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diff --git a/40026-0.txt b/40026-0.txt index 640ad1b..4c886de 100644 --- a/40026-0.txt +++ b/40026-0.txt @@ -1,35 +1,4 @@ -The Project Gutenberg EBook of Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 64, -No. 398, December 1848, by Various - -This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with -almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or -re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included -with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license - - -Title: Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 64, No. 398, December 1848 - -Author: Various - -Release Date: July 1, 2012 [EBook #40026] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: UTF-8 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACKWOOD'S EDINBURGH *** - - - - -Produced by Brendan OConnor, Jonathan Ingram and the Online -Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This -file was produced from images generously made available -by The Internet Library of Early Journals.) - - - - +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40026 *** Transcriber's note: @@ -10020,366 +9989,4 @@ _Printed by William Blackwood and Sons, Edinburgh._ End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 64, No. 398, December 1848, by Various -*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACKWOOD'S EDINBURGH *** - -***** This file should be named 40026-0.txt or 40026-0.zip ***** -This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: - http://www.gutenberg.org/4/0/0/2/40026/ - -Produced by Brendan OConnor, Jonathan Ingram and the Online -Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This -file was produced from images generously made available -by The Internet Library of Early Journals.) - - -Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions -will be renamed. - -Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no -one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation -(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without -permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or -re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included -with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license - - -Title: Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 64, No. 398, December 1848 - -Author: Various - -Release Date: July 1, 2012 [EBook #40026] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACKWOOD'S EDINBURGH *** - - - - -Produced by Brendan OConnor, Jonathan Ingram and the Online -Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This -file was produced from images generously made available -by The Internet Library of Early Journals.) - - - - - - -</pre> - +<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40026 ***</div> <div class="tn"><h3>Transcriber's note:</h3> <p>Spelling and punctuation are sometimes erratic. A few obvious misprints have been corrected, but in general the original spelling and typesetting conventions have been retained. Accents are inconsistent, and have not been standardised.</p> @@ -324,7 +285,7 @@ speak of the cultivated woman bred under English skies, and in English homes. Her attachment to the privacy of life, her wise dislike -and avoidance of the <i>éclat</i> of literary +and avoidance of the <i>éclat</i> of literary renown, and the dull, dry, fever-heat of fashionable circles, tend to complete her qualifications as a fitting representative @@ -530,7 +491,7 @@ timid flock must be led.</p> are our times from those when Madame de Genlis published her little work, <i>De l'Influence des Femmes sur -la Littérature Française comme Protectrices +la Littérature Française comme Protectrices des Lettres, et comme Auteurs</i>. She had to contend, with the same acrid energy, for the privilege of a @@ -554,11 +515,11 @@ seems, in those days just emerging from barbarity, was still heard of—she dismisses it very briefly. "Comme ces devoirs dans une maison bien -ordonnée, ne peuvent jamais prendre +ordonnée, ne peuvent jamais prendre <i>plus d'une heure par jour</i>, cette objection est absolument nulle." As there is much implied in that "maison bien -ordonnée," and as Madame de Genlis +ordonnée," and as Madame de Genlis did not write for simple gentle-folks, it is to be hoped that the one hour per diem may admit of extension @@ -573,11 +534,11 @@ in the following indignant strain:—"Quelles que soient le bonhomie et la candeur d'un auteur, il sait que, par une loi tacite mais universelle, -il est toujours dispensé de -convenir qu'il doit à une femme une -idée heureuse. Dans ce cas seulement -le plagiat et le silence sont également -légitimes."</p> +il est toujours dispensé de +convenir qu'il doit à une femme une +idée heureuse. Dans ce cas seulement +le plagiat et le silence sont également +légitimes."</p> <p>We have changed all that: we have had too many instances of women of @@ -607,7 +568,7 @@ whether a man or a woman has penned it, is absurd. We often hear it said, that none but a woman could have written the letters of Madame -de Sévigné. If Cowper had been a +de Sévigné. If Cowper had been a woman, people would have said the same thing of his letters. They are unrivalled, at least in our own @@ -619,7 +580,7 @@ right to the female pen—has ever written such charming letters as those to Lady Hesketh, and his old friend Thomas Hill. As to the letters of -Madame de Sévigné, they so evidently +Madame de Sévigné, they so evidently come from a mother to a daughter, that it is impossible to forget for a moment the sex of the writer. But @@ -1692,7 +1653,7 @@ in our literature, can be quoted as more perfect than the picture of heroic and Christian courage, which, amid the ruins of his empire, sustained the last -of the Cæsars. The weight of the +of the Cæsars. The weight of the argument is sustained throughout. The reader feels as if breathing a finer and purer atmosphere, above the low @@ -3247,7 +3208,7 @@ shown. Preparations for such a measure<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_665" i were made, and plans of the drainage requisite for the purpose were laid down, at an expense of nearly -£50,000 to the country, and deposited +£50,000 to the country, and deposited in the archives of the Irish government, so long ago as 1814, by the Bog Commission. It was part of the recommendation @@ -3345,7 +3306,7 @@ entire cost was repaid by the crops in three years. Mr Reade, of Wood-Park, county Galway, reclaimed five hundred acres of moorland and mountain -at a cost of from £10 to £17 per +at a cost of from £10 to £17 per acre, which was repaid by the crop of the second year, and the land, formerly worth two shillings and sixpence per @@ -3362,10 +3323,10 @@ useless existence. Mr Coulthurst, in county Cork, reclaimed a bog farm for which the tenants could not pay four shillings per acre. The drainage -and reclamation cost £16 per acre, +and reclamation cost £16 per acre, which was repaid before the fifth year, and the land is now rated at the poor-law -valuation at £4 per acre. Sir +valuation at £4 per acre. Sir Charles Sligh, Bart., and his amiable lady, have effected great good on their estate in Donegal, by locating the @@ -3722,12 +3683,12 @@ by spade husbandry, reclaimed and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_669" id="Pa brought into cultivation 1032 acres of land, previously unproductive waste, on which they raised, last year, crops -valued at £3896, being the proportion -of £15, 18s. each tenant; and their +valued at £3896, being the proportion +of £15, 18s. each tenant; and their live stock, now on the estates, is valued, according to present prices in -the neighbouring markets, at £4162, -being at the rate of £16, 19s. for each—£1304, +the neighbouring markets, at £4162, +being at the rate of £16, 19s. for each—£1304, a sum equal to their present annual rent, having been added since February 1844;" and he adds, "By @@ -3883,7 +3844,7 @@ on the credit of the poor-law unions, may be expected within a few years. And even if there were ultimately a loss to the extent of one-half of the -£10,000,000, which has been stated +£10,000,000, which has been stated as the probable expense of the whole change, the money will at all events have gone to the immediate relief of @@ -3897,7 +3858,7 @@ any attempt at improvement, and very generally with a deteriorating (because not previously considered) effect on the resources of the country—and -which spent £20,000,000 only a +which spent £20,000,000 only a few years ago with very questionable effect, but certainly without being grudged, in attempting to assuage the @@ -4306,7 +4267,7 @@ romance of sentiment, which no hardship, care, grief, disappointment, could wear away, (singular in a period when, at two-and-twenty, young men -declare themselves <i>blasés</i>!) seemed to +declare themselves <i>blasés</i>!) seemed to leave him all the charm of boyhood. A season in London had made me more a man of the world, older in @@ -5916,7 +5877,7 @@ France since February last. There can be no dispute as to the comparative merits of the books, nor, indeed, can a comparison be instituted between -them. <i>Jérome Paturot</i> has, in some +them. <i>Jérome Paturot</i> has, in some parts, almost the weight of history, and it would not be surprising to see it hereafter so referred to. It is the @@ -5933,7 +5894,7 @@ principles. There is a strong good sense, a calm contempt of cant and of pseudo-liberalism, a stripping, whipping, and pickling of humbug, in his -<i>Jérome Paturot</i>, at any time agreeable +<i>Jérome Paturot</i>, at any time agreeable to behold, but peculiarly refreshing just now, by its contrast with the folly, hypocrisy, and fanaticism of @@ -5943,7 +5904,7 @@ capable of thinking and writing so soundly and sensibly—a fact which, with every disposition to judge the nation favourably, recent events have -almost made us doubt. "<i>Jérome +almost made us doubt. "<i>Jérome Paturot in quest of the best possible Republic</i>" is more than witty, spirited, and amusing. Its strong good sense @@ -5951,7 +5912,7 @@ and sledge-hammer truths may and must influence, in a right direction, the minds of many of its French readers. Should any of these be so obtuse as -not fully to appreciate Jérome's sly +not fully to appreciate Jérome's sly wit and pungent epigrams, to them <i>Monsieur Bonardin</i> addresses himself, secure of comprehension: him every @@ -5964,7 +5925,7 @@ by the perusal of <i>Paturot</i>, and this the anonymous author tacitly acknowledges, rather than attempts to conceal. He chooses his hero in the -same respectable trade to which Jérome +same respectable trade to which Jérome devoted his time and industry, when the ambitious cravings of his restless youth had subsided, and before @@ -6007,7 +5968,7 @@ to many of our readers M. Reybaud's former works<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> are already well known, we briefly sketch, for the use of those who have not met with them, -the career of Jérome Paturot previously +the career of Jérome Paturot previously to the advent of the republic. Aspiring, as a young man, to higher occupations than the sale of cottons, @@ -6055,7 +6016,7 @@ for a large beard and a small talent, and for a vanity that nothing can intimidate. In his society, and in the intervals of his place-hunting—to all -appearance a fruitless chase—Jérome +appearance a fruitless chase—Jérome begins a course of "Life under the Republic," his rambles and adventures serving as pegs whereon to hang @@ -6113,7 +6074,7 @@ was really the joy and pride of France, it of course insured the happiness of individuals."</p> -<p>The result of Jérome's inquiries was +<p>The result of Jérome's inquiries was that the joy was on the surface, not in the heart. The spectacle he had before him was the pitiable one of a people @@ -6135,7 +6096,7 @@ cashing a bill in all Paris. Every body is suspected—you, I, the bank, the treasury. Credit is lost, confidence extinguished." This was discouraging; -but Jérome, not satisfied with +but Jérome, not satisfied with one testimony, passed on to a manufacturer. "Manufactures!" said this man, a republican of the very first @@ -6190,7 +6151,7 @@ my reward? a shop full of goods, and an empty till. For two months past, not a purchaser. Debtors will not pay, and creditors will be paid." As -a last forlorn hope, Jérome accosted an +a last forlorn hope, Jérome accosted an artisan. "You want to know my opinion, citizen? You shall have it, in two words. The thing is a failure, @@ -6314,7 +6275,7 @@ guarantee."</p> <p>The quacks were the leaders of the clubs, several of which were visited -by Oscar and Paturot; and Jérome +by Oscar and Paturot; and Jérome was surprised to find how little freedom of discussion was allowed amongst men professing universal @@ -6387,7 +6348,7 @@ nearly cleared the room, and whose result was pitifully small, the enthusiasm of the assembly having expired upon the road from the lips -to the pocket. Jérome departed in +to the pocket. Jérome departed in disgust. He was scarcely better pleased at the next club he visited, whose orator harped perpetually upon @@ -6396,7 +6357,7 @@ to detach him. "Let us associate all men's capital, labour, and talent," said he emphatically. "It is the salvation and reconciliation of all interests." -Jérome, who had always disliked +Jérome, who had always disliked "those sententious aphorisms which resemble pompous signs before empty shops," could not forbear an interruption, @@ -6454,7 +6415,7 @@ doubt as to its nature. It is nothing more or less than English pauperism in the rudimental state."</p> -<p>Jérome had heard Oscar speak of +<p>Jérome had heard Oscar speak of these national workshops, one of whose brigades contained, according to the artist's account, the flower of @@ -6493,7 +6454,7 @@ they still were hard to please. They would find terrace-making at the Champ de Mars:—they were tired of that. They might break stones at -Asnières;—many thanks; it spoiled +Asnières;—many thanks; it spoiled their hands. Would they condescend to plant early potatoes in the fields of St Maur? They should have the eating @@ -6552,8 +6513,8 @@ to the last couplet of the <i>Marseillaise</i>, his comrades called out for the flag accompaniment.</p> -<p>"'As at the <i>Français</i>, Percheron! -as at the <i>Français</i>!</p> +<p>"'As at the <i>Français</i>, Percheron! +as at the <i>Français</i>!</p> <p>"'Really! What epicures! Nothing but the best will serve you, it @@ -6576,7 +6537,7 @@ workshops resumed their march, cutting practical jokes, and cudgel-playing with the acacias, which were considerably deteriorated by the proceeding. -"Such," says Jérome Paturot, +"Such," says Jérome Paturot, "was the end of this memorable day, during which Oscar and myself were enabled to appreciate a national @@ -6605,7 +6566,7 @@ cut administered by M. Reybaud to the tragedy-queen of the French republican stage.</p> -<p>Jérome and Oscar, strolling one +<p>Jérome and Oscar, strolling one evening down the Rue Richelieu, found a crowd at the theatre doors. The Provisional Government treated the @@ -6658,9 +6619,9 @@ acrostic in honour of Rachel:—</p> <span class="i0">R eine de l'empire magique,<br /></span> <span class="i0">A vous ce don de l'ouvrier;<br /></span> <span class="i0">C harmez-nous par votre art magique,<br /></span> -<span class="i0">H éroïne au royal cimier,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">H éroïne au royal cimier,<br /></span> <span class="i0">E t chantez d'un accent guerrier<br /></span> -<span class="i0">L' hymne ardent de la république.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">L' hymne ardent de la république.<br /></span> </div></div> <p>This apropos piece of gallantry drew @@ -6685,7 +6646,7 @@ republic than those of the hothouse. Mitouflet's comrades are bewildered by his extravagance, until he divulges the secret that—government pays. -"Happy nation!" exclaims Jérome, +"Happy nation!" exclaims Jérome, "whom a benevolent government finds in bread and tragedies! What more can it desire?"</p> @@ -6904,7 +6865,7 @@ for admission, the ungrateful miller having passed over to the enemy, and yielded himself captive to the fleshpots and flatteries of the "Provisional." -Jérome, who had a presentiment of +Jérome, who had a presentiment of danger, urged her not to go, the more so as she would have to go alone, for he could get no order. But the exgrisette, @@ -6931,7 +6892,7 @@ with excitement. He had passed seven years of his childhood in the same room with a portrait of Poniatowski taking his famous leap into -the Elster. After that, would Jérome +the Elster. After that, would Jérome have him forget Poland? Forbid it, heaven! And "<i>Vive la Pologne!</i>" "The column advanced, with its leafy @@ -6992,7 +6953,7 @@ left exposed, defenceless, to the outrages of turbulent scholars, and to the contact of impure adventurers."</p> -<p>Uneasy about his wife, Jérome +<p>Uneasy about his wife, Jérome Paturot tried to enter the house, but one of the insurgents replaced the usual guardian of the gate, and demanded @@ -7024,7 +6985,7 @@ week."</p> <p>And away went Oscar to share in the capture. The rescue had come, and the mob was expelled from the Chamber. -Jérome, who could see nothing +Jérome, who could see nothing of Malvina, returned to his lodgings in great alarm. After a while a porter brings him a letter. It is from @@ -7270,7 +7231,7 @@ was unexpected. It had been thought that the Old Guard and the Emperor were done with: the latter slept under the granite of the Invalids; the former, -sculptured on the Vendôme +sculptured on the Vendôme column, mounted spirally towards heaven. Dear and sacred memories! why disturb you by absurd pretensions? @@ -7313,7 +7274,7 @@ snuff-boxes. According to him, art had never received such patronage as from Napoleon: and he greatly distressed and alarmed his friend -Jérome, by spouting under gas-lamps +Jérome, by spouting under gas-lamps highly-coloured harangues concerning the marvels of the imperial palace, and of the King of Rome's baptism. @@ -7341,7 +7302,7 @@ Comtois is of such evident good faith, that Paturot tries to undeceive him,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_699" id="Page_699">[699]</a></span> telling him the Emperor is dead. Thereupon the giant smiles contemptuously, -and, when Jérome persists, +and, when Jérome persists, he looks upon him with suspicion. Then he condescends to give the reason of his credulity. His father had @@ -7475,7 +7436,7 @@ with a sort of semi-credence which a trifling corroborative circumstance ripens into implicit belief. The mutilated, red-ribboned relic of the Grande -Armée, who tells, from beneath the +Armée, who tells, from beneath the shadow of the domestic vine, or from the bench at the <i>auberge</i> door, such thrilling tales of past campaigns, of @@ -7518,7 +7479,7 @@ votes for a stuffed bird instead of a genuine eagle.</p> <p>We have dwelt so long upon -Jérome Paturot that we can afford +Jérome Paturot that we can afford but a few lines to his brother in hosiery. Poor Monsieur Bonardin! Never, since humanity first took to stocking-wearing, @@ -7613,15 +7574,15 @@ monkey himself! Bravo! bravo!</p> <p><i>M. Bonardin</i>, (<i>flourishing his nightcap</i>.)—Yes, yes, my friends, <i>d'un sang impur!...</i> Certainly, by all means; -<i>Vive la République!</i></p> +<i>Vive la République!</i></p> -<p><i>The boys.</i>—<i>Vive la République!</i> +<p><i>The boys.</i>—<i>Vive la République!</i> Down with the <i>Carlisses</i>! (<i>Babet enters with candle-ends; M. Bonardin retreats behind his bed-curtains.</i>) Ah! there's the monkey's wife lighting up at last. Bravo! bravo! <i>Vive la -République!</i> The monkey's wife not +République!</i> The monkey's wife not bad-looking in her night-dress!</p> <p><i>Babet</i>, (<i>shutting the window</i>.)—Do @@ -7732,7 +7693,7 @@ an artist. In these times, that is as much as to tell you I have not a sou in the world." "Alas!" exclaims a fifth, "I would relieve you with -pleasure, but I am a poor <i>employé</i>, +pleasure, but I am a poor <i>employé</i>, and the revolution has struck off a quarter of my salary." "What ill luck!" cries Bonardin; "the revolution @@ -7764,7 +7725,7 @@ revolution upon the trade and prosperity of Paris.</p> <p>We hoped to have included in this -review the fourth volume of <i>Jérome +review the fourth volume of <i>Jérome Paturot</i>, but it has not yet reached us, only a portion of it being published. The work comes out in parts, and @@ -7780,7 +7741,7 @@ his performance. There are numerous points in the brief history of the republic upon which he has not yet touched. We hope yet to -accompany Jérome to the cell of an +accompany Jérome to the cell of an imprisoned journalist, to the court-martials upon the June insurgents, to debates in the Assembly, and to @@ -7799,7 +7760,7 @@ elucidation of its mysteries and rivalries; and we cannot believe, after reading the bold judgments and revelations contained in the three published -volumes of <i>Jérome</i>, that he +volumes of <i>Jérome</i>, that he would be deterred from the task by apprehension of editorial wrath, whether expressed in the field or in the @@ -7999,7 +7960,7 @@ to the interesting little pamphlet itself. The authority upon which rests the fact that the prophecy, generally known under the title of "<i>Les -Prévisions d'Orval</i>," and entitled +Prévisions d'Orval</i>," and entitled "Certain Previsions revealed by God to a Solitary, for the Consolation of the Children of God," was actually @@ -8345,7 +8306,7 @@ assert that copies were handed about, even among the silenced Legitimists, as curious and interesting documents only, and without the least -pretence of that <i>arrière pensée</i>, which +pretence of that <i>arrière pensée</i>, which the government of the republic chose to ascribe to its circulation. The allusion to the "lion," is peculiarly @@ -8487,7 +8448,7 @@ these latter events, the writer can also give testimony, as in the case of the Orval prophecy, that it was transcribed as far back as the year 1836, -from the mouth of the <i>supérieure</i> of a +from the mouth of the <i>supérieure</i> of a convent in Lyons, who testified that she had heard it from the novice to whom it was first delivered. The @@ -8656,7 +8617,7 @@ chance of learning the truth of his prediction, or of giving him the lie in his coffin, by an answer, which the tradition preserved by the excellent -<i>supérieure</i> of the convent of the Sacré +<i>supérieure</i> of the convent of the Sacré Cœur at Lyons reports that he made, when asked as to the period of the fulfilment of his prophecies—for he @@ -8705,7 +8666,7 @@ minute and graphic details relative to the great fire of Paris, and fixes the epoch for this disaster in the nineteenth century; and the far better known -and somewhat famous <i>Prophétie Lorraine</i>, +and somewhat famous <i>Prophétie Lorraine</i>, in verse, in which the same event is foretold. This latter prophecy enters into very minute poetical @@ -8804,7 +8765,7 @@ the prophetic enunciations of the Book of Revelations; and in order to attach a great interest to his interpretations, and the deductions thence drawn, it -is necessary to accept <i>à priori</i>, as a +is necessary to accept <i>à priori</i>, as a matter of faith, those <i>postulata</i>, which the author considers certain at his very outset, and which he sets down @@ -8936,7 +8897,7 @@ the French monarchy may begin to be considerably humbled about that time; for whereas the French king takes the sun for his emblem, and this -for his motto—'<i>Nec plurìbus impar</i>,' +for his motto—'<i>Nec plurìbus impar</i>,' he may at length, or rather his successors, and the monarchy itself, (at least before the year 1794,) be forced to @@ -8974,7 +8935,7 @@ connected with our present subject, that it could not be well avoided. Upon the absolute acceptance of Fleming's interpretations, and -upon his assumption, <i>à priori</i>, that +upon his assumption, <i>à priori</i>, that the "scarlet woman of Babylon" and the anti-Christ do verily typify the Papal power, we must needs be still @@ -9124,7 +9085,7 @@ extraordinarily terrific tempest burst over the capital, obscured it for many hours in darkness, and swept down the new flag placed aloft upon the -column of the Place Vendôme.</p> +column of the Place Vendôme.</p> <p>Coincidences, predictions, revelations—all may, perhaps, be looked @@ -9168,7 +9129,7 @@ population of Paris, yet a string of elegant carriages, more or less coroneted, extended down the Rue Lepelletier, and deposited a distinguished -audience at the door of the Académie +audience at the door of the Académie de Musique. The curtain fell upon the first act; and a triple round of applause, of which a little was attributable @@ -9190,9 +9151,9 @@ from a dandy's fingers as the natural epidermis. The younger of these two men, the Viscount Arthur de Mellay, was a most unexceptionable specimen -of those <i>lions dorés</i> who, in modern +of those <i>lions dorés</i> who, in modern French society, have replaced the -<i>merveilleux</i>, the <i>roués</i>, and <i>raffinés</i> of +<i>merveilleux</i>, the <i>roués</i>, and <i>raffinés</i> of former days. Sleek of face and red of lip, with confident eye and trim mustache, his "getting up" was evidently @@ -9225,7 +9186,7 @@ naturalisation. He had first visited the French capital in a diplomatic capacity, and, after abandoning that career, had spent a part of every year -there as regularly as any native <i>habitué</i> +there as regularly as any native <i>habitué</i> of the club Grammont, the Chantilly race-course, and the Bois de Boulogne. Although a German and a @@ -9243,7 +9204,7 @@ old family, had been much about courts, held a military rank, possessed a castle and fine estate in the Tyrol, mortgaged to the very last <i>zwanziger</i> of -their value, was somewhat <i>blasé</i> and +their value, was somewhat <i>blasé</i> and troubled with the spleen, and considerably in debt, both in Vienna and Paris. He had arrived in the latter @@ -9468,13 +9429,13 @@ had been observed in the way of mourning, and Fatello had finished his affairs, he brought his wife and her sister to Paris, took a magnificent -hotel in the Faubourg St Honoré, and +hotel in the Faubourg St Honoré, and gave Lucullian dinners, and entertainments such as are read of in the Arabian Nights, but rarely seen in the nineteenth century."</p> -<p>"And were his fêtes well attended?"</p> +<p>"And were his fêtes well attended?"</p> <p>"Not quite immediately. At first everybody asked who this Mr Fatello @@ -9527,7 +9488,7 @@ Seine; but on this side the water, he is every where in good odour. They make much of him at the Tuileries and in diplomatic circles; and in the -Chaussée d'Antin, amongst the aristocracy +Chaussée d'Antin, amongst the aristocracy of finance, his money gives him right to a high place. And if he plays the Amphitryon this winter in @@ -9580,7 +9541,7 @@ share of talent and an inordinate one of self-conceit, he had pushed himself forward in his profession, applying himself, in conformity with the Parisian -rage for rage for <i>spécialités</i>, particularly +rage for rage for <i>spécialités</i>, particularly to one class of complaint. The lungs were the organ he had taken under his special protection: his word was @@ -9597,12 +9558,12 @@ large. So far the man of science. The man of pleasure occupied a gorgeous apartment in the vicinity of the Madeleine; gave smart and frequent -soirées, (as one means of increasing +soirées, (as one means of increasing his connexion,) where singers of the first water gave their notes in payment of his advice. He was frequently at the opera,—occasionally at -the Café de Paris,—lived on bad terms +the Café de Paris,—lived on bad terms with his wife, and on good ones with a ballet-dancer, and was in request as an attendant at duels amongst the @@ -9731,7 +9692,7 @@ that dictated it. De Mellay's gossip about the Fatellos had doubtless excited his curiosity, and given him a wish to know them,—for, two days -afterwards, his elegant <i>coupé</i> drove into +afterwards, his elegant <i>coupé</i> drove into the court of their hotel, and a dandified secretary of legation presented, in due form, the Baron Ernest von Steinfeld @@ -9771,7 +9732,7 @@ faubourg, noble as a La Tremouille or a Montmorency, and still sulking against the monarchy of the 7th August; wealthy <i>parvenus</i> from the -Chaussée d'Antin, military nobles of +Chaussée d'Antin, military nobles of imperial fabrication, Russian princes, English lords, Spanish grandees, diplomatists by the dozen, and a prince @@ -9817,7 +9778,7 @@ with them a varied assortment of watches, purses, and jewellery.</p> <p>The night of the much talked-of -fête had arrived; the tailors, milliners, +fête had arrived; the tailors, milliners, and embroiderers, who, for a month past, had slaved in the service of the invited, had brought home the results @@ -10018,13 +9979,13 @@ ribbons, whilst nothing broke the uniform blackness of her sister's garb. Black gloves and masks, and two bouquets of choice exotics, the masterpieces -of the celebrated bouquetière +of the celebrated bouquetière of the Madeleine boulevard, completed the ladies' equipment.</p> <p>"I am sorry," said Fatello, "to deny myself the pleasure of accompanying -you to the Countess's fête; +you to the Countess's fête; but I am behindhand with my correspondence, and have received important letters, which I must answer @@ -10170,7 +10131,7 @@ attention of one of their number, who, soon after twelve o'clock, made his appearance in the ball-room. Impatience to share in the much-talked-of -fête, had rendered the invited punctual; +fête, had rendered the invited punctual; by that hour nearly all had arrived, and in such numbers that the rooms, though so large and numerous, were @@ -10192,7 +10153,7 @@ elbows. But Madame de M——'s well-bred guests merely shrugged their shoulders, and wondered who the <i>man-ant</i> could be who thus imported into -their élite society the unceremonious +their élite society the unceremonious usages of an opera-house masquerade. The black domino heeded not their mute wonderment, nor cared for the @@ -10269,7 +10230,7 @@ the broad glare of the adjoining apartments. The change from a strong to a subdued light had been purposely contrived by the judicious arrangers -of the fête, as a relief for eyes wearied +of the fête, as a relief for eyes wearied by the brilliancy of the ball-room. As yet, however, few persons seemed eager for the transition, and the conservatory @@ -10476,12 +10437,12 @@ The roof, flat and surrounded by a parapet, commanded a view over the adjacent gardens of an extensive bathing establishment and <i>maison de -santé</i>, and was no unpleasant resort, +santé</i>, and was no unpleasant resort, on a fine day, for persons desirous to inhale the fresh air, or to scent it with the fumes of Havana's weed. This pavilion, described by the <i>Petites -Affiches</i> as <i>fraîchement décoré</i>—the +Affiches</i> as <i>fraîchement décoré</i>—the said decoration consisting in fresh paint and paper, and in a profusion of that cheerful French luxury, large @@ -11525,7 +11486,7 @@ you know, are susceptible on these points; it might indispose her towards me, and lessen my chance. In short," he added, with a smile, "if you will -be guided by an <i>ex-roué</i>, now reformed, +be guided by an <i>ex-roué</i>, now reformed, but who has some little experience of the female heart, you will confine yourself to the communication @@ -11621,7 +11582,7 @@ his front. Upwards of half a million. Seven hundred thousand, I daresay. I had reckoned on nearly double, and now I may lose both. Well, -<i>à la grâce du diable</i>. I will go take a +<i>à la grâce du diable</i>. I will go take a gallop."</p> <p>And in another half hour the aspirant @@ -11640,7 +11601,7 @@ elephant.</p> <p>The hotel of the Northern Eagle, situated in one of the most respectable of the numerous small streets between -the Rue St Honoré and the Rue Neuve +the Rue St Honoré and the Rue Neuve des Petits Champs, is one of several hundred establishments of the class, scattered over Paris, and which, although @@ -11761,7 +11722,7 @@ Duchambre.</p> <p>It was eight o'clock at night, and, contrary to his wont, Captain Carcassonne, instead of contesting a pool at -billiards in his accustomed café, or occupying +billiards in his accustomed café, or occupying a stall at his favourite Palais Royal theatre, was seated in his room, alone, a coffee-cup and a bottle on the @@ -11769,7 +11730,7 @@ table beside him, the amber mouthpiece of a huge meerschaum pipe disappearing under his heavy dark mustache, smoking steadily, and reading -the <i>Sentinelle de l'Armée</i>. He was a +the <i>Sentinelle de l'Armée</i>. He was a powerful active man, about forty years of age, with a red-brown complexion, martial features, and a cavalier air, @@ -12293,7 +12254,7 @@ from pawn; and Sebastiana, enamoured of her handsome bridegroom, and whose ardent and jealous imagination drew a romantic picture of a -tête-à-tête existence in a secluded +tête-à -tête existence in a secluded chateau, far from the rivalries of a capital, expressed so strongly her will to apply her fortune in the manner @@ -14491,7 +14452,7 @@ or the large reduced, could answer every purpose. But not so: a moment's consideration will show that the spectator's eye must be consulted, which -sees not minutiæ of form or colour at +sees not minutiæ of form or colour at the distance from which large works are to be seen, and that it seeks for those as the objects are brought nearer. @@ -14520,7 +14481,7 @@ in this view, even contends powerfully with perspective itself, and is often in distance, by being to the eye reduced, of an intensity that would seem to contradict -aërial influence. The phenomenon +aërial influence. The phenomenon of the strength of bright colour in distance is extremely curious: every one must have noticed that a lighted @@ -14943,7 +14904,7 @@ would add a further extravagance of cost and fancy—a mausoleum to her bewitching bones. We remember thinking Menelaus, as pictured in the -<i>Agamemnon</i> of Æschylus, happy even +<i>Agamemnon</i> of Æschylus, happy even in his grief for the loss of Helen, in that he paced his galleries gazing upon her statues.</p> @@ -15112,7 +15073,7 @@ of a certain weakness and faintness.</p> <span class="i0">Inque humeros cervix collapsa recumbit.<br /></span> <span class="i0">Purpureus veluti cum flos succisus aratro,<br /></span> <span class="i0">Languescit moriens; lassove papavera collo,<br /></span> -<span class="i0">Demisere caput, pluviâ cùm fortè gravantur.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Demisere caput, pluviâ cùm fortè gravantur.<br /></span> </div> <p>Perhaps Mr Eastlake may reply, @@ -15495,7 +15456,7 @@ taken by Mr Eastlake may be best shown by a quotation:—</p> <blockquote><p>"We have now briefly considered the -principal æsthetic attributes of the organic +principal æsthetic attributes of the organic and inorganic world. We have traced the influence of two leading principles of beauty—the visible evidence of @@ -15926,9 +15887,9 @@ France, agriculture of, compared with that of England, 3<br /> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">feeling in America on the revolution in, 31</span><br /> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">State of, June 1848, 51</span><br /> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">the present state of, and lessons from it, 476, 477</span><br /> -<span style="margin-left: 1em;">pictures of, from Jérome Paturot, <a href="#Page_687">87</a>.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">pictures of, from Jérome Paturot, <a href="#Page_687">87</a>.</span><br /> <br /> -François le Champi, notices of, 568.<br /> +François le Champi, notices of, 568.<br /> <br /> Frankfort, appearance of the town of, 525<br /> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">the insurrection in, 541</span><br /> @@ -15988,7 +15949,7 @@ Gower the poet, 224.<br /> <br /> Grattan, close of the career of, 620.<br /> <br /> -Gravière's sketches of the naval war, review of, 595.<br /> +Gravière's sketches of the naval war, review of, 595.<br /> <br /> Great Britain, importance of Australia to, 66<br /> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">present state of 479, 492.</span><br /> @@ -16067,7 +16028,7 @@ Jahn, professor, 531.<br /> <br /> Jane Eyre, remarks on, 473.<br /> <br /> -Jérome Paturot, review of, <a href="#Page_687">687</a>.<br /> +Jérome Paturot, review of, <a href="#Page_687">687</a>.<br /> <br /> Jervis, Sir John, 599.<br /> <br /> @@ -16100,7 +16061,7 @@ Laffan, archdeacon, 280.<br /> <br /> Lamb plant, the, 79.<br /> <br /> -Lamoricière, general, 259.<br /> +Lamoricière, general, 259.<br /> <br /> Land, the laws of, 1.<br /> <br /> @@ -16250,7 +16211,7 @@ Paris, state of, 51<br /> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">this beginning to fail, 55, <i>et seq.</i></span><br /> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">sketches in, 248</span><br /> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">a parcel from, 557</span><br /> -<span style="margin-left: 1em;">pictures of, from Jérome Paturot, <a href="#Page_688">688</a>.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">pictures of, from Jérome Paturot, <a href="#Page_688">688</a>.</span><br /> <br /> Passavant's Life of Raphael, notice of, <a href="#Page_758">758</a>.<br /> <br /> @@ -16329,7 +16290,7 @@ Revolutions of England, the, 327<br /> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the Continent, the, 475</span><br /> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">of 1830 and 1848, coincidences between, <a href="#Page_712">712</a>.</span><br /> <br /> -Reybaud's Jérome Paturot, review of, <a href="#Page_687">687</a>.<br /> +Reybaud's Jérome Paturot, review of, <a href="#Page_687">687</a>.<br /> <br /> Richardson, the novels of, 460.<br /> <br /> @@ -16601,17 +16562,17 @@ of Ireland.</i></p></div> <div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> Mill's <i>Principles of Political Economy</i>, vol. i. p. 393.</p></div> -<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> <i>Jérome Paturot à la Recherche de la Meilleure des Républiques.</i> Par <span class="smcap">Louis Reybaud</span>. +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> <i>Jérome Paturot à la Recherche de la Meilleure des Républiques.</i> Par <span class="smcap">Louis Reybaud</span>. Volumes 1 to 3. Paris: 1848. </p><p> -<i>Monsieur Bonardin, ou les Agrémens de la République—Proverbe en plusieurs Décades.</i> +<i>Monsieur Bonardin, ou les Agrémens de la République—Proverbe en plusieurs Décades.</i> Paris: 1848.</p></div> <div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Mill's <i>Principles of Political Economy</i>, vol. i. p. 393.</p></div> <div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> <i>Prophecy of Orval.</i> James Burns: 1848.</p></div> -<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> "<i>Short</i>"—nauticè, <i>unfinished</i>.</p></div> +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> "<i>Short</i>"—nauticè, <i>unfinished</i>.</p></div> <div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Let out the secret.</p></div> @@ -16625,387 +16586,6 @@ having been said not to have left it till 1504.</p></div> </div> - - - - - - -<pre> - - - - - -End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume -64, No. 398, December 1848, by Various - -*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACKWOOD'S EDINBURGH *** - -***** This file should be named 40026-h.htm or 40026-h.zip ***** -This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: - http://www.gutenberg.org/4/0/0/2/40026/ - -Produced by Brendan OConnor, Jonathan Ingram and the Online -Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This -file was produced from images generously made available -by The Internet Library of Early Journals.) - - -Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions -will be renamed. - -Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no -one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation -(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without -permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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