A BOOK FOll A COMER ; OR, Ijlrrttons m pxmt ml %mt FROM. AUTHORS THE BEST SUITED TO THAT MODE OF ENJOYMENT WITH COMMENTS ON EACH, AND A GENERAL INTRODUCTION, BY LEIGH HUNT. : • ' - "... . •«» NEW YORK: H. W. DERBY, 625 BROADWAY. 1861. ■i ■* O t\ ,» .4 a o , What remained I salted, and found she liked that better than the fresh, after a few days' salting : though she did not so well approve of that I had formerly pickled and dried. As my salt grew very low, though I had used it very spar- ingly, I now resolved to try making some ; and the next summer I effected it. Thus we spent the remainder of the winter together, till the days began to be light enough for me to walk abroad a little in the middle of them : for I was now under no appre- hension of her leaving me ; as she had before this time so many opportunities of doing so, but never once attempted it. When the weather cleared up a little, by the lengthen- ing of daylight, I took courage one afternoon to invite her to w T alk with me to the lake ; but she sweetly excused her- self from it whilst there was such a frightful glare of light, as she said ; but, looking out of the door, told me if I would not go out of the wood she would accompany me : so we agreed to take a turn only there. I first went myself over the stile at the door, and thinking it rather too high for her, I took her in my arms and lifted her over. But even when I had her in this manner, I knew not what to make of her clothing, it sat so true and close ; but seeing her by a stead- ier and truer light in the grove, though a heavy gloomy one, than my light had afforded, I begged she would let me know of what silk or other composition her garment was made. She smiled and asked me if mine was not the same under my jacket. " No, lady," says I, " I have nothing but my skin under my clothes." " Why what do you mean?" re- plies she, somewhat tartly ; " but indeed I was afraid some- thing was the matter, by that nasty covering you wear, that you might not be seen. Are not you a glumm?"* " Yes,' * A man. OF A FLYING WOMAN. go, says I, " fair creature." (Here, though you may conceive she spoke part English, part her own country tongue, and I the same, as we best understood each other, yet I shall give you our discourse word for word in plain English.) " Then," says she, "I am afraid you must have been a very bad man, and have been crashee,* which I should be very sorry to hear." I told her I believed we were none of us so good as #e might be, but I hoped my faults had not at most exceeded other men's ; but I had suffered abundance of hardships in my time, and that at last Providence having settled me in this spot, from whence I had no prospect of ever departing, it was none of the least of its mercies to bring to my know- ledge and company the most exquisite piece of all his works in her, which I should acknowledge as long as I lived. She was surprised at this discourse, and asked me (if I did not mean to impose upon her, and was indeed an ingcrashee glummf), why I should tell her I had no prospect of depart- ing from hence ? " Have not you," says she, " the same prospect that I or any other person has of departing? Sir," added she, " you don't do well, and really I fear you are slit, or you would not wear this nasty cumbersome coat (taking hold of my jacket sleeve), if you were not afraid of showing the signs of a bad life upon your natural clothing." I could not for my heart imagine what way there was to get out of my dominions ; but certainly, thought I, there must be some way or other, or she would not be so peremp- tory. And as to my jacket, and showing myself in my natural clothing, I profess she made me blush ; and, but for the shame, I would have stripped to the skin to have satisfied her. " But, madam," says I, " pray pardon me. for you really are mistaken ; I have examined every nook and corner of * Slit ; — a punishment inflicted on the wings, or graundee, of criminals. f A man whose wings had not been slit. 90 PETER WILEJNS'S DISCOVERY this new world in which we now are, and can find no possi- ble outlet ; nay, even by the same way I came in, I am sure it is impossible to get out again." " Why," says she," what outlets have you searched for, or what way can you expect out but the way you came in? and why is that impossible to return by again ? If you arc not slit, is not the air open to you ? will not the sky admit you to patrol in it as well as other people ? I tell you, sir, I fear you have been slit for your crimes ; and though you have been so good to me that I cannot help loving of you heartily for it, yet, if I thought you had been slit, I would not, nay, could not, stay a mo- ment longer with you ; no, though it should break my heart to leave you !" I found m}-self now in a strange quandary, longing to know what she meant by being slit, and had a hundred strange notions in my head whether I was slit or not ; for though I knew what the word naturally signified well enough, yet in what manner, or by what figure of speech she applied it to me, I had no idea of. But seeing her look a little angrily upon me, " Pray, madam," says I, " do not be offended if I take the liberty to ask you what you mean by the word crashee, so often repeated by you, for I am an utter stranger to what yon mean by it?" "Sir," says she, " pray answer me first bow came you here?" " Madam," replied I, "will you phase to take a walk to the verge of the wood, and I will show you the very passage?" "Sir," says she, "I per- fectly know the range of the rocks all around, and by the least description, without going to see them, can tell from which you descended." " In truth," said I, " most charming lady, I descended from no rock at all; nor would I for a thousand worlds attempt what could not be accomplished hut by my destruction." "Sir," says she, in some anger. " it is False, and you impose on me." "I declare to you." OF A FLYING WOMAN. gi • says I," madam, what I tell you is strictly true ; I never was near the summit of any of the surrounding rocks or any- thing like it ; but as you are not far from the verge of the wood, be so good as to step a little further, and I will show you my entrance in hither." " Well'" says she, " now this odious dazzle of light is lessened, I do not care if I do go with you." When we came far enough to see the bridge, " There madam," says I, " there is my entrance, where the sea pours into this lake from yonder cavern." " It is not possible," eays she ; " this is another untruth ; and as I see you would deceive me and are not to be believed, farewell, I must be gone. But hold," says she, " let me ask you one thing more, that is, by what means did you come through that cavern ? you could not have used to have come over the rock." " Bless me, madam," says I, " do you think I and my boat could fly? Come over the rock, did you say? No. madam, I sailed from the great sea, the main ocean, in my boat, through that cavern into this very lake here." " What do you mean by your boat ?" says she ; " you seem to make two things of your boat you say you sailed with, and your- self." " I do so," replied I, " for, madam, I take myself to be good flesh and blood, but my boat is made of wood and other materials." " Is it so ?" says she ; " and pray where is this boat that is made of wood and other materials ? under your jacket ?" " Lord, madam," says I, "you put me in fear that you were angry, but now I hope you only joke with me ; what, put a boat under my jacket ! no, madam, my boat is in the lake." "What! more untruths?" says she. "No, madam," I replied ; " if you would be satisfied of what I say, every word of which is as true as that my boat now is in the lake, pray walk with me thither, and make your own eyes judges what sincerity I speak with." To this xhe 90 PETER WILKWS'S DISCOVERY agreed, it growing dusky ; but assured me, if I did not give her good satisfaction, I should see her no more. "We arrived at the lake, and going to my wet dock, " Now, madam," says I, " pray satisfy yourself whether I spake true or not." She looked at my boat, but could not yet frame a proper notion of it. Says I, " Madam, in this very boat I sailed from the main sea through that very cavern into this lake ; and shall at last think myself the happiest of all men, if you continue with me, love me, and credit me ; and I promise you I will never deceive you, but think my life happily spent in your service." I found she was hardly content yet to believe what I told her of my boat to be true, until I stepped into it, and pushing from the shore, took my oars in my hand, and sailed along the lake by her as she walked on the shore. At last she seemed so well reconciled to me and my boat, that she desired I would take her in. I immediately did so, and we sailed a good way ; and as we returned to my dock, I described to her how I procured the water we drank, and brought it to shore in that vessel. " Well," says she, " I have sailed, as you call it, many a mile in my lifetime, but never in such a thing as this. I own it will serve very well where one has a great many things to carry from place to place ; but to be labouring thus at an oar when one intends pleasure in sailing, is, in my mind, a most ridiculous piece of slavery." " Why, pray, madam, how would you have me sail ; for getting into the boat only will not carry us this way or that, without using some force." ' ; But," says she, " pray where did you get this boat, as you call it?" " Oh ! madam," says I, " that is too long and fatal a story to begin upon now; this boat was made many thousand miles from hence, among a people coal black, a quite different sort from us; and when I first OF A FLYING WOMAN. 93 had it, I little thought of seeing this country ; but I will make a faithful relation of all to you when we come home." Indeed I began to wish heartily we were there, for it grew into the night ; and having strolled so far without my gun, I was afraid of what I had before seen and heard, and hinted our return ; but I found my motion was disagreeable to her, and so I dropped it. I now perceived, and wondered at it, that the later it grew, the more agreeable it seemed to her ; and as I had now brought her into a good humour again by seeing and sailing in my boat, I was not willing to prevent its increase. I told her, if she pleased we would land, and when I had docked my boat, I would accompany her where and as long as she liked. As we talked and walked by the lake, she made a little run before me, and jumped into it. Perceiv- ing this, I cried out ; whereupon she merrily called on me to follow her. The light was then so dim as prevented my having more than a confused sight of her, when she jumped in ; and looking earnestly after her, I could discern nothing more than a small boat on the water, which skimmed along at so great a rate that I almost lost sight of it presently ; but running along the shore for fear of losing her, I met her gravely walking to meet me, and then had entirely lost sight of the boat on the lake. " This," says she, accosting me with a smile, " is my way of sailing, which I perceive by the fright you were in, you are altogether unacquainted with ; and as you tell me you came from so many thousand miles off, it is possible you may be made differently from me ; but surely we are the part of the creation which has had most care bestowed upon it ; and I suspect from all your discourse, to which I have been very attentive, it is possible you may no more be able to fly than to sail as I do." " No, charming creature," says I, " that I cannot, I will assure 94 PETER WILKmS>b DISCOVERY you." She then, stepping to the edge of the lake, for the advantage of a descent before her, sprang up into the air, and away she went, further than my eyes could follow her. I was quite astonished. So, says I, then all is over, all a delusion which I have so long been in, a mere phantom ! better had it been for me never to have seen her, than thus to lose her again. But what could I expect had she staid I for it is plain she is no human composition. But, says I, she felt like flesh too, when I lifted her out at the door. I had but very little time for reflection ; for in about ten minutes after she had left me in this mixtux-e of grief and amazement, she alighted just by me on her feet. Her return, as she plainly saw, filled me with a trans- port not to be concealed, and which, as she afterwards told me, was very agreeable to her. Indeed, I was some mo- ments in such an agitation of mind, from these unparalleled incidents, that I was like one thunderstruck; but coming presently to myself, and clasping her in my arms with as much love and passion as I was capable of expressing. •• Aic yon returned again, kind angel," said I, " to bless a bch who can only be happy in adoring you? Can it be you, who have so many advantages over me, should quit all the pleasures that nature has formed you for. and all your friends and relations, to take an asylum in my arms? But I here make you a tender of all I am able to bestow — my love and constancy. - ' " Come, come," says she, •■ no more raptures. I find you are a worthier man than I thought 1 had reason to take you for; and I beg your par- don for my distrust, whilst 1 was ignorant of your perfec- tions : but now I verily believe all you said is true; ami I promise you, as yon have seemed so much to delight in me, I will never i|nit you. till death or other as fatal accident shall part us. But we will now, if you choose, go home : for OF A FLYING WOMAN. 95 I know you have been some time uneasy in this gloom, though agreeable to me. For, giving my eyes the pleasure of looking eagerly on you, it conceals my blushes from your sight." In this manner, exchanging mutual endearments and soft speeches, hand in hand, we arrived at the grotto: §l\ %\u mill ijjc ypQxmxh. FROM LE SAGE. Gn. Blas is a book which makes a great impression in youth with par- ticular passages; becomes thoroughly appreciated only by the maturest knowledge; and remains one of the greatest of favourites, with old people who are wise and good-natured. Every body knows the Robbers' Cave, the Beggar who asks alms with a loaded musket, the Archbishop who invited a candour which he could not bear, the dramatic surprise and exouisite lesson of the story transcribed into the present volume; and perhaps we all have a general, entertaining recollection of authors, and actresses, and great men. But the hundreds of delicate strokes at svery turn, the quiet, arch reference (never failing) to the most hidden Bourcee of action and nicest evidences of character, require an ex- perienced taste and discernment to do them justice. When they obtain thi-, tin v complete the charm of the reader by Battering his under- standing. The hero (strange critical term for individuals the most un- heroicalt) is justly popular with all the world, because he resembles them in their mixture of sense and nonsense, craft and credulity, selfishness and good qualities. We have a sneaking regard for him on our weak side ; while we (latter ourselves we should surpass him on the strong. Then how pleasant the hypocrisy of the false hermit Lamela, reconciled to US by his animal spirits; how consolatory (if extension of evil can console) the bile and melancholy of the great minister, the Count-Duke, who always sees a spectre before him; and how charming, as completing the round of its universality, the alterna- tions from town t ontry, from solitudes to court-, and the settlement of the once -imple Gil Bias, now Signior de Santillane, in his comforta- ble farm at Lirias, over the door of which was to be written a farewell lo vicissitude : — GIL BLAS AND THE PARASITE. 97 Inveni portum. Spcs et Fortuna, valete. Sat me lnsisti : ludite nunc alios. My port is found. Farewell, ye freaks of chance ; The danco ye led me, now let others dance. Le Sage is accused, like Moliere, of having stolen all his good things from Spain. Do not believe it. Rest assured, that whatever he stole he turned to the choicest account with his own genius ; otherwise the Spaniards would have got the fame for his works, and not he. Nobody- stole Cervantes. Le Sage was a good, quiet man, very deaf, who lived in a small house at Boulogne with a bit of trellised garden at the back, in which he used to walk up and dowr. while he composed. He had a son, a celebrated actor, who came to live with him; and these two were as fast friends, as they were honest and pleasant men. But if every body knows the adventure of Gil Bias with the Parasite, why, it may be asked, repeat it? For the reason given in the Preface, — because there are passages in books which readers love to see repeated, for the A'ery sake of their intimacy with them. It is with fine passages in books as with songs. Some we like, because they are good and new ; and some, because they are very good indeed, and old acquaintances. Besides, there are hundreds of readers who only just recollect them well enough to desire to know them better. It is to be borne in mind, that our hero has just set out in life ; and that this is his first journey since he left school at Oviedo. f ARRIVED in safety at Pennanor, and halting at the •*- gate of an inn that made a tolerable appearance, I no sooner alighted, than the landlord came out, and received me with great civility ; he untied my portmanteau with his own hands, and throwing it on his shoulder, conducted me into a room, while one of his servants led my mule into the stable. This innkeeper, the greatest talker of the Asturias, and as ready to relate his own affairs without being asked, as to pry into those of another, told me his name was Andrew Corcuelo ; that he had served many years in the king's army in quality of a Serjeant ; and had quitted the service fifteen months ago to marry a damsel of Oastropbl, 98 GIL BLAS AND THE PARASITE. who (though she was a little swarthy) knew very well how to turn the penny. He said a thousand other things, which I could have dispensed with the hearing of; but after having made me his confidant, he thought he had a right to exact the same condescension of me, and accordingly asked whence I came, whither I was going, and what I was. I was obliged to answer article by article ; for he accom- panied every question by a profound bow, and begged me to excuse his curiosity with such a respectful air, that I could not refuse to satisfy him in every particular. This engaged me in a long conversation with him, and gave me occasion to mention my design, and the reason I had foi disposing of my mule, that I might take the opportunity of a carrier. He approved of my intention, though not in a very succinct manner; for he r> ted all the trouble- some accidents that might befall me on the road: he re- counted many dismal stories of travellers ; and I began to be afraid he would never have done. He concluded at length however with telling me, that if I had a mind to sell my mule, he was acquainted with a very honest jockey who would buy her. I assured him he would oblige me in Bending for him; upon which he went in quest of him im- mediately with great eagerness. It was not long before he returned with his man, whom he introduced to me as a person of exceeding honesty, and we went into the yard all together, where my mule was produced, and passed and -scd before the jockey, who examined her from head to foot, and did not fail to speak very disadvantageously of I own there was not much to be said in her praise; i>ut however, bad it been the pope's mule, he would have found some defects in her. He assured me. that she had all the defects a mule could have: and to convince me of his veracity, appealed to the landlord, who, doubtless, had GIL BIAS AND THE PARASITE. 99 his reasons for supporting his friend's assertions. " Well, ' said the dealer with an air of indifference, " how much money do you expect for this wretched animal?" After the eulogium he had bestowed on her, and the attestation of Signior Corcuelo, whom I believed to be a man of honesty and understanding, I would have given my mule for noth- ing ; and therefore told him I would rely on his integrity ; bidding him appraise the beast in his own conscience, and I would stand to the valuation. Upon this he assumed the man of honour ; and replied, that in engaging his con- science I took him on the weak side. In good sooth, that did not seem to be his strong side ; for instead of valuing her at ten or twelve pistoles, as my uncle had done, he fix- ed the price at three ducats ; which I accepted with as much joy as if I had made an excellent bargain. After having so advantageously disposed of my mule, the landlord conducted me to a carrier, who was to set out the next day for Astorga. This muleteer let me know that he should set out by day-break, and promised to awake me in time, after we had agreed upon the price, as well for the* hire of a mule, as my board on the road ; and when every- thing was settled between us, I returned to the inn with Corcuelo, who, by the way, began to recount the carrier's history. He told me every circumstance of his character in town ; in short, was going to stupify me again with his intolerable loquacity, when, luckily for me, a man of pretty good appearance prevented my misfortune, by accosting him with great civility. I left them together, and went on, with- out suspecting that I had the least concern in their conver- sation. When I arrived at the inn, I called for supper ; and it being a meagre day, was fain to put up with eggs ; which while they got ready, I made up to my landlady, whom I 100 GIL BLAS AND THE PARASITE. had not seen before. She appeared handsome enough ; and withal so sprightly and gay. that I should have concluded (even if her husband had not told me so) that her house was pret- ty well frequented. "When the omelet I had bespoken was ready. I sat down to table by myself; and had not yet swallowed the first mouthful, when the landlord came in, followed by the man who had stopt him in the street. This cavalier, who wore a long sword, and seemed to be about thirty years of age. advanced towards me with an eager air, saying, " Mr. Student, I am informed that you are that Signior Gil Bias of Santillane, who is the link of philosophy, and ornament of Oviedo ! Is it possible that you are that mir- ror of learning, that sublime genius, whose reputation is so great in this country ? You know not." continued he, ad- dressing himself to the innkeeper and his wife, "you know not what you poss You have a treasure in your house ! Behold in this young gentleman, the eighth wonder of the world !" Then turning to me. and throwing his arms about my neck, " Forgive. I he, "my transports! I cannot contain the joy that your presence creates." I could not answer for some time, because he locked me so close in his arms, that I was almost suffocated for want of breath : and it was not till I had disengaged my head from his embrace, that I replied "Signior Cavalier, I did not think my name was known at Penaflor." " How ! known I" resumed he in his former strain. " we keep a reg- ister of all the celebrated names within twenty leagues of u in particular are looked upon as a prodigy ; and I don't at all doubt, that Spain will one day be as proud of you, as Greece was of her Seven S These words were followed by a fresh hug. which I was forced to endure, though at the risk of strangulation. With the little expe- rience I had, I ought not to have been the dupe of his pro- GIL BIAS AND THE PARASITE. 101 fessions and hyperbolical compliments. I ought to have known, by bis extravagant flattery, that be was one of tbose parasites wbicb abound in every town, and wbo, wben a stranger arrives, introduce themselves to him, in order to All their bellies at his expense. But my youth and vanity made me judge otherwise. My admirer appeared to me so much of a gentleman, that I invited him to take a share of my supper. " Ah, with all my soul," cried he ; 'I am too much obliged to my kind stars for having thrown me in the way of the illustrious Gil Bias, not to enjoy my good for- tune as long as I can ! I have no great appetite," pursued he, " but I will sit down to bear you company, and eat a mouthful purely out of complaisance." So saying, my panegyrist took his place right over against me; and a cover being laid for him, attacked the omelet as voraciously as if he had fasted three whole days. By his complaisant beginning I foresaw that our dish would not last long ; and therefore ordered a second ; which they dressed with such dispatch, that it was served just as we — or rather he — had made an end of the first. He proceeded on this with the same vigour ; and found means, without losing one stroke of his teeth, to overwhelm me with praises during the whole repast, which made me very well pleased with my sweet self. He drank in proportion to his eating ; sometimes to my health, sometimes to that of my father and mother, whose happiness in having such a son as me he could not enough admire. All the while he plied me with wine, and insisted upon my doing him justice, while I toasted health for health ; a circumstance which, together with his intoxicating flattery, put me into such good humour, that seeing our second omelet half devoured, I asked the landlord if he had no fish in the bouse. Signior Corcuelo, who in all likelihood had a fellow-feeliug with the 102 GIL BLAS AND THE PARASITE. parasite, replied, ' : I have a delicate trout; but those who eat it must pay for the sauce; — 'tis a bit too dainty for your palate, I doubt." " What do you call too dainty ?" said the sycophant, raising his voice ; " you're a wiseacre, indeed ! Know, that there is nothing in this house too good for Signior Gil Bias de Santillane, who deserves to be enter- tained like a prince." I was pleased at his laying hold of the landlord's last words, in which he prevented me ; who finding myself offended, said with an air of disdain, " Produce this trout of yours, Gaffer Corcuelo, and give yourself no trouble about the consequence." This was what the innkeeper wanted. He got it ready, and served it up in a trice. At sight of this new dish, I could perceive the parasite's eye sparkle with joy; and he renewed that complaisance — I mean for the fish — which he had already shown for the eggs. At last, however, he was obliged to give out, for fear of ai sing crammed to the very throat. Hav- ing, therefore, eaten and drank his bellyfull, he thought proper to conclude the farce, by rising from table, and ac- costing me in these words : — "Signior Gil Bias, I am too well sati ith your good cheer, to leave you without offering an important advice, which you seem to have g occasion for. Henceforth beware of praise, and be upon your guard againsl body you do not know. You may I with other people inclined to divert themselves with your credulity, and perhaps to push things still further; but don't lie duped again, nor believe yourself (though they lid swc.ii- il) the eighth wonder of the world." So ing, he laughed in m ;. and stalked away. I was as much niFectcd by this bite as I have since been by misfortunes of f iter consequence. I could not for- give myself for having been so grossly imposed upon ; or GIL BLAS AND THE PARASITE. 103 Bather, I was shocked to find my pride so humbled. " How ! (said I to myself) has the traitor, then, made a jest of me ? His design in accosting my landlord in the street was only to pump him ; or perhaps they understand one another. Ah ! simple Gil Bias ! Go hang thyself for shame, for having given such rascals an opportunity of turning thee into ridicule ! I suppose they'll trump up a fine story of this affair, which will reach Oviedo, and doubt- less do thee a great deal of honour, and make thy parents repent their having thrown away so much good counsel on an ass. Instead of exhorting me not to wrong anybody, they ought to have cautioned me against the knavery of the world." Chagrined with these mortifying reflections, and in- flamed with resentment, I locked myself in my chamber and went to bed, where, however, I did not sleep ; for before I could close my eyes, the carrier came to let me know he was ready to set out, and only waited for me. I got up instantly ; and while I put on my clothes, Corcuelo brought me a bill, in which, I assure you, the trout was not forgotten ; and I was not only obliged to gratify his exor- bitance, but I had also the mortification to perceive, while I counted the money, that the sarcastic knave remembered my adventure. After having paid sauce for a supper which I had so ill digested, I went to the muleteer with my bags, wishing the parasite, the innkeeper, and his inn, at the fnhiiirQ in tip IMiuTu" € linmlicr. FROM THE MYSTERIES OF UDOLPHO. Mrs. Radcliffe, a beautiful little woman of delicate constitution and sequestered habits, as fond, as her own heroines, of lonely sea-shores, picturesque mountains, and poetical meditations, perfected that dis- covery of the capabilities of an old house or castle for exciting a romantic interest, which lay ready to be made in the mind of every child and poet, but which (if Gray did not put # it into his head) first suggested itself to the feudal dilletanteism of Horace TValpole. Horace had more genius in him than his contemporaries gave him credit for; but the reputation which his wit obtained him, the material philosophy of the day, and the pursuit of fashionable amusement, did it no good. He lost sight of the line to be drawn between the imposing and the in- credible; and though I real merit in the Castle of Otranto, and • . grandeur of imagination, yet the conversion of dreams into gross daylight palpabilities, which notl 't of iron-founders could create — -words that take a hun d to lift them, and supernatural •itial helmets, big as houses and actually serving for prisons — turns the sublime into the ridiculous, and has completely spoilt an otherwise interesting narrative. Mrs. Radcliffe, frightened perhaps by ole'8 failure (for this gr ress of Fear was too often a servant of it), went to another extreme ; and except in what she quoted from other story-tellers, resolved all her supernatural effects into common- -, however, while they lasted, and every thing djle of frightening out of their wits — old haunted 1 corridors, mysterioi . faces behind curtains, cowled li.ty monks, inquisitors, nuns, places to corcuut murders in, and t!i>' murders th — she understood to perfection. T<> dress these in ap] circumstances, be f a painter as LUDOVICO IN THE HAUNTED CHAMBER. 1Q3 well as the feeling of a poetess. She conceived to a nicety the effect of a storm on a landscape, the playing of a meteor on the point of a spear, and the sudden appearance of some old castle to "which travellers have been long coming, and which they have reasons to fear living in. It has been objected to her that she is too much of a melodramatic writer, and that her characters are inferior to her circumstances; the back- ground (as Ilazlitt says) of more importance than the figures. This in a great measure is true ; but she has painted characters also, chiefly weak ones, as in the querulous duped aunt in Udolpho, and the victim of error, St. Pierre, in the Romance of the Forest. It must be consider- ed, however, that her effects, however produced, are successful, and greatly successful ; and that Nature herself deals in precisely such effects, leaving men to be operated upon by them passively, and not to play the chief parts in the process by means of their characters. Mrs. liadcliffe brings on the scene Fear and Terror themselves, the grandeurs of the known world, and the awes of the unknown ; and if human beings become puppets in her hands, it is as people in storm and earthquake are puppets in the hands of Nature. The following passage, from the Mysteries of Udolpho, is one of the most favourite in her writings. Mr. Ilazlitt thinks the Provencal tale in it " the greatest treat which Mrs. Eadcliffe's pen has provided for the lovers of the marvellous and terrible." Sir Walter Scott says, "The best and most admired specimen of her art is the mysterious disappear- ance of Ludovico, after having undertaken to watch for a night in a haunted apartment ; and the mind of the reader is finely wound up for some strange catastrophe, by the admirable ghost-story which he is represented as perusing to amuse his solitude, as the scene closes upon him. Neither can it be denied, that the explanation afforded of this mysterious accident is as probable as romance requires, and in itself completely satisfactory." What that explanation is, the reader will find at the close of the extract. PPHE count gave orders for the north apartments to be J- opened and prepared for the reception of Ludovico ; but Dorothee, remembering what she had lately witnessed there, feared to obey ; and not one of the other servants daring to venture thither, the rooms remained shut up till the time 5* ' 100 LUDOV1CO IN THL HAUNTED CHAMBER. when Ludovico was to retire thither for the night, an hour for which the whole household waited with the greatest im- patience. After supper, Ludovico. hy the order of the count, at- tended him in his closet, where they remained alone for near half an hour, and on leaving which his lord delivered to him a sword. •• It has seen service in mortal quarrels," said the count, jocosely, "you will use it honourably no doubt in a spiritual one. To-morrow let me hear that there is not one ghost remaining in the chateau." Ludovico received it with a respectful bow. " You shall be obeyed, my lord," said he ; "I will engage that no spectre shall disturb the peace of the chateau after this night." They now returned to the supper-room, where the count's guests awaited to accompany him and Ludovico to the north ots; and Dorothee, being summoned for the keys, delivered them to Ludovico. who then led the way. followed by most of the inhabitants of tl a. Having reached the I lircase, several of the servants shrunk back and -!il to go further, but the rest followed him to the top of the staircase, where a broad landing-place allowed them to flock round him, while he applied the key to the door, dnring which they watched him with as much eager curiosity as if he had been performing some magical rite. Ludovico, unaccustomed t « » the lock, could not turn it, Dorothee, who had lingered far behind, was called for- i. under whose hand the door opened slowly, and her glancing within the d< ber, she uttered a sud- den shriek ami retreated. At this signal of alarm the greater part of the crowd hurried down, and the count, Henri, and Ludovico were left alone to pursue the inquiry, who instantly rushed into the apartment, Ludovico witli a LTJDOVICO IN THE HAUNTED CHAMBER. 107 drawn sword, which he had just time to draw from the scab- bard, the count with a lamp in his hand, and Henry carry- ing a basket containing provision for the courageous ad- venturer. Having looked hastily round the first room, where no- thing appeared to justify alarm, they passed on to the second ; and here too all being quiet, they proceeded to a third in a more tempered step. The count had now leisure to smile at the discomposure into which he had been surprised, and to ask Ludovico in which room he designed to pass the night. " There are several chambers beyond these, your excel- lenza," said Ludovico, pointing to a door, ' : and in one of them is a bed, tliey say. I will pass the night there ; and when I am weary of watching, I can lie down." " Good," said the count ; " let us go on. You see, these rooms show nothing but damp walls and decaying furniture. I have been so much occupied since I came to the chateau, that I have not looked into them till now. Remember, Ludovico, to tell the housekeeper to-morrow to throw open these windows. The damask hangings are dropping to pieces ; I will have them taken down, and this antique furniture removed." " Dear sir," said Henri, ''here is an arm-chair so massy with gilding, that it resembles one of the state chairs in the Louvre more than anything else." " Yes " said the count, stopping a moment to survey it, " there is a history belonging to that chair, but I have not time to tell it ; let us pass on. This suite runs to a greater extent than I imagined ; it is many years since I was in them. But where is the bed-room you speak of, Ludovico? these are only ante-chambers to the great drawing-room. I remember them in their splendour." 103 LUDOYWO IS THE 11AUSTED CHAMBER. " The bed, my lord," replied Ludovico, " they told me was in a room that opens beyond the saloon and terminates the suite." " 0. here is the saloon," said the count, as they entered the spacious apartment in which Emily and Dorothee had rested. He here stood for a moment, surveying the reliques of faded grandeur -which it exhibited, the sumptuous tapestry, the long and low sofas of velvet with frames heavily carved and gilded, the floor inlaid with small squares of fine marble ; and covered in the centre with a piece of rich tapestry work, the casements of painted glass, and the large Venetian mir- rors of a size and quality such as at that period France could not make, which reflected on every side the spacious apart- ment. These had also formerly reflected a gay and brilliant scene, for this had been the state room of the chateau, and here the marchioness had held the assemblies that made part of the festivities of her nuptials. If the wand of a ma- gician could have recalled the vanished groups — many of them vanished even from the earth ! — that once had passed over these polished mirrors, what a varied and contrasted picture would they have exhibited with the present ! Now, instead of a blaze of lights, and a splendid and busy crowd, they reflected only the rays of the one glimmering lamp which the count held up. and which scarcely served to show the three forlorn figures that stood surveying the room, and the spacious and dusky walls around them. "Ah!" said the count to Henri, awaking from his deep reverie, "how the scene is changed since last I saw it ! I a young man then, and the marchioness was alive and in her bloom : many other persons were here too, who are now no more. There stood the orchestra, lure we tripped in many a sprightly maze — the walls echoing to the dance. Now they resound only one feeble voice, and even that will. LUD0V1C0 IN THE HAUNTED CHAMBER. 103 ere long, be heard no more. My son, remember that I was once as young as yourself, and that you must pass away like those who have preceded you — like those who, as they sung and danced in this most gay apartment, forgot that years are made up of moments, and that every step they took carried them nearer to their graves. But such reflections are useless — I had almost said criminal — unless they teach us to prepare for eternity, since otherwise they cloud our present happiness without guiding us to a future one. But enough of this — let us go on." Ludovico now opened the door of the bed-room, and the count, as he entered, was struck with the funeral ap- pearance which the dark arras gave to it. He approached the bed with an emotion of solemnity, and, perceiving it to be covered with a pall of black velvet, paused. " What can this mean ?" said he, as he gazed upon it. " I have heard, my lord," said Ludovico, as he stood at the feet, looking within the canopied curtains, " that the Lady Marchioness de Villeroi died in this chamber, and remained here till she was removed to be buried ; and this, perhaps, signor, may account for the pall." The count made no reply, but stood for a few moments engaged in thought, and evidently much affected. Then, turning to Ludovico, he asked him with a serious air, whether he thought his courage would support him through the night. ' k If you doubt this," added the count, " do nob be ashamed to own it ; I will release you from your en- gagement without exposing you to the triumphs of your fellow-servants." Ludovico paused ; pride and something very like fear seemed struggling in his breast : pride, however, was victorious ; — he blushed, and his hesitation ceased. " No, my lord," said he, " I will go through with what 110 LUDOVICO IN THE BAUNTED CHAMBER. I have begun ; and I am grateful for your consideration. On that hearth I will make a fire : and with the good cheer in this basket. I doubt not I shall do well." " Be it so," said the count ; " but how will you beguile the tediousness of the night, if you do not sleep ?" " When I am weary, my lord," replied Ludovico, " I shall not fear to sleep ; in the meanwhile, I have a book that will entertain me." " Well," said the count, ' : I hope nothing will disturb you ; but if you should be seriously alarmed in the night, come to my apartment. I have too much confidence in your good sense and courage to believe you will be alarmed on slight grounds, or suffer the gloom of this chamber, or its remote situation, to overcome you with ideal terrors. To-morrow I shall have to thank you for an important service ; these rooms shall then be thrown open, and my people will then be convinced of their error. Good-night, Ludovico ; let me see you early in the morning, and remem- ber what I lately said to you." •■ L will, my lord. Good-night to your excellenza — let me attend you with the light." He lighted the count and Henri through the chambers to the outer door. On the landing-place stood a lamp, which one of the affrighted servants had left ; and Henri, as he took it up, again bade Ludovico " good-night," who, having respectfully returned the wish, closed the door upon them ninl fastened it. Then, as he retired to the bed-chamber, he examined the rooms through which he passed with mure minuteness than he had done before ; for he apprehended that some person might have concealed himself in them for the purpose of frightening him. No one, however, but him- Belf was in these chambers ; and leaving open the doors through which he passed, he came again to the great draw LUDOVICO IN THE HAUNTED CHAMBER. \\ x ing-room, whose spaciousness and silent gloom somewhat startled him. For a moment he stood looking back through the long suite of rooms he had just quitted ; and as he turned, perceiving a light and his own figure reflected in one of the large mirrors, he started. Other objects, too were seen obscurely on its dark surface, but he paused not to examine them, and returned hastily into the bed-room, as he surveyed which, he observed the door of the Oriel, and opened it. All within was still. On looking round, his eye was caught by the portrait of the deceased mar- chioness, upon which he gazed for a considerable time with great attention and some surprise ; and then, having ex- amined the closet he returned into the bed-room, where he kindled a wood fire, the bright blaze of which revived his spirits, which had begun to yield to the gloom and silence of the place ; for gusts of wind alone broke at intervals this silence. He now drew a small table and a chair near the fire, took a bottle of wine and some cold provision out of his basket, and regaled himself. When he had finished his repast he laid his sword upon the table, and not feeling disposed to sleep, drew from his pocket the book he had spoken of. It was a volume of old Provencal tales. Hav- ing stirred the fire into a brighter blaze, trimmed his lamp, and drawn his chair upon the hearth, he began to read • and his attention was soon wholly occupied by the scenes which the page disclosed. The count, meanwhile, had returned to the supper-room, whither those of the party who had attended him to the north apartment had retreated upon hearing Dorothee's scream, and who were now earnest in their inquiries con- cerning those chambers. The count rallied his guests on their precipitate retreat, and on the superstitious inclinations which had occasioned it ; and this led to the question 112 LUD0Y1C0 IN THE HAUNTED CHAMBER. whether the spirit, after it has quitted the body, is ever permitted to revisit the earth ; and if it is, whether it was possible for spirits to become visible to the sense ? The baron was of opinion, that the first was probable, and the last was possible ; and he endeavoured to justify this opinion by respectable authorities, both ancient and modern, which he quoted. The count, however, was decidedly against him : and a long conversation ensued, in which the usual argu- ments on these subjects were on both sides brought forward with skill and discussed with candour, but without convert- ing either party to the opinion of his opponent. The effect of their conversation on their auditors was various. Though the count had much the superiority of the baron in point of argument, he had fewer adherents ; for that love, so natural to the human mind, of whatever is able to distend its facul- ties with wonder and astonishment, attached the majority of the company to the side of the baron ; and though many of the count's propositions were unanswerable, his opponents were inclined to believe this the consequence of their own want of knowledge on so abstracted a subject, rather than that arguments did not exist which were forcible enough to conquer him. Blanche was pale with attention, till the ridicule in her father's glance called a blush upon her countenance, and she then endeavoured to forget the superstitious tales she had been told in the convent. Meanwhile, Emily had been Listening with deep attention to the discussion of what was to her a very interesting question; and remembering the appearance Bhe had seen in the apartment of the late mar- chioness, she was frequently chilled with awe. Several times she was on the point of mentioning what she had seen, but die fear of giving pain to the count, and the dread of his ridicule, restrained her; and awaiting in anxious ex- LTJDOVICU AY THE HAUNTED. CHAMBER. \ 13 poctation the event of Ludovico's intrepidity, she deter- mined that her future silence should depend upon it. When the party had separated for the night, and the count retired to his dressing-room, the remembrance of the desolate scenes he had so lately witnessed in his own man- sion deeply affected him, but at length he was aroused from his reverie and his silence. " What music is that I hear?" fcaid he suddenly to his valet. " Who plays at this late hour?" The man made no reply ; and the count continued to lis- ten, and then added, " That is no common musician ; he touches the instrument with a delicate hand. Who is it, Pierre ?" " My lord !" said the man, hesitatingly. " Who plays that instrument ?" repeated the count. " Does not your lordship know, then V said the valet. ' : What mean you?" said tire count somewhat sternly. " Nothing, my lord, I mean nothing," rejoined the man submissively ; " only — that music — goes about the house at midnight often, and I thought your lordship might have heard it before." " Music goes about the house at midnight ! Poor fellow ! Does nobody dance to the music, too ?" " It is not in the chateau, I believe, my lord. The sounds come from the woods, they say, though they seem so very near ; but then a spirit can do anything." " Ah, poor fellow !" said the count, " I perceive you are as silly as the rest of them ; to-morrow you will be con- vinced of your ridiculous error. But, hark ! what noise is that?" '•' Oh, my lord ! that is the voice we often hear with the music." " Often !" said the count ; ' : how often, pray ? It is a very fine one." 114 LUDOVICO IN THE EAUNTED CHAMBER. " Why, my lord, I myself have not heard it more than two or three times ; but there are those who have lived here longer, that have heard it often enough." " What a swell was that !" exclaimed the count, as he still listened ; " and now, what a dying cadence ! This is surely something more than mortal." " That is what they say, my lord," said the valet ; " they say it is nothing mortal that utters it ; and if I might say my thoughts " " Peace !" said the count ; and he listened till the strain died away. '• This is strange," said he, as he returned from the win- dow. " Close the casements, Pierre." Pierre obeyed, and the count soon after dismissed him but did not so soon lose the remembrance of the music, which long vibrated in his fancy in tones of melting sweet- ness, while surprise and perplexity engaged his thoughts. Ludovico, meanwhile in his remote chamber, heard now and then the faint echo of a closing door as the family re- tired to rest ; and then the hall-clock, at a great distance, struck twelve. " It is midnight," said he, and he looked suspiciously round the spacious chamber. The fire on the rth was now nearly expiring, for his attention having book before him, he had forgotten everything besides; but he soon added fresh wood, not because he was cold, though the night was stormy, but because he was cheerless ; and having again trim the lamp, lie poured out a glass of wine, drew his chair nearer t<> the crackling blaze, tried to be deaf to the wind that howled mournfully at the casements, endeavoured to abstract his mind from the melancholy that was stealing upon him, and again took up his book. It had been lent to him by Dorothce, who had formerly picked it up in an obscure LUD0V1C0 IN THE HAUNTED CHAMBER. \\$ corner of the marquis's library ; and who, having opened it, and perceived sonic of the marvels it related, had carefully preserved it for her own entertainment, its condition giving her some excuse for detaining it from its proper station. The damp corner into which it had fallen, had caused the cover to be disfigured and mouldy, and the leaves to be so discoloured with spots, that it was not without difficulty the letters could be traced. The fictions of the Provencal wri- ters, whether drawn from the Arabian legends brought by the Saracens into Spain, or recounting the chivalric exploits performed by crusaders whom the troubadours accompanied to the East, were generally splendid, and always marvellous both in scenery and incident ; and it is not wonderful that Dorothee and Ludovico should be fascinated by inventions which had captivated the careless imagination in every rank of society in a former age. Some of the tales, however, in the book now before Ludovico were of simple structure, and exhibited nothing of the magnificent machinery and heroic manners which usually characterized the fables of the twelfth century, and of this description was the one he now hap- pened to open ; which in its original style was of great length, but may be thus shortly related. The reader will perceive it is strongly tinctured with the superstition of the times. THE rEOVENQ'AL TALE. There lived, in the province of Bretagne, a noble baron, famous for his magnificence and courtly hospitalities. His castle was graced with ladies of exquisite beauty, and thronged with illustrious knights ; for the honour he paid to feats of chivalry invited the brave of distant countries to enter his lists, and his court was more splendid than those nf many nrinces. Eight minstrels were retained in his ser 116 LUD0V1CO IN THE HAUNTED CHAMBER. vice, who used to sing to their harps romantic fictions taken from the Arabians, or adventures of chivalry that befell knights during the crusades, or the martial deeds of the baron, their lord ; while he, surrounded by his knights and ladies, banqueted in the great hall of the castle, where the costly tapestry that adorned the walls with pictured exploits of his ancestors, the casements of painted glass enriched with armorial bearings, the gorgeous banners that waved along the roof, the sumptuous canopies, the profusion of gold and silver that glittered on the sideboards, the numerous dishes that covered the tables, the number and gay liveries of the attendants, with the chivalric and splendid attire of the guests, united to form a scene of magnificence such as we may not hope to see in these degenerate days. Of the baron the following adventure is related : — One night, having retired late from the banquet to his chamber, and dismissed his attendants, he was surprised by the appearance of a stranger of a noble air, but of a sorrowful and dejected countenance. Believing that this person had been secreted in the apartment, since it appeared impossible he could have lately passed the ante-room unobserved by the pages in waiting, who would have prevented this intrusion on their lord, the baron, calling loudly for his people, drew his sword, which he had not yet taken from his side, and stood upon his defence. The stranger, slowly advancing, told him that there was nothing to fear; that he came with no hostile intent, but to communicate to lum a terrible secret, which it was necessary for him to know. The baron, appeased by the courteous manner of the stranger after surveying him for some time in silence, re- turned bis sword into the scabbard, and desired him to ex- plain the means by which he had obtained access to the tnber, and the purpose of this extraordinary visit. LUDOVICO IN THE HAUNTED CHAMBER. \\1 Without answering either of these inquiries, the stranger said that he could not then explain himself, but that, if the baron would follow him to the edge of the forest, at a short distance from the castle walls, he would there convince him that he had something of importance to dis- close. This proposal again alarmed the baron, who would scarcely believe that the stranger meant to draw him to so solitary a spot at this hour of the night without harbouring a design against his life, and he refused to go : observing at the r.ame time, that if the stranger's purpose was an honourable one, he would not persist in refusing to reveal the occasion of his visit in the apartment where they stood. While he spoke this, he viewed the stranger still more attentively than before, but observed no change in his counte- nance, or any symptom that might intimate a consciousness of evil design. He was habited like a knight, was of a tall and majestic stature, and of dignified and courteous man- ners. Still, however, he refused to communicate the sub- stance of his errand in any place but that he had mentioned : and at the same time gave hints concerning the secret he would disclose, that awakened a degree of solemn curiosity in the baron, which at length induced him to consent to the stranger on certain conditions. " Sir knight," said he, " I will attend you to the forest, and will take with me only four of my people, who shall witness our conference." To this, however, the knight objected. u What I would disclose," said he with solemnity, " is to you alone. There are only three living persons to whom the circumstance is known ; it is of more consequence to you and your house than I shall now explain. In future years you will look back to this night with satisfaction or re 113 LUDOVICO IN THE HAUNTED CHAMBER. pentcance, accordingly as you now determine. As you would hereafter prosper, follow me ; I pledge you the honour of a knight that no evil shall befall you. If you are contented to dare futurity, remain in your chamber, and I will depart as I came." '• Sir knight," replied the baron ; " how is it possible that my future peace can depend upon my present deter- mination ?" " That is not now to be told," said the stranger ; " I have explained myself to the utmost. It is late : if you follow me it must be quickly ; you will do well to consider the alternative." The baron mused, and, as he looked upon the knight, he perceived his countenance assume a singular solemnity. (Here Ludovico thought he heard a noise, and he threw a glance round the chamber, and then held up the lamp to assist his observation ; but not perceiving anything to con- firm his alarm, he took up the book again, and pursued the story.) The baron paced his apartment for some time in silence, impressed by the words of the stranger, whose extraordinary request he feared to grant, and feared also to refuse. At length lie said, " Sir knight, you are utterly unknown to me : tell me, yourself, is it reasonable that I should trust myself alone with a stranger, at this hour, in the solitary forest? Tell me, at least, who you are, and who assisted to secrete you in this chamber V The knight frowned at these words, and was a moment silent ; then, with a countenance somewhat stern, he said, " I am an English knight : I am called Sir Bevys of Lan caster, and my deeds are not unknown at the holy city, whence I was returning to my native land, when I was be- nighted in the forest." LU DO VI CO IN THE HAUNTED CHAMBER. [jg " Your name is not unknown to fame," said the baron ; !i I have heard of it." (The knight looked haughtily.) " But why, since my castle is known to entertain all true knights, did not your herald announce you 'I Why did you not appear at the banquet, where your presence would have been welcomed, instead of hiding yourself in my castle, and stealing to my chamber at midnight V The stranger frowned, and turned away in silence ; but the baron repeated the questions. " I come not," said the knight, " t > answer inquiries, but to reveal facts. If you would know more, follow me ; and again I pledge the honour of a knight that you shall return in safety. Be quick in your determination — I must be gone." After some farther hesitation, the baron determined to follow the stranger, and to see the result of his extraordi- nary request ; he therefore again drew forth his sword, and, taking up a lamp, bade the knight lead on. The latter obeyed ; and opening the door of the chamber, they passed into the ante-room, where the baron, surprised to find all his pages asleep, stopped, and with hasty violence was going to reprimand them for their carelessness, when the knight waved his hand, and looked so expressively at the baron, that the latter restrained his resentment, and passed on. The knight, having descended a staircase, opened a secret door, which the baron had believed was only known to himself; and proceeding through several narrow and winding passages, came at length to a small gate that opened beyond the walls of the castle. Meanwhile, the baron fol- lowed in silence and amazement, on perceiving that these secret passages were so well known to a stranger, and felt inclined to turn back from an adventure that appeared to partake of treachery as well as danger. Then, considering 120 LVDOY1CO IN THE HAUNTED CHAMBER. that he was armed, and observing the courteous and noble air of his conductor, his courage returned, lie blushed that it had failed him for a moment, and he resolved to trace the mystery to its source. He now found himself on the heathy platform, before the great gates of his castle, where, on looking up, he per- ceived lights glimmering in the different casements of the guests, who were retiring to sleep ; and while he shivered in the blast, and looked on the dark and desolate scene around him, he thought of the comforts of his warm cham- ber, rendered cheerful by the blaze of wood, and felt, for a moment, the full contrast of his present situation. (Here Ludovico paused a moment, and, looking at his own fire, gave it a brightening stir.) The wind was strong, and the baron watched his lamp with anxiety, expecting every moment to sec it extin- guished ; but though the flame wavered, it did not expire, and he still followed the stranger, who often sighed as he wont, but did not speak. When they reached the borders of the forest, the knight turned and raised his head, as if he meant to address the baron, but then closing his lips, in silence he walked on. As they entered beneath the dark and spreading boughs, the baron, affected by the solemnity of the scene, hesitated whether to proceed, and demanded how much farther they . re to go. The knight replied only by a gesture, and the baron, with hesitating steps and a suspicious eye, followed through an obscure and intricate path, till, having proceeded a considerable way, he again demanded whither they were goii)L r . and refused to proceed unless he was informed. As he said this, he looked at his own sword and at the knight alternately, who shook his head, and whose dejected eo untanance disarmed the baron, for a moment, of suspicion. LUDOVICO IN THE HAUNTED CHAMBER. \^\ " A little farther is the place whither I would lead you," said the stranger ; ' : no evil shall befall you — I have sworn it on the honour of a knight." The baron, reassured, again followed in silence, and they soon arrived at a deep recess of the forest, where the dark and lofty chestnuts entirely excluded the sky, and which was so overgrown with underwood that they proceeded with difficulty. The knight sighed deeply as he passed, and sometimes paused ; and having at length reached a spot where the trees crowded into a knot, he turned, and with a terrific look, pointing to the ground, the baron saw there the body of a man, stretched at its length, and welter- ing in blood ; a ghastly wound was on the forehead, and death appeared already to have contracted the features. The baron, on perceiving the spectacle, started in horror, looked at the knight for explanation, and was then going to raise the body, and examine if there were any remains of life ; but the stranger, waving his hand, fixed upon him a look so earnest and mournful, as not only much surprised him, but made him desist. But what were the baron's emotions when, on holding the lamp near the features of the corpse, he discovered the exact resemblance of the stranger his conductor, to whom he now looked up in astonishment and inquiry ! As he gazed he perceived the countenance of the knight change and begin to fade, till his whole form gradually vanished from his astonished sense ! While the baron stood, fixed to the spot, a voice was heard to utter these words : — (Ludovico started, and laid down the book, for he thought he heard a voice in the chamber, and he looked toward the bed, where, however, he saw only the dark curtain and the pall. He listened, scarcely daring to draw his breath, but heard only the distant roaring of the sea in the storm, and 6 loo LUDOVICO IN THE HAUNTED CHAMBER. the blast that rushed by the casements ; when, concluding that he had been deceived by its sighings, he took up his book to finish his story.) While the baron stood, fixed to the spot, a voice was heard to utter these words : — •• The body of Sir Bevys of Lancaster, a noble knight of England, lies before you. He was this night waylaid and murdered, as he journeyed from the holy city towards his native land. Respect the honour of knighthood, and the law of humanity ; inter the body in christian ground, and cause his murderers to be punished. As ye observe or neglect this, shall peace and happiness, or war and misery, light upon you and your house for ever !" The baron, when he recovered from the awe and aston- ishment into which this adventure had thrown him, re- turned to his castle, whither he caused the body of Sir Bevys to be removed ; and on the following day it was interred with the honours of knighthood, in the chapel of the castle, attended by all the noble knights and ladies who graced the court of Baron de Brunne. Ludovico, having finished this story, laid aside the book, for he felt drowsy; and after putting more wood on the fire, and taking another glass of wine, he reposed him- tf in the arm-chair on the hearth. In his dream he still beheld the chamber where he really was, and once or twice started from imperfect slumbers, imagining he saw a man's face lurking over the high back of his arm-chair. This idea had so strongly impressed him, that, when he raised his eyes, he almost expected to meet other eyes fixed upon his own ; and he quitted his scat, and looked behind the chair before he felt perfectly convinced that no person was there. LUDOYICO IN THE HAUNTED CHAMBER. 123 Thus closed the hour. The count, who had slept little during the night, rose early, and, anxious to speak with Ludovico, went to the north apartment ; but the outer door having been fastened on the preceding night, he was obliged to knock loudly for admittance. Neither the knocking nor his voice was heard : he renewed his calls more loudly than before ; after which a total silence ensued ; and the count, finding all his efforts to be heard ineffectual, at length began to fear that some accident had befallen Ludovico, whom terror of an imagin- ary being might have deprived of his senses. He therefore left the door with an intention of summoning his servants to force it open, some of whom he now heard moving in the lower part of the chateau. To the count's inquiries whether they had seen or heard any thing of Ludovico, they replied, in affright, that not one of them had ventured on the north side of the chateau since the preceding night. " He sleeps soundly, then," said the count, " and is. at such a distance from the outer door, which is fastened, that to gain admittance to the chambers it will be necessary to force it. Bring an instrument, and follow me." The servants stood mute and dejected, and it was not till nearly all the household were assembled, that the count's orders were obeyed. In the meantime, Dorothee was telling of a door that opened from a gallery leading from the great staircase into the last ante-room of the saloon, and this being much nearer to the bed-chamber, it appeared probable that Ludovico might be easily awakened by an attempt to open it. Thither, therefore, the count went ; but his voice was as ineffectual at this door as it had proved at the remoter one ; and now, seriously inte- rested for Ludovico, he was himself going to strike upon 124 LUDOVICO IN THE HAUNTED CHAMBER. the door with the instrument, when he observed its singular beauty, and withheld the blow. It appeared on the first glance to be of ebony, so dark and close was its grain, and so high its polish ; but it proved to be only of larch-wood, of the growth of Provence, then famous for its forests of larch. The beauty of its polished hue, and of its delicate carvings, determined the count to spare this door, and he returned to that leading from the back staircase, which being at length forced, he entered the first ante-room, fol- lowed by Henri and a few of the most courageous of his servants, the rest waiting the event of the inquiry on the stairs and landing-place. All was silence in the chambers through which the count passed, and having reached the saloon, he called loudly upon Ludovico ; after which, still receiving no answer, he threw open the door of the bed-room, and entered. The profound stillness within confirmed his apprehen- sions for Ludovico, for not even the breathings of a person in sleep were heard ; and his uncertainty was not soon ter- minated, since the shutters being all closed, the chamber was too dark fur any object to be distinguished in it. The count bade a servant open them, who. as he crossed the room to do so, Btumbled over something, and fell to the floor, when his cry occasioned such a panic among the few of his fellows who had ventured thus far. that they instantly fled, and the count and Henri were left to finish the ad- venture. Henri then sprang across the room, and, opening a window-shutter, they perceived that the man had fallen over a chair near the hearth, in which Ludovico had been sitting; — for he sat there no longer, nor could anywhere be seen by the imperfect light that was admitted into the LVD OY ICO IN TEE HAUNTED CHAMBER. 125 apartment. The count, seriously alarmed, now opened other shutters, that he might be enabled to examine farther ; and Ludovico not yet appearing, he stood for a moment suspended in astonishment, and scarcely trusting his senses, till his eyes glancing on the bed, he advanced to examine whether he was there asleep. No person, however, was in it ; and he proceeded to the Oriel, where every thing re- mained as on the preceding night ; but Ludovico was no-* where to be found. The count now checked his amazement, considering that Ludovico might have left the chamber during the night, overcome by the terrors which their lonely desolation and the recollected reports concerning them had inspired. Yet, if this had been the fact, the man would naturally have sought society, and his fellow-servants had all declared they had not seen him ; the door of the outer room also had been found fastened, with the key on the inside ; it was impos- sible, therefore, for him to have passed through that ; and all the outer doors of this suite were found, on examination, to be bolted and locked, with the keys also within them. The count, being then compelled to believe that the lad had escaped through the casements, next examined them : but such as opened wide enough to admit the body of a man were found to be carefully secured either by iron bars or by shutters, and no vestige appeared of any person having attempted to pass them ; neither was it probable that Ludovico would have incurred the risk of breaking his neck by leaping from a window, when he might have walked safely through a door. The count's amazement did not admit of words ; but he returned once more to examine the bed-room, where was no appearance of disorder, except that occasioned by the late overthrow of the chair, near which had stood a small 126 LIWOYICO IN THE HAUNTED CHAMBER. table ; and on this Ludovico's sword, bis lamp, the book he had been reading, and the remains of a flask of wine, still villained. At the foot of the table, too, was the basket, with some fragments of provision and wood. Henri and the servant now uttered their astonishment without reserve, and though the count said little, there was a seriousness in his manner that expressed much. It ap- peared that Ludovico must have quitted these rooms by some concealed passage, for the count could not believe that any supernatural means had occasioned this event; yet, if there was any such passage, it seemed inexplicable why he should retreat through it ; and it was equally sur- prising that not even the smallest vestige should appear by which his progress could be traced. In the rooms, everything remained as much in order as if he had just walked out by the common way. The count himself assisted in lifting the arras with which the bed-chamber, saloon, and one of the ante rooms were hung, that he might discover if any door had been concealed behind it ; but after a laborious search, none was found ; and he at length quitted the apartments, having secured the door of the last ante-chamber, the key of which he took into his own possession. He then gave orders that Btricl search should be made for Ludovico, not only in the chateau, but in the neighbourhood, and retiring with Henri to hie closet, they remained there in conversation for a considerable time ; and whatever was the subject of it. Henri from thia hour lost much of his vivacity ; and his manners were particularly grave and reserved, whenever the topic which now agitated the count's family with won- der and alarm, was introduced.* * The chftteau had been inhabited before the counl came into itspoa- ii ion. He was not aware that 'lie apparently outward walls contained LUDOVICO JN THE HAUNTED CHAMBER. 127 1 series of passages and staircases, which led to unknown vaults under- ground; and, therefore, he never thought of looking for a door in those parts of the chamber which he supposed to be next to the air. In these was a communication with the room. The chateau (for we are not here in Udolpho) was on the sea-shore in Languedoc ; its vaults had become the store-house of pirates, who did their best to keep up the supernatural delusions that hindered people from searching the premises ; and theae pirates had carried Ludovieo away. €\)i itftiruitig. FROM TIIE XOYEL OF "NATURE AND ART," -BY MRS. INCHBALT). Elizabeth Ixciibald, an amusing dramatist, a writer of stories of the highest order for sentiment and passion, and a beautiful woman, ad- mirable for attractiveness of almost every kind, especially candour and self-denial, was daughter of a farmer in Suffolk, of the name of Simpson. She married an actor, a very worthy man, who died not long after their union. She performed on the stage herself for some years, in spite of an Impediment in her speech, which seems to have been generally under control; and then settled down into a successful authoress, court- ed by high and low, often with -a view to marriage. In one or two instances offers would evidently have been accepted had they been made, bnt she was superior to all that were unconnected with the heart. tShe maintained some relatives at the expense of personal sacrifices that sometimes left her without a lire in winter; and she died nt a respectable lodging-house in Kensington, where she was buried in the churchyard. She wrote the dramas of The Midnight Hour, Tlu Mogul Tale, Such Things Are, &c ; and, besides the novel from which the following incident is taken, was authoress of The Simple Story, one of the deepest-fell and best-written tales in the language. We had not the honor of knowing Mrs. Lnchbald; but we love her memory for many reasons — one of which is, that a mother who possessed similar virtues was fond of those novels, particularly Nature and Art, and □amended it Btrongbj to as in our boyhood. Passages more beauti- ful and pathetic than those which we have selected are not to be found in the whole circle of English prose. The reader will observe that the warning is not aimed at lawyers in particular. The writer would have done nothing so unjust, A THE WARNING. 129 lawyer is only selected for the more striking illustration of it; and as the profession, generally speaking, has been as free in its way of life as most others, however admirable for the final wisdom and virtue in which its many-thoughted experience tends to settle it, the dreadful circumstances imagined in this story are but too possible — perhaps have often occurred in spirit, though not in letter. The exclamation "Oh, not from you!" may rank with the finest bursts of emotion in the tragic poets ; and it comes more dreadfully home to the bosom of society. THE day at length is come on which Agnes shall have a sight of her beloved William ! She who has watch- ed for hours near his door, to procure a glimpse of him going out or returning home ; who has walked miles to see his chariot pass ; she now will heboid him, and he will see her, by command of the laws of his country. Those laws, which will deal with rigour towards her, are in this one in- stance still indulgent. The time of the assizes at the county town in which she is imprisoned, is arrived — the prisoners are demanded at the shire-hall — the jail doors are opened — they go in sad procession. The trumpet sounds — it speaks the arrival of the judge — and that judge is William. The day previous to her trial, Agnes had read, in the printed calendar of the prisoners, his name as the learned judge before whom she was to appear. For a moment she forgot her perilous state in the excess of joy which the still unconquerable love she bore to him permitted her to taste, even on the brink of the grave! After reflection made her check these worldly transports, as unfit for the present solemn occasion. But, alas ! to her, earth and William were so close- ly united, that, till she forsook the one, she could never cease to think, without the contending passions of hope, of fear, of love, of shame, and of despair, on the other. 6* 130 TEE WARNING. Now fear took place of her first immoderate joy ; she feared that, although much changed in person since he had seen her, and her real name now added to many an alias — yet she feared that some well-known glance of the eye, turn of the action, or accent of speech, might recall her to his remembrance ; and at that idea, shame overcame all her other sensations — for still she retained pride, in respect to his opinion, to wish him not to know Agnes was that wretch she felt she was ! Once a ray of hope beamed on her, that if he knew her — if he recognised her — he might possibly be- friend her cause ; and life, bestowed through William's friendship, seemed a precious object ! But, again, that rig- orous honour she had often heard him boast, that firmness to his word, of which she had fatal experience, taught her to know he would not, for any improper compassion, any unmanly weakness, forfeit his oath of impartial justice. In meditations such as these she passed the sleepless night. "When, in the morning, she was brought to the bar, and her guilty hand held up before the righteous judgment-seat of William, imagination could not form two figures, or two situations more incompatible with the existence of former familiarity than the judge and the culprit; and yet, these very persons had passed together the most blissful moments that cither ever tasted ! Those hours of tender dalliance were now present to her mind — his thoughts were more no- bly employed in his high office ; nor could the haggard face, hollow eye, desponding countenance, and meagre person of the poor prisoner, om-e call to his memory, though her name \\a< uttered among a list of others which she had assumed, his former youthful, lovely Agnes! She heard herself arraigned, with trembling limbs and downcast looks, and many witnesses had appeared against THE WAS SING. 1Sl her, before she ventured to lift her eyes up to her awful judge ; she then gave one fearful glance, and discovered William, unpitying but beloved William, in every feature ! It was a face she had been used to look on with delight, and a kind of absent smile of gladness now beamed on her poor wan visage. When every witness on the part of the prosecutor had been examined, the judge addressed himself to her — " What defence have you to make ?" It was William spoke to Agnes ! The sound was sweet ; the voice was mild, was soft, compassionate, encouraging. It almost charmed her to a love of life ! Not such a voice as when William last addressed her ; when he left her un- done and pregnant, vowing never to see or speak to her more. She would have hung upon the present word for ever. She did not call to mind that this gentleness was the effect of practice, the art of his occupation ; which, at times, is but a copy, by the unfeeling, of the benevolent brethren of the bench. In the present judge, tenderness was not de- signed for consolation of the culprit, but for the approbation of the auditors. There were no spectators, Agnes, by your side when last he parted from you ; — if there had, the awful William would have been awed to marks of pity. Stunned with the enchantment of that well-known tongue directed to her, she stood like one just petrified — all vital power seemed suspended. Again he put the question, and with these additional sentences, tenderly and emphatically delivered : — " Kecol- lect yourself; have you no witnesses? no proof on your behalf?" A dead silence followed these questions. ,3a THE WARNING. He then mildly but forcibly added — " What have you to say?" Here a flood of tears burst from her eyes, which she fixed earnestly upon him, as if pleading for mercy, whilo she faintly articulated — " Nothing, my lord." After a short pause, he asked her in the same forcible, but benevolent tone — '• Have you no one to speak to your character ?" The prisoner answered — " No." A second gush of tears followed this reply, for she called to mind by whom her character had first been blasted. lie summed up the evidence, and every time he was obliged to press hard upon the proofs against her, she shrunk, and seemed to itagger with the deadly blow — writhed under the weight of his minute justice, more than from the prospect of a shameful death. The jury consulted but a few minutes, the verdict was — "Guilty." She heard it with composure. lint when William placed the fatal velvet on his head, and rose to pronounce the fatal sentence, she started with a kind of convulsive motion, retreated a step or two back, and lifting up her hands, with a scream exclaimed — " Oh, not from you !" The piercing shriek which accompanied these words, prevented their being heard by part of the audience ; and those who heard them thought little of their meaning, more than thai they expressed her fear of dying. Serene and dignified, as if no such exclamation had been red, William delivered the final speech ending with — "Dead, dead, dead." THE WARNING. I33 She fainted as he closed the period, and was carried hack to prison in a swoon ; while he adjourned the court to go to dinner. If, unaffected by the scene he had witnessed, William sat down to dinner with an appetite, let not the reader con- ceive that the most distant suspicion had struck his mind of his ever having seen, much less familiarly known, the poor offender whom he had just condemned. Still this forgetfulness did not proceed from the want of memory for Agnes. In every peevish or heavy hour passed with his wife, he was sure to think of her ; yet it was self-love, rather than love of her, that gave rise to these thoughts. He felt the lack of female sympathy and tenderness to soften the fatigue of studious labour, to soothe a sullen, a morose disposition — he felt he wanted comfort for himself, but never once considered what were the wants of Agnes. In the chagrin of a barren bed he sometimes thought, too, even on the child that Agnes bore him ; but whether it were male or female, whether a beggar in the streets or dead, various and important public occupation forbade him to inquire. Yet the poor, the widow, and the orphan fre- quently shared William's ostentatious bounty. He was the president of many excellent charities, gave largely, and sometimes instituted benevolent societies for the unhappy ; for he delighted to load the poor with obligation, and the rich with praise. There are persons like him who love to do every thing good but that which their immediate duty requires. There are servants that will serve every one more cheerfully than their masters ; there are men who will distribute money liberally to all except their creditors ; and there are wives who will love all mankind better than their own husbands. Duty is a familiar word which has little effect upon an ordi- 134 THE WARNING. nary mind , and as ordinary minds make a vast majority, we have acts of generosity, self-denial, and honesty, where Bmaller pains would constitute greater virtues. Had Wil- liam followed the common dictates of charity, had lie adopted private pity instead of public munificence, had he cast an eye at home before he sought abroad for objects of compassion, Agnes had been preserved from an ignominious death, and he had been preserved from — remorse, the tor- tares of which he for the first time proved on reading a printed sheet of paper, accidentally thrown in his way a few days after he had left the town in which he had condemned her to die. - March 10th, 179—. " The last dying words, speech, and confession, birth, parentage, and education, life, character, and behaviour, of Agnes Primrose, who was executed this morning between the hours of ten and twelve, pursuant to the sentence passed upon her by the Honourable Justice Norwynne. " Agnes Primrose was born of honest parents, in the village of Anfield, in the county of " (William started at the name of the village and county) ; " but being led astray by the arts and flattery of seducing man. she fell from the paths of virtue, and took to bad company, which instilled into her young heart all their evil ways, and at th brought her to -this untimely end. So she hopes her death will be a warning to all young persons of her own sex ; how they listen to the praises and courtship of young men. icially of those who are their betters; for they only court to deceive. But the said Agnes freelj forgives all who have done her injury or given her sorrow, from young man who first won her heart, to the jury who found her guilty, and the judge who condemned her to death. THE WARNING. 135 " And she acknowledges the justice of her sentence, not only in respect of her crime for which she suffers, but in re- gard to many other heinous sins of which she has been guilty, more especially that of once attempting to commit a murder upon her own helpless child ; for which guilt she now con- siders the vengeance of God has overtaken her, to which she is patiently resigned, and departs in peace and charity with all the world, praying the Lord to have mercy on her part- ing soul." POSTSCRIPT TO THE CONFESSION. " So great was this unhappy woman's terror of death and the awful judgment that was to follow, that when sentence was pronounced upon her she fell into a swoon, from that into convulsions, from which she never entirely recovered, but was delirious to the time of her execution, except that short interval in which she made her confession to the clergyman who attended her. She has left one child, a youth almost sixteen, who has never forsaken his mother during all the time of her imprisonment, but waited on her with true filial duty ; and no sooner was her final sentence passed than he began to droop, and now lies dangerously ill near the prison from which she is released by death. During the loss of her senses, the said Agnes Primrose raved continually of her child ; and, asking for pen, ink, and paper, wrote an in- coherent petition to the judge, recommending the youth to his protection and mercy. But notwithstanding this insanity, she behaved with composure and resignation when the fatal mornina; arrived in which she was to be launched into eter- nity. She prayed devoutly during the last hour, and seemed to have her whole mind fixed on the world to which she was going. A crowd of spectators followed her to the fatal spot, most of whom returned weeping at the recollection of the 136 THE WABNIXG. fervency with which she prayed, and the impression which her dreadful state seemed to make upon her." No sooner had the name of " Anfield" struck William, than a thousand reflections and remembrances flashed on his mind to give him full conviction who it was he had judged and sentenced. He recollected the sad remains of Agnes, such as he once had known her ; and now he wondered how his thoughts could have been absent from an object so piti- able, so worthy of his attention, as not to give him even suspicion who she was, either from her name or from her person, during the whole trial. ]5ut wonder, astonishment, horror, and every other sen- sation was absorbed by — remorse. It wounded, it stabbed, it rent his hard heart as it would do a tender one ; it havocked on his firm inflexible mind as it would on a weak and pliant brain ! Spirit of Agnes ! look down, and behold all your wrongs revenged ! William feels — remorse. 3njiu SBinitlL THE Life of John Buncle, Esq. ; containing various Observations and Refections made in several parts of the World, and many Extraordinary Relations, is a book unlike any other in the language, perhaps in the world ; and the introduction of passages from it into the present volume must be considered as being, like itself, an excep- tion to rules ; for it will resemble rather a notice in a review, than our selections in general. John's Life is not a classic: it contains no passage which is a general favourite : no extract could be made from it of any length, to which readers of good taste would not find objections. Yet there is so curious an interest in all its absurdities; its jumble of the gayest and gravest considerations is so founded in the actual state of things ; it draws now and then such excellent portraits from life ; and above all, its animal spirits are at once so excessive and so real, that we defy the best readers not to be entertained with it, and having had one or two specimens, not to desire more. Buncle would say, that there is "cut and come again" in him, like one of his luncheons of cold beef and a foaming tankard. John Buncle, Esq., is the representative of his author, Thomas Amory ; of Avhom little is known, except that he was a gentleman of singular habits and appearance, who led a retired life, was married, was a vehement Unitarian, wrote another extraordinary book profess- ing to be "Lives of Several Ladies" (in which there is a link with John), and died, to the glory of animal spirits, and of rounds of bread and butter (into which his good cheer seems latterly to have merged), at the ripe old age of ninety-seven. He is supposed to have been bred a physician. His father was a barrister, and is understood to have acquired considerable property in Ireland, in consequence of becoming secretary to the forfeited estates. 138 JOHN BUNGLE. John Buncle is evidently Ainory himself. This is apparent from the bits of real autobiography which are mixed with the fictitious, and which constitute one of the strange jumbles in his book. Hazlitt baa called him the "English Rabelais;" and in point of animal spirits, love of good cheer, and something of a mixture of scholarship, theology, and profane reading, he may be held to deserve the title; but he has no claim to the Frenchman's greatness of genius, freedom from bigotry, and profoundness of wit and humour. He might have done very well for a clerk to Rabelais ; and his master would have laughed quite as much at, as with him. John is a kind of innocent Henry the Eighth "of private life," without the other's fat, fury, and solemnity, lie is a prodigious hand an in a Dream. Opium takers are said to have such visions; but only such an opium taker as Coleridge ever had one, we suspect, so thoroughly fit and poetical, or related it in such exquisite music. It is impossible to refer to it, and not repeat it. The reader shall first have not only the words which the poet quotes from Purchas as having occa- sioned it, but the original of Purchas from Marco Polo. He will then see what a poet can do, even for a book of old travels and a king of kings. Coleridge says he fell asleep while reading "the following sentence, or words of the same substance," from Purchas's book: — "Here the Khan Kubla commanded a palace to be built, and a stately garden thereunto; and thus ten miles of fertile ground were enclosed with a wall." " The author," he proceeds, "continued for about three hours in a profound sleep, at least of the external senses, during which lie has tli.' most vivid confidence that he could not have composed less than from two to three hundred lines; if that indeed can be called com- position in which all the images rose up before him as things, with a parallel production of the corresponding expressions, without any sen- sation, or a consciousness of effort. On awaking, he appeared to him- self to have a distinct recollection of the whole; and taking his pen, ink, and paper, instantly and eagerly wrote down the lines that are here preserved. At this moment he was unfortunately called out by a person on business from Porlock, and detained by him above an hour; and on his return to his room, found .to his no small surprise and mor- tification, that though he still retained some vague and dim recollec- tion of the general purport of the vision, yet, with the exception of - ime eight or ten scattered lines and images, all the rest had passed away lik«' the images on the surface of a stream into which a stone had been cast ; but, alas! without the after restoration of the latter." KUBLA KHAN'S PALACE AT XANADU. 165 The veracity of this statement has been called in question ; by what right of superior knowledge to the poet's own, we cannot say. For our parts, we devoutly believe it. "We know very little of opium ; but perhaps every writer of verse has experienced what it is to pour forth poetry in dreams, though he may have been as unable to call his pro- duction to mind, as Scarlatti was his famous " Devil's Sonata." Cole- ridge, by some process perhaps of the mysterious herb which had set him to sleep, had the ability given him ; perhaps he had not been asleep at all in the ordinary sense of the word, but in some state of what is called coma vigil. At all events, the poem, exquisite as it is, is no finer than he could have written awake ; and what he could have writ- ten awake, he might have conceived asleep, especially under the pre- ternatural kind of excitement to which opiates give rise. The following is Marco Polo's account of the structure alluded to. We give it, however, not from Harris, but from the later and better pages of Mr. Murray, who published not long ago the completest ver- sion of the travels of Marco Polo. The " Shandu " of Mr. Murray is the " Xanadu" of Coleridge. KUBLA KHAN'S PALACE AT XANADU. At Shandu in Tartary, near the western frontier of China, he has built a very large palace of marble and other valuable stones. The halls are gilded all over, and won- derfully beautiful, and a space sixteen miles in circuit is surrounded by a wall within which are fountains, rivers, and meadows. He finds stags, deer, and wild-goats, to give for food to the falcons and ger-falcons, which he keeps in cages, and goes out once a week to sport with them. Frequently he rides through that enclosure, having a leopard on the crupper, of his horse, which, whenever he is inclined, he lets go, and it catches a stag, deer, or wild-goat, which is given to the ger-falcons in the cage. In this park, too, the mon- arch has a large palace framed of cane, in interior gilded all over, having pictures of beasts and birds most skilfully worked on it. The roof is of the same material, and so 1Gb DELIGHTS OF BOOKS OF TRAVELS. richly varnished that no water can penetrate. I assure you that these canes are more than three palms thick, and from ten to fifteen paces long. They are cut lengthways, from one knot to the other, and then arranged so as to form the roof. The whole structure is so disposed that the Khan, when he pleases, can order it to be taken down, for it is supported by more than two hundred cords of silk. His majesty remains there three months of the year, June, July, and August, the situation being cool and agreeable ; and during this period his palace of cane is set up, while all the rest of the year it is down. On the 28th of August, he departs thence, and for the following purpose : — there are a race of mares white as snow, with no mixture of any other colour, and in number 10,000, whose milk must not bo drunk by any one who is not of imperial lineage. Only one other race of men can drink it, called Boriat, because they gained a victory for Gengis Khan. "When one of these white animals is passing, the Tartars pay respect to it as a great lord, standing by to make way for it. Now for the architecture and landscape gardening of the p stand beside the former, are associated with those regions of wild and preternatural interest which lie between truth and fiction ; places, of which more is truly related than the narrators have been given credit for, but with such colouring from the reports of others, and from their own excited imagination, as give us leave to doubt or to believe just as much as may be suitable to the frame of mind in which we read them. The dreadful or delightful sounds, for instance, which these old travellers heard in deserts, have been reasonably attributed to winds and other natural causes ; and the terrible "faces" which they saw, to robbers or gigantic sculpture. But what care we for "pure reason," when we desire romance ? There is enough mystery in every- thing, however commonplace, to leave its causes inexplicable; and if we choose to have our mysterious music or our terrible face without the alloy of explanation, "neat as imported," we have all the right in the world, whether as boys or sages, to have the wish indulged. FRIAR ODERIC'S RICH MAN WLLO WAS FED BY FIFTY VIRGINS. "While in the province of Mangi, or Southern China, I passed by the palace of a rich man, who is continually at- tended upon by fifty young virgins, who feed him at every meal as a bird feeds her young; and all the time they are so employed, they sing to him most sweetly. The revenues of this man are thirty tomans of tagars of rice, each toman bring 10.000 tagars, and one tagar is the burthen of an ass. His palace is two miles in circuit, and is paved with alter- nate layers of gold and silver. Near the wall of his palace there is an artificial mould of gold and silver, having turrets OF TEE OLD MAN OF THE MOUNTAIN. \-[\ and steeples and other magnificent ornaments, contrived for the solace and recreation of this great man. The personal title of the following tremendous old gentleman (called " Senex" by the first translator of Oderico) means nothing more, ■with the "reasonable," than Sheik, or Elder. He is a kind of dreadful Alderman. But "who would part with the words " Old Man of the Mountain," — their wrinkled old rigour and reverend infamy ? He is first cousin of the shocking old fellow in Sinbad, the Old Man of the Sea, who rode upon the shoulders of that voyager like a nightmare, and stuck his knees in his sides. It is proper to retain the "Of" in the old heading of the story. " Of the old man," &c, is much more an- cient and mysterious than the modern custom of beginning with " The." OF THE OLD MAN OF THE MOUNTAIN. Proceeding on my travels towards the south, I arrived at a certain pleasant and fertile country, called Melistorte, in which dwells a certain aged person called the Old Man of the Mountain. This person had surrounded two moun- tains by a high wall, within which he had the finest gardens and finest fountains in the world, inhabited by great number? of most beautiful virgins. It was likewise supplied with fine horses, and every article that could contribute to luxury and delightful solace ; on which account it was called by the people of the country, the terrestrial paradise. Into this delightful residence the old man used to entice all the young and valiant men he could procure, where they were initiated into all the delights of the earthly paradise, in which milk and wine flowed in abundance, through certain hidden con- duits. "When desirous of assassinating any prince or noble- man, who had offended him, the old man would order the governor of his paradise to entice into that place some ac- quaintance or servant of the prince or baron whom he wished to slay. Allowing this person to take a full taste of tho 172 DELIGHTS OF BOOKS OF TRAVEL. delights of the place, we was east into a deep sleep by means of a strong potion, in which state he was removed from para- dise ; on recovering from his sleep, and finding himself ex- cluded from the pleasures of paradise, he was brought before the old man, whom he entreated to restore him to the place from whence he had been taken. He was then told, that if he would slay such or such a person, he should not only be permitted to return into paradise, but should remain there for ever. By these means the old man used to get all those mur- dered against whom he had conceived any displeasure ; on which account all the kings and princes of the east stood in awe of him and paid him tribute. When the Tartars had subdued a large portion of the earth, they came into the country of the old man, and took from him his paradise. Being greatly incensed at this, he sent out many of his resolute and desperate dependents, by whom numbers of the Tartar nobles were slain. Upon this the Tartars besieged the city of the old man of the moun- tain ; and making him prisoner, they put him to a cruel and ignoble death. The famous Frester John must by no means be omitted in the list of these remote personages -who sit "throned" in old books. Prester, that is to say, Presbyter, or Priesl John, has generally been thought in later times to mean the Christian King of Abyssinia; but the most recent investigators are inclined to restore him his old locality, and con- sider him as a Tartar king, probably a Mongol of the name of Whang, who was supposed to have been converted to the Christian faith by Nestorian missionaries. Whang is almost identical with the pronuncia- tion of the Spanish form of John — Juan; which is very unlike what we call it in England. The imagination is to consider Prester John as a compound of priest and sovereign, an eastern pope or Christian Grand Lama, sitting clothed in white, and holding a cross instead of a sceptre. He is a Christian Tartar, =uhjugating the nations around him. HO TV PRESTER JOHN £ WENT UP HIS ENEMIES. \ 73 till he is conquered by the move famous Zinghis Khan. Little, how- ever, is known of him beyond his name. The most wonderful anec- dote we can find of him is one that is related by Friar John de Carpini, who was sent ambassador to the Tartars by Pope Innocent IV., in the middle of the thirteenth century. It seems to anticipate the appear- ance of artillery in Europe. HOW PRESTER JOHN BURNT UP HIS ENEMY'S MEN AND HORSES. When Zinghis and his people had rested some time after their conquest of Cathay, he divided his army, and sent one of his sons, named Thosut Khan, against the Comainans, whom he vanquished in many battles, and then returned into his own country. Another of his sons was sent with an army against the Indians, who subdued the Lesser India. These Indians are the Black Saracens, who are also named Ethiopians. From thence the Mongol army marched to fight against the Christians dwelling in the greater part of India ; and the king of that country, known by the name of Prester John, came forthwith his army against them. This prince caused a number of hollow copper figures to be made, resembling men, which were stuffed with combustibles and set upon horses, each having a man behind on the horse, with a pair of bellows to stir up the fire. When approach- ing to give battle, these mounted images were first sent for- wards against the enemy, and the men who rode behind set fire by some means to the combustibles, and blew strongly with their bellows ; and the Mongol men and horses were burnt with wild-fire, and the air was darkened with smoke. Then the Indians charged the Mongols, many of whom were wounded and slain, and they were expelled from the country in great confusion, and we have not heard that they ever ventured to return. 1/4 DELIGHTS OF BOOKS OF TRAVEL. It is a pity we cannot give a hundred other romantic particulars out of these old travellers, from the times of Herodotus downwards ; but our limits will not permit us. "We must pass, with a due amount of delight or horror, his semi-annual sleepers and pious cannibals ; the isle of Eearchus, from which no one returned ; the accounts of Gog and Magog, and the wall of Doolkarnien; the one-eyed and one-legged peo- ple of Mandeville, the latter of whom make an umbrella of their foot ; isles of giants and rivers of gems; goblets of wine that came to the drinker of their own accord ; and the Region of Darkness where there never appeared sun, moon, or star, Ac. Sindbad or Ulysses could not (» at them; sometimes had the same identical experiences, as in valleys of diamonds and raw-men-eating giants. We must escape from old fic- tions founded on truth, to modern narratives full of truth and more touching than fiction. And first for honest, admirable LEDYAED. Ledtard's touching praise of women and of the kindness which ha *vcr experienced at their hands, has been repeated in many a book of «elections; but who shall be the firsl person to leave it out? Certainly not the compiler of this. Ledyard was a man who possessed every qualification for a traveller of the highest order, except a little more composure of purpose. He had health, strength, observation, reflec- tion, integrity, undauntedness, enthusiasm, but was somewhat too rest- less and impatient; and this single flaw in his perfections probably tended to shorten his career and leave him without a great practical name. He was an American, and intended for a missionary; but he could not bear to remain at school. He became a sailor, a marine, cir- cumnavigated the world with Cook (who respected and made use of him), and finally went to Africa under the auspices of the association for making discoveries, but died prematurely in Egypt, in the year 1788. When he presented himself at the Institute as a candidate for discovery, he was asked when he would be ready to set out. lie an- swered, "To-morrow mornine." The following passage from a letter which he wrote before embark- ing for Africa, will show the natural dignity and purity of his charac ter. LEDYAR&S PRAISE OF WOMEN. 175 " I was last evening in company with Mr. Jarvis, of New-York, whom I accidentally met in the city, and in- vited to my lodgings. When I was in Paris in distress, he behaved very generously to me, and, as I do not want money at present, I had a double satisfaction in our meet- ing, being equally happy to see him, and to pay him one hundred livres, which I never expected to be able to do, and I suppose he did not think I should. If he goes to New-York as soon as he mentioned, I shall trouble him with this letter to you, and with some others to your ad- dress for my other friends. I wrote you last from this place, nearly two years ago, but I suppose you heard from me at Petersburg, by Mr. Franklin of New-York. I promised to write you from the remote parts of Siberia. I promise everything to those I love ; and so does fortune to me sometimes, but we reciprocally prevent each other from fulfilling our engagements. She left me so poor in Siberia, that I could not write you, because I could not frank the letter." Ledyard's honest biographer, though a great and intelligent admirer of his hero, finds fault with his style for its incorrectness. The fault, if it existed, must be confined to passages in his journal, not given by Mr. Sparks, for we cannot discover it in those which he has. To us it appears admirable ; quite correct and pure ; indeed the best we ever saw for sheer, unaffected eloquence from an American pen. The one before us is a positive masterpiece, in style as well as feeling. LEDYAED'S PRAISE OF WOZ^EN. FROM " MEMOIRS OF HIS LIFE AND TRAVELS, BY JARED SPARKS." I HAVE observed among all nations that the women ornament themselves more than the men ; that wher- ever found, they are the same civil, kind, obliging, humane 176 DELIGHTS OF BOOKS OF TRAVEL. tender beings ; that they are ever inclined to be gay and cheerful, timorous and modest. They do not hesitate, like man, to perform a hospitable or generous action ; not haughty, nor arrogant, nor supercilious, but full of courtesy, and fond of society ; industrious, economical, ingenuous , more liable, in general, to err than man, but in general, also, more virtuous, and performing more good actions than he. I never addressed myself, in the language of decency and friendship, to a woman, whether civilized or savage, without receiving a decent and friendly answer. With man it has often been otherwise. In wandering over the barren plains of inhospitable Denmark, through honest Sweden, frozen Lapland, rude and churlish Finland, unprincipled Russia, and the wide spread regions of the wandering Tartar, if hungry, dry, cold, wet, or sick, woman has ever been friendly to me, and uniformly so ; and to add to this virtue, so worthy of the appellation of benevolence, these actions have been performed in so free and so kind a manner, that, if I was dry, I drank the sweet draught, and if hungry, ate the coarse morsel, with a double relish. MUNGO PARK. What Ledyard wanted to complete his character, the famous Mungo Park eminently possessed. He had not so large a grasp of mind as Ledyard, but he was in no need of it. He had quite enough for his purpose, and Dot any of a doubtful sort to distract it. But who needs to be told what a thorough man for his purpose he was, what sufferings he went through with the simplest and most touching courage, what -ses he achieved, and what a provoking, mortal mischance befell him after all? It was not so mortifying a one as Bruce's, who broke down his own staircase; but it w r as sadder by a great deal, so far from home and on the threshold of the greatest of his adventures. M.JJNGQ PARK'S BED IN THE DESERT. 177 The reader of the following passages (which are like fine tunes in the history of men, and hear endless repetition), will bear in mind, that one of the objects of Park's journey was to discover the real course of the Eiver Niger, which had been a subject of dispute for ages. What a passage is the first one to read, when we are going to bed And what a climax of suffering, fortitude, and piety is the lastl MUNGO PARK'S BED IN THE DESEKT. FROM HIS "TRAVELS IN AFRICA." I SADDLED my horse, and continued my journey. I travelled over a level but more fertile country than I had seen for some time, until sunset, when coming to a path that took a southerly direction, I followed it until midnight, at which time I arrived at a small pool of rain water ; and the wood being open, I determined to rest by it for the night. Having given my horse the remainder of the corn, I made my bed as formerly ; but the musquitoes and flies from the pool prevented sleep for some time, and I was twice disturbed in the night by wild beasts, which came very near, and whose howling kept the horse in continual terror. July 4th. — At daybreak, I pursued my course through the woods as formerly ; saw numbers of antelopes, wild hogs, and ostriches ; but the soil was more hilly, and not so fertile as I had found it the preceding day. About eleven o'clock, I ascended an eminence, where I climbed a tree and discovered, at about eight miles' distance, an open part of the country, with several red spots, which I concluded were cultivated land ; and, directing my course that way, came to the precincts of a watering-place about one o'clock. From the appearance of the place, I judged it to belong to the Foulahs, and was hopeful that I should meet a better 8* 173 DELIGHTS OF BOOKS OF TRAVEL. reception thad I had experienced at Shrilla. In this I was not deceived ; for one of the shepherds invited me to come into his tent, and partake of some dates. This was one of those lowFoulah tents in which is just room sufficient to sit upright, and in which the family, the furniture, &c, seem huddled together like so many articles in a chest. When I had crept upon my hands and knees into this humble habitation, I found that it contained a woman and three children ; who, together with the shepherd and myself, completely occupied the floor. A dish of boiled corn and dates was produced, and the master of the family, as is customary in this part of the country, first tasted it himself, and then desired me to follow his example. Whilst I was eating, the children kept their eyes fixed upon me ; and no sooner did the shepherd pronounce the word Nazarani, than they began to cry, and their mother crept slowly towards the door, out of which she sprang like a greyhound, and was instantly followed by her children. So frightened were they at the very name of Christian, that no entreaties could induce them to approach the tent. Here I purchased some corn for my horse, in exchange for some brass but- tons ; and having thanked the shepherd for his hospitality, struck again into the woods. At sunset I came to a road that took the direction for Bambarra, and resolved to fol- low it for the night ; but about eight o'clock, hearing some people coming from the southward, I thought it prudent to hide myself among some thick bushes near the road. As these thickets are generally full of wild beasts, I found my situation rather unpleasant ; sitting in the dark, holding my horse by the nose with both hands to prevent him from hing, and equally afraid of the natives without and the wild beasts within. My fears, however, were soon dis- sipated ; for the people, after looking round the thicket and THE FIRST SIGHT OF THE NIGER. 179 perceiving nothing, went away, and I hastened to the more open parts of the wood, where I pursued niy journey E.S.E. until midnight, when the joyful cry of frogs induced me once more to deviate a little from my route, in order to quench my thirst. Having accomplished this from a large pool of rain water, I sought for an open spot with a single tree in the midst, under which I made my bed for the night. I was disturbed by some wolves towards morning, which in- duced me to set forward a little before day ; and having passed a small village called Wassalita, I came about ten o'clock (July 5th) to a negro town. THE FIRST SIGHT OF THE NIGER. Hearing that two negroes were going to Sego, I was happy to have their company, and we set out immediately. 1 was constantly taken for a Moor, and became the subject of much merriment to the Bambarrans, who seeing me drive my horse before me, laughed heartily at my appearance. " He has been at Mecca," says one ; " you may see that by his clothes ;" another asked if my horse was sick ; a third wished to purchase it, &c. ; so that I believe the very slaves were ashamed to be seen in my company. Just before it was dark, we took up our lodgings for the night at a small village, where I procured some victuals for myself and some corn for my horse, at the moderate price of a button, and was told that I should see the Niger (which the negroes call Joliba, or the great water), early the next day. The lions are here very numerous ; the gates are shut a little after sunset, and nobody allowed to go out. The thoughts of seeing the Niger in the morning, and the troublesome buzz- ing of musquitoes, prevented me from shutting my eyes during the night, and I had saddled my horse, and was iu 180 DELIGHTS OF BOOKS OF TRAVEL. readiness before daylight ; but on account of the wild bea»ts •we were obliged to wait until the people were stirring and the gates opened. This happened to be a market day at Sego. and the roads were every where filled with people carrying different articles to sell. We passed four large villages, and at eight o'clock saw the smoke over Sego. As we approached the town. I was fortunate enough to overtake the fugitive Kaartans, to whose kindness I had been so much indebted in my journey through Bambarra. They readily agreed to introduce me to their king ; and we rode together through the marshy ground, where, as I was looking anxiously around for the river, one of them called out geo affitti (see the water) ; and looking forwards, I saw with infinite pleasure the great object of my mission, the long-sought for majestic Niger, glittering to the morn- ing sun, as broad as the Thames at Westminster, and flow- ing slowly to the eastward. I hastened to the brink, and having drank of the water, lifted up my fervent thanks in prayer to the Great Ruler of all things, for having thus fai crowned my endeavours with success. KINDNESS OF A WOMAN TO HDI, AND A SONG OVER. HIS DISTRESS. I waited more than two hours without having an oppor- tunity of crossing the river ; during which time, the people who had crossed carried information to Mansong the king, that a white man was waiting for a passage, and was coming to see him. He immediately sent over one of his chief men, who informed me that the king could not possibly see me until he knew what had brought me into this country ; and that I must not presume to cross the river without the king's permission. He therefore advised mo to lodge at a KINDNESS OF A WOMAN TO HIM. \%\ distant village, to which he pointed, for the night ; and said, that in the morning he would give me further instruc- tions how to conduct myself. This was very discouraging. However, as there was no remedy, I set off for the village, where I found, to my great mortification, that no person would admit me into his house. I was regarded with as- tonishment and fear, and was obliged to sit all day without victuals in the shade of a tree ; and the night threatened to be very uncomfortable, for the wind rose, and there was great appearance of a heavy rain ; and the wild beasts are so very numerous in the neighbourhood, that I should have been under the necessity of climbing up the tree and resting among the branches. About sunset, however, as I was pre- paring to pass the night in this manner, and had turned my horse loose that he might graze at liberty, a woman, return- ing from the labours of the field, stopped to observe me, and perceiving that I was weary and dejected, inquired into my situation, which I briefly explained to her ; whereupon, with looks of great compassion, she took up my saddle and bridle, and told me to follow her. Having conducted me into her hut, she lighted up a lamp, spread a mat on the floor, and told me I might remain there for the night. Finding that I was very hungry, she said she would pro- cure me something to eat. She accordingly went out and returned in a short time with a very fine fish, which, having caused to be half broiled upon some embers, she gave me for supper. The rites of hospitality being thus performed towards a stranger in distress, my worthy benefactress (pointing to the mat, and telling me that I might sleep there without apprehension) called to the female part of the family, who had stood gazing on me all the while in fixed astonishment, to resume their task of spinning cotton, in which they continued to employ themselves great part of 182 DELIGHTS OF BOOKS OF TRAVEL. the night. They lightened their labour by songs, one of which was composed extempore, for I was myself the sub- ject of it. It was sung by one of the young women, the rest joining in a sort of chorus. The air was sweet and plain- tive, and the words, literally translated, were these: — "The winds roared and the rains fell. The poor white man, faint and weary, came and sat under our tree. He has no mother to bring him milk ; no wife to grind his corn. Chorus. — Let us pity the white man ; no mother has he, &c. &c. &c." Trifling as this recital may appear to the reader, to a per- son in my situation the circumstance was affecting in the highest degree ; I was oppressed by such unexpected kind- ness, and sleep fled from my eyes. In the morning I pre- sented my landlady with two of the four brass buttons which remained on my waistcoat, the only recompense I could make her. HE PASSES A LION. July 28th. — I departed from Nyara, and reached Nya- mee about noon. This town is inhabited chiefly by Foulahs, from the kingdom of Masina. The dooty (the head man of the place), I know not why, would not receive me, but civilly sent his son on horseback to conduct me to Modiboo ; which, he assured me, was at no great distance. We rode nearly in a direct line through the woods, but in general went forwards with great circumspection. I observed that my guide frequently stopped and looked under the bushes. On inquiring the reason of this caution, he told me that lions were very numerous in that part of the country, and frequently attacked — travelling through the woods. While he was speaking my horse started ; look- ing round, I observed a large animal, of the cameleopard HE PASSES A LION. Ig3 kind, standing at a little distance. The neck and fore-legs were very long ; the head was furnished with two short black horns, turning backwards ; the tail, which reached down to the ham joint, had a tuft of hair at the end. The animal was of a mouse colour, and it trotted away from us in a very sluggish manner, moving its head from side to side to see if we were pursuing it. Shortly after this, as we were crossing a large open plain, where there were a few scattered bushes, my guide, who was a little way before me, wheeled his horse round in a moment, calling out something in the Foulah language which I did not understand. I in- quired in Mandingo what he meant. Warra billi biHi, a very large lion, said he ; and made signs for me to ride away. But my horse was too much fatigued ; so we rode slowly past the bush from which the animal had given us the alarm. Not seeing anything myself, however, I thought my guide had been mistaken, when the Foulah suddenly put his hand to his mouth, exclaiming, Sonbah an alluhi (God preserve us !) and to my great surprise I then per- ceived a large red lion, at a short distance from the bush, with his head couched between his fore paws. I expected he would instantly spring upon me, and instinctively pulled my feet from the stirrups to throw myself on the ground, that my horse might become the victim rather than myself. But it is probable that the lion was not hungry, for he quietly suffered us to pass, though we were fairly within his reach. My eyes were so rivetted upon this sovereign of the beasts, that I found it impossible to remove them until we were at a considerable distance. "We now took a circuitous route through some swampy ground, to avoid any more ol these disagreeable rencounters. 184 DELIGHTS OF BOOKS OF TRAVEL. NARROW ESCAPE FROM ANOTHER LION. In the evening I arrived at a small village called Song, the surly inhabitants of which would not receive me, nor so much as permit me to enter the gate ; but as lions were very numerous in this neighbourhood, and I had frequently, in the course of the day, seen the impression of their feet on the road, I resolved to stay in the vicinity of the village. Having collected some grass for my horse, I accordingly lay down under a tree by the gate. About ten o'clock I heard the hollow roar of a lion at no great distance, and attempted to open the gate ; but the people from within told me, that no person must attempt to enter the gate without the dooty's permission. I begged them to inform the dooty that a lion was approaching the village, and I hoped he would allow me to come within the gate. I waited for an answer to this message with great anxiety ; for the lion kept prowling round the village, and once ad- vanced so very near me, that I heard him rustling among the grass, and climbed the tree for safety. About mid- night the dooty with some of his people opened the gate and desired me to come in. They were convinced, they said, that I was not a Moor ; for no Moor ever waited any time at the gate of a village without cursing the in- habitants. THE MOSS IN THE DESERT. Aug. 25th. — I departed from Kooma, accompanied by two shepherds, who were going towards Sibidooloo. The road* was very steep and rocky, and as my horse had hurt his feet much in coming from Bammakoo, he travelled THE MOSS IX THE DESERT. 185 slowly and with great difficulty ; for in many places the ascent was so sharp, and the declivities so great, that if he had made one false step, he must inevitably have been dashed to pieces. The shepherds being anxious to proceed, gave themselves little trouble about me or my horse, and kept walking on at a considerable distance. It was about eleven o'clock, as I stopped to drink a little water at a rivulet (my companions being near a quarter of a mile be- fore me), that I heard some people calling to each other, and presently a loud screaming as from a person in great distress. I immediately conjectured that a lion had taken one of the shepherds, and mounted my horse to have a better view of what had happened. The noise, however, ceased ; and I rode slowly towards the place from whence I thought it proceeded, calling out, but without receiving any answer. In a little time, however, I perceived one of the shepherds lying among the long grass near the road ; and though I could see no blood upon him, concluded he was dead. But when I came close to him, he whispered to me to stop, telling me that a party of armed men had seized upon his companion, and shot two arrows at himself as he was making his escape. I stopped to consider what course to take, and looking round, saw at a little distance a man sitting upon the stump of a tree ; I distinguished also the heads of six or seven more, sitting amongst the grass with muskets in their hands. I had now no hopes of escaping, and there- fore determined to ride forward amongst them. As I ap- proached them, I was in hopes they were elephant-hunters, and, by way of opening the conversation, inquired if they had shot anything ; but, without returning an answer, one of them ordered me to dismount ; and then, as if recol- lecting himself, waved with his hand for me to proceed. I accordingly rode past, and had with some difficulty crossed 186 DELIGHTS OF BOOKS OF TRAVEL. a deep rivulet, when I heard somebody holloa ; and looking back, saw those I took for elephant-hunters now running after me, and calling out to me to turn back. I stopped until they were all come up, when they informed me that the king of the Foulahs had sent them on purpose to bring me, my horse, and everything that belonged to me, to Fooladoo, and that therefore I must turn back, and go along with them. Without hesitating a moment, I turned round and followed them, and we travelled together near a quarter of a mile without exchanging a word. When coming to a dark place of the wood, one of them said, in the Mandingo language, " This place will do," and imme- diately snatched my hat from my head. Though I was by no means free of apprehension, yet I resolved to show as few signs of fear as possible, and therefore told them, unless my hat was returned to me, I should go no farther. But before I had time to receive an answer, another drew his knife, and seizing upon a metal button which remained upon my waistcoat, cut it off. and put it in his pocket. Their in- tentions were now obvious, and I thought that the easier they were permitted to rob me of everything, the less I had to fear. I therefore allowed them to search my pockets without resistance, and examine every part of my apparel which they did with scrupulous exactness. But observing that I had one waistcoat under another, they insisted that I should cast them both off; and at last, to make sure work. Gripped me quite naked. Even my half-boots (though the sole of one of them was tied to my foot with a broken bridle- rein) were narrowly inspected. Whilst they were examining the plunder, I begged them with great earnestness to return in y pocket compass ; but when I pointed it out to them, as it was lying on the ground, one of the banditti, thinking I was about to take it up, cocked his musket, and swore that he THE MOSS IN THE DESERT. 187 would lay me dead on the spot if I presumed to lay my hand on it. After this some of them went away with my horse, and the remainder stood considering whether they should leave me quite naked, or allow me something to shelter me from the sun. Humanity at last prevailed ; they returned me the worst of the two shirts and a pair of trousers ; and, as they went away, one of them threw back my hat, in the crown of which I kept my memorandums • and this was probably the reason they did not wish to keep it. After they were gone, I sat for some time looking around me with amazement and terror ; whichever way I turned, nothing appeared but danger and difficulty. I saw myself in the midst of a vast wilderness in the depth of the rainy season, naked and alone, surrounded by savage animals, and men still more savage, I was five hundred miles from the nearest European settlement. All these circumstances crowded at once on my recollection ; and I confess, that my spirits began to fail me. I considered my fate as certain, and that I had no alternative but to lie down and perish. The influence of religion, however, aided and supported me. I reflected, that no human prudence or foresight could possibly have averted my present sufferings. I was indeed a stranger in a strange land, yet I was still under the pro- tecting eye of that Providence who has condescended to call himself the stranger's friend. At this moment, painful as my reflections were, the extraordinary beauty of a small moss in fructification irresistibly caught my eye. I mention this, to show from what trifling circumstances the mind will sometimes derive consolation ; for though the whole plant was not larger than the tip of one of my fingers, I could not contemplate the delicate conformation of its roots, leaves, and capsule without admiration. Can that Being (thought I) who planted, watered, and brought to perfection, in this 188 DELIGHTS OF BOOKS OF TRAVEL. obscure part of the world, a thing which appears of so small importance, look with unconcern upon the situation and sufferings of creatures formed after his own image ? — surely not ! reflections like these would not allow me to despair; I started up, and disregarding both hunger and fatigue, travelled forwards, assured that relief was at hand ; and I was not disappointed. In a short time I came to a small village, at the entrance of which I overtook the two shep- herds who had come with me from Kooma. They were much surprised to see me, for they said they never doubted that the Foulaks, when they had robbed, had murdered me. Departing from this village, we travelled over several rocky ridges, and at sunset arrived at Sibidooloo, the frontier town of the kingdom of Manding. ft Ijjipmmit, it §m Umjagr-, ani rut Slteta iit| tjjB 9Sta[. Voyages, for the most part, are not so entertaining as travels. They are less diversified in subject, and less conversant with flesh and blood. When they are otherwise, no reading is more attractive. "Voyages among icebergs, .and to newly discovered lands, combine the charms of romance with the greatest personal interest; and few things affect us more strongly than a well-told and disastrous shipwreck. Such catas- trophes, however, are in general too painful to warrant isolated extract into a book of entertainment. The compiler seems almost cruel in making it. It furnishes too great a contrast to the reader's comfort, without possessing the excuse of utility. The almost universal defect of Voyages is, that they take little no tice of the element on which they are made. Most people who journey by sea, have no wish but to get over it as fast as possible. The " won- ders of the deep " are, for them, as if they did not exist ; and even those who are more curious, are content to see little. Geology has not yet been accompanied by its proper amount of Hydrology. The ocean, physically and intellectually speaking, is comparatively an unploughed field, even by the English ; yet what it may produce, let the reader judge who is acquainted with the narratives of the Cooks, the Scoresbys, and the Humboldts. That the perils of shipwreck, however, may not be wanting to the pleasures of this our Book for a Corner, and that our inland habits may be refreshed by their due contrast with a sense of being " out at sea," we have selected, in the first instance, the following brief but comprehen- sive account of the loss of a Spanish vessel from the pages of Mr. Red ding's Shipwrecks and Disasters at Sea; and in the second, with due 190 SHIPWRECK OF A SPANISH VESSEL. omissions, an abstract of Cook's first voyage to Otaheite, because it keeps the reader longer and more pleasantly on the water than most such narratives, besides furnishing a singular peril by the way, and call- ing to mind some of the most interesting reading of one's childhood. The Spanish vessel was bound from Panama to Caldera, a port in New Spain ; and both before and after the following mishap, the crew and passengers encountered much suffering ; but the present is the most interesting point of the narrative. It is remarkable for answering more completely than usual to what a landsman's imagination conceives of such horrors ; that is to say, the suddenness of the danger, the noise _of the waters, the darkness of the night, the cutting away of masts, and the frightened awakening of guilty consciences. The loud, confessing voices, heard even above the loudness of the thunder, is particularly dreadful. SHIPWEECK OF A SPANISH VESSEL. ABOUT seven, one evening, the crew of a Spanish vessel of burden, with various goods, bound for Caldera, he- held the desired port. All was joy in the ship. The cap- tain presented the sailors with a cask of wine, and a Genoese merchant on board gave them another. The men were in too good a temper to postpone tasting the wine until the next day. They attacked the cask at once, headed by the pilot, and it was soon emptied, but not without materially affecting their heads. The Genoese merchant, fearing the ill effects that must arise from such a state of things when so near the shore, posted himself, in his excess of caution, between the man at the helm and the pilot, from having remarked that the pilot, sitting on li is seat quite drunk, worked the ship from recol- lection alone, as he was close to a port perfectly well known to him. The merchant placed himself in the situation al- ready mentioned, to repeat with more precision the words SHIPWRECK OF A SPANISH VESSEL. \c$\ of the pilot to the timoneer (man at the helm), and this act caused the loss of the ship. The pilot gave the word " north- west, to the north-west, 1 ' Al norueste ;" the merchant, who stammered and spoke bad Spanish, repeated the words " Al nornorueste" to the novih-?iorth-west, which is a different point of the compass. The timoneer, thinking it was his master's orders, did as he was told — kept away from the port and yet approached the coast. In the meanwhile night was approaching fast. The pas- sengers and the captain were in their beds wrapped in slum- ber. About two in the morning, the captain was surprised by hearing the waves breaking upon the rocks. He cried out to the pilot, " What is this, pilot 1 are we entering the port already?" The pilot, on the question being reiterated, roused from his lethargy, and saw with astonishment and terror that the vessel was steering right upon a rock which could scarcely be seen for the obscurity. Above all a high mountain towered in shadow, covered apparently with trees. The pilot called out to come about, but there was now no time, the vessel was close on the shore, and struck with such force that one of her sides opened. A huge wave recoiled from the rock against which it had dashed, swept over the vessel, and filled her with water. Then there was nothing heard throughout the ship but clamorous cries and shrieks of horror. Lamentations suc- ceeded to sounds of mirth and revelry, which had been heard so short a time before. Some awaked suddenly from their sleep, and cried in astonishment as they heard the others do who were aware of the danger, though they knew not yet any reason wherefore. The noise of the vast waves of the Pacific thundering around and over the ship, the darkness of the night, the dash- ing of the sea on the rocks, increased the terror of the scene. 192 SHIPWRECK OF A SPANISH VESSEL. "What was still more extraordinary, the vessel was lost none could tell how or where. This reverse of fortune was terri- ble to them. They had imagined themselves close to the entrance of the port. In the terror which came upon the crew, some fell on their knees in prayer, making vows to heaven for their safety ; others with uplifted hands de- manded God's mercy ; while many in a loud voice, heard even amid the louder thundering of the waves around, re- vealed their most secret sins. The captain preserved his presence of mind. Seeing that all must perish if something were not attempted speed- ily for the safety of those on board, he encouraged the sailors to cut away the masts, and to provide themselves with planks, or any loose timber upon which there was a chance of gain- ing the shore. Everything above deck contributing to the breaking up of the ship by its weight, was cut away or flung overboard. In this state morning broke upon them. The captain, when the vessel had opened her planks and was settling in ther water, seeing that the sailors would endeavour to gain the shore upon anything they could seize that would swim, advised several of them to fasten themselves to the ends of a long rope, one at each end, so that whoever got on shore first might draw after him a second, who might not be so fortunate in his attempt at reaching it. In this manner the captain got the pilot safe to land, although he did not de- serve it. Nearly all the crew escaped. Five or six only, who were dashed by the waves with great force against the ship or the rocks head foremost, were lost. A SEA VOYAGE, AND AN ADVENTURE. 193 A SEA VOYAGE, AND AN ADVENTURE BY TUE WAY. [The narrative of Cook's voyages was drawn up by Hawkesworth, author of The Adventurer. The Mr. Banks mentioned in it was after- wards the well known Sir Joseph, President of the Royal Society; and Dr. Solander became a distinguished botanist] HAVING received my commission, which was dated the 25th of May, 1768, 1 went on board on the 27th, hoisted the pennant, and took charge of the ship, which then lay in the basin in Deptford yard. She was fitted for sea with all expedition; and stores and provisions being taken on board, sailed down the river on the 30th of July, and on the 13th of August anchored in Plymouth Sound. On Friday the 26th of August, the wind becoming fair, we got udder sail, and put to sea. On the 31st we saw several of the birds which the sailors call Mother Carey's chickens, and which they suppose to be the forerunners of a storm ; and on the next day we had a very hard gale, which brought us under our courses, washed overboard a small boat belonging to the boatswain, and drowned three or four dozen of our poultry, which we regretted still more. On Friday the 2d of September we saw land between Cape Finisterre and Cape Ortegal, on the coast of Gallicia, in Spain ; and on the 5th, by an observation of the sun and moon, we found the latitude of Cape Finisterre to be 42° 53' north, and its longitude 8° 46 / west, our first meridian being always supposed to pass through Greenwich ; varia- tion of the needle 21° A' west. During this course, Mr. Banks and Dr. Solander had an opportunity of observing many marine animals, of which no naturalist has hitherto taken notice ; particularly a new species of the oniscus, which was found adhering to the 194 A SEA VOYAGE, AND AX AD VE3 TUBE. medusa pelagica ; and an animal of an angular figure, about three inches long, and one thick, -with a hollow passing quite through it, and a brown spot on one end, which they con- jectured might be its stomach; four of these adhered to- gether by their sides when they were taken, so that at first they were thought to be one animal ; but upon being put into a glass of water they soon separated, and swam about very briskly. These animals are of a new genus, to which Mr. Banks and Dr. Solander gave the name of Dazyso. from the likeness of one species of them to a gem. Several speci- mens of them were taken adhering together sometimes to the length of a yard or more, and shining in the water with very beautiful colours. Another animal of a new genus they also discovered, which shone in the water with colours still more beautiful and vivid, and which indeed exceeded in variety and brightness anything that we had ever seen. The colouring and splendour of these animals were equal to those of an opal, and from their resemblance to that gem, the genus was called Cardnium Opalinum. One of them lived several hours in a glass of salt water, swimming about with great agility, and at every motion displaying a change of colours almost infinitely various. We caught also among the rigging of the ship, when we were at the distance of about ten leagues from Cape Finistcrre. several birds which have not been described by Linnaeus ; they were supposed to have come from Spain, and our gentlemen called the species Motacilla vchjicans (sail-making), as they said none but sailors would venture themselves on board a ship that was going round the world. One of them was so exhausted that it died in Mr. Banks's hand almost as soon as it was brouirht to him. D It was thought extraordinary that no naturalist had hitherto taken notice of the Dagysa, as the sea abounds A SEA VOYAGE, AND AN AD VESTURE. 195 •with theru not twenty leagues from the coast of Spain ; but, unfortunately for the cause of science, there are but very few of those who traverse the sea, that are either desposed or qualified to remark the curiosities of which nature has made it the repository. On the 12th we discovered the islands of Porto Santo and Madeira, and on the next day anchored in Funchiale road, and moored with the stream-anchor : but in the night the bend of the hawser of the stream-anchor slipped, owing to the negligence of the person who had been employed to make it fast. In the morning the anchor was heaved up into the boat, and carried out to the southward ; but in heaving it again, Mr. Weir, the master's mate, was carried overboard by the buoy-rope, and went to the bottom with the anchor ; the people in the ship saw the accident, and got the anchor up with all possible expedition, it was, how- ever, too late, the body came up entangled in the buoy-rope, but it was dead. When the island of Madeira is first approached from the sea, it has a very beautiful appearance \ the sides of the hills being entirely covered with vines almost as high as the eye can distinguish ; and the vines are green when every kind of herbage, except where they shade the ground, and here and there, by the sides of a rill, is entirely burnt up, which was the case at* this time. The refreshments to be had here, are water, wine, fruit of several sorts, onions in plenty, and some sweetmeats ; fresh meat and poultry are not to be had without leave from ' the governor, and the payment of a very high price. We took in 270 lbs. of fresh beef, and a live bullook, charged at 613 lbs., 3,032 gallons of water, and ten tons of wine ; and in the night, between Sunday the j Sth and Mod.- 9 196 A SEA VOYAGE, AND AN ADVENTURE. day the 19th September, we set sail in prosecution of our voyage. On Friday, the 23rd of September, we Baw the Peak of Teneriffe bearing W. by S. £ S. Its appearance at sunset was very striking; when the sun was below the horizon, and the rest of the island appeared of a deep black, the moun- tain still reflected his rays, and glowed with a warmth of colour which no painting can express. On the next day, Saturday the 24th, we came into the north-east trade-wind, and on Friday, the 30th, saw Bona Vista, one of the Cape dc Verd Islands : we ranged the east side if it, at the distance of three or four miles from the shore, till we were obliged to haul off to avoid a, ledge of rocks which stretch out S. W. by W. from the body, or S. E. point of the island, to the extent of a league and a half. During our course from Teneriffe to Bona Vista, we saw great numbers of flying fish, which from the cabin-win- dows appear beautiful beyond imagination, their sides having the colour and brightness of burnished silver; when they are seen from the deck, they do not appear to so much advantage, because their backs are of a dark colour. We also took a shark, which proved to he the Htj/ta/us Carvlm- rias of Linnaeus. Having lost the trade-wind on the 3rd, in latitude 12° 14', and longitude 22° 10', the wind became somewhat vari- able, and we had light airs ami (alms by tur On the 7th, Mr. Banks went out in the hoat, and took what the seamen call a I'mt n-u ,-c man-of-war; it, is the* Holuthuria Physalis of Linnaeus, a*ad a species of the Mol- lusca. It consisted of a small bladder about seven inches long, and very much resembling the air bladder of' tide-. from the bottom of which descended a Dumber of strings of a bright blue and red, some of them three or four feet in length, whioh, upon being touohed, sting Like a nettle, but with niueli more force. On the lop of the bladder in n membrane whioh is used as a sail, and burned bo as to receive (he wind which way soever it. Mows This iiieni brane is marked in fine pink-coloured veins, and the animal Is in every respeot an objoot exquisitely curious and beautiful. AVe also took several of the shell fishes, or testaceous animals, which aroalwa\s found floating up.ni the water, particularly the llr/i.r luii/lnmi and VioldCCO, i Ihcv are about the size of a snail, and arc supported u\ the surface of the water \>y a small (duster of bubbles, which are Idled with air, and consist of a tenacious slimy sulislance that will not easily pari, with its contents j the animal isovipa rOUS, and these liuhhles serve also as a, iiiilus for its CggH It is probable that it never goes down to the bottom, nor willingly approaches any shore ; for the shell is exceed iied 7 brittle, and that of lew fresh water snails is no thin, Every shell contains about a, tea spoonful of liquor, whioh it oai ily discharges upon being touched, and which is of the most beautiful red-purple that can I" conceived It dyes linen Cloth, and it. may perhaps he worth inquiry (as the shell 1 a certainly found in the Mediterranean), whether it. he not the Purpura of the ancients.* * It is quite impoi Lble to di on 1 this subjeot hero. But it tnaj be worth while to refer tho learned reader for some eurlou Information about it, to the i Booharl r] entitled KUrotoioon^ pari II •boot v., eh. Li. Then are 1 ells, tl al ield 1 In pui pie-dye so much esteemed among tin ancients. Pliny, who bai written on the subject, divides them into I > tb< hicdrwm and purpura^ of which the latter was most in reouo t. According to him, tfie best kinds were found in the vicinity of Tyre. That city wan famous for tho manu focture of purple. To be Tyrio conspi emed, in thi 1 t'n, a of the Mantui a poet, i ! - appearance in honour ot (98 A SEA VOYAGE, AiW AN ADVENTURE. In the evening of the 29th of October, we observed that luminous appearance of the sea, which has been so often mentioned by navigators, and of which such various causes have been assigned ; some supposing it to be occasioned by fish, which agitated the water by darting on their prey, some by the putrefaction of fish and other marine animals, some by electricity, and others referring it to a great variety of different causes. It appeared to emit flashes of light ex- actly resembling those of lightning, only not so considerable ; but they were so frequent that sometimes eight or ten were visible almost at the same moment. We were of opinion that they proceeded from some luminous animal, and upon throwing out the casting-net our opinion was confirmed. It brought up a species of the Medusa, which when it came on board had the appearance of metal violently heated, and emitted a white light. With these animals were taken some very small crabs, of three different species, each of which gave as much light as a glow-worm, though the crea- ture was not so large by nine-tenths. Upon examination of these animals, Mr. Banks had the satisfaction to find that they were all entirely new.* Augustus, Geor. 8-17. But several other places in the Mediterranean afforded this precious article. Thus Ilorace speaks of Spartan purple, " Nee Lacnnicas mihi Trahunt honestce purpuras clientse." Od. lib. ii. 18. The English reader will he much pleased with several interesting re- marks as to the purple and other colours known to the ancients, given in President Goguct's valuable work on the origin of laws, arts, &c. &c, of which a translation by Dr. Henry was published at Edinburgh in 1761 HcwTc8Worth. * The reader is referred to the account of Captain Krusenstern's cir- • oumnavigation, for a very satisfactory relation of an experiment on this subject, which clearly proves the truth of the opinion above stated, as to the cause of the shining appearance so often noticed at sea. It is too long for quotation iu this place. — Kerr. A SEA VOYAGE, AND AN ADVENTURE. 199 On the 6th of November, being in latitude 19° 3' south, longitude 35° 50' west, the colour of the water was observed to change, upon which we sounded, and found ground at the depth of thirty-two fathoms ; the lead was cast three times within about four hours, without a foot difference in the depth or quality of the bottom, which was coral rock, fine sand, and shells ; we therefore supposed that we had passed over the tail of the great shoal which is laid down in all our charts by the name of Abrothos, on which Lord Anson struck soundings in his passage outwards. At four the next morning we had no ground with 100 fathom. As several articles of our stock and provisions now began to fall short, I determined to put into Rio de Janeiro, rather than at any port in Brazil or Falkland's Islands, knowing that it could better supply us with what we wanted. It is remarkable, that, during the last three or four days of our staying in the harbour, the air was loaded with but- terflies. They were chiefly of one sort, but in such numbers that thousands were in view in every direction, and the greatest part of them above our mast-head. The country, at a small distance round the town, which is all that any of us saw, is beautiful in the highest degree ; the wildest spots being varied with a greater luxuriance of flowers, both as to number and beauty, than the best gar- dens in England. Upon the trees and bushes sat an almost endless variety of birds, especially small ones, many of them covered with the most elegant plumage ; among which were the hum- ming-bird. Of insects too there was a great variety, and some of them very beautiful ; but they were much more nimble than those of Europe, especially the butterflies, most of which flew near the tops of the trees, and were 200 A SEA VOYAGE, AND AN ADVENTURE. therefore very difficult to be caught, except when the sea breeze blew fresh, which kept them nearer to the ground. When the boat which had been sent on shore returned, we hoisted her on board, and stood out to sea. On the 9th of December, we observed the sea to be covered with broad streaks of a yellowish colour, several of them a mile long, and three or four hundred yards wide. Some of the water thus coloured was taken up, and found to be full of innumerable atoms pointed at the end, of a Yellowish colour, and none more than a quarter of a line, or tne fortieth part of an inch long In the microscope they appeared to be fascicida of small fibres interwoven with each other, not unlike the nidus of some of the phyganeas, called caddices ; but whether they were animal or vegetable substances, whence they came, or for what they were de- signed, neither Mr. Banks nor Dr. Solander could guess. The same appearance had been observed before, when we first discovered the continent of South America. On the 3d of January. 1769, being in latitude 47o 17' S. and longitude 61° 29' 45" W., we were all looking out for Pepy's island, and for some time an appearance was seen in the east which so much resembled land, that we bore away for it ; and it was more than two hours and a half before we were convinced that it was nothing but what sailors call a fog-bank. The people now beginning to complain of cold, each of them received what is called a Magellanic jacket, and a pair of trowsers. The jacket is made of a thick woollen stuff, called Hsarnought, which is provided by the government. We saw, from time to time, a great number of penguins, albatrosses, and sheer-waters, seals, whales, and porpoises; and on the 11th, having passed Falkland's Islands, we dis- covered the coast of Terra del Fuego, at the distance oi A SEA VOYAGE, AND AN ADVENTURE. 201 about four leagues, extending from the W. to S.E. by S. "We bad here five-and-tbirty fathom, the ground soft, small slate stones. As we ranged along the shore to the S. E. at the distance of two or three leagues, we perceived smoke in several places, which was made by the natives, probably as a signal, for they did not continue it after we had passed by. At two o'clock on the 15th of January, we anchored in the bay of Good Success ; and after dinner I went on shore, accompanied by Mr. Banks and Dr. Solander, to look for a watering-place, and speak to the Indians, several of whom had come in sight. We landed on the starboard side of the bay near some rocks, which made smooth water and good landing ; thirty or forty of the Indians soon made their appearance at the end of a sandy beach on the other side of the bay, but seeing our number, which was ten or twelve, they retreated. Mr. Banks and Br. Solander then advanced about one hundred yards before us, upon which two of the Indians returned, and, having advanced some paces towards them, sat down ; as soon as they came up, the Indians rose, and each of theni having a small stick in his hand threw it away, in a direction both from themselves and the strangers, which was considered as the renunciation of weapons in token of peace. They then walked briskly towards their companions, who had halted at about fifty yards behind them, and beckoned the gentlemen to follow, which they did. They were received with many uncouth signs of friendship ; and, in return, they distributed among them some beads and ribbons, which had been brought on shore for that purpose, and with which they were greatly delighted. A mutual confidence and good-will being thus produced, our parties joined ; the conversation, such as it was, became general ; and three of them accompanied us back to the ship. When they came on board, one of them 202 A SEA VOYAGE, AND AS ADVENTURE. whom we took to be a priest, performed much the same ceremonies which M. Bougainville describes, and supposes to be an exorcism. When he was introduced into a new part of the ship, or when anything that he had not seen before caught his attention, he shouted with all his force for some minutes, without directing his voice either to us or his companions.* *The incident related by Bougainville, to which the allusion is made, is somewhat affecting. An interesting boy, one of the savages' children, had unwarily, and from ignorance of its dangerous nature, put some bits of glass into his mouth which the sailors gave him. His lips and palate, &c, were cut in several places, and he soon began to spit blood, and to be violently convulsed. This excited the most distressing alarm and sus- picion among the savages. One of them, whom Bougainville denominates a juggler, immediately had recourse to very strange and unlikely means in order to relieve the poor child. He first laid him on his back, then kneel- ing down between his legs, and bending himself, he pressed the child's belly as much as he could with his head and hands, crying out continually, but with inarticulate sounds. From time to time he raised himself, and seeming to hold I sease in his joined hands, opened them at once in- to the air, blowing, as if he drove away some evil spirit. During those rites, an old woman in tears howled with great violence in the child's ears. These ceremonies, however, not proving effectual, but rather, indeed, as might have been expected, doing mischief, the juggler disappeared for a little in order, as should seem, to procure a peculiar dress, in which he might practise his exorcism with greater confidence of success, and to bring a brother in the trade, similarly apparalled, to aid him in his labours. But so much the worse for the wretched patient, who was ummelledand squeezed all over, till his body was completely bruised. Such treatment, it is almost unnecessary t< . ggravated hi* sufferings, but accomplished no cure. The jugglers at last consented to allow the in- rence of the French surgeon, but appeared to be very jealous of his skill. The child became somewhat easier towards night; however, from I sickness, there was much room to apprehend that he had swallowed some of the glass, and died in consequence ; for "about two o'clock in the morning," says Bougainville, "we on board heard repeated howls, and at break of day, though the weather was very dreadful, tho ■sit oil'. They doubtless fled from a place defiled by death, and by unlucky strangers, who, they thought, wero come merely to destroy them." It is very probable that the person whom Cook supposed a priest, A SEA VOYAGE, AND AN ADVENTURE. 203 They ate some bread and some beef, but not apparently with much pleasure, though such part of what was given them as they did not eat, they took away with them ; but they would not swallow a drop either of wine or sj)irits ; they put the glass to their lips, but, having tasted the liquor, they returned it with strong expressions of disgust. Curiosity seems to be one of the few passions which distin- guish men from brutes ; and of this our guests appeared to have very little. They went from one part of tbe ship to another, and looked at the vast variety of new objects that every moment presented themselves, without any expression either of wonder or pleasure, for the vociferation of our ex- orcist seemed to be neither. After having been on board about two hours, they ex- pressed a desire to go ashore. A boat was immediately ordered, and Mr. Banks thought fit to accompany them. He landed them in safety, and conducted them to their companions, among whom he remarked the same vacant in- difference as in those who had been on board ; for as on one side there appeared no eagerness to relate, so on the other side there seemed to be no curiosity to hear, how they had been received, or what they bad seen. In about half an hour Mr. Banks returned to the ship, and the Indians retired from the shore. On the 16th, early in the morning, Mr. Banks and Dr. Solander, with their astendants and servants, and two sea- men, to assist in carrying the baggage, accompanied by Mr. Monkhouse the surgeon, and Mr. Green the astronomer, set out from the ship with a view to penetrate as far as they practised the charms spoken of, in order to destroy any ill luck, and to pre- vent the occurrence of such like misfortunes in his intercourse with the wonderful strangers. There is an allusion to this incident in a following section. — Kcer. 204 A SEA VOYAGE, AND AN ADVENTURE. could into the country, and return at night. The hills, when viewed at a distance, seemed to be partly a wood, partly a plain, and above them a bare rock. Mr. Banks hoped to get through the wood, and made no doubt but that, beyond it, he should, in a country which no botanist had ever yet visited, find alpine plants which would abundantly compen- sate his labour. They entered the wood at a small sandy beach, a little to the westward of the watering place, and continued to ascend the hill, through the pathless wilder- ness, till three o'clock, before they got a near view of the places which they intended to visit. Soon after they reach- ed what they had taken for a plain ; but, to their great disap- pointment, found it a swamp, covered with low bushes of birch, about three feet high, interwoven with each other, and so stubborn that they could not be bent out of the way : it was therefore necessary to lift the leg over them, which at every step was buried ankle deep in the soil. To aggravate the pain and difficulty of such travelling, the weather, which had hitherto been very fine, much like one of our bright days in May, became gloomy and cold, with sudden blasts of a most piercing wind, accompanied with snow. They pushed forward, however, in good spirits, notwithstanding their fatigue, hoping the worst of the way was past, and that the bare rock which they had seen from the tops of the lower hills was not more tlian a mile before them ; but when they had got about two-thirds over this woody swamp, Mr. Buchan, one of Mr. Banks's draughtsmen, was unhappily seized with a fit. This made it necessary for the whole com- pany to halt, and as it was impossible that he should go any farther, a fire was kindled, and those who were most fatigued were left behind to take care of him. Mr. Banks, Dr. Solander, Mr. Green, and Mr. Monkhouse, went on. and in a short time reached the summit. As botanists, their A SEA VOYAGE, AND AN ADVENTURE. 205 expectations were here abundantly gratified ; for they found a great variety of plants, which, with respect to the alpine plants in Europe, are exactly what those,, plants are with respect to such as grow in the plain. The cold was now become more severe, and the snow- blasts more frequent ; the day also was so far spent, that it was found impossible to get back to the ship, before the next morning. To pass the night upon such a mountain, in such a climate, was not only comfortless but dreadful ; it was impossible, however, to be avoided, and they were to provide for it as well as they could. Mr. Banks and Dr. Solander, while they were improv- ing an opportunity which they had, with so much danger and difficulty, procured, by gathering the plants which they found upon the mountain, sent Mr. Green and Mr. Monk- house back to Mr. Buchan and the people that were with him, with directions to bring them to a hill, which they thought lay in a better route for returning to the wood, and which was therefore appointed as a general rendez- vous. It was proposed, that from this hill they should push through the swamp, which seemed by the new route not to be more than half a mile over, into the shelter of the wood, and there build their wigwam, and make a fire. This, as their way was all down hill, it seemed easy to accomplish. Their whole company assembled at the rendezvous, and, though pinched with the cold, were in health and spirits.. Mr. Buchan himself having recovered his strength in a much greater degree than could have been expected. It was now near eight o'clock in the evening, but still good day-light, and they set forward for the nearest valley, Mr. Banks himself undertaking to bring up the rear, and see that no straggler was left behind. This may perhaps be thought a superfluous caution, but it will soon appear to be 206 A SEA VOYAGE, AND AX ADVENTURE. otherwise. Dr. Solander, who had more than once crossed the mountains which divide Sweden from Norway, well knew that extreme cold, especially when joined with fatigue, produces a torpor and sleepiness that are almost irresistible. He therefore conjured the company to keep moving, what- ever pain it might cost them, and whatever relief they might be promised by an inclination to rest. Whoever sits down, says he, will sleep ; and whoever sleeps, will wake no more. Thus, at once admonished and alarmed, they set forward ; but while they were still upon the naked rock, and before they had got among the bushes, the cold became suddenly so intense, as to produce the effects that had been most dreaded. Dr. Solander himself was the first who found the inclination, against which he had warned others, irresistible ; and insisted upon being suffered to lie down. Mr. Banks entreated and remonstrated in vain, down he lay upon the ground, though it was covered with snow ; and it was with great difficulty that his friend kept him from sleeping. Richmond also, one of the black servants, began to linger, having suffered from the cold in the same manner as the doctor. Mr. Banks, therefore, sent five of the com- pany, among whom was Mr. Buchan, forward to get a fire ready at the first convenient place they could find ; and himself, with four others, remained with the doctor and llichmond, whom, partly by persuasion and entreaty, and partly by force, they brought on ; but when they had got through the greatest part of the birch and swamp, they both declared they could go no farther. Mr. Banks had recourse again to entreaty and expostulation, but they produced no effect. When Richmond was told, that if he did not go on he would in a short time be frozen to death, he answered, that he desired nothing but to lie down and die. The doctor did not so explicitly renounce his life ; he said he A. SEA VOYAGE, AA'D AN ADVENTURE. 207 was willing to go on, but that he must first take some sleep, though he had before told the company that to sleep was to perish. Mr. Banks and the rest found it impossible to carry them, and there being no remedy, they were both suffered to sit down, being partly supported by the bushes, and in a few minutes they fell into a profound sleep. Soon after, some of the people who had been sent forward returned, with the welcome news that a fire was kindled about a quarter of a mile farther on the way. Mr. Banks then en- deavoured to wake Dr. Solander, and happily succeeded. But, though he had not slept five minutes, he had almost lost the use of his limbs, and the muscles were so shrunk that his shoes fell from his feet ; he consented to go forward with such assistance as could be given him, but no attempts to relieve poor Richmond were successful. It being found impossible to make him stir, after some time had been lost in the attempt, Mr. Banks left his other black servant and a seaman, who seemed to have suffered least by the cold, to look after him ; promising, that as soon as two others should be sufficiently warmed, they should be relieved. Mr. Banks, with much difficulty, at length got the doctor to the fire ; and soon after sent two of the people who had been refreshed, in hopes that, with the assistance of those who had been left behind, they would be able to bring Richmond, even though it should still be found impossible to wake him. In about half an hour, however, they had the mortification to see these two men return alone ; they said, that they had been all around the place to which they had been directed, but could neither find Richmond nor those who had been left with him ; and that, though they had shouted many times, no voide had replied. This was matter of equal sur- prise and concern, particularly to Mr. Banks, who, while he was wondering how it could happen, missed a bottle of rum, 208 A SEA VOYAGE, AND 4N ADVENTURE. the company's whole stock, which they now concluded to be in the knapsack of one of the absentees. It was conjectured, that with this Richmond had been roused by the two persons who had been left with him, and that, having perhaps drank too freely of it themselves, they had all rambled from the place where they had been left, in search of the fire, instead of waiting for those who should have been their assistants and guides. Another fall of snow now came on, and con- tinued incessantly for two hours, so that all hopes of seeing them again, at least alive, were given up ; but about twelve o'clock, to the great joy of those at the fire, a shouting was heard at some distance. Mr. Banks, with four men, imme- diat< ly went out, and found the seaman with just strength enough left to stagger along, and call out for assistance. Mr. Banks sent him immediately to the fire, and, by his direction, proceeded in search of the other two, whom he soon after found. Richmond was upon his legs, but not able to put one before the other ; his companion was lying upon the ground, as insensible as a stone. All hands were now called from the fire, and an attempt was made to carry them to it ; but this, notwithstanding the united efforts of the whole company, was found to be impossible. The night was extremely dark, the snow was now very deep, and, under these additional disadvantages, they found it very difficult to make way through the bushes and the bog for themselves, all of them getting many falls in the at- tempt. The only alternative was to make a fire upon the spot ; but the snow which had fallen, and was still falling, besides what was every moment shaken in flakes from the trees, rendered it equally impracticable to kindle one there, and to bring any part of that which had b«en kindled in the wood thither. They were, therefore, reduced to the sad necessity of leaving the unhappy wretches to their fate ; A SEA VOYAGE, AND AN ADVENTURE. 209 having first made them a bed of boughs from the trees, and spread a covering of the same kind over them to a consid- erable height. Having now been exposed to the cold and the snow near an hour and a half, some of the rest began to lose their sen- sibility ; and one Briscoe, another of Mr. Banks's servants, was so ill, that it was thought he must die before he could be got to the fire. At the fire, however, at length they arrived ; and passed the night in a situation which, however dreadful in itself, was rendered more afflicting by the remembrance of what was past, and the uncertainty of what was to come. Of twelve, the number that set out together in health and spirits, two were supposed to be already dead ; a third was so ill, that it was very doubtful whether he would be able to go forward in the morning ; and a fourth, Mr. Buchan, was in danger of a return of his fits, by fresh fatigue, after so un- comfortable a night. They were distant from the ship a long day's journey, through pathless woods, in which it was too probable they might be bewildered till they were over- taken by the next night; and, not having prepared for a journey of more than eight or ten hours, they were wholly destitute of provisions, except a vulture, which they happened to shoot while they were out, and which, if ecpially divided, would not afford each of them half a meal ; and they knew not how much more they might suffer from the cold, as the snow still continued to fall, — a dreadful testimony of the severity of the climate, as it was now the midst of summer in this part of the world, the 21st of December being here the longest day ; and everything might justly be dreaded from a phenomenon which, in the corresponding season, is unknown even in Norway and Lapland. When the morning dawned, they saw nothing round them 210 A SEA VOYAGE, AND AN ADVENTURE. as far as the eye could reach, but snow, which seeaied to lie as thick upon the trees as upon the ground ; and the blasts returned so frequently, and -with such violence, that they found it impossible for them to set out. How long this might last they knew not, and they had but too much reason to apprehend that it would confine them in that desolate forest till they perished with hunger and cold. After having suffered the misery and terror of this situa- tion till sis o'clock in the morning, they conceived some hope of deliverance by discovering the place of the sun through the clouds, which were become thinner, and began to break away. Their first care was to see whether the poor wretches whom they had been obliged to leave among the bushes were yet alive ; three of the company were dispatched for that purpose, and very soon afterwards returned with the melan- choly news that they were dead. Notwithstanding the flattering appearance of the sky, the snow still continued to fall so thick that they could not venture out on their journey to the ship ; but about eight o'clock a small regular breeze sprung up, which, with the prevailing influence of the sun, at length cleared the air ; and they soon after, with great joy, saw the snow fall in large flakes from the trees, a certain sign of an approaching thaw. They now examined more critically the state of their invalids. Briscoe was still very ill, but said, that he thought himself able to walk ; and Mr. Buchan was much better than either he or his friends had any reason to expect. They were now, however, pressed by the calls of hunger, to which, after long fasting, every consideration of future good or evil immediately gives way. Before they set forward, therefore, it was unanimously agreed that they should eat their vul- ture ; the bird was accordingly skinned, and, it being thought best to divide it before it was fit to be eaten, it was cut into A SEA VOYAGE, AND AN ADVENTURE. 211 ten portions, and every man cooked his own as he thought fit. After this repast, which furnished each of them with about three mouthfuls, they prepared to set out ; but it was ten o'clock before the snow was sufficiently gone off, to render a march practicable. After a walk of about three hours, they we # re agreeably surprised to find themselves upon the beach, and much nearer to the ship than they had any reason to expect. Upon reviewing their track from tbe vessel, they perceived that, instead of ascending the hill in a line, so as to penetrate into the country, they had made almost a circle round it. When they came on board, they congratulated each other upon their safety, with a joy that no man can feel who has not been exposed to equal danger ; and as I had suffered great anxiety at their not returning in the evening of the day on which they set out, I was not wholly without my share. On the 1st of March, we were in latitude 38° 44 ; S. and longitude 110° o3 ; W. Many birds, as usual, were constantly about the ship, so that Mr. Banks killed no less than sixty-two in one day ; and what is more remarkable, he caught two forest flies, both of them of the same species, but different from any that have hitherto been described ; these probably belonged to the birds, and came with them from the land, which we judged to be at a great distance. Mr. Banks, also, about this time, found a large cuttle-fish, which had just been killed by the birds, floating in a man- gled condition upon the water ; it is very different from tbe cuttle-fishes that are found in the European seas ; for its arms, instead of suckers, were furnished with a double row of very sharp talons, which resemble those of a cat, and, like them, were retractable into a sheath of skin, from which they might be thrust at pleasure. Of this cuttle-fish we made one of the best soups we bad ever tasted. 212 * SEA VOYAGE, AND AN ADVENTURE. The albatrosses now began to leave us, and after the 8th there was not one to be seen. We continued our course without any memorable event till the 24th, when some of the people who were upon the watch in the night reported that they saw a log of wood pass by the ship ; and that the sea, which was rather rough, became suddenly as smooth as a mill-pond. It was a general opinion that there was land to windward ; but I did not think myself at liberty to search for what I was not sure to find ; though I judged we were not far from the islands that were discovered by Qui- ros in 1G06. Our latitude was 22° 11/ S. and longitude 127° 55' W. On the 25th, about noon, one of the marines, a young fellow about twenty, was placed as sentry at the cabin door ; while he was upon this duty, one of my servants was at the same place preparing to cut a piece of seal-skin into tobacco- pouches. He had promised one to several of the men, but had refused one to this young fellow, though he had asked him several times; upon which he jocularly threatened to steal one, if it should be in his power. It happened that the servant, being called hastily away, gave the skin in charge to the sentinel, without regarding what had passed between them. The sentinel immediately secured a piece of the skin, which the other missing at his return, grew angry ; but, after some altercation, contented himself with taking it away, declaring that, for so trifling an affair, he would not complain of him to the officers. But it happened that one of his fellow-soldiers, overhearing the dispute, came to the knowledge of what had happened, and told it to the rest ; who, taking it into their heads to stand up for the honour of their corps, reproached the offender with great bitterness, and reviled him in the most opprobrious terms; they exaggerated his offence into a crime of the deepest A SEA VOYAGE, AND AN ADVENTURE. 213 dye ; they said it was a theft by a sentry when he was upon duty, and of a thing that had been committed to his trust ; they declared it a disgrace to associate with him ; and the sergeant, in particular, said, that if the person from whom the skin had been stolen would not complain, he would com- plain himself ; for that his honour would suffer if the offender was not punished. From the scoffs and reproaches of these men of honour, the poor young fellow retired to his ham- mock in an agony of confusion and shame. The sergeant soon after went to him, and ordered him to follow him to the deck. He obeyed without reply ; but it being in the dusk of the evening, he slipped from the sergeant and went forward. He was seen by some of the people, who thought he was gone to the head ; but a search being made for him afterwards, it was found that he had thrown himself over- board ; and I was then first made acquainted with the theft and its circumstances. The loss of this man was the more regretted, as he was remarkably quiet and industrious.* About one o'clock, on Monday the 10th of April, some of the people who were looking out for the island to which we were bound, said they saw land ahead, in that part of the horizon where it was expected to appear ; but it was so faint, that, whether there was land in sight or not, remained a matter of dispute till sunset. The next morning, how- ever, at six o'clock, we were convinced that those who said they had discovered land were not mistaken ; it appeared to. be very high and mountainous, extending from W. by S. \ S. to W. by N. -J N. ; and we knew it to be the same that Captain Wallis had called King Greorge the Third's Island. * This poor lad war probably one of the most conscientious persons among the crew, and had been envied for his good conduct. But his quiet may have been accompanied with reserve, an unpopular and indeed sus- picious quality 214 A SEA VOYAGE, AND AN ADVENTURE. We were delayed in our approach to it by light airs and calms, so that in the morning of the 12th we were but little nearer than we had been the night before ; but about seven a breez<~ sprung up, and before eleven several canoes were seen making towards the ship. There were but few of them, however, that would come near ; and the people in those that did, could not be persuaded to come on board. In every canoe there were young plantains, and branches of a tree which the Indians call E'Midlio ; these, as we after- wards learned, were brought as tokens of peace and amity ; and the people in one of the canoes handed them up the ship's side, making signals at the same time with great earnestness which we did not immediately understand ; at length we guessed that they wished these symbols should be placed in some conspicuous part of the ship ; we, there- fore, immediately stuck them among the rigging, at which they expressed the greatest satisfaction. We then pur- chased their cargoes, consisting of cocoa-nuts, and various kinds of fruit, which, after our long voyage, were very ac- ceptable. We stood on with an easy sail all night, with soundings from twenty-two fathoms to twelve; and about seven o'clock in the morning we came to an anchor in thirteen fathoms in Port Royal Bay, called by the natives Matavai. We were immediately surrounded by the natives in their canoes, who gave us cocoa-nuts, fruit resembling apples, bread-fruit, and some small fishes, in exchange for beads and other trifles. They had with them a pig, which they would not part with for anything but a hatchet, and therefore we refused to pur- chase it; because, if we gave them a hatchet for a pig now, we knew they would never afterwards sell one for less, and we could not afford to buy as many as it was probable we should want at that price. The bread-fruit grows on a tree A SEA VOYAGE, AND AN ADVENTURE. 215 that is about the size of a middling oak : its leaves are fre- quently a foot and a half long, of an oblong shape, deeply sinuated like those of the fig-tree, which they resemble in consistence and colour, and in the exuding of a white milky juice upon being broken. The fruit is about the size and shape of a child's head, and the surface is reticulated not much unlike a truffle ; it is covered with a thin skin, and has a core about as big as the handle of a small knife ; the eatable part lies between the skin and the core ; it is as white as snow, and somewhat of the consistence of new bread. It must be roasted before it is eaten, being first divided into three or four parts. Its taste is insipid, with a slight sweetness somewhat resembling that of the crumb of wheaten bread mixed with a Jerusalem artichoke. Among others who came off to the ship was an elderly man, whose name, as we learned afterwards, was Owhaw, and who was immediately known to Mr. Gore and several others who had been here with Captain Wallis. As I was informed that he had been very useful to them, I took him on board the ship with some others, and was particularly attentive to gratify him, as I hoped he might also be useful to us. As soon as the ship was properly secured, I went on shore with Mr. Banks and Dr. Solander, a party of men under arms, and our friend Owhaw. We were received from the boat by some hundreds of the inhabitants, whose looks at least gave us welcome, though they were struck with such awe, that the first who approached us crouched so low that he almost crept upon his hands and knees. It is remarkable, that he, like the people in the canoes, present- ed to us the same symbol of peace that is known to have been in use among the ancient and mighty nations of tho northern hemisphere — the green branch of a tree. We re 216 A SEA VOYAGE, AND AN ADVENTURE. ceived it with looks and gestures of kindness and satisfac tion ; and observing that each of them held one in his hand, we immediately gathered every one a bough, and carried it in our hands in the same manner. They marched with us about half a mile towards the place where the Dolphin had watered, conducted by Owhaw ; then they made a full stop, and having laid the ground bare, by clearing away all the plants that grew upon it, the principal persons among them threw their green branches upon the naked spot, and made signs that we should do the same. We immediately showed our readiness to comply, and to give a greater solemnity to the rite, the marines were drawn up, and marching in order, each dropped his bough upon those of the Indians, and we followed their ex- ample. We then proceeded, and when we came to the watering-place it was intimated to us by signs, that we might occupy that ground, but it happened not to be fit for our purpose. During our walk they had shaken off their first timid sense of our superiority, and were become familiar; they went with us from the watering-place, and took a cir- cuit through the woods. As we went along, we distributed beads and other small presents among them, and had the satisfaction to see that they were much gratified. Our circuit was not less than four or five miles, through groves of trees, which were loaded with cocoa-nuts and bread-fruit, and afforded the most grateful shade. Under these trees were the habitations of the people, most of them being only a roof without walls, and the whole scene realized the poet- ical fables of Arcadia. %mm% %n\{% milt fjlmuscnmit. It is a common thing for men of business to say that they are "fond of books, but have no time for reading." In some instances this may really be the case ; but, for the most part, they had better acknowledge that they care little for what they can find no time to do. In these, as in most other circumstances, "where there is a will there is a way ;" and it is the design of the following extracts from the life of William Hutton to show it. They may be of service both to em- ployers and the employed. The best workman is he who can do his work with cheerfulness ; he is the man whose nature is the best and completest, who has his faculties most about him, and in the most fitting abundance ; and the way to turn our faculties to the best ac- count, is to give them fair play — to see that the senses of the mind (if we may so call them) have as much reasonable fruition as those that contribute to the nourishment and refreshment of the body. Hutton of Birmingham (as he is familiarly called) combined, in a remarkable manner, prudence with enterprise, industry with amusement, and the love of books with devotion to business, and all because he was a tho- rough*human being of his class, probably from causes anterior to his birth. Not that his father was a person of any very edifying descrip- tion. His son gives the following amusing account of him : — " Though my father was neither young, being forty-two, nor handsome, having lost an eye, nor sober, for he spent all he could get in liquor, nor clean, for his trade was oily, nor without shackles, for he had five children, yet women of various descriptions courted his smiles, and were much inclined to pull caps for him." But this squalid Lothario probably sup- plied him with wit and address, and his mother with thought and a good constitution. 10 2 1 8 PASS A GES FR OM A U TO BIO GRA PHY OF BUTTON. William Ilutton was the son of a poor wool-worker. He was brought up as a poor weaver, had not a penny in the world, became a bookbinder under the poorest auspices, and ended with being a rich man, and living in wealth and honour to the age of ninety-two. The passages selected are from a life of him written by himself, and in the original are accompanied with a great deal of additional matter, all worth reading, and in the course of which he gives an account of the rise and progress of his courtship of Mrs. Hutton, here only intimated. He was one of the sufferers from the Riots of Birmingham (which he has recorded), and author of amusing Histories of that town and of Derby. The Robert Bage whom he mentions as his friend and bene- factor, and who was another man of his sort, though in every respect of a higher class, is better known by his writings than his name, being no other than the author of Hermspfong, Man as he Is, and other novels well known to the readers of circulating libraries, and admired by Wal- ter Scott. Two such men of business as Hutton and Robert Bage have seldom come together, at least not in the eyes of the world ; and as they came in the shapes of bookseller and paper-maker, we have special pleasure in thus bringing them before the reader. PASSAGES FROM THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OP "WILLIAM HUTTON. 1741. TTTHAT the mind is bent upon obtaining, the y V hand seldom fails in accomplishing. I de- tested the frame, as totally unsuitable to my temper ; there- fore I produeed no more profit than necessity demanded. I made shift, however, with a little overwork and a little credit, to raise a gentetl suit of clothes, fully adequate to the sphere in which I moved. The girls eyed me with some attention ; nay I eyed myself as much as any of them. 1743. At Whitsuntide I went to see my father, and was favourably received by my acquaintance. One of them played upon the bell-harp. I was charmed with the sound, and agreed for the price, when I could raise the sum, half a-crown. PASSAGES FROM A UTOBIOGRAI'HY OF HVTTON. 219 At Michaelmas I went to Derby, to paj for and bring back my bell-harp, whose sound I thought seraphic. This opened a scene of pleasure which continued many years. Music was my daily study and delight. But, perhaps, I laboured under greater difficulties than any one had done before me. I could not afford an instructor. I had no books, nor could I borrow, or buy ; neither had I a friend to give me the least hint, or put my instrument in tune. Thus I was in the situation of a first inventor, left to grope in the dark to find something. I had first my ear to bring into tune, before I could tune the instrument ; for the ear is the foundation of all music. That is the best tune which best pleases the ear, and he keeps the best time who draws the most music from his tune. For six months did I use every effort to bring a tune out of an instrument which was so dreadfully out, it had no tune in it. Assiduity never forsook me. I was encouraged by a couplet I had seen in Dyce's Spelling-book : "Despair of nothing that you would attain, Unwearied diligence your point will gain !." When I was able to lay a foundation, the improvement and the pleasure were progressive. Wishing to rise, I borrowed a dulcimer, made one by it, then learned to play upon it. But in the fabrication of this instrument, I had neither timber to work upon, tools to work with, nor money to purchase either. It is said " necessity is the mother of invention." I pulled a large trunk to pieces, one of the relics of my family but formerly the property of Thomas Parker, the first Earl of Macclesfield. And as to tools, I con- sidered that the hammer-key and the plyers belonging to the stocking-frame, would supply the place of hammer and pincers. My pocket-knife was all the edge-tools I could 220 PASSAGES FROM A UTOBIOGBAPHY OF HUTTON. raise ; a fork, with one limb, was made to act in the double capacity of spring-awl and gimlet. I quickly was master of this piece of music ; for if a man can play upon one instrument he can soon learn upon any. A young man, apprentice to a baker, happening to see the dulcimer, asked if I could perform upon it. Struck with the sound, and with seeing me play with what he thought great ease, he asked if I would part with the in- strument, and at what price? I answered in the affirmative, and, for sixteen shillings. He gave it. I told him, " If he wanted advice, or his instrument wanted tuning, I would assist him." ' : Oh no. there's not a doubt but I shall do." I bought a coat with the money, and constructed a better instrument. ........ 1746. An inclination for books began to expand; but here, as in music and dress, money was wanting. The first article of purchase was three volumes of the Gentleman's Magazine, 1742, 3, and 4. As I could not afford to pay for binding, I fastened them together in a most cobbled style. These afforded me a treat. I could only raise books of small value, and these in worn-out bindings. I learned to patch, procured paste, varnish, &c, and brought them into tolerable order ; erect- ed shelves, and arranged them in the best manner I was able. If I purchased shabby books, it is no wonder that I dealt with a shabby bookseller who kept his working appa- ratus in his shop. It is no wonder, too, if by repeated visits I became acquainted with this shabby bookseller, and often saw him at work ; but it is a wonder and a fact, that I never saw him perform one act but I could perform it myself; so strong was the desire to attain the art. PASSAGES FROM A UTOBIOGRAPEY OF IIUTTON. 22 1 I made no secret of my progress, and the bookseller rather encouraged me, and for two reasons: I bought such rubbish as nobody else would ; and he had often an oppor- tunity of selling me a cast-off tool for a shilling, not worth a penny. As I was below every degree of opposition, a rival- ship was out of the question. The first book I bound was a very small one, Shak- speare's Venus and Adonis. I showed it to the bookseller. He seemed surprised. I could see jealousy in his eye. However, he recovered in a moment. He had no doubt but I should break. He offered me a worn-down press for two shillings, which no man could use, and which was laid by for the fire. I considered the nature of its construction, bought it, and paid the two shillings. I then asked him to favour me with a hammer and a pin, which he brought with half a conquer- ing smile, and half a sneer. I drove out the garter-pin, which, being galled, prevented the press from working, and turned another square, which perfectly cured the press. He said in anger, " If I had known, you should not have had it." However, I could see he consoled himself with the idea that all must return in the end. This proved for forty- two years my best binding press. I now purchased a tolerably genteel suit of clothes, and was so careful of them, lest I should not be able to procure another, that they continued my best for five years. The stocking-frame being my own, and trade being dead, the hosiers would not employ me ; they could scarcely em- ploy their own frames. I was advised to try Leicester, and took with me half-a-dozen pair of stockings to sell. I visited several warehouses ; but, alas ! all proved blank. They would neither employ me, nor give for my goods anything near prime cost. As I stood like a culprit before a gentlo- 222 PASSA&BS FROM AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF BUTTON. man of the name of Bennet, I was so affected, that I burst into tears, to think that I should have served seven years to a trade at which I could not get bread. My sister took a house, and to soften the rent, my brother and I lodged with her. 1747. It had been the pride of my life, ever since pride commenced, to wear a watch. I bought a silver one for thirty-five shillings. It went ill. I kept it for four years, then gave that and a guinea for another, which went as ill. I afterwards exchanged this for a brass one, which going no better, I sold it for five shillings ; and to complete the watch farce, I gave the five shillings away, and went with- out a watch thirty years. I had promised to visit my father on Whitsun eve, at Derby. Business detained me till it was eleven at night before I arrived. Expectation had for some time been on the stretch, and was now giving way. My father being elevated with liquor, and by my arrival, rose in ecstasy, and gave me the first kiss, and, I believe, the last he ever gave me. This year I began to dip into rhyme. The stream was pleasant, though I doubt whether it flowed from Helicon. Many little pieces were the produce of my pen, which, per- haps, pleased ; however, they gave no offence, for they slept on my shelf till the rioters burnt them in 1791. 1748. Every soul who knew me scoffed at the idea of my book-binding, except my sister, who encouraged and ! me; otherwise I must have sunk under it. I con- sidered that I was naturally of a frugal temper; that I could watch every penny, live upon a little ; that I hated stocking-making, but not book-binding; that if I continued at the frame, I was certain to be poor ; and if I ventured to leave it, I could not be so. My only fear was lest I PASSAGES PR OIL AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF IIVTTON. 223 should draw in my friends ; for I had nothing of my own. I had frequently heard that every man had, some time or other in his life, an opportunity of rising. As this was a received opinion, I would nofeontradict it. I had, how- ever, watched many years for the high tide of my affairs, but thought it never yet had reached me. I still pursued the two trades. Hurt to see my three volumes of magazines in so degraded a state, I took them to pieces, and clothed them in a superior dress. 1749. It was now time to look out for a future place of residence. A large town must be the mark, or there would be no room for exertion. London was thought of, between my sister and me, for I had no soul else to consult. This was rejected for two reasons. I could not venture into such a place without a capital, and my work was not likely to pass among a crowd of judges. My plan was to "fix upon some market town, within a stage of Nottingham, and open shop there on the market day, till I should be better prepared to begin the world at Birmingham. I fixed upon Southwell, as the first step of elevation. It was fourteen miles distant, and the town as despicable as the road to it. I went over at Michaelmas, took a shop at the rate of twenty shillings a-year, sent a few boards for shelves, a few tools, and about two hundredweight of trash, which might be dignified with the name of books, and worth, perhaps, a year's rent of my shop. I was my own joiner, put up the shelves and their furniture, and in one day be- came the most eminent bookseller in the place. During this rainy winter, I set out at five every Satur- day morning, carried a burden of from three pounds weight to thirty, opened shop at ten, starved in it all day upon 224 PASSA GES FROM A UTOBIOGBA PHY OF 1IUTT0N. bread, cheese, and half a pint of ale, took from one to six shillings, shut up at four, and by trudging through the solitary night and the deep roads five hours more, I ar- rived at Nottingham by nine ; where I always found a mess of milk porridge by the fire, prepared by my valuable sister. Nothing short of a surprising resolution and rigid eco- nomy could have carried me through this scene. 1750. Returning to Nottingham, I gave warning to quit at Southwell, and prepared for a total change of life. On the 10th of April, I entered Birmingham, for the third time, to try if I could be accommodated with a small shop. If I could procure any situation, I should be in the way of procuring a better. On the 1 1 th I travelled the streets of Birmingham, agreed with Mrs. Dix for the lesser half of her shop, No. 6 in Buil Street, at one shilling a-week ; and slept at Lichfield in my way back to Not- tingham. On May 13th, Mr. Rudsdall, a dissenting minister of Gainsborough, with whom my sister had lived as a servant, travelling from Nottingham to Stamford, recpuested my company, and offered to pay my expenses, and give me eighteenpence a day for my time. The afternoon was wet in the extreme. He asked why I did not bring my great- coat 1 Shame forbade an answer, or I could have said I had none. The water completely soaked through my clothes, but not being able to penetrate the skin, it filled my boots. Arriving at the inn. every traveller, I found, was wet ; and every one produced a change of apparel but me. I was left out because the house could produce no more. I was obliged to sit the whole evening in my drenched garments, and to put them on nearly as wet on my return the next morning ! What could I expect but destruction ? Fortu- nately I sustained no injury. PASSAGES FROM A VTO BIOGRAPHY OF MUTTON. 225 It happened that Mr. Rudsdall, now declined house- keeping, his wife being dead. He told my sister that he should part with the refuse of his library, and would sell it to me. She replied, " He has no money." '• We will not differ about that. Let him come to Gainsborough ; he shall have the books at his own price." I walked to Gainsborough on the 15th of May, stayed there the 16th, and came back on the 17th. The books were about two hundred pounds' weight. Mr. Rudsdall gave me his corn chest for their deposit ; and for payment, drew the following note, which I signed : — " I promise to pay to Ambrose Rudsdall, one pound seven shillings, when I am able." Mr. Rudsdall observed, " You never need pay this note if you only say you are not able." The books made a better show, and were more val- uable than all I possessed beside. I had now a most severe trial to undergo ; parting with my friends, and residing wholly among strangers. May 23rd, I left Nottingham, and I arrived at Birmingham on the 25th. Having little to do but look into the street, it seemed singular to see thousands of faces pass, and not one that I knew. I had entered a new world, in which I led a melancholy life, a life of silence and tears. Though a young man, and of rather a cheerful turn, it was remarked " tbat I was never seen to smile." The rude family into which I was cast added to the load of melancholy. My brother came to see me about six weeks after my arrival, to whom I observed, that the trade had fully sup- ported me. Five shillings a-week covered every expense ; as food, rent, washing, lodging, &c. Thus a solitary year rolled round, when a few young men of elevated character and sense took notice of me. I had saved about twenty 10* 226 PAHS A GES FROM A UT0B10GRAPHY OF HUTTON. pounds, and was become more reconciled to my situation. The first who took a fancy to me was Samuel Salte, a mer- cer's apprentice, who five years after, resided in London, where he acquired £100.000. He died in 1797. Our inti- macy lasted his life. In this first opening of prosperity, an unfortunate cir- cumstance occurred which gave me great uneasiness, as it threatened totally to eclipse the small prospect before me. The overseers, fearful I should become chargeable to the parish, examined me with regard to my settlement ; and, with the voice of authority, ordered me to procure a certifi- cate, or they would remove me. Terrified, I wrote to my father, who returned for answer, " That All Saints, in Derby, never granted certificates." I was hunted by ill-nature two years. I repeatedly of. fered to pay the levies, which was refused. A succeeding overseer, a draper, of whom I had purchased two suits of clothes, value £10, consented to take them. The scruple exhibited a short sight, a narrow principle, and the exulta- tions of power over the defenceless. Among others who wished to serve me, I had two friends, Mr. Dowler, a surgeon, who resided opposite me, and Mr. < ! race, a hosier at the Gateway, in the High-street. Great consequences often arise from small things. The house ad- joining that of Mr. Grace's, was to be let. My friends both urged me to take it. I was frightened at the rent, eight pounds. However, one drew, and the other pushed, till tiny placed me there. A small house is too large for a man without furniture, and a small rent may be too large for an income which has nothing certain in it but the smallness Having felt the extreme of poverty, I dreaded nothing so much ; but I believed I had seized the tide, and I was un- willing to stop. PASS A GES FR OM A U TO BIO GBA PHY OF H UTTON. 227 Here I pursued business in a more elevated style, and with more success. No event in a man's life is more consequential than mar- riage ; nor is any more uncertain. Upon this die his sum of happiness depends. Pleasing views arise, which vanish as the cloud ; because, like that, they have no foundation. Circumstances change, and tempers with them. Let a man's prior judgment be ever so sound, he cannot foresee a change ; therefore he is liable to deception. I was de- ceived myself, but, thanks to my kind fate, it was on the right side. I found in my wife more than I ever expected to find in woman. Just in proportion as I loved her, I must regret her loss. If my father, with whom I only lived fourteen years, who loved me less, and has been gone forty, never is a day out of my thoughts, what must be my thoughts towards her, who loved me as. herself, and with whom I resided an age ! 1756. — My dear wife brought me a little daughter, who has been the pleasure of my life to this day. We had now a delightful plaything for both. Robert Bage, an old and intimate friend, and a paper- maker, took me to his inn, where we spent the evening. He proposed that I should sell paper for him, which I might either buy on my own account, or sell on his by commission. As I could spare one or two hundred pounds, I chose to purchase ; therefore appropriated a room for the reception of goods, and hung out a sign — The Paper Ware- house. From this small hint I followed the stroke forty years, and acquired an ample fortune. 1763. — "We took several pleasurable journeys; among others, one at Aston, and in a superior style to what we had done before. This is the peculiar privilege of us Birming- 0-28 PASSAGES FROM A UT0B10GKAPHY OF HUTTON. ham men : if ever we acquire five pounds extraordinary, w. take care to show it. 1764. — Every man has his hobby-horse and it is no dis- grace prudently to ride him. He is the prudent man who can introduce cheap pleasures without impeding business. About ten of us, intimate friends, amused ourselves with playing at tennis. Entertained with the diversion, we erected a tennis-court and met on fine evenings for amuse- ment, without expense. I was constituted steward of our little fraternity. My family continued their journeys, and were in a pros perous state. THE EXD. CONTENTS OF THE SECOND SERIES. PAQH Against Inconsistency in our Expectations . Mrs. Barbauld. 7 The Enchantments of the Wizard Indolence, and Exploits of the Knight Sir Industry. From the " Castle of Indolence" Thomson. 14 Stories, now first collected, from the "Tatler," "Spectator," and " Guardian" Sir Richard Steele. 39 Valentine and Unnion 42 The Fire 43 The Wedding Day 46 The Shipwreck 48 The Alchemists 50 The Violent Husband 54 Inkle and Yarico 55 The Fits , 58 Clubs of Steele and Goldsmith 61 The Spectator's Club Steele. 65 The Club of the Tatler " 71 Clubs — Choice Spirits — Muzzy Club — Harmonical So- ciety Goldsmith. 77 Count Fathom's Adventure in the Lone Cottage . Smollett. 84 The Hermit Parnell. 93 Peter Pounce's Dialogue with Parson Adams. From "Joseph Andrews" Fielding. 104 Verses Written at an Inn at Henley Shenstone. Ill Five Letters • . . Gray. 115 To Horace Walpole — A Fox-hunter — A Poet's Solitude — Southern the Dramatist 116 To Richard West — Bad Spirits — Recollections of Hus- bands and Statesmen at School US VI CONTENTS. PAQ a To the Reverend Norton Nicholls — Banter of Formal Excuses and Fine Exordiums — Southampton — An Abbot — Sunrise 119 To the Same — A Mother — Scenery of Kent .... 121 To the Same — Having a Garden of One's Own — Shen- stone — Second Banter of Formal Apologies . . . .123 Advantages of Cultivating a Taste for Pictures Jon. Richardson. 126 Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College .... Gray. 136 A Long Story " 140 Sir Roger de Coverley. From the " Spectator" . . Addison. 148 Sir Roger's Household Establishment . . .... 148 His Behavior in Church on a Sunday 152 Sir Roger and the Gipsies 155 His Visit to the Tombs in Westminster Abbey . . .159 Manners of the French Colonel Pinckney. 164 A House and Grounds 173 Thoughts on a Garden. From a Letter to Evelyn. Cowley. 1*78 Thoughts on Retirement. From one of his Letters Sir W. Temple. 183 Old English Garden of the Seventeenth Century " 185 Petition for an Absolute Retreat . . Lady Winchihea. 188 An Old Country House and an Old Lady. From the "Lounger" Mackenzie. 192 Love of the Country in the Decline of Life. From the same 198 Two Sonnets, and an Inscription on a Spring. Thomas Warton. 204 Inscription over a Calm and Clear Spring 205 Written in a Blank Leaf of Dugdale's "Monasticon" . . 205 Written after seeing Wilton House 205 Descriptions of Night. From the Notes to Ossian . Macpherson. 207 Retirement and Death of a Statesman. From " Memoirs of The Right Honorable Charles James Fox" Trotter. 214 Elegy in a Country Churchyard Gray, 222 Sgainst 3nrimsistat| in nut ^ijurtntinris. FROM AN ESSAY BY MRS. BARBAULD. Better writing or reasoning than the following it would not be easy to find. There are some additional remarks in the original, which, though not without merit, we cannot help thinking by an in- ferior hand, and have, therefore, omitted. Every sentence here set down is admirable ; nor is there anything, however vigorous in the tone, which a noble-minded woman might not utter, without commit- ting the delicacy of her sex. All is conformable to kindness as well as zeal, and to the beauty of right thinking. In reading this excellent piece of advice one feels astonished to think how so many could have stood in need of it, ourselves perhaps among the number. But so it is. We feel it to have been necessary, while we are surprised at its having been so ; and we become anxious that all the world should be acquainted with it. The good it is cal- culated to do is evident, and of the greatest importance. We have heard of reflecting men who are proud to acknowledge their obliga- tions to it; who say it has influenced the greater part of their lives ; and we know of others who have spoken of it with admiration ; Mr. Hazlitt for one. At the same time, good as the spirit of the admonition is for every- body, the line drawn between the seekers of wealth and the cultiva- tors of wisdom appears to us to be a little too strong; or at least .to have become so in our days, whatever the case may have been in those in which it was written. The recognition of the beauty and 8 AGAINST INCONSISTENCY even the utility of mental accomplishments has latterly been keeping better pace with commercial industry ; men in trade have influenced the opinions of the world on the most unexpected and important points, by means of their share of them ; and in the passages ex- tracted from the biography of Hutton, the reader has seen an account of a man who, in Mrs. Barbauld's own time, rose to wealth from the humblest beginnings, and whose career was accompanied, neverthe- less, by a love of books and by liberal feelings, by the regard and assistance of men of genius, and by the warmest affections of his family. The instance of his distinguished friend Bage, the novelist and paper-maker, is still more striking on the side of independence. But we have noticed them both more at large in the place referred to, as well as the exceptions to sordid rules that have occurred in all ages and nations. Still the essay remains necessary to many, useful and a good caution to all. Our gratitude must not forget, that the chief honor of the admoni- tion remains with the good old Stoic philosopher, the following pas- sage out of whose writings Mrs. Barbauld made the text of her sermon : — "What is more reasonable than that they who take paina for anything, should get most in that particular for which they take pains ? They have taken pains for power, you for right principles ; they for riches, you for a proper use of the appear- ance of things. See whether they have the advantage of you in that for which you have taken pains, and which they neglect. If they are in power, and you not, why will not you speak the truth to yourself, that you do nothing for the sake of power, but that they do everything? No: but since I take care to have right principles, it is more reasonable that I should have power. Yes, in respect to what you take care about, your principles; but give up to others the things in which they have taken more care than you; else it is just as if, because you have right principles, you should think it fit that when you shoot an arrow you should hit the mark better than an archer, or that you should forge better than a smith." — Carter's Epictetus. A S most of the unhappiness in the world arises rather from -^-*- disappointed desires than from positive evil, it is of the utmost consequence to attain just notions of the laws and order of the universe, that we may not vex ourselves with fruitless wishes, or give way to groundless and unreasonable discontent. The laws of natural philosophy, indeed, are tolerably understood and attended to ; and, though we may IN OUR EXPECTATIONS. 9 puffer inconveniences, we are seldom disappointed in con- sequence of them. No man expects to preserve oranges through an English winter; or when he has planted an acorn, to see it become a large oak in a few months. The mind of man naturally yields to necessity, and our wishes soon subside when we see the impossibility of their being gratified. Now, upon an accurate inspection, we shall find in the moral government of the world, and the order of the intellectual system, laws as determinate, fixed, and invariable as any in Newton's Pri?icipia. The progress of vegetation is not more certain than the growth of habit ; nor is the power of attraction more clearly proved, than the force of affection, or the influence of example. The man, therefore, who has well studied the operations of nature in mind as well as matter, will acquire a certain moderation and equity in his claims upon Providence ; he will never be disappointed either in himself or others ; he will act with precision, and expect that effect, and that alone, from his efforts, which they are naturally adapted to produce. For want of this, men of merit and integrity often censure the dispositions of Providence for suffering the characters they despise to run away with advantages which, they yet know, are purchased by such means as a high and noble spirit could never submit to. If you refuse to pay the price, why expect the purchase ? We should consider this world as a great mart of commerce, where Fortune exposes to our view various commodities, — riches, ease, tranquillity, fame, integrity, knowledge. Every- thing is marked at a settled price. Our time, our labor, our ingenuity, is so much ready money we are to lay out to the best advantage. Examine, compare, choose, reject, but stand to your own judgment, and do not, like children, when you have purchased one thing, repine that you do not possess another which you did not purchase. Such is the force of 1* 10 AGAINST INCONSISTENCY well-regulated industry, that a steady and vigorous exertion of our faculties, directed to one end, will generally insure success. Would you, for instance, be rich 1 Do you think that single point worth sacrificing everything else to? You may then be rich. Thousands have become so from the lowest beginnings, by toil and patient diligence, and atten- tion to the minutest articles of expense and profit ; but you must give up the pleasures of leisure, of a vacant mind, of a free, unsuspicious temper. If you preserve your integrity, it must be a coarse-spun and vulgar honesty. Those high and lofty notions of morals which you brought with you from schools must be considerably lowered, and mixed with a baser alloy of a jealous and worldly-minded prudence. You must learn to do hard, if not unjust things ; and as for the nice embarrassments of a delicate and ingenuous spirit, it is necessary for you to get rid of them as fast as possible. You must shut your heart against the Muses, and be content to feed your understanding with plain household truths. In short, you must not attempt to enlarge your ideas, or polish your taste, or refine your sentiments ; but keep on in one beaten track, without turning aside either to the right or to the left. " But I cannot submit to drudgery like this — I feel a spirit above it." 'Tis well : be above it then ; only do not repine that you are not rich. Is knowledge the pearl of price ? That, too, may be pur- chased by steady application and long solitary hours of study and reflection. Bestow these, and you shall be wise. " But," says the man of letters, " what a hardship is it, that many an illiterate fellow, who cannot construe the motto of the arms on his coach, shall raise a fortune and make a figure, while I have little more than the common conveniences of life." Et tibi magna satis ! — Was it in order to raise a fortune that you consumed the sprightly hours of youth in study and re- IN OUR EXPECTATIONS. H irement ? "Was it to be rich that you grew pale over the midnight lamp, and distilled the sweetness from the Greek and Roman spring ? You have, then, mistaken your path, and ill employed your industry. " What reward have I then for all my labors ?" What reward ! A large comprehen- sive soul, well purged from vulgar fears, and perturbations, and prejudices, able to comprehend and interpret the works of man — of God ; a rich, nourishing, cultivated mind, pregnant with inexhaustible stores of entertainment and reflection ; a perpetual spring of fresh ideas ; and the conscious dignity of superior intelligence. Good heaven ! — and what reward can you ask besides ? " But is it not some reproach upon the economy of Prov- idence that such a one, who is a mean, dirty fellow, should have amassed wealth enough to buy a nation ?" Not in the least. He made himself a mean dirty fellow for that very end. He has paid his health, his conscience, his liberty for it ; and will you envy him his bargain ? Will you hang your head and blush in his presence, because he outshines you in equipage and show ? Lift up your brow with a noble confidence, and say to yourself, " I have not these things, it is true ; but it is because I have not sought, because I have not desired them. It is because I possess something better. I bave chosen my lot. I am content and satisfied." You are a modest man — you love quiet and independence, and have a delicacy and reserve in your temper which ren- ders it impossible for you to elbow your way in the world, and be the herald of your own merits. Be content, then, with a modest retirement, with the esteem of your intimate friends, with the praises of a blameless heart, and a delicate ingenuous spirit ; but resign the splendid distinctions of the world to those who can better scramble for them. The man whose tender sensibility of conscience, and strict 1-2 AGAINST INCONSISTENCY regard to the rules of morality, makes him scrupulous and fearful of offending, is often heard to complain of the disad- vantages he lies under in every path of honor and profit. " Could I but get over some nice points, and conform to the practice and opinion of those about me, I might stand as fair a chance as others for dignities and preferment." And why can you not? What hinders you from discarding this troublesome scrupulosity of yours which stands so grievously in your way ? If it be a small thing to enjoy a healthful mind, sound at the very core, that does not shrink from the keenest inspection, inward freedom from remorse and per- turbation, unsullied whiteness and simplicity of manners, a genuine integrity, " pure in the last recesses of the mind," — if you think these advantages an inadequate recompense for what you resign, dismiss your scruples this instant, and be a slave-merchant, a director, or — what you please. If these be motives too weak, break off by times ; and as you have not spirit to assert the dignity of virtue, be wise enough not to forego the emoluments of vice. I much admire the spirit of the ancient philosophers, in that they never attempted, as our moralists often do, to lowei the tone of philosophy, and make it consistent with all the in dulgeaces of indolence and sensuality. They never thought of having the bulk of mankind for their disciples, but kept themselves as distinct as possible from a worldly life ; they plainly told men what sacrifices were required, and what ad- vantages they were which might be expected. Si virtus hoc una potest dare, fortis omissis Hoc age deliciis. If you would be a philosopher, these are the terms. You must do thus and thus. There is no other way. If not, go and be one of the vulgar. IN OUR EXPECTATIONS. 13 There is no one quality gives so much dignity to a char- acter as consistency of conduct. Even if a man's pursuits be wrong and unjustifiable, yet if they are prosecuted with steadiness and vigor, we cannot withhold our admiration. The most characteristic mark of a great mind is to choose some one important object and pursue it through life. It was this made Caesar a great man. His object was ambition ; he pursued it steadily, and was always ready to sacrifice to ii every interfering passion or inclination. There is a pretty passage in one of Lucian's dialogues, where Jupiter complains to Cupid that though he has had so many intrigues, he was never sincerely beloved. " In order to be loved," says Cupid, " you must lay aside your aegis and your thunderbolts, and you must curl your hair and place a garland on your head, and walk with a soft step, and assume a winning obsequious deportment." " But," replied Jupiter, " I am not willing to resign so much of my dignity." " Then," returns Cupid, " leave off desiring to be loved." — He wanted to be Jupiter and Adonis at the same time. €\)i (Bnijjauininits nf \\)t Wiyrib 3uh\iuu, ana 1 ^xplnits of tljr Inigjjt lir Mttstrtj. FROM THE ''CASTLE OF INDOLENCE," BY THOMSON. The sequestered mansion in which, either in reality or in imagi- nation, we may be reading this poem, must not itself be a Castle of In- dolence ; yet everybody delights occasionally in being indolent, or in fancying that he shall have a right to be so some day or other. We please ourselves with pictures of perfect rest, even when we can nei- ther enjoy them, nor mean to do so. We would fain have the luxury without the harm or the expense ; there is a corner in every one's mind in which we nestle to it ; and hence the enjoyment of such poems as this by Thomson, in which every delight of the kind is set before us. The second part is not so good as the first. Thomson found himself more inspired by the vice than by its consequences. And we secretly feel as he and his fellow-idlers did, when Sir In- dustry first interrupted them. We resent the termination of our pleas- ures, and look upon the reforming knight as a dull and meddling fellow. Why should he wake us from such a pleasant dream 1 On reflection, however, we see that the fault is not his, but our own ; that we should wake up in a far worse manner, if Sir Industry did not rouse us. There is beautiful poetry in the second part, even exqui- site indolent bits, or places at least in which we might be indolent; in fine, we congratulate ourselves on our virtue, and begin, like the knight, to abuse the old rascally wizard who had pretended to make us his victims. We have retained the best passages in both parts, and ENCHANTMENTS OF THE WIZARD INDOLENCE. 15 the best only ; not without linking them in such a manner as the stanzas luckily enabled us to do, with no violation to a syllable, ex- cept the occasional loss of connection with a rhyme. Alteration was out of the question ; every word retained is the poet's, and no other is admitted. Thomson, who was once seen eating a peach off a tree with his hands in his waistcoat pockets, was fourteen or fifteen years writing the Castle of Indolence ; — a fitting period ! AVe are not to suppose he did nothing between whiles. He was both very indolent and very in- dustrious, for his mind was always at work on his enjoyments, as the world has good reason to know in possessing his Seasons. And he wrote tragedies besides, not so good, hut full of humane and generous sentiments, with passages worth picking out. He had the luck to be made easy in his circumstances by men in power before it was too late for him to enjoy what he made others enjoy ; so he lived at Rich- mond, singing like one of the birds whom he so justly describes as singing the better, the better they are fed ; that is to say, if the genius of singing be in them ; for this implies the necessity of giving vent to it. " What you observe concerning the pursuit of poetry," says he, in a letter to a friend, " so far engaged in it as I am, is certainly just. Besides, let him quit it who can, and ' erit mihi magnus Apollo,' or something as great. A true genius, like light, must be beaming forth, as a false one is an incurable disease. One would not, however, climb Parnassus, any more than your mortal hills, to fix forever on the bar- ren top. No ; it is some little dear retirement in the vale below that gives the right relish to the prospect, which, without that, is nothing but enchantment ; and though pleasing for some time, at last leaves us in a desert. The great fat doctor of Bath* told me that poets should be kept poor, the more to animate their genius. This is like the cruel custom of putting a bird's eye out that it may sing the sweeter ; but, surely, they sing sweetest amid the luxuriant woods, while the full spring blossoms around them." Beautifully said is this, and well reasoned too. It is a final answer to all the grudgers of a poet's comfort. Singing, it is true, might and does console him under any circumstances ; but why should we * Supposed to be Dr. Oheyne, who got fat and melancholy with good living, whereas Thomson got fat and merry ; for Cheyne was an owl, not a singing bird- 16 ENCHANTMENTS OF THE WIZARD INDOLENCE, wish him to be consoled, when he can be made happy 1 as happy as he would make ourselves 1 Thomson is a greater poet than the style of the Seasons would lead us to suppose. He was too modest to approach Nature in the garb of his natural simplicity, so he put on a sort of court suit of classical- ity, stuffed out with " taffeta phrases" and " silken terms precise." But the true genius is underneath. Perhaps there was something in it of a heavy temperament, and of the " indolence" to which it inclined him. He had a warm heart in a gross body. The Castle of Indolence has been thought his best poem, because the style was imitated from that of Spenser. It certainly contains as good poetry as any he wrote ; and the tone of Spenser is charmingly imitated, with an arch but de« lighted reverence. ■& j CANTO I. The castle hight of Indolence, And its false luxury ; Where for a little time, alas! We liv'd right joliily. MORTAL man, who livest here by toil, Do not complain of this thy hard estate ; That, like an emmet, thou must ever moil, Is a sad sentence of an ancient date ; And, certes, there is for it reason great ; For though sometimes it makes thee weep and wail, And curse thy star, and early drudge and late, Withouten that would come a heavier bale, Loose life, unruly passions, and diseases pale. In lowly dale, fast by a river's side, With woody hill o'er hill encompass'd round, A most enchanting wizard did abide, Than whom a fiend more fell is nowhere found. It was, I ween, a lovely spot of ground : And there, a season atween June and May, AND EXPLOITS OF THE KNIGHT SIR INDUSTRY. 17 Half prankt with spring, with summer half embrown'd, A listless climate made ; where, sooth to say, No living wight could work, ne cared ev'n for play. Was naught around but images of rest, Sleep-soothing groves, and quiet lawns between, And flowery beds that slumberous influence kest, From poppies breath'd, and beds of pleasant green, Where never yet was creeping creature seen. Meantime unnumber'd glittering streamlets play'd, And hurled everywhere their waters sheen ; That, as they bicker'd through the sunny glade, Though restless still themselves, a lulling murmur made. Join'd to the prattle of the- purling rills, Were heard the lowing herds along the vale, And flocks loud-bleating from the distant hills, And vacant shepherds piping in the dale : And now and then sweet Philomel would wail, Or stock-doves plain amid the forest deep, That drowsy rustled to the sighing gale ; And still a coil the grasshopper did keep ; Yet all these sounds yblent inclined all to sleep. Full in the passage of the vale, above, A sable, silent, solemn forest stood ; Where naught but shadowy forms was seen to move, As Idless fancy'd in her dreaming mood ; And up the hills, on either side, a wood Of blackening pines, ay waving to and fro, Sent forth a sleepy horror through the blood ; And where this valley winded out, below, The murmuring main was heard, and scarcely heard, to flow. IS ENCHANTMENTS OF THE WIZARD INDOLE NCR A pleasing land of drowsy-head it was, Of dreams that wave before the half-shut eye, And of gay castles in the clouds that pass, Forever flushing round a summer sky ; There eke the soft delights, that witchingly Instil a wanton sweetness through the breast, And the calm pleasures always hover'd nigh; But whate'er smack'd of noyance and unrest Was far, far off expcll'd from this delicious nest. The landskip such, inspiring perfect ease, Where Indolence (for so the wizard hight) Close hid his castle 'mid embowering trees, That half shut out the beams of Phoebus bright, And made a kind of chequer'd day and night. ###### While solitude and perfect silence reign'd, So that to think you dreamt you almost was constraiu'd. As when a shepherd of the Ilebrid Isles, Plac'd far amid the melancholy main, (Whether it be lone fancy him beguiles. Or that aerial beings sometimes deign To stand embodied to our senses plain) Sees on the naked hill or valley low, The whilst in ocean Phoebus dips his wain, A vast assembly moving to and fro, Then all at once in air dissolves the wondrous show. The doors that knew no shrill alarming bell, Ne cursed knocker ply'd by villain's hand, Self-opened into halls, where who can tell What elegance and grandeur wide expand, The pride of Turkey and of Persia land ? Soft quilts on quilts, on carpets carpets spread, and exf :j\ . \ • n 19 And couches stretoh'd around in soemlj band] \.ml endless pillows rise bo prop the bead So that eaob spacious room was one full swelling bed Ami everywhere huge oover'd tables stood, With wines high flavor'd and rich viands orown'd , Whatever sprightly juioe or tasteful food On the green bosom o[' this earth aw t'.uiml, Ami all old ooean genders in bis round Some hand unseen these silently display'd, E'en undemanded by d sight or sound , You need hut wish, and, instantly obey'd, Fair rang'd the dishes rose, and thick the gl i les play'd, The rooms with OOStly tape! * i \ wore hun • Where was inwoven many a gentle tale Such as of old the rural poets SUUg, Or of Arcadian or Sicilian vale j Reolining lovers in tho lonely dale Pour'd forth at Large the sweetly tortur'd board, Or, sighing tender passion, swell'd the gale, And taught oharm'd Eoho to resound bheir smart, While flooks, woods, streams, around, repose and paaos impart Each sound, too, here to Languishment inolin'd, Lull'd tho weak bosom, and induo'd to ease Aerial music in the warbling wind, At distance rii ing oft, by small degn Nearer and nearer eame, (ill o'er the tr< • It hung, and breath'd such soul-dissolving airs As did, alas! with soft perdition pleasi Entangled deep in its enchanting snart The Listening heart forgot all duties and all carei 20 ENCHANTMENTS OF THE WIZARD INDOLENCE, A certain music, never known before,* Here lull'd the pensive melancholy mind ; Full easily obtain'd. Behooves no more, But sidelong to the gently-waving wind, To lay the well-tun'd instrument reclin'd, From which, with airy-flying fingers light, Beyond each mortal touch the most refin'd, The god of winds drew sounds of deep delight, Whence, with just cause, the harp of iEolus it hight. Ah me ! what hand can touch the string so fine ? Who up the lofty diapason roll Such sweet, such sad, such solemn airs divine, Then let them down as;ain into the soul ? Now, rising love they fann'd ; now, pleasing dole They breath'd in tender musings through the heart ; And now a graver sacred strain they stole, As when seraphic hands an hymn impart ; Wild-warbling Nature all, above the reach of art ! Such the gay splendor, the luxurious state Of Caliphs old, who, on the Tigris shore, In mighty Bagdat, populous and great, Held their bright court, where was of ladies store, And verse, love, music, still the garland wore. When sleep was coy, the bard, in waiting there, Cheer'd the lone midnight with the Muses' lore : Composing music bade his dreams be fair, And music lent new gladness to the morning air. Near the pavilions where we slept still ran Soft tinkling streams, and dashing waters fell, And sobbing waters sigh'd, and oft began (So work'd the wizard) wintry storms to swell, * The ^Eolian harp, just then invented AND EXPLOITS OF THE KNIGHT SIR INDUSTRY. 21 As heaven and earth they would together mell ; At doors and windows threatening seem'd to call The demons of the tempest growling fell ; Yet the least entrance found they none at all, Where sweeter grew our sleep, secure in mossy hall. One great amusement of our household was, In a huge crystal magic globe to spy, Still as you turn'd it, all things that do pass Upon this ant-hill earth ; where constantly Of idly -busy men the restless fry Run bustling to and fro with foolish haste In search of pleasures vain that from them fly, Or which obtain'd the caitiffs dare not taste: When nothing is enjoy'd, can there be greater waste? Of vanity the mirror this was call'd. Here you a muckworm of the town might see At his dull desk, amid his ledgers stall'd, Ate up with carking care and penurie, Most like to carcase parch'd on gallows tree. " A penny saved is a penny got ;" Firm to this scoundrel-maxim keepeth he, Ne of its rigor will he bate a jot, Till it has quench'd his fire and banished his pot. Strait from the filth of this low grub, behold ! Comes fluttering forth a gaudy spendthrift heir, All glossy gay, enamell'd all with gold, The silly tenant of the summer air. In folly lost, of nothing takes he care ; Pimps, lawyers, stewards, harlots, flatterers vile, And thieving tradesmen him among them share ; His father's ghost from Limbo Lake the while Sees this, which more damnation doth upon him pile. 22 ENCHANTMENTS OF THE WIZARD INDOLENCE, Of all the gentle tenants of the place, There was a man of special grave remark;* A certain tender gloom o'erspread his face, Pensive, not sad ; in thought involv'd, not dark ; As soot this man would sing as morning lark, And teach the noblest morals of the heart ; But these his talents were yburied stark ; Of the fine stores he nothing would impart, Which or boon Nature gave, or nature-painting Art. To noontide shades incontinent he ran, Where purls the brook with sleep-inviting sound, Or when Dan Sol to slope his wheels began, Amid the broom he bask'd him on the ground, Where the wild thyme and camomil are found ; There would he linger, till the latest ray Of light sate trembling on the welkin's bound ; Then homeward through the twilight shadows stray Sauntering and slow : so had he passed many a day. Yet not in thoughtless slumber were they^past ; For oft the heavenly fire, that lay conceal'd Beneath the sleeping embers, mounted fast, And all its native light anew reveal'd. Oft as he travers'd the cerulean field, And mark'd the clouds that drove before the wind Ten thousand glorious systems would he build, Ten thousand great ideas fill'd his mind ; But with the clouds they fled, and left no trace behiDt With him was sometimes join'd in silent walk, (Profoundly silent, for they never spoke,) * Who this person was. does not appear to have been discoT».icd, AND EXPLOITS OP THE KNIGHT SIR INDUSTRY. 23 One shier still,* who quite detested talk ; Oft stung by spleen, at once away he broke To groves of pine and broad o'ershadowing oak ; There, inly thrill'd, he wander'd all alone, And on himself his pensive fury wroke, Ne never utter'd word save when first shone The glittering star of eve — " Thank Heaven, the day is done I" Here lurk'd a wretch who had not crept abroad For forty years, ne face of mortal seen ; In chamber brooding like a loathly toad, And sure his linen was not very clean ; Through secret loop-holes that had practis'd been Near to his bed, his dinner vile he took ; Unkempt and rough, of squalid face amd mien, Our Castle's shame ; whence, from his filthy nook, We drove the villain out, for fitter lair to look. One day there chaunc'd into these hills to rove A joyous youth, f who took you at first sight ; Him the wild wave of pleasure hither drove Before the sprightly tempest tossing light ; Certes, he was a most engaging wight, Of social glee, and wit humane tho' keen, Turning the night to day and day to night ; For him the merry bells had rung I ween, If in this nook of quiet bells had ever been. But not e'en pleasure to excess is good ; What most elates, then sinks the soul as low : * Supposed to be Armstrong. f Probably the author's friend Patterson, his deputy in the office of Surveyor-General of the Leeward Islands. 24 ENCHANTMENTS OF THE WIZARD INDOLENCE, When spring-tide joy pours in with copious flood, The higher still th' exulting billows flow, The farther back again they flagging go, And leave us grovelling on the dreary shore. Taught by this son of Joy, we found it so, Who, whilst he staid, kept in a gay uproar Our madden'd Castle all, the abode of Sleep no more. As when in prime of June a burnish'd fly, Sprung from the meads, o'er which he sweeps along, Cheer'd by the breathing bloom and vital sky, Tunes up amid these airy halls his song, Soothing at first the gay reposing throng ; And oft he sips their bowl ; or, nearly drown'd, He, thence recovering, drives their beds among, And scares their tender sleep with trump profound, Then out again he flies to wing his mazy round. * Another guest there was of sense refin'd, Who felt each worth, for every worth he had ; Serene, yet warm ; humane, yet firm his mind ; As little touch'd as any man's with bad : Him through their inmost walks the Muses lad, To him the sacred love of Nature lent, And sometimes would he make our valley glad ; When as we found he would not here be pent, To him the better sort this friendly message sent— " Come, dwell with us, true son of Virtue ! come ; But if, alas ! we cannot thee persuade To lie content beneath our peaceful dome Ne ever more to quit our quiet glade, * Lord Lyttlcton. AND EXPLOITS OF THE KNIGHT SIR INDUSTRY. 25 Yet when at last thy toils, but ill apaid, Shall dead thy fire, and damp its heavenly spark, Thou wilt be glad to seek the rural shade, There to indulge the Muse, and Nature mark ; We then a lodge for thee will rear in Hagley Park." Here whilom ligg'd th' Esopus of the age * But call'd by Fame, in soul ypricked deep, A noble pride restor'd him to the stage, And rous'd him like a giant from his sleep. E'en from his slumbers we advantage reap : With double force th' enliven'd scene he wakes, Yet quits not Nature's bounds. He knows to keep Each due decorum. Now the heart he shakes, A.ndnow with well-urged sense th' enlightened judgment takes, A bard here dwelt, more fat than bard beseems,f Who void of envy, guile, or lust of gain, On Virtue still, and Nature's pleasing themes, Pour'd forth his unpremeditated strain ; The world forsaking with a calm disdain, Here laugh'd he careless in his easy seat ; Here quaff'd encircled by the joyous train, Oft moralizing sage ; his ditty sv/eet He loathed much to write, ne cared to repeat. Full oft by holy feet our ground was trod ; Of clerks good plenty here you mote espy ; A little, round, fat, oily man of God,| "Was one I chiefly mark'd among the fry : He had a roguish twinkle in his eye, * Quin, the actor. f Thomson himself. All but the first line of this stanza is under stood to have been written by a friend. ± The Rev. Mr. Murdoch, the poet's first biographer. 2 26 ENCHANTMENTS OF THE WIZARD INDOLENCE, And shone all glittering "with ungodly dew, If a tight damsel chanc'd to trippen by ; Which when observ'd, he shrunk into his mew, And strait would recollect his piety anew. Nor be forgot a tribe who minded naught ( Old inmates of the place) but state affairs ; They look'd, perdie, as if they deeply thought, And on their brow sat every nation's cares. The world by them is parcel'd out in shares. When in the Hall of Smoke they congress hold, And the sage berry sun-burnt Mocha bears Has clear'd their inward eye, then smoke-enroll'd, Their oracles break forth, mysterious as of old. Here languid beauty kept her pale-fac'd court : Bevies of dainty dames of high degree From every quarter hither made resort, Where, from gross mortal care and business free, They lay pour'd out, in ease and luxury : Or should they a vain show of work assume, Alas ! and well -a-day ! what can it be 1 To knot, to twist, to range the vernal bloom ; But far is cast the distaff, spinning-wheel, and loom. Their only labor was to kill the time ; And labor dire it is, and weary woe : They sit, they loll, turn o'er some idle rhyme, Then, rising sudden, to the glass they go, Or saunter forth with tottering step and slow : This soon too rude an exercise they find ; Strait on the couch their limbs again they throw ; Where hours and hours they sighing lie reclin'd, And court the vapory god, soft breathing in the wind. AND EXPLOITS OF THE KNIGHT SIR INDUSTRY. 27 Now must I mark the villany we found : But ah ! too late, as shall eftsoons be shown. A place here was, deep, dreary, underground, Where still our inmates, when unpleasing grown, Diseas'd and loathsome, privily were thrown. Far from the light of heaven, they languish' d there Unpitied, uttering many a bitter groan : For of these wretches taken was no care ; Fierce fiends and hags of hell their only nurses were. * Alas ! the change ! from scenes of joy and rest, To this dark den, where sickness toss'd alway. Here Lethargy, with deadly sleep opprest, Stretch'd on his back, a mighty lubbard, lay, Heaving his sides, and snored night and day. To stir him from his traunce it was not eath ; And his half-open'd eyne he shut straitway ; He led, I wot, the softest way to death, And taught withouten pain and strife to yield the breath. Of limbs enormous, but withal unsound, Soft-swol'n and pale, here lay the Hydropsy : Unwieldy man ! with belly monstrous round, Forever fed with watery supply : For still he drank, and yet he still was dry. And moping here did Hypochondria sit, Mother of Spleen, in robes of various dye, Who vexed was fall oft with ugly fit ; And some her frantic deem'd, and some her deem'd a wit. A lady proud she was, of ancient blood, Yet oft her fear her pride made crouchen low ; * These four concluding stanzas of Canto I. were written by Arm strong. 28 ENCHANTMENTS OF THE WIZARD INDOLENCE, She felt, or fancied, in her fluttering mood, All the diseases which the spittles know, And sought all physic which the shops bestow, And still new leeches and new drugs would try, Her humor ever wavering to and fro ; For sometimes she would laugh, and sometimes cry, Then sudden waxed wroth, and all she knew not wiry. Fast by her side a listless maiden pin'd, "With aching head, and squeamish heart-burnings ; Pale, bloated, cold, she seem'd to hate mankind, Yet lov'd in secret all forbidden things. And here the Tertian shakes his chilling wings : The sleepless Gout here counts the crowing cocks ; A wolf now gnaws him, now a serpent stings : Whilst Apoplexy cramm'd Intemperance knocks Down to the ground at once, as butcher felleth ox. CANTO II. The Knight of Arts und Industry, And his achievements fair, That hy his Castle's overthrow Secured and crowned were. ESCAP'D the Castle of the Sire of Sin, Ah ! where shall I so stfeet a dwelling find ? For all around without, and all within, Nothing save what delightful was and kind, Of goodness savoring and a tender mind, E'er rose to view : but now another strain Of doleful note, alas ! remains behind ; I now must sing of pleasure turn'd to pain, And of the false enchanter Indolence complain. AND EXPLOITS OF THE KNIGHT SIR INDUSTRY. 29 Is there do patron to protect the Muse, And fence for her Parnassus' barren soil? To every labor its reward accrues, And they are sure of bread who swink and moil ; liut a fell tribe th' Aonian hive despoil, As ruthless wasps oft rob the painful bee : Thus while the laws not guard that noblest toil, Ne for the Muses other meed decree, They praised are alone, and starve right merrily. I care not, Fortune, what you me deny ; You cannot rob me of free Nature's grace ; You cannot shut the windows of the sky, Through which Aurora shows her brightening facf : You cannot bar my constant feet to trace The woods and lawns, by living stream, at eve : Let health my nerves and finer fibres brace, And I their toys to the great children leave : Of fancy, reason, virtue, naught can me bereave. Come then, my Muse ! and raise a bolder song ; Come, lig no more upon the bed of sloth, Dragging the lazy languid line along, Fond to begin, but still to finish loath, Thy half-wit scrolls aL eaten by the moth ; Arise, and sing that generous imp of fame, Who with the sons of Softness nobly wroth, To sweep away this human lumber came, Or in a chosen few to rouse the slumbering flame. The tidings reach'd to where, in quiet hall, The good old knight enjoy'd well-earnt repose. " Come, come, Sir Knight, thy children on thee call : Come save us yet, ere ruin round us close, SO ENCHANTMENTS OF THE WIZARD INDOLENCE, The demon Indolence thy toil o'erthrows." On this the noble color stain'd his cheeks, Indignant, glowing thro' the whitening snows Of venerable eld ; his eye full-speaks His ardent soul, and from his couch at once he breaks. I will (he cried) so help me, God ! destroy That villain Archimage. — His page then strait He to him called, a fiery-footed boy, Benempt Dispatch. " My steed be at the gate ; My bard attend ; quick, bring the net of Fate." This net was twisted by the Sisters three, Which when once cast o'er hardened wretch, too late Repentance comes ; replevy cannot be From the strong iron grasp of vengeful Destiny. He came, the bard, a little Druid-wight, Of wither'd aspect ; but his eye was keen, "With sweetness mix'd. In russet gown bedight, As is his sister of the copses green, He crept along, unpromising of mien. Gross he who judges so. His soul was fair, Bright as the children of yon azure sheen. True comeliness, which nothing can impair, Dwells in the mind : all else is van'ty and glare. " Come" (quoth the knight), " a voice has reach'd mine ear ; The demon Indolence threats overthrow To all that to mankind is good and dear : Come, Philomelus ! let us instant go, O'erturn his bowers, and lay his Castle low Those men, those wretched men ! who will be slaves. Must drink a bitter wrathful cup of woe ; But some there be thy song, as from their graves, Shall raise. Thrice happy he ! who without rigor saves." AND EXPLOITS OF THE KNIGHT SIR INDUSTRY. 31 Thus holding high discourse, they came to where The cursed carle was at his wonted trade, Still tempting heedless men into his snare, In witching wise, as I before have said ; But when he saw, in goodly gear array'd, The grave majestic knight approaching nigh, And by his side the bard so sage and staid, His countenance fell ; yet oft his anxious eye Mark'd them, like wily fox who roosted cock doth spy. Nathless, with feign'd respect he bade give back The rabble rout, and welcom'd them full kind ; Struck with the noble twain, they were not slack His orders to obey, and fall behind. Then he resum'd his song, and, unconfin'd, Pour'd all his music, ran thro' all his strings ; With magic dust their eyne he tries to blind, And virtue's tender airs o'er weakness flings. What pity base his song, who so divinely sings ! Elate in thought he counted them his own, They listcu'd so intent with fix'd delight ; But they, instead, as if transmew'd to stone, Marvell'd he could with such sweet art unite The lights and shades of manners wrong and right. Meantime the silly crowd the charm devour, Wide pressing to the gate. Swift on the knight He darted fierce to drag him to his bower, Who back'ning shunn'd his touch, for well he knew his power As in throng'd amphitheatre, of old, The wary Retiarius trapp'd his foe, E'en so the knight, returning on him bold, At once involv'd him in the net of woe, 32 ENCHANTMENTS OF THE WIZARD INDOLENCh, Whereof I mention made not long ago. Enrag'd at first, he scorn'd so weak a jail, And leapt, and flew, and flounced to and fro ; But when he found that nothing could avail, lie sat him felly down, and gnaw'd his hitter nail. Alarm'dj th' inferior demons of the place Ilais'd rueful shrieks and hideous yells around ; Black stormy clouds deform'd the welkin's face, And from beneath was heard a wailing sound, As of infernal sprights in cavern hound ; A solemn sadness every creature strook And lightnings flask'd, and horror rock'd the ground ; Huge crowds on crowds outpour'd with hlemish'd look, As if on time's last verge this frame of things had shook. Soon as the shortdiv'd tempest was yspent, Steam'd from the jaws of vext Avernus' hole, And hush'd the hubbub of the rabblement, Sir Industry the first calm moment stole. " There must" (he cried), '• amid so vast a shoal, Be some who are not tainted at the heart, Not poison'd quite by this same villain's bowl ; Come then, my Bard ! thy heavenly fire impart ; Touch soul with soul, till forth the latent spirit start." The bard obey'd ; and taking from his side, "Where it in seemly sort depending hung, His British harp, its speaking strings he try'd, The which with skilful touch he deftly strung, Till tinkling in clear symphony they rung : Then, as he felt the Muses come along, Light o'er the chords his raptured hand he flung, And play'd a prelude to his rising song ; The whilst, like midnight mute, ten thousands r ound him throng. AND EXPLOITS OF THE KNIGHT SIR INDUSTRY. 33 Thus ardent burst Ills strain — " Ye hapless race ! Dire-laboring here to smother Reason's ray, That lights our Maker's image in our face, And gives us wide o'er earth unquestion'd sway, What is th' ador'd Supreme Perfection, say ? What, but eternal never-resting soul, Almighty power, and all-directing day, By whom each atom stirs, the planets roll ; Who fills, surrounds, informs, and agitates the whole. " Is not the field, with lively culture green, A sight more joyous than the dead morass? Do not the skies with active ether clean And fann'd by sprightly Zephyrs, far surpass The foul November fogs, and slumb'rous mass With which sad Nature veils her drooping face 1 Does not the mountain-stream, as clear as glass, Gay-dancing on, the putrid pool disgrace 1 The same in all holds true, but chief in human race. " Had unambitious mortals minded naught But in loose joy their time to wear away, Had they alone the lap of Dalliance sought, Pleas'd on their pillow their dull heads to lay, Rude Nature's state had been our state to-day ; No cities e'er their towery fronts had rais'd, No arts had made us opulent and gay ; With brother-brutes the human race had graz'd ; None e'er had soar'd to fame, none honor'd been, none prais'd. " Great Homer's song had never fir'd the breast To thirst of glory and heroic deeds ; Sweet Maro's muse, sunk in inglorious rest, Had silent slept amid the Mincian reeds : 2* 34 ENCHANTMENTS OF THE WIZARD INDOLENCE, The wits of modern time had told their beads. And monkish legends been their only strains ; Our Milton's Eden had lain wrapped in weeds, Our Shakspeare stroll'd and laugh'd with "Warwick swains, Ne had my master Spenser charm'd his Mulla's plains. "But should to fame your hearts unfeeling be, If right I read, you pleasure all require ; Then hear how best may be obtain'd this fee, How best enjoy'd this Nature's wide desire. Toil, and be glad ; let industry inspire Into your quicken'd limbs her buoyant breath ; Who does not act, is dead : absorpt entire In miry sloth, no pride, no joy he hath ; leaden-hearted Men, to be in love with death ! " who can speak the vigorous joys of health ; Unclogg'd the body, unobscur'd the mind ; The morning rises gaj-, with pleasing stealth, The temperate evening falls serene and kind ; In health the wiser brutes true gladness find ; See ! how the younglings frisk along the meads, As May comes on, and wakes the balmy wind ; Rampant with life, their joy all joy exceeds; Yet what but high-strung health this dancing pleasaunca breeds ? " There are, I see, who listen to my lay, Who wretched sigh for virtue, but despair. All may be done, (methinks I hear them say,) E'en death despis'd, by generous actions fair ; All but for those who to these bowers repair; Their every power dissolv'd in luxury, To quit of torpid Sluggishness the lair, AND EXPLOITS OF THE KNIGH'l SIR INDUSTRY. 35 And from the powerful arms of Sloth get free Pis rising from the dead — alas ! — it cannot be ! ' Would you then learn to dissipate the band Of these huge threat'ning difficulties dire, That in the weak man's way like lions stand, His soul appall, and damp his rising fire ? Resolve, resolve, and to be men aspire. Exert that noble privilege, alone, Here to mankind indulg'd ; control desire ; Let godlike Reason, from her sovereign throne, Speak the commanding word, I will ! — and it is done. " Heavens ! can you then thus waste, in shameful wise, Your few important days of trial here ? Heirs of eternity ! yborn to rise Through endless states of being, still more near To bliss approaching, and perfection clear? Can you renounce a fortune so sublime 1 Such glorious hopes, your backward steps to steer, And roll, with vilest brutes, through mud and slime ? No ! no ! your heaven-touch'd hearts disdain the sordid crime !" "Enough ! enough !" they cried. Strait from the crowd The better sort on wings of transport fly ; As when amid the lifeless summits proud Of Alpine cliffs, where to the gelid sky Snows pil'd on snows in wintry torpor lie, The rays divine of vernal Phoebus play, Th' awaken'd heaps, in streamlets from on high, Rous'd into action, lively leap away, Glad warbling through the vales, in their new being gay. 36 ENCHANTMENTS OF THE WIZARD INDOLENCE, But for the greater part with rage inflaui'd, Dire-mutter'd curses, and blasphem'd high Jove. " Ye sons of Hate !" (they bitterly exclaim'd), " What brought you to this seat of peace and love 1 While with kind Nature, here amid the grove, We passed the harmless sabbath of our time, What to disturb it could, fell men, emove Your barbarous hearts 1 Is happiness a crime 1 Then do the fiends of hell rule in yon heaven sublime.' " Ye impious wretches !" (quoth the knight in wrath), " Your happiness behold !" — then strait a wand He wav'd, an anti-magic power that hath Truth from illusive falsehood to command. Sudden the landscape sinks on every hand ; The pure quick streams are marshy puddles found ; On baleful heaths the groves all blacken'd stand ; And o'er the weedy, foul, abhorred ground, Snakes, adders, toads, each loathsome" creature crawls around And here and there, on trees by lightning scath'd, Unhappy wights, who loathed life, yhung ; Or in fresh gore and recent murder bath'd, They weltering lay ; or else, infuriate flung Into the gloomy flood, while ravens sung The funeral dirge, they down the torrent roll'd : These by distemper'd blood to madness stung, Had doom'd themselves ; whence oft, when night con- troll'd The world, returning hither their sad spirits howl'd. Attended by a glad acclaiming train Of those he rescued had from gaping heli, AND EXPLOITS OF THE KNIGHT SIR INDUSTRY. 37 Then turu'd the knight, and to his hall again Soft pacing, sought of Peace the mossy cell ; Yet down his cheeks the gems of pity fell, To see the helpless wretches that remaind, There left through delves and deserts dire to yell ; Amaz'd, their looks with pale dismay were stain'd, And spreading wide their hands, they meek repentance feign'd But, ah ! their scorned day of grace was past ; For (horrible to tell) a desert wild Before them stretch'd, bare, comfortless, and vast, With gibbets, bones, and carcases defil'd. There nor trim field nor lively culture smil'd, Nor waving shade was seen, nor mountain fair ; But sands abrupt on sands lay loosely pil'd, Thro' which they floundering toil'd with painful care, Whilst Phoebus smote them sore, and fir'd the cloudless air. Then, varying to a joyless land of bogs, The sadden'd country a gray waste appear'd, Where naught but putrid streams and noisome fogs Forever hung on drizzly Auster's beard ; Or else the ground by piercing Caurus sear'd, Was jagg'd with frost, or heap'd with glazed snow : Thro' these extremes a ceaseless round they steer'd, By cruel fiends still hurried to and fro, Gaunt Beggary, and Scorn, with many hell-hounds moa The first was with base dunghill rags yclad, Tainting the gale in which they flutter'd light ; Of morbid hue, his features sunk and sad ; His hollow eyne shook forth a sickly light ; And o'er his lank jaw-bone, in piteous plight, His black rough beard was matted rank and vile ', 38 ENCHANTMENTS OF THE WIZARD INDOLENCE. Direful to see ! an heart-appalling sight ! Meantime foul scurf and blotches him defile, And dogs, where'er he went, still barked all the while. The other was a fell despightful fiend : Hell holds none worse in baleful bower below ; By pride, and wit, and rage, and rancor, keen'd ; Of man alike, if good or bad, the foe ; With nose upturn'd, he always made a show, As if he smelt some nauseous scent ; his eye Was cold and keen, like blast from boreal snow, And taunts he casten forth most bitterly. Such were the twain that off drove this ungodly fry. E'en so thro' Brentford town, a town of mud, An herd of bristly swine is prick'd along ; The filthy beasts, that never chew the cud, Still grunt, and squeak, and sing their troublous song And oft they plunge themselves the mire among • But aye the ruthless driver goads them on, And aye, of barking dogs the biter throng Makes them renew their unmelodious moan ; Ne ever find they rest from their unresting tone Itorifs hj fir Eitjjarfc ItwU. NOW FIRST COLLECTED. These stories, with the exception of two, compose the entire set contributed by this great master of character and sentiment to the Tatler, Spectator, and Guardian. They are remarkable for going to the heart of their subjects with a comprehensive brevity ; and are just such stories as a man might tell over his wine to a party of friends. Addison's stories, are of a more fanciful sort, and more ele- gant in the style ; some of them are charming ; but they are pieces of writing— these are relations. They have all the warmth as well as brevity of unpremeditated accounts, given as occasion called them forth. Steele, indeed, may be said to have always talked, rather than written ; and hence the beauties as well as defects of his style, which is apt to be too carelessly colloquial. Steele, like Fielding, Smollett, Goldsmith— in fact, like almost all our most entertaining wits and novelists, not excepting (on a great scale) Sir Walter Scott himself— was an impulsive and imprudent man, not attentive enough to his outlays, and too sanguine about his income. He warranted, perhaps, the remonstrances of his staider friend Ad- dison ; and was more touched than comforted by them, from feeling that they were useless. The remonstrances (if they were of the harsh and practical nature they are said to have been), would have come with less ungraciousness from a more genial and generous man ; that is to say, supposing such a man would have thought them advisable. Objections to men like Steele come indeed with grace from none but 40 STORIES BY SIR RICHARD STEELE. generous persons, liable to his temptations, and superior to them. Such persons have made such objections, though not unaccompanied with assumptions that might have been spared ; probably in conse- quence of the re-action in Steele's favor in the writings of Hazlitt and others. The objections, however, deserve to be respectfully re- plied to ; and the just reply, we think, is, that you must consider every writer and every man as the result of all the circumstances that have made him what he is, bodily and mental, and then judge whether that result is a gain and pleasure to the world, and a compensation for the less allowable of those circumstances. For a man cannot be one man and another too ; cannot be Steele and Addison both ; at least we are not aware that any such person has been met with, how ever modified the varieties of their like may be. Would you have had no such thing as Steele's imprudence, and been content to lose the Taller and the Guardian ? as .Fielding's, and been without Tom Jones and Amelia ? as Smollett's, and had no Roderick Random or Humphrey Clinker ? Or, if you say that Addison could have written, and did write, as good and humorous things as those, will you say that the others did not write with a difference from Addison ; and with such a difference as the world strongly feels and highly delights in 1 You will grant this of course. What constitutes, then, the dif- ference of Steele, of Fielding, and of Smollet, from such a writer as Addison 1 and could that difference have delighted us as it does, had it not resulted from the entire natures and circumstances of the men ■? Very foolish and very presumptuous, we grant, would it be in any given imprudent person to quote their example in his defence, even though he should turn out some day to have had warrant for it, or be regarded with indulgence meantime by such as think he has. Those who have nothing in them to justify such an exceptional con- sideration, come under another category altogether, whatever may be said in their excuse ; and those who have something, must be content modestly to await the chance of its recognition, and to pay in the meantime the penalty of its drawbacks. If there were no worse men in the world than Steele, what a planet we should have of it 1 Steele knew his own foibles as well as any man. He regretted, and made amends for them, and left posterity a name for which they have reason to thank and love him. Posterity thanks Addison too ; but it can hardly be said to love him, even by the help of the good old knight Sir Roger, whom Steele invented for him. STORIES BY SIR RICHARD STEELE. 41 Perhaps they'would have loved him more, had lie too confessed his faults ; or even had he told them in what the only one consisted, at which he hinted when he sent for Gay on his death-bed, and asked his pardon for having done him some wrong. Steele asked pardon for wrong, long before he died. The last thing we hear of him is neither a solitary acknowledgment nor a Christian vaunt, but his sit- ting out of doors in his retirement, giving the village maidens prizes to contend for. He said modestly of his life — (far too modestly, for he was a loving husband and father, and a disinterested patriot), that it " was but pardonable ;" and in his beautiful effusion to the memory of his friend Estcourt the comedian, he expressed his gratitude to that honest mimic for having made him sensible of his defects, and taught him to care for nothing but the subjection of his will. The reader will find the passage below.* Truly curious was it, and lucky for the world that Dick Steele and Joseph Addison should have grown up together from childhood, and become the Beaumont and Fletcher of social ethics. But they had * " What was peculiarly excellent in this memorable companion was, that in the accounts he gave of persons and sentiments he did not only hit the figure of their faces and manner of their gestures, but he would, in his narrations, fall into their way of thinking, and this when he recounted passages wherein men of the best wits were concerned, as well as such wherein were represented men of the lowest rank of understanding. It is certain as great an instance of self-love to a weakness, to be impatient of being mimicked, as any can be imagined. There were none but the vain, the formal, the proud, or those who were incapable of amending their faults, dreaded him ; to others he was in the highest degree pleasing : and I do not know any satisfaction of any different kind I ever tasted so much, as having got over an im- patience of seeing myself in the air he could put me when I had displeased him. It is indeed owing to his exquisite talent this way, more than any philosophy I could read ot. eople of the name of King) ; the St. George's Club, who swore " Before George" (which would seem to be Jacobitical, if they had not met on St. George's day) ; Street Clubs (composed of members residing in the same street) ; the Huiu-Druni and Mum Clubs (who ingeniously smoked and held their tongues) ; the Duellists (famous for being killed and " hung") ; the Kit-Cat (the great Whig Club, whose name originated in tails made by Christopher Katt) ; the Beef-Steak (founded by Est- court the comedian) ; the October (a club of Tory country-gentlemen and beer-drinkers) ; the Ugly Club ; the Sighing or Amorous Club ; the Fringe-Glove Club (a set of fop?) ; the Hebdomadal (a set of quid- nuncs) ; the Everlasting (some of whom were always sitting) ; the Cluli of She-Romps, who once a month "demolished a prude" (this looks like a foundation of Steele's acquaintance, Lady Mary Wortley Montague) ; the Mohochs, who demolished windows and watchmen, and ran their swords through sedan-chairs (really) ; the Little or Short (lull (an invention of Pope's) ; the Tall (an invention of Addison's) ; the Terrible (Steele's) ; the Silent, who had loud wives, and whose motto was, "Talking spoils company" (an invention of Zachary Pearce's, bishop of Rochester) ; and last not least, the Club at the Trumpet, in Shire Lane, of which more anon. These, w r e believe, are all the Clubs mentioned in the Taller, Spectator, and Guardian. Brookes's, and (we think) White's, which are still places of meeting for the wits, politicians, and gamblers of high life, arose before the CLUBS OF STEELE AND GOLDSMITH. G3 dissolution of some of them. Then there is the second Beef-Steak Club (founded hy Rich the harlequin) ; the famous Literary Club (originating with Dr. Johnson) ; the Club of Monks at Medmenham Abbey (a profligate mistake) ; the King of Clubs (Bobus Smith's, " himself a club," brother of Sydney) ; and the high quality club en- titled Nulli Sccundus, or Second to None (which a metaphysical wag might translate, Worse than Nothing). Endless would be the enu- meration, even if they could be discovered, of the Freemason and other clubs, which have attained a minor celebrity, and imitations of which branch off through all the gradations of tavern and public- house, and are to be found all over the kingdom, — such as Odd Fel- lows, Merry Fellows, Eccentrics, Free and Easys, Lords and Com- mons, &c. &c, illustrious at Cheshire Cheeses, and Holes in the Wall ; and often better than best for comfort. We must not forget one, how- ever, of which we have read somewhere, called the Livers, which had bottles shaped like inverted cones, so that the wine would " stand" with nobody, but was forced to be always in circulation. The reader will not be surprised to hear, that these " Livers" were famous for dying before their time. Johnson said, that a tavern chair was the " throne of human felici- ty." That to him it was, we have no doubt ; and with admirable wit and sense he filled it. Yet the word " throne" betrays a defect in the right club notion. His felicity consisted in laying down the law, and having the best of the argument. There was too much in it of his illustrious namesake the poet. , We suspect, however, that although Johnson was greatest among his great friends, he was pleasantest among his least. He had to make the most of them in his turn, and to set them a good example. He has the merit of having invented the word " clubable." Boswell, said he, is a " clubable man." He meant intelligent, social, and good tempered. These are the three great requisites for a clubbist ; and it is better to miss the intelli- gence than the sociality, and the sociality than the good temper. The great end of a club is the refreshment to the spirits, after the cares of business or of home, whether those cares be of a bad or a good sort ; and though intellect may be everything with some, and sociality with others, better is the merest puff of a tobacco-pipe with peace, than Johnson himself or Burke without it. We are for the Hum-Drums in preference to the Duellists ; for a little noise with good fellowship to the Hum-Drums ; for good fellowship and wit without the noise to 64 CLUBS OF STEELE AND GOLDSMITH. anything. But if we cannot have all we desire in those respects,, give us a few chatty, cordial people, neither geniuses nor fools, with whom the news of the day and questions of personal interest can be ex- changed, with the certainty that there will at least be peace and har- mony, if little wit. Intellect and wit enough can be got from books ; perhaps too much of them may have been met with in the course of the day. But a club is the next thing before a pillow ; and if it is to refresh you after the day's employment, it should do it in a manner that at all events dismisses you tranquilly to your repose for the night. We suspect, upon the whole, that the Street and Village Clubs have been most successful ; meetings established by the natural course of tilings, and expecting nothing but a comparison of daily notes and a little cheerful refreshment. As to great Reform and Conservative Clubs, Athenseums, &c, they may be good for public objects, but publicity has nothing to do with the comfort suitable to the club proper ; and those institutions in fact, club-wards, are but escapes from domesticity into cheapness and solitude. A man may be a great frequenter of them, and club with nothing but callers on business and a lonely dinner-table. The club to belong to, of all others, would be one composed of good-natured men of genius, such as Steele, Fielding, and Thomson, who had reflection enough for all subjects, enthusiasm enough to give them animation, good breeding enough to hinder the animation from becoming noisy, and humanity enough to make allow- ance for honest occasional departures from any rule whatever. Shak- speare would include such men in his all-comprehensive person; but Ave are not sure that he would not over-inform the club with intellect ; set it too abundantly thinking; and besides, it is difficult, as modern clubbists, to take to the idea of a man of a distant period, with a dif- ferent style of language, and retrospective meats and drinks. Other- wise Chaucer would surely be a perfect member ; and who would not rejoice in the company of Suckling and Marvelll We have selected the following clubs from the writings of Steele and Goldsmith, as exemplifying the three main varieties ; the well- bred, humorsome, but intellectual club (for though Sir Roger de Cov- v and Will Honeycomb make the principal figures in the account it is to be recollected that the Spectator is there) ; the Trumpet Club in Shire Lane, frequented by the Tatler, which is the ordinary common-place club of smokers and old story-tellers, by way of opiate bedwards ; and the clubs of low life, which Goldsmith, as a cosmopo-' THE SPECTATOR'S CLUB. 65 lite, delighted to paint, and which had probably often seen him as a visitor, without suspecting that the simple-looking Irishman was a genius come to immortalize it. Steele's delineations are exquisite; but Goldsmith's are no less so. THE SPECTATOR'S CLUB.* BY STEELE. rpiIE first of our society is a gentleman of Worcestershire, -*- of ancient descent, a baronet, his name Sir Roger de Cov- erley. His great-grandfather was inventor of that famous country-dance which is called after him. All who know that shire are very well acquainted with the parts and merits of Sir Roger. He is a gentleman that is very singular in his behavior, but his singularities proceed from his good sense, and are contradictions to the manners of the world, only as he thinks the world is x in the wrong. However, this humor creates him no enemies, for he does nothing with sourness or obstinacy ; and his being unconfined to modes and forms makes him but the readier and more capable to please and oblige all who know him. When he is in town he lives in Soho Square. It is said he keeps himself a bachelor by rea- son he was crossed in love by a perverse beautiful widow of the next county to him. Before this disappointment Sir Roger was what you call a fine gentleman, had often supped with my Lord Rochester and Sir George Etherege, fought a duel upon his first coming to town, and kicked Bully Dawson in a public coffee-house for calling him youngster, f But be- * No. 2. \ This has been thought inconsistent with Sir Roger's character for simplicity ; but it is not so. It only shows that simplicity is com- patible with the imitation of anything in vogue during the outset of life. Collins, the poet, whose subsequent appearance Johnson de- 66 CLUBS OF STEELE AND GOLDSMITH. ing ill-used by the above-mentioned widow, he was very se- rious for a year and a half; and though, his temper being naturally jovial, he at last got over it, he grew careless of himself and never dressed afterwards. He continues to wear a coat and doublet of the same cut that were in fashion at the time of his repulse, which, in his merry humors, he tells us has been in and out twelve times since he first wore it. 'Tis said Sir Roger grew humble in his desires after he had forgot this cruel beauty, insomuch that it is reported he has frequently offended in point of chastity with beggars and gipsies ; but this is looked upon by his friends rather as a matter of raillery than truth. He is now in his fifty-sixth year, cheerful, gay, and hearty ; keeps a good house both in town and country; a great lover of mankind; but there is such a mirthful cast in his behavior, that he is rather beloved than esteemed. His tenants grow rich ; his servants look satisfied ; all the young women profess love to him, and the young men are glad of his company. When he comes into a house he calls the servants by their names, and talks all the way up stairs to a visit. I must not omit, that Sir Roger is Justice of the Quorum ; that he fills the chair at a Quarter Session with great ability ; and three months ago gained universal applause by explaining a passage in the Game Act. The gentleman next in esteem and authority among us is another bachelor, who is a member of the Inner Temple ; a man of great probity, wit, and understanding; but he has chosen his place of residence rather to obey the direction of scribes as ' : deeent and manly," astonished his friends by the foppish- ness of his dress on his first coming to town ; and Charles Fox, the simplest of men, was at one time a beau of the first fashion. At least be undertook to appear such. AVe suspect that the fopperies of Sir Roger, and of the poet, and the statesman, might all have been seen through by discerning eyes. THE SPECTATOR'S CLUB. 67 an old humorsome father, than in pursuit of his own inclina- tions, fie was placed there to study the laws of the land, and is the most learned of any of the house in those of the stao-e. Aristotle and Longinus are much better understood by him than Littleton or Coke. The father sends up, every post, questions relating to marriage-articles, leases, and ten- ures, in the neighborhood ; all which questions he agrees with an attorney to answer in the lump. He is studying the passions themselves, when he should be inquiring into the de- bates among men which arise from them. He knows the argument of each of the Orations of Demosthenes and Tully, but not one case in the reports of our own courts. No one ever took him for a fool ; but none, except his most intimate friends, know he has a great deal of wit. This turn makes him at once both disinterested and agreeable. As few of his thoughts are drawn from business, they are most of them fit for publication. His taste for books is a little too just for the age lives in. He has read all, but approves of very few. His familiarity with the customs, manners, actions, and writings of the ancients, makes him a very delicate observer of what occurs to him in the present world. He is an excellent critic ; and the time of the play is his hour of business. Exactly at five he passes through New Inn, crosses through Russell Court, and takes a turn at Will's* till the play be- gins. He has his shoes rubbed and his periwig powdered at the barber's, as you go in to the Rose.f It is for the good of the audience when he is at a play, for the actors have an am- bition to please him. * A coffee-house in Russell Street, Covent Garden, frequented by the wits. It occupied the south-west corner of Bow Street ; and was the house that Dryden had frequented. f The tavern mentioned in the pleasant story of the " Medicine" in the first volume of the Taller, No. 2. We know not where it stood ; probably in Rose Street, in the above neighborhood. 68 CLUBS OF STEELE AND GOLDSMITH. The person of next consideration is Sir Andrew Freeport, a merchant of great eminence in the city of London ; a per- son of indefatigable industry, strong reason, and great ex- perience. His notions of trade are noble and generous, and (as every rich man has some sly way of jesting, which would make no great figure were he not a rich man) he calls the sea the British Common. He is acquainted with commerce in all its parts, and will tell you that it is a stupid and barbar- ous way to extend dominion by arms ; for true power is to be got by arts and industry. He will often argue, that if this part of our trade were well cultivated, we should gain from one nation ; and if another, from another. I have heard him pi-ove that diligence makes more lasting acquisi- tions than valor; and that sloth has ruined more nations than the sword. He abounds in several frugal maxims, amongst which the greatest favorite is " A penny saved is a penny got." A general trader of good sense is pleasanter company than a general scholar ; and Sir Andrew having a natural unaffected eloquence, the perspicuity of his discourse gives the same pleasure that wit would in another man. He has made his fortune himself, and says that England may be richer than other kingdoms, by as plain methods as he him- self is richer than other men ; though, at the same time, I can say this of him, that there is not a point in the compass but blows home a ship in which he is an owner. Next to Sir Andrew Freeport in the club-room sits Cap- tain Sentry, a gentleman of great courage, good understand- ing, but of invincible modesty. He is one of those that de- serve very well, but are very awkward at putting their talents within the observation of such as should take notice of them. He was some years a captain, and behaved with great gallan- try in several engagements, and at several sieges ; but, having :i small estate of his own, and being next heir to Sir Roger, THE SPECTATOR'S CLUB. 09 he has quitted a way of life in which no man can rise suitably to his merit who is not something of a courtier as well as a soldier. I have heard him often lament, that in a profession where merit is placed in so conspicuous a view, impudence should get the better of modesty. When he has talked to this purpose, I never heard him make a sour expression, but frankly confess that he left the world, because he was not fit for it. A strict honesty, and an even regular behavior, are in themselves obstacles to him that must press through crowds, who endeavor at the same end with himself — the favor of a commander. He will, however, in his way of talk, excuse generals for not disposing according to men's desert, or in- quiring into it ; for, says he, that great man who has a mind to help me, has as many to break through to come at me, as I have to come at him. Therefore he will conclude that the man who would make a figure, especially in a military way, must get over all false modesty, and assist his patron against the importunity of other pretenders, by a proper assurance in his own vindication. He says it is a civil cowardice to be backward in affecting what you ought to expect, as it is a military fear to be slow in attacking when it is your duty. With this candor does the gentlemen speak of himself and others. The same frankness runs through all his conversa- tion. The military part of his life has furnished him with many adventures, in the relation of which he is very agree- able to the company ; for he is never overbearing, though accustomed to command men in the utmost degree below him ; nor ever too obsequious, from an habit of obeying men highly above him. But that our society may not appear a set of humorists, unacquainted with the gallantries and pleasures of the age, we have among us the gallant Will Honeycomb, a gentleman rcho ; according to his years, should be in the decline of hia 70 CLUBS OF STEELE AND GOLDSMITH. life, but having ever been very careful of his person, and al- ways had a very easy fortnne, Time has made but a very little impression upon him, either by wrinkles on his forehead or traces on his brain. His person is well turned, and of a good height He is very ready at that sort of discourse with which men usually entertain women. He has all his life dressed very well, and remembers habits as others do men. He can smile when one speaks to him, and laughs easily. He knows the history of every mode, and can inform you from which of the French king's wenches our wives and daughters had this manner of curling their hair, or that way of placing their hoods ; whose frailty was covered with such a sort of petti- coat, and whose vanity to show her foot made that part of the dress so short in such a year. In a word, all his conver- sation and knowledge have been in the female world. As other men of his age will take notice to you what such a minister said upon such and such an occasion, he will tell you, when the Duke of Monmouth danced at court, such a woman was then smitten; another was taken with him at the head of his troop in the park. In all these important relations, he has ever about the same time received a kind glance or blow of the fan from some celebrated beauty, mother of the present Lord Such-a-one. . . . I cannot tell whether I am to account him whom I am to speak of as one of our company, for he visits us but seldom ; but when he does, he adds to every man else a new enjoyment of himself. He is a clergyman, a very philosophic man. of general learning, great sanctity of life, and the most t good breeding. He has the misfortune to be of a very weak constitution, and consequently cannot accept of such - and such business as preferments in his function would oblige him to. He is therefore among divines what a cham- ber counsellor is among lawyers. The probity of his mind, THE CLUB OF THE TAT LEE. 71 and the integrity of his life, create him followers ; as being eloquent or loud advances others. He seldom introduces the subject he speaks upon ; but we are so far gone in years, that he observes, when he is among us, an earnestness to have him fall on some divine topic, which he always treats with much authority, as one who has no interest in this world ; as one who is hastening to the object of all his wishes, and conceives hope from his decays and infirmities. These are my ordi- nary companions. THE CLUB OF THE TATLER.* BY THE SAME. "Habeo senectuti magnara gratiam, quae mihi sermonis aviditatem auxit, po tionis et cibi sustulit." Tull. de Sen. " I am much beholden to old age, which has increased my eagerness for conver sation, in proportion as it has lessened my appetite of hunger and thirst." AFTER having applied my mind with more than ordinary attention to my studies, it is my usual custom to relax and unbend it in the conversation of such as are rather easy than shining companions. This I find particularly necessary for mc before I retire to rest, in order to draw my slumbers upon me by degrees, and fall asleep insensibly. This is the particular use I make of a set of heavy honest men, with whom I have passed many hours with much indolence, though not with great pleasure. Their conversation is a kind of pre- parative for sleep. It takes the mind down from its abstrac- tions, leads it into the familiar traces of thought, and lulls it into that state of tranquillity which is the condition of a thinking man when he is but half awake. After this my reader will not be surprised to hear the account which I am about to give of a club of my own contemporaries, among * No. 132. 72 CLUBS OF STEELE AND GOLDSMITH whom I pass two or three hours every evening. This I look upon as taking my first nap before I go to bed. The truth of it is, I should think myself unjust to posterity, as well as to the society at the Trumpet * of which I am a member, did not I in some part of my writings give an account of the per- sons among whom I have passed almost a sixth part of my time for these last forty years. Our club consisted originally of fifteen ; but, partly by the severity of the law in arbitrary times, and partly by the natural effects of old age, we are at present reduced to a third part of that number ; in which, however, we have this consolation, that the best company is said to consist of five persons. I must confess, besides the afore-mentioned benefit which I meet with in the conversa- tion of this select society, I am not the less pleased with the company in which I find myself the greatest wit among them, and am heard as their oracle in all points of learning and difficulty. Sir Jeoffry Notch, who is the oldest of the club, has been in possession of the right-hand chair time out of mind, and is the only man among us that has the liberty of stirring the fire. This, our foreman, is a gentleman of an ancient family that came to a great estate some years before he had discre- 1 run it out in hounds, horses, and cock-fighting ; for which reason he looks upon himself as an honest worthy gentleman, who has had misfortunes in the world, and calls every thriving man an upstart. * Tlie Trumpet was a public-house in the lane in which Steele, &3 ' itler or Mr. Bickerstaff, pretended to live. This lane was no greater locality than Shire Lane, lately so called, close to Temple Bar, now Great Shire Lane ; and the Trumpet is still extant as a pub- lic-house, called the Duke of York. Here, in the drawing-room (for the dignity's Bake), we may fancy Major Matchlock and old Dick Reptile doling forth their respective insipidities. THE CLUB OF THE TATLER. 73 Major Matchlock is the nest senior, who served in the last civil wars, and has all the battles by heart. He does not think any action in Europe worth talking of since the fight of Marston Moor;* and every night tells us of his having been knocked off his horse at the rising of the London apprentices :f for which he is in great esteem amongst us. Honest old Dick Reptile is the third of our society. He is a good-natured indolent man, who speaks little himself, but laughs at our jokes ; and brings his young nephew along with him, a youth of eighteen years old, to show him good company, and give him a taste of the world. This young fellow sits generally silent, but whenever he opens his mouth, or laughs at anything that passes, he is constantly told by his uncle, after a jocular manner, " Ay, ay, Jack, you young men think us fools; but we old men know you are." The greatest wit of our company, next to myself, is a Bencher of the neighboring Inn, who in his youth frequented the ordinaries about Charing Cross, and pretends to have been intimate with Jack Ogle.J He has about ten distichs of Hudibras without book, and never leaves the club until he has applied them all. If any modern wit be mentioned, or any town frolic spoken of, he shakes his head at the dul- ness of the present age, and tells us a story of Jack Ogle. For my part, I am esteemed among them because they * In 1G44, whore Cromwell's cavalry turned the day against Charles I. f Probably in 1647, when they forced their way into the House of Commons with a petition signed by ten thousand citizens. But as the date of the club is 1709, the Major must have been a very old gentleman indeed, if his memory served him rightly. \ Jack Ogle was a wild fellow about town, whose sister is said to have been one of the mistresses of the Duke of York (James II.) 4 74 CL IITII. '. am sou pected by others; though at the same I understand by their behavior that I am considered in of a great deal of learning, bnt no knowl- of the world : insomneh that the M the height of his military pride, calls me the philosopher; Jeoffry, no longer ago than last night, upon a dispute what day of the month il en in Holland, pulled his pipe out of his mouth, and cried, " Wh olar say to il Our club meets precisely at sb ': in the evening; I did not come last night until half an hour after .seven, by which means T e leaped the battle of Naseby, which the M;ijor usually I at about three quarters after six. I found also that my good friend I e Bencher had already Spent three of his distichs, and only waited an opportunity to I aon spoken of. that he might introduce the couplet* where "a to ic." At my entrance into the room. th< naming a red petticoat and \l qcI been divert- ing them with a f J t, but Sir •) : : ;ood-will towards m own tobacco, and stirred up I I look u>,,<<\i it. as a point of morality " In Hudibi f The story is thus given in the notes to the variorum edition 'if : published in 1797 Ogle once rode as a private gentle- man in the fl guards, at that time ander the command of the Duke of Monmouth. Jl<- had pawned liis trooper's clonk and to ave appea had borrowed his landlady's red pet- hich he carried rolled ap en croupe behind him. The Duke ; mmoutfa smoked ii and willing to enjoy the confusion of a de- r to cloak aU with which Ogle after some hesita- tion, was obliged to comply. Although he could not cloak, he said ho at with the best of them. "—Vol. iii. p. 124 THE CLUB OF Till-: TATLER 75 to be obliged by those who endeavor to oblige me ; and therefore, in requital for Li.s kindness, and to sot the eon sation a-going, I took the best I ild to put, him upon telling as ry of old Gantlett, which lie alv. with very particular concern. He traced up his descent on both sides for several generatioi iribing Lis diet and manner of life, with his several battle-, arid partieularly the one in which he fell. " mtlett v ime-cock, upon whose head the knight, in his youth, had won five hundred pounds and lost two thousand. This naturally set the Major upon the account of Edge-hill fight, and ended in a duel of Jack ' Old Reptile was extremely attentive to all that was said. igh it was the same he had heard every night for tl twenty years, and upon all occasions winked upon his nephew to mind what passed. orld a taste of our innocent ition, which we spun out till about ten of the el i my maid came with a lantern to light me home. I could not but reflect with myself, as I was going out. upon the talkative humor of old men. and the little figure' which that part of life makes in one who cannot employ his natural propensity in discourses which would make him venerable. I must ( .it makes me very melancholy in company when I hear a young man begin a story : and have often observed, that one of a quarter of an hour long in a man of five-and- gathers circurnstai. he tells it. until it grows into a long Canterbury tale of two hours by the time The OT.l b a trifling and frivolous old age. is to lay up in our way to it 'ores of knowledge and observation as mat eful and agreeable in our de- clining years. The mind of man in a long life will become a 7G CLUBS OF STEELE AND GOLDSMITH. magazine of wisdom or folly, and will consequently discharge itself in something impertinent or improving. For which reason, as there is nothing more ridiculous than an old trifling story-teller, so there is nothing more venerable than one who has turned his experience to the entertainment and advan- tage of mankind. In short, we, who are in the last stage of life, and are apt to indulge ourselves in talk, ought to consider if what we epeak be worth being heard, and endeavor to make our dis- course like that of Nestor, which Homer compares to the flowing of honey for its sweetness. I am afraid I shall be thought guilt}- of this excess I am speaking of, when I cannot conclude without observing, that Milton certainly thought of this passage in Homer, when, in his description of an eloquent spirit, he says — t: His tongue dropped manna."* * V7e cannot miss the opportunity of adding to this account of the members of the Trumpet Club, that of another associate, whose character is drawn by Steele in a previous number, and is one of the finest that ever proceeded from his pen. It shows his contempt of that a*bsurdcst of all the passions of mortality — Pride. The reader will take notice of the exquisite expression " insolent benevolence ;'*' and the " very insignificant fellow, but exceeding gracious." " The most remarkable (he says) of the persons whose disturbance arises from Pride, and whom I shall use all possible diligence to cure, are such as are hidden in the appearance of quite contrary habits and sitions. Among such, I shall in the first place take care of one who is under the most subtle species of pride that I have observed in my whole experience. " This patient is a person for whom I have great respect, as 1 an old courtier and a friend of mine in my youth. The man has but a bare subsistence, just enough to pay his reckoning with us at the Trumpet ; but, by having spent the beginning of his life in the hearing of great men and persons in power, he is always promising to do good GOLDSMITH'S CLUBS. 77 GOLDSMITHS CLUBS. FROM THE ESSAYS. THE first club I entered upon corning to town was that of the Choice Spirits. The name was entirely suited to my taste ; I was a lover of mirth, good-humor, and even some- times of fun. from my childhood. As no other passport was requisite but the payment of two shillings at the door. I introduced myself without farther ceremony to the members, who were already assembled, and had for some time begun upon business. The grand, with a mallet in his hand, presided at the head of the table. I could not avoid, upon my entrance, making use of all my skill in physiognomy, in order to discover that superiority of genius in men who had taken a title so superior to the rest of man- kind. I expected to see the lines of every face marked with strong thinking: but. though I had some skill in this science. I could for my life discover nothing but a pert simper, fat or profound stupidity. My speculations were soon interrupted by the grand, who offices, to introduce every man lie converses with into the world ; will desire one of ten times his substance to let him see him sometimes, and hints to him that he does not forget him. He answers to matters of no consequence with great circumspection ; hut. however, maintains a general civility in his words and actions, and an insolent benevo- lence to all whom he has to do with. This he practises with a grave tone and air ; and though I am his senior by twelve years, and i by forty pounds per annum, he had yesterday the impudence to com- mend me to my face, and tell me : he should always be ready to en- courage me. : In a word, lie is a very insignificant fellow, but exceeding gracious. The best return I can make him for his favors is to cany him myself to Bedlam, and see him well taken care of." — Taller ' 127. 78 CLUBS OF STEELE AND GOLDSMITH. had knocked down Mr. Spriggins for a song. I was upon this whispered by one of the company who sat next me, that I should now see something touched off to a nicety, for Mr. Spriggins was going to give us Mad Tom in all its glory. Mr. Spriggins endeavored to excuse himself; for, as he was to act a madman and a king, it was impossible to go through the part properly without a crown and chains. His excuses were over-ruled by a great majority, and with much vocifera- tion. The president ordered up the jack-chain ; and, instead of a crown, our performer covered his brows with an inverted Jordan. After he had rattled his chain and shook his head, to the great delight of the whole company, he began his song. As I have heard few young fellows offer to sing in company that did not expose themselves, it was no great disappoint- ment to me to find Mr. Spriggins among the number : how- ever, not to seem an odd fish, I rose from my seat in rapture, cried out, "Bravo! encore!" and slapped the table as loud as any of the rest. The gentleman who sat next me seemed highly pleased with my taste, and the ardor of my approbation; and, whis- pering, told me I had suffered an immense loss, for, had I come a few minutes sooner, I might have heard •• Geeho Dobbin" sung in a tip-top manner, by the pimple-nosed spirit at the president's right elbow; but he was evaporated before I came. As T was expressing my uneasiness at this disappoint- ment, I found the attention of the company employed upon a fat figure, who, with a voice more rough than the Stafford- shire giant's, was giving us the "Softly sweet, in Lydian measure," of Alexander's Feast. After a short pause cf ad- miration, to this succeeded a "Welsh dialogue, with the hu- mors of league and Taffy ; after that came on Old Jackson. "it' 1 b a :i every stanza; next was sung the Dust- GOLDSMITH'S CLUBS. 79 Cart, and then Solomon's Song. The glass began now to circulate pretty freely ; those who were silent when sober would now be heard in their turn ; every man had his song, and he saw no reason why he should not be heard as well as any of the rest ; one begged to be heard while he gave Death and the Lady in high taste ; another sung to a plate which he kept trundling on the edges ; nothing was now heard but singing ; voice rose above voice, and the whole became one universal shout, when the landlord came to acquaint the com- pany that the reckoning was drunk out. Rabelais calls the moments in which a reckoning is mentioned, the most melan- choly of our lives ; never was so much noise so quickly quelled, as by this short but pathetic oration of our landlord. ' ; Drunk out !" was echoed in a tone of discontent round the table ; ' : drunk out already ! that was very odd ! that so much punch could be drunk out already ! impossible !" The land- lord, however, seeming resolved not to retreat from his first assurances, the company was dissolved, and a president chosen for the night ensuing. A friend of mine, to whom I was complaining some time after of the entertainment I have been describing, proposed to bring me to the club that he frequented, which he fancied would suit the gravity of my temper exactly. " We have, at the Muzzy Club," says he, "no riotous mirth, nor awkward ribaldry, no confusion or bawling, all is conducted with wis- dom and decency ; besides, some of our members are worth forty thousand pounds, men of prudence and foresight every one of them ; these are the proper acquaintance, and to such I will to-night introduce you." I was charmed at the pro- posal. To be acquainted with men worth forty thousand pounds, and to talk wisdom the whole night, were offers that threw me into rapture. At seven o'clock I was accordingly introduced by 1115 SO CLUBS OF STEELE AND GOLDSMITH. friend ; not indeed to the company, for, though I made my best bow, they seemed insensible of my approach ; but to the table at which they were sitting. Upon my entering the room, I could not avoid feeling a secret veneration, from the solemnity of the scene before nie ; the members kept a pro- found silence, each with a pipe in his mouth and a pewter pol in his hand, and with faces that might easily be construed into absolute wisdom. Happy society ! thought I to myself, where the members think before they speak, deliver nothing rashly, but convey their thoughts to each other, pregnant with meaning, and matured by reflection. In this pleasing speculation I continued a full half-hour, expecting each moment that somebody would begin to open his mouth. Every time the pipe was laid down, I expected it was to speak; but it was only to spit. At length, resolving to break the charm myself, and overcome their extreme diffidence, for to this I imputed their silence, I rubbed my hands, and, looking as wise as possible, observed that the nights began to grow a little coolish at this time of the This, as it was directed to no one of the company in particular, none thought himself obliged to answer; where- fore I continued still to rub my hands and look wise. My next effort was addressed to a gentleman who sat next me ; to whom I observed that the beer was extremely good; my neighbor made, no reply, but by a large puff of tobacco- Ice. I now began to be uneasy in this dumb society, till one of them a littie relieved me by observing, that bread had not : these three weeks. " Ah !" says another, still keeping the pipe in his mouth, " that puts me in mind of a pleasant story about that — hem — very well ; you must know — but, be fore I begin — sir, my service to you — where was I ?" My next club goes by the name of the Harmon ical So GOLD SMITH'S CLUBS. 81 ciety ; probably from that love of order and friendship which every person commends in institutions of this nature. The landlord was himself founder. The money spent is four- pence each, and they sometimes whip for a double reckoning. To this club few recommendations are requisite except the introductory fourpence and my landlord's good word, which as he gains by it, he never refuses. We all here talked and behaved as everybody else usu- ally does on his club-night. We discussed the topic of the ' day, drank each other's healths, snuffed the candles with our fingers, and filled our pipes from the same plate of tobacco. The company saluted each other in the common manner. Mr. Bellows-mender hoped Mr. Curry-comb-maker had not caught cold going home the last club-night ; and he returned the compliment by hoping, that young Master Bellows- mender had got well again of the chincough. Br. Twist told us a story of a parliament-man, with whom he was intimately accpuainted ; while the bagman, at the same time, was telling a better story of a noble lord, with whom he could do any- thing. A gentleman in a black wig and leather breeches, at the other end of the table was engaged in a long narrative of the ghost in Cock Lane ;* ho had read it in the papers of the day, and was telling it to some that sat next him who could not read. Near him, Mr. Bibbins was disputing on the old subject of religion with a Jew pedler over the table ; while the president vainly knocked down Mr. Leathersides for a song. Besides the combination of these voices, which I could hear altogether, and which formed an upper part to the concert, there were several others playing under-parts by * An impudent imposture of that day, in which it was pretended that a ghost scratched at a bed. Johnson was weak enough to be one of its grave investigators, and Churchill's Ghost was written in deV' sion of it. 4* CLUBS OF STEELE AND GOLDSMITH. themselves, and endeavoring to fasten on some luckless ;hbor's ear, who was himself bent upon the same design against some other. We have often heard of the speech of a corporation, and this induced me to transcribe a speech of this club, taken in short-hand, word for word, as it was spoken by every mem- ber of the company. It may be necessary to observe, that the man who told us of the ghost had the loudest voice, and the longest story to tell ; so that his continuing narrative filled every chasm in the conversation. ' ; So, sir, d'ye perceive me. the ghost giving three loud raps at the bed-post" — " Says my lord to me, my dear Smoke- um. you know there is no man on the face of the yearth for whom I have so high" — "A false heretical opinion of all sound doctrine and good learning ; for I'll tell it aloud and spare not, that" — u Silence for a song ; Mr. Leathersides for a song" — -As I was walking upon the highway. I n. young damsel" — " ' Then what brings you here V said the •»ntothe ghost" — u Sanconiathon, Manetho. and Berosus" •• The whole way from Islington turnpike to Dog-house bar" — •• As for Abel Drugger, sir, he's low in it: my 'prentice boy has more of the gentleman than he"* — " For murder will out one time or another ; and none but a ghost, you know, tlemen, can" — " For my friend, whom you know, gentle- and who is a parliament-man, a man of consequence, a dear honest creature, to be sure ; we were laughing last night at" — •• Upon all his posterity, by simply, barely tasting" — "Sour grapes, as the fox said once when he could not reach i : and 111. Ill tell you a story about that, that will make you burst your sides with laughing. A fox once" " Will nobody listen to the song?"— '-As I was walking upon \ compliment to Goldsmith's friend, Garrick, in the part ^>f r, which was a very low one. GOLDSMITH S CLUBS. 83 the liifhwa} , I met a young damsel both buxom aud gay" — " No gbost, gentlemen, can be murdered ; nor did I ever bear of but one gbost killed in all my life, and that was » « Soul if I don't" — " Mr. Bellows-mender, I bave the bonor of drinking your very good health" — " Fire" — " Whizz"—" Blid"— " Tit"—" Rat"—" Trip"— the rest all riot, nonsense, and rapid confusion. "Were I to be angry at men for being fools (concludes Goldsmith, with touching pleasantry), I could here find ample room for declamation ; but, alas ! I bave been a fool myself, and why should I be angry with them for being some- thing so natural to every child of humanity 1 Catmt /atljmn'0 Jliianiturr in iljr Tut (Cnttogj. BY SMOLLETT. The Adventures of Ferdinand Count Fathom is one of those rare works of genius, in a very unusual sense of the epithet, which a read- er of a well-constituted mind is at a loss whether to admire or to dis- like. It is a history of such elaborate and unmitigated rascality, that one is surprised how the author's imagination could have consented to keep such a scoundrel company for so long a period. But there is one scene in it, which by universal consent is a masterpiece of inter- est ; a mixture of the terrible and the probable that has often since been emulated, but never surpassed. It is to real life what the frag- ment of ,^ ' is to ili'' ideal ; and the writing is as fine as the conception. Smollett takes a delight in showing that the powers of his pen are equal to the most formidable occasions. lie rejoices in " pil- ing up an agony," especially on a victim not so courageous as himself; and by a principle of extremes meeting, a mischievous sarcasm, and Strokes of humor itself, contribute to aggravate and envenom the impression of terror. TjlATHOM departed from the village that same afternoon -L under the auspices of his conductor, and found himself ighted in the midst of a forest, far from the habitations i ;' men. The darkness of the night, the silence and solitude of the place, the indistinct images of the trees that appeared COUNT FATHOM'S ADVENTURE. 85 on every side stretching their extravagant arms athwart the gloom, conspired with the dejection of spirits occasioned by his loss to disturb his fancy, and raise strange phantoms in his imagination. Although he was not naturally supersti- tious, his mind began to be invaded with an awful horror, that gradually prevailed over all the consolations of reason and philosophy ; nor was his heart free from the terrors of assassination. In order to dissipate these disagreeable rev- eries, he had recourse to the conversation of his guide, by whom he was entertained with the history of divers travellers who had been robbed and murdered by ruffians, whose retreat was in the recesses of that very wood. In the midst of this communication, which did not at all tend to the elevation of our hero's spirits, the conductor made an excuse for dropping behind, while our traveller jogged on in expectation of being joined again by him in a few minutes ; he was, however, disappointed in that hope ; the sound of the horse's feet by degrees grew more and more faint, and at last altogether died away. Alarmed at this circumstance, Fathom halted in the road, and listened with the most fearful attention ; but his sense of hearing was saluted with naught but the dismal sighings of the trees, that seemed to foretell an approaching storm. Accordingly, the heavens contracted a more dreary aspect, the lightning began to gleam, the thunder to roll, and the tempest, rais- ing its voice to a tremendous roar, descended in a torrent of rain. In this emergency, the fortitude of our hero was almost quite overcome. So many concurring circumstances of dan- ger and distress might have appalled the most undaunted breast ; what impression then must they have made upon the mind of Ferdinand, who was by no means a man to set fear at defiance ? Indeed he had well nigh lost the use of his re- 8G COUNT FATHOM'S ADVENTURE flection, and was actually invaded to the skin, before he could recollect himself so far as to quit the road, and seek for shel- ter among the thickets that surrounded him. Ilaving rode some furlongs into the forest, he took his station under a tuft of tall trees, that screened him from the storm, and in that .situation called a council with himself, to deliberate upon his next excursion. He persuaded himself that his guide had deserted him for the present, in order to give intelligence of a traveller to some gang of robbers with whom he was con- nected ; and that he must of necessity fall a prey to those banditti, unless he should have the good fortune to elude their search, and disentangle himself from the mazes of the wood. Harrowed with these apprehensions, he resolved to com- mit himself to the mercy of the hurricane, as of two evils the least, and penetrate straight forwards through some devious opening, until he should be delivered from the forest. For this purpose he turned his horse's head in a line quite con- trary to the direction of the high road which he had left, on supposition that the robbers would pursue that tract in quest of him, and that they would never dream of his deserting the highway to traverse an unknown forest amidst the dark- ness of such a boisterous night. After he had continued in this progress through a succession of groves, and bogs, and thorns, and brakes, by which not only his clothes, but also his skin Buffered in a grievous manner, while every nerve quivered with eagerness and dismay, he at length reached an open plain, and pursuing his course, in full hope of arriving at some village where his life would be safe, he descried a rushlight, at a distance, which he looked upon as the star of _'<»od fortune ; and riding towards it at full speed, arrived nt the door of a lone cottage, into which he was admitted by an old woman, who, understanding he was a bewildered travel- 1. -r. i. ceived him with great hospitality. IN THE LONE COTTAGE. ti7 When he learned from his hostess that there was not another house within three leagues, and that she could ac- commodate him with a tolerable bed, and his horse with lodging and oats, he thanked Heaven for his good fortune in stumbling upon this humble habitation, and determined to pass the night under the protection of the old cottager, who gave him to understand, that her husband, who was a fagot- maker, had gone to the next town to dispose of his merchan- dise, and that in all probability he would not return till the nest morning, on account of the tempestuous night. Ferdi- nand sounded the beldame with a thousand artful interroga- tions, and she answered with such an appearance of truth and simplicity, that he concluded his person was quite secure ; and, after having been regaled with a dish of eggs and bacon, desired she would conduct him into the chamber where she proposed he should take his repose. He was accordingly ushered up by a sort of ladder into an apartment furnished with a standing bed, and almost half filled with trusses of straw. He seemed extremely well pleased with his lodging, which in reality exceeded his expectations ; and his kind landlady, cautioning him against letting the candle approach the combustibles, took her leave, and locked the door on the outside. Fathom, whose own principles taught him to be suspicious, and ever upon his guard against the treachery of his fellow- creatures, could have dispensed with this instance of her care in confining her guest to her chamber ; and began to be seized with strange fancies, when he observed that there was no bolt on the inside of the door, by which he might secure himself from intrusion. In consequence of these suggestions, he proposed to take an accurate survey of every object in the apartment, and, in the course of his inquiry, had the mortifi- cation to find the dead body of a man, still warm, who had 88 COUNT FATHOM'S ADVENTURE been lately stabbed, and concealed beneath several bundles of straw. Such a discovery could -not fail to fill the breast of our hero with unspeakable horror ; for he concluded that he him- self would undergo the same fate before morning, without the interposition of a miracle in his favor. In the first trans- ports of his dread he ran to the window, with a view to escape by that outlet, and found his flight effectually ob- structed by divers strong bars of iron. Then his heart began to palpitate, his hair to bristle up, and his knees to totter : his thoughts teemed with presages of death and destruction] his conscience rose up in judgment against him ; and he un- derwent a severe paroxysm of dismay and distraction. His spirits were agitated into a state of fermentation that pro- duced an energy akin to that which is inspired by brandy or other strong liquors ; and, by an impulse that seemed super- natural, he was immediately hurried into measures for his own preservation. What upon a less interesting occasion his imagination durst not propose, he now executed without scruple or re- morse. He undressed the corpse that lay bleeding among the straw, and conveying it to the bed in his arms, deposited it in the attitude of a person who sleeps at his ease ; then he extinguished the light, took possession of the place from whence the body had been removed, and, holding a pistol ready cocked in each hand, waited for the sequel with that de- termined purpose which is often the immediate production of •air. About midnight he heard the sound of feet ascend- ing the ladder; the door was softly opened; he saw the shadow of two men stalking towards the bed; a dark lantern being unshrouded, directed their aim to the supposed sleeper ; and he that held it thrust a poniard to his heart. The force of the blow made a compression on the chest, and a sort of IN THE LONE COTTAGE. 89 groan issued from the windpipe of the defunct ; the stroke was repeated without producing a repetition of the note, so that the assassins concluded the work was effectually done, and retired for the present, with a design to return and rifle the deceased at their leisure. Never had our hero spent a moment in such agony as he felt during this operation. The whole surface of his body was covered with a cold sweat, and his nerves were relaxed with an universal palsy. In short, he remained in a trance, that in all probability contributed to his safety ; for had he retained the use of his senses, he might have been discovered by the transports of his fear. The first use he made of his retrieved recollection, was to perceive that the assassins had left the door open in their retreat ; and he would have in- stantly availed himself of this their neglect, by sallying out upon them at the hazard of his life, had not he been restrained by a conversation he overheard in the room below, importing that the ruffians were going to set out upon another expedi tion, in hopes of finding more prey. They accordingly de- parted, after having laid strong injunctions on the old woman to keep the door fast locked during their absence ; and Ferdi- nand took his resolution without further delay. So soon as, by his conjecture, the robbers were at a sufficient distance from the house, he rose from his lurking-place, moved softly towards the bed, and rummaging the pockets of the deceased, found a purse well stored with ducats, of which, together with a silver watch and a diamond ring, he immediately possessed himself without scruple ; and then, descending with great care and circumspection into the lower apartment, stood be fore the old beldame, before she had the least intimation of his approach. Accustomed as she was to the trade of blood, the hoary hag did not behold this apparition without giving signs of 90 COUNT FATHOM'S ADVENTURE r infinite terror and astonishment. Believing it was no other than the spirit of her second guest, who had been murdered, she fell upon her knees, and began to recommend herself to the protection of the saints, crossing herself with as much devotion as if she had been entitled to the particular care and attention of Heaven. Nor did her anxiety abate when she was undeceived in this her supposition, and understood it was no phantom, but the real substance of the stranger ; who, without staying to upbraid her with the enormity of her crimes, commanded her, on pain of immediate death, to pro- duce his horse ; to which being conducted, he set her on the saddle without delay, and mounting behind, invested her with the management of the reins, swearing, in a most peremptory tone, that the only chance for her life was in directing him to the next town ; and that as soon as she should give him the least cause to doubt her fidelity in the performance of that task, he would on the instant act the part of her exe- cutioner. This declaration had its effect on the withered Hecate, who, with many supplications for mercy and forgiveness, promised to guide him in safety to a certain village at the distance of two leagues, where he might lodge in security, and be provided with a fresh horse, or other conveniences for pursuing his route. On these conditions he told her she iit deserve his clemency ; and they accordingly took their departure together, she being placed astride upon the saddle, holding the bridle in one hand, and a switch in the other, and our adventurer sitting on the crupper, superintending her conduct, and keeping the muzzle of a pistol close at her ear. In this equipage they travelled across part of the same wood in which his guide had forsaken him : and it is not to be supposed that he passed his time in the most agreeable reverie, while he found himself involved in the labyrinth of IN THE LONE COTTAGE 91 those shades, which he considered as the haunts of robbery and assassination. Common fear was a comfortable sensation to what he felt in this excursion. The first steps he had taken for his pres- ervation were the effect of mere instinct, while his faculties were extinguished or suppressed by despair ; but now, as his reflection began to recur, he was haunted by the most intol- erable apprehensions. Every whisper of the wind through the thickets was swelled into the hoarse menaces of murder ; the shaking of the boughs was construed into the bran- dishing of poniards ; and every shadow of a tree became the apparition of a ruffian eager for blood. In short, at each of these occurrences he felt what was infinitely more tormenting than the stab of a real dagger ; and at every fresh fillip of his fear, he acted as a remembrancer to his conductress in a new volley of imprecations, importing, that her life was abso- lutely connected with his opinion of his own safety. Human nature could not long subsist under such compli- cated terror ; but at last he found himself clear of the forest, and was blessed with a distant view of an inhabited place. He then began to exercise his thoughts on a new subject. He debated with himself whether he should make a parade of his intrepidity and public spirit, by disclosing his achieve- ment, and surrendering his guide to the penalty of the law, or leave the old hag and her accomplice to the remorse of their own consciences, and proceed quietly on his journey to Paris, in undisturbed possession of the prize he had already obtained. This last step he determined to take upon recol- lecting, that, in the course of his information, the story of the murdered stranger would infallibly attract the attention of justice, and, in that case, the effects he had borrowed from the defunct must be refunded for the benefit of those who had a right to the succession. This was an argument which 92 COUNT FATHOM'S ADVENTURE. our adventurer could not resist : he foresaw that he should be stripped of his acquisition, which he looked upon as the fair fruits of his valor and sagacity ; and moreover, be detain- ed as an evidence against the robbers, to the manifest detri- ment of his affairs. Perhaps, too, he bad motives of con- science that dissuaded him from bearing witness against a set of people whose principles did not much differ from his own. Influenced by such considerations, he yielded to the first importunity of the beldame, whom he dismissed at a very email distance from the village, after he had earnestly exhort- ed her to quit such an atrocious course of life, and atone for her past crimes by sacrificing her associates to the demands of justice. She did not fail to vow a perfect reformation, and to prostrate herself before him for the favor she had found ; then she betook herself to her habitation, with the full pur- pose of advising her fellow-murderers to repair with all de- spatch to the village and impeach our hero ; who, wisely dis- trusting her professions, stayed no longer in the place than to hire a guide for the next stage, which brought him to the city of Chalons-Sur-Marne €jj? Ifarmit. BY PAR NELL. We know not how it is with others, but we never think of Par- nclVs Hermit without tranquillizing and grateful feelings. Parnell was a true poet of a minor order; he saw nature for himself, though ho wrote a book style ; and this, and one or two other poems of his, such as the eclogue on Health, and the Fairy Tale, have inclined us te believe that there is something in the very name of " Parnell" pecu- liarly gentle and agreeable. Hermits themselves, in poetry, are al- most always interesting and soothing people. We see nothing but their brooks, their solitude, and their resignation, their hermitage and their crust ; and long to be like them, and play at loneliness. " And may at last my weary age Find out the peaceful hermitage, The hairy gown, and mossy cell, Where I may sit and rightly spell Of every star that heaven doth show, And every herb that sips the dew, Till old experience do attain To something like prophetic strain." So, who does not love Goldsmith's Edwin and Angelina, and the gentle line with which it sets out 1 — "Turn, gentle hermit of the dale." Dravton tears himself away with reluctance from a long list of herbs 94 THE HERMIT. ■which he describes a hermit gathering, in his Polyolbion. The follow- ing are some of the verses. " The Hermit," he says, -" leads a sweet retired life. Suppose, 'twixt noon and night, (the sun his half-way wrought.) The shadows to be large, by his descending brought, Who with a fervent eye looks through the twyring* glades, And his dispersed rays commixeth with the shades, Exhaling the milchf dew, which there had tarried long, And on the ranker grass till past the noon-stead hung ;" " 'Tis then," he says, " the hermit comes out of his homely cell, Where from all rude resort, he happily doth dwell ; And in a litllo maundj (being made of osiers small), Which serveth him to do full many a thing withal, He very choicely sorts his simples, got abroad. Here finds he on an oak rheum-purging polypode ;§ And in some open place that to the sun doth lie, He fumitory gets, and eyebright for the eye ; And from the falling-ill by five-leaf | doth restore, And melancholy cures by sovereign hellebore." But ParncU's hermit is not only a proper hermit, with a " cave" for his " cell," " His food the fruits, his drink the crystal well;" he is a questioning philosopher. Resigned as he is to Providence, he is not without doubts as to its attributes, occasioned by the sufferings of virtue and the seeming triumphs of vice ; and an angel is sent to restore peace to his mind. The way in which this is done, though it does not go into the permission of evil in the abstract (one of the se- crets of good, which Heaven seems to keep in reserve for us, in order to enhance the joys of retrospection), furnishes, nevertheless, a far better and more Christian answer, than the assumptions of many a graver authority. It is not ParncU's own. The story is as old, at least, as the Koran, probably a great deal older ; and has most likefr * Turning and winding. + Soft. Perhaps in pastoral analogy with milk. % Ba>kit. § Polypodium (Many-foot), a genus of fern. | Cinque-foil— Potentilla (from its medical powers)— a flower of the order Rosacea. THE HERMIT. 95 been told in the languages of all civilized countries. But Parncll's is the most pleasing version of it we know. The undertone of thought and wonder, on the hermit's part, is well preserved ; the touches of scenery evince the author's taste for nature ; and even the sweet monotony of the versification (so like Pope's, that he has been invidi- ously said to have had a hand in it), is not unsuitable to the eremeti- cal ground- work of the subject and the lesson of resignation. Parnell was a gentle clergyman, who, with all his inculcations of patience and retirement, found it difficult to reconcile himself to a desolate spot in Ireland, and impossible (it is said) to bear the loss of his wife. We often preach what we cannot practise, not out of hypoc- risy, but from opposing frailties and unavailing desire. Parnell ad- mired his hermit the more, because he could not settle down to his solitude and his bin of water. There is a touching passage about him in one of the letters of Swift. Bolingbroke's second wife was like the one that Parnell had lost. The poor poet saw her, for the first time, on a visit at Bolingbroke's house ; and when she came into the room, Swift says, he could not take his eyes off her, and seemed very melancholy. THE HERMIT. FAR in a wild, unknown to public view, From youth to age a reverend hermit grew ; The moss his bed, the cave his humble cell, His food the fruits, his drink the crystal well ; Remote from men, with God he pass'd his days, Prayer all his business, all his pleasure praise. A life so sacred, such serene repose, Seemed heaven itself, till one suggestion rose ; That vice should triumph, virtue vice obey, This sprung some doubt of Providence's sway , His hopes no more a certain prospect boast, And all the tenor of his soul is lost. So when a smooth expanse receives, imprest Calm Nature's image on its watery breast, 96 THE HERMIT. Down bend the banks, the trees depending grow, And skies beneath with answering colors glow : But if a stone the gentle sea divide, Swift ruffling circles curl on every side ; And glimmering fragments of a broken sun, Banks, trees, and skies, in thick disorder run. To clear this doubt, to know the world by sight, To find if books, or swains, report it right, (For yet by swains alone the world he knew, "Whose feet came wandering o'er the nightly dew,) He quits his cell ; the pilgrim staff he bore, And fix'd the scallop in his hat before ; Then with the sun a rising jommey went, Sedate to think, and watching each event. The morn was wasted in the pathless grass, And long and lonesome was the wild to pass ; But when the southern sun had warmed the day, A youth came posting o'er a crossing way ; His raiment decent, his complexion fair, And soft in graceful ringlets wav'd his hair. Then, near approaching, " Father, hail !" he cried, And " Hail, my son," the reverend sire replied ; Words followed words, from question answer flow'd, And talk of various kind deceiv'd the road ; Till each with other pleas'd. and loth to part, While in their age they differ, join in heart. Thus stands an aged elm, in ivy bound ; Thus youthful ivy clasps an elm around. Now sunk the sun ; the closing hour of day < lame onward, mantled o'er with sober gray ; Nature in silence bid the world repose, When near the road a stately palace rose ; THE HERia T. 97 There, by the moon, through ranks of trees they pass, Whose verdure crown'd their sloping sides of grass. It chanc'd the noble master of the dome Still made his house the wandering stranger's home ; Yet still the kindness, from a thirst of praise, Prov'd the vain flourish of expensive ease. The pair arrive ; the liveried servants wait, Their lord receives them at the pompous gate ; The table groans with costly piles of food, And all is more than hospitably good. Then led to rest, the day's long toil they drown, Deep sunk in sleep, and silk, and heaps of down. At length 'tis morn, and at the dawn of day, Along the wide canals the zephyrs play: Fresh o'er the gay parterres the breezes creep, And shake the neighboring wood to banish sleep. Up rise the guests obedient to the call, An early banquet deck'd the splendid hall ; Rich luscious wine a golden goblet grac'd, Which the kind master forc'd the guests to taste. Then pleas'd and thankful from the porch they go ; And, but the landlord, none had cause of woe : His cup was vanished ; for, in secret guise, The younger guest purloin'd the glittering prize. As one who spies a serpent in his way, Glistening and basking in the summer ray, Disorder'd stops to shun the danger near, Then walks with faintness on, and looks with fear ; So seem'd the sire, when far upon the road The shining spoil his wily partner show'd. He stopp'd with silence, walk'd with trembling heart, And much he wish'd, but durst not ask to part ; 5 08 THE HERMIT. Murmuring he lifts his eyes, and thinks it hard That generous actions meet a hase reward. While thus they pass, the sun his glory shrouds. The changing skies hang out their sable clouds ; A sound in air presag'd approaching rain, And beasts to covert scud across the plaiu. Warn'd by the signs, the wandering pair retreat To seek for shelter at a neighboring seat. 'Twas built with turrets on a rising ground, And strong, and large, and unimproved around ; Its owner's temper timorous and severe, Unkind and griping, caused a desert there. As near the miser's heavy doors they drew, Fierce rising gusts with sudden fury blew ; The nimble lightning niix'd with showers began, And o'er their heads loud rolling thunder ran. Here long they knock, but knock or call in vain, Driven by the wind, and batter'd by the rain. At length some pity warm'd the master's breast ('Twas then his threshold first received a guest) ; Slow creaking turns the door with jealous care, And half he welcomes in the shivering pair : One frugal fagot lights the naked walls, And Nature's fervor through their limbs recalls ; Bread of the coarsest sort, with eager wine,* (Each hardly granted) serv'd them both to dine ; And when the tempest first appear'd to cease, A ready warning bid them part in peace. With still remark the pondering hermit view'd. In one ro rich, a life so poor and rude ; * The word eager is here used in its old sense of " sour" — aigre-, and if we interpret " wine" accordingly, vinegar — vin-aigre. THE HERMIT. 99 And why should such within himself, he cried, Lock the lost wealth a thousand want beside ? But what new marks of wonder soon took place In every settling feature of his face, When from his vest the young companion bore The cup the generous landlord own'd before, And paid profusely with the precious bowl The stinted kindness of his churlish soul ! But now the clouds in airy tumult fly ; The sun emerging opes an azure sky ; A fresher green the smiling leaves display, And, glittering as they tremble, cheer the day ; The weather courts them from the poor retreat, And the glad master bolts the wary gate. While hence they walk, the pilgrim's bosom wrought With all the travel of uncertain thought ; His partner's acts without their cause appear, 'Twas there a vice, and seemed a madness here ; Detesting that, and pitying this, he goes, Lost and confounded with the various shows. Now night's dim shades again involve the sky, Again the wanderers want a place to lie ; Again they search, and find a lodging nigh. The soil improv'd around, the mansion neat, And neither poorly low, nor idly great, It seem'd to speak its master's turn of mind, Content, and not to praise, but virtue kind. Hither the walkers turn their weary feet, Then bless the mansion, and the master greet ; Their greeting fair, bestow'd with modest guise, The courteous master hears, and thus replies : " Without a vain, without a grudging heart, To him who gives us all, I yield a part ; iOO THE HERMIT. From him you come, from him accept it here, A frank and sober, more than costly cheer." He spoke, and bid the welcome table spread, They talk of virtue till the time of bed ; When the grave household round his hall repair, Warn'd by a bell, and close the hours with prayer. At length the world, renew'd by calm repose, Was strong for toil ; the dappled morn arose ; Before the pilgrims part, the younger crept Near the clos'd cradle where an infant slept, And writh'd its neck ; the landlord's little pride, strange return ! grew black, and gasp'd, and died. Horror of horrors ! what ! his only son ! Plow look'd our hermit when the fact was done ; Not hell, though hell's black jaws in sunder part, And breathe blue fire, could more assault his heart. Confus'd, and struck with silence at the deed, He flies ; but, trembling, fails to fly with speed ; His steps the youth pursues ; the country lay Perplex'd with roads ; a servant show'd the way ; A river cross'd the path, the passage o'er Was nice to find ; the servant trod before ; Long arms of oak an oaken bridge supplied, And deep the waves beneath the bending glide ; The youth, who seem'd to watch a time to sin, Approach'd the careless guide and thrust him in ; Plunging he falls, and rising, lifts his head, Then flashing turns, and sinks among the dead. Wild sparkling rage inflame the father's eyes, He bursts the bands of fear, and madly cries, " Detested wretch !" — but scarce his speech began, When the strange partner seemed no longer man ; THE HERMIT. 10] His youthful face grew more serenely sweet ; His robe turn'd white, and flow'd upon his feet ; Fair rounds of radiant points invest his hair ; Celestial odors breathe through purpled air ; And wings, whose colors glittered on the day, Wide at his back their gradual plumes display ; The form ethereal burst upon his sight, And moves in all the majesty of light. Though loud at first the pilgrim's passion grew, Sudden he gaz'd, and wist not what to do ; Surprise in secret chains his words suspends, And in a calm his settling temper ends. But silence here the beauteous angel broke (The voice of music ravish'd as he spoke). " Thy prayer, thy praise, thy life to vice unknown, In sweet memorial rise before the throne ; These charm^ success in our bright region find, And force an angel down to calm thy mind ; For this commission'd, I forsook the sky ; Nay, cease to kneel, thy fellow-servant I. " Then know the truth of government divine, And let these scruples be no longer thine. " The Maker justly claims that world he made, In this the right of Providence is laid ; Its sacred majesty through all depends On using second means to work his ends : 'Tis thus, withdrawn in state from human eye, The Power exerts his attributes on high ; Your actions uses, nor controls your will, And bids the doubting sons of men be still. " What strange events can strike with more surprise Than those which lately struck thy wondering eyes ? 102 THE HERMIT. Yet, taught by these, confess the Almighty just, And where you can't unriddle, learn to trust ! " The great, vain man, who far'd on costly food, Whose life was too luxurious to be good, "Who made his ivory stands with goblets shine, And forc'd his guests to morning draughts of wine, Has, with the cup, the graceless custom lost, And still he welcomes, but with less of cost. " The mean, suspicious wretch, whose bolted dooi Ne'er mov'd in duty to the wandering poor ; "With him I left the cup, to teach his mind That Heaven can bless, if mortals will be kind. Conscious of wanting worth, he views the bowl, And feels compassion touch his grateful soul. Thus artists melt the sullen ore of lead, With heaping coals of fire upon its head ; In the kind warmth the metal learns to glow, And, loose from dross, the silver runs below. " Long had our pious friend in virtue trod, But now the child half wean'd his heart from God ; Child of his age, for him he liv'd in pain, And measured back his steps to earth again. To what excesses had his dotage run 1 But God, to save the father, took the son. To all, but thee, in fits he seemed to go, And 'twas my ministry to deal the blow : The poor fond parent, humbled in the dust, Now owns, in tears, the punishment was just. " But now had all his fortune felt a wrack, I lad that false servant sped in safety back : This night his treasur'd heaps he meant to steal, And what a fund of charity would fail ! THE HERMIT. 103 Thus Heaven instructs thy mind : this trial o'er, Depart in peace, resign, and sin no more." On sounding pinions here the youth -withdrew, The sage stood wondering as the seraph flew. Thus look'd Elisha, when, to mount on high, His master took the chariot of the sky ; The fiery pomp ascending left to view ; The prophet gaz'd, and wish'd to follow too. The bending hermit here a prayer begun, Lord ! as in heaven, on earth thy xoill be done : Then, gladly turning, sought his ancient place. And pass'd a life of piety and peace. $jfer $ ironrc'fl Dtalopr xtiitlj ^arsnn Slum, from fielding's " Joseph Andrews." There was once in great vogue a book called Pamela, or Virtue Rewarded, the object of which was to show how a servant-maid might be very virtuous, in the heavenly sense of the word, and very prosper- ous, in the worldly ; a combination which, in the author's opinion, was effected by making her resist all the efforts of a vicious master to ruin her, and then accept his hand in marriage when he found he could obtain her in no other way. Society is so much advanced in reflec- tion since the writing of that book, that a moral so bad would now meet with contempt from critics of all classes, even^though recom- mended by as rare and affecting a genius as his who taught it, and who was no less a person than Samuel Richardson, author of Clarissa Harlowe. With much that is admirable and noble, there is a great deal of false morality even in Clarissa ; a dangerous exaltation of the formal, and literal, and self-worshipping, above the heartier dictates of prudence itself. But the moral in Pamela (with leave of a great name, bo it said), was a pure vulgar mistake. The master was a scoundrel to whom an honest girl ought not to have been given in marriage at all ; and the heroine was a prig and a schemer, with no real respect for the virtues she professed, otherwise she would not have jumped at the first " honorable" offer from one who had done all he could to destroy her. The healthier genius of Fielding saw the folly of these ethics ; and, seasoning his wish to counteract them with a spice of no ill-natured malice against the author (who was in the habit of making another PETER POUNCE'S DIALOGUE. 105 vulgar mistake, and applying that epithet to all who wrote of humble life not in his own manner, particularly Fielding himself), produced the exquisite novel of Joseph Andrews. In this, not his greatest, but in our opinion most delightful work, he has contrived, with a most unexpected, successful, and (to Richardson, we fear) most provoking admission of the value of his moral when put into right action, to make Joseph Andrews Pamela's own brother, both in blood and vir- tue ; to maintain his manly character nevertheless, in spite of conven- tional jests and prejudices ; and, at the same time, to show how little of her pretended purity and humility was in the sister, who in admi- rable keeping with the spirit of her matrimonial virtue, objects to her brother's marrying a girl in her own former condition of society, be- cause it was lowering the family which her " dear Mr. B." had " raised." As a pleasant instance of Fielding's quickness and vivacity in small matters as well as great, this " Mr. B." of Richardson (for his name never appears in that author except as an initial) is assumed by Fielding to have been a Mr. " Booby." Mr. Booby's fine town-lady aunt, Lady B., thus becomes Lady Booby. She and her nephew ena- ble us to see, that people of no real heart and goodness, whatever be their rank, 4'iches, or gaiety, may deserve the appellation of fool, as well as humbler or more solemn pretenders ; and this is one of the many instances, we think, iu which an exception should be made in favor of those characteristical names of persons in works of fiction, to which critics make wholesale objection. Names of the kind often oc- cur in real life, sometimes with ludicrous propriety ; and if similar ones could be taken away from the novels in which we have been used to them, people would reasonably miss the Boobies palmed upon Richardson, the Pickles and Bowlings of Smollett, the Snakes and Sir Anthony Absolutes of Sheridan, and the Marplots and Almivells of Cent- livre and Farquhar. We confess we should be loth to lose even the Dryasdusts of Sir Walter, excessive as they may appear. Fortune herself, (not to say Nature) seems to take pleasure in these whims of cognomination. Who has not met with stout gentlemen of the name of Onslow and Heaviside ; lively Miss Quicks, and languishing Mrs. Sweets 1 Joseph Andrews is a footman who marries a maid-servant. They are excellent persons, and have a delicious friend in Mr. Abraham Adams, a country curate, who prefers bis ^Eschylus to everything but his duty. He is one of the simplest but at the same time manliest 5* 106 PETER POUNCE'S DIALOGUE of men ; is anxious to read a man of the world his sermon on " van- ity ;" preaches patience under affliction, and is ready to lose his sen- ses on the death of his little boy ; in short, has " every virtue under heaven," except that of superiority to the common failings of human- ity, or of being aide to resist knocking a rascal down when he insults the innocent. He is very poor ; and, agreeably to the notions of re- finement in those days, is treated by the rich as if he were little bet- ter than a servant himself. Even their stewards think it a condescen- sion to treat him on equal terms. In the following scene, which is one of the most exquisite in all novel-writing, the reader experiences a delightful triumph in seeing how a vulgar upstart of this class is led to betray his baseness while he thinks he is most exalting himself — Adams, on the other hand, rising and becoming glorious out of the depths of his humble honest}'. The picture gives you such a vivid idea of the two men, that not having read it for some years, we had fancied, in the interval, that when Pounce throws the curate's hat after him out of the window, Fielding had represented Adams as clapping it triumphantly on his head, and snapping his fingers at him. But this is the way with fine writers. In suggesting more than they say, they write more than they do. PETER POUNCE, being desirous of having some one to whom lie might communicate his grandeur, told the par- son he would convey him home in his chariot. This favor was, by Adams, with many bows and acknowledgments, ac- cepted, though he afterwards said he ascended the chariot rather that he might not offend, than from any desire of rid- ing in it, for that in his heart he preferred the pedestrian even to the vehicular expedition. The chariot had not proceeded far before Mr Adams ob- served it was a very fine day. " Aye, and a very fine country, too," answered Pounce. " I should think so more," returned Adams, " if I had not lately travelled over the Downs, which I take to exceed this, and all other prospects in the universe." WITH PARSON ADAMS. 107 " A fig for prospects," answered Pounce ; " one acre here is worth ten there ; for my part, I have no delight in the prospect of any land but my own." " Sir," said Adams, "you can indulge yourself in many fine prospects of that kind." " I thank God I have a little," replied the other, " with which I am content, and envy no man. I have a little, Mr. Adams, with which I do as much good as I can." Adams answered, "That riches, without charity, were nothing worth ; for that they were a blessing only to him who made them a blessing to others." " You and I," said Peter, " have different notions of char- ity. I own, as it is generally used, I do not like the word, nor do I think it becomes one of us gentlemen ; it is a mean, parson-like quality ; though I would not infer that many par- sons have it neither." " Sir," said Adams, " my definition of charity is a generous disposition to relieve the distressed." " There is something in that definition," answered Peter, " which I like well enough ; it is, as you say, a disposition — and does not so much consist in the act as in the disposition to do it ; but, alas ! Mr. Adams, who are meant by the distressed 1 believe me, the distresses of mankind are mostly imaginary, and it would be rather folly than goodness to re- lieve them." " Sure, sir," replied Adams, " hunger and thirst, cold and nakedness, and other distresses which attend the poor, can never be said to be imaginary evils." " How can any man complain of hunger," said Pounce, " in a country where such excellent salads are to be gathered almost in every field 1 — or of thirst, where every stream and river produce such delicious potations ? — and as for cold and nakedness, they are evils introduced by luxury and custom. t03 PETER POUNCE'S DIALOGUE A man naturally wants clothes no more than a horse or any other animal ; and there are whole nations who go without them. But these are things, perhaps, which you, who do not know the world " ' : You will pardon me, sir," returned Adams ; " I have read of the Gi/m?iosophists." " A plague of your Jehosaphats," cried Peter ; " the great- est fault in our constitution is the provision made for the poor, except that perhaps made for some others. Sir, I have not an estate which doth not contribute almost as much again to the poor as to the land-tax ; and I do assure you I expect myself to come to the parish in the end." To which Adams giving a dissenting smile, Peter thus proceeded :- — " I fancy, Mr. Adams, you are one of those who imagine I am a lump of money ; for there are many who I fancy believe that not only my pockets, but my whole clothes, are lined with bank bills ; but, I assure you, you are all mis- taken ; I am not the man the world esteems me. If I can hold my head above water, it is all I can. I have injured myself by purchasing; I have been too liberal of my money. Indeed I fear my heir will find my affairs in a worse situa tion than they ai-e reputed to be. Ah ! he will have reason tG wish I had loved money more and land less. Pray, my good neighbor, where should I have that quantity of mone^ the world is so liberal to bestow on me ? Where could I possibly, without I had stole it, acquire such a treasure ?" " Why truly," said Adams, " I have been always of youi opinion ; I have wondered, as well as yourself, with what con fidence they could report such things of you, which have u me appeared as mere impossibilities ; for you know, sir, and I have often heard you say it, that your wealth is of your own acquisition; and can it be credible that in your short time vou should have amassed such a heap of treasure as these WITH PARSON ADAMS. 109 people will have you are worth ? Indeed, had you inherited an estate like Sir Thomas Booby, which had descended in your family through many generations, they might have had a color for their assertions." " Why, what do they say I am worth ?" cries Peter, with a malicious sneer. " Sir," answered Adams, " I have heard some aver you are not worth less than twenty thousand pounds." At which Peter frowned. " Nay, sir," said Adams, " you ask me only the opinion of others ; for my own part, I have always denied it, nor did I ever believe you could possibly be worth half that sum." " However, Mr. Adams," said he, squeezing him by the hand, " I would not sell them all I am worth for double that sum ; and as to what you believe, or they believe, I care not ■a fig. I am not poor, because you think me so, nor because pou attempt to undervalue me in the country. I know the envy of mankind very well ; but I thank heaven I am above them. It is true, my wealth is of my own acquisition. I have not an estate like Sir Thomas Booby, that hath descend- ed in my family through many generations ; but I know heirs of such estates, who are forced to travel about the country, like some people in torn cassocks, and might be glad to ac- cept of a pitiful curacy, for what I know ; yes, sir, as shabby fellows as yourself, whom no man of my figure, without that vice of good-nature about him, would suffer to ride in a char- iot with him." " Sir," said Adams, " I value not your chariot of a rush ; mil if I had known you had intended to affront me, I would have walked to the world's end on foot, ere I would have accepted a place in it. However, sir, I will soon rid you of that inconvenience !" And so saying, he opened the chariot 110 PE TER P UNCEP S DIALO G UE. door, without calling to the coachman, and leaped out into the highway, forgetting to take his hat along with him ; which, however, Mr. Pounce threw after him with great violence. %mn tnriitru at im Suit nt Winky. BY SHENSTONE. "Shall I not take," said Falstaff, with an exquisite duplication of the personal pronoun, "mine ease at mine INN1" The question might induce us to fancy, that he had another abode ; that it was as much as to say, " Must I go and encounter my difficulty at my lodgings V But he meant it as an appeal to the ex- pectations of everybody. Everybody, the moment he entered an inn, looked to being thoroughly at his ease ; to possess comfort and security as surely as he did the things he paid for. And this«is the feeling we all have of an inn. It is not comparable with home, on the very gravest or the very gayest occasions ; much less as a place to reside in ; but as a place to visit, there is nothing like it. It is like being abroad and at home at the same time ; abroad, in respect to the novelty ; and at home, as regards doing what we please. We are not sufficiently used to it, to feel a thankless indiffer ence ; neither do we entertain such affection for it, as converts interest into anxiety. — But we do it injustice in writing sentences about it. There is nothing sententious at an inn (except on the window-panes) ; it is only free and easy. If you are wise, it is with mirth : if you run the whole round of philosophy with some " learned Theban" of a friend, it is after dinner, when the blood is running the finer round of cheerfulness, to which you feel that the other round is only subordi- nate. The top things throughout are the dinner, and the inn, and the reciprocity ; and you only wish that all the world were as happy as yourselves, wondering that they are not so, and that everybody does 112 VERSES WRITTEN AT AN INN AT HENLEY. not do as he pleases upon the strength of the " Rose and Crown" and universal benevolence. By an inn, however, we do not mean any inn ; no, not even with companions who can make us forget everything else ; for on their ac- count also we desire an inn perfect of its kind ; and this, we take it, is an old inn that has been a country-house, with at least a bit of the old garden to it, parterres of flowers, lavender, &c, and good sized old- fashioned rooms, with smaller ones in corners, to choose according as you are few or many, or wish to be roomy or snug. Hazlitt, who loved to escape from his irritabilities into an inn, has noticed such a one in a charming passage. He is speaking of the delight of reading favorite authors. " The last time," he says, " I tasted this luxury in its full perfec- tion, was one day after a sultry day's walk between Farnham and Alton. I was fairly tired out ; I walked into an inn-yard (I think at the latter place) ; I was shown by the waiter to what looked at first like common out-houses at the other end of it, but they turned out to be a suite of rooms, probably a hundred years old — the one I entered opened into an old-fashioned garden, embellished with beds of lark- spur and a leaden Mercury ; it was wainscoted, and there was a grave- looking dark-colored portrait of Charles II. hanging up over the tiled chimney-piece. I had Love for Love in my pocket, and began to read ; coffee was brought in, in a silver coffee-pot ; the cream, the bread and butter, everything was excellent, and the flavor of Congreve's style prevailed over all. I prolonged the entertainment till a late hour, and relished this divine comedy better even than when I used to see it played by Miss Mellon, as Miss Prue ,- Bob Palmer, as Tattle ; and Bannister as honest Ben. This circumstance happened just five years ago, and it seems like yesterday. If I count my life so, by lustres, it will soon glide away; yet I shall not have to repine, if, while it lasts, it is enriched by a few such recollections."* The Henley at which Shenstone wrote his lines on an inn was the Henley on the road to Stratford-on-Avon. Johnson slept at it one night with Boswell, and had quoted a stanza from the lines in the course of the day, when they were dining at an " excellent inn at Chapelhouse." " We dined," Boswell says, " at an excellent inn at Chapelhouse, where he (Johnson) expatiated on the felicity of England in its taverns • Plain Speaker, vol. i. p. 302. YERSES WRITTEN A T AN INN A T HENLE Y. 113 and inns, and triumphed over the French for not having, in any per- fection, the tavern life. ' There is no private house,' said he, ' in which people can enjoy themselves so well, as at a capital tavern. Let there be ever so great plenty of good things, ever so much grandeur, ever so much elegance, ever so much desire that everybody should be easy, in the nature of things it cannot be ; there must always be some degree of care and anxiety. The master of the house is anxious to entertain his guests ; the guests are anxious to be agreeable to him ; and no man, but a very impudent dog indeed, can as freely command what is in another man's house, as if it were his own. Whereas, at a tavern, there is a general freedom from anxiety. You are sure you are welcome ; and the more noise you make, the more trouble you give, the more good things you call for, the welcomer you are. No servants will attend you with the alacrity which waiters do, who are incited by the prospect of an immediate reward in proportion as they please. No, sir ; there is nothing which has yet been contrived by men, by which so much happiness is produced as by a good tavern or inn.' He then repeated with great emotion Shenstone's lines : '• ' Whoe'er has travell'd life's dull round, Where'er his stages may have been- May sigh to think he still has founc His warmest welcome at an inn.' "* Johnson was so fond of this little poem, that Miss Reynolds (sister of £ir Joshua) said she had learnt it by heart from hearing him re- p«'&* It. Pome exclusive admirers of great poetry would see nothing in it ; but let them try to write as good a one, and they would dis- r.ovcc that some portion of the poetical facility was necessary to ey-ness and modulate even thoughts like these. rjlQ thee, fair Freedom ! I retire, - 1 - From flattery, cards, and dice, and din ; No/ art thou found in mansions higher Than the low cot or humble Inn. 'Ti? here with boundless power I reign ; An(! every health which I begin * Is wll, Kurray'a Edition, vol. vi. p. 81. 1 1 4 VERSES WRITTEN AT AN INN AT HENLEY Converts dull port to bright champagne ; Such freedom crowns it at an Inn. £ fly from pomp, I fly from plate ! I fly from Falsehood's specious grin ! Freedom I love and form I hate, And choose my lodgings at an Inn. Here, waiter, take my sordid ore, Which lackeys else might hope to win j It buys what courts have not in store, It buys me freedom at an Inn. "Whoe'er has travelled life's dull round. Where'er his stages may have been. May sigh to think he still has found The warmest welcome at an Inn. fw Xrtfers nf dpriuj. Gray appears to us to be the best letter-writer in the language. Others equal him in particular qualities, and surpass him in amount of entertainment ; but none are so nearly faultless. Chesterfield wants heart, and even his boasted " delicacy ;" Bolingbroke and Pope want simplicity ; Cowper is more lively than strong ; Shenstone reminds you of too many rainy days, Swift of too many things which he af- fected to despise, Gibbon too much of the formalist and the litterateur. The most amusing of all our letter-writers are Walpole and Lady Mary Wortley Montagu ; but though they had abundance of wit, sense, and animal spirits, you are not always sure of their veracity. Now, " the first quality in a companion," as Sir William Temple observes, " is truth ;" and Gray's truth is as manifest as his other good quali- ties. He has sincerity, modesty, manliness (in spite of a somewhat effeminate body), learning, good-nature, playfulness, a perfect style ; and if an air of pensiveness breathes over all, it is only of that re- signed and contemplative sort which completes our sympathy with the writer. Mark what he says in these letters about his sitting in the forest ; about Southern ; about l&alu and their school-days ; about Shaftes- bury ; about having a " garding" of one's own ; about Akenside com- pared with himself; about the Southampton Abbot, the Grand Duch- ess of Tuscany, &c. &c; and about sunrise — wondering " whether anybody ever saw it before," he is so astonished at their not having said more on the subject. Gray is the " melancholy Jaques" of English literature, without the sullenness or causticity. His melancholy is of the diviner sort of MiUon and Beaumont and is always ready to assume a kindly cheer fulness. 116 FIVE LETTERS OF GRAY. TO HORACE WALPOLE* [a fox-hunter a poet's solitude southern the dramatist.] September, 1737. WAS hindered in my last, and so could not give you all J the trouble I would have done. The description of road which your coach-wheels have so orten honored, it would be needless to give you. Suffice it, that I arrived safe at my uncle's, who is a great hunter in imagination. His dogs take up every chair in the house, so I am forced to stand at this present writing ; and though the gout forbids him galloping after them in the field, yet he continues to regale his ears and nose with their comfortable noise and stink, f He holds me mighty cheap, I perceive, for walking when I should ride, and reading when I should hunt. My comfort amidst all this is, that I have, at the distance of half a mile, through a green lane, a forest (the vulgar call it a common), all my own ; at least as good as so, for I spy no human thing in it but myself. It is a little chaos of mountains and precipices — mountains, it is true, that do not ascend much above the * Walpole and Gray had been school-fellows at Eton ; and. though differing greatly in some respects,, had tastes alike in others, particu- larly a love for romantic fiction and Gothic architecture. Their differ- ences were found to render them unsuitable as fellow-travellers, when they visited Italy; but they renewed their intercourse at home, and continued correspondents as long as Gray lived. At the date of the letter before us, Walpole was a youth of twenty, residing with his father, Sir Robert, at Ilaughton ; Gray, twenty-one, on a visit to an uncle, at Burnham, in Buckinghamshire. The reader will observe the mature manliness of his style. t Some readers of the present day might suppose that coarse hab- its are here but coarsely described by the delicate young poet. Put such language was not considered coarse in the time of Gray. FIVE LETTERS OF GRAY. 117 clouds ; nor are the declivities quite so amazing as Dover cliff; but just such hills as people who love then* necks as well as I do may venture to climb ; and crags that give the eye as much pleasure as if they were dangerous. Both vale and hill are covered with most venerable beeches, and other very reverend vegetables,* that, like most other ancient peo- ple, are always dreaming out their old stories to the winds : " And as they bow their hoary tops, relate la murmuring sounds the dark decrees of fate ; While visions, as poetic eyes avow, Cling to each leaf, and swarm on every bough." At the foot of one of these squats me I (il penscroso), and there I grow to the trunk for a whole morning. The timo- rous hare and sportive squirrel gambol around me, like Adam in paradise, before he had an Eve ; but I think he did not use to read Virgil, as I commonly do there. In this sit- uation I often converse with my Horace, aloud too ; that is, talk to you ; but I do not remember that I ever heard you answer me. I beg pardon for taking all the conversation to myself; but it is entirely your own fault. We have old Mr. Southern! at a gentleman's house, a little way off, who often comes to see us ; he is now seventy-seven years old, and has almost wholly lost his memory, but is as agreeable as an old man can be ; at least I persuade myself so when I look at him, and think of Isabella and Oroonoko. I shall be in town in about three weeks. Adieu." * " Reverend vegetable" is a phrase of Steele's for a common-place old man. \ Southern lived nine years longer. When he was a young man, he. knew Dryden ; and here is Gray, a youth, in company with I)ry- den'd acquaintance. It is always pleasant to observe these links of celebri'y .13 FIVE LETTERS OF GRAY. TO EICHAED WEST.* [BAD SriRITS RECOLLECTIONS OF HUSBANDS AND STATESMEN AT SCHOOL.] London, May 27th, 1742. "INE, you arc to know, is a white melancholy, or rather leucocholy,f for the most part ; which, though it seldom laughs, or dances, nor ever amounts to what one calls joy or pleasure, yet is a good easy sort of a state, and ca lie lazsse que de ^amuser.\ The only fault of it is insipidity ; which is apt now and then to give a sort of en?iui, which makes one form certain little wishes that signify nothing. But there is another sort, black indeed, which I have now and then felt, that has somewhat in it like Tertullian's rule of faith, " credo quia imposszbzle cst"§ for it believes, nay, is sure of everything that is unlikely, so it be but frightful ; and, on the other hand, excludes and shuts its eyes to the most possible hopes, and everything that is pleasurable. From this, the Lord deliver us ; for none but he and sun- shiny weather can do it. In hopes of enjoying this kind of weather, I am going into the country for a few weeks, but shall be never the nearer any society, so if you "have any * Son of the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, by a daughter of Bishop Burnet. His tastes were very like Gray's, and he promised to attain celebrity, but died of a consumption the j-ear following the date of this letter, at the age of twenty-six. f Melancholy signifying black choler, leucocholy would be white cboler. Gray pleasantly coins the word for the occasion. X Docs nothing but trifle. V) / believe because it is impossible. Gray might have added (and perhaps he meant to do so by what follows) tliat Tertullian, who was a cruel bigot, held another rule of faith, equally reasonable, namely. / /" lieve becaus: it is horrible. FIVE LETTERS OF GRAY. 119 cr.r.riiy you will contrive to write. My life is like Harry the fourth' J supper of hens: ' : poulcts a la broche, j)oxdets en ragout, jjoukts en hdchis, poulcts en f; leasees ;* reading here, reading there ; nothing but books with different sauces. Do not let me lose my dessert then ; for though that be read- ing too, yet it has a very different flavor. The May seems to be come since your invitation;! and I promise to bask in her beams, and dress me in her roses : " Et caput in vcrna semper habere rosa."J I shall see Mr. and his wife, nay, and his child too, for he has got a boy. Is it not odd to consider one's contemporaries in the grave light of husband and father ? There are my Lords and , they are statesmen ; do not you remember them dirty boys playing at cricket? As for me, I am never a bit the older, nor the bigger, nor the wiser than I was then ; no, not for having been beyond sea. Pray, how are you ? TO THE REVEREND NORTON NICHOLLS. [BANTER OF FORMAL EXCUSES AND FINE EXORDIUMS SOUTH- AMPTON AN ABBOT SUNRISE.] Nov. 19, 1764. I RECEIVED your letter at Southampton ; and as I would wish to treat everybody according to their own rule and measure of good breeding, have, against my inclination, waited till now before I answered it, purely out of fear and * Roast chicken, ragooed chicken, hashed chicken, fricasecd oil -ken. f West had written an ode to May, addressed to his friend. ) " And bavo my head forever in aprincr roaes." Ji line in " Propsrtius," lib. i;i. v. £2. 120 FIVE LETTERS OF CRAY. respect, and an ingenuous diffidence in my own abilities. It you will not take this as an excuse, accept it at least as a well- turned period, which is always my principal concern.* So I proceed to tell you, that my health is much improv- ed by the sea. Not that I drank it, or bathed in it, as the common people do ; no ! I only walked by it, and looked upon it. The climate is remarkably mild, even in October and November ; no snow has been seen to lie there for these thirty years past ; the myrtles grow in the ground against the houses, Guernsey lilies bloom in every window ; the town, clean and well-built, surrounded by its old stone walls, with their towers and gateways, stands at the point of a peninsula, and opens full south to an arm of the sea, which, having form- ed two beautiful bays on each hand of it stretches away in direct view, till it joins the British Channel. It is skirted on either side with gently rising grounds, clothed with thick wood ; and directly across its mouth rise the high lands of the Isle of Wight at distance, but distinctly seen. In tht bosom of the woods (concealed from profane eyes) lie hid the ruins of Nettley Abbey ; there may be richer and greater houses of religion, but the abbot is content with his situation. See there, at the top of that hanging meadow, under the shade of those old trees that bend into a half-circle about it, he is walking slowly (good man !) and bidding his beads for the souls of his benefactors, interred in that venerable pile that lies beneath him. Beyond it (the meadow still descending) nods a thicket of oaks that mask the building, and have ex- cluded a view too garish and luxuriant for a holy eye ; only on either hand they leave an opening to the blue glittering sea. Did you not observe how, as that white sail shot by and was lost, he turned and crossed himself, to drive the tempter * A banter probably of some apologetica] formality on the part of Nicholls. FIVE LETTERS OF GRAY. 121 from him that had thrown that distraction in his way ? I should tell you that the ferryman who rowed me, a lusty young fellow, told me that he would not for all the world pass a -iight at the Abbey (there were such things seen near it), though there was a power of money hid there. From thence I went to Salisbury, "Wilton, and Stonehenge : but of these things I say no more. They will be published at the University press. PS. — I must not close my letter without giving you one principal event of my history ; which was, that (in the course of my late tour) I set out one morning before five o'clock, the moon shining through a dark and misty autumnal air, and got to the sea-coast time enough to be at the sun's levee. I saw the clouds and dark vapors open gradually to right and left, rolling over one another in great smoky wreaths, and the tide (as it flowed gently in upon the sands) first whitening, then slightly tinged with gold and blue, and all at once a little line of insufferable brightness that (before I can write these five words) was grown to half an orb, and now to a whole one too glorious to be distinctly seen. It is very odd it makes no figure on paper ; yet I shall remember it as long as the sun, or at least as loner as I endure. I wonder whether anybody ever saw it before ? I hardly believe it. TO THE SAME. | A MOTI1EH SCENERY OF KENT.] 17C5. IT is a long time since, that I heard you were gone in hast into Yorkshire on account of your mother's illness ; an the same letter informed me that she was recovered, other wise I had then wrote to you only to beg you would take care of her, and to inform you that I had discovered a thing 6 122, FIVE BETTERS OF GRAY. very little known, which is, that in one's whole life one can never have any more than a single mother. You may think this is obvious, and (what you call) a trite observation. You are a green gosling ! I was at the same age (very near) as wise as you ; and yet I never discovered this (with full evi- dence and conviction, I mean) till it was too late. It is thir- teen years ago, and seems but as yesterday, and every day I live it sinks deeper into my heart. Many a corollary could I draw from this axiom for your use (not for my own), but I will leave you the merit of doing it for yourself. Pray tell me how your health is ; I conclude it perfect, as I hear you offered yourself as a guide to Mr. Palgrave into the Sierra Morena of Yorkshire. For me, I passed the end of May, and all June, in Kent, not disagreeably. In the west part of it, from every eminence, the eye catches some long reach «rf the Thames or Medway, with all their shipping : in the east, the sea breaks in upon you, and mixes its white transient sails, and glittering blue expanse, with the deeper and brighter green of the woods and corn. This sentence ii so fine I am quite ashamed, but no matter ! You must translate it into prose. Palgrave, if he heard it, would co''er his face with his pudding sleeve.* I do not tell you of the great and S'uall beasts, and creeping things innumerable, that I met with, because you do not suspect that this ivorld is inhabited by anything but men. and women, and clergy, and such two- legged cattle. Now I am here again, vcy disconsolate and all alone, for Mr. Brown is gone, and the cares of this world are coming thick upon me ; you, I hope, are better off, riding and walking in the woods of Studley, &o &c. I must no* wish for you here ; besides, I am going to town at Michae mas, by no means for amusement. * He was a clergyman ; rector of Palgrave and Thrandeston, iD Suffolk. FIVE LETTERS OF GRAY. 123 TO THE SAME. ("HAVING A GAIIDEN OF ONE'S OWN SHENSTONE SECOND BAN- TER ON FORMAL APOLOGIES. Pembroke College, June 24th, 1769. ANL so you have a garden of your own, and you plant and transplant, and are dirty and amused. Are not you ashamed of yourself? Why, I have no such thing, you monster ; nor ever shall be either dirty or amused as long as I live.* My gardens are in my windows, like those of a lodger up three pair of stairs in Petticoat Lane, or Camomile Street, and they go to bed regularly under the same roof that I do. Dear ! how charming it must be to walk out in one's own garding : and sit on a bench in the open air, with a foun- tain and leaden statue, and a rolling-stone, and an arbor ! Have a care of sore throats though, and the agoc. However, be it known to you, though I have no garden, I have sold my estate,f and got a thousand guineas and fourscore pounds a-year for my old aunt, and a twenty-pound prize in the lottery, and Lord knows what arrears in the treasury, and am a rich fellow enough, go to ; a fellow that hath had losses, and one that hath two gowns, and every- thing handsome about him ;| and in a few days shall have new window-curtains: are } r ou avized of that? Aye,' and a new mattress to lie upon. * This pleasantry becomes the more charming, when read in con- nection with some previous letters to Nicholls, which were in a strain of serious and somewhat remonstrating advice on carelessness in his affairs, though full of the most touching kindness. t Some houses on the west side of Hand Alley, in Cornhill. | From Dogberry's speech in Much ado about Nothing, Act iv. sc. 2 124 FIVE LETTERS OF GRAY. My Ode* has been rehearsed again and again, and tht scholars have got scraps by heart. I expect to see it torn piecemeal in the North Briton,t before it is born. If you •will come, you shall see it, and sing in it amidst a chcruc from Salisbury and Gloucester music-meeting, great names there, and all well versed in Judas Maccabaeus.j: I wish it was once over, for then I immediately go for a few days to Lon- don, and so with Mr. Brown to Aston, though I fear it will rain the whole summer, and Skiddaw will be invisible and inaccessible to mortals. I have got De la Lande's Vo} r age through Italy in eight volumes. He is a member of the Academy of Sciences, and pretty good to read. I have read, too, an octavo volume of Shenstone's Letters. Poor man ! he was always 'wishing for money, for fame, and other distinctions ; and his whole phi- losophy consisted in living against his will in retirement, and in a place which his taste had adorned, but which he only enjoyed when people of note came to see and commend it. His correspondence is about nothing else but this place and his own writings, with two or three neighboring clergymen who wrote verses too.§ * " On the Installation of the Duke of Grafton as Chancellor of tin University of Cambridge." t A periodical publication now forgotten. X Handel's Oratorio of that name. V) This is a true view of the weak side of Shenstone's character; and Gray, perhaps, confined himself to that side of it for some purpose connected with his correspondent. Otherwise Shenstone must inevi- tably have reaped great enjoyment from the lovely and surprising landscapes he created on his estate, which were the admiration of the best judges, and the site of his own gentle verse-making. Shenstone, like most people, was a different man under different phases of health. Gray was a warm admirer of the poem in these volumes, The School- mistress, He pronounced it " excellent in its kind, and masterly." FIVE LETTERS OP GRA1. 125 I Lave just found the beginning of a letter, which some- body had dropped : I should rather call it first-thoughts for the beginning of a letter, for there are many scratches and corrections. As I cannot use it myself (having got a begin- ning already of my own), I send it for your use on some great occasion. " Dear Sir, " After so long silence, the hopes of pardon, and prospect of forgiveness, might seem entirely extinct, or at least very remote, was I not truly sensible of your goodness and can dor, which is the only asylum that my negligence can fly to, since every apology would prove insufficient to counterbalance it, or alleviate my fault : how then shall my deficiency pre- sume to. make so bold an attempt, or be able to suffer tha hardships of so rough a campaign'?" &c. &c. &c * * See note *, p. 125. Startup! cf (Cnltinaititg a Mi far ^irtaH. BY JONATHAN RICHARDSON. Jonathan Richardson was a portrait-painter and critic in the time of Pope, whom he knew. He was esteemed in his art, and still more for his knowledge and admiration of art in others. He wrote treatisaa on Painting, notes on Milton, a poem in Nichols's Collection, evincing his inquiring and amiable turn of mind, called an Address to the Morn- ing Star; and he was famous for his industry, early-rising, and the affection existing between him and his son. His writings have perhaps created more enthusiasm for pictures than those of any other man in England. lie is not an accomplished writer, like Sir Joshua ; nor has he the depth of Hazlitt ; much less any of the transcendental insights of the promising critical genius who has lately made his appearance among us under the title of the " Oxford Graduate." His style is col- loquial, to a degree of slovenliness : and, with the tendencies natural perhaps to his art in a professional point of view, he is loo much in- clined to confound prosperity with success. But he would interest us less if he did not pour forth all he thought. Candor, honesty, good- ness, vivacity, and a considerable amount of taste and knowledge, constitute the charms of his writing. Sir Joshua respected him; Pope, who dabhled in painting himself, was attached to him; Hazlitt quoted him with delight. The following remarks are on a subject which is yet far too little appreciated, but which is destined, we suspect, to play a great and delightful part in the universal world of civilization. "Knowledge is power ;" but it is not only power to command (which is the sense ic CULTIVATING A TASTE FOR PICTURES. 12? which the axiom is generally taken), it is also power to enjoy. Every- body who knows anything of anything, knows how much that knowl- edge adds to the sum of his ordinary satisfaction ; what strength it gives him, what ennui and vacuity it saves him. The smallest bota- nist or geologist knows it, by the way-side ; the least meteorologist, as he gazes at a rack of clouds. Pictures make themselves known at once, more or less ; yet nobody, who has not in some measure thought on the subject as Richardson here teaches to think, has any concep- tion how much is to be got out of a good picture, the more he knows cf the art, and of nature. lie learns to know everything which the painter intends ; everything which he intimates ; and thus to discover volumes of meaning and entertainment where others see little but a colored page. And the more we know of pictures, the more we come to value engravings, and to know what companions they can be made ; what little treasures of art we may possess, even in those faint repre- sentations, compared with the nothing to be got out of the finest paint- ings by the eyes of ignorance. And then there is the reflex of Painting itself on Nature ; the grateful light which she throws in her turn on the source of her in- spiration ; so that the more we know of objects on canvas, the more we learn to know of the objects themselves, and thus become qualified to discern pictures in everything, and to be critics of our instructor. But Richardson has touched on this point also, and the reader must not be detained from him. We would only beg leave to add, by way of individual experience in such matters, without pretending to any remarkable insight into them, either natural or acquired, that Mr. Ilazlitt, whom we had the pleasure of knowing, converted us from a wrong admiration of white cottages in landscapes to the right one of the honest old red ; that Mr. Haydon (whom we will not call " unfor- tunate," even for his end, knowing what pleasure he got out of his art in life) was the first, in our youth, to give us an eye to the atti- tudes and groups of people m company ; and that we have reason to regard the having been conversant with a house full of paintings during childhood as one of the blessings of our existence. We have never since entered a room of that sort without a tendency to hush and move softly, as if in the presence of things above the ordinary course of nature, of spirits left behind them by great men, looking at us with divine eyes, or informing the most beautiful visions of nattiro with art as wonderful. And we are so. 128 ADVANTAGES OF CULTIVATING WHAT is beautiful and excellent, is naturally adapted to please : but all beauties and excellencies arc not, natu- rally, seen. Most gentlemen see pictures and drawings as the generality of people see the heavens in a clear, starry night; they perceive a sort of beauty there, but such a one as pro- duces no great pleasure in the mind ; but when one considers the heavenly bodies as other worlds, and that there are an infinite number of these in the empire of God (Immensity), and worlds which our eyes, assisted by the best glasses, can never reach, and so far remote from the most distant of what we see, that these visible ones are as it were our neighbors, as the continent of France is to Great Britain ; when one considers farther, that as there are inhabitants on this conti- nent, though we see them not when we see that, it is alto- gether unreasonable to imagine that those innumerable worltlsi are uninhabited and desert ; there must be beings there, some perhaps more, others less noble and excellent than man. When one thus views this vast prospect, the mind is other- wise affected than before, and feels a delight which common notions never can administer. So those who at present can- not comprehend there can be such pleasure in a good picture or drawing as connoisseurs pretend to find, may learn to see the same thing themselves ; their eyes being once opened, they may be said to obtain a new sense ; and new pleasures flow in as often as the objects of that superinduced sight present themselves, which (to people of condition especially) very frequently happens, or may be procured, whether here at home, or in their travels abroad. When a gentleman haa learned to sec the beauties and excellencies that arc really in good pictures and drawings and which may be learnt by conversing with such, and applying himself to the considera- tion of theni, he will look upon that with joy which he now passes over with very little pleasure, if not with indifference; A TASTE FOR PICTURES. 129 Day, a sketch, a scrabble of the harm of a great master, will be capable of administering to him a greater degree of pleas- ure than those who know it not by experience can have any conception of. Besides the graceful and noble attitudes, the beauty of colors and forms, and the fine effects of light and shadow, which none sees as a connoisseur does, such a one enters farther than any other can do into the beauties of the invention, expression, and other parts of the work he is con- sidering. He sees strokes of art, contrivances, expedients, a delicacy and spirit, that others see not, or very imperfectly. He sees what force of mind the great masters had to conceive ideas ; what judgment to see things beautifully, or to imagine beauty from what they saw ; and what a power their hands were endued withal, in a few strokes and with ease, to show to another what themselves conceived. What is it that gives us pleasure in reading a history or poem, but that the mind is thereby furnished with a variety of images? And what distinguishes some authors, and sets them above the common level, but their knowing how to raise their subject'? The Trojan or Peleponnesian wars would never have been thought of by us, if a Homer or Thucydides had not told the stories of them, who knew how to do it so as to fill the minds of their readers with great and delightful ideas. He who converses with the works of the best masters is always reading such admirable authors ; and his mind consequently, in proportion, entertained and delight- ed with the histories, fables, characters, the ideas of magnifi- cent buildings, fine prospects, &c. And he sees these things in those different lights which the various manners of thinking of the several masters sets them ; he sees them as they are represented by the capri- cious but vast genius of Leonardo da Vinci ; the fierce and gigantic one of Michael Angelo ; the divine and polite one 130 ADVANTAGES OF CULTIVATING of Eaphael ; the poetical fancy of Guido ; the angelical mind of Corregio, or Parmegiano ; the haughty, sullen, but accom- plished Annibal, the learned Augustino Caracci. A connoisseur hath this further advantage, that he not only sees beauties in pictures and paintings, -which to common eyes are invisible ; but he learns by these to see such in na- ture, in the exquisite forms and colors, the fine effects of lights, and shadows, and reflections, which in her are always to be found, and from whence he hath a pleasure which other- wise he could never have had, and which none w T ith untaught eyes can possibly discern : he has a constant pleasure of this kind even in the most common things, and the most familiar to us, so that what people usually look upon with the utmost indifference, creates an home-felt delight in his mind. The noblest works of Raphael, the most ravishing music of Han- del, the most masterly strokes of Milton, touch not people who are without discernment. So, the beauties themselves of those all-perfect works of the great author of nature are not seen but by enlightened eyes, that is, those eyes which are taught to see ; to those they appear far otherwise than before they were ; so, so far otherwise ! that one sees through a glass darkly (through the gross medium of ignorance) ; the other, that of a connoisseur, as when the angel had removed the film from Adam's eyes, and purged with euphrasy and rue, the visual nerve, seeth beauty divine and human, as far as human may, as we hope to see everything, still nearer to its true beauty and perfec- tion, in a better state ; when we shall " see what eye hath not seen, neither haJi it entered the heart of man to conceive." By conversing with the works of the best masters, our imaginations are impregnated with great and beautiful images, which present themselves on all occasions in A TASTE FOR PICTURES. 131 reading an author, or ruminating upon some great action, ancient or modern ; everything is raised, everything improved from what it would have been otherwise. Nay, those lovely images with which our minds are thus enriched, arise there continually, and give us pleasure, with or without any par- ticular application. What is rare and curious, exclusive of any other consider- ation, we naturally take pleasure in ; because, as variable as our circumstances are, there is so much of repetition in life that more variety is still desirable. The works of the great masters would thus recommend themselves to us, though they had not that transcendent excellency that they have ; they are such as are rarely seen ; they are the works of a small number of the species in one little country of the world, and in a short space of time. But their excellency being put into the scale makes the rarity of them justly considerable. They arc the works of men like whom none are now to be found, and when there will be, God only knows ! " Art et guides, tout est dans les Champs Elysees." La Fontaine. What the old man Melanthius says of Polygnotus (as he is cited by Plutarch in the life of Cimon), may, with a little alteration, be applied to these men in general ; it is thus al- ready translated : " This famous painter, at his own expense, Gave Athens beauty and magnificence ; New life to all the heroes did impart ; Embellish'd all the temples with his art ; The splendor of the state restor'd again ; And so he did oblige both gods and men." What still adds to the rarity of the excellent works wo 132 ADVANTAGES OF CULTIVATING are speaking of is, their number must necessarily diminish by sudden accidents, or the slow, but certain injuries of time. Another pleasure belonging to connoissance is when we find anything particular and curious ; as the first thoughts of a master for some remarkable picture ; the original of a work of a great master, the copy of which we have already by some other considerable hand ; a drawing of a picture, or after an antique very famous, or which is now lost ; or when we make some new acquisition upon reasonable terms, chiefly when we get for ourselves something we much desired, but could not hope to be masters of ; when we make some new discovery, something that improves our knowledge in connois- sance or painting, or otherwise ; and abundance of such like incidents, and which very frequently happens to a diligent connoisseur. The pleasure that arises from a knowledge of hands is not like, or equal to that of the other parts of the businesK of a connoisseur, but neither is this destitute of it. When one sees an admirable piece of art, it is part of the connois- seur to know to whom to attribute it, and then to know his history ; which arises, I hope, from a natural justice in the human mind that loves and desires to pay a little tribute of gratitude where it discovers it to be due to that merit of another which it is actually enjoying. The custom of put- ting the author's portrait or life at the beginning of his book, is kindly giving us an opportunity of doing this. When one is considering a picture or a drawing,* and at the same time thinks this was done by him who had many * The passage here commencing is one enormously long sen- tence, continued to the words " these reflections," at p. 140. It may be supposed, however, to be very agreeably poured forth in the heat of conversation. A TASTE FOR PICTURES. 133 extraordinary endowments of body and mind, and was withal a virtuous man and a fine gentleman in his whole life, and still more at his death, expiring in the arms of one of the greatest princes of that age, Francis I., king of France, who xoved him as a friend ;* — another is of him who lived a long and happy life beloved of the Emperor Charles V., and many others of the first princes of Europe ;f — when one has another in his hand, and thinks that this was done by one who so excelled in three arts, as that any one of them, in that degree he possessed them all, had rendered him worthy of immortality, and who moreover dared to contend with his sovereign (one of the haughtiest popes that ever was) upon a slight offered to him, and extricated himself with honor ;\. — another is the work of that great self-formed, authentic genius, who was the model of supernatural 'grace ; who alone painted heaven, as surely it is ; and hath represented to hu- man weakness the angelic nature ; this, too, by inspiration ! not having had any master, or none but whom he left quite out of sight in the earliest progresses of his divine pencil ; he even never saw the works of other great masters, having always confined himself to his native Lombardy, except one single one of Raphael, and a great one indeed that was, his St. Ce- cilia when brought to Bologna ; and then, after considering it with long attention, and the admiration it deserved, he had the spirit (and he had a right to that spirit) to say, " Well, I am a painter, too ;"§ he was so little known to the rest of Italy, that he passed till very lately, in the opinion of the world, for a low, poor, indigent creature, from the ill-informa- tion or malice of Vasari, always prejudiced against the Lom- bard painters, when his character was rescued from its affect- ed obscurity, and his noble birth and connections, and splen- * Leonardo da Vinci. t Titian. % Michael Angelo. § Corregio. 134 AD VANTA GES OF C UL Tl VA TING did wealth, asserted boyond all possibility and dispute by the indefatigable industry of Ludiovico Antonio David, a Milan- ese painter, and published at Bologna ; — another we shall consider as the work of him who restored painting when it was almost sunk ; of him whom his art made honorable ; but who neglecting and despising greatness with a sort of cynical pride, was treated suitably to the figure he gave himself, not to his intrinsic merit ; which not having philosophy enough to bear, it broke his heart ;* another is performed by one, who (on the contrary) was a fine gentleman, and of great magnificence, and was much honored by his own and foreign princes ; who was a courtier, a statesman, and a painter ; and so much all these, that when he acted in either character, that seemed to be his business, and the others his diversion ;f — when one thus reflects, besides the pleasure arising from the beauties and excellencies of the work, the fine ideas it gives us of natural things, the noble way of thinking one. finds in it, and the pleasing thoughts it may suggest to us, an ad- ditional pleasure results from these reflections. But, oh ! the pleasure ! when a connoisseur and lover of art has before him a picture or drawing, of which he can say, this is the hand, these the thoughts of him who was one of the politest, best-natured gentlemen that ever was ; who was beloved and assisted by the greatest wits, and the greatest men then at Home, at a time when politeness and all those arts which make life taste truly agreeable, were carried to a greater height than at any period since the reign of Augus- tus : of him who lived in great fame, honor, and magnificence, and died universally lamented ; and even missed a cardinal's hat only by dying a few months too soon ; but was, above all, highly esteemed and favored by two popes, the only ones * Caravaggio "? f Rubons. A TASTE FOR PICTURES. 135 who filled the chair of St. Peter in his time ; — one (in short) who could have been a Leonardo, a Michael Angelo. a Ti- tian, a Corregio, a Parmegiano, an Annibal, a Rubens, or any other when he pleased, but none of them could ever have been a Baphael (£>h mi a Distant ^rnsprrt nf &\n Cnllrgt. Tuis poem has been noticed in our preface, and in the introduc- tion to the Long Story. It is full of thought, tenderness, and music, and should make the writer beloved by all persons of reflection, es- pecially those who know what it is to visit the scenes of their school- days. They may not all regard them in the same melancholy light ; but the melancholy light will cross them, and then Gray's lines will fall in upon the recollection, at once like a bitter and a balm. YE distant spires, ye antique towers, That crown the watery glade, Where grateful science still adores Her Henry's holy shade ; And ye that from the stately brow Of Windsor's heights th' expanse below Of grove, of lawn, of mead survey, Whose turf, whose shade, whose flowers among Wanders the hoary Thames along His silver-winding way. Ali, happy hills, ah, pleasing shade, Ali, fields beloved in vain, ODE ON A PROSPECT OF ETON COLLEGE. Vol Where once my careless childhood stray'd, A stranger yet to pain 1 I feel the gales that from ye blow A momentary bliss bestow, As waving fresh their gladsome wing My weary soul they seem to soothe, And, redolent of joy and youth, To breathe a second spring. Say, father Thames, for thou hast seen Full many a sprightly race, Disporting on thy margent green. The paths of pleasure trace, Who foremost now delight to cleave With pliant arm thy glassy wave ? The captive linnet which enthrall l What idle nrogeny succeed To chase trie rolling circle's speed, Or urge the flying ball 'i While some, on earnest business bent, Their murmuring labors ply Gainst graver hours, that bring constraint To sweeten liberty, Some bold adventurers disdain The limits of their little reign, And unknown regions dare descry ; Still as they run they look behind, They hear a voice in every wind, And snatch a fearful joy. Gay hope is theirs, by fancy fed, Less pleasing when possest ; 138 ODE ON A DISTANT PROSPECT The tear forgot as soon as shed, The sunshine of the breast : Theirs, buxom health of rosy hue, Wild -wit, invention ever new, And lively cheer, of vigor born ; The thoughtless day, the easy night, The spirits pure, the slumbers light, That fly th' approach of morn. Alas, regardless of their doom, The little victims play ! No sense have they of ills to como. Nor care beyond to-day : Yet see how all around them wait The ministers of human fate, And black misfortune's baleful train ; Ah. show them where in ambush stand, To seize their prey, the murderous band I Ah, tell them they are men f These shall the fury passions tear, The vultures of the mind, Disdainful anger, pallid fear, And shame that skulks behind ; Or pining love shall waste their youth Or jealousy, with rankling tooth, That inly gnaws the secret heart , And envy wan, and faded care, Grim-visag'd comfortless despair, And sorrow's piercing dart. Ambition this shall tempt to rise, Then whirl the wretch from high, OF E TON C OLLEGE. 1 39 To bitter scorn a sacrifice, And grinning infamy ; The stings of falsehood those shall try, And hard unkindness' alter'd eye, That mocks the tear it forc'd to flow ; And keen remorse, with blood defil'd, And moody madness laughing wild Amidst severest woe. Lo, in the vale of years beneath A grisly troop are seen, The painful family of death, More hideous than their queen ; This racks the joints, this fires the veins, That every laboring sinew strains, Those in tho deeper vitals rage : Lo, poverty, to fill the band, That numbs the soul with icy hand, And slow consuming age. To each his sufferings ; all are ineD, Condemn'd alike to groan ; The tender for another's pain, The unfeeling for his own. Yet, ah ! why should they know their fate I Since sorrow never comes too late, And happiness too swiftly flies : Thought would destroy their paradise. — No more. Where ignorance is bliss, 'Tis folly to be wise. 1 £ong Itorij. The Long Story is so entitled in deprecation of any tedium which the reader might experience in perusing a personal adventure of the author's who was too sensitive on such points. He pleasantly pre- tends that he has omitted five hundred stanzas. The occasion of the poem was a visit paid him by two ladies,'who did him the honor of being their own introducers. Gray was at the house of his aunt, in his native village of Stoke Pogeis, near Windsor. His mother was there also. The Viscountess Cobham,* who possessed the mansion- house of the place, wished to make the poet's acquaintance. The la- dies in question undertook to break the ice for her. Not finding him at home, they left a card, intimating that they came to tell him of the good health of a Lady Brown, a friend of his. Shy and sequestered as he was. the poet returned the visit ; and he takes the opportunity of describing the house, and complimenting its inmates. Walpole said of Gray, that, however well he might write in moods altogether serious, his real forte was pleasantry. Undoubtedly Gray's pleasantry is of a more original cast than his seriousness ; less indebt- ed to that of his predecessors. Yet there is reason to believe that every thought which he transferred to paper had passed through his own mind, though his love of the writings of others too often induced him to express it in their words. Half his verses are centos ; and yet we feel them to be rather sympathies than echoes. His Ode on the Prospect of Eton College, and his Elegy in a Country Churchyard, are the regrets of all his fellow-mortals, and of himself. Gray vas a scholarly, thoughtful, affectionate man ; a little effeminate in Lis liab- • Sister of Pi'pe's Lord Cobham, and subsequently Countess rempte. A LONG STORY. 141 Its, owing to a feeble constitution ; but manly in bis judgments, and superior to every Id ml of sophistry and meanness. Gray's pleasantry came to bim through his melancholy, assisted by the general delicacy of his perceptions, and his willingness to be pleased. Though a little too cautious of committing his dignity, he was not one of those who " take a calamity for an affront." He was willing to give and to receive pleasure, and this is a disposition which Nature is sure to reward. In the Long Story we see him hesitating at first whether he should go to the " great house." He was not only loth to be disturbed in his sequestered habits ; he was jealous of what might be thought of his humble independence, and his footing as a "gentleman." (He was the son of a scrivener.) But good-nature prevails, not unaccompanied by a willingness to find himself among ladies of rank and elegance; and though he might as well have dropped the circumstance of his secreting himself, he has made a charming picture both of the interview of the ladies with his mother and aunt (whom he pretends they pinched and "rummaged"' like fairies), and of the great Elizabethan house, with its old associa- tions, — things in which he delighted ; for he was an antiquary with all the zest of a poet. The whole poem is fall of picturesqueness, fancy, and wit. I N Britain's isle, no matter where, An ancient pile of building stands ; The Huntingdons and Hattons there Employ'd the power of fairy hands To raise the ceiling's fretted height, Each panel in achievements clothing, Rich windows that exclude the light, And passages that lead to nothing.* Full oft within the spacious walls, When he had fifty winters o'er him, * A line that has become a favorite quotation with critics, es- pecially as applied to passages in music. 142 A LONG STORY. My grave Lord-Keeper led the brawls;* The seal and maces dane'd before him. His bushy beard and shoe-strings green, His high-crown'd hat and satin doublet, Mov'd the stout heart of England's Queen, Though Pope and Spaniard could not trouble it What, in the very first beginning? Shame of the versifying tribe ! Your history whither are you spinning 1 Can you do nothing but describe ? A house there is (and that's enough) From whence one fatal morning issues A brace of warriors, not in buff, But rustlino; in their silks and tissues. o The firstt came cap-a-pie from France, LTcr conquering destiny fulfilling, "Whom meaner beauties eye askance, And vainly ape her art of killing. * The brawl (branle) was a fashionable dance. The Lord Keeper is Sir Christopher Ilatton, a handsome man, who is said to have danced himself into the office. It is unquestionable that he made way some- how into the heart of Elizabeth. Dancing, however, appears to have been so much admired by this great queen, that another and graver lawyer, Sir John Davies, no mean philosophical poet, who was also one of her most devoted panegyrists, divided his leisure thoughts be- tween metrical treatises on the Art of Dancing and on the Immortality of the Soul. Biographers, by the way, tell us, that Ilatton never possessed a house at Stoke Pogei3. Gray, however, says he did ; and there lie \s in consequence, living forever. f Lady Schaub. A LONG STORY. 143 The other Amazon* kind heav'n Had arm'd with spirit, wit, and satire ; *>ut Cobham had the polish giv'n, And tipp'd her arrows with good-nature. To celebrate her eyes, her air — Coarse panegyrics would but tease her : Melissa is her nom de guerre ; Alas ! who would not wish to please her 1 With bonnet blue, and capuchin, And aprons long, they hid their armor, And veil'd their weapons bright and keen In pity to the country farmer. Fame in the shape of Mr. P 1 (By this time all the parish know it) Had told that thereabouts there lurk'd A wicked imp they call'd a poet,f Who prowl'd the country far and near, Bewitch'd the children of the peasants, Dry'd up the cows and lam'd the deer, And suck'd the eggs and kill'd the pheasants. My Lady, heard their joint petition, Swore, by her coronet and ermine, She'd issue out her high commission To rid the manor of such vermin. * Miss Harriett Speed. She was a descendant of the historian, and became the wife of the Sardinian ambassador, the Count de Veri. f Mr. P was a Mr. Purt or Purkt. He is said to have been displeased with this allusion, — Mason thinks unreasonably ; but no- body likes to be thought a gossip. Mason knew that Gray was a good-natured man ; but of this. Mr. P. might not have been so sure. 144 A LONG STORY. The heroines uudertook the task ; Thro' lanes unknown, o'er stiles they ventur'd, Rapp'd at the door, nor stay'd to ask, But bounce into the parlor enter'd. The trembling family they daunt ; They flirt, they sing, they laugh, they tattle ; Rummage his mother, pinch his aunt, And up stairs in a -whirlwind rattle. Each hole and cupboard they explore. Each creek and cranny of his chamber, Run hurry-skurry round the floor, And o'er the bed and tester clamber j Into the drawers and china pry, Papers and books, a huge imbroglio ; Under a tea-cup he might lie, Or creas'd, like dogs-ears, in a folio. On the first marching of the troops, The Muses, hopeless of his pardon, Conveyed him underneath their hoops To a small closet in the garden. &- So Rumor says (who will, believe) ; But that they left the door ajar, Where safe, and laughing in his slcevo, lie heard the distant din of war. Short was his jcy ; he little knew The power of magic was no fable ; Out of the window whisk they flew, But left a spell upon the table. A LONG STORY. 145 The words too eager to unriddle, The poet felt a strange disorder ; Transparent bird-lime form'd the middle, And chains invisible the border. So cunning was the apparatus, The powerful pot-hooks did so move him, That will-he, nill-he, to the great house He went as if the devil drove him. Yet on his way (no sign of grace, For folks in fear are apt to pray) To Phoebus he preferr'd his case, And bees'd his aid that dreadful day. The godhead would have back'd his quarrel ; But, with a blush, on recollection, Own'd that his quiver and his laurel 'Gainst four such eyes were no protection. The court was set, the culprit there ; Forth from their gloomy mansion creeping The Lady Janes and Joans repair, And from the gallery stand peeping : Such as in silence of the night Come (sweep) along some winding entry (Styack* has often seen the sight), Or at the chapel-door stand sentry ; Iu peaked hoods and mantles tarnish'd, Sour vis-nges enough to scare ye, High dames of honor once that garnish'd The drawing-room of fierce Queen Mary f * The housekeeper. 7 i46 A LONG STORY. The peeress comes ; the audience stare, And doff their hats with due submission ; She curt'sies, as she takes her chair, To all the people of condition. The bard with many an artful fib Had in imagination fenc'd him, Disprov'd the arguments of Squib,* And all that Groomf could urge against him j But soon his rhetoric forsook him, When he the solemn hall had seen ; A sudden fit of ague shook him — He stood as mute as poor Macleane.j: Yet something he was heard to mutter " Plow in the park, beneath an old tree, "Without design to hurt the butter, Or any malice to the poultry, He once or twice had penn'd a sonnet, Yet hop'd that he might save his bacon ; N umbers would give their oath upon it, He ne'er was for a conj'rcr taken." The ghostly prudes with hagged face Already had condemn'd the sinner ; My Lady rose, and with a grace — She smil'd, and bid him come to dinner. " Jcsu Maria ! Madam Bridget, Why what can the Viscountess mean?" * The groom of the chamber. f The steward. \. A famous highwayman who had just been executed. A LONG STORY. 147 Cry'd the square hoods in woful fidget ; " The times are alter'd, quite and clean : " Decorum's tura'd to mere civility ! Her air and all her manners show it. Commend me to her affability ! Speak to a commoner and poet !" [Here 500 Stanzas are lost.'] And so God save our noble King, And guard us from long-winded lubbers. That to eternity would sing, And keep my lady from her rubbers. !ir Ilugcr h CnnrrUq. from addison's papers in the " spectator." Sir Roger de Coverlet is one of those truthful types of charac- ter, which, though created hy the mind of man, yet, by the ordination of Nature herself (for Nature includes art among her works), outlasts the successive generations of flesh and blood which it represents. The individuals perish, and leave no memorial; nay, we hardly care to know them while living. We might find them tiresome. We feel that Nature has done well in making them ; we are grateful for the race ; especially on behalf of others, and of the poor ; but we do not particularly see the value of their society ; when, lo ! in steps one of Nature's imitators— called men of genius — and, by the mere fact of producing a likeness of the species to the mind's eye, enchants us for- ever both with it and himself. A little philosophy may easily explain this ; but perhaps a little more may still leave it among the most in- teresting of mysteries. We have said a word elsewhere (see Gradations of Clubs) respect- ing the first invention of Sir Roger by Steele, and the compatibility of his early fopperies with a genuine simplicity. But unquestionably Addison took up the invention of Steele, and enriched and completed it in a way that left the invention itself at a distance. The whole of the following papers are from his exquisite pen. They render com- ment superfluous. One has nothing to do but repeat passages, and admire them, SIR ROGER'S HOUSEHOLD ESTABLISHMENT. TAVINCr often received an invitation from my friend Sir -"■ Roger de Coverley to pass away a month with him in the country, I last week accompanied him thither, and am HOUSEHOLD ESTABLISHMENT. 149 settled with him for some time at his country-house, where I intend to form several of my ensuing speculations. Sir Roger, who is very well acquainted with my humor, lets me rise and go to bed when I please, dine at his own table or in my own chamber as I think fit, sit still and say nothing without bid- ding me be merry. When the gentlemen of the country come to see him, he only shows me at a distance. As I have been walking in his fields I have observed them stealing a sight of me over a hedge, and have heard the knight desir- ing them not to let me see them, for that I hated to be stared at. I am the more at ease in Sir Roger's family, because it consists of sober and staid persons ; for, as the knight is the best master in the world, he seldom changes his servants ; and as he is beloved by all about, his servants never care for leaving him ; by this means his domestics are all in years, and grown old with their master. You would take his valet- de-chambre for his brother ; his butler is gray-headed, his groom is one of the gravest men that I have ever seen, and his coachman has the looks of a privy-councillor. You see the goodness of the master even in the old house-dog, and in a gray pad that is kept in the stable with great care and ten- derness, out of regard for his past services, though he has been useless for several years. I could not but observe, with a great deal of pleasure, the joy that appeared in the countenances of these ancient do- mestics upon my friend's arrival at his country-seat. Some of them could not refrain from tears at the sight of their old master ; every one of them pressed forward to do something for him, and seemed discouraged if they were not employed. At the same time, the good old knight, with a mixture of a father and the master of a family, tempered the inquiries after his own affairs with several kind questions about them- 150 SIR ROGER BE COVERLETS selves. This humanity and good-nature engages everybody to him, so that when he is pleasant upon any of them, all his family are in good-humor, and none so much as the person he diverts himself with. On the contrary, if he coughs, or be- trays any infirmity of old .age, it is easy for a stander-by to observe a secret concern in the looks of all his servants. My worthy friend has put me under the particular care of his butler, who is a very prudent man, and, as well as the rest of his fellow-servants, wonderfully desirous of pleasing me. because they have often heard their master talk of me as his particular friend. My chief companion, when Sir Roger is diverting himself in the woods or the fields, is a very venerable man who is ever with Sir Roger, and has lived at his house in the nature of a chaplain above thirty years. This gentleman is a per- son of good sense and some learning ; of a very regular life and obliging conversation : he heartily loves Sir Roger, and knows that he is very much in the old knight's esteem, so that he lives in the family rather as a relation than as a de- pendant. I have observed in several of my papers, that my friend Sir Roger, amidst all his good qualities, is something of an humorist ; and that his virtues, as well as imperfections, are, as it were, tinged by a certain extravagance which makes them particularly his, and distinguishes them from those of nt her men. This cast of mind, as it is generally very inno- cent in itself, so it renders his conversation highly agreeable, and more delightful than the same degree of sense and virtue would appear in their ordinary colors. As I was walking with him last night, he asked me how I liked the good man I have just now mentioned ? And without staying for an answer told me, "That he was afraid of being insulted with Latin and ■k at his own table ; for which reason he desired a par HOUSEHOLD ESTABLISHMENT. 15 1 ticular friend of his at the University to find him out a clergyman rather of plain sense than much learning ; of a good aspect, a clear voice, a sociable temper, and, if possible, a man that understood a little of backgammon. My friend," says Sir Roger, " found me out this gentleman, who, besides the endowments required of him, is, they tell me, a good scholar, though he does not show it. I have given him the parsonage of the parish ; and, because I know his value, have settled upon him a good annuity for life. If he outlives me, he shall find that he was higher in my esteem than perhaps he thinks he is. He has now been with me thirty years, and though he does not know I have taken notice of it, has never in all that time asked anything of me for himself, though he is every day soliciting me for something in behalf of one or other of my tenants his parishioners. There has not been a law-suit in the parish since he has lived among them : if any dispute arises, they apply themselves to him for the decision ; if they do not acquiesce in his judgment, which I think never happened above onco or twice at most, they appeal to me. At his first settling with me, I made him a present of all the good sermons that have been printed in English, and only begged of him, that every Sunday he would pronounce one of them in the pulpit. Accordingly, he has digested them into such a series, that they follow one another naturally, and make a continued series of practical divinity." As Sir Roger was going on in his story, the gentleman we were talking of came up to us ; and upon the knight asking him who preached to-morrow (for it was Saturday night), told us the Bishop of St. Asaph* in the morning, and Dr. South in the afternoon. He then showed us his list of preachers for the year, where I saw, with a great deal of pleasure, Archbishop Tillotson, Bishop Saunderson, Dr. Bar- * Dr. Fleetwood, afterwards Bishop of Ely. 152 SIR ROGER DE COVERLETS row, Dr. Calamvrwith several living authors who have pub- lished discourses of practical divinity. I no sooner saw this venerable man in the pulpit, but I very much approved of my friend's insisting upon the qualifications of a good aspect and a clear voice ; for I was so charmed with the gracefulness of his figure and delivery, as well as with the discourses he pro- nounced, that I think I never passed any time more to my satisfaction. A sermon repeated after this manner, is like the composition of a poet in the mouth of a graceful actor. I could heartily wish that more of our country clergy would follow this example ; and. instead of wasting their spirits in laborious compositions of their own, would endeav- or after a handsome elocution, and all those other talents that arc proper to enforce what has been penned by greater masters. This would not only be more easy to themselves, but more edifying to the people. SIR ROGER'S BEHAVIOR IN CHURCH ON A SUNDAY. I A3! always very well pleased with a country Sunday, and think, if keeping holy the seventh day were only a human institution, it would he the best method that could have been thought of for the polishing and civilizing of mankind. It i3 certain the country people would soon degenerate into a kind of savages and barbarians, were there not such frequent returns of a stated time, in which the whole village meet to- gether with their best faces, and in their cleanliest habits. to converse with one another upon indifferent subjects, hear their duties explained to them, and join together in adora- tion of tin' Supreme Being. Sunday clears away the rust of the whole week, not only as it refreshes in their minds BEHAVIOR IN CHURCH. 153 the notions of religion, but as it puts both sexes upon ap- pearing in their most agreeable forms, and exerting all such qualities as are apt to give them a figure in the eye of the village. A country fellow distinguishes himself as much in the churchyard as a citizen does upon 'Change, the whole parish politics being generally discussed there, either after sermon or before the bell rings. My friend Sir Itoger, being a good church-man, has beau- tified the inside of his church with several texts of his own choosing : he has likewise given a handsome pulpit-cloth, and railed in the communion-table at his own expense. He has often told me, that at his coming to his estate he found his parishioners very irregular ; and that, in order to make them kneel and join in the responses, he gave every one of them a hassock and a common-prayer book ; and at the same time employed an itinerant singing-master, who goes about the country for that purpose, to instruct them rightly in the tunes of the psalms ; upon which they now very much value themselves, and outdo most of the country churches that I have ever heard. As Sir Roger is landlord to the whole congregation, he keeps them in very good order, and will suffer nobody to sleep in it besides himself ; for if by chance he has been sur- prised into a short nap at sermon, upon recovering out of it he stands up and looks about him, and if he sees anybody else nodding, either wakes them himself or sends his servants to them. Several other of the old knight's particularities break out upon these occasions ; sometimes he will be length- ening out a verse in the singing-psalms, half a minute after the rest of the congregation have done with it ; sometimes, when he is pleased with the matter of his devotion, he pro- nounces Amen three or four times to the same prayer ; and sometimes stands up when everybody else is on their knees, 7# 154 SIR ROGER BE COVERLETS to count the congregation, or see if anj of Lis tenants aio missing. I -was yesterday very much surprised to bear my old friend, in the midst of the service, calling out to one John Matthews to mind what he was about, and not disturb the congregation. This John Matthews, it seems, is remarkable for being an idle fellow, and at that time was kioking his heels for his diversion. This authority of the knight, though exerted in that odd manner which accompanies him in all circumstances of life, has a very good effect upon the parish, who are not polite enough to see anything ridiculous in his behavior ; besides that the general good sense and worthi- ness of his character makes his friends observe these little singularities as foils that rather set off than blemish his good qualities. As soon as the sermon is finished, nobody presumes to stir till Sir Roger is gone out of the church. The knight walks down from his seat in the chancel between a double row of his tenants, that stand bowing to him on each side, and every now and then inquires how such an one's wife, or mother, or son, or father do, whom he docs not see at church ; which is understood as a secret reprimand to the person that is absent. The chaplain has often told me, that upon a catechizing day, when Sir Roger has been pleased with a boy that an- swers well, he has ordered a bible to be given him next day for his encouragement ; and sometimes accompanies it with a Hitch of bacon to his mother. Sir Roger has likewise added five pounds a-ycar to the clerk's place: and that he ii i. iy encourage the young fellows to make themselves per- fect in the church-service, has promised, upon the death of ill' present incumbent, who is very old, to bestow it accord' ing to merit. SIR ROGER AND THE GIPSIES. 155 The fair understanding between Sir Roger and his chap- lain, and their mutual concurrence in doing good, is tho more remarkable, because the very next village is famous for the differences and contentions that rise between the par- son and the squire, who live in a perpetual state of war. The parson is always preaching at the squire, and the squire, to be revenged on the parson, never conies to church. The squire has made all his tenants atheists and tithe-stealers ; while the parson instructs them every Sunday in the dignity of his order, and insinuates to them, in almost every sermon, that he is a better man than his patron. In short, matters are come to such an extremity, that the squire has not said his prayers either in public or private this half-year ; and that the parson threatens him, if he does not mend his man- ners, to pray for him in the face of the whole congregation. Feuds of this nature, though too frequent in the country, are very fatal to the ordinary people ; who are so used to be dazzled with riches, that they pay as much deference to the understanding of a man of an estate, as of a man of learning ; and are very hardly brought to regard any truth, how impor- tant soever it may be, that is preached to them, when they know there are several men of five hundred a-year who do not believe it. SIR ROGER AND THE GIPSIES. AS I was yesterday riding out in the fields with my friend -£*■ Sir Roger, we saw at a little distance from us a troop of gipsies. Upon the first discovery of them, my friend was in some doubt, whether he should not exert the justice of the peace upon such a band of lawless vagrants, but not having his clerk with him, who is a necessary counsellor on these oc 156 SIR ROGER AISD THE GIPSIES. casions, and fearing that his poultry might fare the worse for it, he let the thought drop ;• but, at the same time, gave me a particular account of the mischief they do in the country, in stealing people's goods and spoiling their servants. " If a stray piece of linen hangs on the hedge/' says Sir Roger, " they are sure to have it ; if the hog loses his way in the field, it is ten to one but he becomes their prey ; our geese cannot live in peace for them ; if a man prosecutes them with severity, his hen-roost is sure to pay for it : they generally straggle into these parts about this time of the year ; and set the heads of our servant-maids so agog for husbands, that we do not expect to have any business done as it should be whilst they are in the country. I have an honest dairy-maid who crosses their hands with a piece of silver every summer, and never fails being promised the handsomest young fellow in the parish for her pains. Your friend the butler has been fool enough to be seduced by them, and although he is sure to lose a knife, a fork, or a spoon every time his fortune is told him, generally shuts himself up in the pantry with an old gipsy for about half an hour once in a twelvemonth. Sweet- hearts are the things they live upon, which they bestow very plentifully upon all those that apply themselves to them. You see now and then some handsome jades amongst them : the sluts have very often white teeth and black eyes." Sir Roger observing that I listened with great attention to his account of a people who were so entirely new to me, told nic, that if I would, they should tell us our fortunes. As I was very well pleased with the knight's proposal, we rid up and communicated our hands to them. A Cassandra of the crew, after haying examined my lines very diligently, told inc. that I loved a pretty maid in a corner, that I was a good woman's man, with some other particulars, which I do nut think proper to relate. My friend Sir Roger alight- SIR ROGER AND THE GIPSIES. 157 ed from his horse, and exposed his palm to two or three that stood by him ; they crumpled it into all shapes, and dili- gently scanned every wrinkle that could be made in it ; when one of them, who was older and more sun-burnt than the rest, told him, that he had a widow in his line of life : upon which the knight cried, " Go, go, you are an idle bag- gage ;" and at the same time smiled upon me. The gipsy, finding he was not displeased in his heart, told him, after a farther inquiry into his hand, that his true-love was constant, and that she should dream of him to-night ; my old friend cried pish, and bid her go on. The gipsy told him that he was a bachelor, but would not be so long ; and that he was dearer to somebody than he thought : the knight still repeat- ed " she was an idle baggage," and bid her go on. " Ah, master, 1 ' says the gipsy, " that roguish leer of yours makes a pretty woman's heart ache ; you han't that simper about the mouth for nothing." The uncouth gibberish with which all this was uttered, like the darkness of an oracle, made us more attentive to it. To be short, the knight left the money with her that he had crossed her hand with, and got up again on his horse. As we were riding away, Sir Roger told me, that he knew several sensible people who believed these gipsies now and then foretold very strange things ; and for half an hour to- gether appeared more jocund than ordinary. In the height of his good-humor, meeting a common beggar on the road who was no conjurer, as he went to relieve him he found his pocket was picked ; that being a kind of Palmistry at which this race of vermin are very dexterous. I might here entertain my reader with historical remarks on this idle profligate people, who infest all the countries of Europe, and live in the midst of governments in a kind of Commonwealth by themselves. But instead of entering into 158 SIR ROGER AND THE GIPSIES. observations of this nature, I shall fill the remaining part of my paper with a story which is still fresh in Holland, and was printed in one of our monthly accounts, about twenty years ago. " As the Trekschuyt or Hackney-boat which car- ries passengers from Leyden to Amsterdam, was putting off, a boy running along the side of the canal desired to be taken in, which the master refused, because the lad had not quite money enough to pay his fare. An eminent merchant, being pleased with the looks of the boy, and secretly touched with compassion towards him, paid the money for him, and order- ed him to be taken on board. Upon talking with him after* wards, he found that he could speak readily in three or four languages, and learned upon further examination that he had been stolen away when he was a child by a gipsy, and had rambled ever since with a gang of those strollers up and down several parts of Europe. It happened that the mer- chant, whose heart seems to have inclined towards the boy by a secret kind of instinct, had himself lost a child some years before. The parents, after a long search for him, gave him for drowned in one of the canals with which that country abounds ; and the mother was so afflicted at the loss of a fine boy, who was her only son, that she died for grief of it. Upon laying together all particulars, and examining the sev- eral moles and marks by which the mother used to describe the child when he was first missing, the boy proved to be the son of the merchant whose heart had so unaccountably melt- ed at the sight of him. The lad was very well pleased to find a father who was so rich, and likely to leave him a good estate ; the father, on the other hand, was not a little delighted to i son return to him, whom he had given for lobi., with such a strength of constitution, sharpness of understanding, and skill in languages." Here the printed story leaves off; l>ut if I may give credit to reports, our linguist, having re- SIR ROGER'S VISIT TO WESTMINSTER ABBEY. 159 ceived such extraordinary rudiments towards a good educa- tion, was afterwards trained up in everything that becomes a gentleman ; wearing off, by little and little, all the vicious habits and practices that he had been used to in the course of his peregrinations : nay, it i- said, that he has since been employed in foreign courts upon national business, with great reputation to himself and honor to those who sent him, and that he has visited several countries as a public minister, in which he formerly wandered as a gipsy. SIR ROGER'S VISIT TO THE TOMBS IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY. MY friend Sir Roger de Coverley told me t'other night, that he had been reading my paper upon Westminster Abbey, in which, says he, there are a great many ingenious fancies. He told me, at the same time, that he observed I had promised another paper upon the tombs, and that he should be glad to go and see them with me, not having visited them since he had read history. I could not imagine how this came into the knight's head, till I recollected he had been very busy all last summer upon Baker's Chronicle, which he has quoted several times in his disputes with Sir Andrew Freeport, since his last coming to town. According- ly, I promised to call upon him the next morning, that we might go together to the abbey. I found the knight under his butler's hands, who always shaves him. He was no sooner dressed, than he called for a glass of the Widow Truby's Water, which he told me he al- ways drank before he went abroad. He recommended me to a dram of it at the same time, with so much heartiness, that I could not forbear drinking it. As soon as I had got it .60 SIR ROGER'S VISIT TO THE TOMBS down, I found it very unpalatable ; upon which the knight, observing that I had made several wry faces, told mc that he knew I should not like it at first, but that it was the best, thing in -the world against the stone or gravel. I could have wished indeed that he had acquainted mc with the virtues of it sooner ; but it was too late to complain, and I knew what he had done was out of good-will. Sir Roger told me further, that he got together a quantity of it upon the first news of the sickness being at Dantzick ; when, of a sudden turning short to one of his servants who stood behind him, he bid him call a hackney coach, and take care it was an elderly man that drove it. He then resumed his discourse upon Mrs. Truby's Water, telling me that the Widow Truby was one who did more good than all the doctors and apothecaries in the country ; that she distilled every poppy that grew within five miles of her : that she distributed her water gratis among all sorts of people : to which the knight added that she had a very great jointure, and that the whole country would fain have it a match be- tween him and her ; " and truly/' says Sir Roger, ' ; if I had not been engaged, perhaps I could not have done better." His discourse was broken off by his man's telling him he had called a coach. Upon our going to it, after having cast his eye upon the wheels, he asked the coachman if his axle- tree was good ; upon the fellow's telling liim he would war- rant it, the knight turned to me, told me he looked like an honest man, and went in without further ceremony. We had not gone far, when Sir Roger, popping out his head, called the coachman down from his box, and upon pre- senting himself at the window, asked him if he smoked. As I was considering what this would end in, he bid him stop by the way at any good tobacconist's, and take in a roll of their best Virginia. Nothing material happened in the remaining IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY. 161 part of our journey, till we were set down at the west end of the abbey. As we went up the body of the church, the knight pointed at the trophies upon one of the new monuments, and cried out, " A brave man, I warrant him !" Passing afterwards by Sir Cloudesly Shovel, he flung his hand that way, and cried, " Sir Cloudesly Shovel ! a very gallant man." As we stood before Busby's tomb, the knight uttered himself again after the same manner : " Dr. Busby ! a great man ! he whipped my grandfather : a very great man ! I should have gone to him myself, if I had not been a blockhead : a very great man !" We were immediately conducted into the little chapel on the right hand. Sir Roger, planting himself at our historian's elbow, was very attentive to everything he said, particularly to the account he gave us of the lord who had cut off the King of Morocco's head. Among several other figures, he was very much pleased to see the statesman Cecil upon his knees : and concluding them all to be great men, was con- ducted to the figure which represents that martyr to good housewifery, who died by the prick of a needle. Upon our interpreter's telling us that she was maid of honor to Queen Elizabeth, the knight was very inquisitive about her name and family : and, after having regarded her finger for some time, " I wonder," says he, " that Sir Richard Baker has said nothing of her in his Chronicle." We were then conveyed to the two coronation chairs, where my old friend, after having heard that the stone under- neath the most ancient of them, which was brought from Scotland, was called Jacob's pillar, sat himself down in the chair, and, looking like the figure of an old Gothic king, asked our interpreter, what authority they had to say that Jacob had ever been in Scotland ? The fellow, instead of returning him an answer, told him that he begged his honor would pay 162 SIR ROGER'S VISIT TO THE TOMBS his forfeit. I could observe Sir Roger a little ruffled upon being thus trepanned ; but our guide not insisting on his de- mand, the knight soon recovered his good-hurnor, and whis- pered in my ear, that if Will Wimble were with us, and saw those chairs, it would go hard but he would get a tobacco- stopper out of one or t'other of them. Sir Roger, in the nest place, laid his hand upon Edward the Third's sword, and leaning upon the pummel of it, gave us the whole history of the Black Prince ; concluding, that in Sir Richard Baker's opinion, Edward the Third was one of the greatest princes that ever sat upon the English throne. We were then shown Edward the Confessor's tomb ; upon which Sir Roger accpiaiuted us, that he was the first who touched for the evil; and afterwards Henry the Fourth's, upon which he shook his head, and told us there was fine reading in the casualties of that reign. Our conductor then pointed out that monument where there is the figure of one of our English kings without a head ; and upon giving us to know, that the head, which was of beaten silver, had been stolen away several years since ; " Some Whig, I'll warrant you," said Sir Roger ; " you ought to lock up your kings better : they will carry off the body too, if you don't take care." The glorious names of Henry the Fifth and Queen Eliz- abeth gave the knight great opportunities of shining, and of doing justice to Sir Richard Baker, who, as our knight ob- served with some surprise, had a great many kings in him whose monuments he had not seen in the abbey. For my own part, I could net but be pleased to see the knight show such an honest passion for the glory of his coun- try, and such a respectful gratitude for the memory of it3 princes. I must not omit, that the benevolence of my good old IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY. 1G3 friend which flows out towards every one he converses with, made him very kind to our interpreter, whom he looked upon as an extraordinary man ; for which reason he shook him by the hand at parting, telling him that he should be very glad to see him at his" lodgings in Norfolk Buildings, and talk over these matters with him more at leisure. Blninirrs nf \\)i /rnir). About thirty years ago a volume appeared from the pen of a trav- eller in France, which set " all the world" in England upon going to that country, and living on the charming " banks of the Loire ;" a river not so well known then, as it has lately been, for an ugly trick it has of overflowing its banks, and frightening its Paradisaical inhabit- ants out of their wits. We allude to the travels of Lieutenant-Colonel Pinekney, an officer in the American service, who made the greater part of his tour in company with another American gentleman and two French ladies, one of whom was his friend's wife. This circum- stance will account for the different modes in which he speaks of him- self in the following extracts, one of them implying that he was alone Our extracts are what the reviewers would call " favorable specimens ;" that is, of French character ; and we make them advisedly such, for neighborly purposes. Englishmen like to see favorable specimens of their own travellers in the accounts given of them by Frenchmen ; and we therefore do as we would be done by. Both Englishmen and Frenchmen have faults to mend and customs to get rid of; and they cannot do better than by regarding with kindness what is best on both sides. rnillC main purpose of my journey (says the gallant Colo- -*- nel) being rather to see the manners of the people, than the brick and mortar of the towns, I had formed a resolution to seek the necessary refreshment as seldom as possible at MANNERS OF THE FRENCH. 165 inns, and as often as possible in the houses of the humbler farmers, and the better kind of peasantry. About fifteen miles from Calais my horse and myself were looking out for something of this kind, and one shortly appeared about three hundred yards on the left side of the road. It was a cot- tage in the midst of a garden, and the whole surrounded by a hedge, which looked delightfully green and refreshing. The garden was all in flower and bloom. The walls of the cot- tage were robed in the same livery of nature. I had seen such cottages in Kent and Devonshire, but in no other part of the world. The inhabitants were simple people, small far- mers, having about ten or fifteen acres of land. Some grass was immediately cut for my horse, and the coffee which I produced from my pocket was speedily set before me, with cakes, wine, some meat, and cheese — the French peasantry having no idea of what we call tea. Throwing the windows up, so as to enjoy the scenery and freshness of the garden ; sitting upon one chair, and resting a leg upon the other ; al- ternately pouring out my coffee, and reading a pocket edition of Thomson's Seasons, I enjoyed one of those moments which gave a zest to life ; I felt happy, and in peace and in love with all around me. Proceeding upon my journey, two miles on the Calais side of Boulogne I fell in with an overturned chaise, which the postilion was trying to raise. The vehicle was a chaise de poste, the ordinary travelling carriage of the country, and a thing in a civilized country wretched beyond conception. It was drawn by three horses, one in the shafts, and one on each side. The postillion had ridden on the one on the driving side ; he was a little punch fellow, and in a pair of boots like fire-buckets. The travellers consisted of an old French lady and gentleman ; madame in a high crimped cap, and stiff long whalebone stays. Monsieur informed me very 16G MANNERS OF THE FRENCH. courteously of the cause of the accident, whilst madame al ternatcly curtsied to me. and menaced and scolded the pos tilion. A single cart, and a wagon, were all the vehicles that I saw between Boulogne and Abbeville. In England, in the same space, I should have seen a dozen or score. Not being pressed for time, the beauty of a scene at some little distance from the road-side tempted me to enter into a b} T e-lane, and take a nearer view of it. A village church, embosomed in a chestnut-wood, just rose above the tr^ees on the top of a hill ; the setting sun was on its casements, and the foliage of the wood was burnished by the golden reflec- tion. The distant hum of the village green was just audible ; but not so the French horn, which echoed in full melody through the groves. Having rode about half a mile through a narrow sequestered lane, which strongly reminded me of the half-green and half-trodden bye-roads in "Warwickshire, I came to the bottom of the hill, on the brow and summit of which the village and church were situated. I now saw whence the sound of the horn proceeded. On the left of the road was an ancient chateau, situated in a park or very ex- tensive meadow, and ornamented as well by some venerable trees, as by a circular fence of flowering shrubs, guarded on the outside by a paling on a raised mound. The park or meadow having been newly mown, had an air at once orna- mented and natural. A party of ladies were collected under a patch of trees situated in the middle of the lawn. I stopped at the gate to look at them, thinking myself unperceived ; hut in the same moment the^ate was opened to me by a gen- th'inan and two ladies, who were walking the round. An ex- planation was now necessary, and was accordingly given. The gentleman informed me, upon his part, that the chateau be- longed to Mons. St. Qucntin, a member of the French senate. MANNERS OF THE FRENCH 1G7 and a judge of the district ; that be had a party of friends with him upon the occasion of his lady's birthday, that they were about to begin dancing, and that Mons. St. Quentin would highly congratulate himself on my accidental arrival. One of the ladies, having previously apologized and left us, had seemingly explained to Mons. St. Quentin the main cir- cumstance belonging to me ; for he now appeared, and re- peated the invitation in his own person. The ladies added their kind importunities. I dismounted, gave my horse to a servant in waiting, and joined this happy and elegant party — for such it really was. I had now, for the first time, an opportunity of forming an opinion of French beauty, the assemblage of ladies being very numerous, and all of them most elegantly dressed. Travelling, and the imitative arts, have given a most surpris- ing uniformity to all the fashions of dress and ornament ; and whatever may be said to the contrary, there is a very slight difference between the scenes of a French and English polite assembly. If anything, however, be distinguishable, it is more in degree than in substance. The French fashions, as I saw them here, differed in no other point from what I had seen in London, but in degree. The ladies were certainly more exposed about the necks, and their hair was dressed with more fancy ; but the form was in almost everything the same. The most elegant novelty was a hat, which doubled up like a fan, so that the ladies carried it in their hands. There were more colored than white muslins ; a variety which had a very pretty effect amongst the trees and flowers. The same observation applies to the gentlemen. Their dresses were made as in England ; but the pattern of the cloth, or some appendage to it, was different. One gentle- man habited in a grass-colored silk coat, had veiy much the appearance of Beau Mordecai in the farce : the ladies, how 1G8 MANNERS OF THE FRENCH. ever, seemed to admire him ; and in some conversation with him I found him, in spite of his coat, a very well-informed man. There were likewise three or four fancy dresses ; a Dian, a wood-nymph, and a sweet girl playing upon a flute, habited according to a picture of Calypso by David. On the whole, there was certainly more fancy, more taste, and more elegance, than in an English party of the same description ; though there was not so many handsome women as would have been the proportion of such an assembly in England. From La Fleche to Angers, and thence to Ancennis, the country is a complete garden. The hills were covered with vines ; every wood had its chateau, and every village its church. The peasantry were clean and happy, the children cheerful and healthful looking, and the greater part of the younger women spirited and handsome. There was a great plenty of fruit ; and as we passed through the villages, it was invari- ably brought to us, and almost as invariably any pecuniary return refused with a retreating curtsey. One sweet girl, a young peasant, with eyes and complexion which would be es- teemed handsome even in Philadelphia, having made Mr. Young and myself an offering of this kind, replied very pret- tily to our offer of money, that the women of La Fleche never sold either grapes or water ; as much as to say that the one was as plentiful as the other. Some of these young girls were dressed not only neatly but tastily. Straw hats are the manufacture of the province ; few of them, therefore, but had a straw bonnet, and few of these bonnets were without rib- bons or flowers. We remained at Oudon till near sunset, when we resum- ed our road to Ancennis, where we intended to sleep. As this was only a distance of seven miles, we took it very lei- surely, sometimes riding and sometimes walking. The even- ing was as beautiful as is usual in the southern parts of MANNERS OF THE FRENCH. 1G9 Europe at this season of the year. The road was most ro- mantically recluse, and so serpentine as never to be visible beyond a hundred yards. The nightingales were singing in the adjoining woods. The road, moreover, was bordered on each side by lofty hedges, intermingled with fruit-trees, and even vines in full bearing. At every half-mile a cross- road, branching from the main one, led into the recesses of the country, or to some castle or villa on the high grounds which look to the river. At some of these bye-ways were very curious inscriptions, painted on narrow boards affixed to a tree. Such were, " The way to ' My Heart's Content' is half a league up this road, and then turn to the right, and keep on till you reach it." And another, " The way to ' Love's Her- mitage' is up this lane, till you come to the cherry-tree by the side of a chalk-pit, where there is another direction." Mademoiselle Sillery informed me, that these kind of inscrip- tions were characteristic of the banks of the Loire. " The inhabitants along the whole of the course of this river," said she, " have the reputation, from time immemorial, of being all native poets ; and the reputation, like some pro- phecies, has perhaps been the means of realizing itself. You do not perhaps know that the Loire is called in the provinces the River of Love : and doubtless its beautiful banks, its green meadows, and its woody recesses, have what the musi- cians would call a symphony of tone with that passion." I have translated this sentence verbally from my note-book, as it may give some idea of Mademoiselle Sillery. If ever a figure was formed to inspire the passion of which she spoke, it was this lady. Many clays and years must pass over be- fore I forget our walk on the green road from Oudon to An- cennis — one of the sweetest, softest scenes in France. We entered the forest of Ancennis as the sun was setting This forest is celebrated, in every ancient French ballad, as 8 1 70 MANNERS OF THE FRENCH. being the haunt of fairies, and the scene of the ancient archery of the provinces of Bretagne and Anjou. The road through it was over a green turf, in which the marks of a wheel were scarcely visible. The forest on each side was very thick. At short intervals, narrow footpaths struck into the wood. Our carriage had been sent before to Ancennis, and we were walking merrily on, when the well- known sound of the French horn arrested our steps and attention. Mademoiselle Sillery immediately guessed it to proceed from a company of archers ; and in a few moments her conjecture was verified by the appearance of two ladies and a gentleman, who issued from one of the narrow paths. The ladies, who were merely running from the gentleman, were very tastily habited in the favorite French dress after the Dian of David ; whilst the blue silk jacket and hunting- cap of the gentleman gave him the appearance of a groom about to ride a race. Our appearance necessarily took their attention ; and after an exchange of salutes, but in which no names were mentioned on either side, they invited us to accompany them to their party, who were refreshing them- selves in an adjoining dell. " We have had a party at arch- cry," said one of them, " and Madame St. Amande has won the silver bugle and bow. The party is now at supper, after which we go to the chateau to dance. Perhaps you will not suffer us to repent having met you, by refusing to accompany us." Mademoiselle Sillery was very eager to accept this invitation, and looked rather blank when Mrs. Young declin- ed it, as she wished to proceed on her road as quickly as pos- sible. " You will at least accompany us, merely to see the party." ' : By all means," said Mademoiselle Sillery. tC I must really regret that I cannot." said Mrs. Young. ' ; If it must be so," resumed the lady who w'as inviting us, " let us exchange tokens, and we may meet again." This proposal, MANNERS OF THE FRENCH. 171 so perfectly new to me. was accepted : the fair archers gave our ladies their pearl crescents, which had the appearance of being of considerable value. Madame Young returned some- thing which I did not see : Mademoiselle Sillery gave a silver Cupid, which had served her for an essence-bottle. The gentleman then shaking hands with us, and the ladies embrac- ing each other, we parted mutually satisfied. " Who are these ladies?" demanded I. " You know them as well as we do," replied Mademoiselle Sillery. " And is it thus," said I, ' : that you receive all strangers indiscriminately ?" " Yes," replied she, " all strangers of a certain condition. Where they are evidently of our own rank, we know of no reserve. Indeed, why should we ? It is to general advantage to be pleased, and to please each other." " But you embraced them as if you really felt an affection for them." " And I did feel that affection for them," said she, " as long as I was with them. I would have done them every service in my power, and would even have made sacrifices to serve them." " And yet if you were to see them again, you would perhaps not know them." " Very possibly," replied she. " But I can see no reason why every affection should be necessarily per- manent. We never pretend to permanence. We are cer- tainly transient, but not insincere." In this conversation we reached Anccnnis, a village on a green surrounded by forests. Some of the cottages, as we saw them by moonlight, seemed most delightf ally situated ; and the village had altogether that air of quietness and of rural retreat, which characterizes the scenery of the Loire. Our horses having preceded us by an hour or more, every- thing was prepared for us when we reached our inn. A turkey had been put down to roast, and I entered the kitchen in time to prevent its being spoilt by French cookery. Mademoiselle Sillery had the table provided in an instant 1 72 MANNERS OF THE FRENCH. with silver forks and table-linen. Had a Parisian seen a table thus set out at Ancennis, without knowing that we had brought all these requisites with us, he would not have credited his senses. The inns in France along the banks of the Loire are less deficient in substantial comforts than in these ornamental appendages. Poultry is everywhere cheap, and in great plenty ; but a French inn-keeper has no idea of a table-cloth, and still less of a clean one. He will give you food and a feather-bed, but you must provide yourselves with sheets and table-cloths. ft 23oiisB null totnifts. FROM COWLEY, SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE, LADY WINCHILSEA, AND MACKENZIE. " I've often wished that I had clear, For life, six hundred pounds a-year, A handsome house to lodge a friend, A river ut my garden's end, A terrace walk, and half a rood Of land set out to plant a wood." Few indeed are the persons that in the course of their lives have not entertained wishes of the like sort. Sometimes they have realized them ; sometimes heen disappointed hy the realization itself. In the latter case, the fault is neither in the wish nor in the things wished for. The wish is good, if only as a pleasure of the imagination and an encouragement to the means for attaining its object; and the things are found to be very good indeed, by those whose tempera- ments and habits qualify them for the enjoyment. Stories of unhappy millionaires who retire only to find the country tedious, of tallow- chandlers who yearn for their melting days, and even of poets discon- tented with their "groves," prove but the want of previous fitness, or of sufficient good health. The tallow-chandler should have cultivated something besides long-sixes, and the poet should not have sate read- ing about his groves till the state of his biliary vessels hindered his enjoyment when he got them." There is, however, a great deal of difference in those cases. That of the tallow-chandler, if he knows 174 A HOUSE AND GROUNDS. nothing but tallow and is not in a patient state of health, is hopeless, for he is neither clever nor poor enough to be able to go and help the village carpenter. He must needs quit his roses for the melting-tub, and in very desperation grows richer than he was before. But the love of gn>\cs and gardens being a habit of the poet's mind, he bears ill-health better with them than without them; complaint itself com- him more than it does other men. for he complains inverse; and it is not to be supposed that Shenstone, with all his desire of visitors, and Cowley, with all his child-like disappointments as to "rustic in- nocence," did not pass many happy, or at least many soothing, days in their country abodes. Shenstone, in particular, must have largely partaken of the pleasures of a creator, for he invented the lovely les about his house, and saw to their execution. It would be a good work in some writer to collect instances of this kind of disappointment and the reverse, and show how entirelv each was to be attributed to particular circumstances, and not to that uni- versal doom so falsely predicated of all human expectations. Great names prove nothing against counter-examples. Solomon himself may have been disappointed; but it was not because he was the '• wisest of men ;" it was because he had been too rich and luxurious, and so far one of the foolishest. We do not find that his brother phi- losopher, Epicurus, was disappointed; for he was poor and temperate, and thus was enabled to enjoy his garden to the last. There have been abdicated monarchs who wished to resume their thrones — royal tal- low-chandlers who could not do without their melting levee-days ; but such was not the case with Diocletian, who had a taste for gar- dening. On the contrary, he told the ambassadors who came to tempt him back to power, that if they knew what pleasure he took in his " eabbages," they would hate to go back themselves. Swift, who imi- tated from Horace the verses at the head of this article, would never have been happy in retirement, for he had a restless blood, and his good consisted in the attainment of power. He must have written with greater zest the lines a little further on. : — " Hut here a grievance seems to lio, All tbia is mine but till I die: 1 can't but think 'twould Bound more clover, To me and lu my beirs forever." Bnt his friend Tope set up his rest early in life at Twickenham, and r desired to leave it. Ill-health itself in him was luckily of a kind A HOUSE AND GROUNDS. 175 that made him tranquil. The author of the Seasons never tired of the country. White of Selborne never tired of it. Both found inces- sant occupation in watching the proceedings of the Nature they loved. It must be observed of Thomson, however, that he lived so near town as to be able to visit it whenever he chose. His house was at beautiful Richmond. I doubt not he would have been happy any- where with a few trees and friends ; but he liked a play also, and streets, and human movement. He would fain not go so far from London as not to be able to interchange the delights of town and country. And why should anybody that can help it ? The loveliest country can be found within that reasonable distance, especially in these days of railroads. You may bury yourself in as healthy, if not as wide, a solitude as if you were in the Highlands ; and, in an hour or two, you can enhance the pleasures of returning to it, by a book of your own buying, or a toy for your children. To resign forever the convenience and pleasures of intercourse with a great city would be desired by few ; and it would be least of all desired (except under very particular circumstances) by those who can enjoy the country most; because the power to discern, and the disposition to be pleased, are equally the secrets of the enjoyment in both cases. These, and a congenial occupation, will make a conscientious man happy anywhere if lie has decent health ; and if he is sickly, no earthly comforts can supply the want of them, no, not even the affection of those about him : for what is affection, if it show nothing but the good hearts of those who feel it, and is wasted on a thankless temper 1 Acquire- ment of information, benignity, something to do, and as many things as possible to love, these are the secrets of happiness in town or coun- try. If White of Selborne had been a town instead of a country cler- gyman, he would have told us all about the birds in the city as well as the suburbs. We should have had the best reason given us why lime-trees flourish in London smoke ; lists of flowers for our windows would have been furnished us, together with their times of bloom- ing ; we should have been told of the Ratopolis under ground, as well as of the dray-horses above it; and perhaps the discoverer of the double spiracula in the noses of stags would have found out the reason why tallow-chandlers have no noses at all. Now, what sort of house would most take the fancy of readers who enjoy a book like the present 1 We mean for repose and comfort, apart from the nobler and severer pleasures (very rare ones) ari^ino 176 A HOUSE AND GROUNDS. from discharging the duties belonging to a large estate. Oertainly not the house belonging to such an estate ; not a house like Pliny's, the size ami " sit out" of which it is a labor to read of; not the cold S< lUthero halls of the Romans or Italians, unfit for this climate ; nor an ancient Greek, nor modern Eastern house, with the women's apart- ments imprisoned off from the rest ; nor an old French chateau (ex- cept in Mrs. Radcliffe's romances) — for though pretty to read of, as belonging to the Montmorencys or the Rambouillets, it was inconve- nient inside, and had formal grounds without; nor the lumbering old German house, such as Goethe describes it, though habit and love may have sanctified all these ; no, nor even the princely palace of Chatsworth, though it be as full of taste as the owner, and of fra- grance from conservatories as of blessings from the poor. Comfortable rooms, doubtless, are to be found in that palace ; nay, snug ones ; for the height of taste implies the height of good sense; and such a nest and corner-loving mood of the mind as that epithet designates, we may be sure is not unprovided for. Yet the corner still is in the great house ; is a part of it ; cannot get rid of it ; is shouldered and (of any other such mansion you might say) scorned by it. We must have been used to such houses all our lives (which is seldom the case with those whose luxuries lie in books), otherwise we cannot settle our- selves comfortably in idea to the extent and responsibilities of all those suits of apartments, those corridors, pillars, galleries, looks out and looks in, and to the visitations of the steward. It is not a house, but a Bet of houses thrown into one ; not a nest, but a range under cover; not a privacy, but a publicity and an empire ! Admiration and bless- ing be upon it, for it is the great house of a good man and his large heart fits it well; and yet assuredly, in the eyes of us lovers of nooks and books, the idea of him never seems so happy as when it con- tracts its princely dimensions, and stoops into such cottage rooms as some in which we have had the pleasure of beholding him. But we must not digress in this manner, with an impertinence how- ever respectful. The house to be d< siderated by the lover of books in ordinary, is a warm, cosy, picturesque, irregular house, either old but not fragile, "i new hut built upon some good principle ; a house possessing, never- theless, modern comforts; neither big enough to require riches, nor small enough to cause inconvenience; more open to the sun than otherwise ; yet with trees about it and the sight of moro ; a prospect A HOUSE AND GROUNDS. 177 on one of the sides, to give it a sense of freedom, but a closer scene in front, to insure the sense of snugness ; a garden neither wild nor formal ; or rather two gardens, if possible, though not of ex- pensive size ; one to remind him of the time of his ancestors, a <: trim garden," with pattern beds of flowers, lavender, &c, and a terrace — the other of a freer sort, with a shrubbery, and turf and trees ; a bowling-green by all means ; (what sane person would be without a bowling-green 1) a rookery; a dove-cote; a brook; a paddock; a heath for air ; hill and dale for variety ; walks in a forest, trunks of trees for seats ; towers " embosomed" in their companions ; pastures, cottages ; a town not far off; an abbey close by ; mountains in the distance ; a glimpse of sails in a river, but not large sails ; a combina- tion, in short, of all which is the most But hold. One twentieth part of all this will suffice, if the air be good, and the neighbors congenial ; a cottage, an old farm-house, any- thing solid and not ugly, always excepting the mere modern house, which looks like a barrack, or like a workhouse, or like a chapel, or like a square box with holes cut into it for windows, or a great bit of cheese or hearth-stone, or yellow ochre. It has a gravel walk up to the door, and a bit of unhappy creeper trying to live upon it ; and (under any possible circumstances of quittal) is a disgrace to inhabit. As to the garden, the only absolute sine qua non is a few good brilliant beds of flowers, some grass, some shade, and a bank. But if there is a bee-hive in a corner it is better ; and if there is a bee-hive, there ought to be a brook, provided it is clear, and the soil gravelly. " There, in some covert, by a brook, Where no profaner eye may look, Hide me from day's garish eye ; While the bee with honied thigh, That at her flowery work doth sing, And the waters murmuring, With such concert as they keep, Entice the dewy-feather'd sleep." Beware, though, as Gray says, " of agoes." It is good in the land ot poetry, to sleep by a brook ; but in Middlesex it is best to do it in one's chamber. The best place to take a nap in, out of doors, in this lovely but moist country, is a hay-field. But we are detaining the reader from the houses and gardens pro- vided for him by his books. What signify any others, while the en- 8* .78 THOUGHTS OF COWLEY ON A GARDEN. joyment of these is upon us 1 May-Fair or Saint Mary Axe can alike rejoice in them. The least luxurious room in a street, provided there be but quiet enough to read hy, or imagination enough to forget one's self enables us to he put in possession of a paradise. We shall begin with the modest retreat desiderated by Cowley, and the eulogy which he has delivered on gardens in general. His style is as sweet and sincere as his wishes. The poetical portion of his essay is addressed to the famous English country gentleman and sylvan patriot, his friend Evelyn, who realized all and more than the sensitive poet did, because his means were greater and his complexion more healthy. But Cowley must have had delicious moments both in fancy and pos- session ; and if there be gardens in heaven resembling those on earth (which some have thought, and which is not so unheavenly a notion as many that are held divine), his innocent heart is surely the inhabi- tant of one of the best of them. THOUGHTS OF COWLEY ON A GARDEN. FROM A LETTER. TO EVELYN. I NEVER had any other desire so strong, and so like to covetousness. as that one which I have had always, that I might be master at last of a small house and large garden, with very moderate conveniences joined to thern, and there <1< dicate the remainder of my life, only to the culture of them, and study of nature ; And there (with no design beyond my wall) whole and entire to lie, In no unactivc ease, and no unglorious poverty." Or. as A r irgil has said, shorter and better for me, that I " Studiis florere ignobilis oti ;"* might there though I could wish that he had rather said, " Nobilis oti," when he spoke of his own. * [Take studious (lower in undistinguished ease.] THOUGHTS OF COWLEY ON A GARDEN. 170 Among many other arts and excellences which j r ou en- joy, I am glad to find this favorite of mine the most predom- inant. I know nobody that possesses more private happi- ness than you do in your garden ; and yet no man who makes his happiness more public, by a free communication of the art and knowledge of it to others. All that I myself am able yet to do, is only to recommend to mankind the search of that felicity, which you instruct them how to find out and to enjoy. Happy art thou, whom God does bless With the full choice of thine own happiness ; And happier yet, because thou'rt blest With prudence how to choose the best. In books and gardens, thou hast plac'd aright (Things which thou well dost understand, And both dost make with thy laborious hand) Thy noble innocent delight : And in thy virtuous wife, where thou again dost meet Both pleasures more refin'd and sweet, The fairest garden in her looks, And in her mind the wisest books. Oh, who would change these soft, yet solid joys, For empty shows, and senseless noise ; And all which rank ambition breeds, Which seem such beauteous flowers, and are such poisonous weeds ? When Epicurus to the world had taught That pleasure was the chiefest good, (And was perhaps i' th' right, if rightly understood), His life he to his doctrine brought, And in a garden's shade that sovereign pleasure sought : ISO THOUGHTS OF COWLEY ON A GARDEN. Whoever a true epicure would be, May there find cheap and virtuous luxury Vitellius' table, which did hold As many creatures as the ark of old, That fiscal table to which every day All countries did a constant tribute pay, Could' nothing more delicious afford, Than nature's liberality flclp'd with a little art and industry Allows the meanest gard'ner's board. The wanton taste no fish or fowl can choose, For which the grape or melon she would lose Though all th' inhabitants of sea and air Be listed in the glutton's bill of fare, Yet still the fruits of earth we see Plac'd the third story high in all her luxury. "Where docs the wisdom and the power divine In a more bright and sweet reflection shine,— Where do we finer strokes and colors see Of the Creator's real poetry, Than when we with attention look Upon the third day's volume of the book ? If we could open and intend our eye, We all, like Moses, should espy, Ev'n in a bush, the radiant Deity. ]>ut we despise these his inferior ways (Though no less full of miracle and praise) : Upon the flowers of heaven we gaze ; The stars of earth no wonder in us raise, Though these perhaps do, more than they, The life of mankind sway. Although no part i f mighty nature be THOUGHTS OF COWLEY ON A GARDEN. 181 More stor'd with beauty, power and mystery, Yet, to encourage human industry, God has so order'd, that no other part Such space and such dominion leaves for art. s We nowhere art do so triumphant see, As when it grafts or buds the tree : In other things we count it to excel, If it a docile scholar can appear To nature, and but imitate her well ; It over-rules and is her master here. It imitates her Maker's power divine, And changes her sometimes and sometimes does refine ' It does, like grace, the fallen tree restore, To its blest state of Paradise before. Who would not joy to see his conquering hand O'er all the vegetable world command ? And the wild giants of the wood receive What law he's pleas'd to give % He bids th' ill-natur'd crab produce The gen-tler apple's winy juice, The golden fruit that worthy is Of Galatea's purple kiss : He does the savage hawthorn teach To bear the medlar and the pear ; He bids the rustic plum to rear A noble trunk, and be a peach. Even Daphne's coyness he doth mock, And weds the cherry to her stock. Though she refus'd Apollo's suit, Even she, that chaste and virgin tree, Now wonders at herself to see That she's a mother made, and blushes in her fruit. 182 THOUGHTS OF COWLEY ON A GARDEN. Methinks I see great Dioclesian walk In the Salonian garden's noble shade, Which by his own imperial hands was made ; I see him smile (methinks) as he does talk With th' ambassadors who come in vain T' entice him to a throne again. If I, my friends (said he), should to you show All the delights which in these gardens grow, 'Tis likelier much that you should with me stay, Than 'tis that you should carry me away. And trust me not, my friends, if every day I walk not here with more delight Than ever, after the most happy fight, In triumph to the capitol I rode, To thank the gods, and to be thought, myself, almost a god. A noble finish that, to a sometimes prosaical, often poetical, and always engaging and thoughtful effusion. The garden possessed by Cowley's friend Evelyn was at his seat of Sayes Court, Duptford. It contained, among other beauties, an enormous hedge of holly, which made a glorious show in winter time with its shining red berries. The Czar Peter, who came to England in Evelyn's time, and occupied his house, took delight (by way of procuring himself a strong Russian sensation), in being drawn through this hedge " in a wheel-barrow !" He left it in sad condition accord- ingly, to the disgust and lamentation of the owner. The garden cuts rather a formal and solemn figure, to modern eyes, in the engravings that remain of it. But such engravings can suggest little of color and movement of flowers and the breathing trees ; and our ancestors had more reason to admire those old orderly creations of theirs than mod- ern improvement allows. We are too apt to suppose that one thing cannot be good, because another is better ; or that an improvement cannot too often reject what it might include or ameliorate. There was no want of enthusiasm in the admirers of the old style, whether they were right or wrong. Hear what an arbiter of taste in the next age said of it, the famous Sir William Temple. He was an honest THOUGHTS ON RETIREMENT. 183 statesman and mild Epicurean philosopher, in the real sense of that designation ; that is to say, temperate and reflecting, and fonder of a garden and the friends about him than of anything else. He was a great cultivator of fruit. He had the rare pleasure of obtaining tho retirement he loved ; first at Sheen, near Richmond, in Surrey, which is the place alluded to in the following " Thoughts on Retirement ;" and, secondly, at Moor Park, near Farnham, in the same county — a residence probably named after the Moor Park which he eulogizes in the subsequent description of a garden. In the garden of his house at Farnham he directed that his heart should be buried ; and it was. The sun-dial, under which he desired it might be deposited, is still remaining. SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE'S THOUGHTS ON RETIREMENT. FROM ONE OF HIS LETTERS. AS the country life, and this part of it more particularly (gardening), were the inclination of my youth itself, so they are the pleasure of my age ; and I can truly say, that, among many great employments that have fallen to my share, I have never asked or sought for any one of them, but often endeavored to escape from them into the ease and freedom of a private scene, where a man may go his own way and his own pace, in the common paths or circles of life. . " Inter cuncta leges et per cunctabere doctos Qua ratione queas traducere leniter aevum, Quid minuat curre, quid te tibi reddet amicum ; Quid pure tranquillet, honos, an dulce lucellum, An secretum iter, et fallentis semita vitas." But above all the learned read, and ask By what means you may gently pass your age, What lessens care, what makes thee thine own friend, What truly calms the mind ; honor, or wealth, Or else a private path of stealing life 184 THOUGHTS ON RETIREMENT. These are the questions that a man ought at least to ask himself, whether he asks others or no, and to choose his course of life rather by his own humor and temper, than by common accidents, or advice of friends ; at least if the Spanish proverb be true, That a fool knows more in his own house than a wise man in another's. The measure of choosing well is, whether a man likes what he has chosen ; which, I thank God, is what has be- fallen me ; and though among the follies of my life, building and planting have not been the least, and have cost me more than I have the confidence to own, yet they have been fully recompensed by the sweetness and satisfaction of this retreat, where, since my resolution taken of never entering again into any public employments, I have passed five years without ever going once to town, though I am almost in sight of it and have a house there always ready to receive me. Nor has this been any sort of affectation, as some have thought it, but a mere want of desire or humor to make so small a remove : for when I am in this corner, I can truly say with Horace, " Me quoties reficit gelidus Digentia rivus, Quid sentire putas, quid crcdis, amice, piecari 1 Sit mini, quod nunc est, etiam minus, ut mihi vivam Quod superest aevi, si quid superesse volunt Di. Sit bona librorum, et proviso? frugis in annum Copia, nc fluitem dubiaj spe pendulus horse ; Hoc satis est orare Jovem, qui donat etaufert." .Mi' when the cold Digentian stream revives, What does my friend believe I think or ask 1 Lei me yet les? possess, so I may live, Whate'er of life remains, unto myself. May 1 have books enough, and one year's store, Not to depend upon each doubtful hour ; Tliis is enough of mighty Jove to pray, Who, as he pleases, gives and takes away. AN OLD ENGLISH GARDEN. 185 AN OLD ENGLISH GARDEN OF THE SEVEN- TEENTH CENTURY. FROM THE ESSAYS OF SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE. THE perfectest figure of a garden I ever saw, either at home or abroad, was that of Moor Park in Hertfordshire, when I knew it about thirty years ago. It was made by the Countess of Bedford, esteemed among the greatest wits of her time, and celebrated by Dr. Donne. I will describe it for a model to those that meet with such a situation, and are above the regards of common expense. It lies on the side of a hill (upon which the house stands), but not very steep. The length of the house, where the best rooms and of most use or pleasure are, lies upon the breadth of the garden. The great parlor opens into the middle of a terras gravel- walk that lies even with it, and which may be, as I remember, about three hundred paces long, and broad in proportion ; the border set with standard laurels, and at large distances, which have the beauty of orange-trees, out of flower and fruit. From this walk are three descents by many stone steps, in the middle and at each eud, into a very large parterre. This is divided into quarters by gravel-walks, and adonied by two fountains and eight statues in the several quarters. At the end of the terras-walk are two summer-houses, and the sides of the parterre are ranged with two large cloisters, open to the garden, upon arches of stone, and ending with two other summer-houses even with the cloisters, which are paved with stone, and designed for walks of shade, there being none other in the whole parterre. Over these two cloisters are two terrasses covered with lead, and fenced with balusters ; and the passage into these airy walks is out of the two sum- mer-houses at the end of the first terras-walk. The cloister 186 - AN OLD ENGLISH GARDEN facing the south is covered with vines, and would have been proper for an orange-house, and the other for myrtles, or other more common greens,* and had, I doubt not, been cast for that purpose, if this piece of gardening had been in as much vogue as it is now. From the middle of the parterre is a descent by many steps, flying on each side of a grotto that lies between them (covered with lead, and flat) into the lower garden, which is all fruit-trees, ranged about the several quarters of a wilder- ness which is very shady. The walks here are all green, the grotto embellished with figures of shell-rock-work, fountains, and water-works. If the hill had not ended with the lower garden, and the- wall were not bounded by a common way that goes through the park, they might have added a third quar- ter of all greens ; but this want is supplied by a garden on the other side the house, which is all of that sort, very wild very shady, and adorned with rough rock-work and fountains. This was Moor Park when I was acquainted with it, and the sweetest place, I think, that I have seen in my life, either before or since, at home or abroad. What it is now I can give little account, having passed through several hands that have made great changes in gardens as well as houses ; but the remembrance of what it was is too pleasant ever to forget. The taste of Sir William Temple in gardening prevailed more or less up to the time of George the Third ; hut though Milton had in some degree countenanced it, or appeared to do so, in the couplet in which lie speaks of "Retired leisure, That in trim gardens tnkos his pleasure," yet the very universality of right feeling natural to a poet could not help running out of such bounds, when he came to describe a garden lit Cur paradise. Spenser had set him the example in his " Bower of # Greens formerly meant plants in general. OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 187 Bliss ;" and Tasso, who is supposed to have drawn from some actual gardens in his own time, had set Spenser himself the example in his beautiful account of the bowers of Armida. The probability is, that in all great ages Nature had spoken on the subject, in particular in- stances, to the feelings of genius. Even the Chinese are thought to have anticipated the modern taste, though with their usual semi-bar- barous mixture of clumsy magnificence and petty details ; possibly not always so much so, as the startled invidiousness of their betters has supposed. The Chinese, at all events, are very fond of flowers, and show a truly poetical appreciation of their merits, as may be seen in the charming novel of Ju-Kiao-Li. Milton's garden of Eden made a great impression, when Addison dug it up for the general benefit in his articles on the great poet in the Spectator. Pope's good sense was naturally on the side of it ; and Shenstone gave into it with practical and masterly enthusiasm. Hence the rise of what is called landscape gardening. The new taste ran a little wild at first in the hands of "Kent and Nature ;" then incurred another danger in more mechani- cal hands ; but has finally become the best that ever existed, by the combination of a liberal feeling for nature with the avowed and local reasonableness of art. Gardens are now adapted to places, to climates, and to the demands of the presence of a house ; that is to say, to the compromise which the house naturally tends to make between some- thing like the orderliness and comfort inside of it. and the nature which art goes forth to meet. This is the reason why we have said we should like to have two gardens, if possible : one modified from the old terraces and parterres and formal groves of our ancestors, and the other from the wildness of !; Kent and Nature." If required to choose between the two, we should say, Give us anything comprising a few trees, a few flowers, a plot of grass, a bench, and seclusion ; — anything in which we could pace up and down, sit when we pleased, see a little brilliant color, a good deal of green, and not be overlooked. What- ever did this best, we should like best, whether made by art or nature. There -was a lady in the time of Pope, a true poetess (if she had but known it and taken pains), Lady Winchilsea, a friend of his, who had as thorough a taste for seclusion on the romantic side as ever ex- isted. Her maiden name was Kingsmill; her husband the fifth Earl of Winchilsea, of the same family that now possess the title. Anne Kingsmill was an open-hearted, excellent creature ; she made a loving friend and wife ; is one of the very few original ct servers of nature 188 PETITION FOR AN ABSOLUTE RETREAT. (as Wordsworth has remarked) who appeared in an artificial ago; and deserves to have been gathered into collections of English verse far more than half of our minor poets. We will give a taste or two of this lady's style from her poem on the subject of retirement, and then conclude the present department of our book with two papers out of the periodical works of Mackenzie, worthy to have been read by her- self, and more suited to the desires of readers in general. There is a great deal more of the poem, all creditable to the writer's turn of mind, but not choice enough in style for a book of selection. We beg the reader's admiration for the burden at the close of each paragraph. PETITION FOR AN ABSOLUTE RETREAT. FROM A TOEM BV THE COUNTESS OF V\TNCHILSEA. p IVE mo, indulgent Fate, ^* Give me yet beforo I die, A sweet, but absolute retreat, 'Mongst paths so lost, and trees so high, That the world may ne'er invade, Through such windings and such shade, My unshaken liberty. No intruders thither come, Who visit but to be from home ; None who their vain moments pass Only studious of their glass. News, that charm to listening ears, That false alarm to hopes and fears, That common theme for every fop From the statesman to the shop, In these coverts ne'er be spread ; Of who's deceas'd or who's to wed Be no tidings thither brought ; But silent as a midnight thought, PETITION FOR AN ABSOLUTE RETREAT. 189 Where the world may ne'er invade, Be those windings and that shade. Courteous Fate ! afford me there A table spread, without my care, With what the neighb'ring fields impart, Whose cleanliness be all its art. When of old the calf was drest (Though to make an angel's feast) In the plain, unstudied sauce Nor truffle, nor morillia was, Nor cou'd the mighty patriarch's board One far-fetch'd ortolan afford. Courteous Fate, then give me there Only plain and wholesome fare. Fruits indeed (wou'd Heaven bestow) All that did in Eden grow, All, but the forbidden tree, Wou'd be coveted by me ; Grapes with juice so crowded up, As breaking thro' the native cup ; Figs (yet growing) candy'd o'er By the sun's attracting pow'r ; Cherries, with the downy peach, All within my easy reach ; Whilst creeping near the humble ground Shou'd the strawberry be found, Springing wheresoe'er I stray'd Thro' those windings and that shade. Give me there (since Heaven has shown It was not good to be alone) A partner suited to my mind, Solitary, pleas'd, and kind ; 190 PETITION FOR AN ABSOLUTE RETREA1 "Who, partially, may something see Preferr'd to all the world in me ; Slighting, by my humble side, Fame and splendor, wealth and pride. "When but two the earth possest, 'Twas their happiest days, and best ; They by business, nor by wars, They by no domestic cares, From each other e'er were drawn, But in some grove or flow'ry lawn Spent the swiftly flying time, Spent their own and nature's prime In love, that only passion given To perfect man, whilst friends with Heaven Rage, and jealousy, and hate, Transports of his fallen state, When by Satan's wiles betray'd, Fly those windings, and that shade ! Let me then, indulgent Fate ! Let me still in my retreat From all roving thoughts be freed, Or aims that may contention breed ; Nor be my endeavors led By goods that perish with the dead ! Fitly might the life of man Be indeed esteem'd a span, If the present moment were Of delight his only share ; If no other joys he knew Than what round about him grew : But as those whose stars would traco From a subterranean place, PETITION FOR AN ABSOLUTE RETREAT. 191 Through some engine lift their eyes To the outward glorious skies ; So th' immortal spirit may, When descended to our clay, From a rightly govern'd frame View the height from whence she came ; To her Paradise be caught, And things unutterable taught. Give me, then, in that retreat, Give me, indulgent Fate ! For all pleasures left behind, Contemplations of the mind. Let the fair, the gay, the vain, Courtship and applause obtain ; Let th' ambitious rule the earth ; Let the giddy fool have mirth ; Give the epicure his dish, Every one their several wish ; Whilst my transports I employ On that more extensive joy, When all Heaven shall be survcy'd From those windings and that shad*). Sin nlll Cnnutrq Jtimi miu" an nla Mq. FROM MACKENZIE'S " LOUNGER," N~. 87. I'm: old lady described in the following charming pap'br of Mac- kenzie (which was a favorite with Sir Walter Scott), is not of so large- minded an order as Lady Winchilsea, but she has as good a heart ; is very touching and pleasant ; and her abode suits her admirably. It is the remnant of something that would have been greater in a greater age. We fancy her countenance to have been one that would have re- minded us of the charming old face in Drayton : " Ev'n in the aged'st face where beauty once did dwell, And Nature in the least but seemed to excel, Time cannot make such waste, but something will appear To show some little traot of delicacy tliere." Polyolbion. The reader, perhaps, hardly requires to be told that Mackenzie, whose writings have been gathered into the British classics, was a Scottish gentleman, bred to the bar, who in his youth wrote the once popular novel called the Man of Feeling, and died not long ago at a reverend age, universally regretted. He was the editor and principal writer « » T tin* two periodical works called the Mirror and Lounger, to which several of the reigning Scottish wits contributed. He was not a very original or powerful writer, but he was a very shrewd, elegant, and pleasing one, a happy offset from Addison ; and he sometimes showed great pathos. His stories of La Roche and Louisa Venoni are among the most affecting in the world, and free from the somewhat AN OLD CO UNTR Y HO USE. 1 9 3 morbid softness of his novel. We are the happier in being able to do this tardy, though very unnecessary justice to the merits of a good man and a graceful essayist, because in the petulance and presumption of youth we had mistaken our incompetence to judge them for the measure of their pretensions. I HAVE long cultivated a talent very fortunate for a man of my disposition, that of travelling in my easy chair ; of transporting myself, without stirring from my parlor, to distant places and to absent friends ; of drawing scenes in my mind's eye ; and of peopling them with the groups of fancy, or the society of remembrance. When I have some- times lately felt the dreariness of the town, deserted by my acquaintance ; when I have returned from the coffee-house, where the boxes were unoccupied, and strolled out from my accustomed walk, which even the lame beggar had left, I was fain to shut myself up in my room, order a dish of my best tea (for there is a sort of melancholy which disposes one to make much of one's self), and calling up the powers of memory and imagination, leave the solitary town for a solitude more interesting, which my younger days enjoyed in the country, which I think, and if I am wrong I do not wish to be undeceived, was the most Elysian spot in the world. 'Twas at an old lady's, a relation and godmother of mine, where a particular incident occasioned my being left during the vacation of two successive seasons. Her house was formed out of the remains of an old Gothic castle, of which one tower was still almost entire ; it was tenanted by kindly daws and swallows. Beneath, in a modernized part of the house, resided the mistress of the mansion. The house was skirted by a few majestic elms and beeches, and the stumps of several others showed that once they had been 9 104 AN OLD COUNTRY HOUSE more numerous. To the west a clump of firs covered a rug gcd rocky dell, where the rooks claimed a prescriptive seign fry. Through this a dashing rivulet forced its way. which afterwards grew quiet in its progress ; and gurgling gently through a piece of downy meadow-ground, crossed the bottom of the garden, where a little rustic paling enclosed a washing- green, and a wicker seat, fronting the south, was placed for the accommodation of the old lady, whose lesser tour, when her fields did not require a visit, used to terminate in this spot. Here, too, were ranged the hives for her bees, whose hum, in a still warm sunshine, soothed the good old lady's indolence, while their proverbial industry was sometimes quoted for the instruction of her washers. The brook ran brawling through some underwood on the outside of the gar- den, and soon after formed a little cascade, which fell into the river that winded through a valley in front of the house. When hay -making or harvest was going on, my godmother took her long stick in her hand, and overlooked the labors of the mowers or reapers; though I believe there was little thrift in the superintendency, as the visit generally cost her a draught of beer or a dram, to encourage their diligence. Within doors she had so able an assistant, that her labor little. In that department an old man-servant was her minister, the father of my Peter, who serves me not the less faithfully that we have gathered nuts together in my god- ;.. »ther's hazel-bank. This old butler (I call him by his title of honor, though in truth he had many subordinate offices) had originally enlisted with her husband. -who went into the army a youth (though he afterwards married and be- •inie a country gentleman), had been his servant abroad, and attended him during his last illness at home. His best hat. which lie wore on Sundays, with a scarlet waistcoat of his master's, bad still a cockade in it, AND AN OLD LADY. 195 Her husband's books were in a room at the top of a screw staircase, which had scarce been opened since his death ; but her own library, for Sabbath or rainy days, was ranged in a little book-press in the parlor. It consisted, so far as I can remember, of several volumes of sermons, a Concordance, Thomas a Kempis, Antoninus 's Meditations, the works of the author of the Wlioh Duty of Man, and a translation of Bocthius ; the original editions of the Spectator and Guar- dian, Cowley's Poems (of which I had lost a volume soon after I first came about her house), Baker's Chronicle, Bur- net's History of his oivn Times, Lamb's Royal Cookery, Abcr- cromby's Scots Warriors, and Nisbet's Heraldry. The subject of the last-mentioned book was my god- mother's strong ground ; and she could disentangle a point of genealogy beyond any one I ever knew. She had an ex- cellent memory for anecdotes ; and her stories, though some- times long, were never tiresome ; for she had been a woman of great beauty and accomplishment in her youth, and had kept such company as made the drama of her stories respec- table and interesting. She spoke frequently of such of her own family as she remembered when a child, but scarcely ever of those she had lost, though one could see she thought of them often. She had buried a beloved husband and four children. Her youngest, Edward, " her beautiful her brave," fell in Flanders, and was not entombed with his ancestors. His picture, done when a child, an artless red and white por- trait, smelling at a nosegay, but very like withal, hung at her bed-side, and his sword and gorget were crossed under it. When she spoke of a soldier, it was in a style above her usual simplicity ; there was a sort of swell in her language, which sometimes a tear (for her age had not lost the privilege of tears) made still more eloquent. She kept her sorrows, like her devotions that solaced them, sacred to herself. They 196 .!.V OLD COUNTRY HOUSE threw nothing of gloom over her deportment; a gentle shade only, like the fleckered clouds of summer, that increase, not diminish, the benignity of the season. She had few neighbors, and still fewer visitors ; but her reception of such as did visit her was cordial in the extreme. She pressed a little too much, perhaps ; but there was so much heart and good-will in her importunity, as made her good things seem better than those of any other table. Nor was her attention confined only to the good fare of her guests, though it might have flattered her vanity more than that of most exhibitors of good dinners, because the cookery was generally directed by herself. Their servants lived as well in her hall, and their horses in her stable. She looked after the airing of their sheets, and saw their fires mended if the night was cold. Her old butler, who rose betimes, would never suffer anybody to mount his horse fasting. The parson of the parish was her guest every Sunday, and said prayers in the evening. To say truth, he was no great genius, nor much a scholar. I believe my godmother knew rather more of divinity than he did ; but she received from him information of another sort : he told her who were the poor, the sick, the dying of the parish, and she had some assistance, some comfort for them all. I could draw the old lady at this moment ! dressed in gray, with a clean white hood nicely plaited (for she was somewhat finical about the neatness of her person), sitting in her straight-backed elbow-chair, which stood in a large win- dow, scooped out of the thickness of the ancient wall. The middle panes of the window were of painted glass — the story of Joseph and his brethren. On the outside waved a honey- suckle tnc which often threw its shade across her book or hi r work ; but she would not allow it to be cut down. "It Btood there many a day," said she. "and we old inhali AND AJ\ OLD LADY. 197 tants should bear with one another." Methinks I see her thus seated, her spectacles en, but raised a little on her brow for a pause of explanation, oheir shagreen case laid between the leaves of a silver-clasped family Bible. On one side, her bell and snuff-bos ; on the other, her knitting apparatus in a blue damask bag. — Between her and the fire an old Spanish pointer, that had formerly been her son Edward's, teased, but not teased out of his gravity, by a little terrier of mine. — All this is before me, and I am a hundred miles from town, its inhabitants, and its business. In town I may have seen such a figure : but the country scenery around, like the tasteful frame of an excellent picture, gives it a heightening, a relief, which it would lose in any other situation. Some of my readers, perhaps, will look with little relisu on the portrait. I know it is an egotism in me to talk of its value ; but over this dish of tea, and in such a temper of mind, one is given to egotism. It will be only adding another to say, that when I recall the rural scene of the good old lady's abode, her simple, her innocent, her useful employ- ments, the afflictions she sustained in this world, the comforts she drew from another, I feel a serenity of soul, a benignity of affections, which I am sure confer happiness, and I think must promote virtue. This delightful paper appears to have had its just effect on the readers of the Lounger. It produced some pleasant remarks from a correspondent who signed himself " Urbanus ;" and these remarks produced a letter from the Editor himself, under the signature of " Adrastus," which contains a sort of character of an Old Gentleman to match that of the Old Lady, and has also a tone of reflection that will sensibly affect most readers, especially those at a similar time of life. 198 LOVE OF THE COUNTRY LOVE OF THE COUNTRY IN THE DECLINE OF LIFE. FROM Tin: SAME, NO. 93. SIR. — I, as well as your correspondent Urbanus, was very much pleased with your late paper on the moral use of the country, and the portrait of the excellent lady it contain- ed. I am an old man, sir, but thank God, with all my facul- ties and feelings entire and alive about me ; and your de- scription recalled to my memory some worthy characters with which my youth was acquainted, and which, I am inclined to believe, I should find it a little difficult, were I even disposed to look out for them, to supply now. At my time of life, friends are a treasure which the fortunate may have preserv- ed, but the most fortunate can hardly acquire ; and if I am not mistaken in my opinion of the present race, there are not many friendships among them which I would be solicitous to acquire or they will be likely to preserve. It is not of their little irregularities or imprudencies I complain ; I know these must always be expected and pardoned in the young ; and there are few of us old people who can recollect our youthful days without having some things of that sort to blush for. No. Mr. Lounger, it is their prudence, their wisdom, their sight, their policy, I find fault with. They put on the livery of the world so early, and have so few of the weaknesses of feeling or of fancy ! To this cause I impute the want of that rural sentiment which your correspondent Urbanus seems to suppose is banished only from the country retreats of town dissipation, from the abodes of fashionable and frivolous people, who carry all the follies and pleasures of a city into seem a destined for rural simplicity and rural enjoyment. But in truth, sir. the people of the country themselves, who IN THE DECLINE OF LIFE. 190 never knew fashionable life, or city dissipation, have now ex- changed the simple-hearted pleasures which in my younger days were common among them, for ideas of a much more selfish sort. Most of my young acquaintance there (and I spend at least eight months of the year in the country) are really arrived at that prudent way of estimating things which we used to be diverted with in Hudibras : " For what's the value of a thing, But as much money as 'twill bring V Their ambition, their love, their friendship, all have this ten- dency ; and their no-ambition, their no-love, their no-friend- ship, or, in one word, their indifference about every object from which some worldly advantage is not to be drawn, is equally observable on the other hand. On such a disposition, Mr. Lounger, what impression is to be made by rural objects or rural scenery ? The visions which these paint in fancy, or the tender ties they have on remembrance, cannot find room_ in an imagination or a heart made callous by selfish and in- terested indifference. 'Tis with regret rather than resent- ment that I perceive this sort of turn so prevalent among the young people of my acquaintance, or those with whom I am connected. I have now, alas ! no child of my own in whom I can either lament such a failing, or be proud of the want of it. I think myself happy, sir, that, even at my advanced pe- riod of life, I am still susceptible of such impressions as those which our 87th Number imputes to rural contemplation. At this season, above all others, methinks they are to be enjoy- ed. Now in this fading time of the year, when the flush of vegetation and the glow of maturity is past, when the fields put on a sober or rather saddened appearance, I look on the well-known scenery around my country dwelling, as I would •200 LOVE OF THE COUNTRY on a friend fallen from the pride of prosperity to a more humble and more interesting situation. The withering grass that whistles on the unsheltered bank ; the fallen leaves strewed over the woodland path ; the silence of the almost naked copse, which not long ago rung with the music of the birds : the nocking of their little tribes that seem mute with the dread of ills to come ; the querulous call of the partridge in the bare brown field, and the soft low song of the red- breast from the household shed ; this pensive landscape, with these plaintive accompaniments, dimmed by a gray October sky. which we look on with the thoughts of its shortened and still shortening light ; all this presses on my bosom a certain still and gentle melancholy, which I would not part with for all the pleasure that mirth could give, for all the luxury that wealth could buy. You say, truly, in one of your late papers, that poetry is almost extinguished among us : it is one of my old-fashioned propensities to be fond of poetry, to be delighted with its descriptions, to be affected by its sentiments. I find genuine poetry a sort of opening to the feelings of my mind, to which my own expression could not give vent; I see in its descriptions a picture more lively and better composed, than my own less distinct and loss vivid ideas of the objects around me could furnish. It is with such impressions that I read the following lines of Thomson's Autumn introduc- tive of the solemn and beautiful apostrophe to philosophic melancholy : — • Bui Bee the fading many-color'd woods, Shade deepening over shade, the country round Imbrown; a crowded umbrage, dusk and dun, Of every hue, from wan declining green To Booty dark. These now the lonesome muse, Low whispering, lead into their leaf-strown walks, And give the season in its latest view. IN THE DECLINE OF LIFE. 201 " Meantime, light-shadowing all, a soher calm Fleeces unbounded ether ; whose least wave Stands tremulous, uncertain where to turn The gentle current ; while illumined wide The dewy-skirted clouds imbibe the sun, And through their lucid veil his soften'd force Shed o'er the peaceful world. Then is the time, For those whom wisdom and whom nature charm, To steal themselves from the degenerate crowd, And soar above this little scene of things ; To tread low-thoughted vice beneath their feet, To soothe the throbbing passions into peace, And woo lone quiet in her silent walks." About this time three years, sir, I had the misfortune to lose a daughter, the last survivor of my family, whom her mother, dying at her birth, left a legacy to my tenderness, who closed a life of the most exemplary goodness, of the most tender filial duty, of the warmest benevolence, of the most exalted piety, by a very gradual but not unperceived decay. When I think on the returning season of this calamity, when I see the last fading flowers of autumn, which my Harriet used to gather with a kind of sympathetic sadness, and hear the small chirping note of the flocking linnets, which she used to make me observe as the elegy of the year ! when I have drawn her picture in the midst of this rural scenery, and then reflected on her many virtues and accomplishments, on her early and unceasing attention to myself, her gentle and winning manners to every one around her ; when I re- member her resignation during the progress of her disorder, her unshaken and sublime piety in its latest stages ; when these recollections filled my mind, in conjunction with the drooping images of the season, and the eense of my own waning period of life I feel a mixture of sadness and of com 0* 202 LOVE OF THE COUNTRY posurc, of humility and of elevation of spirit, which I think, sir, a man would ill exchange for any degree of unfeeling prudence, or of worldly wisdom and indifference. The attachment to rural objects is like that family affec- tion which a warm and uncorrupted mind preserves for its relations and early acquaintance. In a town, the lively par- tiality and predilections for these relations or friends is weakened or lost in the general intercourse of the multitude around us. In a town, external objects are so common, so unappropriated to ourselves, and are so liable to change and to decay, that we cannot feel any close or permanent connec- tion with them. In the country we remember them un- changed for a long space of time, and for that space known and frequented by scarce any but ourselves. " Methinks I should hate," says a young lady, the child of fiction, yet drawn with many features like that excellent girl I lost, "methinks I should hate to have been born in a town. AVlien I say my native brook, or my native hill, I talk of friends, of whom the remembrance warms my heart." When the memory of persons we dearly loved is connected with the view of those objects, they have then a double link to the soul. It were tender enough for me to view some ancient trees that form my common evening walk, did I only remember what I was when I first sported under their shade, and what I am when I rest under it now ; but it is doubly tender when I think (4* those with whom I have walked there; of her whom but a few summers ago I saw beneath those beeches, smiling in health, and beauty, and happiness, her present days lighted up with innocence and mirth, and her future drawn in the llattcring colors of fancy and of hope. But I know not why I should trouble you with this re- cital of the situation and feelings of an individual, or indeed why I should have written to you at all, except that I catched IN THE DECLINE OF LIFE. 203 a sort of congenial spirit from your 87th Number, and was led by the letter of Urbanus to compare your description of a personage in former times with those whose sentiments I sometimes hear in the present days. I am not sure that these have gained in point of substance what they have lost in point of imagination. Power, and wealth, and luxury, are relative terms ; and if address, and prudence, and policy, can only acquire us our share, we shall not account ourselves more powerful, more rich, or more luxurious, than when in the little we possessed wo were still equal to those around us. But if we have narrowed the sources of internal comfort and internal enjoyment, — if we have debased the powers of purity of the mind, — if we have blunted the sympathy or contracted the affections of the heart, we have lost some of that treasure which was absolutely our own, and derived not its value from comparative estimation. Above all, if we have allowed the prudence or the interests of this world to shut out from our souls the view or the hopes of a better, we have quenched that light which would have cheered the darkness of affliction and the evening of old age, which at this moment, Mr. Loun- ger (for like an old man I must come back to myself), I feel restoring me my virtuous friends, my loved relations, my dearest child ! — I am, &c. Adrastus. €mn f Qtiiifis, null nn Snsrrijjtiau nn o Ipring. BY THOMAS WARTON. It is curious that Warton, who was by no means a great poet, should have written some of the most favorite sonnets in the lan- guage. The reason is, that they were upon subjects he understood, and that the writer was in earnest. Upon most, indeed upon any oc- casions. Warton's mind was not sufficiently active or excitable to be moved into much eloquence of expression. The Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford, was a luxurious Protestant monk, who found some- thing to minister to his satisfaction in everything around him, Gothic architecture, books, country walks, &c, not omitting the club-room and the pipe ; but he was content, in general, to admire them through the medium of the thoughts of others, and so let the companions of his mind speak for him. He was susceptible, however, of strong general impressions; and as these, in the instances before us, were made by his favorite subjects, they are given with corresponding truth. Almost all his sonnets (they are only nine), but especially these two, notwithstanding; conventional phrases, have elegance, sim- iv, and a touching fervor. Nobody had written on the particular topics before him, at least not poetically; so that his modesty was nut tempted into imitation. It makes us regret that he did not oftener take up new subjects, especially when we see the original eye for na- ture which is discernible even in his half centos from the poets he ad- mired. It must be allowed, nevertheless, that the good comfortable collegian was made rather to feel sentiment in others, than to express it in his own sturdy person. WRITTEN AFTER SEEING WILTON HOUSE. 205 INSCRIPTION OVER A CALM AND CLEAR SPRING. HERE quench your thirst, and mark in me An emblem of true charity ; Who, while my bounty I bestow, Am neither heard, nor seen, to flow. WRITTEN IN A BLANK LEAF OF DUGDALE'S "MONASTICON."* DEEM not devoid of elegance the sage, By fancy's genuine feelings unbeguil'd, Of painful pedantry the poring child, "Who turns of these proud domes th' historic page, Now sunk by time and Henry's fiercer rage. Think'st thou the warbling muses never smil'd On his lone hours ? Ingenuous views engage His thoughts, on themes, unclassic falsely styl'd, Intent. While cloistered piety displays Her mouldering rolls, the piercing eye explores New manners and the pomp of elder days, Whence culls the pensive bard his pictured stores. Nor rough, nor barren, are the winding ways Of hoar antiquity, but strewn with flowers. WRITTEN AFTER SEEING WILTON HOUSE.f TMROM Pembroke's princely dome, where mimic art J- Decks with a magic hand the dazzling bowers, Its living hues where the warm pencil pours, And breathing forms from the rude marble start, * The Monasticon is an account of the monasteries existing in England before the Reformation. f The scat of the Pembroke family; where there was, and is, a fine collection of pictures. • WRITTEN AFTER SEEING WILTON HOUSE. How to life's humbler scene can I depart, My breast all glowing from those gorgeous towers 1 In my low cell how cheat the sullen hours ? Vain the complaint. For foncy can impart (To fate superior and to fortune's doom) "Whate'er adorns the stately storied hall. She, 'mid the dungeon's solitary gloom, Can dress the graces in their Attic pall ; Bid the green landskip's vernal beauty bloom, And in bright trophies clothe the twilight wail Srsrripiimis nf Sigjjt. FROM THE NOTES TO OSSIAN. The dispute respecting the merits and authenticity of the poems of Ossian has long settled down, we believe, into an admission of the former, and a conclusion that Macpherson invented them, assisted by traditional fragments. It is a pity Macpherson ever suffered the dis- pute to take place ; for it has left him a doubtful reputation both for genius and honesty, when perhaps nobody would have questioned either. The fragments may have excelled the inventions ; but hardly any one, except a man of genius, could have put them so well together, notwithstanding the violation of times and manners. There is a great deal of repetition and monotony ; yet somehow these faults them- selves contribute to the welcome part of the impression. They affect us like the dreariness of the heaths and the moaning of the winds. But the work would not have stood its ground, and gained the admir- ers it has, did it not possess positive beauties ; veins of genuine feel- ing and imagination. It is understood that an Italian translation was a favorite with Bonaparte and his officers during the early republican times. The present king of Sweden, Oscar Bernadotte, is said, we be- lieve, to have been named after the son of Ossian. But even these illustrious testimonies to its merit are unnecessary after the single one of Gray, who in his Letters repeatedly expresses his admiration, par- ticularly of the passages before us. We shall extract his notice of them by way of argument as well as critique. It is hardly requisite to mention, that Macpherson does not attribute these passages to Os- sian. He has put them in a note, and says they were written by some imitator " a thousand years afterwards!" Gray takes no notice of 20S DESCRIPTIONS OF NIGHT. tliis ; nor shall we. If they are not of the same manufacture as tho rest, ghost is not like ghost, nor a wind a wind. Observe how beautifully Gray talks of the gust of wind " recollect- ing itself/' and resembling the voice of a spirit. "I have received," he says to his friend Mr. Stonhewer, ''another Scotch packet with a third specimen, inferior in kind (because it is merely description), but full of nature and noble wild imagination. Five bards pass the night at the castle of a chief (himself a principal bard) ; each goes in his turn to observe the face of things, and returns with an extempore picture of the changes he has seen (it is an October night, the harvest month of the Highlands). This is the whole plan ; yet there is a contrivance, and a preparation of ideas, that you would not expect. The oddest thing is, that every one of them sees ghosts (more or less). Tho idea that struck me and surprised me most, is the following : — One of them (describing a storm of wind and rain) says, " Ghosts rido on the tempest to-night ; Sweet is their voice between the gusts of wind ; Their songs are of other worlds I" Did you never observe (while rocking winds are piping loud) that pause, as tho gust is recollecting itself, and rising upon the ear in a shrill and plaintive note, like the swell of an iEolian harp 1 I do as- sure you there is nothing in the world so like the voice of a spirit. Thomson had an ear sometimes : he was not deaf to this ; and has de- scribed it gloriously, but given it another different turn, and of more horror. I cannot repeat the lines : it is in Ills Winter. There is another very fine picture in one of them. It describes the breaking of the clouds after the storm, before it is settled into a calm, and when the moon is seen by short intervals. " The waves are tnmbling on the lake, And lush the rocky ^ides, Tho boat is brimful in the cove, The oars on the rorkin^ tidn. S:iil sits a maid beneath a cliff, And eyes the rolling stream; Her lover promised to come. She eaw his boat (when it wns evening) on the lake; Are these his groans on the gale? Is this his broken boat on tho shoro ?" DESCRIPTIONS OF NIGHT. 209 Note, that Gray has written out these sentences in distinct lines, as though they had been metrically disposed in the original, and not prose. And indeed it is difficult not to discern a music in them, or to think they want a music of any other sort. But the effect would be different in long compositions. FIRST BARD. NIGHT is dull and dark. The clouds rest on the hills. No star with green trembling beam, no moon, looks from the sky. I hear the blast in the wood ; but I hear it distant far. The stream of the valley murmurs ; but its murmur is sullen and sad. From the tree at the grave of the dead the long-howling owl is heard. I see a dim form on the plain ! It is a ghost ! it fades, it flies. Some funeral shall pass this way ; the meteor marks the path. The distant dog is howling from the hut of the hill The staassages extracted. He has given a valuable report of the way in which the great statesman passed his time at Saint Anne's Hill; and the account of his own feelings, while occupied in waiting his patron's last hour, especially during the visit to the dressing-room once occupied by the Duchess of Devonshire, is very striking. Saint Anne's Hill is in the neighborhood of Chertsey. OT. Anne's Hill is delightfully situated; it commands a ^ rich and extensive prospect. The house is embowered in . resting on the side of a lull, its grounds declining grace- fully to a mad, which hounds them at bottom. Some fine trees are grouped round the house, and three remarkably beautiful ones stand on the lawn ; while a profusion of shrubs distributed throughout with taste and judgment. Here RETIREMENT AND DEATH UF A STATESMAN. 215 Mr. Fox was the tranquil and happy possessor of about thirty acres, and the inmate of a small but pleasant mansion. The simplicity and benignity of his manners, speaking the integri- ty of his character, soon dispelled those feelings of awe, which one naturally experiences on approaching what is very exalted. The domestic life of Mr. Fox was equally regular and agreeable. In summer he rose between six and seven ; in winter before eight. The assiduous care and excellent man- agement of Mrs. Fox rendered his rural mansion the abode of peace, elegance, and order, and had long procured her the gratitude and esteem of those private friends whose visits to Mr. Fox, in his retirement at St. Anne's Hill, made them witnesses of this amiable woman's conduct. I confess I car- ried with me some of the vulgar prejudices respecting this great man ! How completely was I undeceived ! After breakfast, which took place between eight and nine in sum- mer, and at a little after nine in winter, he usually read some Italian author with Mrs. Fox, and then spent the time pre- ceding dinner at his literary studies, in which the Greek poets bore a principal part. A frugal but plentiful dinner took place at three, or half- past two, in summer, and at four in winter ; and a few glasses of wine were followed by coffee. The evening was dedicated to walking and conversation till tea-time, when reading aloud in history commenced, and continued till near ten. A light supper of fruit, pastry, or something very trifling, finished the day ; and at half-past ten the family were gone to rest. At breakfast the newspaper was read, commonly by Mr. Fox, as well as the letters which had arrived ; for such was the noble confidence of his mind, that he concealed nothing from his domestic circle, unless it were the faults or the se- crets of his friends. At such times, when the political topics 216 RETIREMENT AND DEATH OF A STATESMAN. of the clay were naturally introduced by the paper. I never could observe the least acrimony or anger against that party which so sedulously, and indeed successfully, had labored to exclude him from the management of affairs, by misrepresen- tations of his motives, rather than by refutations of his ar- guments. In private conversation, I think, he was rather averse to political discussion, generally preferring subjects connected with natural history, in any of its branches: above all, dwel- ling with delight on classical and poetical subjects. It is not to he supposed, however, that, where the interests and happi- - of millions were concerned, he preserved a cold silence. About the end of May, Mrs. Eos mentioned slightly to me that Mr. Fox was unwell ; but at this time there was no alarm or apprehension. In the beginning of June I received a message from her, recpiesting me to come to him, as he had expressed a wish for me to read to him, if I was disengaged. It was in the evening, and I found him reclining upon a couch, uneasy and languid. It seemed to me so sudden an attack, that I was surprised and shocked. " He requested me to read some of the iEneid to him. and desired me to turn to the fourth book: this was his favorite part. The tone of melancholy with which that book commences, was pleasing to his mind: he appeared relieved, and to forget his uneasiness and pains ; but I felt this recurrence to Virgil as a mournful omen of a great attack upon his system, and that he was al- ready looking to abstract himself from noise, and tumult, and politics. Henceforth his illness rapidly increased, and was pronounced a dropsy ! I have reason to think that he turned bis thoughts very soon to retirement at St. Anne's Hill, as he found the pressure of business insupportably harassing ; and I have ever had in mind those lines, as very applicable to him at this time : — RETIREMENT AND DEATH OF A STATESMAN. 217 " And as an hare, whom hounds and horns pursue, Pants to the goal, from whence at first she flew, I still had hopes — my long vexations past — Here to return, a.nd die (at home) at last." Another of these symptoms of melancholy foreboding, 1 thought, was shown in his manner at Holland House. Mrs. Fox, he, and I, drove there several times before his illness confined him, and when exercise was strongly urged. He looked around him the last day he was there with a farewell tenderness that struck me very much. It was the place where he had spent his youthful days. Every lawn, garden, tree, and walk, were viewed by him with peculiar affection. He pointed out its beauties to me, and, in particular, showed me a green lane or avenue, which his mother, the late Lady Holland, had made by shutting up a road. He was a very exquisite judge of the picturesque, and had mentioned to me how beautiful this road had become, since converted into an alley. He raised his eyes in the house, looking around, and was earnest in pointing out everything he liked and remem- bered. Soon, however, his illness very alarmingly increased ; he suffered dreadful pains, and often rose from dinner with intolerable suffering. His temper never changed, and was always serene and sweet : it was amazing to behold so much distressing anguish, and so great equanimity. His friends, alarmed, crowded round him, as well as those relatives who, in a peculiar degree, knew his value and affectionate nature. Mrs. Fox, whose unwearied attentions were the chief comfort of the sufferer, and myself, read aloud a great deal to him. Crabbe's poems, in manuscript, pleased him a great deal ; in particular, the little episode of Phoebe Dawson. He did not, however, hear them all read, and there are parts in which he would have suggested alterations. We thus read, 10 218 RETIREMENT AND DEATH OF A STATESMAN. relieving each other, a great number of novels to him. He now saw very few persons. In truth, he had now every reason to do so, — visitors fatigued and oppressed him. He lan- guished for St. Anne's Hill, and there all his hopes and wishes centered ; he thought of a private life, and of resign- ing his office, and we had hopes that he might be restored sufficiently to enjoy health by abstaining from business. The Duke of Devonshire offered him the use of Chiswick House as a resting-place, from whence, if he gained strength enough, he might proceed to St. Anne's. Preparations for his de- parture began, therefore, to be made, which he saw with visi- ble and unfeigned pleasure. Two or three days before he was removed to Chiswick House, Mr. Fox sent for me, and with marked hesitation and anxiety, as if he much wished it, and yet was unwilling to ask it, informed me of his plan of going to Chiswick House, re- questing me to form one of the family there. There was no occasion to request me ; duty, affection, and gratitude, would have carried me wherever he went. About the end of July, Mrs. Fox and he went there, and on the following day I joined them. No mercenary hand approached him. Mrs. hung over him every day with vigilant and tender affec- tion : when exhausted I took her place ; and at night, as his disorder grew grievously oppressive, a confidential servant and myself shared the watching and labors between us. I took the first part, because I read to him, as well as gave him medicine or nourishment. We continued our reading of Johnsorts Lives of the Poets. How often at midnight, as he listened with avidity, and made the remarks that occurred, he apologized to me for keeping mc from my rest, but, still delighted with our reading, would • Well, you may go on a little more," as I assured him that I liked the reading aloud. At these times he would do RETIREMENT AND DEATH OF A STATESMAN. 219 fend Johnson, when I blamed his severity and unwillingness to allow, and incapacity to appreciate, poetical merit, — would refer me to his life of Savage, and plainly showed much par- tiality for Johnson. Of Dryden, he was a warm and almost enthusiastic admirer. Pie conversed a great deal about that great English poet ; and indeed I never perceived, at any time, a stronger relish for, or admiration of, the poets, than at this afflicting period. I generally read to him till three or four in the morning, and then retired for a few hours : he showed always great uneasiness at my sitting up, but evident- ly was soothed and gratified by my being with him. At first he apologized for my preparing the nourishment, which re* quired to be warmed in the night ; but seeing how sincerely I was devoted to him, he ceased to make any remark. Once he asked me, at midnight, when preparing chicken panade for him, " Does this amuse you 1 I hope it does." He was so far from exacting attendance, that he received every little good office, every proper and necessary attention, as a favor and kindness done him. So un vitiated by commerce with mankind, so tender, so alive to all the charms of friendship, was this excellent man's heart ! His anxiety also, lest Mrs. Fox's health should suffer, was uniformly great till the day he expired. Lord Holland and General Fitzpatrick, as he grew worse, came and resided at Chiswick House entirely. Miss Fox also remained there. Thus he had around him, every day, all he loved most ; and the overwhelming pressure of his disorder was as much as possible relieved by the converse and siffht of cherished relatives and friends. Lord Holland showed how much he valued such an uncle. He never left him ; — the hopes of power or common allurements of ambi tion, had no effect upon him. His affectionate attention to Mr. Fox, and his kindness to all who assisted that great man, 2-20 RETIREMENT AND DEATH OF A STATESMAN. were endearing in a high degree. Miss Fox — calm and re- signed, grieving, without uttering a word — would sit at the foot of his bed, and often reminded me of the fine heads of females, done by masterly hands, to express sorrow, dignity, and fxith in God. There was now a plaintiveness in his manner very inter- og, but no way derogating from his fortitude and calm- ness. He did not affect .the stoic. He bore his pains as a Christian and a man. Till the last day, however, I do not think he conceived himself in danger. A few days before the termination of his mortal career, he said to me at night, " Holland thinks me worse than I am ;" and, in fact, the ap- pearances were singularly delusive not a week before he ex- pired. In the day, he arose and walked a little, and his looks were not ghastly or alarming by any means. Often did he latterly walk to his window to gaze on the berries of the mountain ash, which hung clustering on a young tree at Chis- wick House ; every morning he returned to look at it he would praise it, as the morning breeze, rustling, shook the berries and leaves ; but then the golden sun, which played upon them, and the fresh air that comes with the dawn, were to me almost heart-sickening, though once so delightful : he whom I so much cherished and esteemed, — whose kindness had been ever unremitting and unostentatious. — he whose so- ciety was to me happiness and peace. — was not long to enjoy this sun and this morning air. His last look on that moun- tain-ash was his farewell to nature. I continued to read aloud to him every night, and as he occasionally dropt asleep, I was then left to the awful medita- tions incident to such a situation. No person was awake be- side myself; the lofty rooms and hall of Chiswick House were silent, and the world reposed. In one of those melan oholy pauses, I walked about for a few moments, and found RETIREMENT AND DEATH OF A STATESMAN. 221 myself involuntarily and accidentally in the late Duchess of Devonshire's dressing-room. Everything was as that amiable and accomplished lady had left it : the music-book still open, the books not restored to their places, a chair as if she had but just left it, and every mark of a recent inhabitant in this ele- gant apartment. The Duchess had died in May, and Mr. Fox had very severely felt her loss. Half-opened notes lay scattered about. The night was solemn and still ; and at that moment, had some floating sound of music vibrated through the air, I cannot tell to what my feelings would have been wrought. Never had I experienced so strong a sensa- tion of the transitory nature of life, of the vanity of a fleeting world ! I stood scarce breathing, — heard nothing, — listened. Scarcely knowing how I left the dressing-room, I returned. x\ll was still. Mr. Fox slept quietly. I was deluded into a tranquil joy to find him still alive, and breathing without difficulty. His countenance was always serene in sleep : no troubled dreams ever agitated or distorted it, — it was the transcript of his guileless mind. Mr. Fox expired between five and six in the afternoon of the 13th of September, 1806. The Tower guns were firing for the capture of Buenos Ayres, as he was breathing his last. (Prntfs £lrgi| k it (Cnnntrq Cljurrjitjarft. We desire to say as little as possible about this affecting and noble poem. It is so sweet, so true, and so universally appreciated, that we feel inclined to be as silent before it, as if listening to the wind over the graves. It is the fit conclusion for our book, both in the subject and spirit — serious, calm, and hopeful. The epitaph is on the author ; and never did a man speak of himself with a truth more beautifully combining dignity with humility, a sense of all that he felt worthy and all that he felt weak. We suspect, that the " cross'd in love" of the previous lines might very well apply to Gray. He bad secret griefs of some kind, perhaps of disease, perhaps of sympathy with a good mother, and distress at having a bad father (for such, alas ! was the case) ; but whatever they were, we may be •sure that they were those of a good and kind man. The poem before us is as sweet as if written by Coleridge, and as pious and universal as if religion had uttered it, undisturbed by po- lemics. It is a quintessence of humanity. Til E curfew tolls the knell of parting day, The lowing herd winds slowly o'er the lea, The ploughman homeward plods his weary way, And leaves the world to darkness and to me. Now fades the glimmering landscape on the sight And all the air a solemn stillness holds, ELEGY IN A COUNTRY CHURCHYARD. 223 Save where the beetle wheels his droning flight, And drowsy tiuklings lull the distant folds ; Save that from yonder ivy-mantled tower, The moping owl does to the moon complain Of such as, wandering near her secret bower, Molest her ancient solitary reign. Beneath those rugged elms, that yew-tree's shade, Where heaves the turf in many a mouldering heap, Each in his narrow cell forever laid, The rude forefathers of the hamlet sleep. The breezy call of incense-breathing morn, The swallow twittering from the straw-built shed, The cock's shrill clarion, or the echoing horn, No more shall rouse them from their lowly bed. For them no more the blazing hearth shall burn, Or busy housewife ply her evening care ; No children run to lisp their sire's return. Or climb his knees the envied kiss to share. Oft did the harvest to their sickle yield ; Their furrow oft the stubborn glebe has broke ; How jocund did they drive their team afield ! How bow'd the woods beneath their sturdy stroke ' Let not ambition mock their useful toil, Their homely joys, and destiny obscure ; Nor grandeur hear, with a disdainful smile, The short and simple annals of the poor. The boast of heraldry, the pomp of power, And all that beauty, all that wealth e'er gave, ■>>A ELEGY IN A COUNTRY CHURCHYARD. Await alike the inevitable hour — The paths of glory lead but, to the grave. Nor you, yf proud, impute to these the fault, If memory o'er their tomb no trophies raise, Where, through the long-drawn aisle and fretted vault, The pealing anthem swells the note of praise. Can storied urn or animated bust Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath ? Can honor's voice provoke the silent dust, Or flattery soothe the dull cold ear of death? Perhaps in this neglected spot is laid Some heart once pregnant with celestial fire, Hands that the rod of empire might have sway'd Or wak'd to ecstasy the living lyre. But knowledge to their eyes her ample page, Rich with the spoils of time, did ne'er unroll ; Chill penury repress'd their noble rage, And froze the genial current of the soul. Full many a gem of purest ray serene The dark unfathom'd caves of ocean bear ; Full many a flower is born to blush unseen, And waste its sweetness in the desert air. Some village Hampden, that, with dauntless breast, The little tyrant of his fields withstood, Some mute inglorious Milton here may rest, Some Cromwell, guiltless of his country's blood. Tli' applause of listening senates to command, The threats of pain and ruin to despise. ELEGY IN A COUNTRY CHURCHYARD. 225 To scatter plenty o'er a smiling land, And read their history in a nation's eyes, Their lot forbade ; nor circumscrib'd alone Their growing virtues, but their crimes confiu'd ; Forbade to wade through slaughter to a throne, And shut the gates of mercy on mankind ; The struggling pangs of conscious truth to hide. To quench the blushes of ingenuous shame, Or heap the shrine of luxury and pride "With incense kindled at the muse's flame. Far from the madding crowd's ignoble strife Their sober wishes never learnt to stray ; Along the cool sequester'd vale of life They kept the noiseless tenor of their way. Yet e'en these bones from insult to protect, Some frail memorial still erected nigh, With uncouth rhymes and shapeless sculpture deck'd. Implores the passing tribute of a sigh. Their name, their years, spelt by th' unletter'd muse, The place of fame and elegy supply j And many a holy text around she strews, That teach the rustic moralist to die. For who to dumb forgetfulness a prey, This pleasing anxious being e'er resign'd, Left the warm precincts of the cheerful day, Nor cast one longing, lingering look behind ? On some fond breast the parting soul relies, Some pious hand the closing eye requires ; Ev'n from the tomb the voice of nature cries, Ev'n in our ashes live their wonted fires. 10* 226 ELEGY IN A CO UNTR Y CHTJR CH YARD. For thee, who, mindful or th' unhonor'd dead, Dost in these lines their artless tale relate, If chance,' by lonely contemplation led, Some kindred spirit shall inquire thy fate, Haply some hoary-headed swain may say, " Oft have we seen him, at the peep of dawn, Brushing with hasty steps the dews away, To meet the sun upon the upland lawn. ' : There, at the foot of yonder nodding beech, That wreathes its old fantastic roots so hum. His listless length at noontide would he stretch, And pore upon the brook that bubbles by. ' : Hard by yon wood, now smiling as in scorn, Muttering his wayward fancies, he would rove, Now drooping woful wan, like one forlorn, Or craz'd with care, or cross'd in hopeless love. " One morn I miss'd him on the custom'd hill, Along the heath, and near his favorite tree : Another came; nor yet beside the rill, Nor up the lawn, nor at the wood was he ; ' ; The next with dirges due, in sad array, Slow through the churchyard path we saw him borne- Approach and read (for thou canst read) the lay 'Graved on the stone beneath yon aged thorn." £l)c ISiHtaj)!). Here rests his head upon the lap of earth, A youth to fortune and to fame unknown ; Fair science frown'd not on his humble birth, And melancholy mark'd him for her own. ELZlGY IN A COUNTRY CHURCHYARD. 227 Large was his bounty, and his soul sincere, Heaven did a recompense as largely send ; He gave to misery all he had — a tear ; He gain'd from Heaven ('twas all he wish'd) a friend. No farther seek his merits to disclose, Or draw his frailties from their dread abode (There they alike in trembling hope repose), The bosom of his Father and his God. THE EffD \ This book is DUE on the last «.i n t e stamped below FEB 6 38 I'llCT 1985 L 1 . ' 2 7 1235 11 Ennt- A book for a 1361 comer. ) ' • - )00 296 994 Lt u