the ranks. “The +great art of commanding,” he said, “is to take a fair share +of the work. The man who leads an army cannot succeed unless his +whole mind is thrown into his work. The more trouble, the more +labour must be given; the more danger, the more pluck must be shown, +till all is overpowered.” A young officer who accompanied +him in his campaign in the Cutchee Hills, once said, “When I see +that old man incessantly on his horse, how can I be idle who am young +and strong? I would go into a loaded cannon’s mouth if he +ordered me.” This remark, when repeated to Napier, he said +was ample reward for his toils. The anecdote of his interview +with the Indian juggler strikingly illustrates his cool courage as well +as his remarkable simplicity and honesty of character. On one +occasion, after the Indian battles, a famous juggler visited the camp +and performed his feats before the General, his family, and staff. +Among other performances, this man cut in two with a stroke of his sword +a lime or lemon placed in the hand of his assistant. Napier thought +there was some collusion between the juggler and his retainer. +To divide by a sweep of the sword on a man’s hand so small an +object without touching the flesh he believed to be impossible, though +a similar incident is related by Scott in his romance of the ‘Talisman.’ +To determine the point, the General offered his own hand for the experiment, +and he stretched out his right arm. The juggler looked attentively +at the hand, and said he would not make the trial. “I thought +I would find you out!” exclaimed Napier. “But stop,” +added the other, “let me see your left hand.” The +left hand was submitted, and the man then said firmly, “If you +will hold your arm steady I will perform the feat.” “But +why the left hand and not the right?” “Because the +right hand is hollow in the centre, and there is a risk of cutting off +the thumb; the left is high, and the danger will be less.” +Napier was startled. “I got frightened,” he said; +“I saw it was an actual feat of delicate swordsmanship, and if +I had not abused the man as I did before my staff, and challenged him +to the trial, I honestly acknowledge I would have retired from the encounter. +However, I put the lime on my hand, and held out my arm steadily. +The juggler balanced himself, and, with a swift stroke cut the lime +in two pieces. I felt the edge of the sword on my hand as if a +cold thread had been drawn across it. So much (he added) for the +brave swordsmen of India, whom our fine fellows defeated at Meeanee.”</p> +<p>The recent terrible struggle in India has served to bring out, perhaps +more prominently than any previous event in our history, the determined +energy and self-reliance of the national character. Although English +officialism may often drift stupidly into gigantic blunders, the men +of the nation generally contrive to work their way out of them with +a heroism almost approaching the sublime. In May, 1857, when the +revolt burst upon India like a thunder-clap, the British forces had +been allowed to dwindle to their extreme minimum, and were scattered +over a wide extent of country, many of them in remote cantonments. +The Bengal regiments, one after another, rose against their officers, +broke away, and rushed to Delhi. Province after province was lapped +in mutiny and rebellion; and the cry for help rose from east to west. +Everywhere the English stood at bay in small detachments, beleaguered +and surrounded, apparently incapable of resistance. Their discomfiture +seemed so complete, and the utter ruin of the British cause in India +so certain, that it might be said of them then, as it had been said +before, “These English never know when they are beaten.” +According to rule, they ought then and there to have succumbed to inevitable +fate.</p> +<p>While the issue of the mutiny still appeared uncertain, Holkar, one +of the native princes, consulted his astrologer for information. +The reply was, “If all the Europeans save one are slain, that +one will remain to fight and reconquer.” In their very darkest +moment—even where, as at Lucknow, a mere handful of British soldiers, +civilians, and women, held out amidst a city and province in arms against +them—there was no word of despair, no thought of surrender. +Though cut off from all communication with their friends for months, +and not knowing whether India was lost or held, they never ceased to +have perfect faith in the courage and devotedness of their countrymen. +They knew that while a body of men of English race held together in +India, they would not be left unheeded to perish. They never dreamt +of any other issue but retrieval of their misfortune and ultimate triumph; +and if the worst came to the worst, they could but fall at their post, +and die in the performance of their duty. Need we remind the reader +of the names of Havelock, Inglis, Neill, and Outram—men of truly +heroic mould—of each of whom it might with truth be said that +he had the heart of a chevalier, the soul of a believer, and the temperament +of a martyr. Montalembert has said of them that “they do +honour to the human race.” But throughout that terrible +trial almost all proved equally great—women, civilians and soldiers—from +the general down through all grades to the private and bugleman. +The men were not picked: they belonged to the same ordinary people whom +we daily meet at home—in the streets, in workshops, in the fields, +at clubs; yet when sudden disaster fell upon them, each and all displayed +a wealth of personal resources and energy, and became as it were individually +heroic. “Not one of them,” says Montalembert, “shrank +or trembled—all, military and civilians, young and old, generals +and soldiers, resisted, fought, and perished with a coolness and intrepidity +which never faltered. It is in this circumstance that shines out +the immense value of public education, which invites the Englishman +from his youth to make use of his strength and his liberty, to associate, +resist, fear nothing, to be astonished at nothing, and to save himself, +by his own sole exertions, from every sore strait in life.”</p> +<p>It has been said that Delhi was taken and India saved by the personal +character of Sir John Lawrence. The very name of “Lawrence” +represented power in the North-West Provinces. His standard of +duty, zeal, and personal effort, was of the highest; and every man who +served under him seemed to be inspired by his spirit. It was declared +of him that his character alone was worth an army. The same might +be said of his brother Sir Henry, who organised the Punjaub force that +took so prominent a part in the capture of Delhi. Both brothers +inspired those who were about them with perfect love and confidence. +Both possessed that quality of tenderness, which is one of the true +elements of the heroic character. Both lived amongst the people, +and powerfully influenced them for good. Above all as Col. Edwardes +says, “they drew models on young fellows’ minds, which they +went forth and copied in their several administrations: they sketched +a <i>faith</i>, and begot a <i>school</i>, which are both living things +at this day.” Sir John Lawrence had by his side such men +as Montgomery, Nicholson, Cotton, and Edwardes, as prompt, decisive, +and high-souled as himself. John Nicholson was one of the finest, +manliest, and noblest of men—“every inch a hakim,” +the natives said of him—“a tower of strength,” as +he was characterised by Lord Dalhousie. In whatever capacity he +acted he was great, because he acted with his whole strength and soul. +A brotherhood of fakeers—borne away by their enthusiastic admiration +of the man—even began the worship of Nikkil Seyn: he had some +of them punished for their folly, but they continued their worship nevertheless. +Of his sustained energy and persistency an illustration may be cited +in his pursuit of the 55th Sepoy mutineers, when he was in the saddle +for twenty consecutive hours, and travelled more than seventy miles. +When the enemy set up their standard at Delhi, Lawrence and Montgomery, +relying on the support of the people of the Punjaub, and compelling +their admiration and confidence, strained every nerve to keep their +own province in perfect order, whilst they hurled every available soldier, +European and Sikh, against that city. Sir John wrote to the commander-in-chief +to “hang on to the rebels’ noses before Delhi,” while +the troops pressed on by forced marches under Nicholson, “the +tramp of whose war-horse might be heard miles off,” as was afterwards +said of him by a rough Sikh who wept over his grave.</p> +<p>The siege and storming of Delhi was the most illustrious event which +occurred in the course of that gigantic struggle, although the leaguer +of Lucknow, during which the merest skeleton of a British regiment—the +32nd—held out, under the heroic Inglis, for six months against +two hundred thousand armed enemies, has perhaps excited more intense +interest. At Delhi, too, the British were really the besieged, +though ostensibly the besiegers; they were a mere handful of men “in +the open”—not more than 3,700 bayonets, European and native—and +they were assailed from day to day by an army of rebels numbering at +one time as many as 75,000 men, trained to European discipline by English +officers, and supplied with all but exhaustless munitions of war. +The heroic little band sat down before the city under the burning rays +of a tropical sun. Death, wounds, and fever failed to turn them +from their purpose. Thirty times they were attacked by overwhelming +numbers, and thirty times did they drive back the enemy behind their +defences. As Captain Hodson—himself one of the bravest there—has +said, “I venture to aver that no other nation in the world would +have remained here, or avoided defeat if they had attempted to do so.” +Never for an instant did these heroes falter at their work; with sublime +endurance they held on, fought on, and never relaxed until, dashing +through the “imminent deadly breach,” the place was won, +and the British flag was again unfurled on the walls of Delhi. +All were great—privates, officers, and generals. Common +soldiers who had been inured to a life of hardship, and young officers +who had been nursed in luxurious homes, alike proved their manhood, +and emerged from that terrible trial with equal honour. The native +strength and soundness of the English race, and of manly English training +and discipline, were never more powerfully exhibited; and it was there +emphatically proved that the Men of England are, after all, its greatest +products. A terrible price was paid for this great chapter in +our history, but if those who survive, and those who come after, profit +by the lesson and example, it may not have been purchased at too great +a cost.</p> +<p>But not less energy and courage have been displayed in India and +the East by men of various nations, in other lines of action more peaceful +and beneficent than that of war. And while the heroes of the sword +are remembered, the heroes of the gospel ought not to be forgotten. +From Xavier to Martyn and Williams, there has been a succession of illustrious +missionary labourers, working in a spirit of sublime self-sacrifice, +without any thought of worldly honour, inspired solely by the hope of +seeking out and rescuing the lost and fallen of their race. Borne +up by invincible courage and never-failing patience, these men have +endured privations, braved dangers, walked through pestilence, and borne +all toils, fatigues, and sufferings, yet held on their way rejoicing, +glorying even in martyrdom itself. Of these one of the first and +most illustrious was Francis Xavier. Born of noble lineage, and +with pleasure, power, and honour within his reach, he proved by his +life that there are higher objects in the world than rank, and nobler +aspirations than the accumulation of wealth. He was a true gentleman +in manners and sentiment; brave, honourable, generous; easily led, yet +capable of leading; easily persuaded, yet himself persuasive; a most +patient, resolute and energetic man. At the age of twenty-two +he was earning his living as a public teacher of philosophy at the University +of Paris. There Xavier became the intimate friend and associate +of Loyola, and shortly afterwards he conducted the pilgrimage of the +first little band of proselytes to Rome.</p> +<p>When John III. of Portugal resolved to plant Christianity in the +Indian territories subject to his influence, Bobadilla was first selected +as his missionary; but being disabled by illness, it was found necessary +to make another selection, and Xavier was chosen. Repairing his +tattered cassock, and with no other baggage than his breviary, he at +once started for Lisbon and embarked for the East. The ship in +which he set sail for Goa had the Governor on board, with a reinforcement +of a thousand men for the garrison of the place. Though a cabin +was placed at his disposal, Xavier slept on deck throughout the voyage +with his head on a coil of ropes, messing with the sailors. By +ministering to their wants, inventing innocent sports for their amusement, +and attending them in their sickness, he wholly won their hearts, and +they regarded him with veneration.</p> +<p>Arrived at Goa, Xavier was shocked at the depravity of the people, +settlers as well as natives; for the former had imported the vices without +the restraints of civilization, and the latter had only been too apt +to imitate their bad example. Passing along the streets of the +city, sounding his handbell as he went, he implored the people to send +him their children to be instructed. He shortly succeeded in collecting +a large number of scholars, whom he carefully taught day by day, at +the same time visiting the sick, the lepers, and the wretched of all +classes, with the object of assuaging their miseries, and bringing them +to the Truth. No cry of human suffering which reached him was +disregarded. Hearing of the degradation and misery of the pearl +fishers of Manaar, he set out to visit them, and his bell again rang +out the invitation of mercy. He baptized and he taught, but the +latter he could only do through interpreters. His most eloquent +teaching was his ministration to the wants and the sufferings of the +wretched.</p> +<p>On he went, his hand-bell sounding along the coast of Comorin, among +the towns and villages, the temples and the bazaars, summoning the natives +to gather about him and be instructed. He had translations made +of the Catechism, the Apostles’ Creed, the Commandments, the Lord’s +Prayer, and some of the devotional offices of the Church. Committing +these to memory in their own tongue he recited them to the children, +until they had them by heart; after which he sent them forth to teach +the words to their parents and neighbours. At Cape Comorin, he +appointed thirty teachers, who under himself presided over thirty Christian +Churches, though the Churches were but humble, in most cases consisting +only of a cottage surmounted by a cross. Thence he passed to Travancore, +sounding his way from village to village, baptizing until his hands +dropped with weariness, and repeating his formulas until his voice became +almost inaudible. According to his own account, the success of +his mission surpassed his highest expectations. His pure, earnest, +and beautiful life, and the irresistible eloquence of his deeds, made +converts wherever he went; and by sheer force of sympathy, those who +saw him and listened to him insensibly caught a portion of his ardour.</p> +<p>Burdened with the thought that “the harvest is great and the +labourers are few,” Xavier next sailed to Malacca and Japan, where +he found himself amongst entirely new races speaking other tongues. +The most that he could do here was to weep and pray, to smooth the pillow +and watch by the sick-bed, sometimes soaking the sleeve of his surplice +in water, from which to squeeze out a few drops and baptize the dying. +Hoping all things, and fearing nothing, this valiant soldier of the +truth was borne onward throughout by faith and energy. “Whatever +form of death or torture,” said he, “awaits me, I am ready +to suffer it ten thousand times for the salvation of a single soul.” +He battled with hunger, thirst, privations and dangers of all kinds, +still pursuing his mission of love, unresting and unwearying. +At length, after eleven years’ labour, this great good man, while +striving to find a way into China, was stricken with fever in the Island +of Sanchian, and there received his crown of glory. A hero of +nobler mould, more pure, self-denying, and courageous, has probably +never trod this earth.</p> +<p>Other missionaries have followed Xavier in the same field of work, +such as Schwartz, Carey, and Marshman in India; Gutzlaff and Morrison +in China; Williams in the South Seas; Campbell, Moffatt and Livingstone +in Africa. John Williams, the martyr of Erromanga, was originally +apprenticed to a furnishing ironmonger. Though considered a dull +boy, he was handy at his trade, in which he acquired so much skill that +his master usually entrusted him with any blacksmiths work that required +the exercise of more than ordinary care. He was also fond of bell-hanging +and other employments which took him away from the shop. A casual +sermon which he heard gave his mind a serious bias, and he became a +Sunday-school teacher. The cause of missions having been brought +under his notice at some of his society’s meetings, he determined +to devote himself to this work. His services were accepted by +the London Missionary Society; and his master allowed him to leave the +ironmonger’s shop before the expiry of his indentures. The +islands of the Pacific Ocean were the principal scene of his labours—more +particularly Huahine in Tahiti, Raiatea, and Rarotonga. Like the +Apostles he worked with his hands,—at blacksmith work, gardening, +shipbuilding; and he endeavoured to teach the islanders the art of civilised +life, at the same time that he instructed them in the truths of religion. +It was in the course of his indefatigable labours that he was massacred +by savages on the shore of Erromanga—none worthier than he to +wear the martyr’s crown.</p> +<p>The career of Dr. Livingstone is one of the most interesting of all. +He has told the story of his life in that modest and unassuming manner +which is so characteristic of the man himself. His ancestors were +poor but honest Highlanders, and it is related of one of them, renowned +in his district for wisdom and prudence, that when on his death-bed +he called his children round him and left them these words, the only +legacy he had to bequeath—“In my life-time,” said +he, “I have searched most carefully through all the traditions +I could find of our family, and I never could discover that there was +a dishonest man among our forefathers: if, therefore, any of you or +any of your children should take to dishonest ways, it will not be because +it runs in our blood; it does not belong to you: I leave this precept +with you—Be honest.” At the age of ten Livingstone +was sent to work in a cotton factory near Glasgow as a “piecer.” +With part of his first week’s wages he bought a Latin grammar, +and began to learn that language, pursuing the study for years at a +night school. He would sit up conning his lessons till twelve +or later, when not sent to bed by his mother, for he had to be up and +at work in the factory every morning by six. In this way he plodded +through Virgil and Horace, also reading extensively all books, excepting +novels, that came in his way, but more especially scientific works and +books of travels. He occupied his spare hours, which were but +few, in the pursuit of botany, scouring the neighbourhood to collect +plants. He even carried on his reading amidst the roar of the +factory machinery, so placing the book upon the spinning jenny which +he worked that he could catch sentence after sentence as he passed it. +In this way the persevering youth acquired much useful knowledge; and +as he grew older, the desire possessed him of becoming a missionary +to the heathen. With this object he set himself to obtain a medical +education, in order the better to be qualified for the work. He +accordingly economised his earnings, and saved as much money as enabled +him to support himself while attending the Medical and Greek classes, +as well as the Divinity Lectures, at Glasgow, for several winters, working +as a cotton spinner during the remainder of each year. He thus +supported himself, during his college career, entirely by his own earnings +as a factory workman, never having received a farthing of help from +any other source. “Looking back now,” he honestly +says, “at that life of toil, I cannot but feel thankful that it +formed such a material part of my early education; and, were it possible, +I should like to begin life over again in the same lowly style, and +to pass through the same hardy training.” At length he finished +his medical curriculum, wrote his Latin thesis, passed his examinations, +and was admitted a licentiate of the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons. +At first he thought of going to China, but the war then waging with +that country prevented his following out the idea; and having offered +his services to the London Missionary Society, he was by them sent out +to Africa, which he reached in 1840. He had intended to proceed +to China by his own efforts; and he says the only pang he had in going +to Africa at the charge of the London Missionary Society was, because +“it was not quite agreeable to one accustomed to work his own +way to become, in a manner, dependent upon others.” Arrived +in Africa he set to work with great zeal. He could not brook the +idea of merely entering upon the labours of others, but cut out a large +sphere of independent work, preparing himself for it by undertaking +manual labour in building and other handicraft employment, in addition +to teaching, which, he says, “made me generally as much exhausted +and unfit for study in the evenings as ever I had been when a cotton-spinner.” +Whilst labouring amongst the Bechuanas, he dug canals, built houses, +cultivated fields, reared cattle, and taught the natives to work as +well as worship. When he first started with a party of them on +foot upon a long journey, he overheard their observations upon his appearance +and powers—“He is not strong,” said they; “he +is quite slim, and only appears stout because he puts himself into those +bags (trowsers): he will soon knock up.” This caused the +missionary’s Highland blood to rise, and made him despise the +fatigue of keeping them all at the top of their speed for days together, +until he heard them expressing proper opinions of his pedestrian powers. +What he did in Africa, and how he worked, may be learnt from his own +‘Missionary Travels,’ one of the most fascinating books +of its kind that has ever been given to the public. One of his +last known acts is thoroughly characteristic of the man. The ‘Birkenhead’ +steam launch, which he took out with him to Africa, having proved a +failure, he sent home orders for the construction of another vessel +at an estimated cost of 2000<i>l</i>. This sum he proposed to +defray out of the means which he had set aside for his children arising +from the profits of his books of travels. “The children +must make it up themselves,” was in effect his expression in sending +home the order for the appropriation of the money.</p> +<p>The career of John Howard was throughout a striking illustration +of the same power of patient purpose. His sublime life proved +that even physical weakness could remove mountains in the pursuit of +an end recommended by duty. The idea of ameliorating the condition +of prisoners engrossed his whole thoughts and possessed him like a passion; +and no toil, nor danger, nor bodily suffering could turn him from that +great object of his life. Though a man of no genius and but moderate +talent, his heart was pure and his will was strong. Even in his +own time he achieved a remarkable degree of success; and his influence +did not die with him, for it has continued powerfully to affect not +only the legislation of England, but of all civilised nations, down +to the present hour.</p> +<p>Jonas Hanway was another of the many patient and persevering men +who have made England what it is—content simply to do with energy +the work they have been appointed to do, and go to their rest thankfully +when it is done -</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>“Leaving no memorial but a world<br />Made better by their +lives.”</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>He was born in 1712, at Portsmouth, where his father, a storekeeper +in the dockyard, being killed by an accident, he was left an orphan +at an early age. His mother removed with her children to London, +where she had them put to school, and struggled hard to bring them up +respectably. At seventeen Jonas was sent to Lisbon to be apprenticed +to a merchant, where his close attention to business, his punctuality, +and his strict honour and integrity, gained for him the respect and +esteem of all who knew him. Returning to London in 1743, he accepted +the offer of a partnership in an English mercantile house at St. Petersburg +engaged in the Caspian trade, then in its infancy. Hanway went +to Russia for the purpose of extending the business; and shortly after +his arrival at the capital he set out for Persia, with a caravan of +English bales of cloth making twenty carriage loads. At Astracan +he sailed for Astrabad, on the south-eastern shore of the Caspian; but +he had scarcely landed his bales, when an insurrection broke out, his +goods were seized, and though he afterwards recovered the principal +part of them, the fruits of his enterprise were in a great measure lost. +A plot was set on foot to seize himself and his party; so he took to +sea and, after encountering great perils, reached Ghilan in safety. +His escape on this occasion gave him the first idea of the words which +he afterwards adopted as the motto of his life—“<i>Never +Despair</i>.” He afterwards resided in St. Petersburg for +five years, carrying on a prosperous business. But a relative +having left him some property, and his own means being considerable, +he left Russia, and arrived in his native country in 1755. His +object in returning to England was, as he himself expressed it, “to +consult his own health (which was extremely delicate), and do as much +good to himself and others as he was able.” The rest of +his life was spent in deeds of active benevolence and usefulness to +his fellow men. He lived in a quiet style, in order that he might +employ a larger share of his income in works of benevolence. One +of the first public improvements to which he devoted himself was that +of the highways of the metropolis, in which he succeeded to a large +extent. The rumour of a French invasion being prevalent in 1755, +Mr. Hanway turned his attention to the best mode of keeping up the supply +of seamen. He summoned a meeting of merchants and shipowners at +the Royal Exchange, and there proposed to them to form themselves into +a society for fitting out landsmen volunteers and boys, to serve on +board the king’s ships. The proposal was received with enthusiasm: +a society was formed, and officers were appointed, Mr. Hanway directing +its entire operations. The result was the establishment in 1756 +of The Marine Society, an institution which has proved of much national +advantage, and is to this day of great and substantial utility. +Within six years from its formation, 5451 boys and 4787 landsmen volunteers +had been trained and fitted out by the society and added to the navy, +and to this day it is in active operation, about 600 poor boys, after +a careful education, being annually apprenticed as sailors, principally +in the merchant service.</p> +<p>Mr. Hanway devoted the other portions of his spare time to improving +or establishing important public institutions in the metropolis. +From an early period he took an active interest in the Foundling Hospital, +which had been started by Thomas Coram many years before, but which, +by encouraging parents to abandon their children to the charge of a +charity, was threatening to do more harm than good. He determined +to take steps to stem the evil, entering upon the work in the face of +the fashionable philanthropy of the time; but by holding to his purpose +he eventually succeeded in bringing the charity back to its proper objects; +and time and experience have proved that he was right. The Magdalen +Hospital was also established in a great measure through Mr. Hanway’s +exertions. But his most laborious and persevering efforts were +in behalf of the infant parish poor. The misery and neglect amidst +which the children of the parish poor then grew up, and the mortality +which prevailed amongst them, were frightful; but there was no fashionable +movement on foot to abate the suffering, as in the case of the foundlings. +So Jonas Hanway summoned his energies to the task. Alone and unassisted +he first ascertained by personal inquiry the extent of the evil. +He explored the dwellings of the poorest classes in London, and visited +the poorhouse sick wards, by which he ascertained the management in +detail of every workhouse in and near the metropolis. He next +made a journey into France and through Holland, visiting the houses +for the reception of the poor, and noting whatever he thought might +be adopted at home with advantage. He was thus employed for five +years; and on his return to England he published the results of his +observations. The consequence was that many of the workhouses +were reformed and improved. In 1761 he obtained an Act obliging +every London parish to keep an annual register of all the infants received, +discharged, and dead; and he took care that the Act should work, for +he himself superintended its working with indefatigable watchfulness. +He went about from workhouse to workhouse in the morning, and from one +member of parliament to another in the afternoon, for day after day, +and for year after year, enduring every rebuff, answering every objection, +and accommodating himself to every humour. At length, after a +perseverance hardly to be equalled, and after nearly ten years’ +labour, he obtained another Act, at his sole expense (7 Geo. III. c. +39), directing that all parish infants belonging to the parishes within +the bills of mortality should not be nursed in the workhouses, but be +sent to nurse a certain number of miles out of town, until they were +six years old, under the care of guardians to be elected triennially. +The poor people called this “the Act for keeping children alive;” +and the registers for the years which followed its passing, as compared +with those which preceded it, showed that thousands of lives had been +preserved through the judicious interference of this good and sensible +man.</p> +<p>Wherever a philanthropic work was to be done in London, be sure that +Jonas Hanway’s hand was in it. One of the first Acts for +the protection of chimney-sweepers’ boys was obtained through +his influence. A destructive fire at Montreal, and another at +Bridgetown, Barbadoes, afforded him the opportunity for raising a timely +subscription for the relief of the sufferers. His name appeared +in every list, and his disinterestedness and sincerity were universally +recognized. But he was not suffered to waste his little fortune +entirely in the service of others. Five leading citizens of London, +headed by Mr. Hoare, the banker, without Mr. Hanway’s knowledge, +waited on Lord Bute, then prime minister, in a body, and in the names +of their fellow-citizens requested that some notice might be taken of +this good man’s disinterested services to his country. The +result was, his appointment shortly after, as one of the commissioners +for victualling the navy.</p> +<p>Towards the close of his life Mr. Hanway’s health became very +feeble, and although he found it necessary to resign his office at the +Victualling Board, he could not be idle; but laboured at the establishment +of Sunday Schools,—a movement then in its infancy,—or in +relieving poor blacks, many of whom wandered destitute about the streets +of the metropolis,—or, in alleviating the sufferings of some neglected +and destitute class of society. Notwithstanding his familiarity +with misery in all its shapes, he was one of the most cheerful of beings; +and, but for his cheerfulness he could never, with so delicate a frame, +have got through so vast an amount of self-imposed work. He dreaded +nothing so much as inactivity. Though fragile, he was bold and +indefatigable; and his moral courage was of the first order. It +may be regarded as a trivial matter to mention that he was the first +who ventured to walk the streets of London with an umbrella over his +head. But let any modern London merchant venture to walk along +Cornhill in a peaked Chinese hat, and he will find it takes some degree +of moral courage to persevere in it. After carrying an umbrella +for thirty years, Mr. Hanway saw the article at length come into general +use.</p> +<p>Hanway was a man of strict honour, truthfulness, and integrity; and +every word he said might be relied upon. He had so great a respect, +amounting almost to a reverence, for the character of the honest merchant, +that it was the only subject upon which he was ever seduced into a eulogium. +He strictly practised what he professed, and both as a merchant, and +afterwards as a commissioner for victualling the navy, his conduct was +without stain. He would not accept the slightest favour of any +sort from a contractor; and when any present was sent to him whilst +at the Victualling Office, he would politely return it, with the intimation +that “he had made it a rule not to accept anything from any person +engaged with the office.” When he found his powers failing, +he prepared for death with as much cheerfulness as he would have prepared +himself for a journey into the country. He sent round and paid +all his tradesmen, took leave of his friends, arranged his affairs, +had his person neatly disposed of, and parted with life serenely and +peacefully in his 74th year. The property which he left did not +amount to two thousand pounds, and, as he had no relatives who wanted +it, he divided it amongst sundry orphans and poor persons whom he had +befriended during his lifetime. Such, in brief, was the beautiful +life of Jonas Hanway,—as honest, energetic, hard-working, and +true-hearted a man as ever lived.</p> +<p>The life of Granville Sharp is another striking example of the same +power of individual energy—a power which was afterwards transfused +into the noble band of workers in the cause of Slavery Abolition, prominent +among whom were Clarkson, Wilberforce, Buxton, and Brougham. But, +giants though these men were in this cause, Granville Sharp was the +first, and perhaps the greatest of them all, in point of perseverance, +energy, and intrepidity. He began life as apprentice to a linen-draper +on Tower Hill; but, leaving that business after his apprenticeship was +out, he next entered as a clerk in the Ordnance Office; and it was while +engaged in that humble occupation that he carried on in his spare hours +the work of Negro Emancipation. He was always, even when an apprentice, +ready to undertake any amount of volunteer labour where a useful purpose +was to be served. Thus, while learning the linen-drapery business, +a fellow apprentice who lodged in the same house, and was a Unitarian, +led him into frequent discussions on religious subjects. The Unitarian +youth insisted that Granville’s Trinitarian misconception of certain +passages of Scripture arose from his want of acquaintance with the Greek +tongue; on which he immediately set to work in his evening hours, and +shortly acquired an intimate knowledge of Greek. A similar controversy +with another fellow-apprentice, a Jew, as to the interpretation of the +prophecies, led him in like manner to undertake and overcome the difficulties +of Hebrew.</p> +<p>But the circumstance which gave the bias and direction to the main +labours of his life originated in his generosity and benevolence. +His brother William, a surgeon in Mincing Lane, gave gratuitous advice +to the poor, and amongst the numerous applicants for relief at his surgery +was a poor African named Jonathan Strong. It appeared that the +negro had been brutally treated by his master, a Barbadoes lawyer then +in London, and became lame, almost blind, and unable to work; on which +his owner, regarding him as of no further value as a chattel, cruelly +turned him adrift into the streets to starve. This poor man, a +mass of disease, supported himself by begging for a time, until he found +his way to William Sharp, who gave him some medicine, and shortly after +got him admitted to St. Bartholomew’s hospital, where he was cured. +On coming out of the hospital, the two brothers supported the negro +in order to keep him off the streets, but they had not the least suspicion +at the time that any one had a claim upon his person. They even +succeeded in obtaining a situation for Strong with an apothecary, in +whose service he remained for two years; and it was while he was attending +his mistress behind a hackney coach, that his former owner, the Barbadoes +lawyer, recognized him, and determined to recover possession of the +slave, again rendered valuable by the restoration of his health. +The lawyer employed two of the Lord Mayor’s officers to apprehend +Strong, and he was lodged in the Compter, until he could be shipped +off to the West Indies. The negro, bethinking him in his captivity +of the kind services which Granville Sharp had rendered him in his great +distress some years before, despatched a letter to him requesting his +help. Sharp had forgotten the name of Strong, but he sent a messenger +to make inquiries, who returned saying that the keepers denied having +any such person in their charge. His suspicions were roused, and +he went forthwith to the prison, and insisted upon seeing Jonathan Strong. +He was admitted, and recognized the poor negro, now in custody as a +recaptured slave. Mr. Sharp charged the master of the prison at +his own peril not to deliver up Strong to any person whatever, until +he had been carried before the Lord Mayor, to whom Sharp immediately +went, and obtained a summons against those persons who had seized and +imprisoned Strong without a warrant. The parties appeared before +the Lord Mayor accordingly, and it appeared from the proceedings that +Strong’s former master had already sold him to a new one, who +produced the bill of sale and claimed the negro as his property. +As no charge of offence was made against Strong, and as the Lord Mayor +was incompetent to deal with the legal question of Strong’s liberty +or otherwise, he discharged him, and the slave followed his benefactor +out of court, no one daring to touch him. The man’s owner +immediately gave Sharp notice of an action to recover possession of +his negro slave, of whom he declared he had been robbed.</p> +<p>About that time (1767), the personal liberty of the Englishman, though +cherished as a theory, was subject to grievous infringements, and was +almost daily violated. The impressment of men for the sea service +was constantly practised, and, besides the press-gangs, there were regular +bands of kidnappers employed in London and all the large towns of the +kingdom, to seize men for the East India Company’s service. +And when the men were not wanted for India, they were shipped off to +the planters in the American colonies. Negro slaves were openly +advertised for sale in the London and Liverpool newspapers. Rewards +were offered for recovering and securing fugitive slaves, and conveying +them down to certain specified ships in the river.</p> +<p>The position of the reputed slave in England was undefined and doubtful. +The judgments which had been given in the courts of law were fluctuating +and various, resting on no settled principle. Although it was +a popular belief that no slave could breathe in England, there were +legal men of eminence who expressed a directly contrary opinion. +The lawyers to whom Mr. Sharp resorted for advice, in defending himself +in the action raised against him in the case of Jonathan Strong, generally +concurred in this view, and he was further told by Jonathan Strong’s +owner, that the eminent Lord Chief Justice Mansfield, and all the leading +counsel, were decidedly of opinion that the slave, by coming into England, +did not become free, but might legally be compelled to return again +to the plantations. Such information would have caused despair +in a mind less courageous and earnest than that of Granville Sharp; +but it only served to stimulate his resolution to fight the battle of +the negroes’ freedom, at least in England. “Forsaken,” +he said, “by my professional defenders, I was compelled, through +the want of regular legal assistance, to make a hopeless attempt at +self-defence, though I was totally unacquainted either with the practice +of the law or the foundations of it, having never opened a law book +(except the Bible) in my life, until that time, when I most reluctantly +undertook to search the indexes of a law library, which my bookseller +had lately purchased.”</p> +<p>The whole of his time during the day was occupied with the business +of the ordnance department, where he held the most laborious post in +the office; he was therefore under the necessity of conducting his new +studies late at night or early in the morning. He confessed that +he was himself becoming a sort of slave. Writing to a clerical +friend to excuse himself for delay in replying to a letter, he said, +“I profess myself entirely incapable of holding a literary correspondence. +What little time I have been able to save from sleep at night, and early +in the morning, has been necessarily employed in the examination of +some points of law, which admitted of no delay, and yet required the +most diligent researches and examination in my study.”</p> +<p>Mr. Sharp gave up every leisure moment that he could command during +the next two years, to the close study of the laws of England affecting +personal liberty,—wading through an immense mass of dry and repulsive +literature, and making extracts of all the most important Acts of Parliament, +decisions of the courts, and opinions of eminent lawyers, as he went +along. In this tedious and protracted inquiry he had no instructor, +nor assistant, nor adviser. He could not find a single lawyer +whose opinion was favourable to his undertaking. The results of +his inquiries were, however, as gratifying to himself, as they were +surprising to the gentlemen of the law. “God be thanked,” +he wrote, “there is nothing in any English law or statute—at +least that I am able to find out—that can justify the enslaving +of others.” He had planted his foot firm, and now he doubted +nothing. He drew up the result of his studies in a summary form; +it was a plain, clear, and manly statement, entitled, ‘On the +Injustice of Tolerating Slavery in England;’ and numerous copies, +made by himself, were circulated by him amongst the most eminent lawyers +of the time. Strong’s owner, finding the sort of man he +had to deal with, invented various pretexts for deferring the suit against +Sharp, and at length offered a compromise, which was rejected. +Granville went on circulating his manuscript tract among the lawyers, +until at length those employed against Jonathan Strong were deterred +from proceeding further, and the result was, that the plaintiff was +compelled to pay treble costs for not bringing forward his action. +The tract was then printed in 1769.</p> +<p>In the mean time other cases occurred of the kidnapping of negroes +in London, and their shipment to the West Indies for sale. Wherever +Sharp could lay hold of any such case, he at once took proceedings to +rescue the negro. Thus the wife of one Hylas, an African, was +seized, and despatched to Barbadoes; on which Sharp, in the name of +Hylas, instituted legal proceedings against the aggressor, obtained +a verdict with damages, and Hylas’s wife was brought back to England +free.</p> +<p>Another forcible capture of a negro, attended with great cruelty, +having occurred in 1770, he immediately set himself on the track of +the aggressors. An African, named Lewis, was seized one dark night +by two watermen employed by the person who claimed the negro as his +property, dragged into the water, hoisted into a boat, where he was +gagged, and his limbs were tied; and then rowing down river, they put +him on board a ship bound for Jamaica, where he was to be sold for a +slave upon his arrival in the island. The cries of the poor negro +had, however, attracted the attention of some neighbours; one of whom +proceeded direct to Mr. Granville Sharp, now known as the negro’s +friend, and informed him of the outrage. Sharp immediately got +a warrant to bring back Lewis, and he proceeded to Gravesend, but on +arrival there the ship had sailed for the Downs. A writ of Habeas +Corpus was obtained, sent down to Spithead, and before the ship could +leave the shores of England the writ was served. The slave was +found chained to the main-mast bathed in tears, casting mournful looks +on the land from which he was about to be torn. He was immediately +liberated, brought back to London, and a warrant was issued against +the author of the outrage. The promptitude of head, heart, and +hand, displayed by Mr. Sharp in this transaction could scarcely have +been surpassed, and yet he accused himself of slowness. The case +was tried before Lord Mansfield—whose opinion, it will be remembered, +had already been expressed as decidedly opposed to that entertained +by Granville Sharp. The judge, however, avoided bringing the question +to an issue, or offering any opinion on the legal question as to the +slave’s personal liberty or otherwise, but discharged the negro +because the defendant could bring no evidence that Lewis was even nominally +his property.</p> +<p>The question of the personal liberty of the negro in England was +therefore still undecided; but in the mean time Mr. Sharp continued +steady in his benevolent course, and by his indefatigable exertions +and promptitude of action, many more were added to the list of the rescued. +At length the important case of James Somerset occurred; a case which +is said to have been selected, at the mutual desire of Lord Mansfield +and Mr. Sharp, in order to bring the great question involved to a clear +legal issue. Somerset had been brought to England by his master, +and left there. Afterwards his master sought to apprehend him +and send him off to Jamaica, for sale. Mr. Sharp, as usual, at +once took the negro’s case in hand, and employed counsel to defend +him. Lord Mansfield intimated that the case was of such general +concern, that he should take the opinion of all the judges upon it. +Mr. Sharp now felt that he would have to contend with all the force +that could be brought against him, but his resolution was in no wise +shaken. Fortunately for him, in this severe struggle, his exertions +had already begun to tell: increasing interest was taken in the question, +and many eminent legal gentlemen openly declared themselves to be upon +his side.</p> +<p>The cause of personal liberty, now at stake, was fairly tried before +Lord Mansfield, assisted by the three justices,—and tried on the +broad principle of the essential and constitutional right of every man +in England to the liberty of his person, unless forfeited by the law. +It is unnecessary here to enter into any account of this great trial; +the arguments extended to a great length, the cause being carried over +to another term,—when it was adjourned and re-adjourned,—but +at length judgment was given by Lord Mansfield, in whose powerful mind +so gradual a change had been worked by the arguments of counsel, based +mainly on Granville Sharp’s tract, that he now declared the court +to be so clearly of one opinion, that there was no necessity for referring +the case to the twelve judges. He then declared that the claim +of slavery never can be supported; that the power claimed never was +in use in England, nor acknowledged by the law; therefore the man James +Somerset must be discharged. By securing this judgment Granville +Sharp effectually abolished the Slave Trade until then carried on openly +in the streets of Liverpool and London. But he also firmly established +the glorious axiom, that as soon as any slave sets his foot on English +ground, that moment he becomes free; and there can be no doubt that +this great decision of Lord Mansfield was mainly owing to Mr. Sharp’s +firm, resolute, and intrepid prosecution of the cause from the beginning +to the end.</p> +<p>It is unnecessary further to follow the career of Granville Sharp. +He continued to labour indefatigably in all good works. He was +instrumental in founding the colony of Sierra Leone as an asylum for +rescued negroes. He laboured to ameliorate the condition of the +native Indians in the American colonies. He agitated the enlargement +and extension of the political rights of the English people; and he +endeavoured to effect the abolition of the impressment of seamen. +Granville held that the British seamen, as well as the African negro, +was entitled to the protection of the law; and that the fact of his +choosing a seafaring life did not in any way cancel his rights and privileges +as an Englishman—first amongst which he ranked personal freedom. +Mr. Sharp also laboured, but ineffectually, to restore amity between +England and her colonies in America; and when the fratricidal war of +the American Revolution was entered on, his sense of integrity was so +scrupulous that, resolving not in any way to be concerned in so unnatural +a business, he resigned his situation at the Ordnance Office.</p> +<p>To the last he held to the great object of his life—the abolition +of slavery. To carry on this work, and organize the efforts of +the growing friends of the cause, the Society for the Abolition of Slavery +was founded, and new men, inspired by Sharp’s example and zeal, +sprang forward to help him. His energy became theirs, and the +self-sacrificing zeal in which he had so long laboured single-handed, +became at length transfused into the nation itself. His mantle +fell upon Clarkson, upon Wilberforce, upon Brougham, and upon Buxton, +who laboured as he had done, with like energy and stedfastness of purpose, +until at length slavery was abolished throughout the British dominions. +But though the names last mentioned may be more frequently identified +with the triumph of this great cause, the chief merit unquestionably +belongs to Granville Sharp. He was encouraged by none of the world’s +huzzas when he entered upon his work. He stood alone, opposed +to the opinion of the ablest lawyers and the most rooted prejudices +of the times; and alone he fought out, by his single exertions, and +at his individual expense, the most memorable battle for the constitution +of this country and the liberties of British subjects, of which modern +times afford a record. What followed was mainly the consequence +of his indefatigable constancy. He lighted the torch which kindled +other minds, and it was handed on until the illumination became complete.</p> +<p>Before the death of Granville Sharp, Clarkson had already turned +his attention to the question of Negro Slavery. He had even selected +it for the subject of a college Essay; and his mind became so possessed +by it that he could not shake it off. The spot is pointed out +near Wade’s Mill, in Hertfordshire, where, alighting from his +horse one day, he sat down disconsolate on the turf by the road side, +and after long thinking, determined to devote himself wholly to the +work. He translated his Essay from Latin into English, added fresh +illustrations, and published it. Then fellow labourers gathered +round him. The Society for Abolishing the Slave Trade, unknown +to him, had already been formed, and when he heard of it he joined it. +He sacrificed all his prospects in life to prosecute this cause. +Wilberforce was selected to lead in parliament; but upon Clarkson chiefly +devolved the labour of collecting and arranging the immense mass of +evidence offered in support of the abolition. A remarkable instance +of Clarkson’s sleuth-hound sort of perseverance may be mentioned. +The abettors of slavery, in the course of their defence of the system, +maintained that only such negroes as were captured in battle were sold +as slaves, and if not so sold, then they were reserved for a still more +frightful doom in their own country. Clarkson knew of the slave-hunts +conducted by the slave-traders, but had no witnesses to prove it. +Where was one to be found? Accidentally, a gentleman whom he met +on one of his journeys informed him of a young sailor, in whose company +he had been about a year before, who had been actually engaged in one +of such slave-hunting expeditions. The gentleman did not know +his name, and could but indefinitely describe his person. He did +not know where he was, further than that he belonged to a ship of war +in ordinary, but at what port he could not tell. With this mere +glimmering of information, Clarkson determined to produce this man as +a witness. He visited personally all the seaport towns where ships +in ordinary lay; boarded and examined every ship without success, until +he came to the very <i>last</i> port, and found the young man, his prize, +in the very <i>last</i> ship that remained to be visited. The +young man proved to be one of his most valuable and effective witnesses.</p> +<p>During several years Clarkson conducted a correspondence with upwards +of four hundred persons, travelling more than thirty-five thousand miles +during the same time in search of evidence. He was at length disabled +and exhausted by illness, brought on by his continuous exertions; but +he was not borne from the field until his zeal had fully awakened the +public mind, and excited the ardent sympathies of all good men on behalf +of the slave.</p> +<p>After years of protracted struggle, the slave trade was abolished. +But still another great achievement remained to be accomplished—the +abolition of slavery itself throughout the British dominions. +And here again determined energy won the day. Of the leaders in +the cause, none was more distinguished than Fowell Buxton, who took +the position formerly occupied by Wilberforce in the House of Commons. +Buxton was a dull, heavy boy, distinguished for his strong self-will, +which first exhibited itself in violent, domineering, and headstrong +obstinacy. His father died when he was a child; but fortunately +he had a wise mother, who trained his will with great care, constraining +him to obey, but encouraging the habit of deciding and acting for himself +in matters which might safely be left to him. His mother believed +that a strong will, directed upon worthy objects, was a valuable manly +quality if properly guided, and she acted accordingly. When others +about her commented on the boy’s self-will, she would merely say, +“Never mind—he is self-willed now—you will see it +will turn out well in the end.” Fowell learnt very little +at school, and was regarded as a dunce and an idler. He got other +boys to do his exercises for him, while he romped and scrambled about. +He returned home at fifteen, a great, growing, awkward lad, fond only +of boating, shooting, riding, and field sports,—spending his time +principally with the gamekeeper, a man possessed of a good heart,—an +intelligent observer of life and nature, though he could neither read +nor write. Buxton had excellent raw material in him, but he wanted +culture, training, and development. At this juncture of his life, +when his habits were being formed for good or evil, he was happily thrown +into the society of the Gurney family, distinguished for their fine +social qualities not less than for their intellectual culture and public-spirited +philanthropy. This intercourse with the Gurneys, he used afterwards +to say, gave the colouring to his life. They encouraged his efforts +at self-culture; and when he went to the University of Dublin and gained +high honours there, the animating passion in his mind, he said, “was +to carry back to them the prizes which they prompted and enabled me +to win.” He married one of the daughters of the family, +and started in life, commencing as a clerk to his uncles Hanbury, the +London brewers. His power of will, which made him so difficult +to deal with as a boy, now formed the backbone of his character, and +made him most indefatigable and energetic in whatever he undertook. +He threw his whole strength and bulk right down upon his work; and the +great giant—“Elephant Buxton” they called him, for +he stood some six feet four in height—became one of the most vigorous +and practical of men. “I could brew,” he said, “one +hour,—do mathematics the next,—and shoot the next,—and +each with my whole soul.” There was invincible energy and +determination in whatever he did. Admitted a partner, he became +the active manager of the concern; and the vast business which he conducted +felt his influence through every fibre, and prospered far beyond its +previous success. Nor did he allow his mind to lie fallow, for +he gave his evenings diligently to self-culture, studying and digesting +Blackstone, Montesquieu, and solid commentaries on English law. +His maxims in reading were, “never to begin a book without finishing +it;” “never to consider a book finished until it is mastered;” +and “to study everything with the whole mind.”</p> +<p>When only thirty-two, Buxton entered parliament, and at once assumed +that position of influence there, of which every honest, earnest, well-informed +man is secure, who enters that assembly of the first gentlemen in the +world. The principal question to which he devoted himself was +the complete emancipation of the slaves in the British colonies. +He himself used to attribute the interest which he early felt in this +question to the influence of Priscilla Gurney, one of the Earlham family,—a +woman of a fine intellect and warm heart, abounding in illustrious virtues. +When on her deathbed, in 1821, she repeatedly sent for Buxton, and urged +him “to make the cause of the slaves the great object of his life.” +Her last act was to attempt to reiterate the solemn charge, and she +expired in the ineffectual effort. Buxton never forgot her counsel; +he named one of his daughters after her; and on the day on which she +was married from his house, on the 1st of August, 1834,—the day +of Negro emancipation—after his Priscilla had been manumitted +from her filial service, and left her father’s home in the company +of her husband, Buxton sat down and thus wrote to a friend: “The +bride is just gone; everything has passed off to admiration; and <i>there +is not a slave in</i> <i>the British colonies</i>!”</p> +<p>Buxton was no genius—not a great intellectual leader nor discoverer, +but mainly an earnest, straightforward, resolute, energetic man. +Indeed, his whole character is most forcibly expressed in his own words, +which every young man might well stamp upon his soul: “The longer +I live,” said he, “the more I am certain that the great +difference between men, between the feeble and the powerful, the great +and the insignificant, is <i>energy—invincible determination</i>—a +purpose once fixed, and then death or victory! That quality will +do anything that can be done in this world; and no talents, no circumstances, +no opportunities, will make a two-legged creature a Man without it.”</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<h2>CHAPTER IX—MEN OF BUSINESS</h2> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<p>“Seest thou a man diligent in his business? he shall stand +before kings.”—Proverbs of Solomon<i>.</i></p> +<p>“That man is but of the lower part of the world that is not +brought up to business and affairs.”—Owen Feltham</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>Hazlitt, in one of his clever essays, represents the man of business +as a mean sort of person put in a go-cart, yoked to a trade or profession; +alleging that all he has to do is, not to go out of the beaten track, +but merely to let his affairs take their own course. “The +great requisite,” he says, “for the prosperous management +of ordinary business is the want of imagination, or of any ideas but +those of custom and interest on the narrowest scale.” <a name="citation24"></a><a href="#footnote24">{24}</a> +But nothing could be more one-sided, and in effect untrue, than such +a definition. Of course, there are narrow-minded men of business, +as there are narrow-minded scientific men, literary men, and legislators; +but there are also business men of large and comprehensive minds, capable +of action on the very largest scale. As Burke said in his speech +on the India Bill, he knew statesmen who were pedlers, and merchants +who acted in the spirit of statesmen.</p> +<p>If we take into account the qualities necessary for the successful +conduct of any important undertaking,—that it requires special +aptitude, promptitude of action on emergencies, capacity for organizing +the labours often of large numbers of men, great tact and knowledge +of human nature, constant self-culture, and growing experience in the +practical affairs of life,—it must, we think, be obvious that +the school of business is by no means so narrow as some writers would +have us believe. Mr. Helps had gone much nearer the truth when +he said that consummate men of business are as rare almost as great +poets,—rarer, perhaps, than veritable saints and martyrs. +Indeed, of no other pursuit can it so emphatically be said, as of this, +that “Business makes men.”</p> +<p>It has, however, been a favourite fallacy with dunces in all times, +that men of genius are unfitted for business, as well as that business +occupations unfit men for the pursuits of genius. The unhappy +youth who committed suicide a few years since because he had been “born +to be a man and condemned to be a grocer,” proved by the act that +his soul was not equal even to the dignity of grocery. For it +is not the calling that degrades the man, but the man that degrades +the calling. All work that brings honest gain is honourable, whether +it be of hand or mind. The fingers may be soiled, yet the heart +remain pure; for it is not material so much as moral dirt that defiles—greed +far more than grime, and vice than verdigris.</p> +<p>The greatest have not disdained to labour honestly and usefully for +a living, though at the same time aiming after higher things. +Thales, the first of the seven sages, Solon, the second founder of Athens, +and Hyperates, the mathematician, were all traders. Plato, called +the Divine by reason of the excellence of his wisdom, defrayed his travelling +expenses in Egypt by the profits derived from the oil which he sold +during his journey. Spinoza maintained himself by polishing glasses +while he pursued his philosophical investigations. Linnaeus, the +great botanist, prosecuted his studies while hammering leather and making +shoes. Shakespeare was a successful manager of a theatre—perhaps +priding himself more upon his practical qualities in that capacity than +on his writing of plays and poetry. Pope was of opinion that Shakespeare’s +principal object in cultivating literature was to secure an honest independence. +Indeed he seems to have been altogether indifferent to literary reputation. +It is not known that he superintended the publication of a single play, +or even sanctioned the printing of one; and the chronology of his writings +is still a mystery. It is certain, however, that he prospered +in his business, and realized sufficient to enable him to retire upon +a competency to his native town of Stratford-upon-Avon.</p> +<p>Chaucer was in early life a soldier, and afterwards an effective +Commissioner of Customs, and Inspector of Woods and Crown Lands. +Spencer was Secretary to the Lord Deputy of Ireland, was afterwards +Sheriff of Cork, and is said to have been shrewd and attentive in matters +of business. Milton, originally a schoolmaster, was elevated to +the post of Secretary to the Council of State during the Commonwealth; +and the extant Order-book of the Council, as well as many of Milton’s +letters which are preserved, give abundant evidence of his activity +and usefulness in that office. Sir Isaac Newton proved himself +an efficient Master of the Mint; the new coinage of 1694 having been +carried on under his immediate personal superintendence. Cowper +prided himself upon his business punctuality, though he confessed that +he “never knew a poet, except himself, who was punctual in anything.” +But against this we may set the lives of Wordsworth and Scott—the +former a distributor of stamps, the latter a clerk to the Court of Session,—both +of whom, though great poets, were eminently punctual and practical men +of business. David Ricardo, amidst the occupations of his daily +business as a London stock-jobber, in conducting which he acquired an +ample fortune, was able to concentrate his mind upon his favourite subject—on +which he was enabled to throw great light—the principles of political +economy; for he united in himself the sagacious commercial man and the +profound philosopher. Baily, the eminent astronomer, was another +stockbroker; and Allen, the chemist, was a silk manufacturer.</p> +<p>We have abundant illustrations, in our own day, of the fact that +the highest intellectual power is not incompatible with the active and +efficient performance of routine duties. Grote, the great historian +of Greece, was a London banker. And it is not long since John +Stuart Mill, one of our greatest living thinkers, retired from the Examiner’s +department of the East India Company, carrying with him the admiration +and esteem of his fellow officers, not on account of his high views +of philosophy, but because of the high standard of efficiency which +he had established in his office, and the thoroughly satisfactory manner +in which he had conducted the business of his department.</p> +<p>The path of success in business is usually the path of common sense. +Patient labour and application are as necessary here as in the acquisition +of knowledge or the pursuit of science. The old Greeks said, “to +become an able man in any profession, three things are necessary—nature, +study, and practice.” In business, practice, wisely and +diligently improved, is the great secret of success. Some may +make what are called “lucky hits,” but like money earned +by gambling, such “hits” may only serve to lure one to ruin. +Bacon was accustomed to say that it was in business as in ways—the +nearest way was commonly the foulest, and that if a man would go the +fairest way he must go somewhat about. The journey may occupy +a longer time, but the pleasure of the labour involved by it, and the +enjoyment of the results produced, will be more genuine and unalloyed. +To have a daily appointed task of even common drudgery to do makes the +rest of life feel all the sweeter.</p> +<p>The fable of the labours of Hercules is the type of all human doing +and success. Every youth should be made to feel that his happiness +and well-doing in life must necessarily rely mainly on himself and the +exercise of his own energies, rather than upon the help and patronage +of others. The late Lord Melbourne embodied a piece of useful +advice in a letter which he wrote to Lord John Russell, in reply to +an application for a provision for one of Moore the poet’s sons: +“My dear John,” he said, “I return you Moore’s +letter. I shall be ready to do what you like about it when we +have the means. I think whatever is done should be done for Moore +himself. This is more distinct, direct, and intelligible. +Making a small provision for young men is hardly justifiable; and it +is of all things the most prejudicial to themselves. They think +what they have much larger than it really is; and they make no exertion. +The young should never hear any language but this: ‘You have your +own way to make, and it depends upon your own exertions whether you +starve or not.’ Believe me, &c., MELBOURNE.”</p> +<p>Practical industry, wisely and vigorously applied, always produces +its due effects. It carries a man onward, brings out his individual +character, and stimulates the action of others. All may not rise +equally, yet each, on the whole, very much according to his deserts. +“Though all cannot live on the piazza,” as the Tuscan proverb +has it, “every one may feel the sun.”</p> +<p>On the whole, it is not good that human nature should have the road +of life made too easy. Better to be under the necessity of working +hard and faring meanly, than to have everything done ready to our hand +and a pillow of down to repose upon. Indeed, to start in life +with comparatively small means seems so necessary as a stimulus to work, +that it may almost be set down as one of the conditions essential to +success in life. Hence, an eminent judge, when asked what contributed +most to success at the bar, replied, “Some succeed by great talent, +some by high connexions, some by miracle, but the majority by commencing +without a shilling.”</p> +<p>We have heard of an architect of considerable accomplishments,—a +man who had improved himself by long study, and travel in the classical +lands of the East,—who came home to commence the practice of his +profession. He determined to begin anywhere, provided he could +be employed; and he accordingly undertook a business connected with +dilapidations,—one of the lowest and least remunerative departments +of the architect’s calling. But he had the good sense not +to be above his trade, and he had the resolution to work his way upward, +so that he only got a fair start. One hot day in July a friend +found him sitting astride of a house roof occupied with his dilapidation +business. Drawing his hand across his perspiring countenance, +he exclaimed, “Here’s a pretty business for a man who has +been all over Greece!” However, he did his work, such as +it was, thoroughly and well; he persevered until he advanced by degrees +to more remunerative branches of employment, and eventually he rose +to the highest walks of his profession.</p> +<p>The necessity of labour may, indeed, be regarded as the main root +and spring of all that we call progress in individuals, and civilization +in nations; and it is doubtful whether any heavier curse could be imposed +on man than the complete gratification of all his wishes without effort +on his part, leaving nothing for his hopes, desires or struggles. +The feeling that life is destitute of any motive or necessity for action, +must be of all others the most distressing and insupportable to a rational +being. The Marquis de Spinola asking Sir Horace Vere what his +brother died of, Sir Horace replied, “He died, Sir, of having +nothing to do.” “Alas!” said Spinola, “that +is enough to kill any general of us all.”</p> +<p>Those who fail in life are however very apt to assume a tone of injured +innocence, and conclude too hastily that everybody excepting themselves +has had a hand in their personal misfortunes. An eminent writer +lately published a book, in which he described his numerous failures +in business, naively admitting, at the same time, that he was ignorant +of the multiplication table; and he came to the conclusion that the +real cause of his ill-success in life was the money-worshipping spirit +of the age. Lamartine also did not hesitate to profess his contempt +for arithmetic; but, had it been less, probably we should not have witnessed +the unseemly spectacle of the admirers of that distinguished personage +engaged in collecting subscriptions for his support in his old age.</p> +<p>Again, some consider themselves born to ill luck, and make up their +minds that the world invariably goes against them without any fault +on their own part. We have heard of a person of this sort, who +went so far as to declare his belief that if he had been a hatter people +would have been born without heads! There is however a Russian +proverb which says that Misfortune is next door to Stupidity; and it +will often be found that men who are constantly lamenting their luck, +are in some way or other reaping the consequences of their own neglect, +mismanagement, improvidence, or want of application. Dr. Johnson, +who came up to London with a single guinea in his pocket, and who once +accurately described himself in his signature to a letter addressed +to a noble lord, as <i>Impransus</i>, or Dinnerless, has honestly said, +“All the complaints which are made of the world are unjust; I +never knew a man of merit neglected; it was generally by his own fault +that he failed of success.”</p> +<p>Washington Irying, the American author, held like views. “As +for the talk,” said he, “about modest merit being neglected, +it is too often a cant, by which indolent and irresolute men seek to +lay their want of success at the door of the public. Modest merit +is, however, too apt to be inactive, or negligent, or uninstructed merit. +Well matured and well disciplined talent is always sure of a market, +provided it exerts itself; but it must not cower at home and expect +to be sought for. There is a good deal of cant too about the success +of forward and impudent men, while men of retiring worth are passed +over with neglect. But it usually happens that those forward men +have that valuable quality of promptness and activity without which +worth is a mere inoperative property. A barking dog is often more +useful than a sleeping lion.”</p> +<p>Attention, application, accuracy, method, punctuality, and despatch, +are the principal qualities required for the efficient conduct of business +of any sort. These, at first sight, may appear to be small matters; +and yet they are of essential importance to human happiness, well-being, +and usefulness. They are little things, it is true; but human +life is made up of comparative trifles. It is the repetition of +little acts which constitute not only the sum of human character, but +which determine the character of nations. And where men or nations +have broken down, it will almost invariably be found that neglect of +little things was the rock on which they split. Every human being +has duties to be performed, and, therefore, has need of cultivating +the capacity for doing them; whether the sphere of action be the management +of a household, the conduct of a trade or profession, or the government +of a nation.</p> +<p>The examples we have already given of great workers in various branches +of industry, art, and science, render it unnecessary further to enforce +the importance of persevering application in any department of life. +It is the result of every-day experience that steady attention to matters +of detail lies at the root of human progress; and that diligence, above +all, is the mother of good luck. Accuracy is also of much importance, +and an invariable mark of good training in a man. Accuracy in +observation, accuracy in speech, accuracy in the transaction of affairs. +What is done in business must be well done; for it is better to accomplish +perfectly a small amount of work, than to half-do ten times as much. +A wise man used to say, “Stay a little, that we may make an end +the sooner.”</p> +<p>Too little attention, however, is paid to this highly important quality +of accuracy. As a man eminent in practical science lately observed +to us, “It is astonishing how few people I have met with in the +course of my experience, who can <i>define a fact</i> accurately.” +Yet in business affairs, it is the manner in which even small matters +are transacted, that often decides men for or against you. With +virtue, capacity, and good conduct in other respects, the person who +is habitually inaccurate cannot be trusted; his work has to be gone +over again; and he thus causes an infinity of annoyance, vexation, and +trouble.</p> +<p>It was one of the characteristic qualities of Charles James Fox, +that he was thoroughly pains-taking in all that he did. When appointed +Secretary of State, being piqued at some observation as to his bad writing, +he actually took a writing-master, and wrote copies like a schoolboy +until he had sufficiently improved himself. Though a corpulent +man, he was wonderfully active at picking up cut tennis balls, and when +asked how he contrived to do so, he playfully replied, “Because +I am a very pains-taking man.” The same accuracy in trifling +matters was displayed by him in things of greater importance; and he +acquired his reputation, like the painter, by “neglecting nothing.”</p> +<p>Method is essential, and enables a larger amount of work to be got +through with satisfaction. “Method,” said the Reverend +Richard Cecil, “is like packing things in a box; a good packer +will get in half as much again as a bad one.” Cecil’s +despatch of business was extraordinary, his maxim being, “The +shortest way to do many things is to do only one thing at once;” +and he never left a thing undone with a view of recurring to it at a +period of more leisure. When business pressed, he rather chose +to encroach on his hours of meals and rest than omit any part of his +work. De Witt’s maxim was like Cecil’s: “One +thing at a time.” “If,” said he, “I have +any necessary despatches to make, I think of nothing else till they +are finished; if any domestic affairs require my attention, I give myself +wholly up to them till they are set in order.”</p> +<p>A French minister, who was alike remarkable for his despatch of business +and his constant attendance at places of amusement, being asked how +he contrived to combine both objects, replied, “Simply by never +postponing till to-morrow what should be done to-day.” Lord +Brougham has said that a certain English statesman reversed the process, +and that his maxim was, never to transact to-day what could be postponed +till to-morrow. Unhappily, such is the practice of many besides +that minister, already almost forgotten; the practice is that of the +indolent and the unsuccessful. Such men, too, are apt to rely +upon agents, who are not always to be relied upon. Important affairs +must be attended to in person. “If you want your business +done,” says the proverb, “go and do it; if you don’t +want it done, send some one else.”</p> +<p>An indolent country gentleman had a freehold estate producing about +five hundred a-year. Becoming involved in debt, he sold half the +estate, and let the remainder to an industrious farmer for twenty years. +About the end of the term the farmer called to pay his rent, and asked +the owner whether he would sell the farm. “Will <i>you</i> +buy it?” asked the owner, surprised. “Yes, if we can +agree about the price.” “That is exceedingly strange,” +observed the gentleman; “pray, tell me how it happens that, while +I could not live upon twice as much land for which I paid no rent, you +are regularly paying me two hundred a-year for your farm, and are able, +in a few years, to purchase it.” “The reason is plain,” +was the reply; “you sat still and said <i>Go</i>, I got up and +said <i>Come</i>; you laid in bed and enjoyed your estate, I rose in +the morning and minded my business.”</p> +<p>Sir Walter Scott, writing to a youth who had obtained a situation +and asked for his advice, gave him in reply this sound counsel: “Beware +of stumbling over a propensity which easily besets you from not having +your time fully employed—I mean what the women call <i>dawdling</i>. +Your motto must be, <i>Hoc age</i>. Do instantly whatever is to +be done, and take the hours of recreation after business, never before +it. When a regiment is under march, the rear is often thrown into +confusion because the front do not move steadily and without interruption. +It is the same with business. If that which is first in hand is +not instantly, steadily, and regularly despatched, other things accumulate +behind, till affairs begin to press all at once, and no human brain +can stand the confusion.”</p> +<p>Promptitude in action may be stimulated by a due consideration of +the value of time. An Italian philosopher was accustomed to call +time his estate: an estate which produces nothing of value without cultivation, +but, duly improved, never fails to recompense the labours of the diligent +worker. Allowed to lie waste, the product will be only noxious +weeds and vicious growths of all kinds. One of the minor uses +of steady employment is, that it keeps one out of mischief, for truly +an idle brain is the devil’s workshop, and a lazy man the devil’s +bolster. To be occupied is to be possessed as by a tenant, whereas +to be idle is to be empty; and when the doors of the imagination are +opened, temptation finds a ready access, and evil thoughts come trooping +in. It is observed at sea, that men are never so much disposed +to grumble and mutiny as when least employed. Hence an old captain, +when there was nothing else to do, would issue the order to “scour +the anchor!”</p> +<p>Men of business are accustomed to quote the maxim that Time is money; +but it is more; the proper improvement of it is self-culture, self-improvement, +and growth of character. An hour wasted daily on trifles or in +indolence, would, if devoted to self-improvement, make an ignorant man +wise in a few years, and employed in good works, would make his life +fruitful, and death a harvest of worthy deeds. Fifteen minutes +a day devoted to self-improvement, will be felt at the end of the year. +Good thoughts and carefully gathered experience take up no room, and +may be carried about as our companions everywhere, without cost or incumbrance. +An economical use of time is the true mode of securing leisure: it enables +us to get through business and carry it forward, instead of being driven +by it. On the other hand, the miscalculation of time involves +us in perpetual hurry, confusion, and difficulties; and life becomes +a mere shuffle of expedients, usually followed by disaster. Nelson +once said, “I owe all my success in life to having been always +a quarter of an hour before my time.”</p> +<p>Some take no thought of the value of money until they have come to +an end of it, and many do the same with their time. The hours +are allowed to flow by unemployed, and then, when life is fast waning, +they bethink themselves of the duty of making a wiser use of it. +But the habit of listlessness and idleness may already have become confirmed, +and they are unable to break the bonds with which they have permitted +themselves to become bound. Lost wealth may be replaced by industry, +lost knowledge by study, lost health by temperance or medicine, but +lost time is gone for ever.</p> +<p>A proper consideration of the value of time, will also inspire habits +of punctuality. “Punctuality,” said Louis XIV., “is +the politeness of kings.” It is also the duty of gentlemen, +and the necessity of men of business. Nothing begets confidence +in a man sooner than the practice of this virtue, and nothing shakes +confidence sooner than the want of it. He who holds to his appointment +and does not keep you waiting for him, shows that he has regard for +your time as well as for his own. Thus punctuality is one of the +modes by which we testify our personal respect for those whom we are +called upon to meet in the business of life. It is also conscientiousness +in a measure; for an appointment is a contract, express or implied, +and he who does not keep it breaks faith, as well as dishonestly uses +other people’s time, and thus inevitably loses character. +We naturally come to the conclusion that the person who is careless +about time will be careless about business, and that he is not the one +to be trusted with the transaction of matters of importance. When +Washington’s secretary excused himself for the lateness of his +attendance and laid the blame upon his watch, his master quietly said, +“Then you must get another watch, or I another secretary.”</p> +<p>The person who is negligent of time and its employment is usually +found to be a general disturber of others’ peace and serenity. +It was wittily said by Lord Chesterfield of the old Duke of Newcastle—“His +Grace loses an hour in the morning, and is looking for it all the rest +of the day.” Everybody with whom the unpunctual man has +to do is thrown from time to time into a state of fever: he is systematically +late; regular only in his irregularity. He conducts his dawdling +as if upon system; arrives at his appointment after time; gets to the +railway station after the train has started; posts his letter when the +box has closed. Thus business is thrown into confusion, and everybody +concerned is put out of temper. It will generally be found that +the men who are thus habitually behind time are as habitually behind +success; and the world generally casts them aside to swell the ranks +of the grumblers and the railers against fortune.</p> +<p>In addition to the ordinary working qualities the business man of +the highest class requires quick perception and firmness in the execution +of his plans. Tact is also important; and though this is partly +the gift of nature, it is yet capable of being cultivated and developed +by observation and experience. Men of this quality are quick to +see the right mode of action, and if they have decision of purpose, +are prompt to carry out their undertakings to a successful issue. +These qualities are especially valuable, and indeed indispensable, in +those who direct the action of other men on a large scale, as for instance, +in the case of the commander of an army in the field. It is not +merely necessary that the general should be great as a warrior but also +as a man of business. He must possess great tact, much knowledge +of character, and ability to organize the movements of a large mass +of men, whom he has to feed, clothe, and furnish with whatever may be +necessary in order that they may keep the field and win battles. +In these respects Napoleon and Wellington were both first-rate men of +business.</p> +<p>Though Napoleon had an immense love for details, he had also a vivid +power of imagination, which enabled him to look along extended lines +of action, and deal with those details on a large scale, with judgment +and rapidity. He possessed such knowledge of character as enabled +him to select, almost unerringly, the best agents for the execution +of his designs. But he trusted as little as possible to agents +in matters of great moment, on which important results depended. +This feature in his character is illustrated in a remarkable degree +by the ‘Napoleon Correspondence,’ now in course of publication, +and particularly by the contents of the 15th volume, <a name="citation25"></a><a href="#footnote25">{25}</a> +which include the letters, orders, and despatches, written by the Emperor +at Finkenstein, a little chateau on the frontier of Poland in the year +1807, shortly after the victory of Eylau.</p> +<p>The French army was then lying encamped along the river Passarge +with the Russians before them, the Austrians on their right flank, and +the conquered Prussians in their rear. A long line of communications +had to be maintained with France, through a hostile country; but so +carefully, and with such foresight was this provided for, that it is +said Napoleon never missed a post. The movements of armies, the +bringing up of reinforcements from remote points in France, Spain, Italy, +and Germany, the opening of canals and the levelling of roads to enable +the produce of Poland and Prussia to be readily transported to his encampments, +had his unceasing attention, down to the minutest details. We +find him directing where horses were to be obtained, making arrangements +for an adequate supply of saddles, ordering shoes for the soldiers, +and specifying the number of rations of bread, biscuit, and spirits, +that were to be brought to camp, or stored in magazines for the use +of the troops. At the same time we find him writing to Paris giving +directions for the reorganization of the French College, devising a +scheme of public education, dictating bulletins and articles for the +‘Moniteur,’ revising the details of the budgets, giving +instructions to architects as to alterations to be made at the Tuileries +and the Church of the Madelaine, throwing an occasional sarcasm at Madame +de Stael and the Parisian journals, interfering to put down a squabble +at the Grand Opera, carrying on a correspondence with the Sultan of +Turkey and the Schah of Persia, so that while his body was at Finkenstein, +his mind seemed to be working at a hundred different places in Paris, +in Europe, and throughout the world.</p> +<p>We find him in one letter asking Ney if he has duly received the +muskets which have been sent him; in another he gives directions to +Prince Jerome as to the shirts, greatcoats, clothes, shoes, shakos, +and arms, to be served out to the Wurtemburg regiments; again he presses +Cambacérès to forward to the army a double stock of corn—“The +<i>ifs</i> and the <i>buts</i>,” said he, “are at present +out of season, and above all it must be done with speed.” +Then he informs Daru that the army want shirts, and that they don’t +come to hand. To Massena he writes, “Let me know if your +biscuit and bread arrangements are yet completed.” To the +Grand due de Berg, he gives directions as to the accoutrements of the +cuirassiers—“They complain that the men want sabres; send +an officer to obtain them at Posen. It is also said they want +helmets; order that they be made at Ebling. . . . It is not by sleeping +that one can accomplish anything.” Thus no point of detail +was neglected, and the energies of all were stimulated into action with +extraordinary power. Though many of the Emperor’s days were +occupied by inspections of his troops,—in the course of which +he sometimes rode from thirty to forty leagues a day,—and by reviews, +receptions, and affairs of state, leaving but little time for business +matters, he neglected nothing on that account; but devoted the greater +part of his nights, when necessary, to examining budgets, dictating +dispatches, and attending to the thousand matters of detail in the organization +and working of the Imperial Government; the machinery of which was for +the most part concentrated in his own head.</p> +<p>Like Napoleon, the Duke of Wellington was a first-rate man of business; +and it is not perhaps saying too much to aver that it was in no small +degree because of his possession of a business faculty amounting to +genius, that the Duke never lost a battle.</p> +<p>While a subaltern, he became dissatisfied with the slowness of his +promotion, and having passed from the infantry to the cavalry twice, +and back again, without advancement, he applied to Lord Camden, then +Viceroy of Ireland, for employment in the Revenue or Treasury Board. +Had he succeeded, no doubt he would have made a first-rate head of a +department, as he would have made a first-rate merchant or manufacturer. +But his application failed, and he remained with the army to become +the greatest of British generals.</p> +<p>The Duke began his active military career under the Duke of York +and General Walmoden, in Flanders and Holland, where he learnt, amidst +misfortunes and defeats, how bad business arrangements and bad generalship +serve to ruin the <i>morale</i> of an army. Ten years after entering +the army we find him a colonel in India, reported by his superiors as +an officer of indefatigable energy and application. He entered +into the minutest details of the service, and sought to raise the discipline +of his men to the highest standard. “The regiment of Colonel +Wellesley,” wrote General Harris in 1799, “is a model regiment; +on the score of soldierly bearing, discipline, instruction, and orderly +behaviour it is above all praise.” Thus qualifying himself +for posts of greater confidence, he was shortly after nominated governor +of the capital of Mysore. In the war with the Mahrattas he was +first called upon to try his hand at generalship; and at thirty-four +he won the memorable battle of Assaye, with an army composed of 1500 +British and 5000 sepoys, over 20,000 Mahratta infantry and 30,000 cavalry. +But so brilliant a victory did not in the least disturb his equanimity, +or affect the perfect honesty of his character.</p> +<p>Shortly after this event the opportunity occurred for exhibiting +his admirable practical qualities as an administrator. Placed +in command of an important district immediately after the capture of +Seringapatam, his first object was to establish rigid order and discipline +among his own men. Flushed with victory, the troops were found +riotous and disorderly. “Send me the provost marshal,” +said he, “and put him under my orders: till some of the marauders +are hung, it is impossible to expect order or safety.” This +rigid severity of Wellington in the field, though it was the dread, +proved the salvation of his troops in many campaigns. His next +step was to re-establish the markets and re-open the sources of supply. +General Harris wrote to the Governor-general, strongly commending Colonel +Wellesley for the perfect discipline he had established, and for his +“judicious and masterly arrangements in respect to supplies, which +opened an abundant free market, and inspired confidence into dealers +of every description.” The same close attention to, and +mastery of details, characterized him throughout his Indian career; +and it is remarkable that one of his ablest despatches to Lord Clive, +full of practical information as to the conduct of the campaign, was +written whilst the column he commanded was crossing the Toombuddra, +in the face of the vastly superior army of Dhoondiah, posted on the +opposite bank, and while a thousand matters of the deepest interest +were pressing upon the commander’s mind. But it was one +of his most remarkable characteristics, thus to be able to withdraw +himself temporarily from the business immediately in hand, and to bend +his full powers upon the consideration of matters totally distinct; +even the most difficult circumstances on such occasions failing to embarrass +or intimidate him.</p> +<p>Returned to England with a reputation for generalship, Sir Arthur +Wellesley met with immediate employment. In 1808 a corps of 10,000 +men destined to liberate Portugal was placed under his charge. +He landed, fought, and won two battles, and signed the Convention of +Cintra. After the death of Sir John Moore he was entrusted with +the command of a new expedition to Portugal. But Wellington was +fearfully overmatched throughout his Peninsular campaigns. From +1809 to 1813 he never had more than 30,000 British troops under his +command, at a time when there stood opposed to him in the Peninsula +some 350,000 French, mostly veterans, led by some of Napoleon’s +ablest generals. How was he to contend against such immense forces +with any fair prospect of success? His clear discernment and strong +common sense soon taught him that he must adopt a different policy from +that of the Spanish generals, who were invariably beaten and dispersed +whenever they ventured to offer battle in the open plains. He +perceived he had yet to create the army that was to contend against +the French with any reasonable chance of success. Accordingly, +after the battle of Talavera in 1809, when he found himself encompassed +on all sides by superior forces of French, he retired into Portugal, +there to carry out the settled policy on which he had by this time determined. +It was, to organise a Portuguese army under British officers, and teach +them to act in combination with his own troops, in the mean time avoiding +the peril of a defeat by declining all engagements. He would thus, +he conceived, destroy the <i>morale</i> of the French, who could not +exist without victories; and when his army was ripe for action, and +the enemy demoralized, he would then fall upon them with all his might.</p> +<p>The extraordinary qualities displayed by Lord Wellington throughout +these immortal campaigns, can only be appreciated after a perusal of +his despatches, which contain the unvarnished tale of the manifold ways +and means by which he laid the foundations of his success. Never +was man more tried by difficulty and opposition, arising not less from +the imbecility, falsehoods and intrigues of the British Government of +the day, than from the selfishness, cowardice, and vanity of the people +he went to save. It may, indeed, be said of him, that he sustained +the war in Spain by his individual firmness and self-reliance, which +never failed him even in the midst of his great discouragements. +He had not only to fight Napoleon’s veterans, but also to hold +in check the Spanish juntas and the Portuguese regency. He had +the utmost difficulty in obtaining provisions and clothing for his troops; +and it will scarcely be credited that, while engaged with the enemy +in the battle of Talavera, the Spaniards, who ran away, fell upon the +baggage of the British army, and the ruffians actually plundered it! +These and other vexations the Duke bore with a sublime patience and +self-control, and held on his course, in the face of ingratitude, treachery, +and opposition, with indomitable firmness. He neglected nothing, +and attended to every important detail of business himself. When +he found that food for his troops was not to be obtained from England, +and that he must rely upon his own resources for feeding them, he forthwith +commenced business as a corn merchant on a large scale, in copartnery +with the British Minister at Lisbon. Commissariat bills were created, +with which grain was bought in the ports of the Mediterranean and in +South America. When he had thus filled his magazines, the overplus +was sold to the Portuguese, who were greatly in want of provisions. +He left nothing whatever to chance, but provided for every contingency. +He gave his attention to the minutest details of the service; and was +accustomed to concentrate his whole energies, from time to time, on +such apparently ignominious matters as soldiers’ shoes, camp-kettles, +biscuits and horse fodder. His magnificent business qualities +were everywhere felt, and there can be no doubt that, by the care with +which he provided for every contingency, and the personal attention +which he gave to every detail, he laid the foundations of his great +success. <a name="citation26"></a><a href="#footnote26">{26}</a> +By such means he transformed an army of raw levies into the best soldiers +in Europe, with whom he declared it to be possible to go anywhere and +do anything.</p> +<p>We have already referred to his remarkable power of abstracting himself +from the work, no matter how engrossing, immediately in hand, and concentrating +his energies upon the details of some entirely different business. +Thus Napier relates that it was while he was preparing to fight the +battle of Salamanca that he had to expose to the Ministers at home the +futility of relying upon a loan; it was on the heights of San Christoval, +on the field of battle itself, that he demonstrated the absurdity of +attempting to establish a Portuguese bank; it was in the trenches of +Burgos that he dissected Funchal’s scheme of finance, and exposed +the folly of attempting the sale of church property; and on each occasion, +he showed himself as well acquainted with these subjects as with the +minutest detail in the mechanism of armies.</p> +<p>Another feature in his character, showing the upright man of business, +was his thorough honesty. Whilst Soult ransacked and carried away +with him from Spain numerous pictures of great value, Wellington did +not appropriate to himself a single farthing’s worth of property. +Everywhere he paid his way, even when in the enemy’s country. +When he had crossed the French frontier, followed by 40,000 Spaniards, +who sought to “make fortunes” by pillage and plunder, he +first rebuked their officers, and then, finding his efforts to restrain +them unavailing, he sent them back into their own country. It +is a remarkable fact, that, even in France the peasantry fled from their +own countrymen, and carried their valuables within the protection of +the British lines! At the very same time, Wellington was writing +home to the British Ministry, “We are overwhelmed with debts, +and I can scarcely stir out of my house on account of public creditors +waiting to demand payment of what is due to them.” Jules +Maurel, in his estimate of the Duke’s character, says, “Nothing +can be grander or more nobly original than this admission. This +old soldier, after thirty years’ service, this iron man and victorious +general, established in an enemy’s country at the head of an immense +army, is afraid of his creditors! This is a kind of fear that +has seldom troubled the mind of conquerors and invaders; and I doubt +if the annals of war could present anything comparable to this sublime +simplicity.” But the Duke himself, had the matter been put +to him, would most probably have disclaimed any intention of acting +even grandly or nobly in the matter; merely regarding the punctual payment +of his debts as the best and most honourable mode of conducting his +business.</p> +<p>The truth of the good old maxim, that “Honesty is the best +policy,” is upheld by the daily experience of life; uprightness +and integrity being found as successful in business as in everything +else. As Hugh Miller’s worthy uncle used to advise him, +“In all your dealings give your neighbour the cast of the bank—‘good +measure, heaped up, and running over,’—and you will not +lose by it in the end.” A well-known brewer of beer attributed +his success to the liberality with which he used his malt. Going +up to the vat and tasting it, he would say, “Still rather poor, +my lads; give it another cast of the malt.” The brewer put +his character into his beer, and it proved generous accordingly, obtaining +a reputation in England, India, and the colonies, which laid the foundation +of a large fortune. Integrity of word and deed ought to be the +very cornerstone of all business transactions. To the tradesman, +the merchant, and manufacturer, it should be what honour is to the soldier, +and charity to the Christian. In the humblest calling there will +always be found scope for the exercise of this uprightness of character. +Hugh Miller speaks of the mason with whom he served his apprenticeship, +as one who “<i>put his conscience into every stone that</i> <i>he +laid</i>.” So the true mechanic will pride himself upon +the thoroughness and solidity of his work, and the high-minded contractor +upon the honesty of performance of his contract in every particular. +The upright manufacturer will find not only honour and reputation, but +substantial success, in the genuineness of the article which he produces, +and the merchant in the honesty of what he sells, and that it really +is what it seems to be. Baron Dupin, speaking of the general probity +of Englishmen, which he held to be a principal cause of their success, +observed, “We may succeed for a time by fraud, by surprise, by +violence; but we can succeed permanently only by means directly opposite. +It is not alone the courage, the intelligence, the activity, of the +merchant and manufacturer which maintain the superiority of their productions +and the character of their country; it is far more their wisdom, their +economy, and, above all, their probity. If ever in the British +Islands the useful citizen should lose these virtues, we may be sure +that, for England, as for every other country, the vessels of a degenerate +commerce, repulsed from every shore, would speedily disappear from those +seas whose surface they now cover with the treasures of the universe, +bartered for the treasures of the industry of the three kingdoms.”</p> +<p>It must be admitted, that Trade tries character perhaps more severely +than any other pursuit in life. It puts to the severest tests +honesty, self-denial, justice, and truthfulness; and men of business +who pass through such trials unstained are perhaps worthy of as great +honour as soldiers who prove their courage amidst the fire and perils +of battle. And, to the credit of the multitudes of men engaged +in the various departments of trade, we think it must be admitted that +on the whole they pass through their trials nobly. If we reflect +but for a moment on the vast amount of wealth daily entrusted even to +subordinate persons, who themselves probably earn but a bare competency—the +loose cash which is constantly passing through the hands of shopmen, +agents, brokers, and clerks in banking houses,—and note how comparatively +few are the breaches of trust which occur amidst all this temptation, +it will probably be admitted that this steady daily honesty of conduct +is most honourable to human nature, if it do not even tempt us to be +proud of it. The same trust and confidence reposed by men of business +in each other, as implied by the system of Credit, which is mainly based +upon the principle of honour, would be surprising if it were not so +much a matter of ordinary practice in business transactions. Dr. +Chalmers has well said, that the implicit trust with which merchants +are accustomed to confide in distant agents, separated from them perhaps +by half the globe—often consigning vast wealth to persons, recommended +only by their character, whom perhaps they have never seen—is +probably the finest act of homage which men can render to one another.</p> +<p>Although common honesty is still happily in the ascendant amongst +common people, and the general business community of England is still +sound at heart, putting their honest character into their respective +callings,—there are unhappily, as there have been in all times, +but too many instances of flagrant dishonesty and fraud, exhibited by +the unscrupulous, the over-speculative, and the intensely selfish in +their haste to be rich. There are tradesmen who adulterate, contractors +who “scamp,” manufacturers who give us shoddy instead of +wool, “dressing” instead of cotton, cast-iron tools instead +of steel, needles without eyes, razors made only “to sell,” +and swindled fabrics in many shapes. But these we must hold to +be the exceptional cases, of low-minded and grasping men, who, though +they may gain wealth which they probably cannot enjoy, will never gain +an honest character, nor secure that without which wealth is nothing—a +heart at peace. “The rogue cozened not me, but his own conscience,” +said Bishop Latimer of a cutler who made him pay twopence for a knife +not worth a penny. Money, earned by screwing, cheating, and overreaching, +may for a time dazzle the eyes of the unthinking; but the bubbles blown +by unscrupulous rogues, when full-blown, usually glitter only to burst. +The Sadleirs, Dean Pauls, and Redpaths, for the most part, come to a +sad end even in this world; and though the successful swindles of others +may not be “found out,” and the gains of their roguery may +remain with them, it will be as a curse and not as a blessing.</p> +<p>It is possible that the scrupulously honest man may not grow rich +so fast as the unscrupulous and dishonest one; but the success will +be of a truer kind, earned without fraud or injustice. And even +though a man should for a time be unsuccessful, still he must be honest: +better lose all and save character. For character is itself a +fortune; and if the high-principled man will but hold on his way courageously, +success will surely come,—nor will the highest reward of all be +withheld from him. Wordsworth well describes the “Happy +Warrior,” as he</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>“Who comprehends his trust, and to the same<br />Keeps faithful +with a singleness of aim;<br />And therefore does not stoop, nor lie +in wait<br />For wealth, or honour, or for worldly state;<br />Whom +they must follow, on whose head must fall,<br />Like showers of manna, +if they come at all.”</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>As an example of the high-minded mercantile man trained in upright +habits of business, and distinguished for justice, truthfulness, and +honesty of dealing in all things, the career of the well-known David +Barclay, grandson of Robert Barclay, of Ury, the author of the celebrated +‘Apology for the Quakers,’ may be briefly referred to. +For many years he was the head of an extensive house in Cheapside, chiefly +engaged in the American trade; but like Granville Sharp, he entertained +so strong an opinion against the war with our American colonies, that +he determined to retire altogether from the trade. Whilst a merchant, +he was as much distinguished for his talents, knowledge, integrity, +and power, as he afterwards was for his patriotism and munificent philanthropy. +He was a mirror of truthfulness and honesty; and, as became the good +Christian and true gentleman, his word was always held to be as good +as his bond. His position, and his high character, induced the +Ministers of the day on many occasions to seek his advice; and, when +examined before the House of Commons on the subject of the American +dispute, his views were so clearly expressed, and his advice was so +strongly justified by the reasons stated by him, that Lord North publicly +acknowledged that he had derived more information from David Barclay +than from all others east of Temple Bar. On retiring from business, +it was not to rest in luxurious ease, but to enter upon new labours +of usefulness for others. With ample means, he felt that he still +owed to society the duty of a good example. He founded a house +of industry near his residence at Walthamstow, which he supported at +a heavy outlay for several years, until at length he succeeded in rendering +it a source of comfort as well as independence to the well-disposed +families of the poor in that neighbourhood. When an estate in +Jamaica fell to him, he determined, though at a cost of some 10,000<i>l</i>., +at once to give liberty to the whole of the slaves on the property. +He sent out an agent, who hired a ship, and he had the little slave +community transported to one of the free American states, where they +settled down and prospered. Mr. Barclay had been assured that +the negroes were too ignorant and too barbarous for freedom, and it +was thus that he determined practically to demonstrate the fallacy of +the assertion. In dealing with his accumulated savings, he made +himself the executor of his own will, and instead of leaving a large +fortune to be divided among his relatives at his death, he extended +to them his munificent aid during his life, watched and aided them in +their respective careers, and thus not only laid the foundation, but +lived to see the maturity, of some of the largest and most prosperous +business concerns in the metropolis. We believe that to this day +some of our most eminent merchants—such as the Gurneys, Hanburys, +and Buxtons—are proud to acknowledge with gratitude the obligations +they owe to David Barclay for the means of their first introduction +to life, and for the benefits of his counsel and countenance in the +early stages of their career. Such a man stands as a mark of the +mercantile honesty and integrity of his country, and is a model and +example for men of business in all time to come.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<h2>CHAPTER X—MONEY—ITS USE AND ABUSE</h2> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<p>“Not for to hide it in a hedge,<br />Nor for a train attendant,<br />But +for the glorious privilege<br />Of being independent.”—Burns.</p> +<p>“Neither a borrower nor a lender be:<br />For loan oft loses +both itself and friend;<br />And borrowing dulls the edge of husbandry.”—Shakepeare.</p> +<p>Never treat money affairs with levity—Money is character.—Sir +E. L. Bulwer Lytton.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>How a man uses money—makes it, saves it, and spends it—is +perhaps one of the best tests of practical wisdom. Although money +ought by no means to be regarded as a chief end of man’s life, +neither is it a trifling matter, to be held in philosophic contempt, +representing as it does to so large an extent, the means of physical +comfort and social well-being. Indeed, some of the finest qualities +of human nature are intimately related to the right use of money; such +as generosity, honesty, justice, and self-sacrifice; as well as the +practical virtues of economy and providence. On the other hand, +there are their counterparts of avarice, fraud, injustice, and selfishness, +as displayed by the inordinate lovers of gain; and the vices of thriftlessness, +extravagance, and improvidence, on the part of those who misuse and +abuse the means entrusted to them. “So that,” as is +wisely observed by Henry Taylor in his thoughtful ‘Notes from +Life,’ “a right measure and manner in getting, saving, spending, +giving, taking, lending, borrowing, and bequeathing, would almost argue +a perfect man.”</p> +<p>Comfort in worldly circumstances is a con ion which every man is +justified in striving to attain by all worthy means. It secures +that physical satisfaction, which is necessary for the culture of the +better part of his nature; and enables him to provide for those of his +own household, without which, says the Apostle, a man is “worse +than an infidel.” Nor ought the duty to be any the less +indifferent to us, that the respect which our fellow-men entertain for +us in no slight degree depends upon the manner in which we exercise +the opportunities which present themselves for our honourable advancement +in life. The very effort required to be made to succeed in life +with this object, is of itself an education; stimulating a man’s +sense of self-respect, bringing out his practical qualities, and disciplining +him in the exercise of patience, perseverance, and such like virtues. +The provident and careful man must necessarily be a thoughtful man, +for he lives not merely for the present, but with provident forecast +makes arrangements for the future. He must also be a temperate +man, and exercise the virtue of self-denial, than which nothing is so +much calculated to give strength to the character. John Sterling +says truly, that “the worst education which teaches self denial, +is better than the best which teaches everything else, and not that.” +The Romans rightly employed the same word (virtus) to designate courage, +which is in a physical sense what the other is in a moral; the highest +virtue of all being victory over ourselves.</p> +<p>Hence the lesson of self-denial—the sacrificing of a present +gratification for a future good—is one of the last that is learnt. +Those classes which work the hardest might naturally be expected to +value the most the money which they earn. Yet the readiness with +which so many are accustomed to eat up and drink up their earnings as +they go, renders them to a great extent helpless and dependent upon +the frugal. There are large numbers of persons among us who, though +enjoying sufficient means of comfort and independence, are often found +to be barely a day’s march ahead of actual want when a time of +pressure occurs; and hence a great cause of social helplessness and +suffering. On one occasion a deputation waited on Lord John Russell, +respecting the taxation levied on the working classes of the country, +when the noble lord took the opportunity of remarking, “You may +rely upon it that the Government of this country durst not tax the working +classes to anything like the extent to which they tax themselves in +their expenditure upon intoxicating drinks alone!” Of all +great public questions, there is perhaps none more important than this,—no +great work of reform calling more loudly for labourers. But it +must be admitted that “self-denial and self-help” would +make a poor rallying cry for the hustings; and it is to be feared that +the patriotism of this day has but little regard for such common things +as individual economy and providence, although it is by the practice +of such virtues only that the genuine independence of the industrial +classes is to be secured. “Prudence, frugality, and good +management,” said Samuel Drew, the philosophical shoemaker, “are +excellent artists for mending bad times: they occupy but little room +in any dwelling, but would furnish a more effectual remedy for the evils +of life than any Reform Bill that ever passed the Houses of Parliament.” +Socrates said, “Let him that would move the world move first himself. +” Or as the old rhyme runs -</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>“If every one would see<br />To his own reformation,<br />How +very easily<br />You might reform a nation.”</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>It is, however, generally felt to be a far easier thing to reform +the Church and the State than to reform the least of our own bad habits; +and in such matters it is usually found more agreeable to our tastes, +as it certainly is the common practice, to begin with our neighbours +rather than with ourselves.</p> +<p>Any class of men that lives from hand to mouth will ever be an inferior +class. They will necessarily remain impotent and helpless, hanging +on to the skirts of society, the sport of times and seasons. Having +no respect for themselves, they will fail in securing the respect of +others. In commercial crises, such men must inevitably go to the +wall. Wanting that husbanded power which a store of savings, no +matter how small, invariably gives them, they will be at every man’s +mercy, and, if possessed of right feelings, they cannot but regard with +fear and trembling the future possible fate of their wives and children. +“The world,” once said Mr. Cobden to the working men of +Huddersfield, “has always been divided into two classes,—those +who have saved, and those who have spent—the thrifty and the extravagant. +The building of all the houses, the mills, the bridges, and the ships, +and the accomplishment of all other great works which have rendered +man civilized and happy, has been done by the savers, the thrifty; and +those who have wasted their resources have always been their slaves. +It has been the law of nature and of Providence that this should be +so; and I were an impostor if I promised any class that they would advance +themselves if they were improvident, thoughtless, and idle.”</p> +<p>Equally sound was the advice given by Mr. Bright to an assembly of +working men at Rochdale, in 1847, when, after expressing his belief +that, “so far as honesty was concerned, it was to be found in +pretty equal amount among all classes,” he used the following +words:- “There is only one way that is safe for any man, or any +number of men, by which they can maintain their present position if +it be a good one, or raise themselves above it if it be a bad one,—that +is, by the practice of the virtues of industry, frugality, temperance, +and honesty. There is no royal road by which men can raise themselves +from a position which they feel to be uncomfortable and unsatisfactory, +as regards their mental or physical condition, except by the practice +of those virtues by which they find numbers amongst them are continually +advancing and bettering themselves.”</p> +<p>There is no reason why the condition of the average workman should +not be a useful, honourable, respectable, and happy one. The whole +body of the working classes might, (with few exceptions) be as frugal, +virtuous, well-informed, and well-conditioned as many individuals of +the same class have already made themselves. What some men are, +all without difficulty might be. Employ the same means, and the +same results will follow. That there should be a class of men +who live by their daily labour in every state is the ordinance of God, +and doubtless is a wise and righteous one; but that this class should +be otherwise than frugal, contented, intelligent, and happy, is not +the design of Providence, but springs solely from the weakness, self-indulgence, +and perverseness of man himself. The healthy spirit of self-help +created amongst working people would more than any other measure serve +to raise them as a class, and this, not by pulling down others, but +by levelling them up to a higher and still advancing standard of religion, +intelligence, and virtue. “All moral philosophy,” +says Montaigne, “is as applicable to a common and private life +as to the most splendid. Every man carries the entire form of +the human condition within him.”</p> +<p>When a man casts his glance forward, he will find that the three +chief temporal contingencies for which he has to provide are want of +employment, sickness, and death. The two first he may escape, +but the last is inevitable. It is, however, the duty of the prudent +man so to live, and so to arrange, that the pressure of suffering, in +event of either contingency occurring, shall be mitigated to as great +an extent as possible, not only to himself, but also to those who are +dependent upon him for their comfort and subsistence. Viewed in +this light the honest earning and the frugal use of money are of the +greatest importance. Rightly earned, it is the representative +of patient industry and untiring effort, of temptation resisted, and +hope rewarded; and rightly used, it affords indications of prudence, +forethought and self-denial—the true basis of manly character. +Though money represents a crowd of objects without any real worth or +utility, it also represents many things of great value; not only food, +clothing, and household satisfaction, but personal self-respect and +independence. Thus a store of savings is to the working man as +a barricade against want; it secures him a footing, and enables him +to wait, it may be in cheerfulness and hope, until better days come +round. The very endeavour to gain a firmer position in the world +has a certain dignity in it, and tends to make a man stronger and better. +At all events it gives him greater freedom of action, and enables him +to husband his strength for future effort.</p> +<p>But the man who is always hovering on the verge of want is in a state +not far removed from that of slavery. He is in no sense his own +master, but is in constant peril of falling under the bondage of others, +and accepting the terms which they dictate to him. He cannot help +being, in a measure, servile, for he dares not look the world boldly +in the face; and in adverse times he must look either to alms or the +poor’s rates. If work fails him altogether, he has not the +means of moving to another field of employment; he is fixed to his parish +like a limpet to its rock, and can neither migrate nor emigrate.</p> +<p>To secure independence, the practice of simple economy is all that +is necessary. Economy requires neither superior courage nor eminent +virtue; it is satisfied with ordinary energy, and the capacity of average +minds. Economy, at bottom, is but the spirit of order applied +in the administration of domestic affairs: it means management, regularity, +prudence, and the avoidance of waste. The spirit of economy was +expressed by our Divine Master in the words ‘Gather up the fragments +that remain, so that nothing may be lost.’ His omnipotence +did not disdain the small things of life; and even while revealing His +infinite power to the multitude, he taught the pregnant lesson of carefulness +of which all stand so much in need.</p> +<p>Economy also means the power of resisting present gratification for +the purpose of securing a future good, and in this light it represents +the ascendancy of reason over the animal instincts. It is altogether +different from penuriousness: for it is economy that can always best +afford to be generous. It does not make money an idol, but regards +it as a useful agent. As Dean Swift observes, “we must carry +money in the head, not in the heart.” Economy may be styled +the daughter of Prudence, the sister of Temperance, and the mother of +Liberty. It is evidently conservative—conservative of character, +of domestic happiness, and social well-being. It is, in short, +the exhibition of self-help in one of its best forms.</p> +<p>Francis Horner’s father gave him this advice on entering life:- +“Whilst I wish you to be comfortable in every respect, I cannot +too strongly inculcate economy. It is a necessary virtue to all; +and however the shallow part of mankind may despise it, it certainly +leads to independence, which is a grand object to every man of a high +spirit.” Burns’ lines, quoted at the head of this +chapter, contain the right idea; but unhappily his strain of song was +higher than his practice; his ideal better than his habit. When +laid on his death-bed he wrote to a friend, “Alas! Clarke, I begin +to feel the worst. Burns’ poor widow, and half a dozen of +his dear little ones helpless orphans;—there I am weak as a woman’s +tear. Enough of this;—’tis half my disease.”</p> +<p>Every man ought so to contrive as to live within his means. +This practice is of the very essence of honesty. For if a man +do not manage honestly to live within his own means, he must necessarily +be living dishonestly upon the means of somebody else. Those who +are careless about personal expenditure, and consider merely their own +gratification, without regard for the comfort of others, generally find +out the real uses of money when it is too late. Though by nature +generous, these thriftless persons are often driven in the end to do +very shabby things. They waste their money as they do their time; +draw bills upon the future; anticipate their earnings; and are thus +under the necessity of dragging after them a load of debts and obligations +which seriously affect their action as free and independent men.</p> +<p>It was a maxim of Lord Bacon, that when it was necessary to economize, +it was better to look after petty savings than to descend to petty gettings. +The loose cash which many persons throw away uselessly, and worse, would +often form a basis of fortune and independence for life. These +wasters are their own worst enemies, though generally found amongst +the ranks of those who rail at the injustice of “the world.” +But if a man will not be his own friend, how can he expect that others +will? Orderly men of moderate means have always something left +in their pockets to help others; whereas your prodigal and careless +fellows who spend all never find an opportunity for helping anybody. +It is poor economy, however, to be a scrub. Narrowmindedness in +living and in dealing is generally short-sighted, and leads to failure. +The penny soul, it is said, never came to twopence. Generosity +and liberality, like honesty, prove the best policy after all. +Though Jenkinson, in the ‘Vicar of Wakefield,’ cheated his +kind-hearted neighbour Flamborough in one way or another every year, +“Flamborough,” said he, “has been regularly growing +in riches, while I have come to poverty and a gaol.” And +practical life abounds in cases of brilliant results from a course of +generous and honest policy.</p> +<p>The proverb says that “an empty bag cannot stand upright;” +neither can a man who is in debt. It is also difficult for a man +who is in debt to be truthful; hence it is said that lying rides on +debt’s back. The debtor has to frame excuses to his creditor +for postponing payment of the money he owes him; and probably also to +contrive falsehoods. It is easy enough for a man who will exercise +a healthy resolution, to avoid incurring the first obligation; but the +facility with which that has been incurred often becomes a temptation +to a second; and very soon the unfortunate borrower becomes so entangled +that no late exertion of industry can set him free. The first +step in debt is like the first step in falsehood; almost involving the +necessity of proceeding in the same course, debt following debt, as +lie follows lie. Haydon, the painter, dated his decline from the +day on which he first borrowed money. He realized the truth of +the proverb, “Who goes a-borrowing, goes a-sorrowing.” +The significant entry in his diary is: “Here began debt and obligation, +out of which I have never been and never shall be extricated as long +as I live.” His Autobiography shows but too painfully how +embarrassment in money matters produces poignant distress of mind, utter +incapacity for work, and constantly recurring humiliations. The +written advice which he gave to a youth when entering the navy was as +follows: “Never purchase any enjoyment if it cannot be procured +without borrowing of others. Never borrow money: it is degrading. +I do not say never lend, but never lend if by lending you render yourself +unable to pay what you owe; but under any circumstances never borrow.” +Fichte, the poor student, refused to accept even presents from his still +poorer parents.</p> +<p>Dr. Johnson held that early debt is ruin. His words on the +subject are weighty, and worthy of being held in remembrance. +“Do not,” said he, “accustom yourself to consider +debt only as an inconvenience; you will find it a calamity. Poverty +takes away so many means of doing good, and produces so much inability +to resist evil, both natural and moral, that it is by all virtuous means +to be avoided. . . . Let it be your first care, then, not to be in any +man’s debt. Resolve not to be poor; whatever you have spend +less. Poverty is a great enemy to human happiness; it certainly +destroys liberty, and it makes some virtues impracticable and others +extremely difficult. Frugality is not only the basis of quiet, +but of beneficence. No man can help others that wants help himself; +we must have enough before we have to spare.”</p> +<p>It is the bounden duty of every man to look his affairs in the face, +and to keep an account of his incomings and outgoings in money matters. +The exercise of a little simple arithmetic in this way will be found +of great value. Prudence requires that we shall pitch our scale +of living a degree below our means, rather than up to them; but this +can only be done by carrying out faithfully a plan of living by which +both ends may be made to meet. John Locke strongly advised this +course: “Nothing,” said he, “is likelier to keep a +man within compass than having constantly before his eyes the state +of his affairs in a regular course of account.” The Duke +of Wellington kept an accurate detailed account of all the moneys received +and expended by him. “I make a point,” said he to +Mr. Gleig, “of paying my own bills, and I advise every one to +do the same; formerly I used to trust a confidential servant to pay +them, but I was cured of that folly by receiving one morning, to my +great surprise, duns of a year or two’s standing. The fellow +had speculated with my money, and left my bills unpaid.” +Talking of debt his remark was, “It makes a slave of a man. +I have often known what it was to be in want of money, but I never got +into debt.” Washington was as particular as Wellington was, +in matters of business detail; and it is a remarkable fact, that he +did not disdain to scrutinize the smallest outgoings of his household—determined +as he was to live honestly within his means—even while holding +the high office of President of the American Union.</p> +<p>Admiral Jervis, Earl St. Vincent, has told the story of his early +struggles, and, amongst other things, of his determination to keep out +of debt. “My father had a very large family,” said +he, “with limited means. He gave me twenty pounds at starting, +and that was all he ever gave me. After I had been a considerable +time at the station [at sea], I drew for twenty more, but the bill came +back protested. I was mortified at this rebuke, and made a promise, +which I have ever kept, that I would never draw another bill without +a certainty of its being paid. I immediately changed my mode of +living, quitted my mess, lived alone, and took up the ship’s allowance, +which I found quite sufficient; washed and mended my own clothes; made +a pair of trousers out of the ticking of my bed; and having by these +means saved as much money as would redeem my honour, I took up my bill, +and from that time to this I have taken care to keep within my means.” +Jervis for six years endured pinching privation, but preserved his integrity, +studied his profession with success, and gradually and steadily rose +by merit and bravery to the highest rank.</p> +<p>Mr. Hume hit the mark when he once stated in the House of Commons—though +his words were followed by “laughter”—that the tone +of living in England is altogether too high. Middle-class people +are too apt to live up to their incomes, if not beyond them: affecting +a degree of “style” which is most unhealthy in its effects +upon society at large. There is an ambition to bring up boys as +gentlemen, or rather “genteel” men; though the result frequently +is, only to make them gents. They acquire a taste for dress, style, +luxuries, and amusements, which can never form any solid foundation +for manly or gentlemanly character; and the result is, that we have +a vast number of gingerbread young gentry thrown upon the world, who +remind one of the abandoned hulls sometimes picked up at sea, with only +a monkey on board.</p> +<p>There is a dreadful ambition abroad for being “genteel.” +We keep up appearances, too often at the expense of honesty; and, though +we may not be rich, yet we must seem to be so. We must be “respectable,” +though only in the meanest sense—in mere vulgar outward show. +We have not the courage to go patiently onward in the condition of life +in which it has pleased God to call us; but must needs live in some +fashionable state to which we ridiculously please to call ourselves, +and all to gratify the vanity of that unsubstantial genteel world of +which we form a part. There is a constant struggle and pressure +for front seats in the social amphitheatre; in the midst of which all +noble self-denying resolve is trodden down, and many fine natures are +inevitably crushed to death. What waste, what misery, what bankruptcy, +come from all this ambition to dazzle others with the glare of apparent +worldly success, we need not describe. The mischievous results +show themselves in a thousand ways—in the rank frauds committed +by men who dare to be dishonest, but do not dare to seem poor; and in +the desperate dashes at fortune, in which the pity is not so much for +those who fail, as for the hundreds of innocent families who are so +often involved in their ruin.</p> +<p>The late Sir Charles Napier, in taking leave of his command in India, +did a bold and honest thing in publishing his strong protest, embodied +in his last General Order to the officers of the Indian army, against +the “fast” life led by so many young officers in that service, +involving them in ignominious obligations. Sir Charles strongly +urged, in that famous document—what had almost been lost sight +of that “honesty is inseparable from the character of a thorough-bred +gentleman;” and that “to drink unpaid-for champagne and +unpaid-for beer, and to ride unpaid-for horses, is to be a cheat, and +not a gentleman.” Men who lived beyond their means and were +summoned, often by their own servants, before Courts of Requests for +debts contracted in extravagant living, might be officers by virtue +of their commissions, but they were not gentlemen. The habit of +being constantly in debt, the Commander-in-chief held, made men grow +callous to the proper feelings of a gentleman. It was not enough +that an officer should be able to fight: that any bull-dog could do. +But did he hold his word inviolate?—did he pay his debts? +These were among the points of honour which, he insisted, illuminated +the true gentleman’s and soldier’s career. As Bayard +was of old, so would Sir Charles Napier have all British officers to +be. He knew them to be “without fear,” but he would +also have them “without reproach.” There are, however, +many gallant young fellows, both in India and at home, capable of mounting +a breach on an emergency amidst belching fire, and of performing the +most desperate deeds of valour, who nevertheless cannot or will not +exercise the moral courage necessary to enable them to resist a petty +temptation presented to their senses. They cannot utter their +valiant “No,” or “I can’t afford it,” +to the invitations of pleasure and self-enjoyment; and they are found +ready to brave death rather than the ridicule of their companions.</p> +<p>The young man, as he passes through life, advances through a long +line of tempters ranged on either side of him; and the inevitable effect +of yielding, is degradation in a greater or a less degree. Contact +with them tends insensibly to draw away from him some portion of the +divine electric element with which his nature is charged; and his only +mode of resisting them is to utter and to act out his “no” +manfully and resolutely. He must decide at once, not waiting to +deliberate and balance reasons; for the youth, like “the woman +who deliberates, is lost.” Many deliberate, without deciding; +but “not to resolve, <i>is</i> to resolve.” A perfect +knowledge of man is in the prayer, “Lead us not into temptation.” +But temptation will come to try the young man’s strength; and +once yielded to, the power to resist grows weaker and weaker. +Yield once, and a portion of virtue has gone. Resist manfully, +and the first decision will give strength for life; repeated, it will +become a habit. It is in the outworks of the habits formed in +early life that the real strength of the defence must lie; for it has +been wisely ordained, that the machinery of moral existence should be +carried on principally through the medium of the habits, so as to save +the wear and tear of the great principles within. It is good habits, +which insinuate themselves into the thousand inconsiderable acts of +life, that really constitute by far the greater part of man’s +moral conduct.</p> +<p>Hugh Miller has told how, by an act of youthful decision, he saved +himself from one of the strong temptations so peculiar to a life of +toil. When employed as a mason, it was usual for his fellow-workmen +to have an occasional treat of drink, and one day two glasses of whisky +fell to his share, which he swallowed. When he reached home, he +found, on opening his favourite book—‘Bacon’s Essays’—that +the letters danced before his eyes, and that he could no longer master +the sense. “The condition,” he says, “into which +I had brought myself was, I felt, one of degradation. I had sunk, +by my own act, for the time, to a lower level of intelligence than that +on which it was my privilege to be placed; and though the state could +have been no very favourable one for forming a resolution, I in that +hour determined that I should never again sacrifice my capacity of intellectual +enjoyment to a drinking usage; and, with God’s help, I was enabled +to hold by the determination.” It is such decisions as this +that often form the turning-points in a man’s life, and furnish +the foundation of his future character. And this rock, on which +Hugh Miller might have been wrecked, if he had not at the right moment +put forth his moral strength to strike away from it, is one that youth +and manhood alike need to be constantly on their guard against. +It is about one of the worst and most deadly, as well as extravagant, +temptations which lie in the way of youth. Sir Walter Scott used +to say that “of all vices drinking is the most incompatible with +greatness.” Not only so, but it is incompatible with economy, +decency, health, and honest living. When a youth cannot restrain, +he must abstain. Dr. Johnson’s case is the case of many. +He said, referring to his own habits, “Sir, I can abstain; but +I can’t be moderate.”</p> +<p>But to wrestle vigorously and successfully with any vicious habit, +we must not merely be satisfied with contending on the low ground of +worldly prudence, though that is of use, but take stand upon a higher +moral elevation. Mechanical aids, such as pledges, may be of service +to some, but the great thing is to set up a high standard of thinking +and acting, and endeavour to strengthen and purify the principles as +well as to reform the habits. For this purpose a youth must study +himself, watch his steps, and compare his thoughts and acts with his +rule. The more knowledge of himself he gains, the more humble +will he be, and perhaps the less confident in his own strength. +But the discipline will be always found most valuable which is acquired +by resisting small present gratifications to secure a prospective greater +and higher one. It is the noblest work in self-education—for</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>“Real glory<br />Springs from the silent conquest of ourselves,<br />And +without that the conqueror is nought<br />But the first slave.”</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>Many popular books have been written for the purpose of communicating +to the public the grand secret of making money. But there is no +secret whatever about it, as the proverbs of every nation abundantly +testify. “Take care of the pennies and the pounds will take +care of themselves.” “Diligence is the mother of good +luck.” “No pains no gains.” “No +sweat no sweet.” “Work and thou shalt have.” +“The world is his who has patience and industry.” +“Better go to bed supperless than rise in debt.” Such +are specimens of the proverbial philosophy, embodying the hoarded experience +of many generations, as to the best means of thriving in the world. +They were current in people’s mouths long before books were invented; +and like other popular proverbs they were the first codes of popular +morals. Moreover they have stood the test of time, and the experience +of every day still bears witness to their accuracy, force, and soundness. +The proverbs of Solomon are full of wisdom as to the force of industry, +and the use and abuse of money:- “He that is slothful in work +is brother to him that is a great waster.” “Go to +the ant, thou sluggard; consider her ways, and be wise.” +Poverty, says the preacher, shall come upon the idler, “as one +that travelleth, and want as an armed man;” but of the industrious +and upright, “the hand of the diligent maketh rich.” +“The drunkard and the glutton shall come to poverty; and drowsiness +shall clothe a man with rags.” “Seest thou a man diligent +in his business? he shall stand before kings.” But above +all, “It is better to get wisdom than gold; for wisdom is better +than rubies, and all the things that may be desired are not to be compared +to it.”</p> +<p>Simple industry and thrift will go far towards making any person +of ordinary working faculty comparatively independent in his means. +Even a working man may be so, provided he will carefully husband his +resources, and watch the little outlets of useless expenditure. +A penny is a very small matter, yet the comfort of thousands of families +depends upon the proper spending and saving of pennies. If a man +allows the little pennies, the results of his hard work, to slip out +of his fingers—some to the beershop, some this way and some that—he +will find that his life is little raised above one of mere animal drudgery. +On the other hand, if he take care of the pennies—putting some +weekly into a benefit society or an insurance fund, others into a savings’ +bank, and confiding the rest to his wife to be carefully laid out, with +a view to the comfortable maintenance and education of his family—he +will soon find that this attention to small matters will abundantly +repay him, in increasing means, growing comfort at home, and a mind +comparatively free from fears as to the future. And if a working +man have high ambition and possess richness in spirit,—a kind +of wealth which far transcends all mere worldly possessions—he +may not only help himself, but be a profitable helper of others in his +path through life. That this is no impossible thing even for a +common labourer in a workshop, may be illustrated by the remarkable +career of Thomas Wright of Manchester, who not only attempted but succeeded +in the reclamation of many criminals while working for weekly wages +in a foundry.</p> +<p>Accident first directed Thomas Wright’s attention to the difficulty +encountered by liberated convicts in returning to habits of honest industry. +His mind was shortly possessed by the subject; and to remedy the evil +became the purpose of his life. Though he worked from six in the +morning till six at night, still there were leisure minutes that he +could call his own—more especially his Sundays—and these +he employed in the service of convicted criminals; a class then far +more neglected than they are now. But a few minutes a day, well +employed, can effect a great deal; and it will scarcely be credited, +that in ten years this working man, by steadfastly holding to his purpose, +succeeded in rescuing not fewer than three hundred felons from continuance +in a life of villany! He came to be regarded as the moral physician +of the Manchester Old Bailey; and where the Chaplain and all others +failed, Thomas Wright often succeeded. Children he thus restored +reformed to their parents; sons and daughters otherwise lost, to their +homes; and many a returned convict did he contrive to settle down to +honest and industrious pursuits. The task was by no means easy. +It required money, time, energy, prudence, and above all, character, +and the confidence which character invariably inspires. The most +remarkable circumstance was that Wright relieved many of these poor +outcasts out of the comparatively small wages earned by him at foundry +work. He did all this on an income which did not average, during +his working career, 100<i>l</i>. per annum; and yet, while he was able +to bestow substantial aid on criminals, to whom he owed no more than +the service of kindness which every human being owes to another, he +also maintained his family in comfort, and was, by frugality and carefulness, +enabled to lay by a store of savings against his approaching old age. +Every week he apportioned his income with deliberate care; so much for +the indispensable necessaries of food and clothing, so much for the +landlord, so much for the schoolmaster, so much for the poor and needy; +and the lines of distribution were resolutely observed. By such +means did this humble workman pursue his great work, with the results +we have so briefly described. Indeed, his career affords one of +the most remarkable and striking illustrations of the force of purpose +in a man, of the might of small means carefully and sedulously applied, +and, above all, of the power which an energetic and upright character +invariably exercises upon the lives and conduct of others.</p> +<p>There is no discredit, but honour, in every right walk of industry, +whether it be in tilling the ground, making tools, weaving fabrics, +or selling the products behind a counter. A youth may handle a +yard-stick, or measure a piece of ribbon; and there will be no discredit +in doing so, unless he allows his mind to have no higher range than +the stick and ribbon; to be as short as the one, and as narrow as the +other. “Let not those blush who <i>have</i>,” said +Fuller, “but those who <i>have not</i> a lawful calling.” +And Bishop Hall said, “Sweet is the destiny of all trades, whether +of the brow or of the mind.” Men who have raised themselves +from a humble calling, need not be ashamed, but rather ought to be proud +of the difficulties they have surmounted. An American President, +when asked what was his coat-of-arms, remembering that he had been a +hewer of wood in his youth, replied, “A pair of shirt sleeves.” +A French doctor once taunted Flechier, Bishop of Nismes, who had been +a tallow-chandler in his youth, with the meanness of his origin, to +which Flechier replied, “If you had been born in the same condition +that I was, you would still have been but a maker of candles.”</p> +<p>Nothing is more common than energy in money-making, quite independent +of any higher object than its accumulation. A man who devotes +himself to this pursuit, body and soul, can scarcely fail to become +rich. Very little brains will do; spend less than you earn; add +guinea to guinea; scrape and save; and the pile of gold will gradually +rise. Osterwald, the Parisian banker, began life a poor man. +He was accustomed every evening to drink a pint of beer for supper at +a tavern which he visited, during which he collected and pocketed all +the corks that he could lay his hands on. In eight years he had +collected as many corks as sold for eight louis d’ors. With +that sum he laid the foundations of his fortune—gained mostly +by stock-jobbing; leaving at his death some three millions of francs. +John Foster has cited a striking illustration of what this kind of determination +will do in money-making. A young man who ran through his patrimony, +spending it in profligacy, was at length reduced to utter want and despair. +He rushed out of his house intending to put an end to his life, and +stopped on arriving at an eminence overlooking what were once his estates. +He sat down, ruminated for a time, and rose with the determination that +he would recover them. He returned to the streets, saw a load +of coals which had been shot out of a cart on to the pavement before +a house, offered to carry them in, and was employed. He thus earned +a few pence, requested some meat and drink as a gratuity, which was +given him, and the pennies were laid by. Pursuing this menial +labour, he earned and saved more pennies; accumulated sufficient to +enable him to purchase some cattle, the value of which he understood, +and these he sold to advantage. He proceeded by degrees to undertake +larger transactions, until at length he became rich. The result +was, that he more than recovered his possessions, and died an inveterate +miser. When he was buried, mere earth went to earth. With +a nobler spirit, the same determination might have enabled such a man +to be a benefactor to others as well as to himself. But the life +and its end in this case were alike sordid.</p> +<p>To provide for others and for our own comfort and independence in +old age, is honourable, and greatly to be commended; but to hoard for +mere wealth’s sake is the characteristic of the narrow-souled +and the miserly. It is against the growth of this habit of inordinate +saving that the wise man needs most carefully to guard himself: else, +what in youth was simple economy, may in old age grow into avarice, +and what was a duty in the one case, may become a vice in the other. +It is the <i>love</i> of money—not money itself—which is +“the root of evil,”—a love which narrows and contracts +the soul, and closes it against generous life and action. Hence, +Sir Walter Scott makes one of his characters declare that “the +penny siller slew more souls than the naked sword slew bodies.” +It is one of the defects of business too exclusively followed, that +it insensibly tends to a mechanism of character. The business +man gets into a rut, and often does not look beyond it. If he +lives for himself only, he becomes apt to regard other human beings +only in so far as they minister to his ends. Take a leaf from +such men’s ledger and you have their life.</p> +<p>Worldly success, measured by the accumulation of money, is no doubt +a very dazzling thing; and all men are naturally more or less the admirers +of worldly success. But though men of persevering, sharp, dexterous, +and unscrupulous habits, ever on the watch to push opportunities, may +and do “get on” in the world, yet it is quite possible that +they may not possess the slightest elevation of character, nor a particle +of real goodness. He who recognizes no higher logic than that +of the shilling, may become a very rich man, and yet remain all the +while an exceedingly poor creature. For riches are no proof whatever +of moral worth; and their glitter often serves only to draw attention +to the worthlessness of their possessor, as the light of the glowworm +reveals the grub.</p> +<p>The manner in which many allow themselves to be sacrificed to their +love of wealth reminds one of the cupidity of the monkey—that +caricature of our species. In Algiers, the Kabyle peasant attaches +a gourd, well fixed, to a tree, and places within it some rice. +The gourd has an opening merely sufficient to admit the monkey’s +paw. The creature comes to the tree by night, inserts his paw, +and grasps his booty. He tries to draw it back, but it is clenched, +and he has not the wisdom to unclench it. So there he stands till +morning, when he is caught, looking as foolish as may be, though with +the prize in his grasp. The moral of this little story is capable +of a very extensive application in life.</p> +<p>The power of money is on the whole over-estimated. The greatest +things which have been done for the world have not been accomplished +by rich men, nor by subscription lists, but by men generally of small +pecuniary means. Christianity was propagated over half the world +by men of the poorest class; and the greatest thinkers, discoverers, +inventors, and artists, have been men of moderate wealth, many of them +little raised above the condition of manual labourers in point of worldly +circumstances. And it will always be so. Riches are oftener +an impediment than a stimulus to action; and in many cases they are +quite as much a misfortune as a blessing. The youth who inherits +wealth is apt to have life made too easy for him, and he soon grows +sated with it, because he has nothing left to desire. Having no +special object to struggle for, he finds time hang heavy on his hands; +he remains morally and spiritually asleep; and his position in society +is often no higher than that of a polypus over which the tide floats.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>“His only labour is to kill the time,<br />And labour dire +it is, and weary woe.”</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>Yet the rich man, inspired by a right spirit, will spurn idleness +as unmanly; and if he bethink himself of the responsibilities which +attach to the possession of wealth and property he will feel even a +higher call to work than men of humbler lot. This, however, must +be admitted to be by no means the practice of life. The golden +mean of Agur’s perfect prayer is, perhaps, the best lot of all, +did we but know it: “Give me neither poverty nor riches; feed +me with food convenient for me.” The late Joseph Brotherton, +M.P., left a fine motto to be recorded upon his monument in the Peel +Park at Manchester,—the declaration in his case being strictly +true: “My richness consisted not in the greatness of my possessions, +but in the smallness of my wants.” He rose from the humblest +station, that of a factory boy, to an eminent position of usefulness, +by the simple exercise of homely honesty, industry, punctuality, and +self-denial. Down to the close of his life, when not attending +Parliament, he did duty as minister in a small chapel in Manchester +to which he was attached; and in all things he made it appear, to those +who knew him in private life, that the glory he sought was <i>not</i> +“to be seen of men,” or to excite their praise, but to earn +the consciousness of discharging the every-day duties of life, down +to the smallest and humblest of them, in an honest, upright, truthful, +and loving spirit.</p> +<p>“Respectability,” in its best sense, is good. The +respectable man is one worthy of regard, literally worth turning to +look at. But the respectability that consists in merely keeping +up appearances is not worth looking at in any sense. Far better +and more respectable is the good poor man than the bad rich one—better +the humble silent man than the agreeable well-appointed rogue who keeps +his gig. A well balanced and well-stored mind, a life full of +useful purpose, whatever the position occupied in it may be, is of far +greater importance than average worldly respectability. The highest +object of life we take to be, to form a manly character, and to work +out the best development possible, of body and spirit—of mind, +conscience, heart, and soul. This is the end: all else ought to +be regarded but as the means. Accordingly, that is not the most +successful life in which a man gets the most pleasure, the most money, +the most power or place, honour or fame; but that in which a man gets +the most manhood, and performs the greatest amount of useful work and +of human duty. Money is power after its sort, it is true; but +intelligence, public spirit, and moral virtue, are powers too, and far +nobler ones. “Let others plead for pensions,” wrote +Lord Collingwood to a friend; “I can be rich without money, by +endeavouring to be superior to everything poor. I would have my +services to my country unstained by any interested motive; and old Scott +<a name="citation27"></a><a href="#footnote27">{27}</a> and I can go +on in our cabbage-garden without much greater expense than formerly.” +On another occasion he said, “I have motives for my conduct which +I would not give in exchange for a hundred pensions.”</p> +<p>The making of a fortune may no doubt enable some people to “enter +society,” as it is called; but to be esteemed there, they must +possess qualities of mind, manners, or heart, else they are merely rich +people, nothing more. There are men “in society” now, +as rich as Croesus, who have no consideration extended towards them, +and elicit no respect. For why? They are but as money-bags: +their only power is in their till. The men of mark in society—the +guides and rulers of opinion—the really successful and useful +men—are not necessarily rich men; but men of sterling character, +of disciplined experience, and of moral excellence. Even the poor +man, like Thomas Wright, though he possess but little of this world’s +goods, may, in the enjoyment of a cultivated nature, of opportunities +used and not abused, of a life spent to the best of his means and ability, +look down, without the slightest feeling of envy, upon the person of +mere worldly success, the man of money-bags and acres.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<h2>CHAPTER XI—SELF-CULTURE—FACILITIES AND DIFFICULTIES</h2> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<p>“Every person has two educations, one which he receives from +others, and one, more important, which he gives to himself.”—Gibbon.</p> +<p>“Is there one whom difficulties dishearten—who bends +to the storm? He will do little. Is there one who will conquer? +That kind of man never fails.”—John Hunter.</p> +<p>“The wise and active conquer difficulties,<br />By daring to +attempt them: sloth and folly<br />Shiver and shrink at sight of toil +and danger,<br />And <i>make</i> the impossibility they fear.”—Rowe.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>“The best part of every man’s education,” said +Sir Walter Scott, “is that which he gives to himself.” +The late Sir Benjamin Brodie delighted to remember this saying, and +he used to congratulate himself on the fact that professionally he was +self-taught. But this is necessarily the case with all men who +have acquired distinction in letters, science, or art. The education +received at school or college is but a beginning, and is valuable mainly +inasmuch as it trains the mind and habituates it to continuous application +and study. That which is put into us by others is always far less +ours than that which we acquire by our own diligent and persevering +effort. Knowledge conquered by labour becomes a possession—a +property entirely our own. A greater vividness and permanency +of impression is secured; and facts thus acquired become registered +in the mind in a way that mere imparted information can never effect. +This kind of self-culture also calls forth power and cultivates strength. +The solution of one problem helps the mastery of another; and thus knowledge +is carried into faculty. Our own active effort is the essential +thing; and no facilities, no books, no teachers, no amount of lessons +learnt by rote will enable us to dispense with it.</p> +<p>The best teachers have been the readiest to recognize the importance +of self-culture, and of stimulating the student to acquire knowledge +by the active exercise of his own faculties. They have relied +more upon <i>training</i> than upon telling, and sought to make their +pupils themselves active parties to the work in which they were engaged; +thus making teaching something far higher than the mere passive reception +of the scraps and details of knowledge. This was the spirit in +which the great Dr. Arnold worked; he strove to teach his pupils to +rely upon themselves, and develop their powers by their own active efforts, +himself merely guiding, directing, stimulating, and encouraging them. +“I would far rather,” he said, “send a boy to Van +Diemen’s Land, where he must work for his bread, than send him +to Oxford to live in luxury, without any desire in his mind to avail +himself of his advantages.” “If there be one thing +on earth,” he observed on another occasion, “which is truly +admirable, it is to see God’s wisdom blessing an inferiority of +natural powers, when they have been honestly, truly, and zealously cultivated.” +Speaking of a pupil of this character, he said, “I would stand +to that man hat in hand.” Once at Laleham, when teaching +a rather dull boy, Arnold spoke somewhat sharply to him, on which the +pupil looked up in his face and said, “Why do you speak angrily, +sir? <i>indeed</i>, I am doing the best I can.” Years afterwards, +Arnold used to tell the story to his children, and added, “I never +felt so much in my life—that look and that speech I have never +forgotten.”</p> +<p>From the numerous instances already cited of men of humble station +who have risen to distinction in science and literature, it will be +obvious that labour is by no means incompatible with the highest intellectual +culture. Work in moderation is healthy, as well as agreeable to +the human constitution. Work educates the body, as study educates +the mind; and that is the best state of society in which there is some +work for every man’s leisure, and some leisure for every man’s +work. Even the leisure classes are in a measure compelled to work, +sometimes as a relief from <i>ennui</i>, but in most cases to gratify +an instinct which they cannot resist. Some go foxhunting in the +English counties, others grouse-shooting on the Scotch hills, while +many wander away every summer to climb mountains in Switzerland. +Hence the boating, running, cricketing, and athletic sports of the public +schools, in which our young men at the same time so healthfully cultivate +their strength both of mind and body. It is said that the Duke +of Wellington, when once looking on at the boys engaged in their sports +in the play-ground at Eton, where he had spent many of his own younger +days, made the remark, “It was there that the battle of Waterloo +was won!”</p> +<p>Daniel Malthus urged his son when at college to be most diligent +in the cultivation of knowledge, but he also enjoined him to pursue +manly sports as the best means of keeping up the full working power +of his mind, as well as of enjoying the pleasures of intellect. +“Every kind of knowledge,” said he, “every acquaintance +with nature and art, will amuse and strengthen your mind, and I am perfectly +pleased that cricket should do the same by your arms and legs; I love +to see you excel in exercises of the body, and I think myself that the +better half, and much the most agreeable part, of the pleasures of the +mind is best enjoyed while one is upon one’s legs.” +But a still more important use of active employment is that referred +to by the great divine, Jeremy Taylor. “Avoid idleness,” +he says, “and fill up all the spaces of thy time with severe and +useful employment; for lust easily creeps in at those emptinesses where +the soul is unemployed and the body is at ease; for no easy, healthful, +idle person was ever chaste if he could be tempted; but of all employments +bodily labour is the most useful, and of the greatest benefit for driving +away the devil.”</p> +<p>Practical success in life depends more upon physical health than +is generally imagined. Hodson, of Hodson’s Horse, writing +home to a friend in England, said, “I believe, if I get on well +in India, it will be owing, physically speaking, to a sound digestion.” +The capacity for continuous working in any calling must necessarily +depend in a great measure upon this; and hence the necessity for attending +to health, even as a means of intellectual labour. It is perhaps +to the neglect of physical exercise that we find amongst students so +frequent a tendency towards discontent, unhappiness, inaction, and reverie,—displaying +itself in contempt for real life and disgust at the beaten tracks of +men,—a tendency which in England has been called Byronism, and +in Germany Wertherism. Dr. Channing noted the same growth in America, +which led him to make the remark, that “too many of our young +men grow up in a school of despair.” The only remedy for +this green-sickness in youth is physical exercise—action, work, +and bodily occupation.</p> +<p>The use of early labour in self-imposed mechanical employments may +be illustrated by the boyhood of Sir Isaac Newton. Though a comparatively +dull scholar, he was very assiduous in the use of his saw, hammer, and +hatchet—“knocking and hammering in his lodging room”—making +models of windmills, carriages, and machines of all sorts; and as he +grew older, he took delight in making little tables and cupboards for +his friends. Smeaton, Watt, and Stephenson, were equally handy +with tools when mere boys; and but for such kind of self-culture in +their youth, it is doubtful whether they would have accomplished so +much in their manhood. Such was also the early training of the +great inventors and mechanics described in the preceding pages, whose +contrivance and intelligence were practically trained by the constant +use of their hands in early life. Even where men belonging to +the manual labour class have risen above it, and become more purely +intellectual labourers, they have found the advantages of their early +training in their later pursuits. Elihu Burritt says he found +hard labour <i>necessary</i> to enable him to study with effect; and +more than once he gave up school-teaching and study, and, taking to +his leather-apron again, went back to his blacksmith’s forge and +anvil for his health of body and mind’s sake.</p> +<p>The training of young men in the use of tools would, at the same +time that it educated them in “common things,” teach them +the use of their hands and arms, familiarize them with healthy work, +exercise their faculties upon things tangible and actual, give them +some practical acquaintance with mechanics, impart to them the ability +of being useful, and implant in them the habit of persevering physical +effort. This is an advantage which the working classes, strictly +so called, certainly possess over the leisure classes,—that they +are in early life under the necessity of applying themselves laboriously +to some mechanical pursuit or other,—thus acquiring manual dexterity +and the use of their physical powers. The chief disadvantage attached +to the calling of the laborious classes is, not that they are employed +in physical work, but that they are too exclusively so employed, often +to the neglect of their moral and intellectual faculties. While +the youths of the leisure classes, having been taught to associate labour +with servility, have shunned it, and been allowed to grow up practically +ignorant, the poorer classes, confining themselves within the circle +of their laborious callings, have been allowed to grow up in a large +proportion of cases absolutely illiterate. It seems possible, +however, to avoid both these evils by combining physical training or +physical work with intellectual culture: and there are various signs +abroad which seem to mark the gradual adoption of this healthier system +of education.</p> +<p>The success of even professional men depends in no slight degree +on their physical health; and a public writer has gone so far as to +say that “the greatness of our great men is quite as much a bodily +affair as a mental one.” <a name="citation28"></a><a href="#footnote28">{28}</a> +A healthy breathing apparatus is as indispensable to the successful +lawyer or politician as a well-cultured intellect. The thorough +aëration of the blood by free exposure to a large breathing surface +in the lungs, is necessary to maintain that full vital power on which +the vigorous working of the brain in so large a measure depends. +The lawyer has to climb the heights of his profession through close +and heated courts, and the political leader has to bear the fatigue +and excitement of long and anxious debates in a crowded House. +Hence the lawyer in full practice and the parliamentary leader in full +work are called upon to display powers of physical endurance and activity +even more extraordinary than those of the intellect,—such powers +as have been exhibited in so remarkable a degree by Brougham, Lyndhurst, +and Campbell; by Peel, Graham, and Palmerston—all full-chested +men.</p> +<p>Though Sir Walter Scott, when at Edinburgh College, went by the name +of “The Greek Blockhead,” he was, notwithstanding his lameness, +a remarkably healthy youth: he could spear a salmon with the best fisher +on the Tweed, and ride a wild horse with any hunter in Yarrow. +When devoting himself in after life to literary pursuits, Sir Walter +never lost his taste for field sports; but while writing ‘Waverley’ +in the morning, he would in the afternoon course hares. Professor +Wilson was a very athlete, as great at throwing the hammer as in his +flights of eloquence and poetry; and Burns, when a youth, was remarkable +chiefly for his leaping, putting, and wrestling. Some of our greatest +divines were distinguished in their youth for their physical energies. +Isaac Barrow, when at the Charterhouse School, was notorious for his +pugilistic encounters, in which he got many a bloody nose; Andrew Fuller, +when working as a farmer’s lad at Soham, was chiefly famous for +his skill in boxing; and Adam Clarke, when a boy, was only remarkable +for the strength displayed by him in “rolling large stones about,”—the +secret, possibly, of some of the power which he subsequently displayed +in rolling forth large thoughts in his manhood.</p> +<p>While it is necessary, then, in the first place to secure this solid +foundation of physical health, it must also be observed that the cultivation +of the habit of mental application is quite indispensable for the education +of the student. The maxim that “Labour conquers all things” +holds especially true in the case of the conquest of knowledge. +The road into learning is alike free to all who will give the labour +and the study requisite to gather it; nor are there any difficulties +so great that the student of resolute purpose may not surmount and overcome +them. It was one of the characteristic expressions of Chatterton, +that God had sent his creatures into the world with arms long enough +to reach anything if they chose to be at the trouble. In study, +as in business, energy is the great thing. There must be the “fervet +opus”: we must not only strike the iron while it is hot, but strike +it till it is made hot. It is astonishing how much may be accomplished +in self-culture by the energetic and the persevering, who are careful +to avail themselves of opportunities, and use up the fragments of spare +time which the idle permit to run to waste. Thus Ferguson learnt +astronomy from the heavens, while wrapt in a sheep-skin on the highland +hills. Thus Stone learnt mathematics while working as a journeyman +gardener; thus Drew studied the highest philosophy in the intervals +of cobbling shoes; and thus Miller taught himself geology while working +as a day labourer in a quarry.</p> +<p>Sir Joshua Reynolds, as we have already observed, was so earnest +a believer in the force of industry that he held that all men might +achieve excellence if they would but exercise the power of assiduous +and patient working. He held that drudgery lay on the road to +genius, and that there was no limit to the proficiency of an artist +except the limit of his own painstaking. He would not believe +in what is called inspiration, but only in study and labour. “Excellence,” +he said, “is never granted to man but as the reward of labour.” +“If you have great talents, industry will improve them; if you +have but moderate abilities, industry will supply their deficiency. +Nothing is denied to well-directed labour; nothing is to be obtained +without it.” Sir Fowell Buxton was an equal believer in +the power of study; and he entertained the modest idea that he could +do as well as other men if he devoted to the pursuit double the time +and labour that they did. He placed his great confidence in ordinary +means and extraordinary application.</p> +<p>“I have known several men in my life,” says Dr. Ross, +“who may be recognized in days to come as men of genius, and they +were all plodders, hard-working, <i>intent</i> men. Genius is +known by its works; genius without works is a blind faith, a dumb oracle. +But meritorious works are the result of time and labour, and cannot +be accomplished by intention or by a wish. . . . Every great work is +the result of vast preparatory training. Facility comes by labour. +Nothing seems easy, not even walking, that was not difficult at first. +The orator whose eye flashes instantaneous fire, and whose lips pour +out a flood of noble thoughts, startling by their unexpectedness, and +elevating by their wisdom and truth, has learned his secret by patient +repetition, and after many bitter disappointments.” <a name="citation29"></a><a href="#footnote29">{29}</a></p> +<p>Thoroughness and accuracy are two principal points to be aimed at +in study. Francis Horner, in laying down rules for the cultivation +of his mind, placed great stress upon the habit of continuous application +to one subject for the sake of mastering it thoroughly; he confined +himself, with this object, to only a few books, and resisted with the +greatest firmness “every approach to a habit of desultory reading.” +The value of knowledge to any man consists not in its quantity, but +mainly in the good uses to which he can apply it. Hence a little +knowledge, of an exact and perfect character, is always found more valuable +for practical purposes than any extent of superficial learning.</p> +<p>One of Ignatius Loyola’s maxims was, “He who does well +one work at a time, does more than all.” By spreading our +efforts over too large a surface we inevitably weaken our force, hinder +our progress, and acquire a habit of fitfulness and ineffective working. +Lord St. Leonards once communicated to Sir Fowell Buxton the mode in +which he had conducted his studies, and thus explained the secret of +his success. “I resolved,” said he, “when beginning +to read law, to make everything I acquired perfectly my own, and never +to go to a second thing till I had entirely accomplished the first. +Many of my competitors read as much in a day as I read in a week; but, +at the end of twelve months, my knowledge was as fresh as the day it +was acquired, while theirs had glided away from recollection.”</p> +<p>It is not the quantity of study that one gets through, or the amount +of reading, that makes a wise man; but the appositeness of the study +to the purpose for which it is pursued; the concentration of the mind +for the time being on the subject under consideration; and the habitual +discipline by which the whole system of mental application is regulated. +Abernethy was even of opinion that there was a point of saturation in +his own mind, and that if he took into it something more than it could +hold, it only had the effect of pushing something else out. Speaking +of the study of medicine, he said, “If a man has a clear idea +of what he desires to do, he will seldom fail in selecting the proper +means of accomplishing it.”</p> +<p>The most profitable study is that which is conducted with a definite +aim and object. By thoroughly mastering any given branch of knowledge +we render it more available for use at any moment. Hence it is +not enough merely to have books, or to know where to read for information +as we want it. Practical wisdom, for the purposes of life, must +be carried about with us, and be ready for use at call. It is +not sufficient that we have a fund laid up at home, but not a farthing +in the pocket: we must carry about with us a store of the current coin +of knowledge ready for exchange on all occasions, else we are comparatively +helpless when the opportunity for using it occurs.</p> +<p>Decision and promptitude are as requisite in self-culture as in business. +The growth of these qualities may be encouraged by accustoming young +people to rely upon their own resources, leaving them to enjoy as much +freedom of action in early life as is practicable. Too much guidance +and restraint hinder the formation of habits of self-help. They +are like bladders tied under the arms of one who has not taught himself +to swim. Want of confidence is perhaps a greater obstacle to improvement +than is generally imagined. It has been said that half the failures +in life arise from pulling in one’s horse while he is leaping. +Dr. Johnson was accustomed to attribute his success to confidence in +his own powers. True modesty is quite compatible with a due estimate +of one’s own merits, and does not demand the abnegation of all +merit. Though there are those who deceive themselves by putting +a false figure before their ciphers, the want of confidence, the want +of faith in one’s self, and consequently the want of promptitude +in action, is a defect of character which is found to stand very much +in the way of individual progress; and the reason why so little is done, +is generally because so little is attempted.</p> +<p>There is usually no want of desire on the part of most persons to +arrive at the results of self-culture, but there is a great aversion +to pay the inevitable price for it, of hard work. Dr. Johnson +held that “impatience of study was the mental disease of the present +generation;” and the remark is still applicable. We may +not believe that there is a royal road to learning, but we seem to believe +very firmly in a “popular” one. In education, we invent +labour-saving processes, seek short cuts to science, learn French and +Latin “in twelve lessons,” or “without a master.” +We resemble the lady of fashion, who engaged a master to teach her on +condition that he did not plague her with verbs and participles. +We get our smattering of science in the same way; we learn chemistry +by listening to a short course of lectures enlivened by experiments, +and when we have inhaled laughing gas, seen green water turned to red, +and phosphorus burnt in oxygen, we have got our smattering, of which +the most that can be said is, that though it may be better than nothing, +it is yet good for nothing. Thus we often imagine we are being +educated while we are only being amused.</p> +<p>The facility with which young people are thus induced to acquire +knowledge, without study and labour, is not education. It occupies +but does not enrich the mind. It imparts a stimulus for the time, +and produces a sort of intellectual keenness and cleverness; but, without +an implanted purpose and a higher object than mere pleasure, it will +bring with it no solid advantage. In such cases knowledge produces +but a passing impression; a sensation, but no more; it is, in fact, +the merest epicurism of intelligence—sensuous, but certainly not +intellectual. Thus the best qualities of many minds, those which +are evoked by vigorous effort and independent action, sleep a deep sleep, +and are often never called to life, except by the rough awakening of +sudden calamity or suffering, which, in such cases, comes as a blessing, +if it serves to rouse up a courageous spirit that, but for it, would +have slept on.</p> +<p>Accustomed to acquire information under the guise of amusement, young +people will soon reject that which is presented to them under the aspect +of study and labour. Learning their knowledge and science in sport, +they will be too apt to make sport of both; while the habit of intellectual +dissipation, thus engendered, cannot fail, in course of time, to produce +a thoroughly emasculating effect both upon their mind and character. +“Multifarious reading,” said Robertson of Brighton, “weakens +the mind like smoking, and is an excuse for its lying dormant. +It is the idlest of all idlenesses, and leaves more of impotency than +any other.”</p> +<p>The evil is a growing one, and operates in various ways. Its +least mischief is shallowness; its greatest, the aversion to steady +labour which it induces, and the low and feeble tone of mind which it +encourages. If we would be really wise, we must diligently apply +ourselves, and confront the same continuous application which our forefathers +did; for labour is still, and ever will be, the inevitable price set +upon everything which is valuable. We must be satisfied to work +with a purpose, and wait the results with patience. All progress, +of the best kind, is slow; but to him who works faithfully and zealously +the reward will, doubtless, be vouchsafed in good time. The spirit +of industry, embodied in a man’s daily life, will gradually lead +him to exercise his powers on objects outside himself, of greater dignity +and more extended usefulness. And still we must labour on; for +the work of self-culture is never finished. “To be employed,” +said the poet Gray, “is to be happy.” “It is +better to wear out than rust out,” said Bishop Cumberland. +“Have we not all eternity to rest in?” exclaimed Arnauld. +“Repos ailleurs” was the motto of Marnix de St. Aldegonde, +the energetic and ever-working friend of William the Silent.</p> +<p>It is the use we make of the powers entrusted to us, which constitutes +our only just claim to respect. He who employs his one talent +aright is as much to be honoured as he to whom ten talents have been +given. There is really no more personal merit attaching to the +possession of superior intellectual powers than there is in the succession +to a large estate. How are those powers used—how is that +estate employed? The mind may accumulate large stores of knowledge +without any useful purpose; but the knowledge must be allied to goodness +and wisdom, and embodied in upright character, else it is naught. +Pestalozzi even held intellectual training by itself to be pernicious; +insisting that the roots of all knowledge must strike and feed in the +soil of the rightly-governed will. The acquisition of knowledge +may, it is true, protect a man against the meaner felonies of life; +but not in any degree against its selfish vices, unless fortified by +sound principles and habits. Hence do we find in daily life so +many instances of men who are well-informed in intellect, but utterly +deformed in character; filled with the learning of the schools, yet +possessing little practical wisdom, and offering examples for warning +rather than imitation. An often quoted expression at this day +is that “Knowledge is power;” but so also are fanaticism, +despotism, and ambition. Knowledge of itself, unless wisely directed, +might merely make bad men more dangerous, and the society in which it +was regarded as the highest good, little better than a pandemonium.</p> +<p>It is possible that at this day we may even exaggerate the importance +of literary culture. We are apt to imagine that because we possess +many libraries, institutes, and museums, we are making great progress. +But such facilities may as often be a hindrance as a help to individual +self-culture of the highest kind. The possession of a library, +or the free use of it, no more constitutes learning, than the possession +of wealth constitutes generosity. Though we undoubtedly possess +great facilities it is nevertheless true, as of old, that wisdom and +understanding can only become the possession of individual men by travelling +the old road of observation, attention, perseverance, and industry. +The possession of the mere materials of knowledge is something very +different from wisdom and understanding, which are reached through a +higher kind of discipline than that of reading,—which is often +but a mere passive reception of other men’s thoughts; there being +little or no active effort of mind in the transaction. Then how +much of our reading is but the indulgence of a sort of intellectual +dram-drinking, imparting a grateful excitement for the moment, without +the slightest effect in improving and enriching the mind or building +up the character. Thus many indulge themselves in the conceit +that they are cultivating their minds, when they are only employed in +the humbler occupation of killing time, of which perhaps the best that +can be said is that it keeps them from doing worse things.</p> +<p>It is also to be borne in mind that the experience gathered from +books, though often valuable, is but of the nature of <i>learning</i>; +whereas the experience gained from actual life is of the nature of <i>wisdom</i>; +and a small store of the latter is worth vastly more than any stock +of the former. Lord Bolingbroke truly said that “Whatever +study tends neither directly nor indirectly to make us better men and +citizens, is at best but a specious and ingenious sort of idleness, +and the knowledge we acquire by it, only a creditable kind of ignorance—nothing +more.”</p> +<p>Useful and instructive though good reading may be, it is yet only +one mode of cultivating the mind; and is much less influential than +practical experience and good example in the formation of character. +There were wise, valiant, and true-hearted men bred in England, long +before the existence of a reading public. Magna Charta was secured +by men who signed the deed with their marks. Though altogether +unskilled in the art of deciphering the literary signs by which principles +were denominated upon paper, they yet understood and appreciated, and +boldly contended for, the things themselves. Thus the foundations +of English liberty were laid by men, who, though illiterate, were nevertheless +of the very highest stamp of character. And it must be admitted +that the chief object of culture is, not merely to fill the mind with +other men’s thoughts, and to be the passive recipient of their +impressions of things, but to enlarge our individual intelligence, and +render us more useful and efficient workers in the sphere of life to +which we may be called. Many of our most energetic and useful +workers have been but sparing readers. Brindley and Stephenson +did not learn to read and write until they reached manhood, and yet +they did great works and lived manly lives; John Hunter could barely +read or write when he was twenty years old, though he could make tables +and chairs with any carpenter in the trade. “I never read,” +said the great physiologist when lecturing before his class; “this”—pointing +to some part of the subject before him—“this is the work +that you must study if you wish to become eminent in your profession.” +When told that one of his contemporaries had charged him with being +ignorant of the dead languages, he said, “I would undertake to +teach him that on the dead body which he never knew in any language, +dead or living.”</p> +<p>It is not then how much a man may know, that is of importance, but +the end and purpose for which he knows it. The object of knowledge +should be to mature wisdom and improve character, to render us better, +happier, and more useful; more benevolent, more energetic, and more +efficient in the pursuit of every high purpose in life. “When +people once fall into the habit of admiring and encouraging ability +as such, without reference to moral character—and religious and +political opinions are the concrete form of moral character—they +are on the highway to all sorts of degradation.” <a name="citation30"></a><a href="#footnote30">{30}</a> +We must ourselves <i>be</i> and <i>do</i>, and not rest satisfied merely +with reading and meditating over what other men have been and done. +Our best light must be made life, and our best thought action. +At least we ought to be able to say, as Richter did, “I have made +as much out of myself as could be made of the stuff, and no man should +require more;” for it is every man’s duty to discipline +and guide himself, with God’s help, according to his responsibilities +and the faculties with which he has been endowed.</p> +<p>Self-discipline and self-control are the beginnings of practical +wisdom; and these must have their root in self-respect. Hope springs +from it—hope, which is the companion of power, and the mother +of success; for whoso hopes strongly has within him the gift of miracles. +The humblest may say, “To respect myself, to develop myself—this +is my true duty in life. An integral and responsible part of the +great system of society, I owe it to society and to its Author not to +degrade or destroy either my body, mind, or instincts. On the +contrary, I am bound to the best of my power to give to those parts +of my constitution the highest degree of perfection possible. +I am not only to suppress the evil, but to evoke the good elements in +my nature. And as I respect myself, so am I equally bound to respect +others, as they on their part are bound to respect me.” +Hence mutual respect, justice, and order, of which law becomes the written +record and guarantee.</p> +<p>Self-respect is the noblest garment with which a man may clothe himself—the +most elevating feeling with which the mind can be inspired. One +of Pythagoras’s wisest maxims, in his ‘Golden Verses,’ +is that with which he enjoins the pupil to “reverence himself.” +Borne up by this high idea, he will not defile his body by sensuality, +nor his mind by servile thoughts. This sentiment, carried into +daily life, will be found at the root of all the virtues—cleanliness, +sobriety, chastity, morality, and religion. “The pious and +just honouring of ourselves,” said Milton, may be thought the +radical moisture and fountain-head from whence every laudable and worthy +enterprise issues forth.” To think meanly of one’s +self, is to sink in one’s own estimation as well as in the estimation +of others. And as the thoughts are, so will the acts be. +Man cannot aspire if he look down; if he will rise, he must look up. +The very humblest may be sustained by the proper indulgence of this +feeling. Poverty itself may be lifted and lighted up by self-respect; +and it is truly a noble sight to see a poor man hold himself upright +amidst his temptations, and refuse to demean himself by low actions.</p> +<p>One way in which self-culture may be degraded is by regarding it +too exclusively as a means of “getting on.” Viewed +in this light, it is unquestionable that education is one of the best +investments of time and labour. In any line of life, intelligence +will enable a man to adapt himself more readily to circumstances, suggest +improved methods of working, and render him more apt, skilled and effective +in all respects. He who works with his head as well as his hands, +will come to look at his business with a clearer eye; and he will become +conscious of increasing power—perhaps the most cheering consciousness +the human mind can cherish. The power of self-help will gradually +grow; and in proportion to a man’s self-respect, will he be armed +against the temptation of low indulgences. Society and its action +will be regarded with quite a new interest, his sympathies will widen +and enlarge, and he will thus be attracted to work for others as well +as for himself.</p> +<p>Self-culture may not, however, end in eminence, as in the numerous +instances above cited. The great majority of men, in all times, +however enlightened, must necessarily be engaged in the ordinary avocations +of industry; and no degree of culture which can be conferred upon the +community at large will ever enable them—even were it desirable, +which it is not—to get rid of the daily work of society, which +must be done. But this, we think, may also be accomplished. +We can elevate the condition of labour by allying it to noble thoughts, +which confer a grace upon the lowliest as well as the highest rank. +For no matter how poor or humble a man may be, the great thinker of +this and other days may come in and sit down with him, and be his companion +for the time, though his dwelling be the meanest hut. It is thus +that the habit of well-directed reading may become a source of the greatest +pleasure and self-improvement, and exercise a gentle coercion, with +the most beneficial results, over the whole tenour of a man’s +character and conduct. And even though self-culture may not bring +wealth, it will at all events give one the companionship of elevated +thoughts. A nobleman once contemptuously asked of a sage, “What +have you got by all your philosophy?” “At least I +have got society in myself,” was the wise man’s reply.</p> +<p>But many are apt to feel despondent, and become discouraged in the +work of self-culture, because they do not “get on” in the +world so fast as they think they deserve to do. Having planted +their acorn, they expect to see it grow into an oak at once. They +have perhaps looked upon knowledge in the light of a marketable commodity, +and are consequently mortified because it does not sell as they expected +it would do. Mr. Tremenheere, in one of his ‘Education Reports’ +(for 1840-1), states that a schoolmaster in Norfolk, finding his school +rapidly falling off, made inquiry into the cause, and ascertained that +the reason given by the majority of the parents for withdrawing their +children was, that they had expected “education was to make them +better off than they were before,” but that having found it had +“done them no good,” they had taken their children from +school, and would give themselves no further trouble about education!</p> +<p>The same low idea of self-culture is but too prevalent in other classes, +and is encouraged by the false views of life which are always more or +less current in society. But to regard self-culture either as +a means of getting past others in the world, or of intellectual dissipation +and amusement, rather than as a power to elevate the character and expand +the spiritual nature, is to place it on a very low level. To use +the words of Bacon, “Knowledge is not a shop for profit or sale, +but a rich storehouse for the glory of the Creator and the relief of +man’s estate.” It is doubtless most honourable for +a man to labour to elevate himself, and to better his condition in society, +but this is not to be done at the sacrifice of himself. To make +the mind the mere drudge of the body, is putting it to a very servile +use; and to go about whining and bemoaning our pitiful lot because we +fail in achieving that success in life which, after all, depends rather +upon habits of industry and attention to business details than upon +knowledge, is the mark of a small, and often of a sour mind. Such +a temper cannot better be reproved than in the words of Robert Southey, +who thus wrote to a friend who sought his counsel: “I would give +you advice if it could be of use; but there is no curing those who choose +to be diseased. A good man and a wise man may at times be angry +with the world, at times grieved for it; but be sure no man was ever +discontented with the world if he did his duty in it. If a man +of education, who has health, eyes, hands, and leisure, wants an object, +it is only because God Almighty has bestowed all those blessings upon +a man who does not deserve them.”</p> +<p>Another way in which education may be prostituted is by employing +it as a mere means of intellectual dissipation and amusement. +Many are the ministers to this taste in our time. There is almost +a mania for frivolity and excitement, which exhibits itself in many +forms in our popular literature. To meet the public taste, our +books and periodicals must now be highly spiced, amusing, and comic, +not disdaining slang, and illustrative of breaches of all laws, human +and divine. Douglas Jerrold once observed of this tendency, “I +am convinced the world will get tired (at least I hope so) of this eternal +guffaw about all things. After all, life has something serious +in it. It cannot be all a comic history of humanity. Some +men would, I believe, write a Comic Sermon on the Mount. Think +of a Comic History of England, the drollery of Alfred, the fun of Sir +Thomas More, the farce of his daughter begging the dead head and clasping +it in her coffin on her bosom. Surely the world will be sick of +this blasphemy.” John Sterling, in a like spirit, said:- +“Periodicals and novels are to all in this generation, but more +especially to those whose minds are still unformed and in the process +of formation, a new and more effectual substitute for the plagues of +Egypt, vermin that corrupt the wholesome waters and infest our chambers.”</p> +<p>As a rest from toil and a relaxation from graver pursuits, the perusal +of a well-written story, by a writer of genius, is a high intellectual +pleasure; and it is a description of literature to which all classes +of readers, old and young, are attracted as by a powerful instinct; +nor would we have any of them debarred from its enjoyment in a reasonable +degree. But to make it the exclusive literary diet, as some do,—to +devour the garbage with which the shelves of circulating libraries are +filled,—and to occupy the greater portion of the leisure hours +in studying the preposterous pictures of human life which so many of +them present, is worse than waste of time: it is positively pernicious. +The habitual novel-reader indulges in fictitious feelings so much, that +there is great risk of sound and healthy feeling becoming perverted +or benumbed. “I never go to hear a tragedy,” said +a gay man once to the Archbishop of York, “it wears my heart out.” +The literary pity evoked by fiction leads to no corresponding action; +the susceptibilities which it excites involve neither inconvenience +nor self-sacrifice; so that the heart that is touched too often by the +fiction may at length become insensible to the reality. The steel +is gradually rubbed out of the character, and it insensibly loses its +vital spring. “Drawing fine pictures of virtue in one’s +mind,” said Bishop Butler, “is so far from necessarily or +certainly conducive to form a <i>habit</i> of it in him who thus employs +himself, that it may even harden the mind in a contrary course, and +render it gradually more insensible.”</p> +<p>Amusement in moderation is wholesome, and to be commended; but amusement +in excess vitiates the whole nature, and is a thing to be carefully +guarded against. The maxim is often quoted of “All work +and no play makes Jack a dull boy;” but all play and no work makes +him something greatly worse. Nothing can be more hurtful to a +youth than to have his soul sodden with pleasure. The best qualities +of his mind are impaired; common enjoyments become tasteless; his appetite +for the higher kind of pleasures is vitiated; and when he comes to face +the work and the duties of life, the result is usually aversion and +disgust. “Fast” men waste and exhaust the powers of +life, and dry up the sources of true happiness. Having forestalled +their spring, they can produce no healthy growth of either character +or intellect. A child without simplicity, a maiden without innocence, +a boy without truthfulness, are not more piteous sights than the man +who has wasted and thrown away his youth in self-indulgence. Mirabeau +said of himself, “My early years have already in a great measure +disinherited the succeeding ones, and dissipated a great part of my +vital powers.” As the wrong done to another to-day returns +upon ourselves to-morrow, so the sins of our youth rise up in our age +to scourge us. When Lord Bacon says that “strength of nature +in youth passeth over many excesses which are owing a man until he is +old,” he exposes a physical as well as a moral fact which cannot +be too well weighed in the conduct of life. “I assure you,” +wrote Giusti the Italian to a friend, “I pay a heavy price for +existence. It is true that our lives are not at our own disposal. +Nature pretends to give them gratis at the beginning, and then sends +in her account.” The worst of youthful indiscretions is, +not that they destroy health, so much as that they sully manhood. +The dissipated youth becomes a tainted man; and often he cannot be pure, +even if he would. If cure there be, it is only to be found in +inoculating the mind with a fervent spirit of duty, and in energetic +application to useful work.</p> +<p>One of the most gifted of Frenchmen, in point of great intellectual +endowments, was Benjamin Constant; but, <i>blasé</i> at twenty, +his life was only a prolonged wail, instead of a harvest of the great +deeds which he was capable of accomplishing with ordinary diligence +and self-control. He resolved upon doing so many things, which +he never did, that people came to speak of him as Constant the Inconstant. +He was a fluent and brilliant writer, and cherished the ambition of +writing works, “which the world would not willingly let die.” +But whilst Constant affected the highest thinking, unhappily he practised +the lowest living; nor did the transcendentalism of his books atone +for the meanness of his life. He frequented the gaming-tables +while engaged in preparing his work upon religion, and carried on a +disreputable intrigue while writing his ‘Adolphe.’ +With all his powers of intellect, he was powerless, because he had no +faith in virtue. “Bah!” said he, “what are honour +and dignity? The longer I live, the more clearly I see there is +nothing in them.” It was the howl of a miserable man. +He described himself as but “ashes and dust.” “I +pass,” said he, “like a shadow over the earth, accompanied +by misery and <i>ennui</i>.” He wished for Voltaire’s +energy, which he would rather have possessed than his genius. +But he had no strength of purpose—nothing but wishes: his life, +prematurely exhausted, had become but a heap of broken links. +He spoke of himself as a person with one foot in the air. He admitted +that he had no principles, and no moral consistency. Hence, with +his splendid talents, he contrived to do nothing; and, after living +many years miserable, he died worn out and wretched.</p> +<p>The career of Augustin Thierry, the author of the ‘History +of the Norman Conquest,’ affords an admirable contrast to that +of Constant. His entire life presented a striking example of perseverance, +diligence, self culture, and untiring devotion to knowledge. In +the pursuit he lost his eyesight, lost his health, but never lost his +love of truth. When so feeble that he was carried from room to +room, like a helpless infant, in the arms of a nurse, his brave spirit +never failed him; and blind and helpless though he was, he concluded +his literary career in the following noble words:- “If, as I think, +the interest of science is counted in the number of great national interests, +I have given my country all that the soldier, mutilated on the field +of battle, gives her. Whatever may be the fate of my labours, +this example, I hope, will not be lost. I would wish it to serve +to combat the species of moral weakness which is <i>the disease</i> +of our present generation; to bring back into the straight road of life +some of those enervated souls that complain of wanting faith, that know +not what to do, and seek everywhere, without finding it, an object of +worship and admiration. Why say, with so much bitterness, that +in the world, constituted as it is, there is no air for all lungs—no +employment for all minds? Is not calm and serious study there? +and is not that a refuge, a hope, a field within the reach of all of +us? With it, evil days are passed over without their weight being +felt. Every one can make his own destiny—every one employ +his life nobly. This is what I have done, and would do again if +I had to recommence my career; I would choose that which has brought +me where I am. Blind, and suffering without hope, and almost without +intermission, I may give this testimony, which from me will not appear +suspicious. There is something in the world better than sensual +enjoyments, better than fortune, better than health itself—it +is devotion to knowledge.”</p> +<p>Coleridge, in many respects, resembled Constant. He possessed +equally brilliant powers, but was similarly infirm of purpose. +With all his great intellectual gifts, he wanted the gift of industry, +and was averse to continuous labour. He wanted also the sense +of independence, and thought it no degradation to leave his wife and +children to be maintained by the brain-work of the noble Southey, while +he himself retired to Highgate Grove to discourse transcendentalism +to his disciples, looking down contemptuously upon the honest work going +forward beneath him amidst the din and smoke of London. With remunerative +employment at his command he stooped to accept the charity of friends; +and, notwithstanding his lofty ideas of philosophy, he condescended +to humiliations from which many a day-labourer would have shrunk. +How different in spirit was Southey! labouring not merely at work of +his own choice, and at taskwork often tedious and distasteful, but also +unremittingly and with the utmost eagerness seeking and storing knowledge +purely for the love of it. Every day, every hour had its allotted +employment: engagements to publishers requiring punctual fulfilment; +the current expenses of a large household duty to provide: for Southey +had no crop growing while his pen was idle. “My ways,” +he used to say, “are as broad as the king’s high-road, and +my means lie in an inkstand.”</p> +<p>Robert Nicoll wrote to a friend, after reading the ‘Recollections +of Coleridge,’ “What a mighty intellect was lost in that +man for want of a little energy—a little determination!” +Nicoll himself was a true and brave spirit, who died young, but not +before he had encountered and overcome great difficulties in life. +At his outset, while carrying on a small business as a bookseller, he +found himself weighed down with a debt of only twenty pounds, which +he said he felt “weighing like a millstone round his neck,” +and that, “if he had it paid he never would borrow again from +mortal man.” Writing to his mother at the time he said, +“Fear not for me, dear mother, for I feel myself daily growing +firmer and more hopeful in spirit. The more I think and reflect—and +thinking, not reading, is now my occupation—I feel that, whether +I be growing richer or not, I am growing a wiser man, which is far better. +Pain, poverty, and all the other wild beasts of life which so affrighten +others, I am so bold as to think I could look in the face without shrinking, +without losing respect for myself, faith in man’s high destinies, +or trust in God. There is a point which it costs much mental toil +and struggling to gain, but which, when once gained, a man can look +down from, as a traveller from a lofty mountain, on storms raging below, +while he is walking in sunshine. That I have yet gained this point +in life I will not say, but I feel myself daily nearer to it.”</p> +<p>It is not ease, but effort—not facility, but difficulty, that +makes men. There is, perhaps, no station in life, in which difficulties +have not to be encountered and overcome before any decided measure of +success can be achieved. Those difficulties are, however, our +best instructors, as our mistakes often form our best experience. +Charles James Fox was accustomed to say that he hoped more from a man +who failed, and yet went on in spite of his failure, than from the buoyant +career of the successful. “It is all very well,” said +he, “to tell me that a young man has distinguished himself by +a brilliant first speech. He may go on, or he may be satisfied +with his first triumph; but show me a young man who has <i>not</i> succeeded +at first, and nevertheless has gone on, and I will back that young man +to do better than most of those who have succeeded at the first trial.”</p> +<p>We learn wisdom from failure much more than from success. We +often discover what <i>will</i> do, by finding out what will not do; +and probably he who never made a mistake never made a discovery. +It was the failure in the attempt to make a sucking-pump act, when the +working bucket was more than thirty-three feet above the surface of +the water to be raised, that led observant men to study the law of atmospheric +pressure, and opened a new field of research to the genius of Galileo, +Torrecelli, and Boyle. John Hunter used to remark that the art +of surgery would not advance until professional men had the courage +to publish their failures as well as their successes. Watt the +engineer said, of all things most wanted in mechanical engineering was +a history of failures: “We want,” he said, “a book +of blots.” When Sir Humphry Davy was once shown a dexterously +manipulated experiment, he said—“I thank God I was not made +a dexterous manipulator, for the most important of my discoveries have +been suggested to me by failures.” Another distinguished +investigator in physical science has left it on record that, whenever +in the course of his researches he encountered an apparently insuperable +obstacle, he generally found himself on the brink of some discovery. +The very greatest things—great thoughts, discoveries, inventions—have +usually been nurtured in hardship, often pondered over in sorrow, and +at length established with difficulty.</p> +<p>Beethoven said of Rossini, that he had in him the stuff to have made +a good musician if he had only, when a boy, been well flogged; but that +he had been spoilt by the facility with which he produced. Men +who feel their strength within them need not fear to encounter adverse +opinions; they have far greater reason to fear undue praise and too +friendly criticism. When Mendelssohn was about to enter the orchestra +at Birmingham, on the first performance of his ‘Elijah,’ +he said laughingly to one of his friends and critics, “Stick your +claws into me! Don’t tell me what you like, but what you +don’t like!”</p> +<p>It has been said, and truly, that it is the defeat that tries the +general more than the victory. Washington lost more battles than +he gained; but he succeeded in the end. The Romans, in their most +victorious campaigns, almost invariably began with defeats. Moreau +used to be compared by his companions to a drum, which nobody hears +of except it be beaten. Wellington’s military genius was +perfected by encounter with difficulties of apparently the most overwhelming +character, but which only served to nerve his resolution, and bring +out more prominently his great qualities as a man and a general. +So the skilful mariner obtains his best experience amidst storms and +tempests, which train him to self-reliance, courage, and the highest +discipline; and we probably own to rough seas and wintry nights the +best training of our race of British seamen, who are, certainly, not +surpassed by any in the world.</p> +<p>Necessity may be a hard schoolmistress, but she is generally found +the best. Though the ordeal of adversity is one from which we +naturally shrink, yet, when it comes, we must bravely and manfully encounter +it. Burns says truly,</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>“Though losses and crosses<br />Be lessons right severe,<br />There’s +wit there, you’ll get there,<br />You’ll find no other where.”</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>“Sweet indeed are the uses of adversity.” They +reveal to us our powers, and call forth our energies. If there +be real worth in the character, like sweet herbs, it will give forth +its finest fragrance when pressed. “Crosses,” says +the old proverb, “are the ladders that lead to heaven.” +“What is even poverty itself,” asks Richter, “that +a man should murmur under it? It is but as the pain of piercing +a maiden’s ear, and you hang precious jewels in the wound.” +In the experience of life it is found that the wholesome discipline +of adversity in strong natures usually carries with it a self-preserving +influence. Many are found capable of bravely bearing up under +privations, and cheerfully encountering obstructions, who are afterwards +found unable to withstand the more dangerous influences of prosperity. +It is only a weak man whom the wind deprives of his cloak: a man of +average strength is more in danger of losing it when assailed by the +beams of a too genial sun. Thus it often needs a higher discipline +and a stronger character to bear up under good fortune than under adverse. +Some generous natures kindle and warm with prosperity, but there are +many on whom wealth has no such influence. Base hearts it only +hardens, making those who were mean and servile, mean and proud. +But while prosperity is apt to harden the heart to pride, adversity +in a man of resolution will serve to ripen it into fortitude. +To use the words of Burke, “Difficulty is a severe instructor, +set over us by the supreme ordinance of a parental guardian and instructor, +who knows us better than we know ourselves, as He loves us better too. +He that wrestles with us strengthens our nerves, and sharpens our skill: +our antagonist is thus our helper.” Without the necessity +of encountering difficulty, life might be easier, but men would be worth +less. For trials, wisely improved, train the character, and teach +self-help; thus hardship itself may often prove the wholesomest discipline +for us, though we recognise it not. When the gallant young Hodson, +unjustly removed from his Indian command, felt himself sore pressed +down by unmerited calumny and reproach, he yet preserved the courage +to say to a friend, “I strive to look the worst boldly in the +face, as I would an enemy in the field, and to do my appointed work +resolutely and to the best of my ability, satisfied that there is a +reason for all; and that even irksome duties well done bring their own +reward, and that, if not, still they <i>are</i> duties.”</p> +<p>The battle of life is, in most cases, fought up-hill; and to win +it without a struggle were perhaps to win it without honour. If +there were no difficulties there would be no success; if there were +nothing to struggle for, there would be nothing to be achieved. +Difficulties may intimidate the weak, but they act only as a wholesome +stimulus to men of resolution and valour. All experience of life +indeed serves to prove that the impediments thrown in the way of human +advancement may for the most part be overcome by steady good conduct, +honest zeal, activity, perseverance, and above all by a determined resolution +to surmount difficulties, and stand up manfully against misfortune.</p> +<p>The school of Difficulty is the best school of moral discipline, +for nations as for individuals. Indeed, the history of difficulty +would be but a history of all the great and good things that have yet +been accomplished by men. It is hard to say how much northern +nations owe to their encounter with a comparatively rude and changeable +climate and an originally sterile soil, which is one of the necessities +of their condition,—involving a perennial struggle with difficulties +such as the natives of sunnier climes know nothing of. And thus +it may be, that though our finest products are exotic, the skill and +industry which have been necessary to rear them, have issued in the +production of a native growth of men not surpassed on the globe.</p> +<p>Wherever there is difficulty, the individual man must come out for +better for worse. Encounter with it will train his strength, and +discipline his skill; heartening him for future effort, as the racer, +by being trained to run against the hill, at length courses with facility. +The road to success may be steep to climb, and it puts to the proof +the energies of him who would reach the summit. But by experience +a man soon learns that obstacles are to be overcome by grappling with +them,—that the nettle feels as soft as silk when it is boldly +grasped,—and that the most effective help towards realizing the +object proposed is the moral conviction that we can and will accomplish +it. Thus difficulties often fall away of themselves before the +determination to overcome them.</p> +<p>Much will be done if we do but try. Nobody knows what he can +do till he has tried; and few try their best till they have been forced +to do it. “<i>If</i> I could do such and such a thing,” +sighs the desponding youth. But nothing will be done if he only +wishes. The desire must ripen into purpose and effort; and one +energetic attempt is worth a thousand aspirations. It is these +thorny “ifs”—the mutterings of impotence and despair—which +so often hedge round the field of possibility, and prevent anything +being done or even attempted. “A difficulty,” said +Lord Lyndhurst, “is a thing to be overcome;” grapple with +it at once; facility will come with practice, and strength and fortitude +with repeated effort. Thus the mind and character may be trained +to an almost perfect discipline, and enabled to act with a grace, spirit, +and liberty, almost incomprehensible to those who have not passed through +a similar experience.</p> +<p>Everything that we learn is the mastery of a difficulty; and the +mastery of one helps to the mastery of others. Things which may +at first sight appear comparatively valueless in education—such +as the study of the dead languages, and the relations of lines and surfaces +which we call mathematics—are really of the greatest practical +value, not so much because of the information which they yield, as because +of the development which they compel. The mastery of these studies +evokes effort, and cultivates powers of application, which otherwise +might have lain dormant, Thus one thing leads to another, and so the +work goes on through life—encounter with difficulty ending only +when life and culture end. But indulging in the feeling of discouragement +never helped any one over a difficulty, and never will. D’Alembert’s +advice to the student who complained to him about his want of success +in mastering the first elements of mathematics was the right one—“Go +on, sir, and faith and strength will come to you.”</p> +<p>The danseuse who turns a pirouette, the violinist who plays a sonata, +have acquired their dexterity by patient repetition and after many failures. +Carissimi, when praised for the ease and grace of his melodies, exclaimed, +“Ah! you little know with what difficulty this ease has been acquired.” +Sir Joshua Reynolds, when once asked how long it had taken him to paint +a certain picture, replied, “All my life.” Henry Clay, +the American orator, when giving advice to young men, thus described +to them the secret of his success in the cultivation of his art: “I +owe my success in life,” said he, “chiefly to one circumstance—that +at the age of twenty-seven I commenced, and continued for years, the +process of daily reading and speaking upon the contents of some historical +or scientific book. These off-hand efforts were made, sometimes +in a cornfield, at others in the forest, and not unfrequently in some +distant barn, with the horse and the ox for my auditors. It is +to this early practice of the art of all arts that I am indebted for +the primary and leading impulses that stimulated me onward and have +shaped and moulded my whole subsequent destiny.”</p> +<p>Curran, the Irish orator, when a youth, had a strong defect in his +articulation, and at school he was known as “stuttering Jack Curran.” +While he was engaged in the study of the law, and still struggling to +overcome his defect, he was stung into eloquence by the sarcasms of +a member of a debating club, who characterised him as “Orator +Mum;” for, like Cowper, when he stood up to speak on a previous +occasion, Curran had not been able to utter a word. The taunt +stung him and he replied in a triumphant speech. This accidental +discovery in himself of the gift of eloquence encouraged him to proceed +in his studies with renewed energy. He corrected his enunciation +by reading aloud, emphatically and distinctly, the best passages in +literature, for several hours every day, studying his features before +a mirror, and adopting a method of gesticulation suited to his rather +awkward and ungraceful figure. He also proposed cases to himself, +which he argued with as much care as if he had been addressing a jury. +Curran began business with the qualification which Lord Eldon stated +to be the first requisite for distinction, that is, “to be not +worth a shilling.” While working his way laboriously at +the bar, still oppressed by the diffidence which had overcome him in +his debating club, he was on one occasion provoked by the Judge (Robinson) +into making a very severe retort. In the case under discussion, +Curran observed “that he had never met the law as laid down by +his lordship in any book in his library.” “That may +be, sir,” said the judge, in a contemptuous tone, “but I +suspect that <i>your</i> library is very small.” His lordship +was notoriously a furious political partisan, the author of several +anonymous pamphlets characterised by unusual violence and dogmatism. +Curran, roused by the allusion to his straitened circumstances, replied +thus; “It is very true, my lord, that I am poor, and the circumstance +has certainly curtailed my library; my books are not numerous, but they +are select, and I hope they have been perused with proper dispositions. +I have prepared myself for this high profession by the study of a few +good works, rather than by the composition of a great many bad ones. +I am not ashamed of my poverty; but I should be ashamed of my wealth, +could I have stooped to acquire it by servility and corruption. +If I rise not to rank, I shall at least be honest; and should I ever +cease to be so, many an example shows me that an ill-gained elevation, +by making me the more conspicuous, would only make me the more universally +and the more notoriously contemptible.”</p> +<p>The extremest poverty has been no obstacle in the way of men devoted +to the duty of self-culture. Professor Alexander Murray, the linguist, +learnt to write by scribbling his letters on an old wool-card with the +end of a burnt heather stem. The only book which his father, who +was a poor shepherd, possessed, was a penny Shorter Catechism; but that, +being thought too valuable for common use, was carefully preserved in +a cupboard for the Sunday catechisings. Professor Moor, when a +young man, being too poor to purchase Newton’s ‘Principia,’ +borrowed the book, and copied the whole of it with his own hand. +Many poor students, while labouring daily for their living, have only +been able to snatch an atom of knowledge here and there at intervals, +as birds do their food in winter time when the fields are covered with +snow. They have struggled on, and faith and hope have come to +them. A well-known author and publisher, William Chambers, of +Edinburgh, speaking before an assemblage of young men in that city, +thus briefly described to them his humble beginnings, for their encouragement: +“I stand before you,” he said, “a self-educated man. +My education was that which is supplied at the humble parish schools +of Scotland; and it was only when I went to Edinburgh, a poor boy, that +I devoted my evenings, after the labours of the day, to the cultivation +of that intellect which the Almighty has given me. From seven +or eight in the morning till nine or ten at night was I at my business +as a bookseller’s apprentice, and it was only during hours after +these, stolen from sleep, that I could devote myself to study. +I did not read novels: my attention was devoted to physical science, +and other useful matters. I also taught myself French. I +look back to those times with great pleasure, and am almost sorry I +have not to go through the same experience again; for I reaped more +pleasure when I had not a sixpence in my pocket, studying in a garret +in Edinburgh, then I now find when sitting amidst all the elegancies +and comforts of a parlour.”</p> +<p>William Cobbett’s account of how he learnt English Grammar +is full of interest and instruction for all students labouring under +difficulties. “I learned grammar,” said he, “when +I was a private soldier on the pay of sixpence a day. The edge +of my berth, or that of my guard-bed, was my seat to study in; my knapsack +was my book-case; a bit of board lying on my lap was my writing-table; +and the task did not demand anything like a year of my life. I +had no money to purchase candle or oil; in winter time it was rarely +that I could get any evening light but that of the fire, and only my +turn even of that. And if I, under such circumstances, and without +parent or friend to advise or encourage me, accomplished this undertaking, +what excuse can there be for any youth, however poor, however pressed +with business, or however circumstanced as to room or other conveniences? +To buy a pen or a sheet of paper I was compelled to forego some portion +of food, though in a state of half-starvation: I had no moment of time +that I could call my own; and I had to read and to write amidst the +talking, laughing, singing, whistling, and brawling of at least half +a score of the most thoughtless of men, and that, too, in the hours +of their freedom from all control. Think not lightly of the farthing +that I had to give, now and then, for ink, pen, or paper! That +farthing was, alas! a great sum to me! I was as tall as I am now; +I had great health and great exercise. The whole of the money, +not expended for us at market, was two-pence a week for each man. +I remember, and well I may! that on one occasion I, after all necessary +expenses, had, on a Friday, made shifts to have a halfpenny in reserve, +which I had destined for the purchase of a redherring in the morning; +but, when I pulled off my clothes at night, so hungry then as to be +hardly able to endure life, I found that I had lost my halfpenny! +I buried my head under the miserable sheet and rug, and cried like a +child! And again I say, if, I, under circumstances like these, +could encounter and overcome this task, is there, can there be, in the +whole world, a youth to find an excuse for the non-performance?”</p> +<p>We have been informed of an equally striking instance of perseverance +and application in learning on the part of a French political exile +in London. His original occupation was that of a stonemason, at +which he found employment for some time; but work becoming slack, he +lost his place, and poverty stared him in the face. In his dilemma +he called upon a fellow exile profitably engaged in teaching French, +and consulted him what he ought to do to earn a living. The answer +was, “Become a professor!” “A professor?” +answered the mason—“I, who am only a workman, speaking but +a patois! Surely you are jesting?” “On the contrary, +I am quite serious,” said the other, “and again I advise +you—become a professor; place yourself under me, and I will undertake +to teach you how to teach others.” “No, no!” +replied the mason, “it is impossible; I am too old to learn; I +am too little of a scholar; I cannot be a professor.” He +went away, and again he tried to obtain employment at his trade. +From London he went into the provinces, and travelled several hundred +miles in vain; he could not find a master. Returning to London, +he went direct to his former adviser, and said, “I have tried +everywhere for work, and failed; I will now try to be a professor!” +He immediately placed himself under instruction; and being a man of +close application, of quick apprehension, and vigorous intelligence, +he speedily mastered the elements of grammar, the rules of construction +and composition, and (what he had still in a great measure to learn) +the correct pronunciation of classical French. When his friend +and instructor thought him sufficiently competent to undertake the teaching +of others, an appointment, advertised as vacant, was applied for and +obtained; and behold our artisan at length become professor! It +so happened, that the seminary to which he was appointed was situated +in a suburb of London where he had formerly worked as a stonemason; +and every morning the first thing which met his eyes on looking out +of his dressing-room window was a stack of cottage chimneys which he +had himself built! He feared for a time lest he should be recognised +in the village as the quondam workman, and thus bring discredit on his +seminary, which was of high standing. But he need have been under +no such apprehension, as he proved a most efficient teacher, and his +pupils were on more than one occasion publicly complimented for their +knowledge of French. Meanwhile, he secured the respect and friendship +of all who knew him—fellow-professors as well as pupils; and when +the story of his struggles, his difficulties, and his past history, +became known to them, they admired him more than ever.</p> +<p>Sir Samuel Romilly was not less indefatigable as a self-cultivator. +The son of a jeweller, descended from a French refugee, he received +little education in his early years, but overcame all his disadvantages +by unwearied application, and by efforts constantly directed towards +the same end. “I determined,” he says, in his autobiography, +“when I was between fifteen and sixteen years of age, to apply +myself seriously to learning Latin, of which I, at that time, knew little +more than some of the most familiar rules of grammar. In the course +of three or four years, during which I thus applied myself, I had read +almost every prose writer of the age of pure Latinity, except those +who have treated merely of technical subjects, such as Varro, Columella, +and Celsus. I had gone three times through the whole of Livy, +Sallust, and Tacitus. I had studied the most celebrated orations +of Cicero, and translated a great deal of Homer. Terence, Virgil, +Horace, Ovid, and Juvenal, I had read over and over again.” +He also studied geography, natural history, and natural philosophy, +and obtained a considerable acquaintance with general knowledge. +At sixteen he was articled to a clerk in Chancery; worked hard; was +admitted to the bar; and his industry and perseverance ensured success. +He became Solicitor-General under the Fox administration in 1806, and +steadily worked his way to the highest celebrity in his profession. +Yet he was always haunted by a painful and almost oppressive sense of +his own disqualifications, and never ceased labouring to remedy them. +His autobiography is a lesson of instructive facts, worth volumes of +sentiment, and well deserves a careful perusal.</p> +<p>Sir Walter Scott was accustomed to cite the case of his young friend +John Leyden as one of the most remarkable illustrations of the power +of perseverance which he had ever known. The son of a shepherd +in one of the wildest valleys of Roxburghshire, he was almost entirely +self educated. Like many Scotch shepherds’ sons—like +Hogg, who taught himself to write by copying the letters of a printed +book as he lay watching his flock on the hill-side—like Cairns, +who from tending sheep on the Lammermoors, raised himself by dint of +application and industry to the professor’s chair which he now +so worthily holds—like Murray, Ferguson, and many more, Leyden +was early inspired by a thirst for knowledge. When a poor barefooted +boy, he walked six or eight miles across the moors daily to learn reading +at the little village schoolhouse of Kirkton; and this was all the education +he received; the rest he acquired for himself. He found his way +to Edinburgh to attend the college there, setting the extremest penury +at defiance. He was first discovered as a frequenter of a small +bookseller’s shop kept by Archibald Constable, afterwards so well +known as a publisher. He would pass hour after hour perched on +a ladder in mid-air, with some great folio in his hand, forgetful of +the scanty meal of bread and water which awaited him at his miserable +lodging. Access to books and lectures comprised all within the +bounds of his wishes. Thus he toiled and battled at the gates +of science until his unconquerable perseverance carried everything before +it. Before he had attained his nineteenth year he had astonished +all the professors in Edinburgh by his profound knowledge of Greek and +Latin, and the general mass of information he had acquired. Having +turned his views to India, he sought employment in the civil service, +but failed. He was however informed that a surgeon’s assistant’s +commission was open to him. But he was no surgeon, and knew no +more of the profession than a child. He could however learn. +Then he was told that he must be ready to pass in six months! +Nothing daunted, he set to work, to acquire in six months what usually +required three years. At the end of six months he took his degree +with honour. Scott and a few friends helped to fit him out; and +he sailed for India, after publishing his beautiful poem ‘The +Scenes of Infancy.’ In India he promised to become one of +the greatest of oriental scholars, but was unhappily cut off by fever +caught by exposure, and died at an early age.</p> +<p>The life of the late Dr. Lee, Professor of Hebrew at Cambridge, furnishes +one of the most remarkable instances in modern times of the power of +patient perseverance and resolute purpose in working out an honourable +career in literature. He received his education at a charity school +at Lognor, near Shrewsbury, but so little distinguished himself there, +that his master pronounced him one of the dullest boys that ever passed +through his hands. He was put apprentice to a carpenter, and worked +at that trade until he arrived at manhood. To occupy his leisure +hours he took to reading; and, some of the books containing Latin quotations, +he became desirous of ascertaining what they meant. He bought +a Latin grammar, and proceeded to learn Latin. As Stone, the Duke +of Argyle’s gardener, said, long before, “Does one need +to know anything more than the twenty-four letters in order to learn +everything else that one wishes?” Lee rose early and sat +up late, and he succeeded in mastering the Latin before his apprenticeship +was out. Whilst working one day in some place of worship, a copy +of a Greek Testament fell in his way, and he was immediately filled +with the desire to learn that language. He accordingly sold some +of his Latin books, and purchased a Greek Grammar and Lexicon. +Taking pleasure in learning, he soon mastered the language. Then +he sold his Greek books, and bought Hebrew ones, and learnt that language, +unassisted by any instructor, without any hope of fame or reward, but +simply following the bent of his genius. He next proceeded to +learn the Chaldee, Syriac, and Samaritan dialects. But his studies +began to tell upon his health, and brought on disease in his eyes through +his long night watchings with his books. Having laid them aside +for a time and recovered his health, he went on with his daily work. +His character as a tradesman being excellent, his business improved, +and his means enabled him to marry, which he did when twenty-eight years +old. He determined now to devote himself to the maintenance of +his family, and to renounce the luxury of literature; accordingly he +sold all his books. He might have continued a working carpenter +all his life, had not the chest of tools upon which he depended for +subsistence been destroyed by fire, and destitution stared him in the +face. He was too poor to buy new tools, so he bethought him of +teaching children their letters,—a profession requiring the least +possible capital. But though he had mastered many languages, he +was so defective in the common branches of knowledge, that at first +he could not teach them. Resolute of purpose, however, he assiduously +set to work, and taught himself arithmetic and writing to such a degree +as to be able to impart the knowledge of these branches to little children. +His unaffected, simple, and beautiful character gradually attracted +friends, and the acquirements of the “learned carpenter” +became bruited abroad. Dr. Scott, a neighbouring clergyman, obtained +for him the appointment of master of a charity school in Shrewsbury, +and introduced him to a distinguished Oriental scholar. These +friends supplied him with books, and Lee successively mastered Arabic, +Persic, and Hindostanee. He continued to pursue his studies while +on duty as a private in the local militia of the county; gradually acquiring +greater proficiency in languages. At length his kind patron, Dr. +Scott, enabled Lee to enter Queen’s College, Cambridge; and after +a course of study, in which he distinguished himself by his mathematical +acquirements, a vacancy occurring in the professorship of Arabic and +Hebrew, he was worthily elected to fill the honourable office. +Besides ably performing his duties as a professor, he voluntarily gave +much of his time to the instruction of missionaries going forth to preach +the Gospel to eastern tribes in their own tongue. He also made +translations of the Bible into several Asiatic dialects; and having +mastered the New Zealand language, he arranged a grammar and vocabulary +for two New Zealand chiefs who were then in England, which books are +now in daily use in the New Zealand schools. Such, in brief, is +the remarkable history of Dr. Samuel Lee; and it is but the counterpart +of numerous similarly instructive examples of the power of perseverance +in self-culture, as displayed in the lives of many of the most distinguished +of our literary and scientific men.</p> +<p>There are many other illustrious names which might be cited to prove +the truth of the common saying that “it is never too late to learn.” +Even at advanced years men can do much, if they will determine on making +a beginning. Sir Henry Spelman did not begin the study of science +until he was between fifty and sixty years of age. Franklin was +fifty before he fully entered upon the study of Natural Philosophy. +Dryden and Scott were not known as authors until each was in his fortieth +year. Boccaccio was thirty-five when he commenced his literary +career, and Alfieri was forty-six when he began the study of Greek. +Dr. Arnold learnt German at an advanced age, for the purpose of reading +Niebuhr in the original; and in like manner James Watt, when about forty, +while working at his trade of an instrument maker in Glasgow, learnt +French, German, and Italian, to enable himself to peruse the valuable +works on mechanical philosophy which existed in those languages. +Thomas Scott was fifty-six before he began to learn Hebrew. Robert +Hall was once found lying upon the floor, racked by pain, learning Italian +in his old age, to enable him to judge of the parallel drawn by Macaulay +between Milton and Dante. Handel was forty-eight before he published +any of his great works. Indeed hundreds of instances might be +given of men who struck out an entirely new path, and successfully entered +on new studies, at a comparatively advanced time of life. None +but the frivolous or the indolent will say, “I am too old to learn.” +<a name="citation31"></a><a href="#footnote31">{31}</a></p> +<p>And here we would repeat what we have said before, that it is not +men of genius who move the world and take the lead in it, so much as +men of steadfastness, purpose, and indefatigable industry. Notwithstanding +the many undeniable instances of the precocity of men of genius, it +is nevertheless true that early cleverness gives no indication of the +height to which the grown man will reach. Precocity is sometimes +a symptom of disease rather than of intellectual vigour. What +becomes of all the “remarkably clever children?” Where +are the duxes and prize boys? Trace them through life, and it +will frequently be found that the dull boys, who were beaten at school, +have shot ahead of them. The clever boys are rewarded, but the +prizes which they gain by their greater quickness and facility do not +always prove of use to them. What ought rather to be rewarded +is the endeavour, the struggle, and the obedience; for it is the youth +who does his best, though endowed with an inferiority of natural powers, +that ought above all others to be encouraged.</p> +<p>An interesting chapter might be written on the subject of illustrious +dunces—dull boys, but brilliant men. We have room, however, +for only a few instances. Pietro di Cortona, the painter, was +thought so stupid that he was nicknamed “Ass’s Head” +when a boy; and Tomaso Guidi was generally known as “Heavy Tom” +(Massaccio Tomasaccio), though by diligence he afterwards raised himself +to the highest eminence. Newton, when at school, stood at the +bottom of the lowest form but one. The boy above Newton having +kicked him, the dunce showed his pluck by challenging him to a fight, +and beat him. Then he set to work with a will, and determined +also to vanquish his antagonist as a scholar, which he did, rising to +the top of his class. Many of our greatest divines have been anything +but precocious. Isaac Barrow, when a boy at the Charterhouse School, +was notorious chiefly for his strong temper, pugnacious habits, and +proverbial idleness as a scholar; and he caused such grief to his parents +that his father used to say that, if it pleased God to take from him +any of his children, he hoped it might be Isaac, the least promising +of them all. Adam Clarke, when a boy, was proclaimed by his father +to be “a grievous dunce;” though he could roll large stones +about. Dean Swift was “plucked” at Dublin University, +and only obtained his recommendation to Oxford “speciali gratia.” +The well-known Dr. Chalmers and Dr. Cook <a name="citation32"></a><a href="#footnote32">{32}</a> +were boys together at the parish school of St. Andrew’s; and they +were found so stupid and mischievous, that the master, irritated beyond +measure, dismissed them both as incorrigible dunces.</p> +<p>The brilliant Sheridan showed so little capacity as a boy, that he +was presented to a tutor by his mother with the complimentary accompaniment +that he was an incorrigible dunce. Walter Scott was all but a +dunce when a boy, always much readier for a “bicker,” than +apt at his lessons. At the Edinburgh University, Professor Dalzell +pronounced upon him the sentence that “Dunce he was, and dunce +he would remain.” Chatterton was returned on his mother’s +hands as “a fool, of whom nothing could be made.” +Burns was a dull boy, good only at athletic exercises. Goldsmith +spoke of himself, as a plant that flowered late. Alfieri left +college no wiser than he entered it, and did not begin the studies by +which he distinguished himself, until he had run half over Europe. +Robert Clive was a dunce, if not a reprobate, when a youth; but always +full of energy, even in badness. His family, glad to get rid of +him, shipped him off to Madras; and he lived to lay the foundations +of the British power in India. Napoleon and Wellington were both +dull boys, not distinguishing themselves in any way at school. <a name="citation33"></a><a href="#footnote33">{33}</a> +Of the former the Duchess d’Abrantes says, “he had good +health, but was in other respects like other boys.”</p> +<p>Ulysses Grant, the Commander-in-Chief of the United States, was called +“Useless Grant” by his mother—he was so dull and unhandy +when a boy; and Stonewall Jackson, Lee’s greatest lieutenant, +was, in his youth, chiefly noted for his slowness. While a pupil +at West Point Military Academy he was, however, equally remarkable for +his indefatigable application and perseverance. When a task was +set him, he never left it until he had mastered it; nor did he ever +feign to possess knowledge which he had not entirely acquired. +“Again and again,” wrote one who knew him, “when called +upon to answer questions in the recitation of the day, he would reply, +‘I have not yet looked at it; I have been engaged in mastering +the recitation of yesterday or the day before.’ The result +was that he graduated seventeenth in a class of seventy. There +was probably in the whole class not a boy to whom Jackson at the outset +was not inferior in knowledge and attainments; but at the end of the +race he had only sixteen before him, and had outstripped no fewer than +fifty-three. It used to be said of him by his contemporaries, +that if the course had been for ten years instead of four, Jackson would +have graduated at the head of his class.” <a name="citation34"></a><a href="#footnote34">{34}</a></p> +<p>John Howard, the philanthropist, was another illustrious dunce, learning +next to nothing during the seven years that he was at school. +Stephenson, as a youth, was distinguished chiefly for his skill at putting +and wrestling, and attention to his work. The brilliant Sir Humphry +Davy was no cleverer than other boys: his teacher, Dr. Cardew, once +said of him, “While he was with me I could not discern the faculties +by which he was so much distinguished.” Indeed, Davy himself +in after life considered it fortunate that he had been left to “enjoy +so much idleness” at school. Watt was a dull scholar, notwithstanding +the stories told about his precocity; but he was, what was better, patient +and perseverant, and it was by such qualities, and by his carefully +cultivated inventiveness, that he was enabled to perfect his steam-engine.</p> +<p>What Dr. Arnold said of boys is equally true of men—that the +difference between one boy and another consists not so much in talent +as in energy. Given perseverance and energy soon becomes habitual. +Provided the dunce has persistency and application he will inevitably +head the cleverer fellow without those qualities. Slow but sure +wins the race. It is perseverance that explains how the position +of boys at school is so often reversed in real life; and it is curious +to note how some who were then so clever have since become so commonplace; +whilst others, dull boys, of whom nothing was expected, slow in their +faculties but sure in their pace, have assumed the position of leaders +of men. The author of this book, when a boy, stood in the same +class with one of the greatest of dunces. One teacher after another +had tried his skill upon him and failed. Corporal punishment, +the fool’s cap, coaxing, and earnest entreaty, proved alike fruitless. +Sometimes the experiment was tried of putting him at the top of his +class, and it was curious to note the rapidity with which he gravitated +to the inevitable bottom. The youth was given up by his teachers +as an incorrigible dunce—one of them pronouncing him to be a “stupendous +booby.” Yet, slow though he was, this dunce had a sort of +dull energy of purpose in him, which grew with his muscles and his manhood; +and, strange to say, when he at length came to take part in the practical +business of life, he was found heading most of his school companions, +and eventually left the greater number of them far behind. The +last time the author heard of him, he was chief magistrate of his native +town.</p> +<p>The tortoise in the right road will beat a racer in the wrong. +It matters not though a youth be slow, if he be but diligent. +Quickness of parts may even prove a defect, inasmuch as the boy who +learns readily will often forget as readily; and also because he finds +no need of cultivating that quality of application and perseverance +which the slower youth is compelled to exercise, and which proves so +valuable an element in the formation of every character. Davy +said “What I am I have made myself;” and the same holds +true universally.</p> +<p>To conclude: the best culture is not obtained from teachers when +at school or college, so much as by our own diligent self-education +when we have become men. Hence parents need not be in too great +haste to see their children’s talents forced into bloom. +Let them watch and wait patiently, letting good example and quiet training +do their work, and leave the rest to Providence. Let them see +to it that the youth is provided, by free exercise of his bodily powers, +with a full stock of physical health; set him fairly on the road of +self-culture; carefully train his habits of application and perseverance; +and as he grows older, if the right stuff be in him, he will be enabled +vigorously and effectively to cultivate himself.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<h2>CHAPTER XII—EXAMPLE—MODELS</h2> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<p>“Ever their phantoms rise before us,<br />Our loftier brothers, +but one in blood;<br />By bed and table they lord it o’er us,<br />With +looks of beauty and words of good.”—John Sterling.</p> +<p>“Children may be strangled, but Deeds never; they have an indestructible +life, both in and out of our consciousness.”—George Eliot.</p> +<p>“There is no action of man in this life, which is not the beginning +of so long a chain of consequences, as that no human providence is high +enough to give us a prospect to the end.”—Thomas of Malmesbury.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>Example is one of the most potent of instructors, though it teaches +without a tongue. It is the practical school of mankind, working +by action, which is always more forcible than words. Precept may +point to us the way, but it is silent continuous example, conveyed to +us by habits, and living with us in fact, that carries us along. +Good advice has its weight: but without the accompaniment of a good +example it is of comparatively small influence; and it will be found +that the common saying of “Do as I say, not as I do,” is +usually reversed in the actual experience of life.</p> +<p>All persons are more or less apt to learn through the eye rather +than the ear; and, whatever is seen in fact, makes a far deeper impression +than anything that is merely read or heard. This is especially +the case in early youth, when the eye is the chief inlet of knowledge. +Whatever children see they unconsciously imitate. They insensibly +come to resemble those who are about them—as insects take the +colour of the leaves they feed on. Hence the vast importance of +domestic training. For whatever may be the efficiency of schools, +the examples set in our Homes must always be of vastly greater influence +in forming the characters of our future men and women. The Home +is the crystal of society—the nucleus of national character; and +from that source, be it pure or tainted, issue the habits, principles +and maxims, which govern public as well as private life. The nation +comes from the nursery. Public opinion itself is for the most +part the outgrowth of the home; and the best philanthropy comes from +the fireside. “To love the little platoon we belong to in +society,” says Burke, “is the germ of all public affections.” +From this little central spot, the human sympathies may extend in an +ever widening circle, until the world is embraced; for, though true +philanthropy, like charity, begins at home, assuredly it does not end +there.</p> +<p>Example in conduct, therefore, even in apparently trivial matters, +is of no light moment, inasmuch as it is constantly becoming inwoven +with the lives of others, and contributing to form their natures for +better or for worse. The characters of parents are thus constantly +repeated in their children; and the acts of affection, discipline, industry, +and self-control, which they daily exemplify, live and act when all +else which may have been learned through the ear has long been forgotten. +Hence a wise man was accustomed to speak of his children as his “future +state.” Even the mute action and unconscious look of a parent +may give a stamp to the character which is never effaced; and who can +tell how much evil act has been stayed by the thought of some good parent, +whose memory their children may not sully by the commission of an unworthy +deed, or the indulgence of an impure thought? The veriest trifles +thus become of importance in influencing the characters of men. +“A kiss from my mother,” said West, “made me a painter.” +It is on the direction of such seeming trifles when children that the +future happiness and success of men mainly depend. Fowell Buxton, +when occupying an eminent and influential station in life, wrote to +his mother, “I constantly feel, especially in action and exertion +for others, the effects of principles early implanted by you in my mind.” +Buxton was also accustomed to remember with gratitude the obligations +which he owed to an illiterate man, a gamekeeper, named Abraham Plastow, +with whom he played, and rode, and sported—a man who could neither +read nor write, but was full of natural good sense and mother-wit. +“What made him particularly valuable,” says Buxton, “were +his principles of integrity and honour. He never said or did a +thing in the absence of my mother of which she would have disapproved. +He always held up the highest standard of integrity, and filled our +youthful minds with sentiments as pure and as generous as could be found +in the writings of Seneca or Cicero. Such was my first instructor, +and, I must add, my best.”</p> +<p>Lord Langdale, looking back upon the admirable example set him by +his mother, declared, “If the whole world were put into one scale, +and my mother into the other, the world would kick the beam.” +Mrs. Schimmel Penninck, in her old age, was accustomed to call to mind +the personal influence exercised by her mother upon the society amidst +which she moved. When she entered a room it had the effect of +immediately raising the tone of the conversation, and as if purifying +the moral atmosphere—all seeming to breathe more freely, and stand +more erectly. “In her presence,” says the daughter, +“I became for the time transformed into another person.” +So much does she moral health depend upon the moral atmosphere that +is breathed, and so great is the influence daily exercised by parents +over their children by living a life before their eyes, that perhaps +the best system of parental instruction might be summed up in these +two words: “Improve thyself.”</p> +<p>There is something solemn and awful in the thought that there is +not an act done or a word uttered by a human being but carries with +it a train of consequences, the end of which we may never trace. +Not one but, to a certain extent, gives a colour to our life, and insensibly +influences the lives of those about us. The good deed or word +will live, even though we may not see it fructify, but so will the bad; +and no person is so insignificant as to be sure that his example will +not do good on the one hand, or evil on the other. The spirits +of men do not die: they still live and walk abroad among us. It +was a fine and a true thought uttered by Mr. Disraeli in the House of +Commons on the death of Richard Cobden, that “he was one of those +men who, though not present, were still members of that House, who were +independent of dissolutions, of the caprices of constituencies, and +even of the course of time.”</p> +<p>There is, indeed, an essence of immortality in the life of man, even +in this world. No individual in the universe stands alone; he +is a component part of a system of mutual dependencies; and by his several +acts he either increases or diminishes the sum of human good now and +for ever. As the present is rooted in the past, and the lives +and examples of our forefathers still to a great extent influence us, +so are we by our daily acts contributing to form the condition and character +of the future. Man is a fruit formed and ripened by the culture +of all the foregoing centuries; and the living generation continues +the magnetic current of action and example destined to bind the remotest +past with the most distant future. No man’s acts die utterly; +and though his body may resolve into dust and air, his good or his bad +deeds will still be bringing forth fruit after their kind, and influencing +future generations for all time to come. It is in this momentous +and solemn fact that the great peril and responsibility of human existence +lies.</p> +<p>Mr. Babbage has so powerfully expressed this idea in a noble passage +in one of his writings that we here venture to quote his words: “Every +atom,” he says, “impressed with good or ill, retains at +once the motions which philosophers and sages have imparted to it, mixed +and combined in ten thousand ways with all that is worthless and base; +the air itself is one vast library, on whose pages are written <i>for +ever</i> all that man has ever said or whispered. There, in their +immutable but unerring characters, mixed with the earliest as well as +the latest sighs of mortality, stand for ever recorded vows unredeemed, +promises unfulfilled; perpetuating, in the united movements of each +particle, the testimony of man’s changeful will. But, if +the air we breathe is the never-failing historian of the sentiments +we have uttered, earth, air, and ocean, are, in like manner, the eternal +witnesses of the acts we have done; the same principle of the equality +of action and reaction applies to them. No motion impressed by +natural causes, or by human agency, is ever obliterated. . . . If the +Almighty stamped on the brow of the first murderer the indelible and +visible mark of his guilt, He has also established laws by which every +succeeding criminal is not less irrevocably chained to the testimony +of his crime; for every atom of his mortal frame, through whatever changes +its severed particles may migrate, will still retain adhering to it, +through every combination, some movement derived from that very muscular +effort by which the crime itself was perpetrated.”</p> +<p>Thus, every act we do or word we utter, as well as every act we witness +or word we hear, carries with it an influence which extends over, and +gives a colour, not only to the whole of our future life, but makes +itself felt upon the whole frame of society. We may not, and indeed +cannot, possibly, trace the influence working itself into action in +its various ramifications amongst our children, our friends, or associates; +yet there it is assuredly, working on for ever. And herein lies +the great significance of setting forth a good example,—a silent +teaching which even the poorest and least significant person can practise +in his daily life. There is no one so humble, but that he owes +to others this simple but priceless instruction. Even the meanest +condition may thus be made useful; for the light set in a low place +shines as faithfully as that set upon a hill. Everywhere, and +under almost all circumstances, however externally adverse—in +moorland shielings, in cottage hamlets, in the close alleys of great +towns—the true man may grow. He who tills a space of earth +scarce bigger than is needed for his grave, may work as faithfully, +and to as good purpose, as the heir to thousands. The commonest +workshop may thus be a school of industry, science, and good morals, +on the one hand; or of idleness, folly, and depravity, on the other. +It all depends on the individual men, and the use they make of the opportunities +for good which offer themselves.</p> +<p>A life well spent, a character uprightly sustained, is no slight +legacy to leave to one’s children, and to the world; for it is +the most eloquent lesson of virtue and the severest reproof of vice, +while it continues an enduring source of the best kind of riches. +Well for those who can say, as Pope did, in rejoinder to the sarcasm +of Lord Hervey, “I think it enough that my parents, such as they +were, never cost me a blush, and that their son, such as he is, never +cost them a tear.”</p> +<p>It is not enough to tell others what they are to do, but to exhibit +the actual example of doing. What Mrs. Chisholm described to Mrs. +Stowe as the secret of her success, applies to all life. “I +found,” she said, “that if we want anything <i>done</i>, +we must go to work and <i>do</i>: it is of no use merely to talk—none +whatever.” It is poor eloquence that only shows how a person +can talk. Had Mrs. Chisholm rested satisfied with lecturing, her +project, she was persuaded, would never have got beyond the region of +talk; but when people saw what she was doing and had actually accomplished, +they fell in with her views and came forward to help her. Hence +the most beneficent worker is not he who says the most eloquent things, +or even who thinks the most loftily, but he who does the most eloquent +acts.</p> +<p>True-hearted persons, even in the humblest station in life, who are +energetic doers, may thus give an impulse to good works out of all proportion, +apparently, to their actual station in society. Thomas Wright +might have talked about the reclamation of criminals, and John Pounds +about the necessity for Ragged Schools, and yet done nothing; instead +of which they simply set to work without any other idea in their minds +than that of doing, not talking. And how the example of even the +poorest man may tell upon society, hear what Dr. Guthrie, the apostle +of the Ragged School movement, says of the influence which the example +of John Pounds, the humble Portsmouth cobbler, exercised upon his own +working career:-</p> +<p>“The interest I have been led to take in this cause is an example +of how, in Providence, a man’s destiny—his course of life, +like that of a river—may be determined and affected by very trivial +circumstances. It is rather curious—at least it is interesting +to me to remember—that it was by a picture I was first led to +take an interest in ragged schools—by a picture in an old, obscure, +decaying burgh that stands on the shores of the Frith of Forth, the +birthplace of Thomas Chalmers. I went to see this place many years +ago; and, going into an inn for refreshment, I found the room covered +with pictures of shepherdesses with their crooks, and sailors in holiday +attire, not particularly interesting. But above the chimney-piece +there was a large print, more respectable than its neighbours, which +represented a cobbler’s room. The cobbler was there himself, +spectacles on nose, an old shoe between his knees—the massive +forehead and firm mouth indicating great determination of character, +and, beneath his bushy eyebrows, benevolence gleamed out on a number +of poor ragged boys and girls who stood at their lessons round the busy +cobbler. My curiosity was awakened; and in the inscription I read +how this man, John Pounds, a cobbler in Portsmouth, taking pity on the +multitude of poor ragged children left by ministers and magistrates, +and ladies and gentlemen, to go to ruin on the streets—how, like +a good shepherd, he gathered in these wretched outcasts—how he +had trained them to God and to the world—and how, while earning +his daily bread by the sweat of his brow, he had rescued from misery +and saved to society not less than five hundred of these children. +I felt ashamed of myself. I felt reproved for the little I had +done. My feelings were touched. I was astonished at this +man’s achievements; and I well remember, in the enthusiasm of +the moment, saying to my companion (and I have seen in my cooler and +calmer moments no reason for unsaying the saying)—‘That +man is an honour to humanity, and deserves the tallest monument ever +raised within the shores of Britain.’ I took up that man’s +history, and I found it animated by the spirit of Him who ‘had +compassion on the multitude.’ John Pounds was a clever man +besides; and, like Paul, if he could not win a poor boy any other way, +he won him by art. He would be seen chasing a ragged boy along +the quays, and compelling him to come to school, not by the power of +a policeman, but by the power of a hot potato. He knew the love +an Irishman had for a potato; and John Pounds might be seen running +holding under the boy’s nose a potato, like an Irishman, very +hot, and with a coat as ragged as himself. When the day comes +when honour will be done to whom honour is due, I can fancy the crowd +of those whose fame poets have sung, and to whose memory monuments have +been raised, dividing like the wave, and, passing the great, and the +noble, and the mighty of the land, this poor, obscure old man stepping +forward and receiving the especial notice of Him who said ‘Inasmuch +as ye did it to one of the least of these, ye did it also to Me.’”</p> +<p>The education of character is very much a question of models; we +mould ourselves so unconsciously after the characters, manners, habits, +and opinions of those who are about us. Good rules may do much, +but good models far more; for in the latter we have instruction in action—wisdom +at work. Good admonition and bad example only build with one hand +to pull down with the other. Hence the vast importance of exercising +great care in the selection of companions, especially in youth. +There is a magnetic affinity in young persons which insensibly tends +to assimilate them to each other’s likeness. Mr. Edgeworth +was so strongly convinced that from sympathy they involuntarily imitated +or caught the tone of the company they frequented, that he held it to +be of the most essential importance that they should be taught to select +the very best models. “No company, or good company,” +was his motto. Lord Collingwood, writing to a young friend, said, +“Hold it as a maxim that you had better be alone than in mean +company. Let your companions be such as yourself, or superior; +for the worth of a man will always be ruled by that of his company.” +It was a remark of the famous Dr. Sydenham that everybody some time +or other would be the better or the worse for having but spoken to a +good or a bad man. As Sir Peter Lely made it a rule never to look +at a bad picture if he could help it, believing that whenever he did +so his pencil caught a taint from it, so, whoever chooses to gaze often +upon a debased specimen of humanity and to frequent his society, cannot +help gradually assimilating himself to that sort of model.</p> +<p>It is therefore advisable for young men to seek the fellowship of +the good, and always to aim at a higher standard than themselves. +Francis Horner, speaking of the advantages to himself of direct personal +intercourse with high-minded, intelligent men, said, “I cannot +hesitate to decide that I have derived more intellectual improvement +from them than from all the books I have turned over.” Lord +Shelburne (afterwards Marquis of Lansdowne), when a young man, paid +a visit to the venerable Malesherbes, and was so much impressed by it, +that he said,—“I have travelled much, but I have never been +so influenced by personal contact with any man; and if I ever accomplish +any good in the course of my life, I am certain that the recollection +of M. de Malesherbes will animate my soul.” So Fowell Buxton +was always ready to acknowledge the powerful influence exercised upon +the formation of his character in early life by the example of the Gurney +family: “It has given a colour to my life,” he used to say. +Speaking of his success at the Dublin University, he confessed, “I +can ascribe it to nothing but my Earlham visits.” It was +from the Gurneys he “caught the infection” of self-improvement.</p> +<p>Contact with the good never fails to impart good, and we carry away +with us some of the blessing, as travellers’ garments retain the +odour of the flowers and shrubs through which they have passed. +Those who knew the late John Sterling intimately, have spoken of the +beneficial influence which he exercised on all with whom he came into +personal contact. Many owed to him their first awakening to a +higher being; from him they learnt what they were, and what they ought +to be. Mr. Trench says of him:- “It was impossible to come +in contact with his noble nature without feeling one’s self in +some measure <i>ennobled</i> and <i>lifted up</i>, as I ever felt when +I left him, into a higher region of objects and aims than that in which +one is tempted habitually to dwell.” It is thus that the +noble character always acts; we become insensibly elevated by him, and +cannot help feeling as he does and acquiring the habit of looking at +things in the same light. Such is the magical action and reaction +of minds upon each other.</p> +<p>Artists, also, feel themselves elevated by contact with artists greater +than themselves. Thus Haydn’s genius was first fired by +Handel. Hearing him play, Haydn’s ardour for musical composition +was at once excited, and but for this circumstance, he himself believed +that he would never have written the ‘Creation.’ Speaking +of Handel, he said, “When he chooses, he strikes like the thunderbolt;” +and at another time, “There is not a note of him but draws blood.” +Scarlatti was another of Handel’s ardent admirers, following him +all over Italy; afterwards, when speaking of the great master, he would +cross himself in token of admiration. True artists never fail +generously to recognise each other’s greatness. Thus Beethoven’s +admiration for Cherubini was regal: and he ardently hailed the genius +of Schubert: “Truly,” said he, “in Schubert dwells +a divine fire.” When Northcote was a mere youth he had such +an admiration for Reynolds that, when the great painter was once attending +a public meeting down in Devonshire, the boy pushed through the crowd, +and got so near Reynolds as to touch the skirt of his coat, “which +I did,” says Northcote, “with great satisfaction to my mind,”—a +true touch of youthful enthusiasm in its admiration of genius.</p> +<p>The example of the brave is an inspiration to the timid, their presence +thrilling through every fibre. Hence the miracles of valour so +often performed by ordinary men under the leadership of the heroic. +The very recollection of the deeds of the valiant stirs men’s +blood like the sound of a trumpet. Ziska bequeathed his skin to +be used as a drum to inspire the valour of the Bohemians. When +Scanderbeg, prince of Epirus, was dead, the Turks wished to possess +his bones, that each might wear a piece next his heart, hoping thus +to secure some portion of the courage he had displayed while living, +and which they had so often experienced in battle. When the gallant +Douglas, bearing the heart of Bruce to the Holy Land, saw one of his +knights surrounded and sorely pressed by the Saracens, he took from +his neck the silver case containing the hero’s bequest, and throwing +it amidst the thickest press of his foes, cried, “Pass first in +fight, as thou wert wont to do, and Douglas will follow thee, or die;” +and so saying, he rushed forward to the place where it fell, and was +there slain.</p> +<p>The chief use of biography consists in the noble models of character +in which it abounds. Our great forefathers still live among us +in the records of their lives, as well as in the acts they have done, +which live also; still sit by us at table, and hold us by the hand; +furnishing examples for our benefit, which we may still study, admire +and imitate. Indeed, whoever has left behind him the record of +a noble life, has bequeathed to posterity an enduring source of good, +for it serves as a model for others to form themselves by in all time +to come; still breathing fresh life into men, helping them to reproduce +his life anew, and to illustrate his character in other forms. +Hence a book containing the life of a true man is full of precious seed. +It is a still living voice; it is an intellect. To use Milton’s +words, “it is the precious life-blood of a master spirit, embalmed +and treasured up on purpose to a life beyond life.” Such +a book never ceases to exercise an elevating and ennobling influence. +But, above all, there is the Book containing the very highest Example +set before us to shape our lives by in this world—the most suitable +for all the necessities of our mind and heart—an example which +we can only follow afar off and feel after,</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>“Like plants or vines which never saw the sun,<br />But dream +of him and guess where he may be,<br />And do their best to climb and +get to him.”</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>Again, no young man can rise from the perusal of such lives as those +of Buxton and Arnold, without feeling his mind and heart made better, +and his best resolves invigorated. Such biographies increase a +man’s self-reliance by demonstrating what men can be, and what +they can do; fortifying his hopes and elevating his aims in life. +Sometimes a young man discovers himself in a biography, as Correggio +felt within him the risings of genius on contemplating the works of +Michael Angelo: “And I too, am a painter,” he exclaimed. +Sir Samuel Romilly, in his autobiography, confessed himself to have +been powerfully influenced by the life of the great and noble-minded +French Chancellor Daguesseau:- “The works of Thomas,” says +he, “had fallen into my hands, and I had read with admiration +his ‘Eloge of Daguesseau;’ and the career of honour which +he represented that illustrious magistrate to have run, excited to a +great degree my ardour and ambition, and opened to my imagination new +paths of glory.”</p> +<p>Franklin was accustomed to attribute his usefulness and eminence +to his having early read Cotton Mather’s ‘Essays to do Good’—a +book which grew out of Mather’s own life. And see how good +example draws other men after it, and propagates itself through future +generations in all lands. For Samuel Drew avers that he framed +his own life, and especially his business habits, after the model left +on record by Benjamin Franklin. Thus it is impossible to say where +a good example may not reach, or where it will end, if indeed it have +an end. Hence the advantage, in literature as in life, of keeping +the best society, reading the best books, and wisely admiring and imitating +the best things we find in them. “In literature,” +said Lord Dudley, “I am fond of confining myself to the best company, +which consists chiefly of my old acquaintance, with whom I am desirous +of becoming more intimate; and I suspect that nine times out of ten +it is more profitable, if not more agreeable, to read an old book over +again, than to read a new one for the first time.”</p> +<p>Sometimes a book containing a noble exemplar of life, taken up at +random, merely with the object of reading it as a pastime, has been +known to call forth energies whose existence had not before been suspected. +Alfieri was first drawn with passion to literature by reading ‘Plutarch’s +Lives.’ Loyola, when a soldier serving at the siege of Pampeluna, +and laid up by a dangerous wound in his leg, asked for a book to divert +his thoughts: the ‘Lives of the Saints’ was brought to him, +and its perusal so inflamed his mind, that he determined thenceforth +to devote himself to the founding of a religious order. Luther, +in like manner, was inspired to undertake the great labours of his life +by a perusal of the ‘Life and Writings of John Huss.’ +Dr. Wolff was stimulated to enter upon his missionary career by reading +the ‘Life of Francis Xavier;’ and the book fired his youthful +bosom with a passion the most sincere and ardent to devote himself to +the enterprise of his life. William Carey, also, got the first +idea of entering upon his sublime labours as a missionary from a perusal +of the Voyages of Captain Cook.</p> +<p>Francis Horner was accustomed to note in his diary and letters the +books by which he was most improved and influenced. Amongst these +were Condorcet’s ‘Eloge of Haller,’ Sir Joshua Reynolds’ +‘Discourses,’ the writings of Bacon, and ‘Burnet’s +Account of Sir Matthew Hale.’ The perusal of the last-mentioned +book—the portrait of a prodigy of labour—Horner says, filled +him with enthusiasm. Of Condorcet’s ‘Eloge of Haller,’ +he said: “I never rise from the account of such men without a +sort of thrilling palpitation about me, which I know not whether I should +call admiration, ambition, or despair.” And speaking of +the ‘Discourses’ of Sir Joshua Reynolds, he said: “Next +to the writings of Bacon, there is no book which has more powerfully +impelled me to self-culture. He is one of the first men of genius +who has condescended to inform the world of the steps by which greatness +is attained. The confidence with which he asserts the omnipotence +of human labour has the effect of familiarising his reader with the +idea that genius is an acquisition rather than a gift; whilst with all +there is blended so naturally and eloquently the most elevated and passionate +admiration of excellence, that upon the whole there is no book of a +more <i>inflammatory</i> effect.” It is remarkable that +Reynolds himself attributed his first passionate impulse towards the +study of art, to reading Richardson’s account of a great painter; +and Haydon was in like manner afterwards inflamed to follow the same +pursuit by reading of the career of Reynolds. Thus the brave and +aspiring life of one man lights a flame in the minds of others of like +faculties and impulse; and where there is equally vigorous efforts like +distinction and success will almost surely follow. Thus the chain +of example is carried down through time in an endless succession of +links,—admiration exciting imitation, and perpetuating the true +aristocracy of genius.</p> +<p>One of the most valuable, and one of the most infectious examples +which can be set before the young, is that of cheerful working. +Cheerfulness gives elasticity to the spirit. Spectres fly before +it; difficulties cause no despair, for they are encountered with hope, +and the mind acquires that happy disposition to improve opportunities +which rarely fails of success. The fervent spirit is always a +healthy and happy spirit; working cheerfully itself, and stimulating +others to work. It confers a dignity on even the most ordinary +occupations. The most effective work, also, is usually the full-hearted +work—that which passes through the hands or the head of him whose +heart is glad. Hume was accustomed to say that he would rather +possess a cheerful disposition—inclined always to look at the +bright side of things—than with a gloomy mind to be the master +of an estate of ten thousand a year. Granville Sharp, amidst his +indefatigable labours on behalf of the slave, solaced himself in the +evenings by taking part in glees and instrumental concerts at his brother’s +house, singing, or playing on the flute, the clarionet or the oboe; +and, at the Sunday evening oratorios, when Handel was played, he beat +the kettle-drums. He also indulged, though sparingly, in caricature +drawing. Fowell Buxton also was an eminently cheerful man; taking +special pleasure in field sports, in riding about the country with his +children, and in mixing in all their domestic amusements.</p> +<p>In another sphere of action, Dr. Arnold was a noble and a cheerful +worker, throwing himself into the great business of his life, the training +and teaching of young men, with his whole heart and soul. It is +stated in his admirable biography, that “the most remarkable thing +in the Laleham circle was the wonderful healthiness of tone which prevailed +there. It was a place where a new comer at once felt that a great +and earnest work was going forward. Every pupil was made to feel +that there was a work for him to do; that his happiness, as well as +his duty, lay in doing that work well. Hence an indescribable +zest was communicated to a young man’s feeling about life; a strange +joy came over him on discerning that he had the means of being useful, +and thus of being happy; and a deep respect and ardent attachment sprang +up towards him who had taught him thus to value life and his own self, +and his work and mission in the world. All this was founded on +the breadth and comprehensiveness of Arnold’s character, as well +as its striking truth and reality; on the unfeigned regard he had for +work of all kinds, and the sense he had of its value, both for the complex +aggregate of society and the growth and protection of the individual. +In all this there was no excitement; no predilection for one class of +work above another; no enthusiasm for any one-sided object: but a humble, +profound, and most religious consciousness that work is the appointed +calling of man on earth; the end for which his various faculties were +given; the element in which his nature is ordained to develop itself, +and in which his progressive advance towards heaven is to lie.” +Among the many valuable men trained for public life and usefulness by +Arnold, was the gallant Hodson, of Hodson’s Horse, who, writing +home from India, many years after, thus spoke of his revered master: +“The influence he produced has been most lasting and striking +in its effects. It is felt even in India; I cannot say more than +<i>that</i>.”</p> +<p>The useful influence which a right-hearted man of energy and industry +may exercise amongst his neighbours and dependants, and accomplish for +his country, cannot, perhaps, be better illustrated than by the career +of Sir John Sinclair; characterized by the Abbé Gregoire as “the +most indefatigable man in Europe.” He was originally a country +laird, born to a considerable estate situated near John o’ Groat’s +House, almost beyond the beat of civilization, in a bare wild country +fronting the stormy North Sea. His father dying while he was a +youth of sixteen, the management of the family property thus early devolved +upon him; and at eighteen he began a course of vigorous improvement +in the county of Caithness, which eventually spread all over Scotland. +Agriculture then was in a most backward state; the fields were unenclosed, +the lands undrained; the small farmers of Caithness were so poor that +they could scarcely afford to keep a horse or shelty; the hard work +was chiefly done, and the burdens borne, by the women; and if a cottier +lost a horse it was not unusual for him to marry a wife as the cheapest +substitute. The country was without roads or bridges; and drovers +driving their cattle south had to swim the rivers along with their beasts. +The chief track leading into Caithness lay along a high shelf on a mountain +side, the road being some hundred feet of clear perpendicular height +above the sea which dashed below. Sir John, though a mere youth, +determined to make a new road over the hill of Ben Cheilt, the old let-alone +proprietors, however, regarding his scheme with incredulity and derision. +But he himself laid out the road, assembled some twelve hundred workmen +early one summer’s morning, set them simultaneously to work, superintending +their labours, and stimulating them by his presence and example; and +before night, what had been a dangerous sheep track, six miles in length, +hardly passable for led horses, was made practicable for wheel-carriages +as if by the power of magic. It was an admirable example of energy +and well-directed labour, which could not fail to have a most salutary +influence upon the surrounding population. He then proceeded to +make more roads, to erect mills, to build bridges, and to enclose and +cultivate the waste lands. He introduced improved methods of culture, +and regular rotation of crops, distributing small premiums to encourage +industry; and he thus soon quickened the whole frame of society within +reach of his influence, and infused an entirely new spirit into the +cultivators of the soil. From being one of the most inaccessible +districts of the north—the very <i>ultima Thule</i> of civilization—Caithness +became a pattern county for its roads, its agriculture, and its fisheries. +In Sinclair’s youth, the post was carried by a runner only once +a week, and the young baronet then declared that he would never rest +till a coach drove daily to Thurso. The people of the neighbourhood +could not believe in any such thing, and it became a proverb in the +county to say of an utterly impossible scheme, “Ou, ay, that will +come to pass when Sir John sees the daily mail at Thurso!” +But Sir John lived to see his dream realized, and the daily mail established +to Thurso.</p> +<p>The circle of his benevolent operation gradually widened. Observing +the serious deterioration which had taken place in the quality of British +wool,—one of the staple commodities of the country,—he forthwith, +though but a private and little-known country gentleman, devoted himself +to its improvement. By his personal exertions he established the +British Wool Society for the purpose, and himself led the way to practical +improvement by importing 800 sheep from all countries, at his own expense. +The result was, the introduction into Scotland of the celebrated Cheviot +breed. Sheep farmers scouted the idea of south country flocks +being able to thrive in the far north. But Sir John persevered; +and in a few years there were not fewer than 300,000 Cheviots diffused +over the four northern counties alone. The value of all grazing +land was thus enormously increased; and Scotch estates, which before +were comparatively worthless, began to yield large rentals.</p> +<p>Returned by Caithness to Parliament, in which he remained for thirty +years, rarely missing a division, his position gave him farther opportunities +of usefulness, which he did not neglect to employ. Mr. Pitt, observing +his persevering energy in all useful public projects, sent for him to +Downing Street, and voluntarily proposed his assistance in any object +he might have in view. Another man might have thought of himself +and his own promotion; but Sir John characteristically replied, that +he desired no favour for himself, but intimated that the reward most +gratifying to his feelings would be Mr. Pitt’s assistance in the +establishment of a National Board of Agriculture. Arthur Young +laid a bet with the baronet that his scheme would never be established, +adding, “Your Board of Agriculture will be in the moon!” +But vigorously setting to work, he roused public attention to the subject, +enlisted a majority of Parliament on his side, and eventually established +the Board, of which he was appointed President. The result of +its action need not be described, but the stimulus which it gave to +agriculture and stock-raising was shortly felt throughout the whole +United Kingdom, and tens of thousands of acres were redeemed from barrenness +by its operation. He was equally indefatigable in encouraging +the establishment of fisheries; and the successful founding of these +great branches of British industry at Thurso and Wick was mainly due +to his exertions. He urged for long years, and at length succeeded +in obtaining the enclosure of a harbour for the latter place, which +is perhaps the greatest and most prosperous fishing town in the world.</p> +<p>Sir John threw his personal energy into every work in which he engaged, +rousing the inert, stimulating the idle, encouraging the hopeful, and +working with all. When a French invasion was threatened, he offered +to Mr. Pitt to raise a regiment on his own estate, and he was as good +as his word. He went down to the north, and raised a battalion +of 600 men, afterwards increased to 1000; and it was admitted to be +one of the finest volunteer regiments ever raised, inspired throughout +by his own noble and patriotic spirit. While commanding officer +of the camp at Aberdeen he held the offices of a Director of the Bank +of Scotland, Chairman of the British Wool Society, Provost of Wick, +Director of the British Fishery Society, Commissioner for issuing Exchequer +Bills, Member of Parliament for Caithness, and President of the Board +of Agriculture. Amidst all this multifarious and self-imposed +work, he even found time to write books, enough of themselves to establish +a reputation. When Mr. Rush, the American Ambassador, arrived +in England, he relates that he inquired of Mr. Coke of Holkham, what +was the best work on Agriculture, and was referred to Sir John Sinclair’s; +and when he further asked of Mr. Vansittart, Chancellor of the Exchequer, +what was the best work on British Finance, he was again referred to +a work by Sir John Sinclair, his ‘History of the Public Revenue.’ +But the great monument of his indefatigable industry, a work that would +have appalled other men, but only served to rouse and sustain his energy, +was his ‘Statistical Account of Scotland,’ in twenty-one +volumes, one of the most valuable practical works ever published in +any age or country. Amid a host of other pursuits it occupied +him nearly eight years of hard labour, during which he received, and +attended to, upwards of 20,000 letters on the subject. It was +a thoroughly patriotic undertaking, from which he derived no personal +advantage whatever, beyond the honour of having completed it. +The whole of the profits were assigned by him to the Society for the +Sons of the Clergy in Scotland. The publication of the book led +to great public improvements; it was followed by the immediate abolition +of several oppressive feudal rights, to which it called attention; the +salaries of schoolmasters and clergymen in many parishes were increased; +and an increased stimulus was given to agriculture throughout Scotland. +Sir John then publicly offered to undertake the much greater labour +of collecting and publishing a similar Statistical Account of England; +but unhappily the then Archbishop of Canterbury refused to sanction +it, lest it should interfere with the tithes of the clergy, and the +idea was abandoned.</p> +<p>A remarkable illustration of his energetic promptitude was the manner +in which he once provided, on a great emergency, for the relief of the +manufacturing districts. In 1793 the stagnation produced by the +war led to an unusual number of bankruptcies, and many of the first +houses in Manchester and Glasgow were tottering, not so much from want +of property, but because the usual sources of trade and credit were +for the time closed up. A period of intense distress amongst the +labouring classes seemed imminent, when Sir John urged, in Parliament, +that Exchequer notes to the amount of five millions should be issued +immediately as a loan to such merchants as could give security. +This suggestion was adopted, and his offer to carry out his plan, in +conjunction with certain members named by him, was also accepted. +The vote was passed late at night, and early next morning Sir John, +anticipating the delays of officialism and red tape, proceeded to bankers +in the city, and borrowed of them, on his own personal security, the +sum of 70,000<i>l</i>., which he despatched the same evening to those +merchants who were in the most urgent need of assistance. Pitt +meeting Sir John in the House, expressed his great regret that the pressing +wants of Manchester and Glasgow could not be supplied so soon as was +desirable, adding, “The money cannot be raised for some days.” +“It is already gone! it left London by to-night’s mail!” +was Sir John’s triumphant reply; and in afterwards relating the +anecdote he added, with a smile of pleasure, “Pitt was as much +startled as if I had stabbed him.” To the last this great, +good man worked on usefully and cheerfully, setting a great example +for his family and for his country. In so laboriously seeking +others’ good, it might be said that he found his own—not +wealth, for his generosity seriously impaired his private fortune, but +happiness, and self-satisfaction, and the peace that passes knowledge. +A great patriot, with magnificent powers of work, he nobly did his duty +to his country; yet he was not neglectful of his own household and home. +His sons and daughters grew up to honour and usefulness; and it was +one of the proudest things Sir John could say, when verging on his eightieth +year, that he had lived to see seven sons grown up, not one of whom +had incurred a debt he could not pay, or caused him a sorrow that could +have been avoided.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<h2>CHAPTER XIII—CHARACTER—THE TRUE GENTLEMAN</h2> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<p>“For who can always act? but he,<br />To whom a thousand memories +call,<br />Not being less but more than all<br />The gentleness he seemed +to be,</p> +<p>But seemed the thing he was, and joined<br />Each office of the social +hour<br />To noble manners, as the flower<br />And native growth of +noble mind;</p> +<p>And thus he bore without abuse<br />The grand old name of Gentleman.”—Tennyson.</p> +<p>“Es bildet ein Talent sich in der Stille,<br />Sich ein Charakter +in dem Strom der Welt.”—Goethe.</p> +<p>“That which raises a country, that which strengthens a country, +and that which dignifies a country,—that which spreads her power, +creates her moral influence, and makes her respected and submitted to, +bends the hearts of millions, and bows down the pride of nations to +her—the instrument of obedience, the fountain of supremacy, the +true throne, crown, and sceptre of a nation;—this aristocracy +is not an aristocracy of blood, not an aristocracy of fashion, not an +aristocracy of talent only; it is an aristocracy of Character. +That is the true heraldry of man.”—The Times.</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>The crown and glory of life is Character. It is the noblest +possession of a man, constituting a rank in itself, and an estate in +the general goodwill; dignifying every station, and exalting every position +in society. It exercises a greater power than wealth, and secures +all the honour without the jealousies of fame. It carries with +it an influence which always tells; for it is the result of proved honour, +rectitude, and consistency—qualities which, perhaps more than +any other, command the general confidence and respect of mankind.</p> +<p>Character is human nature in its best form. It is moral order +embodied in the individual. Men of character are not only the +conscience of society, but in every well-governed State they are its +best motive power; for it is moral qualities in the main which rule +the world. Even in war, Napoleon said the moral is to the physical +as ten to one. The strength, the industry, and the civilisation +of nations—all depend upon individual character; and the very +foundations of civil security rest upon it. Laws and institutions +are but its outgrowth. In the just balance of nature, individuals, +nations, and races, will obtain just so much as they deserve, and no +more. And as effect finds its cause, so surely does quality of +character amongst a people produce its befitting results.</p> +<p>Though a man have comparatively little culture, slender abilities, +and but small wealth, yet, if his character be of sterling worth, he +will always command an influence, whether it be in the workshop, the +counting-house, the mart, or the senate. Canning wisely wrote +in 1801, “My road must be through Character to power; I will try +no other course; and I am sanguine enough to believe that this course, +though not perhaps the quickest, is the surest.” You may +admire men of intellect; but something more is necessary before you +will trust them. Hence Lord John Russell once observed in a sentence +full of truth, “It is the nature of party in England to ask the +assistance of men of genius, but to follow the guidance of men of character.” +This was strikingly illustrated in the career of the late Francis Horner—a +man of whom Sydney Smith said that the Ten Commandments were stamped +upon his countenance. “The valuable and peculiar light,” +says Lord Cockburn, “in which his history is calculated to inspire +every right-minded youth, is this. He died at the age of thirty-eight; +possessed of greater public influence than any other private man; and +admired, beloved, trusted, and deplored by all, except the heartless +or the base. No greater homage was ever paid in Parliament to +any deceased member. Now let every young man ask—how was +this attained? By rank? He was the son of an Edinburgh merchant. +By wealth? Neither he, nor any of his relations, ever had a superfluous +sixpence. By office? He held but one, and only for a few +years, of no influence, and with very little pay. By talents? +His were not splendid, and he had no genius. Cautious and slow, +his only ambition was to be right. By eloquence? He spoke +in calm, good taste, without any of the oratory that either terrifies +or seduces. By any fascination of manner? His was only correct +and agreeable. By what, then, was it? Merely by sense, industry, +good principles, and a good heart—qualities which no well-constituted +mind need ever despair of attaining. It was the force of his character +that raised him; and this character not impressed upon him by nature, +but formed, out of no peculiarly fine elements, by himself. There +were many in the House of Commons of far greater ability and eloquence. +But no one surpassed him in the combination of an adequate portion of +these with moral worth. Horner was born to show what moderate +powers, unaided by anything whatever except culture and goodness, may +achieve, even when these powers are displayed amidst the competition +and jealousy of public life.”</p> +<p>Franklin, also, attributed his success as a public man, not to his +talents or his powers of speaking—for these were but moderate—but +to his known integrity of character. Hence it was, he says, “that +I had so much weight with my fellow citizens. I was but a bad +speaker, never eloquent, subject to much hesitation in my choice of +words, hardly correct in language, and yet I generally carried my point.” +Character creates confidence in men in high station as well as in humble +life. It was said of the first Emperor Alexander of Russia, that +his personal character was equivalent to a constitution. During +the wars of the Fronde, Montaigne was the only man amongst the French +gentry who kept his castle gates unbarred; and it was said of him, that +his personal character was a better protection for him than a regiment +of horse would have been.</p> +<p>That character is power, is true in a much higher sense than that +knowledge is power. Mind without heart, intelligence without conduct, +cleverness without goodness, are powers in their way, but they may be +powers only for mischief. We may be instructed or amused by them; +but it is sometimes as difficult to admire them as it would be to admire +the dexterity of a pickpocket or the horsemanship of a highwayman.</p> +<p>Truthfulness, integrity, and goodness—qualities that hang not +on any man’s breath—form the essence of manly character, +or, as one of our old writers has it, “that inbred loyalty unto +Virtue which can serve her without a livery.” He who possesses +these qualities, united with strength of purpose, carries with him a +power which is irresistible. He is strong to do good, strong to +resist evil, and strong to bear up under difficulty and misfortune. +When Stephen of Colonna fell into the hands of his base assailants, +and they asked him in derision, “Where is now your fortress?” +“Here,” was his bold reply, placing his hand upon his heart. +It is in misfortune that the character of the upright man shines forth +with the greatest lustre; and when all else fails, he takes stand upon +his integrity and his courage.</p> +<p>The rules of conduct followed by Lord Erskine—a man of sterling +independence of principle and scrupulous adherence to truth—are +worthy of being engraven on every young man’s heart. “It +was a first command and counsel of my earliest youth,” he said, +“always to do what my conscience told me to be a duty, and to +leave the consequence to God. I shall carry with me the memory, +and I trust the practice, of this parental lesson to the grave. +I have hitherto followed it, and I have no reason to complain that my +obedience to it has been a temporal sacrifice. I have found it, +on the contrary, the road to prosperity and wealth, and I shall point +out the same path to my children for their pursuit.”</p> +<p>Every man is bound to aim at the possession of a good character as +one of the highest objects of life. The very effort to secure +it by worthy means will furnish him with a motive for exertion; and +his idea of manhood, in proportion as it is elevated, will steady and +animate his motive. It is well to have a high standard of life, +even though we may not be able altogether to realize it. “The +youth,” says Mr. Disraeli, “who does not look up will look +down; and the spirit that does not soar is destined perhaps to grovel.” +George Herbert wisely writes,</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>“Pitch thy behaviour low, thy projects high,<br />So shall +thou humble and magnanimous be.<br />Sink not in spirit; who aimeth +at the sky<br />Shoots higher much than he that means a tree.”</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>He who has a high standard of living and thinking will certainly +do better than he who has none at all. “Pluck at a gown +of gold,” says the Scotch proverb, “and you may get a sleeve +o’t.” Whoever tries for the highest results cannot +fail to reach a point far in advance of that from which he started; +and though the end attained may fall short of that proposed, still, +the very effort to rise, of itself cannot fail to prove permanently +beneficial.</p> +<p>There are many counterfeits of character, but the genuine article +is difficult to be mistaken. Some, knowing its money value, would +assume its disguise for the purpose of imposing upon the unwary. +Colonel Charteris said to a man distinguished for his honesty, “I +would give a thousand pounds for your good name.” “Why?” +“Because I could make ten thousand by it,” was the knave’s +reply.</p> +<p>Integrity in word and deed is the backbone of character; and loyal +adherence to veracity its most prominent characteristic. One of +the finest testimonies to the character of the late Sir Robert Peel +was that borne by the Duke of Wellington in the House of Lords, a few +days after the great statesman’s death. “Your lordships,” +he said, “must all feel the high and honourable character of the +late Sir Robert Peel. I was long connected with him in public +life. We were both in the councils of our Sovereign together, +and I had long the honour to enjoy his private friendship. In +all the course of my acquaintance with him I never knew a man in whose +truth and justice I had greater confidence, or in whom I saw a more +invariable desire to promote the public service. In the whole +course of my communication with him, I never knew an instance in which +he did not show the strongest attachment to truth; and I never saw in +the whole course of my life the smallest reason for suspecting that +he stated anything which he did not firmly believe to be the fact.” +And this high-minded truthfulness of the statesman was no doubt the +secret of no small part of his influence and power.</p> +<p>There is a truthfulness in action as well as in words, which is essential +to uprightness of character. A man must really be what he seems +or purposes to be. When an American gentleman wrote to Granville +Sharp, that from respect for his great virtues he had named one of his +sons after him, Sharp replied: “I must request you to teach him +a favourite maxim of the family whose name you have given him—<i>Always +endeavour to be really what you would wish to appear</i>. This +maxim, as my father informed me, was carefully and humbly practised +by <i>his</i> father, whose sincerity, as a plain and honest man, thereby +became the principal feature of his character, both in public and private +life.” Every man who respects himself, and values the respect +of others, will carry out the maxim in act—doing honestly what +he proposes to do—putting the highest character into his work, +scamping nothing, but priding himself upon his integrity and conscientiousness. +Once Cromwell said to Bernard,—a clever but somewhat unscrupulous +lawyer, “I understand that you have lately been vastly wary in +your conduct; do not be too confident of this; subtlety may deceive +you, integrity never will.” Men whose acts are at direct +variance with their words, command no respect, and what they say has +but little weight; even truths, when uttered by them, seem to come blasted +from their lips.</p> +<p>The true character acts rightly, whether in secret or in the sight +of men. That boy was well trained who, when asked why he did not +pocket some pears, for nobody was there to see, replied, “Yes, +there was: I was there to see myself; and I don’t intend ever +to see myself do a dishonest thing.”—This is a simple but +not inappropriate illustration of principle, or conscience, dominating +in the character, and exercising a noble protectorate over it; not merely +a passive influence, but an active power regulating the life. +Such a principle goes on moulding the character hourly and daily, growing +with a force that operates every moment. Without this dominating +influence, character has no protection, but is constantly liable to +fall away before temptation; and every such temptation succumbed to, +every act of meanness or dishonesty, however slight, causes self-degradation. +It matters not whether the act be successful or not, discovered or concealed; +the culprit is no longer the same, but another person; and he is pursued +by a secret uneasiness, by self-reproach, or the workings of what we +call conscience, which is the inevitable doom of the guilty.</p> +<p>And here it may be observed how greatly the character may be strengthened +and supported by the cultivation of good habits. Man, it has been +said, is a bundle of habits; and habit is second nature. Metastasio +entertained so strong an opinion as to the power of repetition in act +and thought, that he said, “All is habit in mankind, even virtue +itself.” Butler, in his ‘Analogy,’ impresses +the importance of careful self-discipline and firm resistance to temptation, +as tending to make virtue habitual, so that at length it may become +more easy to be good than to give way to sin. “As habits +belonging to the body,” he says, “are produced by external +acts, so habits of the mind are produced by the execution of inward +practical purposes, i.e., carrying them into act, or acting upon them—the +principles of obedience, veracity, justice, and charity.” +And again, Lord Brougham says, when enforcing the immense importance +of training and example in youth, “I trust everything under God +to habit, on which, in all ages, the lawgiver, as well as the schoolmaster, +has mainly placed his reliance; habit, which makes everything easy, +and casts the difficulties upon the deviation from a wonted course.” +Thus, make sobriety a habit, and intemperance will be hateful; make +prudence a habit, and reckless profligacy will become revolting to every +principle of conduct which regulates the life of the individual. +Hence the necessity for the greatest care and watchfulness against the +inroad of any evil habit; for the character is always weakest at that +point at which it has once given way; and it is long before a principle +restored can become so firm as one that has never been moved. +It is a fine remark of a Russian writer, that “Habits are a necklace +of pearls: untie the knot, and the whole unthreads.”</p> +<p>Wherever formed, habit acts involuntarily, and without effort; and, +it is only when you oppose it, that you find how powerful it has become. +What is done once and again, soon gives facility and proneness. +The habit at first may seem to have no more strength than a spider’s +web; but, once formed, it binds as with a chain of iron. The small +events of life, taken singly, may seem exceedingly unimportant, like +snow that falls silently, flake by flake; yet accumulated, these snow-flakes +form the avalanche.</p> +<p>Self-respect, self-help, application, industry, integrity—all +are of the nature of habits, not beliefs. Principles, in fact, +are but the names which we assign to habits; for the principles are +words, but the habits are the things themselves: benefactors or tyrants, +according as they are good or evil. It thus happens that as we +grow older, a portion of our free activity and individuality becomes +suspended in habit; our actions become of the nature of fate; and we +are bound by the chains which we have woven around ourselves.</p> +<p>It is indeed scarcely possible to over-estimate the importance of +training the young to virtuous habits. In them they are the easiest +formed, and when formed they last for life; like letters cut on the +bark of a tree they grow and widen with age. “Train up a +child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart +from it.” The beginning holds within it the end; the first +start on the road of life determines the direction and the destination +of the journey; <i>ce n’est que le premier pas qui coûte</i>. +“Remember,” said Lord Collingwood to a young man whom he +loved, “before you are five-and-twenty you must establish a character +that will serve you all your life.” As habit strengthens +with age, and character becomes formed, any turning into a new path +becomes more and more difficult. Hence, it is often harder to +unlearn than to learn; and for this reason the Grecian flute-player +was justified who charged double fees to those pupils who had been taught +by an inferior master. To uproot an old habit is sometimes a more +painful thing, and vastly more difficult, than to wrench out a tooth. +Try and reform a habitually indolent, or improvident, or drunken person, +and in a large majority of cases you will fail. For the habit +in each case has wound itself in and through the life until it has become +an integral part of it, and cannot be uprooted. Hence, as Mr. +Lynch observes, “the wisest habit of all is the habit of care +in the formation of good habits.”</p> +<p>Even happiness itself may become habitual. There is a habit +of looking at the bright side of things, and also of looking at the +dark side. Dr. Johnson has said that the habit of looking at the +best side of a thing is worth more to a man than a thousand pounds a +year. And we possess the power, to a great extent, of so exercising +the will as to direct the thoughts upon objects calculated to yield +happiness and improvement rather than their opposites. In this +way the habit of happy thought may be made to spring up like any other +habit. And to bring up men or women with a genial nature of this +sort, a good temper, and a happy frame of mind, is perhaps of even more +importance, in many cases, than to perfect them in much knowledge and +many accomplishments.</p> +<p>As daylight can be seen through very small holes, so little things +will illustrate a person’s character. Indeed character consists +in little acts, well and honourably performed; daily life being the +quarry from which we build it up, and rough-hew the habits which form +it. One of the most marked tests of character is the manner in +which we conduct ourselves towards others. A graceful behaviour +towards superiors, inferiors, and equals, is a constant source of pleasure. +It pleases others because it indicates respect for their personality; +but it gives tenfold more pleasure to ourselves. Every man may +to a large extent be a self-educator in good behaviour, as in everything +else; he can be civil and kind, if he will, though he have not a penny +in his purse. Gentleness in society is like the silent influence +of light, which gives colour to all nature; it is far more powerful +than loudness or force, and far more fruitful. It pushes its way +quietly and persistently, like the tiniest daffodil in spring, which +raises the clod and thrusts it aside by the simple persistency of growing.</p> +<p>Even a kind look will give pleasure and confer happiness. In +one of Robertson of Brighton’s letters, he tells of a lady who +related to him “the delight, the tears of gratitude, which she +had witnessed in a poor girl to whom, in passing, I gave a kind look +on going out of church on Sunday. What a lesson! How cheaply +happiness can be given! What opportunities we miss of doing an +angel’s work! I remember doing it, full of sad feelings, +passing on, and thinking no more about it; and it gave an hour’s +sunshine to a human life, and lightened the load of life to a human +heart for a time!” <a name="citation35"></a><a href="#footnote35">{35}</a></p> +<p>Morals and manners, which give colour to life, are of much greater +importance than laws, which are but their manifestations. The +law touches us here and there, but manners are about us everywhere, +pervading society like the air we breathe. Good manners, as we +call them, are neither more nor less than good behaviour; consisting +of courtesy and kindness; benevolence being the preponderating element +in all kinds of mutually beneficial and pleasant intercourse amongst +human beings. “Civility,” said Lady Montague, “costs +nothing and buys everything.” The cheapest of all things +is kindness, its exercise requiring the least possible trouble and self-sacrifice. +“Win hearts,” said Burleigh to Queen Elizabeth, “and +you have all men’s hearts and purses.” If we would +only let nature act kindly, free from affectation and artifice, the +results on social good humour and happiness would be incalculable. +The little courtesies which form the small change of life, may separately +appear of little intrinsic value, but they acquire their importance +from repetition and accumulation. They are like the spare minutes, +or the groat a day, which proverbially produce such momentous results +in the course of a twelvemonth, or in a lifetime.</p> +<p>Manners are the ornament of action; and there is a way of speaking +a kind word, or of doing a kind thing, which greatly enhances their +value. What seems to be done with a grudge, or as an act of condescension, +is scarcely accepted as a favour. Yet there are men who pride +themselves upon their gruffness; and though they may possess virtue +and capacity, their manner is often such as to render them almost insupportable. +It is difficult to like a man who, though he may not pull your nose, +habitually wounds your self-respect, and takes a pride in saying disagreeable +things to you. There are others who are dreadfully condescending, +and cannot avoid seizing upon every small opportunity of making their +greatness felt. When Abernethy was canvassing for the office of +surgeon to St. Bartholomew Hospital, he called upon such a person—a +rich grocer, one of the governors. The great man behind the counter +seeing the great surgeon enter, immediately assumed the grand air towards +the supposed suppliant for his vote. “I presume, Sir, you +want my vote and interest at this momentous epoch of your life?” +Abernethy, who hated humbugs, and felt nettled at the tone, replied: +“No, I don’t: I want a pennyworth of figs; come, look sharp +and wrap them up; I want to be off!”</p> +<p>The cultivation of manner—though in excess it is foppish and +foolish—is highly necessary in a person who has occasion to negociate +with others in matters of business. Affability and good breeding +may even be regarded as essential to the success of a man in any eminent +station and enlarged sphere of life; for the want of it has not unfrequently +been found in a great measure to neutralise the results of much industry, +integrity, and honesty of character. There are, no doubt, a few +strong tolerant minds which can bear with defects and angularities of +manner, and look only to the more genuine qualities; but the world at +large is not so forbearant, and cannot help forming its judgments and +likings mainly according to outward conduct.</p> +<p>Another mode of displaying true politeness is consideration for the +opinions of others. It has been said of dogmatism, that it is +only puppyism come to its full growth; and certainly the worst form +this quality can assume, is that of opinionativeness and arrogance. +Let men agree to differ, and, when they do differ, bear and forbear. +Principles and opinions may be maintained with perfect suavity, without +coming to blows or uttering hard words; and there are circumstances +in which words are blows, and inflict wounds far less easy to heal. +As bearing upon this point, we quote an instructive little parable spoken +some time since by an itinerant preacher of the Evangelical Alliance +on the borders of Wales:- “As I was going to the hills,” +said he, “early one misty morning, I saw something moving on a +mountain side, so strange looking that I took it for a monster. +When I came nearer to it I found it was a man. When I came up +to him I found he was my brother.”</p> +<p>The inbred politeness which springs from right-heartedness and kindly +feelings, is of no exclusive rank or station. The mechanic who +works at the bench may possess it, as well as the clergyman or the peer. +It is by no means a necessary condition of labour that it should, in +any respect, be either rough or coarse. The politeness and refinement +which distinguish all classes of the people in many continental countries +show that those qualities might become ours too—as doubtless they +will become with increased culture and more general social intercourse—without +sacrificing any of our more genuine qualities as men. From the +highest to the lowest, the richest to the poorest, to no rank or condition +in life has nature denied her highest boon—the great heart. +There never yet existed a gentleman but was lord of a great heart. +And this may exhibit itself under the hodden grey of the peasant as +well as under the laced coat of the noble. Robert Burns was once +taken to task by a young Edinburgh blood, with whom he was walking, +for recognising an honest farmer in the open street. “Why +you fantastic gomeral,” exclaimed Burns, “it was not the +great coat, the scone bonnet, and the saunders-boot hose that I spoke +to, but <i>the man</i> that was in them; and the man, sir, for true +worth, would weigh down you and me, and ten more such, any day.” +There may be a homeliness in externals, which may seem vulgar to those +who cannot discern the heart beneath; but, to the right-minded, character +will always have its clear insignia.</p> +<p>William and Charles Grant were the sons of a farmer in Inverness-shire, +whom a sudden flood stripped of everything, even to the very soil which +he tilled. The farmer and his sons, with the world before them +where to choose, made their way southward in search of employment until +they arrived in the neighbourhood of Bury in Lancashire. From +the crown of the hill near Walmesley they surveyed the wide extent of +country which lay before them, the river Irwell making its circuitous +course through the valley. They were utter strangers in the neighbourhood, +and knew not which way to turn. To decide their course they put +up a stick, and agreed to pursue the direction in which it fell. +Thus their decision was made, and they journeyed on accordingly until +they reached the village of Ramsbotham, not far distant. They +found employment in a print-work, in which William served his apprenticeship; +and they commanded themselves to their employers by their diligence, +sobriety, and strict integrity. They plodded on, rising from one +station to another, until at length the two men themselves became employers, +and after many long years of industry, enterprise, and benevolence, +they became rich, honoured, and respected by all who knew them. +Their cotton-mills and print-works gave employment to a large population. +Their well-directed diligence made the valley teem with activity, joy, +health, and opulence. Out of their abundant wealth they gave liberally +to all worthy objects, erecting churches, founding schools, and in all +ways promoting the well-being of the class of working-men from which +they had sprung. They afterwards erected, on the top of the hill +above Walmesley, a lofty tower in commemoration of the early event in +their history which had determined the place of their settlement. +The brothers Grant became widely celebrated for their benevolence and +their various goodness, and it is said that Mr. Dickens had them in +his mind’s eye when delineating the character of the brothers +Cheeryble. One amongst many anecdotes of a similar kind may be +cited to show that the character was by no means exaggerated. +A Manchester warehouseman published an exceedingly scurrilous pamphlet +against the firm of Grant Brothers, holding up the elder partner to +ridicule as “Billy Button.” William was informed by +some one of the nature of the pamphlet, and his observation was that +the man would live to repent of it. “Oh!” said the +libeller, when informed of the remark, “he thinks that some time +or other I shall be in his debt; but I will take good care of that.” +It happens, however, that men in business do not always foresee who +shall be their creditor, and it so turned out that the Grants’ +libeller became a bankrupt, and could not complete his certificate and +begin business again without obtaining their signature. It seemed +to him a hopeless case to call upon that firm for any favour, but the +pressing claims of his family forced him to make the application. +He appeared before the man whom he had ridiculed as “Billy Button” +accordingly. He told his tale and produced his certificate. +“You wrote a pamphlet against us once?” said Mr. Grant. +The supplicant expected to see his document thrown into the fire; instead +of which Grant signed the name of the firm, and thus completed the necessary +certificate. “We make it a rule,” said he, handing +it back, “never to refuse signing the certificate of an honest +tradesman, and we have never heard that you were anything else.” +The tears started into the man’s eyes. “Ah,” +continued Mr. Grant, “you see my saying was true, that you would +live to repent writing that pamphlet. I did not mean it as a threat—I +only meant that some day you would know us better, and repent having +tried to injure us.” “I do, I do, indeed, repent it.” +“Well, well, you know us now. But how do you get on—what +are you going to do?” The poor man stated that he had friends +who would assist him when his certificate was obtained. “But +how are you off in the mean time?” The answer was, that, +having given up every farthing to his creditors, he had been compelled +to stint his family in even the common necessaries of life, that he +might be enabled to pay for his certificate. “My good fellow, +this will never do; your wife and family must not suffer in this way; +be kind enough to take this ten-pound note to your wife from me: there, +there, now—don’t cry, it will be all well with you yet; +keep up your spirits, set to work like a man, and you will raise your +head among the best of us yet.” The overpowered man endeavoured +with choking utterance to express his gratitude, but in vain; and putting +his hand to his face, he went out of the room sobbing like a child.</p> +<p>The True Gentleman is one whose nature has been fashioned after the +highest models. It is a grand old name, that of Gentleman, and +has been recognized as a rank and power in all stages of society. +“The Gentleman is always the Gentleman,” said the old French +General to his regiment of Scottish gentry at Rousillon, “and +invariably proves himself such in need and in danger.” To +possess this character is a dignity of itself, commanding the instinctive +homage of every generous mind, and those who will not bow to titular +rank, will yet do homage to the gentleman. His qualities depend +not upon fashion or manners, but upon moral worth—not on personal +possessions, but on personal qualities. The Psalmist briefly describes +him as one “that walketh uprightly, and worketh righteousness, +and speaketh the truth in his heart.”</p> +<p>The gentleman is eminently distinguished for his self-respect. +He values his character,—not so much of it only as can be seen +of others, but as he sees it himself; having regard for the approval +of his inward monitor. And, as he respects himself, so, by the +same law, does he respect others. Humanity is sacred in his eyes: +and thence proceed politeness and forbearance, kindness and charity. +It is related of Lord Edward Fitzgerald that, while travelling in Canada, +in company with the Indians, he was shocked by the sight of a poor squaw +trudging along laden with her husband’s trappings, while the chief +himself walked on unencumbered. Lord Edward at once relieved the +squaw of her pack by placing it upon his own shoulders,—a beautiful +instance of what the French call <i>politesse de coeur</i>—the +inbred politeness of the true gentleman.</p> +<p>The true gentleman has a keen sense of honour,—scrupulously +avoiding mean actions. His standard of probity in word and action +is high. He does not shuffle or prevaricate, dodge or skulk; but +is honest, upright, and straightforward. His law is rectitude—action +in right lines. When he says <i>yes</i>, it is a law: and he dares +to say the valiant <i>no</i> at the fitting season. The gentleman +will not be bribed; only the low-minded and unprincipled will sell themselves +to those who are interested in buying them. When the upright Jonas +Hanway officiated as commissioner in the victualling department, he +declined to receive a present of any kind from a contractor; refusing +thus to be biassed in the performance of his public duty. A fine +trait of the same kind is to be noted in the life of the Duke of Wellington. +Shortly after the battle of Assaye, one morning the Prime Minister of +the Court of Hyderabad waited upon him for the purpose of privately +ascertaining what territory and what advantages had been reserved for +his master in the treaty of peace between the Mahratta princes and the +Nizam. To obtain this information the minister offered the general +a very large sum—considerably above 100,000<i>l</i>. Looking +at him quietly for a few seconds, Sir Arthur said, “It appears, +then, that you are capable of keeping a secret?” “Yes, +certainly,” replied the minister. “<i>Then so am I</i>,” +said the English general, smiling, and bowed the minister out. +It was to Wellington’s great honour, that though uniformly successful +in India, and with the power of earning in such modes as this enormous +wealth, he did not add a farthing to his fortune, and returned to England +a comparatively poor man.</p> +<p>A similar sensitiveness and high-mindedness characterised his noble +relative, the Marquis of Wellesley, who, on one occasion, positively +refused a present of 100,000<i>l</i>. proposed to be given him by the +Directors of the East India Company on the conquest of Mysore. +“It is not necessary,” said he, “for me to allude +to the independence of my character, and the proper dignity attaching +to my office; other reasons besides these important considerations lead +me to decline this testimony, which is not suitable to me. <i>I +think of</i> <i>nothing but our army</i>. I should be much distressed +to curtail the share of those brave soldiers.” And the Marquis’s +resolution to refuse the present remained unalterable.</p> +<p>Sir Charles Napier exhibited the same noble self-denial in the course +of his Indian career. He rejected all the costly gifts which barbaric +princes were ready to lay at his feet, and said with truth, “Certainly +I could have got 30,000<i>l</i>. since my coming to Scinde, but my hands +do not want washing yet. Our dear father’s sword which I +wore in both battles (Meanee and Hyderabad) is unstained.”</p> +<p>Riches and rank have no necessary connexion with genuine gentlemanly +qualities. The poor man may be a true gentleman,—in spirit +and in daily life. He may be honest, truthful, upright, polite, +temperate, courageous, self-respecting, and self-helping,—that +is, be a true gentleman. The poor man with a rich spirit is in +all ways superior to the rich man with a poor spirit. To borrow +St. Paul’s words, the former is as “having nothing, yet +possessing all things,” while the other, though possessing all +things, has nothing. The first hopes everything, and fears nothing; +the last hopes nothing, and fears everything. Only the poor in +spirit are really poor. He who has lost all, but retains his courage, +cheerfulness, hope, virtue, and self-respect, is still rich. For +such a man, the world is, as it were, held in trust; his spirit dominating +over its grosser cares, he can still walk erect, a true gentleman.</p> +<p>Occasionally, the brave and gentle character may be found under the +humblest garb. Here is an old illustration, but a fine one. +Once on a time, when the Adige suddenly overflowed its banks, the bridge +of Verona was carried away, with the exception of the centre arch, on +which stood a house, whose inhabitants supplicated help from the windows, +while the foundations were visibly giving way. “I will give +a hundred French louis,” said the Count Spolverini, who stood +by, “to any person who will venture to deliver these unfortunate +people.” A young peasant came forth from the crowd, seized +a boat, and pushed into the stream. He gained the pier, received +the whole family into the boat, and made for the shore, where he landed +them in safety. “Here is your money, my brave young fellow,” +said the count. “No,” was the answer of the young +man, “I do not sell my life; give the money to this poor family, +who have need of it.” Here spoke the true spirit of the +gentleman, though he was but in the garb of a peasant.</p> +<p>Not less touching was the heroic conduct of a party of Deal boatmen +in rescuing the crew of a collier-brig in the Downs but a short time +ago. <a name="citation36"></a><a href="#footnote36">{36}</a> A +sudden storm which set in from the north-east drove several ships from +their anchors, and it being low water, one of them struck the ground +at a considerable distance from the shore, when the sea made a clean +breach over her. There was not a vestige of hope for the vessel, +such was the fury of the wind and the violence of the waves. There +was nothing to tempt the boatmen on shore to risk their lives in saving +either ship or crew, for not a farthing of salvage was to be looked +for. But the daring intrepidity of the Deal boatmen was not wanting +at this critical moment. No sooner had the brig grounded than +Simon Pritchard, one of the many persons assembled along the beach, +threw off his coat and called out, “Who will come with me and +try to save that crew?” Instantly twenty men sprang forward, +with “I will,” “and I.” But seven only +were wanted; and running down a galley punt into the surf, they leaped +in and dashed through the breakers, amidst the cheers of those on shore. +How the boat lived in such a sea seemed a miracle; but in a few minutes, +impelled by the strong arms of these gallant men, she flew on and reached +the stranded ship, “catching her on the top of a wave”; +and in less than a quarter of an hour from the time the boat left the +shore, the six men who composed the crew of the collier were landed +safe on Walmer Beach. A nobler instance of indomitable courage +and disinterested heroism on the part of the Deal boatmen—brave +though they are always known to be—perhaps cannot be cited; and +we have pleasure in here placing it on record.</p> +<p>Mr. Turnbull, in his work on ‘Austria,’ relates an anecdote +of the late Emperor Francis, in illustration of the manner in which +the Government of that country has been indebted, for its hold upon +the people, to the personal qualities of its princes. “At +the time when the cholera was raging at Vienna, the emperor, with an +aide-de-camp, was strolling about the streets of the city and suburbs, +when a corpse was dragged past on a litter unaccompanied by a single +mourner. The unusual circumstance attracted his attention, and +he learnt, on inquiry, that the deceased was a poor person who had died +of cholera, and that the relatives had not ventured on what was then +considered the very dangerous office of attending the body to the grave. +‘Then,’ said Francis, ‘we will supply their place, +for none of my poor people should go to the grave without that last +mark of respect;’ and he followed the body to the distant place +of interment, and, bare-headed, stood to see every rite and observance +respectfully performed.”</p> +<p>Fine though this illustration may be of the qualities of the gentleman, +we can match it by another equally good, of two English navvies in Paris, +as related in a morning paper a few years ago. “One day +a hearse was observed ascending the steep Rue de Clichy on its way to +Montmartre, bearing a coffin of poplar wood with its cold corpse. +Not a soul followed—not even the living dog of the dead man, if +he had one. The day was rainy and dismal; passers by lifted the +hat as is usual when a funeral passes, and that was all. At length +it passed two English navvies, who found themselves in Paris on their +way from Spain. A right feeling spoke from beneath their serge +jackets. ‘Poor wretch!’ said the one to the other, +‘no one follows him; let us two follow!’ And the two +took off their hats, and walked bare-headed after the corpse of a stranger +to the cemetery of Montmartre.”</p> +<p>Above all, the gentleman is truthful. He feels that truth is +the “summit of being,” and the soul of rectitude in human +affairs. Lord Chesterfield declared that Truth made the success +of a gentleman. The Duke of Wellington, writing to Kellerman, +on the subject of prisoners on parole, when opposed to that general +in the peninsula, told him that if there was one thing on which an English +officer prided himself more than another, excepting his courage, it +was his truthfulness. “When English officers,” said +he, “have given their parole of honour not to escape, be sure +they will not break it. Believe me—trust to their word; +the word of an English officer is a surer guarantee than the vigilance +of sentinels.”</p> +<p>True courage and gentleness go hand in hand. The brave man +is generous and forbearant, never unforgiving and cruel. It was +finely said of Sir John Franklin by his friend Parry, that “he +was a man who never turned his back upon a danger, yet of that tenderness +that he would not brush away a mosquito.” A fine trait of +character—truly gentle, and worthy of the spirit of Bayard—was +displayed by a French officer in the cavalry combat of El Bodon in Spain. +He had raised his sword to strike Sir Felton Harvey, but perceiving +his antagonist had only one arm, he instantly stopped, brought down +his sword before Sir Felton in the usual salute, and rode past. +To this may be added a noble and gentle deed of Ney during the same +Peninsular War. Charles Napier was taken prisoner at Corunna, +desperately wounded; and his friends at home did not know whether he +was alive or dead. A special messenger was sent out from England +with a frigate to ascertain his fate. Baron Clouet received the +flag, and informed Ney of the arrival. “Let the prisoner +see his friends,” said Ney, “and tell them he is well, and +well treated.” Clouet lingered, and Ney asked, smiling, +“what more he wanted”? “He has an old mother, +a widow, and blind.” “Has he? then let him go himself +and tell her he is alive.” As the exchange of prisoners +between the countries was not then allowed, Ney knew that he risked +the displeasure of the Emperor by setting the young officer at liberty; +but Napoleon approved the generous act.</p> +<p>Notwithstanding the wail which we occasionally hear for the chivalry +that is gone, our own age has witnessed deeds of bravery and gentleness—of +heroic self-denial and manly tenderness—which are unsurpassed +in history. The events of the last few years have shown that our +countrymen are as yet an undegenerate race. On the bleak plateau +of Sebastopol, in the dripping perilous trenches of that twelvemonth’s +leaguer, men of all classes proved themselves worthy of the noble inheritance +of character which their forefathers have bequeathed to them. +But it was in the hour of the great trial in India that the qualities +of our countrymen shone forth the brightest. The march of Neill +on Cawnpore, of Havelock on Lucknow—officers and men alike urged +on by the hope of rescuing the women and the children—are events +which the whole history of chivalry cannot equal. Outram’s +conduct to Havelock, in resigning to him, though his inferior officer, +the honour of leading the attack on Lucknow, was a trait worthy of Sydney, +and alone justifies the title which has been awarded to him of, “the +Bayard of India.” The death of Henry Lawrence—that +brave and gentle spirit—his last words before dying, “Let +there be no fuss about me; let me be buried <i>with the</i> <i>men</i>,”—the +anxious solicitude of Sir Colin Campbell to rescue the beleaguered of +Lucknow, and to conduct his long train of women and children by night +from thence to Cawnpore, which he reached amidst the all but overpowering +assault of the enemy,—the care with which he led them across the +perilous bridge, never ceasing his charge over them until he had seen +the precious convoy safe on the road to Allahabad, and then burst upon +the Gwalior contingent like a thunder-clap;—such things make us +feel proud of our countrymen and inspire the conviction that the best +and purest glow of chivalry is not dead, but vigorously lives among +us yet.</p> +<p>Even the common soldiers proved themselves gentlemen under their +trials. At Agra, where so many poor fellows had been scorched +and wounded in their encounter with the enemy, they were brought into +the fort, and tenderly nursed by the ladies; and the rough, gallant +fellows proved gentle as any children. During the weeks that the +ladies watched over their charge, never a word was said by any soldier +that could shock the ear of the gentlest. And when all was over—when +the mortally-wounded had died, and the sick and maimed who survived +were able to demonstrate their gratitude—they invited their nurses +and the chief people of Agra to an entertainment in the beautiful gardens +of the Taj, where, amidst flowers and music, the rough veterans, all +scarred and mutilated as they were, stood up to thank their gentle countrywomen +who had clothed and fed them, and ministered to their wants during their +time of sore distress. In the hospitals at Scutari, too, many +wounded and sick blessed the kind English ladies who nursed them; and +nothing can be finer than the thought of the poor sufferers, unable +to rest through pain, blessing the shadow of Florence Nightingale as +it fell upon their pillow in the night watches.</p> +<p>The wreck of the <i>Birkenhead</i> off the coast of Africa on the +27th of February, 1852, affords another memorable illustration of the +chivalrous spirit of common men acting in this nineteenth century, of +which any age might be proud. The vessel was steaming along the +African coast with 472 men and 166 women and children on board. +The men belonged to several regiments then serving at the Cape, and +consisted principally of recruits who had been only a short time in +the service. At two o’clock in the morning, while all were +asleep below, the ship struck with violence upon a hidden rock which +penetrated her bottom; and it was at once felt that she must go down. +The roll of the drums called the soldiers to arms on the upper deck, +and the men mustered as if on parade. The word was passed to <i>save +the women and children</i>; and the helpless creatures were brought +from below, mostly undressed, and handed silently into the boats. +When they had all left the ship’s side, the commander of the vessel +thoughtlessly called out, “All those that can swim, jump overboard +and make for the boats.” But Captain Wright, of the 91st +Highlanders, said, “No! if you do that, <i>the boats with the +women must be</i> <i>swamped</i>;” and the brave men stood motionless. +There was no boat remaining, and no hope of safety; but not a heart +quailed; no one flinched from his duty in that trying moment. +“There was not a murmur nor a cry amongst them,” said Captain +Wright, a survivor, “until the vessel made her final plunge.” +Down went the ship, and down went the heroic band, firing <i>a feu de +joie</i> as they sank beneath the waves. Glory and honour to the +gentle and the brave! The examples of such men never die, but, +like their memories, are immortal.</p> +<p>There are many tests by which a gentleman may be known; but there +is one that never fails—How does he <i>exercise power</i> over +those subordinate to him? How does he conduct himself towards +women and children? How does the officer treat his men, the employer +his servants, the master his pupils, and man in every station those +who are weaker than himself? The discretion, forbearance, and +kindliness, with which power in such cases is used, may indeed be regarded +as the crucial test of gentlemanly character. When La Motte was +one day passing through a crowd, he accidentally trod upon the foot +of a young fellow, who forthwith struck him on the face: “Ah, +sire,” said La Motte, “you will surely be sorry for what +you have done, when you know that <i>I am blind</i>.” He +who bullies those who are not in a position to resist may be a snob, +but cannot be a gentleman. He who tyrannizes over the weak and +helpless may be a coward, but no true man. The tyrant, it has +been said, is but a slave turned inside out. Strength, and the +consciousness of strength, in a right-hearted man, imparts a nobleness +to his character; but he will be most careful how he uses it; for</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>“It is excellent<br />To have a giant’s strength; but +it is tyrannous<br />To use it like a giant.”</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p>Gentleness is indeed the best test of gentlemanliness. A consideration +for the feelings of others, for his inferiors and dependants as well +as his equals, and respect for their self-respect, will pervade the +true gentleman’s whole conduct. He will rather himself suffer +a small injury, than by an uncharitable construction of another’s +behaviour, incur the risk of committing a great wrong. He will +be forbearant of the weaknesses, the failings, and the errors, of those +whose advantages in life have not been equal to his own. He will +be merciful even to his beast. He will not boast of his wealth, +or his strength, or his gifts. He will not be puffed up by success, +or unduly depressed by failure. He will not obtrude his views +on others, but speak his mind freely when occasion calls for it. +He will not confer favours with a patronizing air. Sir Walter +Scott once said of Lord Lothian, “He is a man from whom one may +receive a favour, and that’s saying a great deal in these days.”</p> +<p>Lord Chatham has said that the gentleman is characterised by his +sacrifice of self and preference of others to himself in the little +daily occurrences of life. In illustration of this ruling spirit +of considerateness in a noble character, we may cite the anecdote of +the gallant Sir Ralph Abercromby, of whom it is related, that when mortally +wounded in the battle of Aboukir, he was carried in a litter on board +the ‘Foudroyant;’ and, to ease his pain, a soldier’s +blanket was placed under his head, from which he experienced considerable +relief. He asked what it was. “It’s only a soldier’s +blanket,” was the reply. “<i>Whose</i> blanket is +it?” said he, half lifting himself up. “Only one of +the men’s.” “I wish to know the name of the +man whose blanket this is.” “It is Duncan Roy’s, +of the 42nd, Sir Ralph.” “Then see that Duncan Roy +gets his blanket this very night.” <a name="citation37"></a><a href="#footnote37">{37}</a> +Even to ease his dying agony the general would not deprive the private +soldier of his blanket for one night. The incident is as good +in its way as that of the dying Sydney handing his cup of water to the +private soldier on the field of Zutphen.</p> +<p>The quaint old Fuller sums up in a few words the character of the +true gentleman and man of action in describing that of the great admiral, +Sir Francis Drake: “Chaste in his life, just in his dealings, +true of his word; merciful to those that were under him, and hating +nothing so much as idlenesse; in matters especially of moment, he was +never wont to rely on other men’s care, how trusty or skilful +soever they might seem to be, but, always contemning danger, and refusing +no toyl, he was wont himself to be one (whoever was a second) at every +turn, where courage, skill, or industry, was to be employed.”</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div> +<h2>Footnotes:</h2> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div> +<p><a name="footnote1"></a><a href="#citation1">{1}</a> Napoleon +III., ‘Life of Caesar.’</p> +<p><a name="footnote2"></a><a href="#citation2">{2}</a> Soult +received but little education in his youth, and learnt next to no geography +until he became foreign minister of France, when the study of this branch +of knowledge is said to have given him the greatest pleasure.—‘OEuvres, +&c., d’Alexis de Tocqueville. Par G. de Beaumont.’ +Paris, 1861. I. 52</p> +<p><a name="footnote3"></a><a href="#citation3">{3}</a> ‘OEuvres +et Correspondance inédite d’Alexis de Tocqueville. +Par Gustave de Beaumont.’ I. 398.</p> +<p><a name="footnote4"></a><a href="#citation4">{4}</a> “I +have seen,” said he, “a hundred times in the course of my +life, a weak man exhibit genuine public virtue, because supported by +a wife who sustained hint in his course, not so much by advising him +to such and such acts, as by exercising a strengthening influence over +the manner in which duty or even ambition was to be regarded. +Much oftener, however, it must be confessed, have I seen private and +domestic life gradually transform a man to whom nature had given generosity, +disinterestedness, and even some capacity for greatness, into an ambitious, +mean-spirited, vulgar, and selfish creature who, in matters relating +to his country, ended by considering them only in so far as they rendered +his own particular condition more comfortable and easy.”—‘OEuvres +de Tocqueville.’ II. 349.</p> +<p><a name="footnote5"></a><a href="#citation5">{5}</a> Since +the original publication of this book, the author has in another work, +‘The Lives of Boulton and Watt,’ endeavoured to portray +in greater detail the character and achievements of these two remarkable +men.</p> +<p><a name="footnote6"></a><a href="#citation6">{6}</a> The following +entry, which occurs in the account of monies disbursed by the burgesses +of Sheffield in 1573 [?] is supposed by some to refer to the inventor +of the stocking frame:- “Item gyven to Willm-Lee, a poore scholler +in Sheafield, towards the settyng him to the Universitie of Chambrydge, +and buying him bookes and other furnyture [which money was afterwards +returned] xiii iiii [13s. 4d.].”—Hunter, ‘History +of Hallamshire,’ 141.</p> +<p><a name="footnote7"></a><a href="#citation7">{7}</a> ‘History +of the Framework Knitters.’</p> +<p><a name="footnote8"></a><a href="#citation8">{8}</a> There +are, however, other and different accounts. One is to the effect +that Lee set about studying the contrivance of the stocking-loom for +the purpose of lessening the labour of a young country-girl to whom +he was attached, whose occupation was knitting; another, that being +married and poor, his wife was under the necessity of contributing to +their joint support by knitting; and that Lee, while watching the motion +of his wife’s fingers, conceived the idea of imitating their movements +by a machine. The latter story seems to have been invented by +Aaron Hill, Esq., in his ‘Account of the Rise and Progress of +the Beech Oil manufacture,’ London, 1715; but his statement is +altogether unreliable. Thus he makes Lee to have been a Fellow +of a college at Oxford, from which he was expelled for marrying an innkeeper’s +daughter; whilst Lee neither studied at Oxford, nor married there, nor +was a Fellow of any college; and he concludes by alleging that the result +of his invention was to “make Lee and his family happy;” +whereas the invention brought him only a heritage of misery, and he +died abroad destitute.</p> +<p><a name="footnote9"></a><a href="#citation9">{9}</a> Blackner, +‘History of Nottingham.’ The author adds, “We +have information, handed down in direct succession from father to son, +that it was not till late in the seventeenth century that one man could +manage the working of a frame. The man who was considered the +workman employed a labourer, who stood behind the frame to work the +slur and pressing motions; but the application of traddles and of the +feet eventually rendered the labour unnecessary.”</p> +<p><a name="footnote10"></a><a href="#citation10">{10}</a> Palissy’s +own words are:- “Le bois m’ayant failli, je fus contraint +brusler les estapes (étaies) qui soustenoyent les tailles de +mon jardin, lesquelles estant bruslées, je fus constraint brusler +les tables et plancher de la maison, afin de faire fondre la seconde +composition. J’estois en une telle angoisse que je ne sçaurois +dire: car j’estois tout tari et deseché à cause +du labeur et de la chaleur du fourneau; il y avoit plus d’un mois +que ma chemise n’avoit seiché sur moy, encores pour me +consoler on se moquoit de moy, et mesme ceux qui me devoient secourir +alloient crier par la ville que je faisois brusler le plancher: et par +tel moyen l’on me faisoit perdre mon credit et m’estimoit-on +estre fol. Les autres disoient que je cherchois à faire +la fausse monnoye, qui estoit un mal qui me faisoit seicher sur les +pieds; et m’en allois par les ruës tout baissé comme +un homme honteux: . . . personne ne me secouroit: Mais au contraire +ils se mocquoyent de moy, en disant: Il luy appartient bien de mourir +de faim, par ce qu’il delaisse son mestier. Toutes ces nouvelles +venoyent a mes aureilles quand je passois par la ruë.” +‘OEuvres Complètes de Palissy. Paris, 1844;’ +De l’Art de Terre, p. 315.</p> +<p><a name="footnote11"></a><a href="#citation11">{11}</a> “Toutes +ces fautes m’ont causé un tel lasseur et tristesse d’esprit, +qu’auparavant que j’aye rendu mes émaux fusible à +un mesme degré de feu, j’ay cuidé entrer jusques +à la porte du sepulchre: aussi en me travaillant à tels +affaires je me suis trouvé l’espace de plus se dix ans +si fort escoulé en ma personne, qu’il n’y avoit aucune +forme ny apparence de bosse aux bras ny aux jambes: ains estoyent mes +dites jambes toutes d’une venue: de sorte que les liens de quoy +j’attachois mes bas de chausses estoyent, soudain que je cheminois, +sur les talons avec le residu de mes chausses.”—‘OEuvres, +319-20.</p> +<p><a name="footnote12"></a><a href="#citation12">{12}</a> At +the sale of Mr. Bernal’s articles of vertu in London a few years +since, one of Palissy’s small dishes, 12 inches in diameter, with +a lizard in the centre, sold for 162<i>l</i>.</p> +<p><a name="footnote13"></a><a href="#citation13">{13}</a> Within +the last few months, Mr. Charles Read, a gentleman curious in matters +of Protestant antiquarianism in France, has discovered one of the ovens +in which Palissy baked his chefs-d’oeuvre. Several moulds +of faces, plants, animals, &c., were dug up in a good state of preservation, +bearing his well-known stamp. It is situated under the gallery +of the Louvre, in the Place du Carrousel.</p> +<p><a name="footnote14"></a><a href="#citation14">{14}</a> D’Aubigné, +‘Histoire Universelle.’ The historian adds, “Voyez +l’impudence de ce bilistre! vous diriez qu’il auroit lu +ce vers de Sénèque: ‘On ne peut contraindre celui +qui sait mourir: <i>Qui mori scit</i>, cogi nescit.’”</p> +<p><a name="footnote15"></a><a href="#citation15">{15}</a> The +subject of Palissy’s life and labours has been ably and elaborately +treated by Professor Morley in his well-known work. In the above +brief narrative we have for the most part followed Palissy’s own +account of his experiments as given in his ‘Art de Terre.’</p> +<p><a name="footnote16"></a><a href="#citation16">{16}</a> “Almighty +God, the great Creator,<br />Has changed a goldmaker to a potter.”</p> +<p><a name="footnote17"></a><a href="#citation17">{17}</a> The +whole of the Chinese and Japanese porcelain was formerly known as Indian +porcelain—probably because it was first brought by the Portuguese +from India to Europe, after the discovery of the Cape of Good Hope by +Vasco da Gama.</p> +<p><a name="footnote18"></a><a href="#citation18">{18}</a> ‘Wedgwood: +an Address delivered at Burslem, Oct. 26th, 1863.’ By the +Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone, M.P.</p> +<p><a name="footnote19"></a><a href="#citation19">{19}</a> It +was characteristic of Mr. Hume, that, during his professional voyages +between England and India, he should diligently apply his spare time +to the study of navigation and seamanship; and many years after, it +proved of use to him in a remarkable manner. In 1825, when on +his passage from London to Leith by a sailing smack, the vessel had +scarcely cleared the mouth of the Thames when a sudden storm came on, +she was driven out of her course, and, in the darkness of the night, +she struck on the Goodwin Sands. The captain, losing his presence +of mind, seemed incapable of giving coherent orders, and it is probable +that the vessel would have become a total wreck, had not one of the +passengers suddenly taken the command and directed the working of the +ship, himself taking the helm while the danger lasted. The vessel +was saved, and the stranger was Mr. Hume.</p> +<p><a name="footnote20"></a><a href="#citation20">{20}</a> ‘Saturday +Review,’ July 3rd, 1858.</p> +<p><a name="footnote21"></a><a href="#citation21">{21}</a> Mrs. +Grote’s ‘Memoir of the Life of Ary Scheffer,’ p. 67.</p> +<p><a name="footnote22"></a><a href="#citation22">{22}</a> While +the sheets of this revised edition are passing through the press, the +announcement appears in the local papers of the death of Mr. Jackson +at the age of fifty. His last work, completed shortly before his +death, was a cantata, entitled ‘The Praise of Music.’ +The above particulars of his early life were communicated by himself +to the author several years since, while he was still carrying on his +business of a tallow-chandler at Masham.</p> +<p><a name="footnote23"></a><a href="#citation23">{23}</a> Mansfield +owed nothing to his noble relations, who were poor and uninfluential. +His success was the legitimate and logical result of the means which +he sedulously employed to secure it. When a boy he rode up from +Scotland to London on a pony—taking two months to make the journey. +After a course of school and college, he entered upon the profession +of the law, and he closed a career of patient and ceaseless labour as +Lord Chief Justice of England—the functions of which he is universally +admitted to have performed with unsurpassed ability, justice, and honour.</p> +<p><a name="footnote24"></a><a href="#citation24">{24}</a> On +‘Thought and Action.’</p> +<p><a name="footnote25"></a><a href="#citation25">{25}</a> ‘Correspondance +de Napoléon Ier.,’ publiée par ordre de l’Empereur +Napoléon III, Paris, 1864.</p> +<p><a name="footnote26"></a><a href="#citation26">{26}</a> The +recently published correspondence of Napoleon with his brother Joseph, +and the Memoirs of the Duke of Ragusa, abundantly confirm this view. +The Duke overthrew Napoleon’s generals by the superiority of his +routine. He used to say that, if he knew anything at all, he knew +how to feed an army.</p> +<p><a name="footnote27"></a><a href="#citation27">{27}</a> His +old gardener. Collingwood’s favourite amusement was gardening. +Shortly after the battle of Trafalgar a brother admiral called upon +him, and, after searching for his lordship all over the garden, he at +last discovered him, with old Scott, in the bottom of a deep trench +which they were busily employed in digging.</p> +<p><a name="footnote28"></a><a href="#citation28">{28}</a> Article +in the ‘Times.’</p> +<p><a name="footnote29"></a><a href="#citation29">{29}</a> ‘Self-Development: +an Address to Students,’ by George Ross, M.D., pp. 1-20, reprinted +from the ‘Medical Circular.’ This address, to which +we acknowledge our obligations, contains many admirable thoughts on +self-culture, is thoroughly healthy in its tone, and well deserves republication +in an enlarged form.</p> +<p><a name="footnote30"></a><a href="#citation30">{30}</a> ‘Saturday +Review.’</p> +<p><a name="footnote31"></a><a href="#citation31">{31}</a> See +the admirable and well-known book, ‘The Pursuit of Knowledge under +Difficulties.’</p> +<p><a name="footnote32"></a><a href="#citation32">{32}</a> Late +Professor of Moral Philosophy at St. Andrew’s.</p> +<p><a name="footnote33"></a><a href="#citation33">{33}</a> A writer +in the ‘Edinburgh Review’ (July, 1859) observes that “the +Duke’s talents seem never to have developed themselves until some +active and practical field for their display was placed immediately +before him. He was long described by his Spartan mother, who thought +him a dunce, as only ‘food for powder.’ He gained +no sort of distinction, either at Eton or at the French Military College +of Angers.” It is not improbable that a competitive examination, +at this day, might have excluded him from the army.</p> +<p><a name="footnote34"></a><a href="#citation34">{34}</a> Correspondent +of ‘The Times,’ 11th June, 1863.</p> +<p><a name="footnote35"></a><a href="#citation35">{35}</a> Robertson’s +‘Life and Letters,’ i. 258.</p> +<p><a name="footnote36"></a><a href="#citation36">{36}</a> On +the 11th January, 1866.</p> +<p><a name="footnote37"></a><a href="#citation37">{37}</a> Brown’s +‘Horae Subsecivae.’</p> +<div class="GutenbergBlankLines3"><br /><br /><br /></div> +<p>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, SELF HELP ***</p> +<pre> + +******This file should be named selfh10h.htm or selfh10h.zip****** +Corrected EDITIONS of our EBooks get a new NUMBER, selfh11h.htm +VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, selfh10ah.htm + +Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US +unless a copyright notice is included. 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