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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #52043 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52043)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Chautauquan, Vol. IV, November 1883, by
-The Chautauquan Literary and Scientific Circle
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Chautauquan, Vol. IV, November 1883
- A Monthly Magazine Devoted to the Promotion of True Culture.
- Organ of the Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle.
-
-Author: The Chautauquan Literary and Scientific Circle
-
-Editor: Theodore L. Flood
-
-Release Date: July 8, 2017 [EBook #52043]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHAUTAUQUAN, NOVEMBER 1883 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Emmy, Juliet Sutherland and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Transcriber's Note: Bold text is surrounded by =equal signs= and
-italic text is surrounded by _underscores_.]
-
-
-
-
-THE CHAUTAUQUAN.
-
-_A MONTHLY MAGAZINE DEVOTED TO THE PROMOTION OF TRUE CULTURE. ORGAN OF
-THE CHAUTAUQUA LITERARY AND SCIENTIFIC CIRCLE._
-
- VOL. IV. NOVEMBER, 1883. No. 2.
-
-
-
-
-Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle.
-
-
-_President_—Lewis Miller, Akron, Ohio.
-
-_Superintendent of Instruction_—Rev. J. H. Vincent, D.D., New Haven,
-Conn.
-
-_Counselors_—Rev. Lyman Abbott, D.D.; Rev. J. M. Gibson, D.D.; Bishop
-H. W. Warren, D.D.; Prof. W. C. Wilkinson, D.D.
-
-_Office Secretary_—Miss Kate F. Kimball, Plainfield, N. J.
-
-_General Secretary_—Albert M. Martin, Pittsburgh, Pa.
-
-
-
-[Transcriber's Note: This table of contents of this periodical was
-created for the HTML version to aid the reader.]
-
-
-
-
-Contents
-
- REQUIRED READING
- German History 63
- German Literature 66
- Physical Science
- II.—The Circulation of Water on the Land 67
- SUNDAY READINGS
- [Sunday, November 4.]—Moral Distinctions Not Sufficiently
- Regarded in Social Intercourse 70
- [Sunday, November 11.] 71
- [Sunday, November 18.] 72
- [Sunday, November 25.] 72
-
- Political Economy
- II. Production, Continued—Capital—Combination and
- Division of Labor 73
- III.—Consumption 74
- Readings in Art
- II.—Sculpture: Grecian and Roman 75
- Selections from American Literature 77
- Benjamin Franklin—Extracts From Poor Richard’s Almanac 77
- George Washington—Account of the Battle of Trenton 78
- Thomas Jefferson—George Washington 79
- Thoughts from William Ellery Channing 79
-
- Autumn Sympathy 80
- Republican Prospects in France 80
- Chautauqua to California 81
- To My Books 83
- Earthquakes—Ischia and Java 83
- Low Spirits 85
- Vegetable Villains 86
- From the Baltic to the Adriatic 87
- Electricity 89
- Poachers in England 90
- Eight Centuries With Walter Scott 91
- The Great Organ at Fribourg 94
- Eccentric Americans 95
- Etiquette 99
- Napoleon’s Marshals 100
- C. L. S. C. Work 102
- C. L. S. C. Stationery 103
- New England Branch of the Class of ’86 103
- C. L. S. C. Testimony 103
- C. L. S. C. Reunion 104
- Local Circles 105
- How to Conduct a Local Circle 107
- Questions and Answers 109
- Outline of C. L. S. C. Studies 112
- Chautauqua Normal Class 112
- Editor’s Outlook 115
- Dr. Haygood's Battle for the Negro 115
- The Political Outlook 115
- History of Greece 116
- A College Reform 116
- Editor’s Note-Book 117
- Editor’s Table 119
- C. L. S. C. Notes on Required Readings For November 120
- C. L. S. C. Notes on Required Readings in “The Chautaquan” 123
- Tricks of the Conjurors 125
- Talk About Books 126
-
-
-
-
-REQUIRED READING
-
-FOR THE
-
-_Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle for 1883-4_.
-
-NOVEMBER.
-
-
-
-
-GERMAN HISTORY.
-
-By REV. W. G. WILLIAMS, A.M.
-
-
-II.
-
-From the time of Julius Cæsar to the fall of the Roman Empire, a period
-of more than four hundred years, the greater part of the Germans were
-subject to Roman rule, a rule maintained only by military force. But
-the struggle against Rome never entirely ceased—and as Roman power
-gradually declined the Germans seized every opportunity to recover
-their liberty and in their turn became conquerors. To trace the
-succession of their vicissitudes during this period would be to give
-the narrative of a bold, vigorous, war-like people in their rude
-barbaric condition. We should discover even in those early times those
-race characteristics of strength, bravery and persistence which became
-so marked in later centuries; we should recognize in Hermann, the first
-German leader, the prophecy of the Great Charles who steps upon the
-scene nearly eight centuries later.
-
-
-HERMANN, THE FIRST LEADER.
-
-He it was (Hermann Arminius) who, with a power to organize equal
-to that of William of Orange, bound the German tribes in a secret
-confederacy, whose object it was to resist and repel the Roman armies.
-While still himself serving as an officer in the Roman army, he managed
-to rally the confederated Germans and to attack Varus’s army of forty
-thousand men—the best Roman legions—as they were marching through the
-Teutoburger Forest, where, aided by violent storms, the Germans threw
-the Romans into panic and the fight was changed to a slaughter. When
-the news of the great German victory reached Rome the aged Augustus
-trembled with fear; he let his hair and beard grow for months as a sign
-of trouble, and was often heard to exclaim: “O, Varus, Varus, give me
-back my legions.” Though Rome, under the able leadership of Germanicus,
-soon after defeated the Germans, yet she had been taught that the
-Germans possessed a spirit and a power sufficient to make her tremble
-for her future supremacy.
-
-Hermann seems to have devoted himself to the creation of a permanent
-union of the tribes he had commanded. We may guess, but can not assert,
-that his object was to establish a national organization like that of
-Rome, and in doing this he must have come into conflict with laws and
-customs which were considered sacred by the people. But his remaining
-days were too few for even the beginning of a task which included such
-an advance in the civilization of the race. We only know that he was
-waylaid and assassinated by members of his own family in the year 21.
-He was then 37 years old and had been for thirteen years the leader of
-his people.[A]
-
- * * * * *
-
-He was undoubtedly the liberator of Germany, having dared to grapple
-with the Roman power, not in its beginnings, like other kings and
-commanders, but in the maturity of its strength. He was not always
-victorious in battle, but in war he was never subdued. He still lives
-in the songs of the barbarians, unknown to the annals of the Greeks,
-who only admire that which belongs to themselves—nor celebrated as he
-deserves by the Romans, who, in praising the olden times, neglect the
-events of the later years.[B]
-
-
-GERMAN NATIONALITIES AT THE CLOSE OF THE THIRD CENTURY.
-
-When we meet the Germans at the close of the third century we are
-surprised to find that the tribal names which they bore in the time
-of Hermann have nearly all disappeared, and new names of wider
-significance have taken their places. Instead of thirty to forty petty
-tribes, they are now consolidated into four chief nationalities with
-two or three inferior, but independent branches. Their geographical
-situation is no longer the same, migrations have taken place, large
-tracts of territory have changed hands, and many leading families have
-been overthrown and new ones arisen. Nothing but the constant clash of
-arms could have wrought such change. As each of these new nationalities
-plays a prominent part in the following centuries, a short description
-of them is given:
-
-1. _The Alemanni._—The name of this division (_Alle Mannen_, signifying
-“all men”) shows that it was composed of fragments of many tribes. The
-Alemanni first made their appearance along the Main, and gradually
-pushed southward over the Tithe lands, where the military veterans of
-Rome had settled, until they occupied the greater part of southwestern
-Germany, and eastern Switzerland to the Alps. Their descendants occupy
-the same territory to this day.
-
-2. _The Franks._—It is not known whence this name is derived, nor what
-is its meaning. The Franks are believed to have been formed out of
-the Sicambrians in Westphalia, a portion of the Chatti and the Batavi
-in Holland, together with other tribes. We first hear of them on the
-Lower Rhine, but they soon extended their territory over a great part
-of Belgium and Westphalia. Their chiefs were already called kings, and
-their authority was hereditary.
-
-3. _The Saxons._—This was one of the small original tribes settled in
-Holstein. The name “Saxon” is derived from their peculiar weapon, a
-short sword, called _sahs_. We find them occupying at the close of the
-third century nearly all the territory between the Harz Mountains and
-the North Sea, from the Elbe westward to the Rhine. There appears to
-have been a natural enmity—no doubt bequeathed from the earlier tribes
-out of which both grew—between them and the Franks.
-
-4. _The Goths._—Their traditions state that they were settled in Sweden
-before they were found by the Greek navigators on the southern shore of
-the Baltic in 330 B. C. It is probable that only a portion of the tribe
-navigated, and that the present Scandinavian race is descended from the
-remainder. They came in contact with the Romans beyond the mouth of the
-Danube about the beginning of the third century.[C]
-
-
-INFLUENCE OF THE ROMANS ON THE GERMANS.
-
-The proximity of the Romans on the Rhine, the Danube, and the Neckar,
-had by degrees effected alterations in the manners of the Germans. They
-had become acquainted with many new things, both good and bad. By means
-of the former they became acquainted with money, and even luxuries.
-The Romans had planted the vine on the Rhine, and constructed roads,
-cities, manufactories, theaters, fortresses, temples, and altars. Roman
-merchants brought their wares to Germany, and fetched thence amber,
-feathers, furs, slaves, and the very hair of the Germans; for it became
-the fashion to wear light flaxen wigs, instead of natural hair. Of
-the cities which the Romans built there are many yet remaining, as
-Salzburg, Ratisbonne, Augsburg, Basle, Strasburg, Baden, Spires, Worms,
-Metz, Treves, Cologne, Bonn, etc. But in the interior of Germany,
-neither the Romans nor their habits and manners had found friends, nor
-were cities built there according to the Roman style.[D]
-
-
-INVASION OF THE HUNS—ATTILA.
-
-The fourth century of our era and the first half of the fifth were
-characterized by the spirit of migration among all the peoples beyond
-the Rhine. Representatives of every German village and district went
-to Rome, and each brought back stories of the wealth and luxury
-that existed there. They had the keen perception and the strength
-to recognize the increasing weakness of the government, and also to
-despise the enervation and corruption of its citizens. The German was
-ambitious and restless as daily he regarded Rome more and more as his
-prey. The Romans themselves saw the danger of the Empire and lived in
-apprehension of overwhelming incursions long before they came. In the
-latter part of the fourth century the great impulse was given to the
-people of northern and eastern Europe by successive invasions from
-Asia; and a vast and general movement began among them which resulted
-in the disintegration of the Roman Empire, and the transfer of the
-principal arena of history from the shores of the Mediterranean Sea
-to the countries in which the great powers of modern Europe afterward
-grew up. The first impulse to this series of events was given by
-disturbances and migrations in central Asia, of whose cause hardly
-anything is known. Long before the Christian era there was a powerful
-race of Huns in northeastern Asia who became so dangerous to the
-Chinese that the great wall of China was built as a defense against
-them (finished B. C. 244).[E]
-
- * * * * *
-
-These Huns, a Mongol race, had migrated from the center of Asia
-westward three-quarters of a century previously (A. D. 375), carrying
-death and devastation on their path. They had nothing in common with
-the peoples of the West, either in facial features or habits of life.
-Contemporary historians describe them as surpassing by their savagery
-all that can be imagined. They were of low stature, with broad
-shoulders, thick-set limbs, flat noses, high cheek-bones, small eyes
-deeply sunk in the sockets, and yellow complexion. Ammianus Marcellinus
-compares them, in their monstrous ugliness, to beasts walking on two
-legs, or the grinning heads clumsily carved on the posts of bridges.
-They had no beard, because from infancy their faces were hideously
-scarred by being slashed all over, in order to hinder its growth.
-Accustomed to lead a wandering life in their native country, these wild
-hordes traversed the Steppes, or boundless plains which lie between
-Russia and China, in huge chariots, or on small hardy horses, changing
-their stations as often as fresh pasture was required for their cattle.
-Except constrained by necessity, they never entered any kind of house,
-holding them in horror as so many tombs. They were accustomed from
-infancy to endure cold, hunger, and thirst. As the great boots they
-wore deprived them of all facility in marching, they never fought on
-foot; but the skill with which they managed their horses and threw
-the javelin, made them more formidable to the Germans than even the
-disciplined, but less ferocious, legions of Rome.
-
-This was the rude race which, bursting into Europe in the second half
-of the fourth century, shook the whole barbarian world to its center,
-and precipitated it upon the Roman Empire. The Goths fled before them,
-when they passed the Danube, the Vandals when they crossed the Rhine.
-After a halt of half a century in the center of Europe, the Huns put
-themselves again in motion.
-
-Attila, the king of this people, constrained all the tribes wandering
-between the Rhine and the Oural to follow him. For some time he
-hesitated upon which of the two empires he should carry the wrath of
-heaven. Deciding upon the West, he passed the Rhine, the Moselle, and
-the Seine, and marched upon Orleans. The populations fled before him in
-indescribable terror, for the _Scourge of God_, as he was called, left
-not one stone upon another wheresoever he passed. Metz and twenty other
-cities had been destroyed. Troyes alone had been saved by its bishop,
-Saint Loup. He wished to seize upon Orleans, the key of the southern
-provinces; and his innumerable army surrounded the city. Its bishop,
-St. Aignan, sustained the courage of the inhabitants by promising them
-a powerful succor. Ætius, in fact, arrived with all the barbarian
-nations encamped in Gaul, at the expense of which the new invasion was
-made. Attila for the first time fell back; but in order to choose a
-battle-field favorable for his cavalry, he halted in the Catalaunian
-plains near Méry-sur-Seine. There the terrible shock of battle took
-place. In the first onset the Franks, who formed the vanguard of Ætius,
-fought with such animosity that 15,000 Huns strewed the plain. But
-next day, when the great masses on both sides encountered, the bodies
-of 165,000 combatants were left on that field of carnage. Attila was
-conquered. The allies, however, not daring to drive the wild Huns to
-despair, suffered Attila to retreat into Germany (451). In the year
-following he made amends for his defeat by an invasion of northern
-Italy, ravaging Aquileia, Milan, and other cities in a frightful
-manner, but died of an apoplectic stroke (453), soon after his return,
-and his empire fell with him, but not the terrible remembrance of his
-name and of his cruelties. The Visigoths, whose king had perished in
-the fight, and the Franks of Meroveus, had had, with Ætius, the chief
-honor of that memorable day in the Catalaunian plains. For it had
-become a question whether Europe should be German or Mongolian, whether
-the fierce Huns or the Germans should found an empire on the ruins of
-that which was then crumbling.[F]
-
-
-FALL OF THE WESTERN EMPIRE—MANNERS AND MORALS OF THE GERMANS IN THIS
-AGE.
-
-The Western Empire had now but a short time to live. The dastardly
-emperor Valentinian III., suspicious of the independent position of
-Ætius, recalled the conqueror of Attila from Gaul, and slew him with
-his own hand (A. D. 454). He was himself murdered soon after, and his
-widow, Eudoxia, though forced to marry the assassin, determined to
-avenge her husband. She invited the Vandals, for this purpose, from
-Africa across the sea to Rome. This German tribe, still ruled by the
-aged Genseric, was the only one which possessed a fleet; and by this
-means the Vandals had already made themselves masters of the great
-islands of the Mediterranean, of Sicily, Sardinia, and Corsica. The
-“sea-king” eagerly obeyed the summons (A. D. 455), and now “golden
-Rome” was given up for fourteen days to his soldiers, and was sacked
-with such horrors that the name of Vandal has ever since been a proverb
-for barbarity and destruction. Yet the mediation of Leo the Great, then
-Bishop of Rome, saved the city from utter ruin. From this time onward
-the emperors, who followed one another in quick succession, were mere
-tools of the German generals, and symbols of power before the common
-people; for the whole imperial army now consisted of the remnants of
-various German nations, who had sought service for pay. These too, at
-last, like their kindred in the provinces, demanded lands in Italy, and
-would have no less than one-third of the soil. When this was refused,
-Odoacer, at the head of his soldiers—Heruli, Sciri, Turcilingi, and
-Rugii, who forced their way thither from the Danube—put an end to the
-very name of the Roman Empire, stripping the boy Romulus Augustulus,
-the last emperor, of the purple, and ruling alone in Italy, as German
-general and king. Thus the Western Empire fell by German hands, after
-they had already wrested from it all its provinces, Africa, Spain, Gaul
-and Britain. This occurred in the year 476. Ancient history ends with
-this event; but in the history of the Germans it is merely an episode.
-
-At the time of the great migrations, the German tribes were barbarians,
-in that they were destitute alike of humanity toward enemies and
-inferiors, and of scientific culture. Neither the pursuit of learning
-nor the practice of mercy to the vanquished could seem to them other
-than unmanly weakness. Their ferocity spread misery and ruin through
-the whole arena of history, and made the fifth and sixth centuries of
-our era the crowning epoch in the annals of human suffering; while
-their active, passionate contempt for learning destroyed the existing
-monuments of intelligence and habits of inquiry and thought, almost
-as completely as they swept away the wealth, prosperity, and social
-organization of the Roman world. Their ablest kings despised clerical
-accomplishments. Even Theodoric the Great could not write, and his
-signature was made by a black smear over a form or mould in which his
-name was cut. Nevertheless these nations were not what we mean by
-savages. Their originally beautiful and resonant language was already
-cultivated in poetical forms, in heroic songs. There was intercourse
-and trade among the several nations. Minstrels, especially, passed
-from one royal court to another, and the same song which was sung to
-Theodoric in Ravenna could be heard and understood by the Vandals
-in Carthage, by Clovis in Paris, and by the Thuringians in their
-fastnesses. A common language was a strong bond of union among these
-nations. Messengers, embassies, and letters were sent to and fro
-between their courts; gifts were exchanged, and marriages and alliances
-entered into. Thus the nations were informed concerning one another,
-and recognized their mutual relationship. It was this international
-intercourse that gave rise to the heroic minstrelsy—a faithful relation
-of the great deeds of German heroes during the migrations; but the
-minstrel boldly transforms the order of events, and brings together
-things which in reality took place at intervals of whole generations.
-Thus they sing of Hermanric, of Theodoric the Great (Dietrich the
-Strong, of Berne), and of his faithful knight Hildebrand; then of
-the fall of the Burgundian kings, of the far-ruling Attila, and of
-Sigurd, or Siegfried, who was originally a Northern god of spring, but
-here appears as a youthful hero, faithful and child-like, simple and
-unsuspicious, yet the mightiest of all—the complete image of the German
-character.
-
-These wild times of warfare and wandering could not, of course,
-favorably affect morals and character. They did much to root out of
-the minds and lives of the people their ancient heathen faith and
-practices. Their old gods were associated with places, scenes, features
-of the country and the climate; and, with these out of sight, the gods
-themselves were easily forgotten. Moreover, the local deities of other
-places and nations were brought into notice. The people’s religious
-habits were broken up, their minds confused, and thus they were better
-prepared than before to embrace the new and universal doctrines of
-Christianity. But the wanderings had a bad effect on morality in all
-forms. The upright German was still distinguished by his self-respect
-from the false, faithless, and cowardly “Welshman,” whose nature had
-become deformed through years of servitude. But Germans, too, were
-now often guilty of faithlessness and cruelty; and some tribes grew
-effeminate and corrupt, especially the Vandals in luxurious Africa.
-They imitated the style of the conquered in dress, arms, and manner
-of life; and some adopted their language also. For instance, even
-Theodoric the Great corresponded in Latin with foreign monarchs; and as
-early as the sixth and seventh centuries, the Germans recorded their
-own laws in Latin, the West Goths and Burgundians introducing the
-practice, which was followed by the Franks, Alemanni, Bavarians, and
-Langobards. These laws, and the prohibitions they contain, are the best
-sources of information upon the manners of the time, and especially
-upon the condition of the lower orders, the peasants, and the slaves.
-The most frequent cases provided are of bodily injuries, murder,
-wounds, and mutilations, showing that the warlike disposition had
-degenerated into cruelty and coarseness. For all these injuries, the
-weregeld, or ransom, was still a satisfaction. The life of a nobleman,
-that of a freeman, of a slave, and the members of the body—the eye,
-ear, nose, and hand—were assessed each at a fixed money valuation,
-to be paid by the aggressor, if he would not expose himself to the
-vengeance of the wronged man or his family. But crimes committed by
-peasants and slaves were punished by death, sometimes at the stake,
-where freemen might escape by paying a fine. The oaths of parties and
-witnesses were heard; and they were sustained by the oaths of others,
-their friends, relations, or partisans, who swore that they were to
-be believed. If an accused party swore that he was innocent, it was
-only necessary for him to obtain a sufficient number of compurgators,
-or jurors, of his own rank to swear that they believed him, in order
-to secure acquittal. But the number required was much larger for men
-of low rank than for the nobles; and the freedmen and slaves had no
-rights of the kind, but were tortured at will to compel them to confess
-or testify. The slaves were often tried by an ordeal, and were held
-guilty of any accusation if they could not put their hands into boiling
-water without harm. For freemen, if no other evidence were accessible,
-a trial by battle was adopted, as an appeal to God’s judgment. The
-heathen tribes in Germany proper—the Frisi, Saxons, Thuringians, and
-Alemanni—lived on in their old ways; yet they too failed to maintain
-the spotless character assigned them by Tacitus. It was a time of
-general ferment. The new elements of civilization had brought with them
-new vices, and the simplicity of earlier days could not survive.[G]
-
- [To be continued.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-RIGHT well I know that improvement is a duty, and as we see man strives
-ever after a higher point, at least he seeks some novelty. But beware!
-for with these feelings Nature has given us also a desire to continue
-in the old ways, and to take pleasure in that to which we have been
-accustomed. Every condition of man is good which is natural and in
-accordance with reason. Man’s desires are boundless, but his wants are
-few. For his days are short, and his fate bounded by a narrow span. I
-find no fault with the man who, ever active and restless, crosses every
-sea and braves the rude extremes of every clime, daring and diligent in
-pursuit of gain, rejoicing his heart and house by wealth.—_Goethe._
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[A] Bayard Taylor.
-
-[B] Tacitus.
-
-[C] Bayard Taylor.
-
-[D] Sime.
-
-[E] Lewis.
-
-[F] Sime.
-
-[G] Lewis.
-
-
-
-
-GERMAN LITERATURE.
-
-
-Among the Germans, as among all other nations, the earliest literature
-is poetical. Little is preserved of their ancient poetry, but Tacitus
-tells us that the Germans of his time had ancient songs relating to
-Tuisco and Mannus, and to the hero Arminius. It is the opinion of many
-critics that the stories of “Reynard, the Fox,” and “Isengrim, the
-Wolf,” may be traced back to these remote times. The legends of the
-“Nibelungenlied” have many marks of antiquity which would place them in
-this pre-historic age. The first definite period, however, is:
-
-I. THE EARLY MIDDLE AGE.—When the German tribes accepted Christianity,
-the clergy strove to replace the native poetry by the stories of the
-gospel. In the fourth century Bishop Ulfilas prepared a clear, faithful
-and simple translation of the Scriptures, which has since been of value
-in the study of the Teutonic languages. Charles the Great overpowered
-the effort the priests had made to check poetry by issuing orders to
-collect the old German ballads. But few of these treasures of Old High
-and Low German literature have come down to us. Later the Church still
-further counteracted the influences of pagan literature by a religious
-poetry in which the life of Christ was sung in verse. Scholastic
-learning was also zealously cultivated in the monasteries and schools.
-
-II. THE AGE OF CHIVALRY.—Under the Hohenstaufen dynasty during the
-period of Middle High German the country passed through one of the
-greatest epochs of its literature. The most characteristic outcome
-of this active era is a series of poetical romances produced in the
-twelfth and thirteenth centuries. In these romances the subject of
-whatever epoch it might be, was treated wholly in the spirit of
-chivalry, the supreme aim was to furnish an idealized picture of the
-virtues of knighthood. Wolfram von Eschenbach was one of the most
-brilliant of these writers; “Parzival,” his chief poem, is purely
-imaginative. The hero is made to pass from a life of dreams to one of
-adventure, finally to become lord of the palace of the Holy Grail.
-Its object is to show the restless spirit of the Middle Ages, which,
-continually discontent with life, sought a nobler place.
-
-Gottfried, of Strasburg, was a complete contrast to Wolfram and his
-greatest contemporary. Tristam and Iseult is his theme. Mediæval
-romance bore its richest fruit in these two poets, and most of their
-successors imitated either one or the other. To this age belongs the
-famous epic, the “Nibelungenlied,” in which many ancient ballads have
-been collected and arranged. “Gudrun” is another epic in which a poet
-of this period has given form to several old legends. But lyrics as
-well as romances and epics mark the age of chivalry. The poets of this
-class were known as _minnesänger_ because their favorite theme was
-_minne_ or love. Of all the _minnesänger_ the first place belongs to
-Walther von der Vogelweide. He wrote poems of patriotism as well as on
-the usual subjects of lyric verse.
-
-To this epoch belong the beginnings of prose in German literature.
-Latin was the speech of scholars, and prose works were almost uniformly
-in that language. The “Sachenspiegel” and “Schwabenspiegel,” two
-collections of local laws, aroused interest among Germans in their
-language. The preachers, however, were the chief founders of prose
-style. Dissatisfied with the abuses and mere forms under which genuine
-spiritual life was crushed, they strove to awaken new and truer ideas
-of religion. A Franciscan monk, Berthold, and Eckhart are the two to
-whom most is due.
-
-III. THE LATER MIDDLE AGE.—After the fall of the Hohenstaufen dynasty,
-chivalry died out in Germany, and with it the incentive to poetry.
-During the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, attempts were made to
-produce poetry by rule. As every trade has its guild, so there was
-formed a guild of poetry, in which the members made their verses by the
-“_tabulatur_,” and were obliged to pass through successive stages up
-to the “_meistersänger_.” More important were the efforts at dramatic
-composition. They were crude representations of scriptural subjects,
-with which the clergy sought to replace the pagan festivals. Out of
-these representations grew the “mysteries,” or “miracle plays,” in
-which there was an endeavor to dramatize sacred subjects. “Shrove
-Tuesday plays” were dialogues, setting forth some scene of noisy fun,
-and were the first attempts at comedy.
-
-During the latter part of the fifteenth century there was in Germany,
-as in other European countries, a great revival of intellectual life.
-It was due to two things—the re-discovery of Greek literature and the
-invention of printing. In the universities a broader culture took the
-place of scholastic studies. Many books found their way to the people,
-but these were mainly on social questions. The tyranny of princes and
-abuses of the clergy were the topics for the times, and multitudes of
-books were written ridiculing princes, priests, nobles, and even the
-Pope. The greatest of these satires was “Reineke Vos,” by Barkhusen,
-a printer of Rostock. During this stirring period Maximilian I. was
-emperor, and attempted to revive the mediæval romance. His success was
-not great, and in no sense affected popular taste.
-
-IV. THE CENTURY OF THE REFORMATION.—While the Renaissance brought
-about a great literary movement in England and France, and an artistic
-movement in Italy, in Germany the Reformation agitated the nation.
-Luther was the commanding spirit of the age in literature, as in
-religion. His greatest achievement was his translation of the Bible.
-For the first time a literary language was given to the nation. Luther
-gave to the men of all the countries of Germany a common speech, so
-that it is to him that the Germans owe the most essential of all the
-conditions of a national life and literature. Next to Luther stands
-Ulrich Von Hutten, an accomplished defender of the new culture and of
-the Reformation. Hans Sachs, the meistersänger of Nuremburg, is now
-acknowledged to be the chief German poet of the sixteenth century. He
-wrote more than six thousand poems. His hymn, “Warum betrübst du dich,
-mein Herz,” was soon translated into eight languages. The religious
-lyrics of this age were of superior worth. Indeed, next to the
-translation of the Bible, nothing did so much to unite the Protestants.
-During this century the drama made considerable progress.
-
-V. THE PERIOD OF DECAY.—This period is in many respects the most
-dismal in German history. During the seventeenth century little poetry
-of worth was produced. No progress was made in the formation of the
-drama, and few prose works were written that are now tolerated. The one
-brilliant thinker of the age was Leibnitz.
-
-VI. THE PERIOD OF REVIVAL.—With the accession of Frederick the Great,
-a stronger national life sprung up in Germany, and literature shared
-the growth. Several causes contributed to the advance of literature;
-the revival of classical learning, and a knowledge of English
-literature were chief. Several literary schools grew up. Important
-as were many of the writers in them, they exercised slight influence
-on the national mind compared with founders of the German classical
-literature—Klopstock, Wieland, and Lessing. Klopstock’s fame mainly
-rests on the “Messiah,” a work now little read, and if defective, yet
-full of striking and beautiful images. Klopstock’s odes are superior to
-his dramas, the latter showing knowledge neither of the stage nor of
-life. His influence upon intellectual life in Germany was very marked.
-
-Wieland was one of the most prolific of writers. “Oberon” is the most
-pleasing of his poems to modern readers, and by far most famous.
-“Agathon” is his best prose romance. Although at first a strong
-pietist, Wieland eventually became a pronounced epicurean. Lessing,
-the third of these great poets, is the only writer before Goethe that
-Germans now read sympathetically. As an imaginative writer he was
-chiefly distinguished in the drama, and his most important dramatic
-work is “Minna Von Barnhelm.” Superior to his imaginative works were
-his labors as a thinker. His style ranks with the greatest European
-writers, and his criticisms are of great value.
-
-VII. THE CLASSICAL PERIOD.—About 1770 there began in German literary
-life a curious movement called “_Sturm und Drang_” (storm and
-pressure). Almost all young writers were under its influence. Its most
-prominent quality was discontent with the existing world. The critical
-guide of the movement was Herder. To him is due the impulse which
-led to a collection of the songs and ballads of the people. His most
-important prose work was “Ideas Toward the Philosophy of the History
-of Humanity.” To Herder belongs the honor of stimulating the genius
-of Goethe, who holds in German literature the place of Shakspere in
-English. His extraordinary range of activity is his most wonderful
-characteristic. Goethe’s first published work placed him among the
-writers of the “_Sturm und Drang_” school, as was true of the earlier
-works of Schiller. The lyrics of Goethe have perhaps the most subtle
-charm of all his writings, but “Hermann und Dorothea,” “Wilhelm
-Meister,” “Faust,” etc., are his great productions. Schiller, Goethe’s
-great rival, divided with him the public attention and interest.
-Schiller’s literary career began when he was only twenty-two. “The
-Robbers” and “Don Carlos” are his principal early works. It was in 1794
-that Goethe and Schiller began that acquaintance which ripened into
-one of the most beautiful friendships in the history of literature.
-They wrote in common on Schiller’s journal “Die Horen,” and many of
-Schiller’s works were influenced by the larger life of his friend. This
-is particularly true of his dramas, “Wallenstein,” “Die Jungfrau von
-Orleans,” “Maria Stuart,” and “Wilhelm Tell.”
-
-In 1781 one of the most important works of German literature was
-published—Kant’s “Kritik der Reinen Vernunft.” The philosophical
-systems of Fichte, Schelling and Hegel followed, and excited even
-greater interest than the writings of the imaginative writers.
-
-Each of the leading writers of the classical period had numerous
-followers, but the most important band was that which at first grew up
-around Goethe—the romantic school. The aim of the school was to revive
-mediævalism—to link daily life to poetry. The writer known as the
-prophet of the school was Frederick von Hardenburg, generally called
-Novalis. The critical leaders were Wilhelm and Friedrich von Schlegel.
-Tieck, Nackenroder, Fouquè, and Schleiermacher were the chief writers.
-
-VIII. THE LATEST PERIOD.—In 1832, with the death of Goethe, a new
-era began in German literature. In philosophy the school of Hegel,
-who wrote during the lifetime of Goethe, has had many enthusiastic
-adherents; among these were Strauss, Ruge and Feuerbach. Schopenhauer,
-although he wrote his chief book during the time of Goethe at present
-stirs deeper interest than any other thinker.
-
-In imaginative literature the greatest writer of the latest period is
-Heinrich Heine, whose lyrics have attracted general attention. The
-novel has acquired the same important place in Germany as in England.
-Among the chief novelists are Freytag, the Countess Ida Hahn-Hahn, Paul
-Heyse, Spielhagen and Reuter.
-
- * * * * *
-
-EVERYTHING that regards statesmanship and the interest of the world
-is in all outward respects of the greatest importance; it creates
-and destroys in a moment the happiness, even the very existence, of
-thousands, but when the wave of the moment has rushed past, and the
-storm has abated, its influence is lost, and even frequently disappears
-without leaving a trace behind. Many other things that are noiselessly
-influencing the thoughts and feelings often make far deeper and more
-lasting impressions on us. Man can for the most part keep himself very
-independent of all that does not trench on his private life—a very wise
-arrangement of Providence, since it gives a much greater security to
-human happiness.—_William von Humboldt._
-
-
-
-
-PHYSICAL SCIENCE.
-
-
-II.—THE CIRCULATION OF WATER ON THE LAND.
-
-Although air is continually evaporating water from the surface of the
-earth, and continually restoring it again by condensation, yet, on the
-whole and in the course of years, there seems to be no sensible gain or
-loss of water in our seas, lakes, and rivers; so that the two processes
-of evaporation and condensation balance each other.
-
-It is evident, however, that the moisture precipitated at any moment
-from the air is not at once evaporated again. The disappearance of the
-water is due in part to evaporation, but only in part. A great deal of
-it goes out of sight in other ways.
-
-The rain which falls upon the sea is the largest part of the whole
-rainfall of the globe, because the surface of the sea is about three
-times greater than that of the land. All this rain gradually mingles
-with the salt water, and can then be no longer recognized. It thus
-helps to make up for the loss which the sea is always suffering by
-evaporation. For the sea is the great evaporating surface whence most
-of the vapor of the atmosphere is derived.
-
-On the other hand, the total amount of rain which falls upon the land
-of the globe must be enormous. It has been estimated, for example,
-that about sixty-eight cubic miles of water annually descend as rain
-even upon the surface of the British Isles, and there are many much
-more rainy regions. If you inquire about this rain which falls upon
-the land, you will find that it does not at once disappear, but begins
-another kind of circulation. Watch what happens during a shower of
-rain. If the shower is heavy, you will notice little runs of muddy
-water coursing down the streets or roads, or flowing out of the ridges
-of the fields. Follow one of the runs. It leads into some drain or
-brook, that into some larger stream, the stream into a river; and the
-river, if you follow it far enough, will bring you to the sea. Now
-think of all the brooks and rivers of the world, where this kind of
-transport of water is going on, and you will at once see how vast must
-be the part of the rain which flows off the land into the ocean.
-
-But does the whole of the rain flow off at once into the sea in this
-way? A good deal of the rain which falls upon the land must sink
-underground and gather there. You may think that surely the water which
-disappears in that way must be finally withdrawn from the general
-circulation which we have been tracing. When it sinks below the
-surface, how can it ever get up to the surface again?
-
-Yet, if you consider for a little, you will be convinced that whatever
-becomes of it underneath, it can not be lost. If all the rain which
-sinks into the ground be forever removed from the surface circulation,
-you will at once see that the quantity of water upon the earth’s
-surface must be constantly and visibly diminishing. But no such
-changes, so far as can be seen, are really taking place. In spite of
-the rain which disappears into the ground, the circulation of water
-between the air, the land, and the sea continues without perceptible
-diminution.
-
-You are driven to conclude, therefore, that there must be some means
-whereby the water underground is brought back to the surface. This
-is done by springs, which gush out of the earth, and bring up water
-to feed the brooks and rivers, whereby it is borne into the sea.
-Here, then, are two distinct courses which the rainfall takes—one
-below ground, and one above. It will be most convenient to follow the
-underground portion first.
-
-A little attention to the soils and rocks which form the surface of a
-country is enough to show that they differ greatly from each other in
-hardness, and in texture or grain. Some are quite loose and porous,
-others are tough and close-grained. They consequently differ much
-in the quantity of water they allow to pass through them. A bed of
-sand, for example, is pervious; that is, will let water sink through
-it freely, because the little grains of sand lie loosely together,
-touching each other only at some points, so as to leave empty spaces
-between. The water readily finds its way among these empty spaces. In
-fact, the sand-bed may become a kind of sponge, quite saturated with
-the water which has filtered down from the surface. A bed of clay, on
-the other hand, is impervious; it is made up of very small particles
-fitting closely to each other, and therefore offering resistance to
-the passage of water. Wherever such a bed occurs, it hinders the free
-passage of the water, which, unable to sink through it from above on
-the way down, or from below on the way up to the surface again, is kept
-in by the clay, and forced to find another line of escape.
-
-Sandy soils are dry because the rain at once sinks through them; clay
-soils are wet because they retain the water, and prevent it from freely
-descending into the earth.
-
-Now the rocks beneath us, besides being in many cases porous in their
-texture, such as sandstone, are all more or less traversed with
-cracks—sometimes mere lines, like those of a cracked window-pane, but
-sometimes wide and open clefts and tunnels. These numerous channels
-serve as passages for the underground water. Hence, although a rock
-may be so hard and close-grained that water does not soak through it
-at all, yet if that rock is plentifully supplied with these cracks, it
-may allow a large quantity of water to pass through. Limestone, for
-example, is a very hard rock, through the grains of which water can
-make but little way; yet it is so full of cracks or “joints,” as they
-are called, and these joints are often so wide, that they give passage
-to a great deal of water.
-
-In hilly districts, where the surface of the ground has not been
-brought under the plow, you will notice that many places are marshy
-and wet, even when the weather has long been dry. The soil everywhere
-around has perhaps been baked quite hard by the sun; but these places
-remain still wet, in spite of the heat. Whence do they get their
-water? Plainly not directly from the air, for in that case the rest of
-the ground would also be damp. They get it not from above, but from
-below. It is oozing out of the ground; and it is this constant outcome
-of water from below which keeps the ground wet and marshy. In other
-places you will observe that the water does not merely soak through the
-ground, but gives rise to a little run of clear water. If you follow
-such a run up to its source, you will see that it comes gushing out of
-the ground as a spring.
-
-Springs are the natural outlets for the underground water. But, you
-ask, why should this water have any outlets, and what makes it rise to
-the surface?
-
-Let us suppose that a flat layer of some impervious rock, like clay,
-underlies another layer of a porous material, like sand. The rain which
-falls on the surface of the ground, and sinks through the upper bed,
-will be arrested by the lower one, and made either to gather there, or
-find its escape along the surface of that lower bed. If a hollow or
-valley should have its bottom below the level of the line along which
-the water flows, springs will gush out along the sides of the valley.
-The line of escape may be either the junction between two different
-kinds of rock, or some of the numerous joints already referred to.
-Whatever it be, the water can not help flowing onward and downward, as
-long as there is any passage along which it can find its way; and the
-rocks underneath are so full of cracks, that it has no difficulty in
-doing so.
-
-But it must happen that a great deal of the underground water descends
-far below the level of the valleys, and even below the level of the
-sea. And yet, though it should descend for several miles, it comes at
-last to the surface again. To realize clearly how this takes place,
-let us follow a particular drop of water from the time when it sinks
-into the earth as rain, to the time when, after a long journey up and
-down in the bowels of the earth, it once more reaches the surface.
-It soaks through the soil together with other drops, and joins some
-feeble trickle, or some more ample flow of water, which works its way
-through crevices and tunnels of the rocks. It sinks in this way to
-perhaps a depth of several thousand feet, until it reaches some rock
-through which it can not readily make further way. Unable to work its
-way downward, the pent-up water must try to find escape in some other
-direction. By the pressure from above it is driven through other cracks
-and passages, winding up and down until at last it comes to the surface
-again. It breaks out there as a gushing spring.
-
-Rain is water nearly in a state of purity. After journeying up and
-down underground it comes out again in springs, always more or less
-mingled with other materials, which it gets from the rocks through
-which it travels. They are not visible to the eye, for they are held
-in what is called chemical solution. When you put a few grains of salt
-or sugar upon a plate, and pour water over them, they are dissolved in
-the water and disappear. They enter into union with the water. You can
-not see them, but you can still recognize their presence by the taste
-which they give to the water which holds them in solution. So water,
-sinking from the soil downward, dissolves a little of the substance
-of the subterranean rocks, and carries this dissolved material up to
-the surface of the ground. One of the important ingredients in the air
-is carbonic acid gas, and this substance is both abstracted from and
-supplied to the air by plants and animals. In descending through the
-atmosphere rain absorbs a little air. As ingredients of the air, a
-little carbonic acid gas, particles of dust and soot, noxious vapors,
-minute organisms, and other substances floating in the air, are caught
-up by the descending rain, which in this way washes the air, and tends
-to keep it much more wholesome than it would otherwise be.
-
-But rain not merely picks up impurities from the air, it gets a large
-addition when it reaches the soil.
-
-Armed with the carbonic acid which it gets from the air, and with the
-larger quantity which it abstracts from the soil, rainwater is prepared
-to attack rocks, and to eat into them in a way which pure water could
-not do.
-
-Water containing carbonic acid has a remarkable effect on many rocks,
-even on some of the very hardest. It dissolves more or less of their
-substance, and removes it. When it falls, for instance, on chalk or
-limestone, it almost entirely dissolves and carries away the rock
-in solution, though still remaining clear and limpid. In countries
-where chalk or limestone is an abundant rock, this action of water
-is sometimes singularly shown in the way in which the surface of the
-ground is worn into hollows. In such districts, too, the springs are
-always hard; that is, they contain much mineral matter in solution,
-whereas rainwater and springs which contain little impurity are termed
-soft.
-
-When a stone building has stood for a few hundred years, the
-smoothly-dressed face which its walls received from the mason is
-usually gone. Again, in the burying-ground surrounding a venerable
-church you see the tombstones more and more mouldered the older they
-are. This crumbling away of hard stone with the lapse of time is a
-common familiar fact to you. But have you ever wondered why it should
-be so? What makes the stone decay, and what purpose is served by the
-process?
-
-If it seem strange to you to be told that the surface of the earth is
-crumbling away, you should take every opportunity of verifying the
-statement. Examine your own district. You will find proofs that, in
-spite of their apparent steadfastness, even the hardest stones are
-really crumbling down. In short, wherever rocks are exposed to the air
-they are liable to decay. Now let us see how this change is brought
-about.
-
-First of all we must return for a moment to the action of carbonic
-acid, which has been already described. You remember that rainwater
-abstracts a little carbonic acid from the air, and that, when it sinks
-under the earth, it is enabled by means of the acid to eat away some
-parts of the rocks beneath. The same action takes place with the rain,
-which rests upon or flows over the surface of the ground. The rainwater
-dissolves out little by little such portions of the rocks as it can
-remove. In the case of some rocks, such as limestone, the whole, or
-almost the whole, of the substance of the rock is carried away in
-solution. In other kinds, the portion dissolved is the cementing
-material whereby the mass of the rock was bound together; so that when
-it is taken away, the rock crumbles into mere earth or sand, which
-is readily washed away by the rain. Hence one of the causes of the
-mouldering of stone is the action of the carbonic acid taken up by the
-rain.
-
-In the second place, the oxygen of the portion of air contained in
-rainwater helps to decompose rocks. When a piece of iron has been
-exposed for a time to the weather, in a damp climate, it rusts. This
-rust is a compound substance, formed by the union of oxygen with iron.
-What happens to an iron railing or a steel knife, happens also, though
-not so quickly nor so strongly, to many rocks. They, too, rust by
-absorbing oxygen. A crust of corroded rock forms on their surface, and,
-when it is knocked off by the rain, a fresh layer of rock is reached by
-the ever-present and active oxygen.
-
-In the third place, the surface of many parts of the world is made to
-crumble down by means of frost. Sometimes during winter, when the cold
-gets very keen, pipes full of water burst, and jugs filled with water
-crack from top to bottom. The reason of this lies in the fact that
-water expands in freezing. Ice requires more space than the water would
-if it remained fluid. When ice forms within a confined space, it exerts
-a great pressure on the sides of the vessel, or cavity, which contains
-it. If these sides are not strong enough to bear the strain to which
-they are put, they must yield, and therefore they crack.
-
-You have learned how easily rain finds its way through soil. Even the
-hardest rocks are more or less porous, and take in some water. Hence,
-when winter comes the ground is full of moisture; not in the soil
-merely, but in the rocks. And so, as frost sets in, this pervading
-moisture freezes. Now, precisely the same kind of action takes place
-with each particle of water, as in the case of the water in the burst
-water-pipe or the cracked jar. It does not matter whether the water is
-collected into some hole or crevice, or is diffused between the grains
-of the rocks and the soil. When it freezes it expands, and in so doing
-tries to push asunder the walls between which it is confined.
-
-Water freezes not only between the component grains, but in the
-numerous crevices or joints, as they are called, by which rocks are
-traversed. You have, perhaps, noticed that on the face of a cliff, or
-in a quarry, the rock is cut through by lines running more or less in
-an upright direction, and that by means of these lines the rock is
-split up by nature, and can be divided by the quarrymen into large
-four-sided blocks or pillars. These lines, or joints, have been already
-referred to as passages for water in descending from the surface. You
-can understand that only a very little water may be admitted at a time
-into a joint. But by degrees the joint widens a little, and allows more
-water to enter. Every time the water freezes it tries hard to push
-asunder the two sides of the joint. After many winters, it is at last
-able to separate them a little; then more water enters, and more force
-is exerted in freezing, until at last the block of rock traversed by
-the joint is completely split up. When this takes place along the face
-of a cliff, one of the loosened parts may fall and actually roll down
-to the bottom of the precipice.
-
-In addition to carbonic acid, oxygen, and frost, there are still
-other influences at work by which the surface of the earth is made to
-crumble. For example, when, during the day, rocks are highly heated by
-strong sunshine, and then during night are rapidly cooled by radiation,
-the alternate expansion and contraction caused by the extremes of
-temperature loosen the particles of the stone, causing them to crumble
-away, or even making successive crusts of the stone fall off.
-
-Again, rocks which are at one time well soaked with rain, and at
-another time are liable to be dried by the sun’s rays and by wind,
-are apt to crumble away. If then it be true, as it is, that a general
-wasting of the surface of the land goes on, you may naturally ask why
-this should be. Out of the crumbled stones all soil is made, and on the
-formation and renewal of the soil we depend for our daily food.
-
-Take up a handful of soil from any field or garden, and look at it
-attentively. What is it made of? You see little pieces of crumbling
-stone, particles of sand and clay, perhaps a few vegetable fibers; and
-the whole soil has a dark color from the decayed remains of plants
-and animals diffused through it. Now let us try to learn how these
-different materials have been brought together.
-
-Every drop of rain which falls upon the land helps to alter the
-surface. You have followed the chemical action of rain when it
-dissolves parts of rocks. It is by the constant repetition of the
-process, drop after drop, and shower after shower, for years together,
-that the rocks become so wasted and worn. But the rain has also a
-mechanical action.
-
-Watch what happens when the first pattering drops of a shower begin
-to fall upon a smooth surface of sand, such as that of a beach. Each
-drop makes a little dint or impression. It thus forces aside the grains
-of sand. On sloping ground, where the drops can run together and flow
-downward, they are able to push or carry the particles of sand or clay
-along. This is called a mechanical action; while the actual solution
-of the particles, as you would dissolve sugar or salt, is a chemical
-action. Each drop of rain may act in either or both of these ways.
-
-Now you will readily see how it is that rain does so much in the
-destruction of rocks. It not only dissolves out some parts of them, and
-leaves a crumbling crust on the surface, but it washes away this crust,
-and thereby exposes a fresh surface to decay. There is in this way a
-continual pushing along of powdered stone over the earth’s surface.
-Part of this material accumulates in hollows, and on sloping or level
-ground; part is swept into the rivers, and carried away into the sea.
-As the mouldering of the surface of the land is always going on, there
-is a constant formation of soil. Indeed, if this were not the case,
-if after a layer of soil had been formed upon the ground, it were to
-remain there unmoved and unrenewed, the plants would by degrees take
-out of it all the earthy materials they could, and leave it in a barren
-or exhausted state. But some of it is being slowly carried away by
-rain, fresh particles from mouldering rocks are being washed over it by
-the same agent, while the rock or sub-soil underneath is all the while
-decaying into soil. The loose stones, too, are continually crumbling
-down and making new earth. And thus, day by day, the soil is slowly
-renewed.
-
-Plants, also, help to form and renew the soil. They send their roots
-among the grains and joints of the stones, and loosen them. Their
-decaying fibers supply most of the carbonic acid by which these stones
-are attacked, and furnish also most of the organic matter in the soil.
-Even the common worms, which you see when you dig up a spadeful of
-earth, are of great service in mixing the soil and bringing what lies
-underneath up to the surface.
-
-One part of the rain sinks under the ground, and you have traced its
-progress there until it comes to the surface again. You have now to
-trace, in a similar way, the other portion of the rainfall which flows
-along the surface in brooks and rivers.
-
-You can not readily meet with a better illustration of this subject
-than that which is furnished by a gently sloping road during a heavy
-shower of rain. Let us suppose that you know such a road, and that
-just as the rain is beginning you take up your station at some part
-where the road has a well-marked descent. At first you notice that each
-of the large heavy drops of rain makes in the dust, or sand, one of
-the little dints or rain-prints already described. As the shower gets
-heavier these rain-prints are effaced, and the road soon streams with
-water. Now mark in what manner the water moves.
-
-Looking at the road more narrowly, you remark that it is full of little
-roughnesses—at one place a long rut, at another a projecting stone,
-with many more inequalities which your eye could not easily detect
-when the road was dry, but which the water at once discloses. Every
-little dimple and projection affects the flow of the water. You see
-how the raindrops gather together into slender streamlets of running
-water which course along the hollows, and how the jutting stones and
-pieces of earth seem to turn these streamlets now to one side and now
-to another.
-
-Toward the top of the slope only feeble runnels of water are to be
-seen. But further down they become fewer in number, and at the same
-time larger in size. They unite as they descend; and the larger and
-swifter streamlets at the foot of the descent are thus made up of a
-great many smaller ones from the higher parts of the slope.
-
-Why does the water run down the sloping road? why do rivers flow? and
-why should they always move constantly in the same direction? They do
-so for the same reason that a stone falls to the ground when it drops
-out of your hand; because they are under the sway of that attraction
-toward the center of the earth, to which, as you know, the name of
-gravity is given. Every drop of rain falls to the earth because it is
-drawn downward by the force of this attraction. When it reaches the
-ground it is still, as much as ever, under the same influence; and it
-flows downward in the readiest channel it can find. Its fall from the
-clouds to the earth is direct and rapid; its descent from the mountains
-to the sea, as part of a stream, is often long and slow; but the cause
-of the movement is the same in either case. The winding to and fro of
-streams, the rush of rapids, the roar of cataracts, the noiseless flow
-of the deep sullen currents, are all proofs how paramount is the sway
-of the law of gravity over the waters of the globe.
-
-Drawn down in this way by the action of gravity, all that portion of
-the rain which does not sink into the earth must at once begin to move
-downward along the nearest slopes, and continue flowing until it can
-get no further. On the surface of the land there are hollows called
-lakes, which arrest part of the flowing water, just as there are
-hollows on the road which serve to collect some of the rain. But in
-most cases they let the water run out at the lower end as fast as it
-runs in at the upper, and therefore do not serve as permanent resting
-places for the water. The streams which escape from lakes go on as
-before, working their way to the seashore. So that the course of all
-streams is a downward one; and the sea is the great reservoir into
-which the water of the land is continually pouring.
-
-The brooks and rivers of a country are thus the natural drains, by
-which the surplus rainfall, not required by the soil or by springs,
-is led back again into the sea. When we consider the great amount of
-rain, and the enormous number of brooks in the higher parts of the
-country, it seems, at first, hardly possible for all these streams to
-reach the sea without overflowing the lower grounds. But this does not
-take place; for when two streams unite into one, they do not require a
-channel twice as broad as either of their single water-courses. On the
-contrary, such an union gives rise to a stream which is not so broad
-as either of the two from which it flows. But it becomes swifter and
-deeper.
-
-Let us return to the illustration of the roadway in rain. Starting from
-the foot of the slope, you found the streamlets of rain getting smaller
-and smaller, and when you came to the top there were none at all. If,
-however, you were to descend the road on the other side of the ridge,
-you would probably meet with other streamlets coursing down-hill in
-the opposite direction. At the summit the rain seems to divide, part
-flowing off to one side, and part to the other.
-
-In the same way, were you to ascend some river from the sea, you would
-watch it becoming narrower as you traced it inland, and branching more
-and more into tributary streams, and these again subdividing into
-almost endless little brooks. But take any of the branches which unite
-to form the main stream, and trace it upward. You come, in the end,
-to the first beginnings of a little brook, and going a little further
-you reach the summit, down the other side of which all the streams are
-flowing to the opposite quarter. The line which separates two sets of
-streams in this way is called the water-shed. In England, for example,
-one series of rivers flows into the Atlantic, another into the North
-Sea. If you trace upon a map a line separating all the upper streams
-of the one side from those of the other, that line will mark the
-water-shed of the country.
-
-But there is one important point where the illustration of the road
-in rain quite fails. It is only when rain is falling, or immediately
-after a heavy shower, that the rills are seen upon the road. When the
-rain ceases the water begins to dry up, till in a short time the road
-becomes once more firm and dusty. But the brooks and rivers do not
-cease to flow when the rain ceases to fall. In the heat of summer, when
-perhaps there has been no rain for many days together, the rivers still
-roll on, smaller usually than they were in winter, but still with ample
-flow. What keeps them full? If you remember what you have already been
-told about underground water, you will answer that rivers are fed by
-springs as well as by rain.
-
-Though the weather may be rainless, the springs continue to give out
-their supplies of water, and these keep the rivers going. But if
-great drought comes, many of the springs, particularly the shallow
-ones, cease to flow, and the rivers fed by them shrink up or get dry
-altogether. The great rivers of the globe, such as the Mississippi,
-drain such vast territories, that any mere local rain or drought makes
-no sensible difference in their mass of water.
-
-In some parts of the world, however, the rivers are larger in summer
-and autumn than they are in winter and spring. The Rhine, for instance,
-begins to rise as the heat of summer increases, and to fall as the cold
-of winter comes on. This happens because the river has its source among
-snowy mountains. Snow melts rapidly in summer, and the water which
-streams from it finds its way into the brooks and rivers, which are
-thereby greatly swollen. In winter, on the other hand, the snow remains
-unmelted; the moisture which falls from the air upon the mountains
-is chiefly snow; and the cold is such as to freeze the brooks. Hence
-the supplies of water at the sources of these rivers are, in winter,
-greatly diminished, and the rivers themselves become proportionately
-smaller.
-
- [To be continued.]
-
-
-
-
-SUNDAY READINGS.
-
-Selected by REV. J. H. VINCENT, D.D.
-
-
-[_Sunday, November 4._]
-
-MORAL DISTINCTIONS NOT SUFFICIENTLY REGARDED IN SOCIAL INTERCOURSE.
-
- “He that walketh with wise men shall be wise; but a
- companion of fools shall be destroyed.”—_Proverbs
- xiii:20._
-
-That “a man may be known by the company he keeps,” has passed into a
-proverb among all nations, thus attesting what has been the universal
-experience. The fact would seem to be that a man’s associates either
-find him, or make him like themselves. An acute but severe critic of
-manners, who was too often led by his disposition and circumstances
-to sink the philosopher in the satirist, has said: “Nothing is so
-contagious as example. Never was there any considerable good or ill
-action, that hath not produced its like. We imitate good ones through
-emulation; and bad ones through that malignity in our nature, which
-shame conceals, and example sets at liberty.”
-
-This being the case, or anything like it, all, I think, must agree
-that moral distinctions are not sufficiently cared for in social
-intercourse. In forming our intimacies we are sometimes determined by
-the mere accident of being thrown together; sometimes by a view to
-connections and social position; sometimes by the fascination of what
-are called companionable qualities; seldom, I fear, by thoughtful and
-serious regard to the influence they are likely to have on character.
-We forget that other attractions, of whatsoever nature, instead of
-compensating for moral unfitness in a companion, only have the effect
-to make such unfitness the more to be dreaded.
-
-Let me introduce what I have to say on the importance of paying more
-regard to moral distinctions in the choice of friends, by a few remarks
-on what are called, by way of distinction, companionable qualities, and
-on the early manifestation of a free, sociable, confiding turn of mind.
-Most parents hail the latter, I believe, as the best of prognostics;
-and in some respects it is. It certainly makes the child more
-interesting as a child, and more easily governed; it often passes for
-precocity of talent; at any rate, men are willing to construe it into
-evidence of the facility with which he will make his way in the world.
-The father is proud of such a son; the mother idolizes him. If from
-any cause he is brought into comparison with a reserved, awkward, and
-unyielding boy in the neighborhood, they are ready enough to felicitate
-themselves, and others are ready enough to congratulate them, on the
-difference. And yet I believe I keep within bounds, when I say that, of
-the two, there is more than an even chance that the reserved, awkward,
-and unyielding boy will give his parents less occasion for anxiety
-and mortification, and become in the end the wiser and better man.
-The reason is, that if a child from natural facility of disposition
-is easily won over to good courses, he is also, from the same cause,
-liable at any time to be seduced from these good courses into bad
-ones. On the contrary, where a child, from rigor or stubbornness of
-temper, is peculiarly hard to subdue or manage, there is this hope for
-a compensation: if by early training, or the experience of life, or a
-wise foresight of consequences, he is once set right, he is almost sure
-to keep so.
-
-It is not enough considered, that, in the present constitution of
-society, men are not in so much danger from want of good dispositions,
-as from want of firmness and steadiness of purpose. Hence it is that
-gentle and affectionate minds, more perhaps than any others, stand
-in need of solid principle and fixed habits of virtue and piety,
-as a safeguard against the lures and fascinations of the world. A
-man of a cold, hard, and ungenial nature is comparatively safe so
-far as the temptations of society go: partly because of this very
-impracticableness of his nature, and partly because his companionship
-is not likely to be desired or sought even by the bad: he will be
-left to himself. The corrupters of innocence in social intercourse
-single out for their prey men of companionable qualities. Through
-his companionable qualities the victim is approached, and by his
-companionable qualities he is betrayed.
-
-Let me not be misunderstood. Companionable qualities are not objected
-to _as such_. When they spring from genuine goodness of heart, and
-are the ornament of an upright life, they are as respectable as they
-are amiable; and it would be well if Christians and all good men
-cultivated them more than they do. If we would make virtue and religion
-to be loved, we must make _ourselves_ to be loved _for_ our virtue
-and religion; which would be done if we were faithful to carry the
-gentleness and charity of the gospel into our manners as well as into
-our morals. Nevertheless, we insist that companionable qualities, when
-they have no better source than a sociable disposition, or, worse
-still, an easy temper and loose principles, are full of danger to their
-possessor, and full of danger to the community; especially where, from
-any cause, but little regard is paid to moral distinctions in social
-intercourse. We also say, that in such a state of society the danger
-will be most imminent to those whom we should naturally be most anxious
-to save—I mean, persons of a loving and yielding turn of mind.
-
-
-[_Sunday, November 11._]
-
-And this brings me back again to the position taken in the beginning
-of this discourse. The reason why companionable qualities are attended
-with so much danger is, that society itself is attended with so much
-danger; and the reason why society is attended with so much danger
-is, that social intercourse is not more under the control of moral
-principles, moral rules, and moral sanctions.
-
-My argument does not make it necessary to exaggerate the evils and
-dangers of modern society. I am willing to suppose that there have
-been times when society was much less pure than it is now; and again,
-that there are places where it is much less pure than it is here; but
-it does not follow that there are no evils or dangers now and here.
-On the contrary, it is easy to see that there may be stages in the
-progressive improvement of society, where the improvement itself will
-have the effect, not to lessen, but to increase the danger, _so far
-as good men are concerned_. In a community where vice abounds, where
-the public manners are notoriously and grossly corrupt, good men are
-put on their guard. They will not be injured by such society, for they
-will have nothing to do with it. A broad line of demarcation is drawn
-between what is expected from good men, and what is expected from bad
-men; so that the example of the latter has no effect on the former
-except to admonish and to warn. But let the work of refinement and
-reform go on in general society until vice is constrained to wear a
-decent exterior, until an air of decorum and respectability is thrown
-over all public meetings and amusements, and one consequence will be
-that the distinction between Christians and the world will not be so
-clearly seen, or so carefully observed, as before. The standard of the
-world, from the very fact that it is brought nearer to the standard of
-the gospel, will be more frequently confounded with it; Christians will
-feel at liberty to do whatever the world does, and the danger is, that
-they will come at length to do it from the same principles.
-
-Besides, are we sure that we have not formed too favorable an opinion
-of the moral condition of general society—of that general society in
-the midst of which we are now living, and to the influence of which we
-are daily and hourly exposed? We should remember that in pronouncing
-on the character of public opinion and public sentiment, we are very
-likely to be affected and determined ourselves, not a little, by the
-fact that we share in that very public opinion and public sentiment
-which we are called upon to judge. I have no doubt that virtue, in
-general, is esteemed by the world, or that, _other things being equal_,
-a man of integrity will be preferred on account of his integrity. But
-this is not enough. It shows that the multitude see, and are willing
-to acknowledge, the dignity and worth of an upright course; but it
-does not prove them to have that _abhorrence for sin_, which it is
-the purpose and the tendency of the gospel to plant in all minds. If
-they had this settled and rooted abhorrence for sin, which marks the
-Christian, and without which a man can not be a Christian, they would
-not prefer virtue to vice, “other things being equal,” but they would
-do so whether other things were equal or not; they would knowingly keep
-no terms with vice, however recommended or glossed over by interest or
-worldly favor, or refined and elegant manners.
-
-Now, I ask whether general society, even as it exists amongst us,
-will bear this test? Is it not incontestable that very unscrupulous
-and very dangerous men, if they happen to be men of talents, or men
-of fashion, or men of peculiarly engaging manners, find but little
-difficulty in insinuating themselves into what is called good society;
-nay, are often among those who are most courted and caressed? Some
-vices, I know, are understood to put one under the social ban; but it
-is because they offend, not merely against morality and religion, but
-against taste, against good-breeding, against certain conventions of
-the world. To be convinced of this it is only necessary to observe that
-the same, or even a much larger amount of acknowledged criminality,
-manifested under other forms, is not found to be attended with the
-same result. The mischiefs of this state of things are felt by all;
-but especially by those who are growing up in what are generally
-accounted the most favored walks of life. On entering into society
-they see men of known profligacy mingling in the best circles, and
-with the best people, if not indeed on terms of entire sympathy and
-confidence, at least on those of the utmost possible respect and
-courtesy. They see all this, and they see it every day; and it is by
-such flagrant inconsistencies in those they look up to for guidance,
-more perhaps than by any other one cause, that their own principles and
-their own faith are undermined. And besides, being thus encouraged and
-countenanced in associating with dissipated and profligate men in what
-is called good society, they will be apt to construe it into liberty
-to associate with them _anywhere_. At any rate the intimacy is begun.
-As society is constituted at present, corrupting intimacies are not
-infrequently begun amidst all the decencies of life, and, it may be,
-in the presence and under the countenance and sanction of parents and
-virtuous friends, which are afterward renewed and consummated, and this
-too by an easy, natural, and almost necessary gradation, amidst scenes
-of excess—perhaps in the haunts of ignominy and crime.
-
-
-[_Sunday, November 18._]
-
-If one should propose a reform in this respect, I am aware of the
-difficulties and objections that would stand in his way.
-
-Some would affirm it to be impracticable in the nature of things.
-They would reason thus: “The circle in which a man visits and moves
-is made for him, and not by him: at any rate, it is not, and can not
-be, determined by moral considerations alone. Something depends on
-education; something on family connections or mere vicinity; something
-on similarity in tastes and pursuits; something also on equality or
-approximation in wealth and standing. A poor man, or a man having a
-bare competency, if he is as virtuous and industrious, is just as
-_respectable_ as a rich man; but it is plain that he can not pitch his
-style of living, or his style of hospitality, on the same scale of
-expense. It is better for both, therefore, that they should visit in
-different circles.” Perhaps it is; but what then? I am not recommending
-an amalgamation of the different classes in society. I suppose that
-such an amalgamation would neither be practicable nor desirable in
-the existing state of things. All I contend for is, that in every
-class, open and gross immorality of any kind should exclude a man from
-reputable company. Will any one say that this is impracticable? Let
-a man, through untoward events, but not by any fault or neglect of
-his own, be reduced in his circumstances,—let a man become generally
-odious, not in consequence of any immorality, but because, perhaps,
-he has embraced the unpopular side in politics or religion—let a man
-omit some trifling formality which is construed into a vulgarity, or
-a personal affront, and people do not appear to find much difficulty
-in dropping the acquaintance. If, then, it is so easy a thing to drop
-a man’s acquaintance for other reasons, and for no reason,—from mere
-prejudice, from mere caprice,—will it still be pretended that it can
-not be done at the command of duty and religion?
-
-Again, it may be objected that, if you banish a man from general
-society for his immoralities, you will drive him to despair, and so
-destroy the only remaining hope of his reformation. What! are you going
-_to keep society corrupt_ in the vain expectation that a corrupt state
-of society will help to reform its corrupt members? Besides, I grant
-that we should have compassion on the guilty; but I also hold that we
-should have compassion on the innocent too. Would you, therefore, allow
-a bad man to continue in good society, when the chances are a thousand
-to one that he will make others as bad as himself, and not more than
-one to a thousand that he himself will be reclaimed? Moreover, this
-reasoning is fallacious throughout. By expelling a dissipated and
-profligate man from good society, instead of destroying all hope of
-his recovery, you do in fact resort to the only remaining means of
-reforming one over whom a fear of God, and a sense of character, and
-the upbraidings of conscience have lost their power. What cares he for
-principle, or God, or an hereafter? Nothing, therefore, is so likely to
-encourage and embolden him to go on in his guilty course, as the belief
-that he will be allowed to do so without the forfeiture of the only
-thing he does care for, his reputable standing in the world. On the
-other hand, nothing is so likely to arrest him in these courses, and
-bring him to serious reflection, as the stern and determined threat of
-absolute exclusion from good society, if he persists.
-
-Another objection will also be made which has stronger claims on our
-sympathy and respect. We shall be told that the innocent as well as
-the guilty will suffer—the guilty man’s friends and connections,
-who will probably feel the indignity more than he does himself. God
-forbid that we should needlessly add to the pain of those who are thus
-connected! But we must remember that the highest form of friendship
-does not consist in blindly falling in with the feelings of those whom
-we would serve, but in consulting what will be for their real and
-permanent good. If, therefore, the course here recommended has been
-shown to be not only indispensable to public morals, but more likely
-than any other to reclaim the offender, it is clearly not more a
-dictate of justice to the community, than of Christian charity to the
-parties more immediately concerned. Consider, also, how much is asked,
-when a good man is called upon to open his doors to persons without
-virtue and without principle. Unless the social circle is presided
-over by a spirit which will rebuke and frown away immorality, whatever
-fashionable names and disguises it may wear,—unless your sons and
-daughters can meet together without being in danger of having their
-faith disturbed by the jeers of the infidel, or their purity sullied
-by the breath of the libertine, neither they nor you are safe in the
-most innocent enjoyments and recreations. Parents at least should take
-a deep interest in this subject, if they do not wish to see the virtue,
-which they have reared under the best domestic discipline, blighted and
-corrupted before their eyes by the temptations to which their children
-are almost necessarily exposed in general society—a society which they
-can not escape except by going out of the world, and which they can not
-partake of without endangering the loss of what is of more value than a
-thousand worlds.
-
-
-[_Sunday, November 25._]
-
-I have failed altogether in my purpose in this discourse if I have
-not done something to increase your distrust of mere companionable
-qualities, when not under the control of moral and religious principle;
-and also of the moral character and moral influence of general society,
-as at present constituted. Still you may ask, “If I associate with
-persons worse than myself, how can it be made out to be more probable
-that they will drag me down to their level, than that I shall lift
-them up to mine?” The answer to this question, I hardly need say,
-depends, in no small measure, on the reason or motive which induces the
-association. If you mix with the world, not for purposes of pleasure or
-self-advantage—if you resort to society, not for society as an end, but
-as a means to a higher end, _the improvement of society itself_—you do
-but take up the heavenly mission which Christ began. For not being able
-to make the distinction, through the hollowness and corruption of their
-hearts, the Pharisees thought it to be a just ground of accusation
-against our Lord, that he was willing to be accounted the friend of
-publicans and sinners. Let the same mind be in you that was also in
-Christ Jesus, and we can not doubt that the spirit which inspires you
-will preserve you wherever you may go. It is of such persons that our
-Lord has said: “Behold, I give unto you power to tread on serpents and
-scorpions, and over all the power of the enemy; and nothing shall by
-any means harm you.” Very far am I, therefore, from denying that we may
-do good in society, as well as incur danger and evil. Even in common
-friendships frequent occasions will present themselves for mutual
-service, for mutual counsel and admonition. Let me impress upon you
-this duty. Perhaps there is not one among you all, who has not at this
-moment companions on whom he can confer an infinite blessing. If there
-is a weak place in their characters, if to your knowledge they are
-contemplating a guilty purpose, if they are on the brink of entering
-into dangerous connections, by a timely, affectionate, and earnest
-remonstrance you may save them from ruin. _Remember, we shall all be
-held responsible, not only for the evil which we do ourselves, but for
-the evil which we might prevent others from doing; it is not enough
-that we stand; we must endeavor to hold up our friends._
-
-Very different from this, however, is the ordinary commerce of society;
-and hence its danger. If we mix with the world for the pleasure it
-affords, we shall be likely to be among the first to be reconciled to
-the freedom and laxity it allows. The world is not brought up to us,
-but we sink down to the world; the drop becomes of the consistence
-and color of the ocean into which it falls; the ocean remains itself
-unchanged. In the words of an old writer: “Though the well-disposed
-will remain some good space without corruption, yet time, I know not
-how, worketh a wound in him, which weakness of ours considered, and
-easiness of nature, apt to be deceived, looked into, they do best
-provide for themselves that separate themselves as far as they can
-from the bad, and draw as nigh to the good, as by any possibility they
-can attain to.” “He that walketh with wise men shall be wise; but a
-companion of fools shall be destroyed.”
-
-
-
-
-POLITICAL ECONOMY.
-
-By G. M. STEELE, D.D.
-
-
-II.
-
-PRODUCTION, CONTINUED—CAPITAL—COMBINATION AND DIVISION OF LABOR.
-
-5. We have already seen that an essential to any considerable
-production is _capital_. We have seen the nature of capital and how
-it comes to exist. We have also learned that though capital implies
-saving, mere saving is not the sole condition of capital; indeed, a
-narrow penuriousness prevents the rapid accumulation of capital. The
-man who is accustomed to bring his water from a spring a quarter of
-a mile from his house instead of digging a well at the cost of a few
-dollars, or a few days’ work, acts uneconomically. In the long run
-the bringing of the water from the spring costs him much more than
-the digging of the well. The man who has extensive grain-fields, and
-who, for the sake of saving the expense of a reaper, or even a cradle,
-continues to use the sickle, will find that his saving results in a
-loss instead of a gain.
-
-A man does not need to be rich in order to be a capitalist. When the
-savage has invented a bow and arrows he has the rudiments of capital.
-The laborer who has reserved out of his earnings enough to buy him a
-set of tools, or a few acres of land, is as really a capitalist as
-the owner of factories or railroads. Whatever property is used for
-production is capital.
-
-Capital exists in many forms. It has been generally divided into
-_fixed_ and _circulating_, though the limits of these divisions are
-not very precisely defined. The main difference consists in this, that
-while certain kinds of capital are used only once in the fulfillment of
-their purposes, other kinds are used repeatedly. Fuel can be burned but
-once. An axe may serve for years. Circulating capital is of two kinds:
-
-(1) There are the stock and commodities which are to be consumed in
-reproduction; (_a_) the material out of which the new product is to be
-made, as lumber for cabinet ware, leather for shoes, etc.; (_b_) food
-and other provisions for the sustenance of the laborers.
-
-(2) There is the stock of completed commodities on hand and ready
-for the market. The chairs that are finished and ready for sale in
-the chair factory are of this character. It is to be observed that
-the same article may be at one time circulating and at another fixed
-capital. Thus the chairs just spoken of, while they are in the hands
-of the manufacturer, or passing through those of the dealers, are
-circulating capital. It is only when they become _fixed in use_ that
-their character changes.
-
-Fixed capital consists (1) of all tools, implements, and machinery,
-used in the trades. Here, too, belong all structures of every sort
-for productive purposes; (2) all beasts of burden and draft; (3)
-all improvements of land implied in clearing, fencing, draining,
-fertilizing, terracing, etc.; (4) all mental acquisitions gained by
-labor and which give man power for productive results.
-
-Obviously capital, by whomsoever owned, is an advantage to the laborer.
-But such capital is useless to the owner unless he can unite it with
-labor. So, too, the ability to labor is of no benefit to the laborer
-unless he can employ it in connection with capital. Generally the more
-capital there is in a community, other things being equal, the better
-it is for the laborer; and the more laborers there are, other things
-being equal, the better it is for the capitalist. When a factory burns
-down it may destroy only a small part of the wealth of the owners, and
-they may not palpably suffer; but it is very likely to deprive the
-laborers, who are connected with it, of the means of securing their
-daily sustenance.
-
-There is no natural antagonism of interests between capital and labor,
-but rather the utmost concord and interdependence. Whatever conflicts
-arise between the laborers and the capitalists come from the unnatural
-selfishness and jealousy of the parties concerned.
-
-6. As has been intimated, it is only by application of principles
-underlying political economy that we come to the conditions of the
-highest production, or, in other words, find how to satisfy the largest
-range of desires to the greatest extent at the smallest cost of labor.
-One of the chief means of effecting this is by _the combination and
-division of labor_. Recalling what was said concerning association and
-individuality, we shall see what principles are involved here, and
-how naturally they came into operation. As there was seen to be no
-antagonism between the two latter conceptions when carefully analyzed,
-so there is none, but rather the opposite, between combination
-and division of labor. It is true that there are instances where
-combination may take place without division, as when men unite to
-effect purposes which one could not accomplish except in much more than
-the proportionate time; as also in some cases to affect purposes which
-the individual could not effect in any length of time, such as the
-moving and placing of heavy timbers and stones, the management of ships
-and railway trains, etc. But for the most part men divide their labor
-in the process in order that they may combine the result. This is done
-in two ways:
-
-(1) Men divide up the work of supplying human wants into different
-trades and occupations, according to their several tastes and
-aptitudes. Each man needs nearly the same that every other needs.
-But while each provides for only one kind of want, he provides more
-than enough to satisfy his own desire in that particular respect,
-and contributes the overplus to meet that same want in others. As
-all others do the same, each is contributing to meet the desires
-of one and all to each. The shoemaker, the tailor, the carpenter,
-the cabinet-maker, the blacksmith, the weaver, the paper-maker, the
-tin-man, the miner, the smelter, the painter, the glazier, etc., are
-all contributing to supply the farmer’s needs, and the farmer is
-contributing to all their needs. The wants of all are many times more
-fully met in this way than if each one should undertake to supply all
-his own wants.
-
-(2) In some complicated trades the work is divided into a number of
-processes. There are men who could do every one of these parts; but
-such men are few, and their labor very costly, because some of the
-parts require rare skill and talent. What is needed is to organize
-several grades of laborers, so that the physically strong, the
-intelligent and skillful may have the work that only they can do; the
-less strong and skillful may find employment in the lighter and easier
-parts, and so all grades of ability down to the delicate woman or the
-little child, and up to the most powerful muscle and most advanced
-intelligence, can find their place. It is almost incredible how great
-is the increase of productiveness from the mere economical arrangement
-of workers. It is said that in so simple a matter as the making of
-pins, where the work is divided into ten processes and properly
-distributed, that the production will be _two hundred and forty times_
-as much as if each man did the whole work on each pin.
-
-This connects itself with another important condition of large
-production. I mean the diversification of employment in a community.
-It is only in such a varied industry that all the varied tastes,
-aptitudes and abilities of society can find scope and adaptation; and
-without this, production must fall far short of its possibilities.
-This, too, is required to develop those differences which constitute
-individuality, and on which association depends.
-
-There are other conditions of enlarged production, such as are implied
-in freedom, good government, and the moral character of the community,
-the influence of each of which will easily suggest itself to thoughtful
-minds.
-
-
-III.—CONSUMPTION.
-
-1. Consumption is the destruction of values. Production implies
-consumption. In general, all material is destroyed in entering into
-new forms of wealth. Thus, leather must be destroyed in order to the
-production of shoes. Flour must disappear in the manufacture of bread,
-and wheat in the making of flour. Every kind of implement, or machine
-or structure is consumed by use. This consumption is immediate, or
-by a single use; or it is gradual. The food that we eat and the fuel
-that we burn are examples of the former; tools, bridges, buildings
-and aqueducts are examples of the latter. It is accomplished in a few
-months or years; or is protracted through centuries.
-
-2. Consumption is either _voluntary_ or _involuntary_. Of the latter
-kind we have instances in the _natural decay_ of objects, as in wood
-and vegetables; the rusting of iron, the mildew and the moth-eating of
-cotton and woolen fabrics, and the wearing away by attrition of gold,
-silver, and other metals; also the destruction caused by vermin. Much
-of this may be prevented by the prudent foresight which sound economy
-enjoins; yet much loss will inevitably take place. A great deal of
-consumption is _accidental_. Great destruction is caused by fires,
-steam-boiler explosions, floods and tornadoes, earthquakes and volcanic
-eruptions.
-
-3. Voluntary consumption is either _productive_ or _unproductive_.
-The former is when the material appears in new form and with a higher
-value, as cloth made into garments and iron into hardware and cutlery.
-Unproductive consumption occurs, both in the cases before mentioned of
-natural and accidental consumption, and in cases where gratification
-of desire is the sole object sought and achieved, as when one eats and
-drinks simply for the enjoyment, and without reference to the waste of
-nature or the nourishment of the system.
-
-It is not altogether easy to discriminate between these two kinds of
-consumption. We readily see the difference between a man’s drinking a
-quantity of whiskey, not because it will help him in the performance
-of any duty, but because he likes it, and the scattering of a quantity
-of seed over the ground in spring. There is no doubt that one act is
-productive and the other unproductive. But there are cases where the
-distinction is less clear.
-
-It is not necessarily a case of unproductive consumption when one
-destroys value for the sake of gratifying some desire. Probably a
-majority of men eat and drink simply because they desire food and
-drink, having no thought of any ulterior object. Yet this eating and
-drinking is absolutely essential to productive labor. The wealth
-consumed in this way reappears, to a large extent, in the products of
-human industry.
-
-Still there is much really unproductive consumption; a destruction of
-value, in the place of which no other value ever appears. There are,
-for instance, men and women—
-
- * * * “who creep
- Into this world to eat and sleep,
- And know no reason why they’re born,
- But simply to consume the corn.”
-
-Vast quantities of wealth are consumed in riotous living, in greedy
-and vulgar extravagance, and unmeaning magnificence. There is also
-much consumption designed to be productive, but failing of its
-end through misdirection. Large amounts of property are sometimes
-invested in enterprises which prove failures. This occurs partly from
-miscalculation or negligence, and partly from a disposition to trust
-to chances—the gambler’s calculation. In these ways much wealth is
-consumed with no consequent product.
-
-4. It is not easy to draw the line between the ordinary conveniences of
-life and its luxuries; nor can it be stated to what extent the latter
-in any sense of the term are economically allowable. What to one class
-of persons may be a luxury to another class may be almost a necessity.
-So what might in one age have been a rare and expensive indulgence,
-is in a more advanced period among the cheaper and more ordinary
-commodities. I call special attention to three kinds of consumption:
-
-(1) There is the consumption necessary to life and the performance of
-productive labor. The word _necessary_ here is used in its liberal
-rather than its restricted sense. The absolute necessities of human
-life are very few. It does not even require much to keep a man in
-working condition. But to keep him where there is a larger kind of
-living, and where his energies of both body and mind, together with the
-moral qualities which render him most efficient, are at their best, the
-consumption must be more generous.
-
-Besides subsistence there must be materials, tools, machines, and
-a variety of conditions involving the destruction of value. It is
-desirable to sustain man not as a mere savage, but to give him the
-largest volume of human life; and the civilized man, it will be
-admitted, lives a broader life than the savage. We are not to forget
-that Political Economy aims at the increase of the value of man, more
-than at the multiplication of material wealth, or the increase of
-commerce, except as the latter are conditions of the former.
-
-(2) A second kind of consumption is of such articles as minister
-to bodily enjoyment and meet certain mental appetencies of a lower
-order. They are not necessary to sustain life, nor to render it more
-efficient. On the contrary, they often impair the vigor and competence
-of the person. At the best they simply gratify certain desires without
-adding anything to the value of the man. To this category belong mere
-dainty food, gold and jewels, and other ornaments, valued solely
-because of their showiness and not for any artistic excellence; gay and
-costly apparel, in which the gayety and the costliness are the main
-features. These constitute a class of luxuries that are in nearly every
-sense non-productive. They favorably affect neither the individual nor
-society, and are for the most part hurtful to both.
-
-(3) But not all consumption, the object of which is to gratify desire,
-is to be reckoned in this category. There are certain pleasures which
-ennoble and really enrich those who participate in them. There are
-desires the gratification of which enlarges the volume of one’s being.
-They are related not so much to man’s productive capability as to that
-which is the final cause of all production, and to which all wealth
-is only a means. The labor, material, implements, and whatever else
-is consumed in the production of the works or effects of genuine art,
-result in the most _real wealth_ that exists. By this is meant not
-merely pictures, statues, books, carved work, tasteful tapestries,
-and similar objects which can be bought and sold, but also oratorios
-which you may hear but once; magnificent parks to which you may be
-admitted, but may never own; great actors and singers whose genius may
-be exhibited to others, but not possessed by them. It is true that much
-which properly belongs here may be so consumed as to deserve only a
-place in the second class; but it may also have those higher and nobler
-uses which imply production in the best sense.
-
-5. _Public consumption_ is the expenditure of means for society in its
-aggregate capacity. It has reference principally to the support of
-those agencies which are implied in the term _government_. The reasons
-for the necessity of such expenditures have already been given. The
-purposes to which such consumption is properly applied may be grouped
-as follows:
-
-(_a_) The support and administration of government. This embraces
-compensation to executive, legislative and judicial officers,
-and expenditure for public buildings. (_b_) For works of public
-convenience. Here are included the paving and lighting of streets,
-water-works and sewerage. (_c_) For advancing science and promoting
-intelligence, by means of exploring expeditions, geological surveys,
-meteorological and astronomical observations, etc. (_d_) For the
-promotion of popular education. (_e_) For the support of the poor and
-the relief of the afflicted. (_f_) For national defense.
-
-6. The general law of economical consumption, both individual and
-public, is that only so much and such a quality should be consumed as
-is necessary to effect the purpose designed, whether that be further
-production or individual gratification. It is nearly the same in the
-case of labor. In relation to the work to be done, the character,
-ability and skill of the laborer should be considered.
-
-
-
-
-READINGS IN ART.
-
-
-II.—SCULPTURE: GRECIAN AND ROMAN.
-
-While Egyptian sculpture was losing its individuality, and Assyrian
-was wearing itself out in excessive ornamentation, there was a new art
-growing up in the isles and on the eastern shores of the Mediterranean.
-The early centuries of its growth are hidden from our knowledge. The
-remains are so scanty, so imperfect, that it is with difficulty that
-we trace the influences which were molding the art, and the extent to
-which it was taking hold of the people. Of this primitive period but
-one single work of sculpture is preserved.
-
-“At Mycenæ, once perhaps in the days of Homer (850-800? B. C.) the most
-important city of Greece, there are sculptural works in the remains
-of two lions over the entrance gate. The height of these is about ten
-feet, and the width fifteen feet. The stone is a greenish limestone.
-The holes show where the metal pins held the heads, long since decayed.
-Fragments as they are, they show an Assyrian rather than an Egyptian
-influence in the strong marking of the muscles and joints, softened
-though it is by decay, and in the erect attitude, which denotes action,
-such as is not seen in Egyptian art of this kind. Of this gate of the
-lions, which has long been known as the most ancient work of early
-Greek sculpture, it must be noticed that it is not in the round, but
-only in high relief. And this is the case with all the earliest works,
-just as it is with the Assyrian sculptures. They tend to show therefore
-that the Greek sculptor had not yet learnt to model and carve in the
-round in marble and stone.”
-
-In the objects found by Cesnola in Cyprus, and consisting of statues
-and other sculptures, incised gems, and metal work of the hammered-out
-kind, the resemblance to the art of Assyria is remarkable. Three
-hundred years later than the “gate of lions” are the reliefs discovered
-at Xanthus in Lycia. “They belong to the Harpy monument—a pier-shaped
-memorial, along the upper edge of which is a frieze ornamented in
-relief.” The archaic is still visible in the figures. The drapery
-falls in long straight folds, with zigzag edges. There is the stiff,
-inevitable smile of the Egyptian statue. The figures are in motion, but
-both feet are set flat on the ground. Though in profile the eyes are
-shown in full. In spite of these primitive absurdities, and the fact
-that the subjects represent foreign myths, the statues are Greek.
-
-In the fifth century various art schools were founded. “In Argos lived
-Argeladas (515-455 B. C.), famous for his bronze statues of gods and
-Olympic victors, and still more famous for his three great pupils,
-Phidias, Myron, and Polycleitus. In Sicyon there lived, at the same
-time, Canachus, the founder of a vital and enduring school. He executed
-the colossal statue of Apollo at Miletus, and was skilled not only
-in casting bronze but in the use of gold and ivory and wood carving.
-Ægina, then a commercial island as yet not subjected, was rendered
-illustrious by the two masters Callon and Onatas, the latter especially
-known by several groups of bronze statues and warlike scenes from
-heroic legends. Lastly, Athens possessed among other artists Hegias,
-the teacher of Phidias and Critius. But all of these old masters were
-severe, hard, archaic in their treatment.”
-
-But a period approaches when by a freer, happier treatment of their
-work the way was led to the highest Athenian sculpture. We can but
-mention the leading sculptors, Calamis of Athens, Pythagoras of
-Rhegium, and, greatest of all, Myron of Athens. They do not belong
-to the epoch of the finest Grecian art, but they were the immediate
-forerunners.
-
-“Now, for the first time in opposition to the barbarians, the
-national Hellenic mind rose to the highest consciousness of noble
-independence and dignity. Athens concentrated within herself, as in
-a focus, the whole exuberance and many-sidedness of Greek life, and
-glorified it into beautiful utility. The victory of the old time
-over the new was effected by the power of Phidias, one of the most
-wonderful artist minds of all times. He lived in the times of Athens’
-greatest prosperity, and to him Pericles gave the task of executing
-the magnificent works he had planned for adorning the city. Among
-the famous statues which Phidias wrought in carrying out these plans
-was that of Athene, the patron goddess of the Athenians. The booty
-which had been taken at Salamis was set aside for this purpose, and
-forty-four talents, equal to $589,875 of our money, was spent in
-adorning the statue. The virgin goddess was standing erect; a golden
-helmet covered her beautiful and earnest head; a coat of mail, with
-the head of the Medusa carved in ivory concealed her bosom; and long,
-flowing, golden drapery enveloped her whole figure—a statue of Niké,
-six feet high, stood on the outstretched hand of the goddess. The
-undraped parts were formed of ivory; the eyes of sparkling precious
-stones; the drapery, hair, and weapons of gold. In it Phidias portrayed
-for all ages the character of Minerva, the serious goddess of wisdom,
-the mild protectress of Attica.”
-
-Still more than in this statue the austere maidenliness of the goddess
-was elevated into noble, intellectual beauty in a figure of Athene
-placed on the Acropolis by the Lemnians; so much so that an old epigram
-instituted a comparison with the Aphrodite of Praxiteles of Cnidus, and
-calls Paris “a mere cow-driver for not giving the apple to Athene.”
-
-The still more famous colossal statue by Phidias, the Zeus at Olympia
-in Elis, was his last great work. It was made between B. C. 438, the
-date of the consecration of the Parthenon statue, and B. C. 432, the
-year of his death, at Elis.
-
-This was a seated statue of ivory and gold, 55 feet high, including
-the throne. Strabo remarks, that “if the god had risen he would have
-carried away the roof,” and the height of the interior was about 55
-feet; the temple being built on the model of the Parthenon at Athens,
-which was 64 feet to the point of the pediment.
-
-The statue was seen in its temple by Paulus Æmilius in the second
-century B. C., who declared the god himself seemed present to him.
-Epictetus says that “it was considered a misfortune for any one to
-die without having seen the masterpiece of Phidias.” In the time of
-Julian the Apostate (A. D. 361-363) “it continued to receive the homage
-of Greece in spite of every kind of attack which the covert zeal of
-Constantine had made against polytheism, its temples, and its idols.”
-This is the last notice we possess giving authentic information of this
-grand statue. Phidias is said to have executed many other statues:
-thirteen in bronze from the booty of Marathon, consecrated at Delphi
-under Cimon—statues of Apollo, Athene, and Miltiades, with those ten
-heroes who had given their names to the ten Athenian tribes (Eponymi);
-an Athene for the city of Pellene in gold and ivory; another for the
-Platæans, of the spoils of Marathon, made of wood gilt, with the head,
-feet, and hands of Pentelic marble. “These,” M. Rochette says, “may be
-considered the productions of his youth.”
-
-The great national work of the time, however, was the Parthenon, and
-the ornamentation was entrusted to Phidias. Not that all the wonderful
-statues were executed by him alone. He had his pupils and associates.
-The most famous of these seems to have been Alcamenes, a versatile and
-imaginative disciple of his master. After him were Agoracritus and
-Pæonius. There were many others who assisted in the work. The outside
-of the temple was ornamented with three classes of sculpture: (1) The
-sculptures of the pediments, being independent statues resting on the
-cornices. (2) The groups of the metopes, ninety-two in number. These
-were in high relief. (3) The frieze around the upper border of the
-cella of the Parthenon contained a representation in low relief of the
-Panathenaic procession. All these classes of sculpture were in the
-highest style of the art.
-
-The influence of the sculptures of the Parthenon is seen in many
-directions in the temple of Apollo at Phigalia, the temple of
-Niké-Apteros on the Acropolis at Athens, at Halicarnassus, etc.
-
-“The works which are known to have been executed by the sculptors
-contemporary with Phidias, and by others who formed what is spoken of
-as ‘the later Athenian school,’ did not approach the great examples of
-the Parthenon. Sculpture then reached the highest point in the grandest
-style, whether in the treatment of the statue in the round, or of
-bas-relief as in the frieze, or alto-relievo as in the metopes. As to
-the chryselephantine statues of Phidias, it may be concluded without
-hesitation that though we are compelled to rely upon descriptions only,
-they must have been works of the great master even more beautiful than
-the marbles.”
-
-At Argos during the time of Phidias, a somewhat younger school
-flourished under the leadership of Polycleitus. “The aspiration of
-Polycleitus was to depict the perfect beauty of the human form in calm
-repose.” His Amazon and Juno represent best his style; so perfect are
-all his works in their proportions that the invention of the canon has
-been assigned to him.
-
-In the works of the later Athenian school, at the head of which were
-Scopas and Praxiteles, the sublime ideal of Greek art was no longer
-sustained by any new creations that can be compared with those of
-the Phidian school; no rivalry with those great masters seemed to
-be attempted. The severe and grand was beyond the comprehension, or
-probably uncongenial to the spirit of the age, which inclined toward
-the poetic, the graceful, the sentimental and romantic. The whole range
-of the beautiful myths found abundant illustration in forms entirely
-different from the ancient archaic representations, and in these the
-fancy of the sculptor was allowed the fullest and freest indulgence.
-Nymphs, nereids, mænads, and bacchantes occupied the chisel of the
-sculptor in every form of graceful beauty.
-
-After this epoch, to which so many of the fine statues
-belong—repetitions in marble of famous originals in bronze—Greek
-sculpture took another phase in accordance with the social life and
-the taste of the age, which inclined toward the feeling for display
-that arose with the domination of the Macedonian power, brought to its
-height by the conquests and ambition of Alexander the Great. Lysippus,
-a self-taught sculptor of Sicyon, was the leading artist of his time.
-He was evidently a student of nature and individual character, as he
-was the first to become celebrated for his portraits, especially those
-of Alexander. He departed from the severe and grand style, and in the
-native conceit of all self-taught men sneered at the art of Polycleitus
-in the well-known saying recorded of him, “Polycleitus made men as they
-were, but I make them as they ought to be.” He seems to have been the
-first great naturalistic sculptor.
-
-Rhodes had unquestionable right to give her name to a school of
-sculpture, both from the great antiquity of the origin of the culture
-of the arts in the island, and from the number, more than one hundred,
-of colossal statues in bronze. The Rhodian school is also distinguished
-by those remarkable examples of sculpture in marble of large groups
-of figures—the Toro Farnese and the Laocoon. In these works there is
-the same feeling for display of artistic accomplishment that has been
-noticed as characteristic of the Macedonian age, with that effort at
-the pathetic, especially in the Laocoon, which belongs to the finer
-style of the later Athenian school as displayed in the works of Scopas
-and Praxiteles, in the Niobe figures and others.
-
-At Pergamus, another school allied in style to that of Ephesus arose,
-of which the chief sculptor was Pyromachus, who, according to Pliny,
-flourished in the 120th Olympiad, B. C. 300-298. A statue of Æsculapius
-by Pyromachus was a work of some note in the splendid temple at
-Pergamus, and is to be seen on the coins of that city. It is also
-conjectured that the well-known Dying Gladiator is a copy of a bronze
-by Pyromachus. The vigorous naturalistic style of these statues,
-surpassing anything of preceding schools in the effort at expression,
-may be taken as characteristic of the school of Pergamus, then
-completely under Roman influence, and destined to become more so. But
-all question as to the nature of the sculptures was set at rest by the
-discovery of many large works in high relief by the German expedition
-at Pergamus in 1875. These are now in the Museum at Berlin. They are
-of almost colossal proportions, representing, as Pliny described, the
-wars of Attalus and the Battles with the Giants. The nude figure is
-especially marked by the effort to display artistic ability as well
-as great energy in the action. In these points there is observable a
-connection with the well-known and very striking example of sculpture
-of this order—the Fighting Gladiator, or more properly the Warrior of
-Agasias, who, as is certain from the inscription on his work, was an
-Ephesian.
-
-The equally renowned statue of the Apollo Belvedere, finely conceived
-and admirably modeled as it undoubtedly is, bears the stamp of artistic
-display which removes it from the style of the great classic works of
-sculpture.
-
-The history of Roman sculpture is soon told. If it have any real
-roots, they are to be traced in the ancient Etruscan; for all that was
-really characteristic in it as art is associated with that style, in
-that intense naturalism which became developed so strikingly in the
-production of portrait statues and busts, and in those great monumental
-works in bas-relief which are marked by the same strong feeling for
-descriptive representation of the most direct and realistic kind, upon
-their triumphal columns and arches.
-
-As has already been stated, early Roman sculpture, if such it can be
-called, was entirely the work of Etruscan artists, employed by the
-wealth of Rome to afford the citizens that display of pomp in their
-worship of the gods and the triumphs of their warriors which their
-ambition demanded. All important works were made of colossal size. Some
-of the early Roman (quasi Etruscan) statues spoken of by the historians
-are a bronze colossus of Jupiter, an Etruscan bronze colossus of
-Apollo, eighty feet high, in the Palatine Library of the temple of
-Augustus. A portrait statue of an orator in the toga, and a chimæra,
-both of bronze, are in the Florence Museum. Sculpture, from the love
-of it as a means of expressing the beautiful in the ideal form of the
-deities or the heroic and the pathetic of humanity, never existed as
-a growth of Roman civilization. The inclination of the Roman mind was
-toward social, municipal, and imperial system and ordering; in this
-direction the Romans were inventors and improvers upon that which they
-borrowed from the Greeks. But in art they began by hiring, and they
-ended by debasing the work of the hired.
-
-They took away the bronze statues of Greece as trophies of conquest,
-covered them with gold, and set them up in the palaces and public
-places of Rome. They subsidized the sculptors of Greece, who under
-Roman influence had fallen away from their high traditions; they did
-nothing for the sake of art, but simply manufactured, as it were,
-copies and imitations of Greek statues for their own use. Happily we
-have to be grateful for the fact, though we can not honor the motive.
-Had it not been for this bestowal of their wealth in the gratification
-of their taste for luxury and display, many of the renowned statues
-of ancient Greek art would have been known only by the vague mention
-of them by Pausanias and Pliny, or the early Christian writers of the
-Church, or the poetic allusions of the Greek anthologists and the Latin
-epigrammatists.
-
-The Column of Trajan was the great work of Apollodorus, the favorite
-architect of the emperor, dedicated A. D. 114. It is 10½ feet in
-diameter and 127 feet high, made of thirty-four blocks of white marble,
-twenty-three being in the shaft, nine in the base, which is finely
-sculptured, and two in the capital and _torus_. The reliefs at the base
-are smaller than those toward the top, being two feet high, increasing
-to nearly four as they approach the summit; this was, of course, to
-enable the more distant subjects to be seen equally well with the
-others, a singular illustration of the intensely practical turn of
-Roman art in its application. There are about 2,500 figures, not
-counting horses, representing the battles and sieges of the Dacian war.
-The column of M. Aurelius Antoninus, erected A. D. 174, is similar in
-height, but the sculptures, although in higher relief, are not so good.
-They represent the conquest of the Marcomans.
-
-The Augustan age (B. C. 36-A. D. 14), favorable as it was to
-literature, only contributed to the multiplying of copies of the Greek
-statues, such as we see in so many instances, some of which are of
-great excellence, and inestimable as reliable evidence of fine Greek
-sculpture. These copies were sometimes varied by the sculptor in some
-immaterial point of detail.
-
-Nero (A. D. 54-68) is said to have adorned his Golden House with no
-less than 500 statues, brought from Delphi. In the Baths of Titus,
-still in existence (they were built on the ground of the house and
-gardens of Mæcenas), many valuable statues have been discovered. The
-Arch of Titus furnishes an excellent example of bas-relief of that
-time, in it the golden candlestick and other spoils from the temple of
-Jerusalem are shown.
-
-Hadrian (A. D. 117-138) encouraged the reproduction of the Greek
-statues, with great success as regards execution, for his famous villa
-at Tivoli, and besides these are the statues of his favorite Antinous,
-which are the most original works of the time. Hadrian’s imperial
-and liberal promotion of sculpture, gave an immense impetus to the
-production of statues of every form. All the towns of Greece which he
-favored made bronze portrait statues of him, which were placed in the
-temple of Jupiter Olympius at Athens, and the enclosure round more than
-half a mile in extent was filled with its many statues.
-
-The learned Varro speaks of Arcesilaus as the sculptor of Venus
-Genetrix, in the forum of Cæsar, and of a beautiful marble group of
-Cupids playing with a lioness, some leading her, others beating her
-with their sandals, others offering her wine to drink from horns.
-
-Under the Antonines arose the outrageous fashion of representing noble
-Romans and their wives as deities, and this was carried so far that
-the men are not unfrequently nude as if heroic. The bas-reliefs on the
-arch of Septimus Severus at Rome, and that which goes by the name of
-Constantine—though made chiefly of reliefs belonging to one raised in
-honor of Trajan—show the poor condition of sculpture at that time. The
-numerous sarcophagi, some made by Greek sculptors for the Roman market,
-and others by those working at Rome, are other examples of the feeble
-style of imitators and workmen actuated by no knowledge or feeling of
-art. Some of these are still to be seen in the collections at Rome,
-with mythological subjects, the heads being left unfinished, so that
-the portraits of the family could be carved when required.
-
-The rule of Constantine was, however, far more disastrous to art as the
-seat of the Empire was removed to Byzantium. Most of the finest statues
-accumulated in Rome were removed there only to be lost forever in the
-plundering of wars and the fanatical rage of the Christian iconoclasts.
-While destroying the statues of the gods, they may have spared those
-which commemorated agonistic victors; but we may be sure that nearly
-all the works in metal which the Christians spared were melted down by
-the barbarous hordes of Gothic invaders, who under Alaric occupied the
-Morea about A. D. 395.
-
-With this glance at the complete decadence of art and the coming
-darkness that preceded its revival, we approach the subject of
-sculpture as connected with the rise of ecclesiastical religious art,
-which is necessarily reserved for further consideration.
-
-
-
-
-SELECTIONS FROM AMERICAN LITERATURE.
-
-
-BENJAMIN FRANKLIN.
-
- I recommend the study of Franklin to all young people;
- he was a real philanthropist, a wonderful man. It was
- said that it was honor enough to any one country to
- have produced such a man as Franklin.—_Sydney Smith._
-
- A man who makes a great figure in the learned world;
- and who would still make a greater figure for
- benevolence and candor were virtue as much regarded in
- this declining age as knowledge.—_Lord Kaimes._
-
- He was a great experimental philosopher, a consummate
- politician, and a paragon of common sense.—_Edinburgh
- Review._
-
- He has in no instance exhibited that false dignity by
- which science is kept aloof from common application;
- and he has sought rather to make her an useful inmate
- and servant in the common habitations of man, than
- to preserve her merely as an object of admiration in
- temples and palaces.—_Sir Humphrey Davy._
-
- His style has all the vigor, and even conciseness
- of Swift, without any of his harshness. It is in no
- degree more flowery, yet both elegant and lively.—_Lord
- Jeffrey._
-
- When he left Passy it seemed as if the village had lost
- its patriarch.—_Thomas Jefferson._
-
-
-Extracts From Poor Richard’s Almanac.
-
-“Love well, whip well.” “The proof of gold is fire; the proof of
-woman, gold; the proof of man, a woman.” “There is no little enemy.”
-“Necessity never made a good bargain.” “Three may keep a secret, if
-two of them are dead.” “Deny self for self’s sake.” “Keep thy shop,
-and thy shop will keep thee.” “Here comes the orator, with his flood
-of words and his drop of reason.” “Sal laughs at everything you say;
-why? because she has fine teeth.” “An old young man will be a young old
-man.” “He is no clown that drives the plow, but he that does clownish
-things.” “Diligence is the mother of good luck.” “Wealth is not his
-that has it, but his that enjoys it.” “He that can have patience can
-have what he will.” “Good wives and good plantations are made by good
-husbands.” “God heals, the doctor takes the fee.” “The noblest question
-in the world is, What good may I do in it?” “There are three faithful
-friends, an old wife, an old dog, and ready money.” “Who has deceived
-thee so oft as thyself?” “Fly pleasures, and they will follow you.”
-“Hast thou virtue? Acquire also the graces and beauties of virtue.”
-“Keep your eyes wide open before marriage; half shut afterward.”
-“As we must account for every idle word, so we must for every idle
-silence.” “Search others for their virtues, thyself for thy vices.”
-“Grace thou thy house, and let not that grace thee.” “Let thy child’s
-first lesson be obedience, and the second will be what thou will.”
-“Let thy discontents be thy secrets.” “Happy that nation, fortunate
-that age, whose history is not diverting.” “There are lazy minds, as
-well as lazy bodies.” “Tricks and treachery are the practice of fools,
-who have not wit enough to be honest.” “Let no pleasure tempt thee, no
-profit allure thee, no ambition corrupt thee, no example sway thee, no
-persuasion move thee, to do anything which thou knowest to be evil; so
-shalt thou always live jollily, for a good conscience is a continual
-Christmas.”
-
- “Altho’ thy teacher act not as he preaches,
- Yet ne’ertheless, if good, do what he teaches;
- Good counsel failing men may give, for why?
- He that’s aground knows where the shoal doth lie.
- My old friend Berryman, oft when alive,
- Taught others thrift, himself could never thrive.
- Thus like the whetstone, many men are wont
- To sharpen others while themselves are blunt.”
-
-
-Poetry for December, 1834.
-
- “He that for the sake of drink neglects his trade,
- And spends each night in taverns till ’tis late,
- And rises when the sun is four hours high,
- And ne’er regards his starving family,
- God in his mercy may do much to save him,
- But, woe to the poor wife, whose lot it is to have him.”
-
-
-An Astronomical Notice.
-
-During the first visible eclipse _Saturn_ is retrograde: for which
-reason the crabs will go sidelong, and the rope-makers backward.
-Mercury will have his share in these affairs, and so confound the
-speech of the people, that when a _Pennsylvanian_ would say _panther_,
-he shall say _painter_. When a _New Yorker_ thinks to say _this_, he
-shall say _diss_, and the people in _New England_ and _Cape May_ will
-not be able to say _cow_ for their lives, but will be forced to say
-_keow_, by a certain involuntary twist in the root of their tongues. No
-_Connecticut man_ nor _Marylander_ will be able to open his mouth this
-year but _sir_ shall be the first or last syllable he pronounces, and
-sometimes both. Brutes shall speak in many places, and there will be
-about seven and twenty irregular verbs made this year if grammar don’t
-interpose. Who can help these misfortunes? This year the stone-blind
-shall see but very little; the deaf shall hear but poorly; and the dumb
-sha’n’t speak very plain. As to old age, it will be incurable this
-year, because of the years past. And toward the fall some people will
-be seized with an unaccountable inclination to roast and eat their
-own ears: Should this be called madness, doctors? I think not. But
-the worst disease of all will be a most horrid, dreadful, malignant,
-catching, perverse, and odious malady, almost epidemical, insomuch that
-many shall seem mad upon it. I quake for very fear when I think on’t;
-for I assure you very few shall escape this disease, which is called by
-the learned Albromazer—_Lacko’mony_.
-
-
-GEORGE WASHINGTON.
-
- His papers which have been preserved show how he gained
- the power of writing correctly—always expressing
- himself with clearness and directness, often with
- felicity and grace.—_George Bancroft._
-
- No one who has not been in England can have an idea of
- the admiration expressed among all parties for General
- Washington.—_Rufus King, 1797._
-
- * * * The great central figure of that unparalleled
- group, that “noble army” of chieftains, sages,
- and patriots, by whom the revolution was
- accomplished.—_Edward Everett._
-
- He had in his composition a calm which gave him
- in moments of highest excitement the power
- of self-control, and enabled him to excel in
- patience.—_Bancroft._
-
-
-Account of the Battle of Trenton.
-
- HEADQUARTERS, MORRISTOWN, Dec. 27, 1776.
-
- _To the President of Congress_:
-
-SIR—I have the pleasure of congratulating you upon the success of an
-enterprise which I had formed against a detachment of the enemy lying
-in Trenton, and which was executed yesterday morning.
-
-The evening of the twenty-fifth I ordered the troops intended for this
-service to parade back of McKonkey’s ferry, that they might begin to
-pass as soon as it grew dark, imagining we should be able to throw them
-all over, with the necessary artillery, by twelve o’clock, and that we
-might easily arrive at Trenton by five in the morning, the distance
-being about nine miles. But the quantity of ice made that night impeded
-the passage of the boats so much that it was three o’clock before the
-artillery could all be got over; and near four before the troops took
-up their line of march.
-
-This made me despair of surprising the town, as I well knew we could
-not reach it before the day was fairly broke. But as I was certain
-there was no making a retreat without being discovered, and harassed on
-re-passing the river, I determined to push on at all events. I formed
-my detachment into two divisions, one to march by the lower or river
-road, the other by the upper or Pennington road. As the divisions had
-nearly the same distance to march, I ordered each of them, immediately
-upon forcing the out-guards, to push directly into the town, that they
-might charge the enemy before they had time to form.
-
-The upper division arrived at the enemy’s advanced post exactly at
-eight o’clock: and in three minutes after I found, from the fire on the
-lower road, that that division had also got up. The out-guards made but
-small opposition, though, for their numbers, they behaved very well,
-keeping up a constant retreating fire from behind houses. We presently
-saw their main body formed; but from their motions, they seemed
-undetermined how to act.
-
-Being hard pressed by our troops, who had already got possession of
-their artillery, they attempted to file off by a road on their right,
-leading to Princeton. But, perceiving their intention, I threw a body
-of troops in their way; which immediately checked them. Finding,
-from our disposition, that they were surrounded, and that they must
-inevitably be cut to pieces if they made any further resistance, they
-agreed to lay down their arms. The number that submitted in this manner
-was twenty-three officers and eight hundred and eighty-six men. Colonel
-Rahl, the commanding officer, and seven others, were found wounded in
-the town. I do not exactly know how many they had killed; but I fancy
-not above twenty or thirty, as they never made any regular stand. Our
-loss is very trifling indeed—only two officers and one or two privates
-wounded.
-
-I find that the detachment consisted of the three Hessian regiments of
-Lanspach, Kniphausen, and Rahl, amounting to about fifteen hundred men,
-and a troop of British light horse; but immediately upon the beginning
-of the attack, all those who were not killed or taken pushed directly
-down toward Bordentown. These would likewise have fallen into our hands
-could my plan have been completely carried into execution.
-
-General Ewing was to have crossed before day at Trenton ferry, and
-taken possession of the bridge leading out of town; but the quantity
-of ice was so great that, though he did every thing in his power to
-effect it, he could not get over. This difficulty also hindered General
-Cadwallader from crossing with the Pennsylvania militia from Bristol.
-He got part of his foot over; but finding it impossible to embark his
-artillery, he was obliged to desist.
-
-I am fully confident that, could the troops under Generals Ewing and
-Cadwallader have passed the river, I should have been able, with their
-assistance, to have driven the enemy from all their posts below
-Trenton. But the numbers I had with me being inferior to theirs below
-me, and a strong battalion of light infantry being at Princeton above
-me, I thought it most prudent to return the same evening with the
-prisoners and the artillery we had taken. We found no stores of any
-consequence in the town.
-
-In justice to the officers and men, I must add that their behavior upon
-this occasion reflects the highest honor upon them. The difficulty of
-passing the river in a very severe night, and their march through a
-violent storm of snow and hail, did not in the least abate their ardor;
-but when they came to the charge each seemed to vie with the other in
-pressing forward; and were I to give a preference to any particular
-corps I should do great injustice to the others.
-
-Colonel Baylor, my first aid-de-camp, will have the honor of delivering
-this to you; and from him you may be made acquainted with many other
-particulars. His spirited behavior upon every occasion requires me to
-recommend him to your particular notice.
-
-I have the honor to be, etc.,
-
- G. W.
-
-
-THOMAS JEFFERSON.
-
- As a composition, the Declaration [of Independence]
- is Mr. Jefferson’s. It is the production of his mind,
- and the high honor of it belongs to him clearly and
- absolutely. To say that he performed his great work
- well would be doing him an injustice. To say that
- he did excellently well, admirably well, would be
- inadequate and halting praise. Let us rather say
- that he so discharged the duty assigned him that all
- Americans may well rejoice that the work of drawing
- the title-deed of their liberties devolved upon
- him.—_Daniel Webster._
-
- After Washington and Franklin there is no person who
- fills so eminent a place among the great men of America
- as Jefferson.—_Lord Brougham._
-
-
-Washington.
-
-His mind was great and powerful, without being of the very first order;
-his penetration strong, though not so acute as that of a Newton, Bacon,
-or Locke; and as far as he saw, no judgment was ever sounder. It was
-slow in operation, being little aided by invention or imagination,
-but sure in conclusion. Hence the common remark of his officers, of
-the advantage he derived from councils of war, where, hearing all
-suggestions, he selected whatever was best; and certainly no general
-ever planned his battles more judiciously. But if deranged during the
-course of the action, if any member of his plan was dislocated by
-sudden circumstances, he was slow in a re-adjustment. The consequence
-was, that he often failed in the field, and rarely against an enemy
-in station, as at Boston and York. He was incapable of fear, meeting
-personal dangers with the calmest unconcern. Perhaps the strongest
-feature in his character was prudence, never acting until every
-circumstance, every consideration was maturely weighed; refraining
-if he saw a doubt, but when once decided, going through with his
-purpose, whatever obstacles opposed. His integrity was most pure, his
-justice the most inflexible I have ever known; no motives of interest
-or consanguinity, of friendship or hatred, being able to bias his
-decision. He was, indeed, in every sense of the word, a wise, a good,
-and a great man. His temper was naturally irritable and high-toned; but
-reflection and resolution had obtained a firm and habitual ascendency
-over it. If ever, however, it broke its bounds, he was most tremendous
-in his wrath. In his expenses he was honorable, but exact; liberal in
-contributions to whatever promised utility; but frowning and unyielding
-on all visionary projects, and all unworthy calls on his charity.
-His heart was not warm in its affections; but he exactly calculated
-every man’s value, and gave him a solid esteem proportioned to it.
-His person, you know, was fine, his stature exactly what one would
-wish; his deportment easy, erect, and noble, the best horseman of his
-age, and the most graceful figure that could be seen on horseback.
-Although in the circle of his friends, where he might be unreserved
-with safety, he took a free share in conversation, his colloquial
-talents were not above mediocrity, possessing neither copiousness of
-ideas nor fluency of words. In public, when called on for a sudden
-opinion, he was unready, short, and embarrassed. Yet he wrote readily,
-rather diffusely, in an easy and correct style. This he had acquired
-by conversation with the world, for his education was merely reading,
-writing, and common arithmetic, to which he added surveying at a
-later day. His time was employed in action chiefly, reading little,
-and that only in agriculture and English history. His correspondence
-became necessarily extensive, and with journalizing his agricultural
-proceedings, occupied most of his leisure hours within doors. On the
-whole, his character was, in its mass, perfect, in nothing bad, in a
-few points indifferent; and it may truly be said, that never did nature
-and fortune combine more completely to make a man great, and to place
-him in the same constellation with whatever worthies have merited from
-man an everlasting remembrance. For his was the singular destiny and
-merit of leading the armies of his country successfully through an
-arduous war, for the establishment of its independence; of conducting
-its councils through the birth of a government, new in its forms and
-principles, until it had settled down into a quiet and orderly train;
-and of scrupulously obeying the laws through the whole of his career,
-civil and military, of which the history of the world furnishes no
-other example.
-
-
-THOUGHTS FROM WILLIAM ELLERY CHANNING.
-
-ON BOOKS.—It is chiefly through books that we enjoy intercourse with
-superior minds and these invaluable means of communication are in the
-reach of all. In the best books great men talk to us, give us their
-most precious thoughts, and pour their souls into ours.
-
-God be thanked for books! They are the voices of the distant and the
-dead, and make us heirs of the spiritual life of past ages.
-
-Books are the true levelers. They give to all who will faithfully use
-them, the society, the spiritual presence of the best and greatest of
-our race. No matter how poor I am. No matter though the prosperous of
-my time will not enter my obscure dwelling. If the sacred writers will
-enter and take up their abode under my roof, if Milton will cross my
-threshhold to sing to me of paradise, and Shakspere to open to me the
-worlds of imagination and the workings of the human heart, and Franklin
-to enrich me with his practical wisdom, I shall not pine for want of
-intellectual companionship, and I may become a cultivated man, though
-excluded from what is called the best society in the place where I live.
-
-ON LABOR.—Manual labor is a great good, but only in its just
-proportions. In excess it does great harm. It is not a good when
-made the sole work of life. It must be joined with higher means of
-improvement or it degrades instead of exalting. Man has a various
-nature which requires a variety of occupation and discipline for its
-growth. Study, meditation, society, and relaxation should be mixed up
-with his physical toil. He has intellect, heart, imagination, taste, as
-well as bones and muscles; and he is grievously wronged when compelled
-to exclusive drudgery for bodily subsistence.
-
-ON POLITICS.—To govern one’s self (not others) is true glory. To serve
-through love, not to rule, is Christian greatness. Office is not
-dignity. The lowest men, because most faithless in principle, most
-servile to opinion, are to be found in office. I am sorry to say it,
-but the truth should be spoken, that, at the present moment, political
-action in this country does little to lift up any who are concerned
-in it. It stands in opposition to a high morality. Politics, indeed,
-regarded as the study and pursuit of the true, enduring good of a
-community, as the application of great unchangeable principles to
-public affairs, is a noble sphere of thought and action, but politics,
-in its common sense, or considered as the invention of temporary
-shifts, as the playing of a subtle game, as the tactics of party for
-gaining power and the spoils of office, and for elevating one set of
-men above another is a paltry and debasing concern.
-
-ON SELF-DENIAL.—To deny ourselves is to deny, to withstand, to renounce
-whatever, within or without, interferes with our conviction of right,
-or with the will of God. It is to suffer, to make sacrifice, for duty
-or our principles. The question now offers itself: What constitutes
-the singular merit of this suffering? Mere suffering, we all know, is
-not virtue. Evil men often endure pain as well as the good and are
-evil still. This, and this alone, constitutes the worth and importance
-of the sacrifice, suffering, which enters into self-denial, that it
-springs from and manifests moral strength, power over ourselves, force
-of purpose, or the mind’s resolute determination of itself to duty.
-It is the proof and result of inward energy. Difficulty, hardship,
-suffering, sacrifices, are tests and measures of moral force and the
-great means of its enlargement. To withstand these is the same thing
-as to put forth power. Self-denial then is the will acting with power
-in the choice and prosecution of duty. Here we have the distinguishing
-glory of self-denial, and here we have the essence and distinction of a
-good and virtuous man.
-
-ON PLEASURE.—The first means of placing a people beyond the temptations
-to intemperance is to furnish them with the means of innocent
-pleasure. By innocent pleasures I mean such as excite moderately;
-such as produce a cheerful frame of mind, not boisterous mirth; such
-as refresh, instead of exhausting, the system; such as are chastened
-by self-respect, and are accompanied with the consciousness that life
-has a higher end than to be amused. In every community there _must_
-be pleasures, relaxations and means of agreeable excitement; and if
-innocent ones are not furnished, resort will be had to criminal. Men
-drink to excess very often to shake off depression, or to satisfy
-the restless thirst for agreeable excitement, and these motives
-are excluded in a cheerful community. A gloomy state of society in
-which there are few innocent recreations, may be expected to abound
-in drunkenness if opportunities are afforded. The savage drinks to
-excess because his hours of sobriety are dull and unvaried, because
-in losing consciousness of his condition and his existence he loses
-little which he wishes to retain. The laboring classes are most exposed
-to intemperance, because they have at present few other pleasurable
-excitements. A man, who, after toil, has resources of blameless
-recreation is less tempted than other men to seek self-oblivion. He has
-too many of the pleasures of the man to take up those of the brute.
-
- [End of Required Reading for November.]
-
-
-
-
-AUTUMN SYMPATHY.
-
-By E. G. CHARLESWORTH.
-
-
- The primrose and the violet,
- The bloom on apricot and peach,
- The marriage-song of larks in heights,
- The south wind and the swallow’s nest;
- All born of spring, I once loved best.
-
- But now the dying leaf and flower,
- The frost wind moaning in the pane,
- The robin’s plaintive latter song,
- The early sunset in the west;
- All born of autumn, I love best.
-
- Tell me, my heart, the reason why
- Thy pulse thus beats with things that die;
- Is it thine own autumnal sheaves?
- Is it thine own dead fallen leaves?
-
- —_London Sunday Magazine._
-
-
-
-
-REPUBLICAN PROSPECTS IN FRANCE.
-
-By JOSEPH REINACH.
-
-
-On the very morrow of Gambetta’s death, and when that catastrophe had
-been interpreted by the immense majority of European opinion, as also
-by many Frenchmen, as the certain presage of the approaching triumph
-of advanced Radicalism—triumph to be followed by violent interior
-discords that would infallibly bring about the fall of the Republic and
-the re-establishment either of Empire or of Royalty—I said that these
-predictions would not be realized, and, moreover, that Gambetta’s death
-would but serve to hasten the triumph of his political ideas and party.
-I will cite, word for word, what I wrote at the end of January in a
-paper that appeared in this Review on February 1:
-
-“We even believe we may predict that the realization of several of
-Gambetta’s ideas will meet with fewer obstacles, at least among a
-certain fraction of public opinion, to-morrow than yesterday. A
-formidable reaction will take place in favor of the great statesman
-whom we weep, a reaction in favor of his theories and his principles.
-In short, we shall most likely witness the contrary of what has taken
-place for some years. It was enough that Gambetta should defend a
-theory for it to be attacked with fury. From henceforth it will often
-suffice that an idea was formerly held up by Gambetta for it to be
-enthusiastically acclaimed. As in the story of Cid Campeador, it is his
-corpse that leads his followers to victory.”
-
-What I foretold six months ago has been fulfilled in every point. Those
-very Castilians who during Cid’s lifetime suspected him of the darkest
-designs and reviled him as a criminal—what did they do after his death?
-They put the hero’s corpse in an iron coffin, and the black gravecloth
-on the bier was the standard which, in the front rank of battle, led
-the Spanish army to victory. And so has it been, or nearly so, with
-French Republicans and Gambetta. The political history of our country
-during the last six months may be thus summed up: Out of Gambetta’s
-death-bed has arisen a first (not complete) victory for his ideas and
-friends; from the party more specially organized by him have been
-chosen most men now in office, that they may execute his will.
-
-As a matter of fact, just after the excitement of the first few days,
-as soon as it became necessary for the Republicans to unite and stop
-the Royalists who thought the fruit already ripe, what ministers did
-the President of the Republic call for? M. Jules Ferry, who for the
-last five years had been, if not the direct coadjutor, at least the
-most invariable and faithful political ally of Gambetta, was made Prime
-Minister; M. Waldeck-Rousseau, the late Minister for Home Affairs under
-Gambetta, and M. Raynal, the late Minister of Public Works, were both
-recalled to the same offices. M. Challemel-Lacour, Gambetta’s most
-esteemed and devoted friend, was named Minister of Foreign Affairs, and
-M. Martin Feuillèe, Under-Secretary of State for Justice on November
-14, Minister of Justice; M. Margue, Under-Secretary of State for Home
-Affairs, resumed the same post. General Campenon could have been
-Minister of War had he wished it. And a great pity it is he declined
-his friends’ proposals. Thus, in its general bearings, the Ferry
-Ministry is the Gambetta Ministry without Gambetta.
-
-Except some secondary modifications made necessary by the change of
-circumstances, the political program is about the same. Abroad an
-active and steady diplomacy, the regular development of our colonial
-politics, the consolidation of the protectorate in Tunis; at home
-the constitution of a strong government, the methodical realization
-of social and democratic reforms, the policy of _scrutin de liste_,
-whilst awaiting the abolition of _scrutin d’arrondissement_. The
-principal bills adopted last session, except the Magistracy bill, are
-but legacies from the Gambetta Cabinet. Both cabinets are animated by
-the same national spirit—national above all, but also progressist and
-governmental. The halo imparted by the presence of a man of genius
-is certainly wanting; but Carlyle’s _hero-worship_ is by no means a
-democratic necessity. There is certainly reason for rejoicing when a
-nation acknowledges and appreciates in one of its sons, sprung from its
-midst, an intellect of the highest order. But when Alexander leaves
-lieutenants profoundly imbued with his spirit, formed in his school,
-most desirous and capable of continuing his work—when these men,
-instead of being at variance, remain, on the contrary, more strongly
-bound together than ever—there is certainly no reason for complaining
-and giving way to discouragement.
-
-Then it is not only in parliament that the _opportunist_ policy is
-again getting the upper hand. Throughout the whole country it has
-regained the ground it had lost by the intrigues of hostile parties.
-The great majority of Republicans have now recovered from a number of
-diseases for which Gambetta had always prescribed the remedy—remedy,
-alas! that too many refused to stretch out their hand for. The mania
-for decentralization is forgotten. The necessity for a strongly
-constituted and vigorous central power is almost universally understood
-and acknowledged. Demagogue charlatans are for the most part unmasked.
-Our foreign policy is steadier—we are no longer afraid of Egyptian
-shadows. Intransigeants of the Right and Left still continue to see
-in our colonial enterprises but vulgar jobbing, and to denounce and
-revile them in every possible way. But the great mass of the nation
-is no longer to be made a fool of, and has understood the necessity
-of extending France beyond the seas. There is a story of an English
-peasant who locked the stable door after the horse had been stolen.
-Happily for France she has several horses in her stables. If she has
-lost, at least for a time, her beautiful Arabian steed on the borders
-of the Nile, that is but an additional reason for taking jealous care
-of the others.—_The Nineteenth Century._
-
- * * * * *
-
-IN 404 Honorius was emperor. At that time, in the remote deserts of
-Libya, there dwelt an obscure monk named Telemachus. He had heard of
-the awful scenes in the far-off Coliseum at Rome. Depend upon it, they
-lost nothing by their transit across the Mediterranean in the hands of
-Greek and Roman sailors. In the baths and market-places of Alexandria,
-in the Jewries of Cyrene, in the mouths of every itinerant Eastern
-story-teller, the festive massacres of the Coliseum would doubtless be
-clothed in colors truly appalling, yet scarcely more appalling than the
-truth.
-
-Telemachus brooded over these horrors till his mission dawned upon
-him. He was ordained by heaven to put an end to the slaughter of
-human beings in the Coliseum. He made his way to Rome. He entered
-the Coliseum with the throng, what time the gladiators were parading
-in front of the emperor with uplifted swords and the wild mockery of
-homage—“_Morituri te salutant._” Elbowing his way to the barrier, he
-leapt over at the moment when the combatants rushed at each other,
-threw himself between them, bidding them, in the name of Christ, to
-desist. To blank astonishment succeeded imperial contempt and popular
-fury. Telemachus fell slain by the swords of the gladiators. Legend
-may adorn the tale and fancy fill out the picture, but the solid fact
-remains—_there never was another gladiatorial fight in the Coliseum_.
-One heroic soul had caught the flow of public feeling that had already
-begun to set in the direction of humanity, and turned it. He had
-embodied by his act and consecrated by his death the sentiment that
-already lay timidly in the hearts of thousands in that great city
-of Rome. In 430 an edict was passed abolishing forever gladiatorial
-exhibitions.—_Good Words._
-
- * * * * *
-
-ALL merit ceases the moment we perform an act for the sake of its
-consequences. Truly in this respect “we have our reward.”—_Wilhelm von
-Humboldt._
-
-
-
-
-CHAUTAUQUA TO CALIFORNIA.
-
-By FRANCES E. WILLARD, President N. W. C. T. U.
-
-
-I.
-
-I.—SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA.
-
-In one thing Chautauqua and California are alike—each is a climax, and
-both are “made up of every creature’s best.” My sufficient consolation
-for missing one of them this year is, that I saw the other. Let us
-speed onward, then, taking Chautauqua as our point of departure, in a
-Pickwickian sense only, unless for the further reason that it has the
-high prerogative of making all its happy denizens believe it to be
-the center of gravity (and good times) for one planet at least; the
-meridian from which all fortunate longitude is reckoned and all lucky
-time-pieces set. Our swift train, “outward bound,” races along through
-the old familiar East and the West no longer new.
-
- “Through the kingdoms of corn,
- Through the empires of grain,
- Through dominions of forest;
- Drives the thundering train;
- Through fields where God’s cattle
- Are turned out to grass,
- And his poultry whirl up
- From the wheels as we pass;
- Through level horizons as still as the moon
- With the wilds fast asleep and the winds in a swoon.”
-
-From a palace car with every eastern luxury, we gaze out on the
-dappled, pea-green hills of New Mexico and the wide, empty stretches
-of Arizona, stopping in Santa Fe—Columbia’s Damascus, in Albuquerque—a
-pocket edition of Chicago, and in Tucson—the storm-center of
-semi-tropic trade. But the “W. C. T. U.” is a plant of healing as
-indigenous to every soil for good as the saloon for evil, and in the
-first city the Governor’s wife has accepted leadership; in the second
-that place is held by a lovely Ohio girl, the wife of a young lawyer;
-and in the third a leading woman of society and church work, whose
-husband is one of Arizona’s most honored pioneers, consents to be our
-standard-bearer. These way-side errands, with their delightful new
-friendships and tender gospel lessons over, we hasten on to California.
-Some token of its affluent beauty comes to us on Easter Sabbath in the
-one hundred calla-lilies sent from Los Angeles, five hundred miles
-beyond, to adorn the church where we worship in Tucson, that marvelous
-oasis in the desert. “Go on, and God be with you,” says the friend who
-escorts us to the train; “you’ll find Los Angeles a heaven on earth.”
-And so, indeed, we did, coming up out of the wilderness on a soft
-spring day, between fair, emerald hills that stood as the fore-runners
-of the choicest land on which were ever mirrored the glory and the
-loveliness of God.
-
-We visited the thirty leading centers of interest and activity in the
-great Golden State during the two months of our stay, but when the
-courteous mayor of this “city of the angels” welcomed us thither,
-and children heaped about us their baskets of flowers, rare, save
-in California, we told “His Honor” that of all the towns we had yet
-visited—and they number a thousand at least—his was the one most fitly
-named.
-
-Southern California, and this its exquisite metropolis, have been a
-terra incognita even to the intelligent, until the steam horse lately
-caracoled this way. Now it is thronged by emigrants and tourists, men
-and women of small means reaping from half a dozen acres here what a
-large farm in Illinois could hardly yield, and invalids hitherto only
-an expense to their friends, finding the elixir of life in this balmy
-air, and joyously joining once more the energetic working forces of
-the world. Flowers are so plenty here that banks and pyramids alone
-can satisfy the claims of decorative art; baskets of roses are more
-frequent than bouquets or even _boutonnieres_ with us. Heliotropes and
-fuchsias climb to the apex of the roof, while the common garden trees
-are oranges, lemons, limes, citrons, figs, olives and pomegranates.
-Strawberry short-cake can be had all the year round from the fresh
-fruit of one’s own garden, and oranges at the rate of nine thousand
-to one tree, and in some cases fifteen inches in circumference, have
-been raised in this vicinity. Riverside and Pasadena are adjacent
-colonies and bear a stronger resemblance to one’s ideal Garden of Eden
-than any other places I ever expect to see. Through groves of rarest
-semi-tropic fruit trees you ride for miles, in the midst of beautiful,
-modern homes, for the American renaissance is not more manifest in the
-suburbs of Boston or Chicago than in Southern California. Fences are
-nowhere visible, the Monterey cypress furnishing a hedge which puts
-to blush the choicest of old England; the pepper tree with drooping
-branches, and the Australian gum tree, tall and umbrageous, outlining
-level avenues whose vistas seem unending. Above all this are skies
-that give back one’s best Italian memories, and for a background the
-tranquil amplitude of the Sierra Madre Mountains. What would you more?
-“See Naples and die” is an outworn phrase. “See California and live”
-has been the magic formula of how many restored and happy pilgrims! The
-tonic of cold water has electrified this soil, seven years ago an utter
-desert, so that now three years of growth will work a transformation
-that fifteen would fail to bring about east of the Mississippi. To
-my thinking this result is but a material prototype of the heavenly
-estate that shall come to our America when its arid waste of brains
-and stomachs, usurped by alcohol, shall learn the cooling virtues of
-this same cold water. In Riverside my host planted in May of 1880,
-two thousand grape cuttings (not roots, remember), and in September,
-1881, gathered from them two hundred boxes of grapes. Pasadena was
-founded by a good man from Maine, and is exempt from saloons by the
-provisions of its charter. Here, from six acres, a gentleman realized
-thirteen hundred dollars, clear of all expenses, last year, by drying
-and sacking his grapes, instead of sending them to the winery. “The
-profits were so much larger that hereafter his pocket-book will counsel
-him, if not his conscience, to keep clear of the wine trade,” said the
-wide awake temperance woman who gave me the item. In Pasadena, Mrs.
-Jennie C. Carr, whose fruit ranche and gardens, largely tilled by her
-own hands, disclose every imaginable variety which the most extravagant
-climate can produce, sells at three thousand dollars per acre, land
-purchased by her for a mere song six years ago. In Santa Ana and San
-Bernardino, also near Los Angeles, there is the same luxuriance and
-swift moving life. A county superintendent of schools told me he had
-one school district that includes 160 miles of railroad, and has a town
-of 800 people, where three months ago there was silence and vacancy.
-At San Diego, the most southerly town in California, we found the _ne
-plus ultra_ of climate for consumptives, its temperature ranging from
-fifty-five to seventy-five degrees, and its air dry. San Diego is
-the oldest town in the State, having been established as a Catholic
-“Mission” in 1769. It is now altogether modernized and is Nature’s own
-sanitarium, besides being a lovely land-locked harbor of the Pacific.
-Santa Barbara, which we missed seeing, has a grape vine sixty years
-old, and a foot through, which in 1867 bore six tons of grapes, some
-of whose clusters weighed five pounds each. The railroad will soon
-make this beautiful town accessible to rapid tourists to whom the
-ocean is unkind. Twenty-one missions were founded over a century ago
-by Franciscan friars in Southern California. They brought with them
-from Spain the orange and the vine. They were conquerors, civilizers,
-subduers of the soil. They brought cattle, horses, sheep, and—alas!
-hogs. They conquered the land for Spain without cruelty, baptizing
-the Indians into the church and teaching them the arts of peace. Then
-followed the Mexican, then our own conquest of their territory, and now
-the Anglo-Saxon reigns supreme in a land on which Nature has lavished
-all she had to give. Upon his victory over the alcohol habit, depends
-the future of this goodly heritage. If he raises grapes he will
-survive; if he turns them into wine he must succumb.
-
-
-II.—SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY.
-
-We crossed the famous and dangerous “Tehachapi Pass” at night, and
-wended our way slowly through this notable valley, three hundred miles
-in length by thirty-five in width, stopping to found the W. C. T. U. in
-its four chief towns, Fresno, Tulare, Merced, and Modesto.
-
-Irrigation is the watchword here, and as it takes capitalists to carry
-this through on a scale so immense, large farms are now the rule. For
-instance, we passed over one seventy-three miles in length by twenty in
-width. Later on, it is to be hoped these immense proprietaries may be
-settled by men whose primary object is to establish and maintain homes.
-At present, in the agricultural line, “big enterprises” are alone
-attractive. “Alfalfa,” a peculiarly hardy and luxuriant clover—imported
-by Governor Bigler from Chili—is the first crop, and grazing precedes
-grain. This plant “strikes its roots six feet or more into the soil,
-and never requires a second planting, while every year there are five
-crops of alfalfa and but two of wheat and barley.”
-
-Varied indeed is the population of this valley. One day we dine with a
-practical woman from Massachusetts, who declares that the sand storms,
-which most people consider the heaviest discount on the valley, are
-“really not so bad, for they polish off the house floors as nothing
-else could.” The next we meet a group of earnest, motherly hearts from
-a dozen different States, and almost as many religious denominations,
-united to “provide for the common defense” of home against saloon. Next
-day a lawyer from Charleston invites us to his cozy residence, “because
-his wife knows some of our Southern leaders in the W. C. T. U.” The
-next we make acquaintance with half a dozen school ma’ams from the
-East, who have taken a ranche and set up housekeeping for themselves;
-and in the fourth town visited an Englishman born in Auckland, New
-Zealand, the leading criminal lawyer of the county, and instigator of
-the woman’s crusade in Oakland, who gives us a graphic description of
-that movement, which was a far-off echo of the Ohio pentecost.
-
-So we move on at the rate of two meetings a day, with the hearty
-support of the united clergy (except the Episcopal, and often they
-helped us, too), and the warm coöperation of the temperance societies,
-emerging in San Francisco, Monday, April 16, 1883.
-
-
-III.—SAN FRANCISCO.
-
-I am glad we did not so far forget ourselves as to arrive on Sunday,
-for it appears that certain good, gifted, and famous persons, who shall
-be nameless, telegraphed to certain Christian leaders of their intended
-arrival on that day, and received answer: “The hour of your coming will
-find us at church. The Palace is the best hotel.” Now on an overland
-trip, an absent-minded traveler might fail to note the precise date
-of his arrival in the metropolis of the Pacific, but that would be no
-excuse to our guid folk yonder, whose Sunday laws have been smitten
-from their statute books, and Christians hold themselves to strict
-account for their example, which now alone conserves the Christian’s
-worship and the poor man’s rest.
-
-San Francisco is probably the most cosmopolitan city now extant. Its
-three hundred thousand people sound the gamut of nationality in the
-most varying and dissonant chorus that ever greeted human ears. The
-struggle for survival is an astonishing mixture of fierceness and
-good-nature. Crowding along the streets, Irish and Chinaman, New
-Englander and Negro, show kind consideration, but in the marts of
-trade and at the polls “their guns are ballots, their bullets are
-ideas.” Old-time asperities are softening, however, even on these
-battlegrounds. The trend is upward, toward higher levels of hope and
-brotherhood. Eliminate the alcohol and opium habits, and all these
-would (and will ere long) dwell together in unity. Lives like those
-of Rev. Dr. Otis Gibson, and Mrs. Captain Goodall, invested for the
-Christianizing of the Chinese, or like that of Mrs. Sarah B. Cooper,
-devoted to kindergartening the embryo “hoodlum,” or that of Dr. R. H.
-McDonald, the millionaire philanthropist, consecrated to the temperance
-reform, are mighty prophecies of the good time coming.
-
-San Francisco is the city of bay windows, and its people, beyond any
-other on this continent, believe in sunshine and fresh air. In like
-manner, they are fond of ventilating every subject, are in nowise
-afraid of the next thing simply because it is the next, but have broad
-hospitality for new ideas. Rapid as the heel taps of its street life
-is the movement of its thought and the flame of its sympathy. Much as
-has been said in its dispraise, Mount Diablo—the chief feature of its
-environs—is not so symbolic of its spirit as the white tomb of Thomas
-Starr King, which, standing beside one of its busiest streets, is a
-perpetual reminder of noble power conserved for noblest use. Everybody
-knows San Francisco’s harbor is without a rival save Puget Sound and
-Constantinople. Everybody has heard of its “Palace Hotel,” the largest
-in the world, and one that includes “eighteen acres of floor;” of
-its “endless chain” street cars, the inevitable outgrowth of dire
-necessity in its up-hill streets; of its indescribable “Chinatown;” of
-“Seal Rock,” with its monster sea-lions, gamboling and howling year
-out and year in, for herein are the salient features of the strange
-city’s individuality. For a metropolis but thirty-four years old,
-the following record is unrivaled: Total value of real and personal
-property, $253,000,000; school property, $1,000,000; 130,000 buildings;
-11,000 streets; 12 street car lines; 33 libraries and reading-rooms; 38
-hospitals; 316 benevolent societies; 168 newspapers, and—the best fire
-department in the world!
-
-The two drawbacks of this wonderful city are its variable climate and
-its possible earthquakes. A witty writer warns the intending tourist
-thus: “Be sure to bring your _summer_ clothes. Let me repeat: be sure
-to bring your _winter_ clothes.” To state the fact that in August
-one may see fur cloaks any day, and in January a June toilet is not
-uncommon, is but another way of stating that the galloping sea breeze,
-unimpeded by mountains, rushes in moist squadrons on the shore, and
-has all seasons for its own, in which to battle with the genial warmth
-of this most lovely climate. As to earthquakes, there have been but
-three since 1849, and these were insignificant calamities compared
-with one year of our domesticated western tornadoes. Less than fifty
-lives have been lost in California by earthquakes, thirty-seven of
-these occurring in the country outside of San Francisco, and less than
-a hundred thousand dollars worth of property has been destroyed, while
-two millions would not cover our loss by cyclone in a single year,
-to say nothing of the number of victims. Civilization seems to have
-a naturalizing effect on fleas, snakes and earthquakes, west of the
-Sierras, but acts as a tonic upon hurricanes east of the Rockies. Will
-our scientists please “rise to explain” this mystery so close in its
-relation to human weal and woe?
-
- [To be continued.]
-
-
-
-
-TO MY BOOKS.
-
-By LADY STIRLING-MAXWELL.
-
-
- Silent companions of the lonely hour,
- Friends, who can never alter or forsake,
- Who for inconstant roving have no power,
- And all neglect, perforce, must calmly take,
- Let me return to you; this turmoil ending
- Which worldly cares have in my spirit wrought,
- And, o’er your old familiar pages bending,
- Refresh my mind with many a tranquil thought:
- Till, haply meeting there, from time to time,
- Fancies, the audible echo of my own,
- ’Twill be like hearing in a foreign clime
- My native language spoke in friendly tone,
- And with a sort of welcome I shall dwell
- On these, my unripe musings, told so well.
-
-
-
-
-EARTHQUAKES—ISCHIA AND JAVA.
-
-
-PHENOMENA AND PROBABLE CAUSES.
-
-These violent convulsions that from time to time shake and rend the
-earth, are among the most terrible calamities that come upon men,
-causing immense destruction of property and of life. Their occurrence
-is often most unexpected.
-
-Villages, cities, and whole districts of densely populated countries
-sink beneath a sudden stroke, overwhelmed in a common ruin. If any
-warning is given, the alarming premonitions rather confuse and paralyze
-effort, because, with the appalling certainty of disaster, there is
-nothing to show in what form it will come, or to indicate a place of
-refuge.
-
-While the recent horrors at Ischia and in Java excite much painful
-interest in the public mind, they naturally recall similar scenes
-of other years. Earthquakes of less destructive violence are very
-frequent, and suggest greater power than is exerted. Even the slight
-trembling, or vibratory motions, that produce no material injury,
-remind us of the prodigious forces that may at any moment burst their
-barriers with great violence.
-
-In every perceptible shock we feel the mighty pulsations of the
-agitated molten mass whose waves dash against the walls that restrain
-them; or the struggling of compressed elastic gases, that must have
-vent, though their escape rend the earth. The crust between us and the
-seas of fire, whose extent no man knoweth, may be in places weakening,
-cut away, as the inner walls of a furnace by the molten metal; so the
-danger may be nearer and greater than is known or feared. A devout
-man finds refuge and a comfortable assurance in the truth, “The Lord
-reigneth; in his hands are the deep places of the earth. The strength
-of the hills is his also.”
-
-There are records of earthquakes more ancient than any books written
-by men. They antedate the earliest chapters of human history, and
-probably belonged to the pre-adamite earth. If no human ear heard their
-tread, the footprints are still visible. In all mountainous regions
-the evidence of their upheaval by some mighty force is too plain to be
-doubted. The marine fossils found far up on their heights, the position
-of strata, often far from horizontal, with immense fissures, and chasms
-of unknown depth, all tell of disturbances that may have taken place
-before the historic period. If in those primitive times mountains were
-literally carried into the midst of the sea, and vast tracts of the
-ocean’s bed shoved up thousands of feet, it was only a more terrible
-display of the gigantic powers still in action, and of whose workings
-the centuries have borne witness.
-
-No country seems to have escaped these terrible visitations, though
-some suffer more than others. Volcanoes being of the same origin, they
-are more frequent in volcanic regions, and perhaps by their shocks the
-seething caldrons have been uncovered.
-
-The same localities, as Southern Italy, and the neighboring island of
-Sicily, have, from a remote period, at times been terribly shaken. From
-1783 to 1786 a thousand shocks were made note of, five hundred of which
-are described as having much force. Lyell considers them of special
-importance, not because differing from like disturbances in other
-places, but because observed and minutely described by men competent to
-collect and state such physical facts in a way to show their bearing on
-the science of the earth. The following, collected from Lyell, Gibbon,
-Humboldt, and the encyclopædias, are facts respecting some of the
-principal earthquakes on record. Their statements, much condensed, are
-not given in chronological order, but as we find them:
-
-In 115, of the Christian era, Antioch in Syria, “Queen of the East,”
-beautiful in itself, and beautiful for situation, a city of two hundred
-thousand inhabitants, was utterly ruined by earthquake. Afterward
-rebuilt, in more than all its ancient splendor, by Trajan, the tide of
-life and wealth again flowed into it, and for centuries we read of no
-serious disasters of the kind. All apprehension of danger removed, the
-people became famous for luxurious refinements, and, strangely enough,
-seem to have united high intellectual qualities with a passionate
-fondness for amusements. In 458 the city was again terribly shaken,
-and twice in the sixth century. Each time the destruction was nearly
-complete; but each time, in less than a century, the city was restored
-again, but only to stand until 1822, and from that overthrow it has
-never recovered, being now a miserable town of only six thousand
-inhabitants. The destruction of five populous cities, on one site,
-involved a fearful loss of life. Probably more than half a million
-thus perished. The most destructive earthquake in that, or any other
-locality, of which we find any mention, was in 562. An immense number
-of strangers being in attendance at the festival of the Ascension,
-added to the multitudes belonging to the city. Gibbon estimates that
-two hundred and fifty thousand persons were buried in the ruins.
-
-Among the earliest accounts of earthquakes having particular interest,
-is the familiar one of that which destroyed Herculaneum and Pompeii
-in the year 63—about sixteen years before those cities were buried in
-scoria and ashes from Vesuvius.
-
-Of modern earthquakes three or four are here mentioned as presenting
-some interesting phenomena. That of Chili, in 1822, caused the
-permanent elevation of the country between the Andes and the coast. The
-area thus raised is estimated at one hundred thousand square miles, and
-the elevation from two to seven feet. Shore lines, at higher levels,
-indicate several previous upheavals of the same region, along about the
-same lines. The opposite of this, a depression of land, was occasioned
-in the island of Jamaica in 1692, when Port Royal, the capital, was
-overwhelmed. A thousand acres or more thus sank in less than one
-minute, the sea rolling in and driving the vessels that were in the
-harbor over the tops of the houses.
-
-The earthquake of New Madrid, below St. Louis, on the Mississippi,
-was in 1811, and interesting as an instance of successive shocks, and
-almost incessant quaking of the ground for months, and at a distance
-from any volcano. The agitation of the earth in Missouri continued
-till near the time of the destruction of the city of Caracas, in South
-America, and then ceased. One evening, about this time, is described by
-the inhabitants of New Madrid as cloudless, and peculiarly brilliant.
-The western sky was a continual glare from vivid flashes of lightning,
-and peals of thunder were incessantly heard, apparently proceeding,
-as did the flashes, from below the horizon. Comparatively little harm
-was done in Missouri, but the beautiful city of Caracas, with its
-splendid churches and palatial homes, was made a heap of ruins, beneath
-which twelve thousand of its inhabitants were buried. Just how these
-events were related we know not. Whether the same pent-up forces that
-were struggling in vain to escape in the valley of the Mississippi,
-found vent in that distant locality, God only knows. The supposition
-allowed may account for the relief that came to the greatly troubled
-New Madrid. The evils they dreaded came but in part—enough only to
-suggest the greater perils they escaped. Over an extent of country
-three hundred miles in length fissures were opened in the ground
-through which mud and water were thrown, high as the tops of the trees.
-From the mouth of the Ohio to the St. Francis the ground rose and fell
-in great undulations. Lakes were formed and drained again, and the
-general surface so lowered that the country along the White River and
-its tributaries, for a distance of seventy miles, is known as “the sunk
-country.” Flint, the geographer, seven years after the event, noticed
-hundreds of chasms then closed and partially filled. They may yet, in
-places, be traced, having the appearance of artificial trenches.
-
-Fissures are occasionally met in different parts of the country, which
-extend through solid rock to a great depth. “The Rocks” at Panama, N.
-Y., have been elsewhere described, and furnish a profitable study.
-
-A more remarkable chasm of this kind extends from the western base of
-the Shawangunk Mountain, near Ellenville, Ulster County, N. Y., for
-about a mile to the summit. At first one can easily step across the
-fissure, but further up it becomes wider, till the hard vertical walls
-of sandstone are separated by a gorge several feet wide, and of great
-depth. At the top an area of a hundred acres or more is rent in every
-direction, the continuity of the surface being interrupted by steps
-of rocks, presenting abrupt walls. The gorge traced up the mountain
-becomes a frightful abyss, more than a hundred feet wide. Among the
-loose stones at the bottom large trees are growing, whose tops scarce
-reach half way to the edge of the precipice. Most such disruptions
-of rocks and mountains were doubtless caused by earthquakes at some
-unknown period.
-
-The great earthquake at Lisbon, the capital of Portugal, was in 1755.
-“The ominous rumbling sound below the surface was almost immediately
-followed by the shock which threw down the principal part of the city;
-in the short space of six minutes, it is believed, 60,000 perished. The
-sea rolled back, leaving the bar dry, and then returned, in a great
-tidal wave, fifty feet, or more, in height. The mountains around were
-shaken with great violence, their rocks rent, and thrown in fragments
-into the valley below. Multitudes of people rushed from their falling
-buildings to the marble quay, which suddenly sank with them, like a
-ship foundering at sea; and when the waters closed over the place no
-fragments of the wreck—none of the vessels near by, that were drawn
-into the whirlpool, and not one of the thousands of the bodies that
-were carried down ever appeared again. Over the spot occupied by the
-quay, the water stood six hundred feet deep; and beneath it, locked in
-fissured rocks, and in chasms of unknown depth, lie what was the life
-and wealth of the place, in the middle of the eighteenth century.”
-
-Earthquakes, of especial interest, from their recent occurrence and
-destructive effects, are those of 1857-58, in the kingdom of Naples,
-and in Mexico; but we have not room to more than mention them. The
-past summer will be remembered as the period of at least two terrible
-disasters from earthquakes, in localities distant from each other.
-The first, July 28, was at Ischia, a beautiful island at the north
-entrance of the bay of Naples. The principal town, Cassamicciola, was
-mostly destroyed, and much injury done at other places. The town was
-a noted health resort, and it is feared many distinguished strangers
-perished in it. The shocks began in the night, when a majority of the
-citizens, who frequent such places, were in the theater, and the scene
-there was terrible. Lamps were overturned; clouds of dust arose, and
-then the walls of the building opened, and fell, giving no opportunity
-for escape. The ground opened in many places, and houses and their
-inhabitants were swallowed up. The hotel Picola Sentinella sank into
-the earth, with all its inmates. The number destroyed, first estimated
-at three thousand, was much larger, but how much is not yet certainly
-known. Years must elapse before the town is restored, when it will be
-with a new class of inhabitants.
-
-The sad tidings of disaster in Italy were soon followed by still more
-startling intelligence from Java, where, as in regions bordering on
-the Mediterranean, earthquakes are not a new experience with the
-inhabitants. A recital of the calamities occurring in Java during
-the last century would make a gloomy chapter in history, suggesting
-the insecurity and transitory nature of all earthly possessions. The
-island is one of the largest and, commercially, most important, in the
-Indian archipelago, six hundred and sixty miles in length, and the
-width varying from forty to one hundred and thirty miles. It is densely
-populated, and governed by a Dutch viceroy. In the mountain range
-extending through the center, with a mean elevation of seven thousand
-feet, are many volcanoes; and earthquakes are of frequent occurrence,
-as in other volcanic regions. In 1878 record was made of some sixteen,
-in different parts of the island. One of the most famous, accompanied
-by a vast eruption of Papandayang, the largest of the volcanoes,
-took place a hundred years ago, overwhelming an area of a hundred
-square miles, and destroying three thousand people—the island at that
-time having fewer inhabitants. There were two similar eruptions from
-volcanoes at the same time, respectively one hundred and thirty-four
-and three hundred and fifty-two miles from Papandayang, suggesting the
-fact that the power of producing them, and the earthquakes, may operate
-through a field of vast extent, and breaks through where the barriers
-give way. It is safe to say both have the same origin.
-
-Ischia and Java, though almost antipodes, are companions in disaster,
-and possibly felt the dashing of the same billows, striking with
-violence here or there, according as some mighty impulse drove them
-on. The great calamities of the past summer, besides their appeal to
-our humanity, will be of interest to scientific men, and may throw
-light on the relations of earthquakes and volcanoes, and their cause,
-after which they have been searching a good deal in the dark, and with
-results not yet satisfactory.
-
-The accounts of the last fearful disaster are yet incomplete, and may
-not all be verified. The latest, and apparently most reliable reports,
-place it among the most terrible calamities known in the history of
-the race, since the deluge. The earth trembled and shook—rocks were
-rent—buildings tumbled in ruins. A large part of the city, full of
-wealth and life, sank out of sight. Tidal waves carried destruction
-along the coast. Volcanoes belched forth smoke, ashes and lava,
-overspreading fertile valleys; and when the sulphurous clouds that hung
-over them, black as night, were lifted, turbulent waters rolled over
-fifty square miles of pasture lands that the day before were covered
-with flocks, and the homes of men. It is estimated that seventy-five
-thousand people perished. It may be a few thousand less, or more,
-as there are yet no data from which to form more than a proximate
-estimate. The whole number will not be known till the graves and the
-sea give up their dead.
-
-
-
-
-LOW SPIRITS.
-
-By J. MORTIMER GRANVILLE.
-
-
-There is enough in the daily experience of life to depress the feelings
-and rob the mind of its buoyancy, without having to encounter lowness
-of spirits as a besetting mental state or malady. Nevertheless, it so
-frequently assumes the character of an affection essentially morbid,
-attacks individuals who are not naturally disposed to despondency,
-and gives so many unmistakable proofs of its close relations with the
-health of the physical organism, that it must needs be included in the
-category of disease. The constitutional melancholy which distinguishes
-certain types of character and development, is a setting in the minor
-key rather than depression. Within the compass of a lower range,
-individuals of this class exhibit as many changes of mood as those
-whose temperament is, so to say, pitched higher, and who therefore seem
-to be capable of greater elation.
-
-It is important to ascertain at the outset whether a particular person
-upon whom interest may be centered is not naturally characterized by
-this restrained or reserved tone of feeling! Unhealthy conditions of
-mind are generally to be recognized by the circumstance that they offer
-a contrast to some previous state. The movable, excitable temperament
-may become fixed and seemingly unimpressionable, the self-possessed
-begin to be irritable, the calm, passionate. It is the _change_ that
-attracts attention, and when low spirits come to afflict a mind wont
-to exhibit resilience and joyousness, there must be a cause for the
-altered tone, and prudence will enjoin watchfulness. Mischief may be
-done unwittingly by trying to stimulate the uncontrollable emotions.
-
-There are few more common errors than that which assumes lowness
-of spirits to be a state in which an appeal should be made to the
-sufferer. We constantly find intelligent and experienced persons,
-who show considerable skill in dealing with other mental disorders
-and disturbances, fail in the attempt to relieve the pains of
-melancholy. They strive by entreaty, expostulation, firmness, and even
-brusqueness, to coerce the victim, and prevail upon him to shake off
-his despondency. They urge him to take an interest in what is passing
-around, to bestir himself, and put an end to his broodings. This would
-be all very well if the burden that presses so heavily on the spirit
-simply lay on the surface, but the lowness of which I am speaking
-is something far deeper than can be reached by “rallying.” It is a
-freezing of all the energies; a blight which destroys the vitality, a
-poison which enervates and paralyzes the whole system.
-
-It is no use probing the consciousness for the cause while the
-depression lasts—as well look for the weapon by which a man has been
-struck senseless to the earth, when the victim lies faint and bleeding
-in need of instant succor. If the cause were found at such a moment,
-nothing could be done to prevent its further mischief. Supposing it to
-be discovered that the malady is the fruit of some evil-doing or wrong
-management of self, the moment when a crushed spirit is undergoing
-the penalty of its error is not that which should be selected for
-remonstrance. It is vain to argue with a man whose every faculty of
-self-control is at its lowest ebb. The judgment and the will are
-dormant. The show of feeling made by the conscience in the hour of
-dejection is in great part emotional, and the purposes then formed
-are sterile. The tears of regret, the efforts of resolve, elicited in
-the state of depression, are worse than useless; they are like the
-struggles of a man sinking in the quicksand—they bury the mind deeper
-instead of freeing it.
-
-The state of mental collapse must be allowed to pass; but here comes
-the difficulty; the moment reaction takes place, as shown by a slight
-raising of the cloud, it will be too late to interfere. The mind
-will then have entered on another phase not less morbid than the
-depression which it has replaced. There is no certain indication of
-the right moment to make the effort for the relief of a sufferer from
-this progressive malady. The way to help is to watch the changes of
-temperament narrowly, and, guided by time rather than symptoms, to
-present some new object of interest—a trip, an enterprise, a congenial
-task—at the moment which immediately precedes the recovery. The soul
-lies brooding—it is about to wake; the precise time can be foreknown
-only by watching the course of previous attacks; whatever engrosses the
-rousing faculties most powerfully on waking, will probably hold them
-for awhile. It is a struggle between good and healthy influences on the
-one hand, and evil and morbid on the other. If it be earnestly desired
-to rescue the sufferer, the right method must be pursued, and wrong
-and mischief-working procedures—among which preaching, persuading,
-moralizing, and rallying are the worst and most hurtful—ought to be
-carefully avoided. When the thoughts are revived and the faculties
-rebound, they must be kept engaged with cheering and healthful subjects.
-
-There is no greater error than to suppose good has been accomplished
-when a melancholic patient has been simply aroused. The apparently
-bright interval of a malady of this class is even more perilous than
-the period of exhaustion and lowness. The moment the mind resumes
-the active state, it generally resumes the work of self-destruction.
-The worst mischief is wrought in the so-called lucid interval. The
-consciousness must be absorbed and busied with healthful exercise,
-or it will re-engage in the morbid process which culminates in
-depression. The problem is to keep off the next collapse, and this can
-be accomplished only by obviating the unhealthy excitement by which it
-is commonly preceded and produced. Healthy activity promotes nutrition,
-and replenishes the strength of mind and body alike; all action that
-does not improve the quality of the organ acting, deteriorates it and
-tends to prevent normal function.
-
-
-
-
-VEGETABLE VILLAINS.
-
-By R. TURNER.
-
-
-THE LARGER FUNGI.
-
-To become acquainted with the bulkier of these villains, we must visit
-their favorite haunts. An occasional one may occur in any kind of
-place, as has already been explained. A good many, especially of the
-edible sort, and notably the common mushroom, grow in open pastures.
-To get among crowds of them, however, we must resort to close woods,
-especially of fir and pine. There they grow on tree-stumps, fallen
-trunks, and on the ground, in great variety and abundance. If we go at
-the proper season their profusion will astonish us. This time of plenty
-varies from early to late autumn with the character of the weather.
-Clad in waterproof wraps and with leather gloves on hand, we may make
-a fungus foray into the dripping woods amid russet and falling leaves
-with comparative comfort; and even on a “raw rheumatic day” there will
-likely be much enjoyment for us and still more instruction. It will
-be strange, indeed, if we do not find some kinds to eat and very many
-to think over. We ought to get examples, at least, of nearly all the
-different families. Let us consider them in a general way as novices
-do. A host of them have gills like the mushroom; and so we may take
-that best known of them all as a type of the whole class. Mushroom
-spawn runs through the soil in a rootlike way, absorbing the organic
-matter it falls in with and every here and there swelling out into
-roundish bodies, each consisting of a tubercle enclosed in a wrapper.
-The tubercle bursts through the wrapper as growth goes on, and soon
-above ground appears the well-known form of the mushroom, with a stalk
-supporting a fleshy head by the center, and on the under surface of
-this head radiating gills, which are at first covered by a veil that
-finally gives way and leaves only a ring round the stem. These gills
-are originally flesh-colored, but afterward become brown and mottled
-with numerous minute purple spores. If we were to investigate further
-by means of the microscope, we should find that the spores are not
-contained in any case, and that they are produced in fours on little
-points at the tips of special cells. Of the other kinds belonging to
-this order of agarics, some differ from the mushroom in being poisonous
-and others in being parasitic. There is much variety, also, in the
-tints of gill and spore, different kinds having these white, pink,
-rosy, salmon-colored, reddish, or yellowish, or darkish brown, purple
-or black. Again, in some the stem is not central, but attached more or
-less laterally to the head; in others there is no stem, and the gills
-radiate out from the substance on which the agaric grows. The ring
-round the stalk, too, often varies, or is sometimes wanting. There
-are many other differences, and it is by these that we are able to
-distinguish the one kind from the other: but, of course, little more
-can be done here than merely to indicate this infinite variety. Dr.
-Badham, in his admirable work on the “Esculent Funguses of England,”
-puts this quaintly, as he does many other facts. “These are stilted
-upon a high leg, and those have not a leg to stand on; some are
-shell-shaped, many bell-shaped; and some hang upon their stalks like a
-lawyer’s wig.”
-
-These gill-bearers, are, however, but one order in this extensive
-division of plants. Nature’s plastic hand is never weary of shaping
-fresh forms. It is lavish of variety, and never works in a stinted
-or makeshift way. In place of gills we find in another order tubes
-or pores in which the spores are produced. These tubular kinds
-are sometimes fleshy, as in the edible boletus, or woody, as in
-the polypores, popularly called sap-balls, which every one who
-knows anything about woods and their wonders must have seen on old
-tree-stumps, often growing to a great size. In yet another order,
-spines, or bristles, or teeth, take the place of gills and tubes. In
-the puff-balls the spores ripen inside a roundish leathern case, which
-afterward bursts and discharges them as a fine dust. Then there is an
-extensive class in which the spores are not produced in this offhand
-way at all, but are carefully enclosed in little cases, or rather, I
-should say, loaded into microscopic guns, as in the pezizas; and very
-beautiful objects these are under the microscope.
-
-Poisonous, putrescent, strange in shape, or color, or odor, as many
-of the larger fungi are, it is little to be wondered at that contempt
-has been a common human feeling with respect to most of them, and a
-crush with disdainful heel on occasion the lot of a good many. The
-popular loathing has run out into language. Under the opprobrious
-term “toadstool,” a whole host of kinds is commonly included. The
-puff-balls are known in Scotland as “de’il’s sneeshin’-mills” (devil’s
-snuff-boxes), an epithet which expresses with a certain imaginative
-humor, and a dash of superstition, the idea of something so utterly
-base that it ministers to the gratification of demons, tickling their
-olfactory organs with satanic satisfaction. Indeed, in this country
-the mushroom is almost the only favored exception to the popular
-verdict of loathing. It has gained the hearts of the people through
-their stomachs, and ketchup has overcome popular prejudice by its fine
-flavor. But there are many others on which cultured palates dote.
-Truffles are dear delicacies, which few but rich men taste, for fine
-aroma and flavor command a high price. The Scotch-bonnets of the fairy
-rings, besides possessing a certain bouquet of elfin romance, cook
-into delicacies full of stomachic delight. Then there are chantarells
-and morels and blewitts, and poor-men’s-beef-steaks, over which
-trained appetites rejoice. A score of dainty little rogues at least
-there are, and a still greater number of kinds that are nutritive
-and fairly palatable. In some European countries the edible ones are
-a really valuable addition to the food of the people—not from being
-more plentiful than with us, but from being more eagerly gathered and
-diligently cultivated. One sort or other is used as food by every
-tribe of men. Not only does the edible mushroom occur in all habitable
-lands, but in certain foreign parts—as in Australia—there are forms of
-it very much superior in quality to our English ones. Then, of course,
-every clime has its own peculiar edible kinds. The native bread of the
-Australians is an instance in point; it looks somewhat like compressed
-sago, and is a fairly good article of diet. The staple food of the
-wild Fuegians for several months each year is supplied by a kind which
-they gather in great abundance from the living twigs of the evergreen
-beech. Then there are some not very pleasant, according to our ideas,
-which can be safely used, and are thus available in times of scarcity,
-as, for instance, the gelatinous one which the New Zealand natives
-know as “thunder-dirt,” and one somewhat similar that the Chinese are
-said to utilize. A curious trade has of late years sprung up between
-New Zealand and China. A brown semi-transparent fungus, resembling the
-human ear, grows abundantly in the North Island. This the Maoris and
-others collect, dry, and pack into bags, for export to China, where
-it is highly prized for its flavor and gelatinous qualities as an
-ingredient in soup. It is a species nearly related to our Jew’s-ear.
-The value of this fungus exported from New Zealand in 1877 was stated
-at over £11,000.—_Good Words._
-
- * * * * *
-
- When we reflect how little we have done
- And add to that how little we have seen,
- And furthermore how little we have won
- Of joy or good, how little known or been,
- We long for other life, more full, more keen,
- And yearn to change with those
- Who well have run.
- —_Jean Ingelow._
-
- * * * * *
-
-A TALENT for any art is rare; but it is given to nearly every one to
-cultivate a taste for art; only it must be cultivated with earnestness.
-The more things thou learnest to know and enjoy, the more complete and
-full will be for thee the delight of living.—_Platen._
-
-
-
-
-FROM THE BALTIC TO THE ADRIATIC.
-
-By the author of “German-American Housekeeping,” etc.
-
- [Concluded.]
-
-
-Travelers are like conchologists, vying with one another in picking
-up different shells, and herein lies the unending interest of their
-records.
-
-In the roundabout route from the Baltic to the Adriatic and
-Mediterranean, Cassel, the electorate in former years of Hesse-Cassel,
-afforded a most suggestive visit. To be sure, its history is not
-altogether pleasant to an American, for the fact that the old elector
-hired his troops to England to fight us during the Revolutionary
-war, is not a savory bit of German history. Even Frederick the Great
-saw the meanness of it, for when he heard they were to take their
-route to England by Prussian roads, he sent word, “if they did so, he
-would levy a cattle tax on them.” Perhaps some of the money paid by
-England at that time was laid up in the public treasury and expended
-afterward upon the extravagant ornamentation of the grounds of the
-elector’s summer residence, “Wilhelmshöhe.” The palace is in itself
-one of the most magnificent in Europe. Above the cascades in front
-of it is the highest fountain on the continent. One stream, twelve
-inches in diameter, is thrown to the height of two hundred feet. The
-colossal Hercules which crowned the summit of this artificial grandeur
-was thirty feet high, and the cascades are nine hundred feet long.
-The whole arrangement is said to have kept two thousand men engaged
-for fourteen years, and to have cost over ten million dollars! Jerome
-Napoleon occupied this palace of Wilhelmshöhe when he was king of
-Westphalia.
-
-A walk of three miles under the straight and narrow road shaded by lime
-trees, leads one back to Cassel, after this visit to Wilhelmshöhe.
-The town is beautifully situated on either side of the river Fulda,
-and has a population of thirty-two thousand. The beautiful terrace
-overlooking the _angarten_, crowned by its new picture gallery, offers
-as delightful promenades as the celebrated Dresden Terrace. The strains
-of sweet music coming up from the _angarten_ (meadow) while one is
-looking at the beautiful Rembrandts and Van Dykes in the gallery,
-give the enchantment which one never fails to find in a German town.
-Napoleon carried away many of the most valuable pictures from the
-Cassel gallery—but it is redeemed from the number of horrible Jordaens
-and Teniers by possessing the “pearl of Rembrandts,” a portrait of
-“Saskia,” his wife.
-
-Chemical products, snuff included, are manufactured in Cassel, and
-it is quite a wide-awake business place—the old town preserved for
-picturesque effect, and the new town building up for enterprising
-manufacturers.
-
-Leaving Cassel any day at one o’clock, one can reach Coblenz at
-half-past seven in the evening, and the Bellevue Hotel will shelter one
-delightfully for the night, provided a room on the _hof_, or court,
-is not given. Four hundred feet above the river at Coblenz stands the
-old fortress of “Ehrenbreitstein.” How fine its old gray stone and
-its commanding situation is! No wonder Auerbach, the novelist, in his
-“Villa on the Rhine,” devoted so many pages to Ehrenbreitstein, the
-Gibraltar of the Rhine. It cost the government five million dollars.
-With its four hundred cannon, and capacity to store provision for ten
-years for eight thousand men in its magazine, well may it scorn attacks
-“as a tempest scorns a chain.”
-
-Instead of driving up to see this monstrous fortress, one may prefer
-to wander into St. Castor’s Church in the early morning, and, like
-a devout Catholic, kneel and pray. It may be more restful to thus
-“commune with one’s own heart and be still,” than to keep up a
-perpetual sight-seeing. Charlemagne divided his empire among his
-grandchildren in this very church. It dates to the eighth century,
-and is one of the best specimens of Lombard architecture in all the
-Rhine provinces. Coming out in the morning about ten o’clock, the sun
-will light up the severe outlines of the great old Ehrenbreitstein
-across the river, and the thought comes to one, did Luther compose his
-celebrated hymn, “_Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott_” (A mighty fortress
-is our God), while in such a moment of inspiration as this scene
-produces upon the mind?
-
-We left Coblenz at ten o’clock on the steamer “Lorlei” for Mainz. This
-romantic name for our boat, the waters we were plying, St. Castor’s
-Church on the left, and Ehrenbreitstein on the right, brought a
-strange combination of war, romance and religion to the mind. The
-only prosaic moment which seized me was in passing the Lorlei Felsen
-on the Rhine—when instead of remembering Lorlei, I exclaimed, so my
-companions told me: “O! here is where they catch the fine salmon!”
-Rheinstein was to my mind the most beautiful and picturesque castle of
-all, and being owned by the Crown Prince is kept in becoming repair.
-The little “_panorama des Rheins_” is a troublesome little companion,
-for it leaves one not a moment for calm enjoyment and forgetfulness,
-constantly pointing out the places of interest and crowding their
-history and romance upon one.
-
-The Dom at Mainz is a curious study for an architect—combining as it
-does so many styles and containing such curious old tombs.
-
-Frankfort, the birthplace of Goethe, and the native place of the
-Rothschilds family, has too much history to detail in an article like
-this. When it was a free city it had, and still retains, I believe, the
-reputation of being the commercial capital of that part of Germany.
-
-Goethe preferred little Weimar for the development of his poetical
-life. His father’s stately house in Frankfort, still to be seen, was
-not equal to his own in Weimar.
-
-But let us leave the river Main and the river Rhine and look up
-Nuremberg and Munich before we follow our southern course to the
-Adriatic. An erratic journey this, but have we not found some shells
-which the other conchologists overlooked?
-
-Nuremberg seems to have lost more in population than any German city we
-know of. Having once numbered 100,000, it now claims only 55,000. It is
-a curious fact that Nuremberg toys which were so celebrated formerly,
-have been surpassed in this country, and now American manufactures in
-this line are taken to Nuremberg and actually sold as German toys.
-This was told me by a gentleman interested in the trade. But buy a
-lead-pencil in Nuremberg if you want a good article very cheap—perhaps
-you can learn to draw or sketch with one, being inspired with the
-memory of Albert Dürer.
-
-Nuremberg is Bavaria’s second largest city, and attracts more
-foreigners or visitors than Munich, perhaps, yet to the mind of the
-Bavarian Munich is Bavaria, as to the Frenchman Paris is France, and
-to the Prussian Berlin is Prussia! No traveler can be contented,
-however, without some time in Nuremberg, although I dare say many go
-away disappointed. The old stone houses with their carved gables, the
-walls and turrets, St. Sebald Church, and the fortress where Gustavus
-Adolphus with his immense army was besieged by Wallenstein, are things
-which never grow tedious to the memory. In this fortress now they keep
-the instruments of torture used in the middle ages to extract secrets
-from the criminal or the innocent, as it might chance to be. A German
-in Berlin laughingly told me when I described the rusty torturous
-things, that they were all of recent manufacture, and were not the
-genuine articles at all! But new or old, genuine or reproduced, they
-make one shudder as does Fox’s “Book of Martyrs.” I know of no church
-in Germany more worthy of study than St. Sebald’s. In it one finds a
-curious old gold lamp, which swings from the ceiling about half way
-down one aisle of the church. It is called _die ewige lampe_, because
-it has been always burning since the twelfth century. It is related of
-one of Nuremberg’s respectable old citizens that he was returning in
-the darkness one stormy night to his home, and finally almost despaired
-of finding his way, when a faint light from the St. Sebald’s Church
-enabled him to arrive safe at his own door. He gave a fund to the
-church afterward for the purpose of keeping there a perpetual light.
-When the Protestants took St. Sebald’s, as they did so many Catholic
-churches in Germany after the Reformation, the interest money which the
-old man gave had still to be used in this way according to his will. So
-_die ewige lampe_ still swings and gives its dim light to the passer-by
-at night. Our American consul told me a characteristic story of an
-American girl and her mother, whom he was showing about Nuremberg, as
-was his social duty, perhaps. They were in St. Sebald’s Church, and
-he related the story of the lamp as they stood near it. Underneath
-stands a little set of steps which the old sexton ascends to trim the
-lamp. “Oh!” said this precocious American girl, “I shall blow it out,
-and then their tradition that it has never been out will be upset.” So
-she climbed the steps fast, and as she was about to do this atrocious
-thing our consul pulled her back, and said she would be in custody in
-an hour, and he would not help her out. The mother merely laughed, and
-evidently saw nothing wrong about the performance. It is just such
-smart acts on the part of American girls abroad which induce a man
-like Henry James to write novels about them. The fine, intelligent,
-self-poised girls travel unnoticed, while the “Daisy Millers” cause the
-judgment so often passed upon all American girls by foreigners, that
-they are “an emancipated set.”
-
-It was our good fortune while in Munich to board with most agreeable
-people. The _Herr Geheimrath_ (privy counselor) had retired from active
-life of one kind, to enjoy the privilege of being an antiquarian
-and art critic. He had his house full of most valuable and curious
-treasures. The study of ceramics was his hobby, and fayence, porcelain,
-and earthenwares of the rarest kinds were standing around on his
-desk, on cabinets, and on the floor. He edited _Die Wartburg_, a
-paper which was the organ of _Münchener Alterthum-Verein_, and wrote
-weekly articles _Ueber den Standpunkt unserer heutigen Kunst_. His
-wife was formerly the _hof-singerin_ (court-singer) at the royal opera
-in Munich, but was then too old to continue. Every Saturday evening
-she would give a home concert, and would sing the lovely aria from
-“Freischutz,” or Schumann’s songs.
-
-St. Petersburg never looked whiter from snow than did Munich that
-winter. The galleries were cold, but the new and old Pinakothek were
-too rich to be forsaken. Fortunately the new building was just across
-the street from the _Herr Geheimrath’s_. If it had only been the
-old Pinakothek I found myself continually saying, for who cares for
-Kaulbachs, and modern German art, compared with the rich Van Dykes,
-the Rubens, the Dürers, and the old Byzantine school? I should say the
-Munich gallery is superior to the Dresden in numbers, but not in gems.
-But they have fine specimens from the Spanish, the Italian, and German
-schools.
-
-The Glyptothek is Munich’s boast. There is a stately grandeur in this
-building that suggests Greece and her art. On a frosty morning, to
-wander out beyond the Propylæum and enter through the great bronze door
-of the Glyptothek, one feels like a mouse entering a marble quarry. I
-presume there is no such collection of originals in any country but
-Italy. Ghiberti, Michael Angelo, Benvenuti, Cellini, Peter Vischer,
-Thorwaldsen, Canova, Rauch, Schwanthaler, are all represented by
-original works. But it needs a warm climate to make such a collection
-of statuary altogether attractive.
-
-Going from Germany to Italy, one takes the “Brenner Pass,” generally,
-over the Alps—the oldest way known, and used by Hannibal. After winding
-around the side of these snowy peaks, and being blinded by the mists
-enveloping the landscape, trembling with admiration or fear, as the
-case may be, a glimpse of sunny Italy is most encouraging.
-
-To reach the Adriatic and Venice is enough earthly joy for some
-souls. Elizabeth Barrett Browning felt so; and all people feel so,
-perhaps, who, as Henry James and W. D. Howells, give themselves up to
-Venice, and write about her until she becomes identified with their
-reputation. But let Venice and the Adriatic be silent factors in this
-article, and let Verona, Florence, and Rome substitute them.
-
-We alighted at Verona at midnight, and in the pale moonlight, which
-gave a ghastly appearance to the quaint old place. “The Two Gentlemen
-of Verona” were not to be seen that night. The streets were silent, yet
-I thought perhaps they might greet us in the morning; but their shadowy
-old cloaks are only to be seen thrown around a thousand beggars, who
-are as thick as bees and as ugly as bats.
-
-“The tomb of Juliet” is also a deception—a modern invention; but the
-house of Juliet’s parents (the Capuletti), an old palace, stands as it
-did in the days when Shakspere represents its banqueting halls and good
-cheer.
-
-The scenery from Verona to Florence, with the exception of a few views
-of the Apennines, is very tedious—nothing beyond almond orchards,
-which in March, the time of the year I saw them, resembled dead apple
-trees. You will be surprised to hear that the Italian gentlemen wore
-fur on their coats. They were, I imagine, traveled gentlemen, for the
-genuine Italian, whether count or beggar, has a cloak thrown over his
-shoulders in bewitching folds. When he pulls his large felt hat over
-his magnificent eyes so that it casts a dark shadow over his mysterious
-face, and stands in the sunshine, he looks simply a picture.
-
-Verona is more Italian in appearance than Florence. The principal
-street runs along either side of the river Arno, and is crowded for
-some distance with little picture and jewelry shops; but farther on
-toward the _cascine_, or park, the street widens, and is enriched
-with handsome modern buildings, most of which are hotels. This drive
-to the _cascine_ and the grand hotel was made when Victor Emmanuel
-allowed the impression to exist that Florence would remain the capital
-of Italy. This drive is thronged with carriages about four o’clock
-in the afternoon. It was here I remember to have had the carriage of
-the Medici family pointed out to me. Within sat two ladies with dark,
-lustrous eyes, jet hair, and a great deal of lemon color on their
-bonnets. The livery was also lemon color, and the carriage contained
-the coat of arms on a lemon-colored panel. The Italians are very
-partial to this shade of yellow. The beds are draped with material of
-this same intense hue—very becoming to brunettes, but ruinous, as the
-young ladies would say, to blondes.
-
-Every one knows of the old Palazzo Vecchio, which rises away above
-every object in the city of Florence. Its walls are so thick that in
-them there are places for concealment—little cells—and in one of these
-the great reformer of Florence, Savonarola, was kept until they burned
-him at the stake in front of the palace.
-
-“Santa Croce” is the name of the church which contains the tombs of
-Michael Angelo, Alfieri Galileo, and Machiavelli. Byron, moved with
-this idea, writes:
-
- “In Santa Croce’s holy precincts lie
- Ashes which make it holier, dust which is
- Even in itself an immortality.”
-
-Every American goes to Powers’s studio to see the original of the
-Greek Slave. Next to the Venus of Milo it seems the loveliest study in
-marble of the female figure. But “our lady of Milo,” as Hawthorne calls
-her—there is no beauty to hers!
-
-The Baptistery in Florence is a curious octagonal church, built in
-the twelfth century, and has the celebrated bronze doors by Ghiberti,
-representing twelve eventful scenes from the Bible. Those to the south
-are beautiful enough, said Michael Angelo, to be the gates of paradise.
-
-As often as I had reflected upon Rome and her seven hills, on arriving
-there the hills seemed to be a new revelation to me, and the rapid
-driving of the Italians up and down the steep and narrow streets
-bewildered me not a little. I found myself on the way from the depot,
-constantly asking, can this be Rome? Everything looks so new. The
-houses are light sandstone, like the buildings in Paris. I was
-informed that this portion of Rome was calculated to mislead me, and
-that I would find our hotel quite like Paris and New York houses. The
-next morning, instead of making a pilgrimage to the Roman forum, the
-Colosseum, and the palace of the Cæsars, we drove to St. Peter’s, which
-kept me still quite in the notion that Rome had been whitewashed, or
-something done to destroy her ancient classic aspect. We spent four
-hours in the great church wandering around and witnessing a procession
-of priests, monks, and gorgeous cardinals. There is no gewgaw, no
-tinsel in St. Peter’s as one sees in so many other Catholic churches;
-although gold is used in profusion, yet it is kept in subjection to
-the tone of the walls. The bronze altar over St. Peter’s tomb is
-wonderfully effective in the way of concentrating color and attention.
-It is almost necessary to find a niche in the base of some pillar and
-sit there awhile before plunging into the immensity of this great
-building, just as a bird gets ready before darting into space. But
-after all, the feeling of immensity which St. Peter’s gives is not so
-grateful to the religious sense as the Gothic style of architecture,
-with its stained window, and deep recesses,
-
- “Its long drawn aisles and fretted vaults.”
-
-There is little solemnity in St. Peter’s, little shade and no music,
-only from side chapels; but there are grand proportions, perfect
-simplicity, and the pure light of heaven sending a beam upon a golden
-dove above St. Peter’s tomb, which radiates in a thousand streams of
-light over the marble pavement.
-
-Nothing impressed me so much in Rome or suggested the ancient glory
-so much as the ruins of the Baths of Caracalla. The magnificence of
-this building must have been unparalleled. It accommodated sixteen
-hundred bathers at once, and some of its walls are so thick one fears
-to estimate the depth. What would the old Romans have thought of the
-buildings of the present generation, which fall down or burn up without
-much warning. Here is solid masonry standing since the year 212.
-
-The different arches and columns of Rome constitute one of the most
-attractive features to almost every traveller. Let those who enjoy
-them climb their steps or strain their eyes to decipher in a scorching
-Italian sun the dates, the seven golden candlesticks, the shew bread,
-and Aaron’s rod, on Titus’s arch for example. I shall wander off while
-they are so occupied into the old capitol—into the room where Rienzi
-stood and exhorted the people to recover their ancient rights and into
-the basement below where St. Paul was imprisoned.
-
-The present king had just been crowned at that time. I saw the king and
-queen in a procession where they were driving to gratify the people,
-and again we saw him unattended driving with his brother through the
-grounds of the Borghese Villa. The carnival was forbidden that year
-in Rome on account of the death of the King and Pope, but there were
-out-croppings of it on the streets. The tinseled finery and humbug of
-it seem so incongruous in ancient classic Rome. I was glad to escape it.
-
-The old Pantheon is too important in its history for any one to write
-of it, but I have always liked the following paragraph from James
-Freeman Clarke concerning it: “The Romans in this church, or temple,
-worshiped their own gods, while they allowed the Jews, when in Rome,
-to worship their Jewish god, and the Egyptians to worship the gods of
-Egypt, and when they admitted the people of a conquered state to become
-citizens of Rome their gods were admitted with them; but in both cases
-the new citizens occupied a subordinate position to the old settlers.
-The old worship of Rome was free from idolatry. Jupiter, Juno, and
-the others were not represented by idols. But there was an impassable
-gulf between the old Roman religion and modern Roman thought, and
-Christianity came to the Roman world not as a new theory but as a new
-life, and now her churches stand by the side of the ruins of the Temple
-of Vesta and the old empty Pantheon.”
-
-
-
-
-ELECTRICITY.
-
-
-What is it? and what some of its manifestations? The name was given to
-an occult, but everywhere present, property of material things. First
-discovered by the ancients in amber (Gr. _electron_) and brought into
-evidence by friction. It is generally spoken of as a highly elastic,
-imponderable fluid, or fluids, with which all matter is supposed to be
-in a greater or less degree charged. Though such fluids have never been
-discovered as entities, and their existence may be but imaginary, it
-was asserted to account for facts that otherwise seemed inexplicable.
-
-Definitions of electricity are at hand, and could be easily given; but
-they do not define or accurately point out that which they designate.
-All that can be said, with confidence, is that certain phenomena which
-come within our observation suggest the presence of such fluids, and
-are not otherwise explained. The answer to the question, “What is it?”
-must be the honest confession, we do not know. But, if ignorant of what
-it is, we may yet intelligently study its manifestations. The phenomena
-are not less capable of satisfactory discussion because the efficient
-agent producing them is unknown.
-
-The theory of two imponderable fluids or electricities having strong
-attractive and repellant forces, is adopted because probable, and it
-helps make the discussion intelligible.
-
-The awakened interest now so widely felt in this branch of natural
-science is more than just the desire to know what is knowable of the
-world we live in. At first, and indeed for ages, only the curious
-studied electricity, and practical men asked “_Cui bono?_” But in
-the present century it has become an applied science. In no other
-field have our studies of nature been more fruitful of discoveries
-practically affecting the multiform industries, and improving the
-rapidly advancing civilization of the age.
-
-Some of the skillful inventions for controlling and utilizing this
-power lying all about us will be mentioned hereafter.
-
-It will be well first to state a few facts that are known and mostly
-established by experimental tests:
-
-(1) The earth, and all bodies on its surface, with the atmosphere
-surrounding it, are charged with electricity of greater or less
-potency. This seems their permanent state, though in some cases, its
-presence is not easily detected.
-
-(2) In quantity or intensity it is very different in different bodies,
-as also in the same under different conditions. In some portions of
-vast objects, as the earth and its atmosphere, it accumulates, immense
-currents being poured into them, while others are perhaps to the same
-extent drained.
-
-(3) Through some bodies the subtle fluid may pass with but slight
-obstruction—and they are called _conductors_. In others the hindrance
-is greater, and we call them _insulators_. But the difference is only
-of degrees; as the best conductors offer some obstruction, and the most
-perfect insulators do not completely insulate. The metals, charcoal,
-water, and most moist substances, as the earth and animal bodies, offer
-but little resistance. The atmosphere, most kinds of glass, sulphur,
-india rubber, vulcanite, shellac, and other resins, with dry silk and
-cotton, are our best insulators. Friction used to secure electrical
-manifestations is the occasion rather than the cause of the electricity
-thus developed or set free. That it does not cause it, even in the
-sense that it causes heat is evident, since the quantity of electricity
-bears no proportion to the amount of friction used to produce it.
-
-Though, really, there are not several distinct kinds of electricity,
-as statical, dynamic, magnetic, frictional, and atmospheric, the
-nomenclature of the science is at least convenient, and will not
-mislead. It indicates the methods of production, and makes the
-discussion of the subject more intelligible. And then the electricity
-developed or set free by the different methods of excitement, though of
-the same kind, differs much in degree and intensity.
-
-What is called statical electricity is the condition of the subtle
-force in a state of electrical quiescence; and all electricity in
-motion, however excited by friction, heat, chemical action, or
-otherwise, is dynamic.
-
-Perpetual modifications are taking place in electrical condition of all
-matter, that when made apparent, at first may seem quite inexplicable.
-The excited currents flow with amazing rapidity. Their actions and
-re-actions baffle our calculations, and the imagination itself is
-bewildered by their extent and complexity. Yet by electrical tests and
-laboratory experiments, carefully employed, the laws of electricity are
-now as well known as those of any other branch of physical science,
-and the phenomena, if more startling, are no more mysterious than the
-manifestations of heat, light and gravitation.
-
-Atmospheric electricity is not different in kind from that brought into
-evidence by the methods of the experimenter in the laboratory, subject
-to his control, and much used in the arts and industries of life. The
-lightning that shineth from the one part under heaven to the other part
-under heaven, a bright light in the cloud, is the same as the electric
-spark from the moderately charged receiver, when the positive and
-negative poles are brought into contact—the same as the less intense
-spark excited by passing the hand rapidly over the fur on the cat’s
-back when the electrical conditions are favorable.
-
-The storm cloud is a vast receiver and by induction becomes at times
-highly charged with electricity. If the cloud is at rest, and the
-heated air grows moist, that which is known as sheet or heat lightning
-appears in frequent flashes. The imprisoned electricity leaps forth
-from the bosom or edge of the cloud, but as instantly gathers itself
-back to its source, and apparently without tension or force enough
-to crash through the atmosphere to any distant object. The flashes
-are unaccompanied by the noise of thunder, and may be but reflections
-on the cloud from a source far beyond. We watch them without fear of
-danger, and the subdued impression is that of the beautiful.
-
-Amidst the terrific grandeur of the violent thunder storm another form
-of lightning is seen; either the vivid flash that seems to envelop us,
-or zigzag, sometimes forked lines that dash across the cloud earthward,
-and occasionally, as in a return stroke, from the earth to the cloud.
-
-In about the middle of the eighteenth century the identity of lightning
-with electricity was fully ascertained, and since then the most sublime
-and startling phenomena of our thunder storms are better understood.
-Under certain contingencies they must occur. Since the different
-clouds or portions of the same cloud are charged with different
-electricities, positive and negative, when these by the winds are
-brought near each other, or rolled together, fierce explosions follow,
-and great electrical changes take place in the clouds. Vast supplies
-of the imprisoned fiery fluid leap from strata to strata, or, if the
-distance is not too great, and the earth is at the same time strongly
-electrified, crash down to it through whatever sufficient conductors
-are found. If those not sufficient to receive and convey the charge
-be in the path they are dashed aside; men and beasts are killed by
-the shock, trees and other less perfect conductors are scattered in
-fragments.
-
-Usually the more prominent objects as masts of ships, trees, and
-buildings are struck in the lightning’s course from the cloud, but
-occasionally those lowest down, near trees, and even in cellars receive
-the shock. In these cases the current is probably from the earth,
-whose electric condition is negative with respect to the clouds that
-pass over it. In either case the opposite electricities that strongly
-attract each other, and whose concurrence produces the destructive
-discharge near the earth’s surface are held apart by the stratum of air
-between them. When the attraction becomes too strong to be resisted by
-the insulating medium they rush together, in their fiery embrace, the
-flash and concussion being in proportion to the intensity of the charge.
-
-Do lightning rods protect? Yes; but not perfectly. If properly
-constructed, and of sufficient conducting capacity, they are a source
-of safety, and to discard them as useless is not wise.
-
-The instances in which buildings provided with rods have been struck
-do not prove them useless; or, as some say, that the rods do harm by
-attracting the lightning that they are unable to conduct to the earth
-without injury to the building. The point does not attract, but only
-catches the electricity that sweeps over it. When violent shocks or
-explosions occur the rod may be of little service. Its office is to
-prevent these by silently conducting the excess of electricity from
-the air. The rod, rightly placed, conducts to the earth all it can,
-lessening the evil it does not entirely prevent. But all danger is not
-removed. The position of the opposite poles in the immense battery may
-be such as to give the stroke a horizontal direction, and far below the
-point of the rod; such currents have been known to pass long distances
-through atmosphere and smite with destructive violence objects lying
-in their path. Against these lateral attacks rods above our roofs are
-probably little or no protection. Still the more good conductors there
-are in any locality the less danger, as they prevent the accumulation
-of electricity.
-
-
-
-
-POACHERS IN ENGLAND.
-
-By JAMES TURVES.
-
-
-It is somewhat surprising that none of our present-day novelists,
-like Charles Reade or Thomas Hardy, who are always on the outlook
-for romantic realism, whether it be in incident or in fact, have had
-their eyes directed to the rural poachers who abound in every shire.
-Poachers, though neither quite respectable members of the church
-nor of society, are more interesting characters than burglars or
-ticket-of-leave men, who figure frequently in the novelist’s pages.
-And, very strange to say, it has been left to a lady to write the
-first accounts of poaching episodes, episodes remarkable for their
-masculine touches and their wonderful grip of open-air reality; Harriet
-Martineau, in her “Forest and Game Law Tales,” astonishes us by her
-graphic realism and her delicacy of treatment; Charles Kingsley wrote
-one or two of his pathetic ballads on the subject of a poacher and
-his wife; Norman Macleod made a Highland poacher the subject of a
-character sketch; and in our own times Mr. Richard Jefferies, a writer
-who finds pleasure in minute description and vivid realism, has in his
-own style of exact word-painting given us a pleasant book about his
-own experiences as an amateur poacher. But the real poacher, the rural
-vagabond, the parish character, the ne’er-do-weel, whose life is a
-living protest against the game-laws, is of more lasting interest than
-any amateur can ever be.
-
-Viewed from the serene vantage-ground of the philosophy of life,
-poaching is mean and ignoble, and demoralizing sport to you or me, and
-is not worth the powder and shot, while the fines and punishments are
-out of all proportion to the joys; yet there are not wanting apologists
-for it in this apologetic century. “Poaching! Man, there’s no sin in
-catching a rabbit or snaring a hare. They belong to naebody. Bless
-you! it’s a gentleman’s trick, shooting.” This is the opinion of any
-Northern lowland ploughman’s wife, as she looks from her red-tiled
-cottage-door out upon the face of the corn-growing mother earth, which
-has given her sweet memories and a host of country neighbors and
-friends.
-
-Sixty years ago peasants could use their guns without let or hindrance,
-and it was then a common thing for a farm-laborer to go out and have a
-shot when no sportsman was in the way. Taking an odd shot now and then
-was never, and is not even now, looked upon by them as poaching. But a
-noted poacher, nicknamed the Otter, tells me, with a sigh, “Poaching
-is not what it once was!” And it is true. Not so very long ago it
-was a very profitable occupation, and comparatively respectable,
-before railways and telegraph wires and penny newspapers stereotyped
-metropolitan ideas into all and sundry. An old farmer is pointed out as
-having made all his money by systematic poaching, and an influential
-city official is said to have laid his early nest-egg by no other means
-than being a good shot where he had no invitation to be. To-day even
-rural society would look down upon a young farmer engaged in poaching.
-It is no longer sport to gentlemen, says the Otter, and is left to
-moral vagabonds, the waifs and strays, the parish loafers. The great
-strides of agriculture, the game-laws, and the artificial breeding of
-game have driven it into sneaking ways, and robbed it of its robust
-picturesque adventures. To excel in it a man must give up his nights
-and days to it—in short, he must become a specialist, and even then it
-hardly pays.
-
-A genuine poacher has great force of character; he has a genius for
-field and woodcraft. He is the eldest survivor of rustic romance. His
-wild life is tinged with the love of adventure, the love of moon and
-stars, the knowledge of the seasons, the haunts and habits of game, and
-the power of trapping rabbits in dark woodland glades. No man knows
-more intimately the night-side of Nature between the chilly hours
-of midnight and sunrise. In this cold-blooded age there are always
-some Quixotic individuals, born in the outwardly sleepy villages and
-lifeless farmsteads, with the love of midnight adventure, who wage
-long warfare against the game-laws, and who only knuckle under to the
-law’s severity when their health gives way or an enemy turns informer.
-“Rheumatics plays the mischief with poaching!” exclaims the Otter,
-referring to the long night-watches in wet ditches and beside hedges
-for hares on the lea fields. Irrespective of all thought of gain, there
-is an infatuation to eager spirits in this midnight sport. It appeals
-to strong, healthy, brave men. Charles Kingsley, in “The Bad Squire,”
-with its strong sympathy and feeling, and its cry of “blood” on all the
-squire owned, from the foreign shrub to the game he sold, gives us the
-poacher’s wife view, a view we are too apt to ignore or forget, with
-the weary eyes and heavy heart, that grow light only with weeping, and
-go wandering into the night. We forget too often that in the hearts of
-common folk there is the glamor of poetic romance about poaching, and a
-bitter hatred toward the game-laws. Like Rizpah’s son, many a lad has
-had no other incentive than that “The farmer dared us to do it,” and
-that he found it sweetened by the secret sympathy of the people. Too
-often, I fear, the game-laws dare a brave rustic into poaching: he has
-only this one way left to satisfy the insatiable British thirst for
-field sport. It is gravely whispered that some of the most striking
-men have tasted its romance; and if all stories be true, the master of
-the English drama owes to an unlucky deer-poaching incident the lucky
-turn in his career which sent him to London and to writing plays, and
-poachers may reasonably claim Shakspere as their patron saint.
-
-When the strong, sweet ale warms his heart, the poacher boasts of
-dreadful adventures in the night, of leaping broad mill-dams when
-chased, of giving fight in the dark, and discomfiting gamekeepers by
-clever tricks. He paints his exploits in such heroical glory, that
-the seat next the fire in the ale-house is given him by admiring and
-fearing rustics. Honesty he ascribes to practicedness in the world’s
-ways, and he looks upon keeping out of jail as the greatest victory
-that man can achieve. He is the type of man that makes our best
-soldiers, or, as he phrases it, is paid to stop the gun-shots. He
-requires no almanac to tell him when the moon is to rise to-morrow,
-and he could give the gamekeepers lessons. He is to be envied for his
-quick feeling of life and his sympathy for field and forest sport, and
-that wild exuberance of spirits which he seems to catch with his hares.
-It is this rural vagabond—and not Mr. Commonplace Respectability—who
-rivets young folks’ attention; his energy anywhere would achieve
-success; and he is free from that unpardonable fault, dulness. In the
-rustic drama of life he is the character that takes hold of us in our
-best impulses—and is not that the best world of the ideal? He disdains
-to shoot starlings or black-birds; he is too much a sportsman to pay
-attention to such small game. He can put his hands to various ways
-of living; he can collect bird’s eggs, shoot wild rock-pigeons for
-a farmers’ club, gather blackberries, or, as they say in Scotland,
-“brambles,” pull young ash-saplings in plantations, and sell them to
-grooms in the livery stables in town.—_The Contemporary Review._
-
-
-
-
-EIGHT CENTURIES WITH WALTER SCOTT.
-
-By WALLACE BRUCE.
-
-
-“The burning sun of Syria had not yet attained its highest point in
-the horizon, when a knight of the Red Cross, who had left his distant
-northern home, and joined the host of the Crusaders in Palestine, was
-pacing slowly along the sandy deserts which lie in the vicinity of the
-Dead Sea, or as it is called, the Lake Asphalites, where the waves of
-the Jordan pour themselves into an inland sea, from which there is no
-discharge of waters.”
-
-This is the graphic opening of “The Talisman.” The steel clad pilgrim
-was entering upon that great plain, once watered even as the Garden of
-the Lord, now an arid and sterile wilderness, sloping away to the Dead
-Sea, which hides beneath its sluggish waves the once proud cities of
-Sodom and Gomorrah;—a dark mass of water “Which holds no living fish in
-its bosom, bears no skiff on its surface, and sends no tribute to the
-ocean.” It was a scene of desolation still testifying to the just wrath
-of the Almighty. As in the days of Moses, “The whole land was brimstone
-and salt; it is not sown, nor beareth, nor any grass groweth thereon.”
-The first sentence of the chapter revealed the descriptive and artistic
-power of the novelist, for the desolation is made more desolate by the
-introduction of the solitary horseman, journeying slowly through the
-flitting sand, under the noontide splendor of the eastern sun.
-
-Almost a century has passed since the triumph of the first crusade. The
-Latin Kingdom, founded by its leaders, had lasted only eighty-eight
-years. Jerusalem is again in the hands of the Saracens. The crescent
-gleams on the Mosque of St. Omar. The cross has been torn from her
-temples, her shrines profaned, and the worshipers of the Holy Sepulcher
-murdered or exiled. The second crusade had been a failure, and its
-history a series of disasters. Thousands perished in the long march
-across Asia Minor. Those who reached Palestine undertook the siege of
-Damascus, but the attempt was disastrous. In 1187 a powerful leader
-of the East appeared in the high-souled and chivalrous Saladin. By
-wise counsel he united the factions of the Mohammedans, which had
-been at variance for two hundred years; and on the arrival of the
-third crusade, with which event we are now dealing, he was enabled to
-present a solid front of warriors “like unto the sand of the desert in
-multitude.”
-
-The land, where “peace and good will to men” had been proclaimed by the
-voices of angels, and emphasized by the blessed words of the Son of
-God, was again converted into a vast tournament field for the armies of
-Europe and Asia: aye more, even in the mountain passes that guard the
-Holy City, the mission of the crusaders was sacrificed to petty insults
-and rivalries. Richard the Lion-hearted and King Philip of France were
-repeating the old story of Achilles and Agamemnon. The military orders
-of the Knights of the Temple and the Knights of St. John, which had
-grown up in Jerusalem, founded as fraternities devoted to works of
-mercy in behalf of poor pilgrims, had become powerful rivals of each
-other and the clergy, and by intrigue and dissension purposely fomented
-the discord. According to the historian Michaud, “On the one side were
-the French, the German, the Templars and the Genoese; on the other the
-English, the Pisans, and the Knights of St. John.”
-
-These are the historical circumstances with which Scott has to deal;
-and it is on a mission from such a council, made up of discordant
-factions, convened during the sickness of Richard, that we find the
-Knight of the Red Cross, or as he is afterward styled, Kenneth the
-Scot, bearing a message to the celebrated Hermit of Engaddi. His
-adventures by the way are as romantic as any recorded in the Knights
-of the Round-Table; for, as he directed his course toward a cluster of
-palm trees, he saw suddenly emerge therefrom a Saracen chief mounted
-on a fleet Arabian horse. As they drew near each other they prepared
-for battle, each after the manner of his own country. “On the desert,”
-according to an Eastern proverb, “no man meets a friend.” The heavy
-armor of the crusader and his powerful horse are more than an even
-match for the wily Saracen. The Scottish knight might have been likened
-in the conflict to a bold rock in the sea, and the swift assaults
-of the Eastern warrior to the waves dashing against it only to be
-broken into foam. After a long struggle, which was worthy of a larger
-audience, the Saracen calls a truce, and the Mohammedan and Christian,
-so lately in deadly conflict, make their way side by side, each
-respecting the other’s courage, to the well under the clustered palms.
-
-The student of history will find in the description of this
-hand-to-hand conflict an object-lesson of the garb and manners of the
-Eastern and Western races; and will learn more in the conversation that
-follows, as they partake of their scanty meal, of the sentiments and
-customs of the hostile races than can be gathered from the pages of any
-history with which I am acquainted: for Sir Walter had the marvelous
-faculty of absorbing history. He saw everything so vividly that he was
-able to reproduce it in living forms. As we read his description, we
-sit with them under the palms; we hear them now responding in courtesy,
-and again in sharp discussion, as allusion is made to their respective
-religions or modes of life; and, as they resume their journey, we feel
-grateful to the novelist for the beautiful figure which he puts in
-the mouth of the Scottish knight in answer to the Saracen’s boast of
-harem-life as contrasted with a Christian household.
-
- “That diamond signet,” says the knight, “which thou
- wearest on thy finger, thou holdest it doubtless of
- inestimable value?” “Bagdad can not show the like,”
- replied the Saracen; “But what avails it to our
- purpose?” “Much,” replied the Frank, “as thou shalt
- thyself confess. Take my war-axe and dash the stone
- into twenty shivers; would each fragment be as valuable
- as the original gem, or would they, all collected, bear
- the tenth part of its estimation?”
-
- “That is a child’s question,” answered the Saracen;
- “the fragments of a stone would not equal the entire
- jewel in the degree of hundreds to one.”
-
- “Saracen,” replied the Christian warrior, “the love
- which a true knight binds on one only, fair and
- faithful, is the gem entire; the affection thou
- flingest among thy enslaved wives, and half-wedded
- slaves, is worthless, comparatively, as the sparkling
- shivers of the broken diamond.”
-
-We find both soldiers courteous in conversation, and their example
-teaches a good lesson to modern controversy; but the “courtesy of the
-Christian seemed to flow rather from a good natured sense of what was
-due to others; that of the Moslem, from a high feeling of what was
-to be expected from himself. The manners of the Eastern warrior were
-grave, graceful and decorous;” he might have been compared to “his
-sheeny and crescent-shaped saber, with its narrow and light, but bright
-and keen, Damascus blade, contrasted with the long and ponderous Gothic
-war-sword which was flung unbuckled on the same sod.”
-
-They pursue their march to the grotto of the Hermit of Engaddi; a man
-respected alike by Christian and Mohammedan; revered by the Latins
-for his austere devotion, and by the Arabs on account of his symptoms
-of insanity, which they ascribed to inspiration. The hermit, once
-a crusader, was the man whom Kenneth was to meet. He delivers his
-message; but at night, while the Saracen slept, Kenneth is conducted to
-a subterraneous, but elegantly carved chapel, where he meets by chance
-with the noble sister of King Richard, who with Richard’s newly wedded
-wife, had come hither to pray for the king’s recovery. She drops a
-rose at the knight’s feet confirming the approbation which her smiles
-had already expressed to him in camp, and the story of true love, not
-destined to run smoothly, is fairly commenced. But as with “Count
-Robert of Paris,” “The Talisman” is not so much a romance as a picture
-of the strife and jealousy of haughty and rival leaders. Its value, as
-a historical novel, lies in the portrayal of these discordant elements.
-
-We may read the best history of the crusades, page by page, line by
-line, only to forget the next month, or the next year, everything save
-the issue of the long struggle; but “The Talisman,” by its wondrous
-reality, makes a lasting impression upon our minds. We see Richard
-tossing upon his couch, impatient of his fever and protracted delays.
-We see the Marquis of Montserrat, and the Grand Master of the Knights
-Templar walking together in close-whispered conspiracy. We see Leopold,
-the Grand Duke of Austria, lifting his own banner, with overweening
-pride, by the side of England’s standard. We see Richard dashing aside
-the attendants of his sick bed, half-clad, rushing forth to avenge the
-insult, splintering the staff, and trampling upon the Austrian flag. We
-stand with Kenneth under the starlight, guarding alone the dignity of
-England’s banner, but decoyed away in an unlucky hour by the ring of
-King Richard’s sister, which had been obtained by artifice. We see the
-flag stolen in that fatal absence, and the noble knight condemned to
-death, to be saved only by miracle from the fierce wrath of Richard. He
-is given as a present to the Arabian physician whose art had restored
-the king to health. We see him again with Richard in the disguise
-of a Nubian slave. We see a strolling Saracen with poisoned dagger
-attempting the life of Richard, but saved by the faithful Kenneth. We
-find Richard considering in his mind the giving of his royal sister
-in marriage to Saladin; an affair which fortunately needed the lady’s
-consent, who had in her veins too much of the proud Plantagenet blood
-to know the meaning of compulsion. We see the tournament which decided
-the treachery of Conrad, and the triumph of Kenneth, who turns out to
-be no other than the Earl of Huntingdon, heir of the Scottish throne.
-The comrade of Kenneth, and the physician who waited upon the king,
-chances to be the same person, and no less renowned a hero than the
-Emperor Saladin, who sends as a nuptial present to Kenneth and Edith
-Plantagenet the celebrated talisman by which he had wrought so many
-notable cures; which, according to Scott, is still in existence in the
-family of Sir Simon of Lee.
-
-This tale of the crusaders is so complete that we need after closing
-the volume only a few lines of history to complete the record. The
-city of Ptolemais was captured after a three years’ siege. More than
-one hundred skirmishes and nine great battles were fought under its
-walls. Both parties were animated by religious zeal. It is said
-that the King of Jerusalem marched to battle with the books of the
-Evangelists borne before him; and that Saladin often paused upon the
-field of battle to recite a prayer, or read a chapter from the Koran.
-Philip finally returns to France. Richard remains in command of one
-hundred thousand soldiers. He conquers the Saracens in battle, repairs
-the fortifications of Jaffa and Ascalon, but in the intoxication
-of pleasure forgets the conquest of Jerusalem. His victories were
-fruitless. He obtained from Saladin merely a truce of three years
-and eight months, “which insured to pilgrims the right of entering
-Jerusalem untaxed,” and, without fulfilling his promise of striking
-his lance against the gates of the Holy City, sets off on his homeward
-journey, to be taken captive and held a prisoner in a Tyrolese castle.
-In brief the history of the Third Crusade is that of a house divided
-against itself.
-
-As “The Betrothed” brought us back from Constantinople and Palestine
-to Merrie England, so “Ivanhoe” transports the reader, and some of
-the prominent actors of the drama, from the eastern shores of the
-Mediterranean to the pleasant district of the West Riding of Yorkshire,
-watered by the river Don, “where flourished in ancient times those
-bands of gallant outlaws, whose deeds have been rendered so popular in
-English song.”
-
-The prominent historical features which Scott illustrates in the
-romantic story of “Ivanhoe” are the domestic and civil relations
-existing between the Saxon and the Norman about the year 1196, when the
-return of Richard the First from Palestine and captivity was an event
-rather hoped for than expected; and an event _not_ hoped for by King
-John and his followers.
-
-The Saxon spirit had been well nigh subdued by the strict and unjust
-laws imposed by the Norman kings. For one hundred and thirty years
-Norman-French had been the language of the court, the language of law,
-of chivalry and justice. The laws of the chase and the curfew,—and
-many others unknown to the Saxon constitution,—had been placed upon
-the necks of the inhabitants of the soil. With few exceptions the race
-of Saxon princes had been extirpated; and it was not until the reign
-of Edward III. that England became thoroughly united as one people.
-The English language at the close of the twelfth century was not yet
-born. The Saxon mother and Norman father were not yet wedded; the two
-languages were gradually getting acquainted with each other; or, as
-Scott has logically expressed it, “the necessary intercourse between
-the lords of the soil, and those oppressed inferior beings by whom that
-soil was cultivated, occasioned the formation of a dialect, compounded
-betwixt the French and the Anglo-Saxon, in which they could render
-themselves mutually intelligible to each other; and from this necessity
-arose by degrees the structure of our present English language, in
-which the speech of the victors and the vanquished has been so happily
-blended together, and which has since been so richly improved by
-importations from the classical languages, and from those spoken by
-the southern nations of Europe.” In the first chapter—and it is always
-well to read carefully the first chapter of Scott—we are introduced
-to a swine-herd, born thrall of Cedric of Rotherwood, one of the few
-powerful Saxon families existing in England at the time of our story.
-He is attended by a domestic clown, or jester, maintained at that time
-in the houses of the wealthy. With an art and unity like Shakspere,
-Scott emphasizes at the very outset the chief historic feature of his
-story, by putting the following conversation in the mouths of these
-Saxon menials:
-
- “How call you those grunting brutes running about on
- their four legs?” demanded Wamba, the jester.
-
- “Swine,” said the herd.
-
- “And swine is good Saxon,” said the jester; “but how
- call you it when quartered?”
-
- “Pork,” answered the cow-herd.
-
- “And pork,” said Wamba, “is good Norman-French; and
- so when the brute lives, and is in the charge of a
- Saxon slave, she goes by her Saxon name; but becomes a
- Norman, and is called _pork_, when she is carried to
- the castle-hall to feast among the nobles. Nay, I can
- tell you more,” said Wamba, in the same tone, “there is
- Alderman Ox, who continues to hold his Saxon epithet,
- while he is under the charge of serfs and bondsmen such
- as thou, but becomes _beef_, a fiery French gallant,
- when he arrives before the worshipful jaws that are
- destined to consume him. Mynheer Calf, too, becomes
- Monsieur de _Veau_ in the like manner; he is Saxon when
- he requires tendance, and takes a Norman name when he
- becomes matter of enjoyment.”
-
-The third chapter brings together a strange gathering under the roof
-of the hospitable Cedric: Brian de Bois Gilbert, a haughty Templar;
-Prior Aymer, of free and jovial character; a poor Palmer, just returned
-from the Holy Land, and a Jew known as Isaac of York; all journeying
-on their way to a tournament to be held a few miles distant at Ashby
-de la Zouche. Lady Rowena, descended from the noble line of Alfred,
-graced the table with her presence, a ward destined by Cedric, but not
-by fate, to be the wife of Athelstane,—a Saxon descended from Edward
-the Confessor: in the furtherance of which idea his only son had been
-exiled, when it became known that he aspired to the hand of the Saxon
-beauty.
-
-At the tournament the remaining characters of the drama are introduced:
-King John, with his retinue; Richard the Lion-Hearted, under the
-disguise of the “Black Knight;” Rebecca, the Jewess; the proud baron
-Front de Bœuf; Robin Hood, the brave outlaw, under the name of Loxley;
-and Ivanhoe, the poor pilgrim, who wins the prize at the tournament
-and crowns Rowena Queen of Beauty. At the close of the second day’s
-tournament, in which Ivanhoe is again successful, a letter is handed
-to King John with the brief sentence, “Take heed to yourself, for
-the devil is unchained.” It was like the handwriting on the wall of
-Belshazzar’s palace, and proclaimed the end of his kingdom.
-
-Cedric, Rowena, Isaac, Rebecca, Athelstane and Ivanhoe depart their
-several ways from the tournament, but are captured and taken to Front
-de Bœuf’s castle. Cedric escapes in the guise of a monk. The castle is
-stormed, and now occurs one of the most dramatic pictures in the pages
-of romantic literature, destined to reveal to all time the undying
-hate between the Saxon and the Norman. A Saxon woman, by name Ulrica,
-had lived for years in Front de Bœuf’s castle. She had seen her father
-and seven brothers killed in defending their home, but she “remained
-to administer ignominiously to the murderers of her family. She used
-the seductions of her beauty to arm the son against the father; she
-heated drunken revelry into murderous broil, and stained with a
-parricide the banqueting hall of the conquerors.” She had sold body
-and soul to obtain revenge for Norman cruelties; and now, grown old
-in servitude, incensed by the contempt of her masters, she determines
-upon a deed, which will make the ears of men tingle while the name of
-Saxon is remembered. She fires the castle and appears on a turret in
-the guise of one of the ancient furies, yelling forth a war-song. “Her
-long, dishevelled grey hair flows back from her uncovered head; the
-inebriated delight of gratified vengeance contends in her eyes with the
-fire of insanity; and she brandishes the distaff which she holds in her
-hand, as if she were one of the fatal sisters, who spin and abridge
-the thread of human life. At length, with a terrific crash, the whole
-turret gives way, and she perishes in the flames which consume her
-tyrant.”
-
-There is another historic feature of the times emphasized in this
-romance: the oppression of the Jews in England during these cruel and
-adventurous times. The character of the race is vividly portrayed in
-Isaac of York, in which masterly delineation Scott seems truer to
-nature than Shakspere in the character of Shylock. Rebecca, his noble
-and beautiful daughter, is the type of all that is pure and womanly.
-Her words have the eloquence of the poets and prophets of old: “Know
-proud knight,” she says, “we number names amongst us to which your
-boasted Northern nobility is as the gourd compared with the cedar—names
-that ascend far back to those high times when the Divine Presence shook
-the mercy seat between the cherubim, and which derive their splendor
-from no earthly prince, but from the awful Voice, which bade their
-fathers be nearest of the congregation to the vision; such were the
-princes of the house of Jacob; now such no more. They are trampled down
-like the shorn grass, and mixed with the mire of the ways; yet there
-are those among them who shame not such high descent, and of such shall
-be the daughter of Isaac, the son of Adonikam. Farewell! I envy not
-thy blood-won honors; I envy not thy barbarous descent from northern
-heathens; I envy not thy faith, which is ever in thy mouth, but never
-in thy heart nor in thy practice.”
-
-The description of Friar Tuck entertaining King Richard in disguise
-is in Scott’s happiest vein; and Robin Hood, with his bold outlaws,
-shares the honors gracefully with knights and nobles. But it is alike
-unnecessary and unprofitable to attempt a condensation of “Ivanhoe.”
-No outline can convey the beauty of a finished picture. It is not to
-be taken at second hand. It is only for us to indicate its relation
-to history; and it will suffice to say that King Richard was gladly
-welcomed by the English people, and that Ivanhoe was wedded to the
-beautiful Rowena.
-
-But, do I hear the reader ask, what becomes of the fair Jewess? Scott
-has answered the question so beautifully in his preface that I borrow
-his own words—a passage to my mind unsurpassed in English prose: “The
-character of the fair Jewess found so much favor in the eyes of some
-fair readers, that the writer was censured, because, when arranging the
-fates of the characters of the drama, he had not assigned the hand of
-Wilfred to Rebecca, rather than the less interesting Rowena. But, not
-to mention that the prejudices of the age rendered such an union almost
-impossible, the author may, in passing, observe, that he thinks a
-character of a highly virtuous and lofty stamp, is degraded rather than
-exalted by an attempt to reward virtue with temporal prosperity. Such
-is not the recompense which Providence has deemed worthy of suffering
-merit, and it is a dangerous and fatal doctrine to teach young persons,
-the most common readers of romance, that rectitude of conduct and of
-principle are either naturally allied with, or adequately rewarded
-by, the gratification of our passions, or attainment of our wishes.
-In a word, if a virtuous and self-denied character is dismissed with
-temporal wealth, greatness, rank, or the indulgence of such a rashly
-formed or ill-assorted passion as that of Rebecca for Ivanhoe, the
-reader will be apt to say, ‘Verily, virtue has had its reward.’ But
-a glance on the great picture of life will show that the duties of
-self-denial and the sacrifice of passion to principle are seldom thus
-remunerated; and that the internal consciousness of their high-minded
-discharge of duty produces on their own reflections a more adequate
-recompense in the form of that peace which the world can not give or
-take away.”
-
-
-
-
-THE GREAT ORGAN AT FRIBOURG.
-
-By EDITH SESSIONS TUPPER.
-
-
-After thoroughly “doing” Berne in most approved guide-book fashion;
-feeding the bears—hot, dusty looking creatures; standing in the middle
-of the street, heads thrown back at the risk of dislocating our necks
-to watch the celebrated clock strike, we stand one evening on the hotel
-terrace and take our farewell look at the Bernese Alps. Sharply defined
-against a sunset-flushed sky, as if cut from alabaster, glittering
-fair and white like the pinnacles and domes of a city celestial, rise
-the Mönch, Eiger, Wetterhorn, and, serene and august in her icy virgin
-beauty, the Jungfrau.
-
- “Too soon the light began to fade,
- Tho’ lingering soft and tender;
- And the snow giants sank again
- Into their calm dead splendor.”
-
-Leaving Berne, we take our way to Fribourg, to see its wonderful
-gorges and skeleton bridges, and hear its more wonderful organ. On
-our arrival at this quaint old Romanesque town, we are driven to the
-most delightful little hotel, hanging on the very edge of the great
-ravine, upon the sides of which the town is built. Through the more
-closely-built region of the town runs the old stone wall with its high
-watch-towers. Spanning the great gulf are the bridges—mere phantoms of
-bridges they seem from our windows. A dreary, drizzling rain sets in
-soon after we arrive, and some American lads across the court-yard from
-time to time send forth in their sweet untrained voices the refrain of
-that mournful ballad, the “Soldier’s Farewell,”
-
- “Farewell, farewell, my own true love.”
-
-A prevalent tone of _heimweh_ is in the air; eyes are filling, and
-memory is stretching longing hands over the ocean, when fortunately
-comes the summons to _table d’hote_. At our plates we find programs
-in very bad English of a concert to be given this evening upon the
-great organ in the cathedral. Thither we go at dusk, pausing a moment
-to look at the grotesque carving of the last judgment over the great
-door. Thereon the good, with most satisfied faces, are being admitted
-to heaven by St. Peter, a stout old gentleman in a short gown, jingling
-a bunch of keys; while the wicked are being carried in Swiss baskets
-to a great cauldron over a blazing fire, therein to be deposited, and
-to be stirred up by devils armed with pitchforks for that purpose.
-We enter. Without, the ceaseless drip of the rain; within, gloom,
-darkness—save for the never-ceasing light before the altar, decay.
-The air is chill and damp. Around us stretch dark, shadowed aisles.
-Tombs of those long dust are on every hand. The air seems peopled with
-ghosts. We are seated, and patiently wait for life to be breathed
-into that mighty monster looming up in the darkness, above our heads.
-Suddenly, with a crash that shakes the building, the organ speaks.
-Silenced, overwhelmed, we listen, possessing our souls in patience for
-the “Pastorale,” representing a thunder storm among the Alps, which
-is to close the evening’s entertainment. We have but recently come
-from the everlasting hills, and our souls are still under their magic
-enchantment. At last the moment comes. A pause, and there steals upon
-the ear a light, sweet refrain. It is spring, the old, ideal spring;
-the trees are budding; flowers are smiling from the meadows; we feel
-warm south winds blowing; afar in the woods we hear the sylvan pipe of
-the shepherd and the songs of birds. A peace is upon everything. Nature
-is calm, happy, and full of promise of glad fruition. To this succeeds
-a languid, dreary strain—it is a drowsy summer afternoon. A delicious
-languor pervades the air; we hear the trees whispering to each other
-of their perfect foliage; we hear the laughing waters leaping and
-calling to each other through their rocky passes; the flocks are asleep
-in the shade; the shadows are stealing and playing over the sides of
-the mountains, and the whole world swims in a misty, golden haze. Now
-listen closely. Do not we catch the mutter of distant thunder? And
-again, do not we hear that clear, bell-like bird-call for rain? The
-distant muttering grows louder, a stronger breeze sways the trees;
-still we hear distinctly that bird-call. Now louder rolls the thunder,
-the wind has arisen, the trees are bending to meet it, and in rage
-are tossing their boughs to the overcast sky; and ah! here comes the
-rain. Patter, patter, at first, now fast and faster, and now with a mad
-rush down it comes in one tremendous, outpouring sheet, and now with a
-terrific rumble and crash,
-
- “From peak to peak the rattling crags among,
- Leaps the live thunder:
- Not from one lone cloud,
- But every mountain now hath found a tongue,
- And Jura answers from her misty shroud
- Back to the joyous Alps who call on her aloud.”
-
-The wind shrieks and howls, and yet above all this tumult and roar of
-the elements, clearly and unmistakably rings that sweet flute-like
-bird-call. The storm rages, spends its fury, and dies away, and from a
-neighboring cloister come the voices of an unseen choir, raising a “Te
-Deum” to him who holds the storms in his hands. Silently we rise and
-go, a great peace upon us, for divine notes from the soul of the organ
-have entered into ours.
-
- * * * * *
-
-IT is not the nature of man to be always moving forward; it has its
-comings and goings. Fever has its cold and hot fits, and the cold
-shiver proves the height of the fever quite as much as the hot fit.
-The inventions of man from age to age proceed much in the same way.
-The good nature and the malice of the world in general have the same
-ebbs and flows. “Change of living is generally agreeable to the
-rich.”—_Pascal._
-
-
-
-
-ECCENTRIC AMERICANS.
-
-By COLEMAN E. BISHOP.
-
-
-II.—THE STATESMAN IN A STATE OF NATURE.
-
-David Crockett was born in the wilds of Tennessee, August 17, 1786. He
-toughened rapidly, like a bear’s cub, but he showed in addition to the
-usual woodsman’s instincts the unusual qualities of great tenderness
-of feeling and generosity, with a remarkable gift of wit and love of
-fun. The incredible stories of his hardships at the age of twelve and
-thereafter we have not room to recount. In the best sense he was a
-tough boy. The closing scene of his home life—if a hut presided over
-by a drunken father, and a mother who left no impression on the boy’s
-character that showed itself in after years can be by any courtesy
-called a home—was a dissolving view of a ragged, bare-footed urchin of
-fourteen chased through the brush by a father with a large goad and a
-large load of liquor. Thus David Crockett set out upon the world for
-himself.
-
-With Crockett’s story as a bear-hunter, nomadic woodsman, soldier and
-Indian-fighter, exciting and marvelous as are these incidents of the
-first thirty years of his life, we shall not much concern ourselves.
-But I do wonder that his life-like, quaint narrative of these has not
-become standard juvenile literature, along with Robinson Crusoe and
-Mayne Reid’s stories of adventure. Through all these exciting though
-isolated years, the young woodsman picked up a good deal of practical
-knowledge, not one scrap of which he ever forgot; and withal was
-developing a strange quality of unpretentious self-esteem. “The idea
-seemed never to have entered his mind that there was any one superior
-to David Crockett, or any one so humble that Crockett was entitled to
-look down upon him with condescension. He was a genuine democrat, and
-all were in his view equal. And this was not the result of thought, of
-any political or moral principle. It was a part of his nature, like his
-stature or complexion. This is one of the rarest qualities to be found
-in any man.”[H]
-
-He also was developing oratorical powers. He acquired unbounded
-popularity at musters and frolics, in camp and in the chase by his
-fun-making qualities, his homely, kindly, keen wit. His retentive
-memory was an inexhaustible store-house of anecdote, and he always had
-an apt illustration for any point he wanted to make. He began to taste
-the sweet consciousness of power over his fellows, and to easily fall
-into the position of leadership, for which nature designed him.
-
-His first official position came to him at about the age of thirty.
-There were a good many outlaws in the region where he at that time had
-his cabin and claim, and society began to cohere for self-protection.
-The settlers convened and appointed Crockett and others to be justices
-of the peace, and a corps of stalwart young men to be constables.
-These justices were really provost-marshals in power. There were no
-statute laws nor courts; but there was authority enough, and Crockett
-says everybody made laws according to his own notions of right. For
-shooting and appropriating a hog running at large, for instance, the
-sentence was to strip the thief, tie him to a tree and give him a
-flogging, burn down his cabin and drive him out of the country. Soon
-after, the new territory was organized into counties and Crockett was
-regularly commissioned a justice by the legislature. His account of his
-administration is interesting:
-
- “I was made a squire according to law; though now the
- honor rested on me more heavily than before. For, at
- first, whenever I told my constable, says I, ‘catch
- that fellow and bring him up for trial!’ away he
- went, and the fellow must come, dead or alive. For we
- considered this a good warrant, though it was only in
- _verbal writing_. But after I was appointed by the
- Assembly, they told me my warrants must be in _real_
- writing and signed; and that I must keep a book and
- write my proceedings in it. This was a hard business
- on me, for I could just barely write my own name. But
- to do this, and write the warrants too, was at least
- a huckleberry over my persimmon. I had a pretty well
- informed constable however, and I told him when he
- should happen to be out anywhere and see that a warrant
- was necessary and would have a good effect, he needn’t
- take the trouble to come all the way to me to get one,
- but he could just fill one out, and then on the trial
- I could correct the whole business if he had committed
- any error. In this way I got on pretty well, till by
- care and attention I improved my handwriting in such a
- manner as to be able to prepare my warrants and keep my
- record books without much difficulty. My judgments were
- never appealed from: and if they had been they would
- have stuck like wax, as I gave my decisions on the
- principles of common justice and honesty between man
- and man, and relied on natural born sense, and not on
- law learning, to guide me; for I had never read a page
- in a law-book in all my life.”
-
-Crockett made his first stump speech when he was about thirty-four
-years old. A militia regiment was to be organized, and a Captain
-Mathews, after promising Crockett the majority of the regiment if he
-would support him for its colonel, turned against Crockett in favor of
-his own son. At a great muster prepared by Mathews, he made a stump
-speech in his own and his son’s favor. Crockett, entirely unabashed,
-mounted the stump as soon as Mathews finished, and on the captain’s own
-grounds proceeded to expose his duplicity and argue the total unfitness
-of both him and his son for the command. The speech was fluent,
-witty, full of anecdote, and carried the rude audience by storm. It
-effectually beat both father and son. The fame of this maiden effort
-traveled fast in a community where oratory was the great, if not the
-only engine of popular control, and the result was that a committee
-soon waited on Crockett and asked him to stand for the legislature then
-about to be elected (1821). Some of his first electioneering adventures
-illustrate the frankness and tact so queerly combined in him, and also
-show how he got his education in politics. Hickman county wanted to
-change its county seat. He says: “Here they told me that they wanted to
-move their town nearer to the center of the county, and I must come out
-in favor of it. I did not know what this meant, or how the town was to
-be moved, and so I kept dark, going on the same identical plan that I
-now find is called _non-committal_.”
-
-On one occasion the candidates for governor of the State, Congress,
-and several for legislature, some of them able stump-speakers, were
-announced. As he listened, a sense of inferiority for the first time,
-probably, penetrated him; he drank in all they said, and remembered it.
-He says:
-
- “The thought of having to make a speech made my knees
- feel mighty weak, and set my heart to fluttering almost
- as bad as my first love scrape with the Quaker’s niece.
- But as luck would have it, these big candidates spoke
- nearly all day, and when they quit the people were worn
- out with fatigue, which afforded me a good apology for
- not discussing the government. But I listened mighty
- close to them, and was learning pretty fast about
- political matters. When they were all done I got up and
- told some laughable story and quit.”
-
-He was elected, and in the legislature proved a good story-teller, a
-formidable antagonist in repartee, and above all a good listener. He
-says the first thing that he took pains to learn was the meaning of the
-words “judiciary” and “government,” as up to that time he had “never
-heard that there was any such thing in all nature as a judiciary.” The
-halls of the Tennessee legislature were again brightened in 1823-24 by
-the wit and good sense of “the gentleman from the cane” as an opponent
-derisively dubbed him, very much to his subsequent regret.
-
-Crockett was now so well known that he was put forward for Congress.
-His rapid advancement staggered even his self-sufficiency, and
-he objected, saying he “knowed nothing about Congress matters.”
-Fortunately, perhaps, he was given time to learn more, for he was
-beaten at the polls this time. It was claimed by his supporters the
-result was obtained by fraud, and as the adverse majority was small, he
-was urged to contest the election; but he declined, saying he did not
-care enough for office to take it unless the clearly expressed will of
-the people called him thereto. From hunting for men he turned with zest
-to hunting for bears; his endurance, hardihood and success, and the
-never-failing benevolence with which he divided the fruits of the hunt
-with poor settlers, or lent a helping hand in many other ways, made him
-more political capital than the best stump speeches could have done. He
-killed one hundred and five bears one season. Two years later (1827)
-he ran for Congress again and was triumphantly elected over two strong
-opponents. Thus the bear-hunting, Indian-fighting “gentleman from the
-cane,” barely able to write his name, so poor that he had to borrow
-money to pay his traveling expenses to Washington, became a law-maker
-of a great nation by sheer force of native talent and goodness of heart.
-
-His fame preceded him to Washington. His prowess in arms, his dexterity
-in politics, and his quaint wit had been in the papers; all his sayings
-had been, as is the style of American journalism, exaggerated and
-embellished and distorted, until the general impression of him was that
-of a coarse, outlandish, swaggering yahoo. His appearance in Washington
-dispersed these illusions thence, but the misrepresentations did not
-cease in the prints. As in the case of Lincoln, every profane and
-vulgar thing that cheap wit could invent was attributed to Crockett,
-and received as his. Many of these false impressions survive to this
-day; it is therefore proper here to give a picture of the man as he
-was seen at home. It is thus reported by an intelligent gentleman who
-visited his cabin just after his election. The visitor penetrated to
-Crockett’s cabin eight miles through unbroken wilderness by a path
-blazed on the trees. He says:
-
- Two men were seated on stools at the door, both in
- their shirt-sleeves, engaged in cleaning their rifles.
- As the stranger rode up, one of the men came forward
- to meet him. He was dressed in very plain homespun
- attire, with a black fur cap upon his head. He was
- a finely proportioned man, about six feet high,
- apparently forty-five years of age, and of very frank,
- pleasing, open countenance. He held his rifle in his
- hand, and from his right shoulder hung a bag made of
- raccoon-skin, to which there was a sheath attached
- containing a large butcher-knife.
-
- “This is Colonel Crockett’s residence, I presume,” said
- the stranger.
-
- “Yes,” was the reply, with a smile as of welcome.
-
- “Have I the pleasure of seeing that gentleman before
- me?” the stranger added.
-
- “If it be a pleasure,” was the courteous reply, “you
- have, sir.”
-
- “Well, Colonel,” responded the stranger, “I have ridden
- much out of my way to spend a day or two with you, and
- take a hunt.”
-
- “Get down, sir,” said the Colonel, cordially. “I am
- delighted to see you. I like to see strangers. And the
- only care I have is that I can not accommodate them as
- well as I could wish. I have no corn, but my little boy
- will take your horse over to my son-in-law’s. He is a
- good fellow, and will take care of him.”
-
- Leading the stranger into his cabin, Crockett very
- courteously introduced him to his brother, his wife,
- and his daughters. He then added:
-
- “You see we are mighty rough here. I am afraid you will
- think it hard times. But we have to do the best we can.
- I started mighty poor, and have been rooting ’long ever
- since. But I hate apologies. What I live upon always, I
- think a friend can for a day or two. I have but little,
- but that little is as free as the water that runs. So
- make yourself at home.”
-
-He seemed to have a great horror of binding himself to any man or
-party. “I will pledge myself to no administration,” he said. “When
-the will of my constituents is known, that will be my law; when it
-is unknown my own judgment shall be my guide.” So clear and lofty an
-idea had this unlearned man formed of the duties of a representative!
-Well for the country if as high a standard of political duty even now
-prevailed among the best and wisest legislators!
-
-Nothing is recorded of his first term in Congress except that he
-“brought down the house” every time he spoke, and once so discomfited a
-colleague that a duel was talked of; upon which Crockett gave out that
-if any one challenged him he should select as their weapons _bows and
-arrows_.
-
-He was re-elected in 1829. This was the Jackson tidal wave—the
-inauguration of that craze of hero-worship and spoils-grabbing which
-entailed its curse upon our politics, even to this day. During this
-term came the turning point in Crockett’s career and a triumphant test
-of the strength of his character. At first he supported Jackson’s
-administration and acted with the party. But when that “constitutional
-democrat” blossomed out into an unconstitutional autocrat, one man of
-his party was found manly enough to act upon his own convictions. One
-of these unconstitutional measures was an act to vote half a million
-of dollars for disbursements made without color of law, and Crockett
-opposed it. The result is best told in his own words:
-
- “Soon after the commencement of this second term, I
- saw, or thought I did, that it was expected of me that
- I would bow to the name of Andrew Jackson, and follow
- him in all his motions, and mindings, and turnings,
- even at the expense of my conscience and judgment.
- Such a thing was new to me, and a total stranger to
- my principles. I know’d well enough, though, that if
- I didn’t ‘hurrah’ for his name, the hue and cry was
- to be raised against me, and I was to be sacrificed,
- if possible. His famous, or rather I should say his
- _infamous_ Indian bill was brought forward, and I
- opposed it from the purest motives in the world.
- Several of my colleagues got around me, and told me how
- well they loved me, and that I was ruining myself. They
- said this was a favorite measure of the President, and
- I ought to go for it. I told them I believed it was a
- wicked, unjust measure, and that I should go against
- it, let the cost to myself be what it might; that I
- was willing to go with General Jackson in everything I
- believed was honest and right; but, further than this,
- I wouldn’t go for him or any other man in the whole
- creation.
-
- “I had been elected by a majority of three thousand
- five hundred and eighty-five votes, and I believed they
- were honest men, and wouldn’t want me to vote for any
- unjust notion, to please Jackson or any one else; at
- any rate, I was of age, and determined to trust them.
- I voted against this Indian bill, and my conscience
- yet tells me that I gave a good, honest vote, and one
- that I believe will not make me ashamed in the day
- of judgment. I served out my term, and though many
- amusing things happened, I am not disposed to swell my
- narrative by inserting them.
-
- “When it closed, and I returned home, I found the storm
- had raised against me sure enough; and it was echoed
- from side to side, and from end to end of my district,
- that I had turned against Jackson. This was considered
- the unpardonable sin. I was hunted down like a wild
- varment, and in this hunt every little newspaper in
- the district, and every little pin-hook lawyer was
- engaged. Indeed, they were ready to print anything
- and everything that the ingenuity of man could invent
- against me.”
-
-It proved as he had anticipated; he failed of re-election, but only by
-a majority of seventy votes. Two years of bear-hunting followed, during
-which Crockett thirsted for the nobler pursuit of ambition of which he
-had had a taste. Some of his predictions as to Jackson’s course had
-been verified, and many things conspired to open his constituents’
-eyes to the high character of their representative’s course. In the
-canvass of 1833 he was elected the third time, winning one of the
-most remarkable political triumphs ever known in this country. He had
-against him all the education, talent and wealth of his district; the
-administration made it a test vote, and all that promises of reward,
-threats of punishment, political and social, unlimited money, the
-influence of the national banks, and every appliance that the most
-tyrannical disposition ever dominant in our affairs could bring to bear
-were used. Men of genius, eloquence, influence and fortune rode the
-district; whiskey was free as water. The entire press opposed Crockett
-with the ingenuity and abandon which only “patronage” can inspire.
-More than all this the common people of the district, with whom lay
-Crockett’s influence, if he had any, worshiped “Old Hickory,” under
-whom many of them had fought. Against these odds the impoverished,
-uneducated hunter, with no aid but his natural gifts and a clean
-record, canvassed the district of seventeen counties and 100,000
-inhabitants and won. This remarkable victory in Jackson’s own State,
-when his popularity was at its height, gave Crockett a new and better
-title to respect than any he had before presented; and it increased
-the mystery hanging about this strange, uncultured genius. The world
-abandoned its preconceived notions of the back-woodsman when it saw his
-power; but it was at loss to conceive a true idea of him.
-
-During this session of Congress (1833-34) Crockett wrote his
-autobiography. As might be expected, it is a very unique work. Its
-style is simple and vigorous; the language is Shaksperian in its
-monosyllables and short sentences, but the _ensemble_ is graphic, and
-as the events narrated are of the most extraordinary kind, it makes
-very exciting reading. On the title page appears his famous motto:
-
- “I leave these words for others when I’m dead;
- Be always sure you’re right, then GO AHEAD!”
-
-Crockett submitted the manuscript of this work to a critic for
-revision; but he declared afterward that the reviser had not improved
-the work—probably because he toned down its vigorous language. Such
-expressions as “my son and me went,” occur, and spelling like this:
-“hawl,” “tuff,” “scaffled,” “clomb” (for climbed); “flower” (for
-flour). But he positively objected to some of the orthographical
-corrections, as he said “such spelling was contrary to nature.” He
-brought the narrative of his life up to the date, and concluded it as
-follows:
-
- “I am now here in Congress, this 28th day of January,
- in the year of our Lord 1834; and, what is more
- agreeable to my feelings, as a free man. I am at
- liberty to vote as my conscience and judgment dictate
- to be right, without the yoke of any party on me or the
- driver at my heels with the whip in hand commanding
- me to ‘gee-wo-haw!’ just at his pleasure. Look at my
- arms: you will find no party handcuffs on them! Look at
- my neck: you will not find there any collar with the
- engraving,
-
- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
- . MY DOG.—ANDREW JACKSON. .
- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
-
- But you will find me standing up to my rack as the
- people’s faithful representative, and the public’s most
- obedient, very humble servant,
-
- “DAVID CROCKETT.”
-
-What would not senators and representatives of to-day give for the same
-independence? What health and manliness it would impart to public life,
-if every legislator were thus free of handcuffs and collars!
-
-In the spring of 1834, Crockett made his famous “starring tour” through
-the East. From Philadelphia to Portland, and back to Washington, it
-was a continuous ovation. Crockett and the populace were mutually
-astonished; he at his receptions, and they at the actions, appearance,
-and utterances of the man who had been represented to them by his
-political opponents as a buffoon and semi-savage. He was more than
-all impressed with the developments of wealth and enterprise in the
-North; he frankly confessed the prejudices he had formed against the
-Yankees, and praised their thrift and principles. He spoke well and
-appropriately on each occasion, though—strange change in him!—with
-evident confusion at the lionizing. He wrote of the ovation he received
-on landing in Philadelphia:
-
- “It struck me strangely to hear a strange people
- huzzaing for me; it took me so uncommon unexpected,
- as I had no idea of attracting attention. The folks
- came crowding around me, saying, ‘Give me the hand
- of an honest man.’ I thought I had rather be in the
- wilderness with my gun and dogs, than to be attracting
- all that fuss.”
-
-In a happy little speech here, from the hotel balcony, he said:
-
- “I am almost induced to believe this flattery—perhaps
- a burlesque. This is new to me, yet I see nothing but
- friendship in your faces.”
-
-At a grand banquet in New York City, Crockett having been toasted as
-“The undeviating supporter of the constitution and the laws,” made
-this neat and characteristic hit, as he reports it:
-
- “I made a short speech, and concluded with the story of
- the red cow, which was, that as long as General Jackson
- went straight, I followed him; but when he began to go
- this way, and that way, and every way, I wouldn’t go
- after him; like the boy whose master ordered him to
- plough across the field to the red cow. Well, he began
- to plough, and she began to walk; and he ploughed all
- forenoon after her. So when the master came, he swore
- at him for going so crooked. ‘Why, sir,’ said the boy,
- ‘you told me to plough to the red cow, and I kept after
- her, but she always kept moving.’”
-
-Most enthusiastic of all was his reception in Boston, where President
-Jackson’s policy was most unpopular. It was even proposed to confer
-on Crockett the degree of LL.D., an honor that had been awarded to
-Jackson: but, unlike Jackson, Crockett had the wit to decline an honor
-which neither of the two deserved.
-
-The more he saw and heard the more humble he became. When called
-up for an after-dinner speech in Boston he burst out in his honest
-way—“I never had but six months’ schooling in all my life, and I
-confess I consider myself a _poor tyke_ to be here addressing the most
-intelligent people in the world.” If he had not culture, he had what
-was far more rare in that age of truckling to one-man power—_manhood_.
-It seemed as if unlettered David Crockett was the only man in public
-life to stand up straight, and people acknowledged the power of true
-character. The culture and wealth of the East bowed to unspoiled
-manhood; it was a revelation fresh from Nature’s hand.
-
-A few extracts from one of his more sustained and dignified efforts
-will illustrate the development Crockett had attained by simple
-observation. After praising New England he said:
-
- “I don’t mean that because I eat your bread and drink
- your liquor, that I feel so. No; that don’t make me see
- clearer than I did. It is your habits, and manners,
- and customs; your industry; your proud, independent
- spirits; your hanging on to the eternal principles of
- right and wrong; your liberality in prosperity, and
- your patience when you are ground down by legislation,
- which, instead of crushing you, whets your invention to
- strike a path without a blaze on a tree to guide you;
- and above all, your never-dying, deathless grip to our
- glorious Constitution. These are the things that make
- me think you are a mighty good people.
-
- “I voted for Andrew Jackson because I believed he
- possessed certain principles, and not because his name
- was Andrew Jackson, or the ‘Hero,’ or ‘Old Hickory.’
- And when he left those principles which induced me to
- support him, I considered myself justified in opposing
- him. This thing of man-worship I am a stranger to; I
- don’t like it; it taints every action of life.
-
- “I know nothing, by experience, of party discipline. I
- would rather be a raccoon-dog, and belong to a Negro in
- the forest, than to belong to any party, further than
- to do justice to all, and to promote the interests of
- my country. The time will and must come, when honesty
- will receive its reward, and when the people of this
- nation will be brought to a sense of their duty, and
- will pause and reflect how much it cost us to redeem
- ourselves from the government of one man. It cost the
- lives and fortunes of thousands of the best patriots
- that ever lived. Yes, gentlemen, hundreds of them fell
- in sight of your own city.
-
- “Gentlemen, if it is for opposing those high-handed
- measures that you compliment me, I say I have done so,
- and will do so, now and forever. I will be no man’s
- man, and no party’s man, other than to be the people’s
- faithful representative: and I am delighted to see the
- noble spirit of liberty retained so boldly here, where
- the first spark was kindled; and I hope to see it shine
- and spread over our whole country.”
-
-He took his seat in Congress, a central object in the political
-field. His position was anomalous. Party ties were closely drawn,
-and party rancor bitter as it can be only when nothing but plunder
-is at stake between parties. The Democrats could not claim Crockett
-so long as he antagonized their god, Jackson; and the alliance of
-the Whigs he most distinctly repudiated. He was an independent, an
-“unattached statesman;” the prototype of an element which has now
-become formidable in our politics, but a character for whom there was
-no place in those times. He was, like all eccentrics, ahead or apart
-from his age, and was at first feared, then shunned, and then called
-crazy by the great body of public men, whose standard of sanity was to
-sacrifice manhood to party, to betray the Republic for spoils.
-
-It was during this Congress that he created a sensation by antagonizing
-benevolence of representatives at government expense. A bill had
-been reported and was about to pass, appropriating a gratuity to a
-naval officer’s widow. Crockett made an unanswerable argument on the
-unconstitutionality of this and other such appropriations, and closed
-by offering, with other friends of the widow, to give her a week of his
-salary as congressman. Not a member dared to answer or to vote for the
-bill, and not one followed Crockett’s example of charity at his own
-expense.
-
-But the independent, honest eccentric had reached the end of his public
-career. In the next congressional election he was beaten by tricks such
-as would not be tolerated at this time. One of these devices was to
-announce fictitiously a large number of public meetings in Crockett’s
-name on the same day. When he failed to appear, as announced, speakers
-of the Jackson party, who would always arrange to be present, denounced
-Crockett as afraid to face his constituents upon his “treacherous and
-corrupt record in Congress.” The defeat was a surprise to him; more, it
-almost broke his heart. He wrote, manfully, but pathetically, “I have
-suffered myself to be politically sacrificed to save my country from
-ruin and disgrace.” I may add, like the man in the play, “Crockett’s
-occupation’s gone.”
-
-Shortly after he made a farewell address to his constituents, into
-which he compressed a good deal of plain speaking, or as he says,
-“I put the ingredients in the cup pretty strong, I tell you: and
-I concluded by telling them that I was done with politics for the
-present, and that they might all go to hell and I would go to Texas.”
-
-“When I returned home,” he adds, “I felt sort of cast down at the
-change that had taken place in my fortunes; sorrow, it is said, will
-make even an oyster feel poetical. Such was my state of feeling that I
-began to fancy myself inspired; so I took my pen in hand, and as usual,
-I went ahead.” This is
-
-
-CROCKETT’S FAREWELL TO HOME.
-
- “Farewell to the mountains whose mazes to me
- Were more beautiful far than Eden could be;
- No fruit was forbidden, but Nature had spread
- Her bountiful board, and her children were fed.
- The hills were our garners—our herds wildly grew
- And Nature was shepherd and husbandman too.
- I felt like a monarch, yet thought like a man,
- As I thanked the Great Giver, and worshiped his plan.
-
- “The home I forsake where my offspring arose;
- The graves I forsake where my children repose.
- The home I redeemed from the savage and wild;
- The home I have loved as a father his child;
- The corn that I planted, the fields that I cleared,
- The flocks that I raised, and the cabin I reared;
- The wife of my bosom—Farewell to ye all!
- In the land of the stranger I rise or I fall.
-
- “Farewell to my country! I fought for thee well,
- When the savage rushed forth like the demons from hell.
- In peace or in war I have stood by thy side—
- My country, for thee I have lived, would have died!
- But I am cast off, my career now is run,
- And I wander abroad like the prodigal son—
- Where the wild savage roves, and the broad prairies spread,
- The fallen—despised—will again go ahead.”
-
-We can not follow our hero—for he was a moral hero—in his adventures
-while going across the country to Texas. Only one incident have we
-room for. On the way he rode apace with a circuit preacher, a man not
-less a hardy adventurer than himself. He narrates this:
-
- “We talked about politics, religion, and nature,
- farming, and bear-hunting, and the many blessings that
- an all-bountiful Providence had bestowed upon our
- happy country. He continued to talk on this subject,
- traveling over the whole ground, as it were, until
- his imagination glowed, and his soul became full to
- overflowing; and he checked his horse, and I stopped
- mine also, and a stream of eloquence burst forth from
- his aged lips, such as I have seldom listened to:
- it came from the overflowing fountain of a pure and
- grateful heart. We were alone in the wilderness, but as
- he proceeded, it seemed to me as if the tall trees bent
- their tops to listen; that the mountain stream laughed
- out joyfully as it bounded on like some living thing;
- that the fading flowers of autumn smiled, and sent
- forth their fresher fragrance, as if conscious that
- they would revive in spring; and even the sterile rocks
- seemed to be endued with some mysterious influence. We
- were alone in the wilderness, but all things told me
- that God was there. The thought renewed my strength and
- courage. I had left my country, felt somewhat like an
- outcast, believed that I had been neglected and lost
- sight of. But I was now conscious that there was one
- watchful eye over me; no matter whether I dwelt in
- the populous cities, or threaded the pathless forests
- alone; no matter whether I stood in the high places
- among men, or made my solitary lair in the untrodden
- wild, that eye was still upon me. My very soul leaped
- joyfully at the thought. I never felt so grateful in
- all my life. I never loved my God so sincerely in all
- my life. I felt that I still had a friend.
-
- “When the old man finished, I found that my eyes were
- wet with tears. I approached and pressed his hand, and
- thanked him, and says I, ‘Now let us take a drink.’ I
- set him the example, and he followed it, and in a style
- too that satisfied me, that if he had ever belonged
- to the temperance society, he had either renounced
- membership, or obtained a dispensation.”
-
-Crockett reached Texas just in time to take part with the American
-filibusters in the famous defense of the fortress of the Alamo, against
-Santa Anna’s army. On the 6th of March, 1836, the citadel was carried
-by the Mexicans by assault, only six of the little garrison surviving,
-of whom Crockett was one. When captured he stood at bay in an angle of
-the fort, his shattered rifle in one hand and a bloody bowie-knife in
-the other; twenty Mexicans, dead or dying, were at his feet. His face
-was covered with blood flowing from a deep gash across his forehead.
-Santa Anna ordered the prisoners to be put to the sword. Crockett,
-hearing the order, though entirely unarmed, sprang like a tiger at the
-throat of the Mexican general, but a dozen swords interrupted him and
-cut off his life.
-
-Thus in its prime was thrown away a life that in many respects was
-one of the most extraordinary in our annals. If he had enjoyed early
-advantages, he would have been one of the greatest of Americans.
-Nay, it is possible that if he had not been so deeply wounded by
-ingratitude, treachery and defeat, and had remained at home, he,
-instead of General Harrison, would have been the one to lead the
-popular revolution, when came the reaction from the unlicensed _regime_
-of Jackson and Van Buren.
-
-David Crockett’s courage, independence, honesty, goodness of heart,
-made him shine “like a good deed in a naughty world.” He ought not
-to be forgotten by his countrymen, for a noble illustration of the
-capabilities that may be found among the common people, and of the
-career possible to even the lowliest-born American citizen.
-
- * * * * *
-
-WHEN a man is called feeble, what is meant by the expression?
-Feebleness denotes a relative state; a relative state of the being to
-whom it is applied. He whose strength exceeds his necessities, though
-an insect, a worm, is a strong being; he whose necessities exceed his
-strength, though an elephant, a lion, a conqueror, a hero, though a
-god, is a feeble being.—ROUSSEAU.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[H] Abbott.
-
-
-
-
-ETIQUETTE.
-
-
-Etiquette is from the French word for ticket, and its present use in
-English suggests the old custom of distributing tickets or cards on
-which the ceremonies to be observed at any formal proceedings are
-fully set forth—a kind of program for important social gatherings of
-distinguished persons. Modern usage has given the word a much wider
-significance. It means the manners or deportment of cultured people;
-their bearing toward, or treatment of others.
-
-The suggestions in a recent number of THE CHAUTAUQUAN, respecting
-“street etiquette,” or things proper to be observed in riding, driving
-and walking, will not now be repeated, though many of our younger
-readers might profit by having, on so familiar a subject, “line upon
-line, precept upon precept.”
-
-The etiquette proper for the home and every-day life, in town and
-country, is quite as important, and embraces more things than there is
-space to notice.
-
-
-CALLS AND CARDS.
-
-Home, the dearest spot on earth, would be no fit abode for social
-beings if closed against the entrance and friendly offices of those
-without. The courtesies and kindness of neighbors must be received and
-reciprocated to make the home comforts complete. By simple methods
-the most important amicable relations in society are established and
-maintained.
-
-Calls may be distinguished as ceremonious or friendly. The latter
-among intimate friends may, and ought to be quite informal, and for
-them no rules need be prescribed. Common-sense may be safely trusted,
-as to their manner, frequency, and the time spent in making them. But
-well-disposed, cultured people will usually have friendly relations
-with a much larger number than can be received on terms of close
-intimacy. As a means of establishing and maintaining such relations,
-mere formal calls are made. In the country and in small towns residents
-are expected to call on new-comers without having any previous
-acquaintance with them, or even having met them before. Ordinarily the
-new-comer, of whatever rank, should not call formally on a resident
-first, but wait till the other has taken the initiative. If after the
-first meeting, for any reason, the resident does not care to pursue the
-acquaintance, it will be discontinued by not leaving cards or calling
-again. The newcomer in like manner if not wishing to extend or continue
-the acquaintance, will politely return the first call, leaving cards
-only if the neighbors are not at home.
-
-In some sections of the country calling on newcomers is done rather
-indiscriminately and with little regard to the real, or supposed social
-standing of the persons. This accords best with our American ideas of
-equality, and is consistent for those whose friendships are decided by
-character and personal accomplishments, rather than by the accidents
-of birth or wealth. The good society for which all may rightly aspire
-claims as among its brightest jewels some who financially rank with
-the lowly—rich only in the nobler qualities of mind and heart. The
-etiquette that, in any way, closes the door to exclude them is more
-nice than wise.
-
-Those in high esteem in their community and most worthy will naturally,
-if circumstances permit, take the responsibility of first calls on
-strangers who come to reside among them. The call itself is a tender
-of friendship, and friendly offices, even though intimacy is not found
-practicable or desirable.
-
-Custom does not require the residents of large cities to formally call
-on all new-comers in their neighborhood, which would be impracticable,
-only those quite near and having apparently about the same social
-status are entitled to this courtesy. Some discrimination is not only
-allowable but necessary.
-
-A desirable acquaintance once formed, however initiated, is maintained
-by calls more or less frequent, as circumstances may decide, or by
-leaving cards when for either party that is more convenient.
-
-Visiting cards must be left in person, not sent by mail or by the
-hand of a servant, unless in exceptional cases. Distance, unfavorable
-weather or delicate health might be sufficient reasons for sending the
-cards, but, as a rule, ladies leave their cards themselves, this being
-found more acceptable.
-
-A lady’s visiting card should be plain, printed in clear type, with no
-ornamental or old English letters. The name printed on the middle of
-the card. The place of residence on the left-hand corner.
-
-A married lady would never use her christian name on a card, but that
-of her husband after Mrs., before her surname.
-
-In most places it is customary and considered in good taste for
-husbands and wives to have their names printed on the same card: “Mr.
-and Mrs.,” but each would still need separate cards of their own.
-
-The title “Honorable” is not used on cards. Other titles are, omitting
-the “The” preceding the title.
-
-It is not in accordance with etiquette in most places for young ladies
-to have visiting cards of their own. Their names are printed beneath
-that of their mother, on her card, either “Miss” or “the Misses,” as
-the case may be. If the mother is not living, the daughter’s name would
-be printed beneath that of her father, or of her brother, in case of a
-brother and sister residing alone.
-
-If a young lady is taken into society by a relative or friend, her name
-would properly be written in pencil under that of her friend.
-
-If a lady making calls finds the mistress of the house “not at home”
-she will leave her card and also one of her husband’s for each, the
-mistress and her husband; but if she have a card with her own and her
-husband’s name on it, she leaves but one of his separate cards.
-
-If a lady were merely leaving cards, and not intending to call she
-would hand the three cards to the person answering at the door, saying,
-“For Mrs. ——,” without asking whether she is at home or not.
-
-If a lady is sufficiently intimate to call, asks for and finds her
-friend at home, she should, on leaving the house, leave two of her
-husband’s cards in a conspicuous place on the table in the hall. She
-should not drop them in the card-basket or hand them to the hostess,
-though she might silently hand them to the servant in the hall. She
-will on no account leave her own card, having seen the lady which
-removes all occasion for leaving her card.
-
-If the lady were accompanied by her husband and the lady of the house
-at home, the husband would leave one of his own cards for the master of
-the house, but if he also is at home no cards are left. A lady leaves
-her card for a lady only, while a gentleman leaves his for both husband
-and wife.
-
-A gentleman when calling takes his hat in his hand into the room and
-holds it until he has met the mistress of the house; he may then either
-place it on a chair or table near him, or hold it in his hand till he
-takes his leave.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DREAMS, books, are each a world: and books we know,
- Are a substantial world, both pure and good;
- Round these, with tendrils strong as flesh and blood,
- Our pastime and our happiness will grow.
- There find I personal themes, a plenteous store,
- Matter wherein right voluble I am,
- To which I listen with a ready ear;
- Two shall be named, preëminently dear,—
- The gentle lady married to the Moor;
- And heavenly Una, with her milk-white lamb.
-
- Blessings be with them, and eternal praise,
- Who gave us nobler loves and nobler cares—
- The poets, who on earth have made us heirs
- Of truth and pure delight by heavenly lays!
- Oh! might my name be numbered among theirs,
- Then gladly would I end my mortal days.
-
- —_Wordsworth’s “Personal Talk.”_
-
-
-
-
-NAPOLEON’S MARSHALS.
-
-
-Napoleon’s marshals were twenty-six in number, of whom seven only
-were born in a rank which would have entitled them to become general
-officers under the old Monarchy. These were Kellermann, Berthier,
-Davoust, Macdonald, Marmont, Grouchy, and Poniatowski, a Pole. Of
-the others, Murat was the son of an innkeeper, Lefèbvre of a miller,
-Augereau of a mason, Bernadotte of a weaver, and Ney of a cooper.
-Masséna’s father, like Murat’s, kept a village wine-shop; Lannes was
-the son of an ostler, and was himself apprenticed to a dyer; Victor,
-whose real name was Perrin, was the son of an invalided private
-soldier, who after leaving the service became a market-crier; while
-Soult’s mother kept a mercer’s shop, and Oudinot’s a small _cafè_ with
-a circulating library. The marshals sprung from the _bourgeoisie_ or
-middle class were Serrurier, whose father was an officer, but never
-rose above the rank of captain; Bessières, whose father, though a poor
-clerk in a lawyer’s office, was the son of a doctor; Suchet, who was
-the son of a silk-merchant; Moncey, the son of a barrister; Gouvion,
-who assumed the name of Saint-Cyr, and whose father practiced as an
-attorney; and Brune, who started in life as a journalist. It is curious
-to trace through the lives of the different men the effect which
-their earliest associations had upon them. Some grew ashamed of their
-parentage; whilst others bragged overmuch of being self-made men. Only
-one or two bore their honors with perfect modesty and tact.
-
-The noblest character among Napoleon’s marshals was beyond doubt
-Adrien Moncey, Duc de Conégliano. He was born at Besançon in 1754,
-and enlisted at the age of fifteen, simply that he might not be a
-charge to his parents. From his father, the barrister, he had picked
-up a smattering of education, while Nature had given him a talent
-for drawing. He looked so small and young when he was brought before
-the colonel of the Franche Comté regiment for enrollment, that the
-latter, who was quite a young man—the Count de Survilliers—asked him,
-laughing, whether he had been tipsy from “drinking too much milk”
-when he fell into the hands of the recruiting sergeant. The sergeant,
-by way of proving that young Moncey had been quite sober when he had
-put on the white cockade (which was like taking the king’s shilling
-in England), produced a cleverly executed caricature of himself which
-the boy had drawn; upon which M. de Survilliers predicted that so
-accomplished a recruit would quickly win an epaulette. This promise
-came to nothing, for in 1789, after twenty years’ service, Moncey was
-only a lieutenant. It was a noble trait in him that in after years he
-never spoke resentfully of his slow promotion. He used to say that he
-had been thoroughly well-trained, and he alluded kindly to all his
-former officers. After Napoleon’s overthrow, Moncey’s conduct was most
-chivalrous; he privately blamed Ney’s betrayal of the Bourbons, for it
-was not in his nature to approve of double-dealing, but he refused to
-sit in judgment upon his former comrade. Marshal Victor was sent to
-shake his resolution, but Moncey repeated two or three times: “I do not
-think I should have acted as Ney did, but I believe he acted according
-to his conscience and did well; ordinary rules do not apply to this
-case.” He eventually became governor of the Invalides, and it fell to
-him in 1840 to receive Napoleon’s body when it was brought from St.
-Helena. It was remarked at the time that if Napoleon himself could have
-designated the man who was to discharge this pious duty, he would have
-chosen none other than Moncey, or Oudinot, who by a happy coincidence
-became governor of the Invalides in 1842 after Moncey’s death.
-
-Nicolas Oudinot, Duc de Reggio, was surnamed the Modern Bayard. He was
-born in 1767, and like Moncey enlisted in his sixteenth year. He was
-wounded thirty-two times in action, but was so little of a braggart
-that in going among the old pensioners of the Invalides he was never
-heard to allude to his own scars. At Friedland a bullet went through
-both his cheeks, breaking two molars. “These Russians do not know how
-to draw teeth,” was his only remark, as his wound was being dressed.
-
-After Friedland he received with the title of count a grant of £40,000,
-and he began to distribute money at such a rate among his poor
-relations, that the emperor remonstrated with him. “You keep the lead
-for yourself, and you give the gold away,” said His Majesty in allusion
-to two bullets which remained in the marshal’s body.
-
-Macdonald comes next among the marshals for nobility of character. He
-was of Irish extraction, born at Sancerre in 1765, and served under
-Louis XVI. in Dillon’s Irish Regiment. Macdonald won his colonelcy at
-Jemmapes. In 1804, however, all his prospects were suddenly marred
-through his generous espousal of Moreau’s cause. Moreau had been
-banished on an ill-proven charge of conspiracy; and Macdonald thought,
-like most honest men, that he had been very badly treated.
-
-But by saying aloud what most honest men were afraid even to whisper,
-Macdonald incurred the Corsican’s vindictive hatred, and during
-five years he was kept in disgrace, being deprived of his command,
-and debarred from active service. He thus missed the campaigns
-of Austerlitz and Jéna, and this was a bitter chagrin to him. He
-retired to a small country-house near Brunoy, and one of his favorite
-occupations was gardening. He was much interested in the projects
-for manufacturing sugar out of beetroot, which were to render France
-independent of West India sugar—a matter of great consequence after
-the destruction of France’s naval power at Trafalgar: and he had an
-intelligent gardener who helped him in his not very successful efforts
-to raise fine beetroots. This man turned out to be a police-spy.
-Napoleon in his jealousy of Moreau and hatred of all who sympathized
-with the latter, had thought it good to have Macdonald watched, and
-he appears to have suspected at one time that the hero of Otricoli
-contemplated taking service in the English army. There were other
-marshals besides Macdonald who had reasons to complain of Napoleon;
-Victor’s hatred of him was very lively, and arose out of a practical
-joke. Victor was the vainest of men; he had entered Louis XVI.’s
-service at fifteen as a drummer, but when he became an officer under
-the Republic he was weak enough to be ashamed of his humble origin
-and assumed his Christian name of Victor as a surname instead of his
-patronymic of Perrin. He might have pleaded, to be sure, that Victor
-was a name of happy augury to a soldier, but he does not appear to
-have behaved well toward his Perrin connections. He was a little man
-with a waist like a pumpkin, and a round, rosy, jolly face, which had
-caused him to be nicknamed _Beau Soleil_. A temperate fondness for red
-wine added occasionally to the luster of his complexion. He was not a
-general of the first order, but brave and faithful in carrying out his
-master’s plans; he had an honorable share in the victory of Friedland,
-and after this battle was promoted to the marshalate and to a dukedom.
-Now Victor would have liked to be made Duke of Marengo; but Napoleon’s
-sister Pauline suggested that his services in the two Italian wars
-could be commemorated as well by the title of Belluno—pronounced in
-French, Bellune. It was not until after Napoleon had innocently acceded
-to this suggestion that he learned his facetious sister had in choosing
-the title of Bellune (Belle Lune) played upon the sobriquet of Beau
-Soleil. He was at first highly displeased at this, but Victor himself
-took the joke so very badly that the emperor ended by joining in the
-laughter, and said that if the marshal did not like the title that had
-been given him, he should have no other. Wounds in vanity seldom heal,
-and Victor, as soon as he could safely exhibit his resentment, showed
-himself one of Napoleon’s bitterest enemies. During the Hundred Days he
-accompanied Louis XVIII. to Ghent, and he figured in full uniform at
-the _Te Deum_ celebrated in the Cathedral of Saint Bavon in honor of
-Waterloo.
-
-Augereau, Duc de Castiglione, was of all the marshals the one in whom
-there is least to admire; yet he was for a time the most popular among
-them, having been born in Paris and possessing the devil-may-care
-impudence of Parisians. He was the son of a mason and of a street
-fruit-vendor, and he began life as apprentice to his father’s trade.
-Soon after he enlisted, and proved a capital soldier; but his character
-was only good in the military sense. He was thirty-two when the
-Revolution broke out, and was then wearing a sergeant’s stripes; in
-the following year he got a commission; in 1793 he was a colonel; in
-1795 a general. His rapid promotion was not won by valor only, but by
-sending to the war office bombastic despatches in which he magnified
-every achievement of his twenty-fold, and related it with a rigmarole
-of patriotic sentiments and compliments to the convention.
-
-There was one great point of resemblance between Augereau and Masséna:
-they were both inveterate looters. In 1798, when Masséna was sent
-to Rome to establish a republic, his own soldiers were disgusted by
-the shameless way in which he plundered palaces and churches, and he
-actually had to resign his command owing to their murmurs. Augereau was
-a more wily spoiler, for he gave his men a good share of what he took,
-and kept another share for Parisian museums, but he always reserved
-enough for himself to make his soldiering a very profitable business.
-
-It was politic of Napoleon to make of Augereau a marshal-duke, for
-apart from the man’s intrepidity, which was unquestionable (though he
-was a poor general), the honors conferred upon him were a compliment
-to the whole class of Parisian _ouvriers_. Augereau’s mother, the
-costerwoman, lived to see him in all his glory, and he was good to
-her, for once, at a state pageant, when he was wearing the plumed
-hat of a senator, and the purple velvet mantle with its _semis_ of
-golden bees, he gave her his arm in public. This incident delighted
-all the market-women of Paris, and helped to make Napoleon’s court
-popular; but in general respects Augereau proved an unprofitable,
-ungrateful servant. He was one of the first marshals to grumble against
-his master’s repeated campaigns, and he deserted him in 1814 under
-circumstances which looked suspicious. Napoleon accused him of letting
-himself be purposely beaten by the Allies. After the escape from Elba,
-Augereau first pronounced himself vehemently against the “usurper;”
-then proffered him his services, which were contemptuously spurned. The
-Duc de Castiglione’s career ended then, for he retired to his estate at
-Houssaye, and died a year afterward, little regretted by anybody.
-
-Masséna, who had been born the year after Augereau, died the year after
-him, in 1817. He too had enlisted very young, but finding he could get
-no promotion, had asked his friends to buy his discharge, and during
-the five years that preceded the Revolution, he served as potman in his
-father’s tavern at Leven. Re-enlisting in 1789, he became a general in
-less than four years. After Rivoli, Bonaparte dubbed him “The darling
-of victory;” but it was a curious feature in Masséna that his talents
-only came out on the battle-field. Usually he was a dull dog, with no
-faculty for expressing his ideas, and he wore a morose look. Napoleon
-said that “the noise of cannon cleared his mind,” endowing him with
-penetration and gaiety at the same time. The din of war had just the
-contrary effect upon Brune, who, but for his tragic death, would have
-remained the most obscure of the marshals, though he is conspicuous
-from being almost the only one of the twenty-six who had no title of
-nobility. Brune was a notable example of what strong will-power can
-do to conquer innate nervousness. He was the son of a barrister, and
-having imbibed the hottest revolutionary principles, vapored them
-off by turning journalist. He went to Paris, and was introduced to
-Danton, for whom he conceived an enthusiastic admiration. He became
-the demagogue’s disciple, letter-writer, and boon companion, and it is
-pretty certain that he would eventually have kept him company on the
-guillotine, had it not been for a lucky sneer from a woman’s lips which
-drove him into the army. Brune had written a pamphlet on military
-operations, and it was being talked of at Danton’s table, when Mdlle.
-Gerfault, an actress of the Palais Royal, better known as “Eglé,” said
-mockingly, “You will be a general when we fight with pens.” Stung to
-the quick, Brune applied for a commission, was sent into the army with
-the rank of major, and in about a year, through Danton’s patronage,
-became a brigade-general; meanwhile poor Eglé, having wagged her pert
-tongue at Robespierre, lost her head in consequence.
-
-The marshal on whom ducal honors seemed to sit most queerly was
-François Lefèbvre, Duc de Dantzig. He was born in 1755, the son of a
-miller, and was a sergeant in the French guards at the time of the
-Revolution. He had then just married a _vivandière_. The anecdotes of
-Madame Lefèbvre’s incongruous sayings at the consular and imperial
-courts are so many as to remind one of the proverb, “We yield only to
-riches.” Everything that could be imagined in the way of a _lapsus
-linguæ_ or a bull was attributed to this good-natured Mrs. Malaprop,
-whose oddities amused Josephine, but not always Napoleon.
-
-Once Lefèbvre fell ill of ague, and his servant, an old soldier, caught
-the malady at the same time. The servant was quickly cured; but the
-fever clung to the marshal until it occurred to his energetic duchess
-that the doctor had blundered by giving to a marshal the same doses as
-to a private soldier. She rapidly counted on her fingers the different
-rungs of the military ladder. “Here, drink, this suits your rank,” she
-said, putting a full tumbler to her husband’s lips, and the duke having
-swallowed a dozen doses at one gulp, was soon on his legs again. “You
-have much to learn, my friend,” was the lady’s subsequent remark to the
-astonished doctor.
-
-Napoleon was a great stickler for appearances, and for this reason
-loathed the dirtiness and slovenliness of Davoust. Madame Junot, in
-her amusing “Memoirs,” relates that the Duc d’Auerstadt, having some
-facial resemblance to Napoleon, was fond of copying him in dress and
-manners; but she adds that Napoleon himself was very neat. A marshal
-had no excuse for being untidy. Davoust had been at Brienne with
-Bonaparte, and had thus a longer experience of his master’s character
-than any of the other marshals. Had he been wise he would have turned
-it to account, not only by cultivating the graces, but by giving the
-emperor that ungrudging, demonstrative loyalty which Napoleon valued
-above all things, and rewarded by constant favor. But Davoust was a
-caballer, a grievance-monger, and a _grognard_; and it must have been
-rather diverting to see him aping the manners of a master at whom he
-was always carping in holes and corners. On the other hand, it must
-be said that Davoust proved faithful in the hour of misfortune, and
-did not rally to the Bourbons till 1818; that is, when all chances of
-an imperial restoration were gone; moreover, every time he held an
-important command he did his duty with courage, talent, and fidelity.
-His affected brusqueness of speech was an unfortunate mannerism, for it
-made him many enemies, and sometimes exposed him to odd reprisals. The
-roughness of tongue which was affected in Davoust was natural in Soult.
-This marshal had an excellent heart, but he could not, for the life
-of him, refrain from snarling at anybody whom he heard praised. The
-proverb about bite and bark might have been invented for him, as the
-men at whom he grumbled most were often those whom he most favored.
-
-Soult was born in the same year as Napoleon, 1769, and out-lived
-all his brother marshals, dying in 1852, when the second empire was
-already an impending fact. He had been a private soldier under Louis
-XVI., he passed through every grade in the service, he became prime
-minister, and when he voluntarily resigned office in 1847, owing to
-the infirmities of age, Louis Philippe created him marshal-general—a
-title which had only been borne by three marshals before him, Turenne,
-Villars, and Maurice de Saxe. But these honors never quite consoled
-Soult for having failed to become king of Portugal. He could not
-stomach the luck of his comrade Bernadotte, the son of a weaver, who
-was wearing the crown of Sweden.
-
-Bernadotte, whom Soult envied, has some affinities with M. Grévy.
-This president of the republic first won renown by a parliamentary
-motion to the effect that a republic did not want a president; so
-Bernadotte came to be a king, after a long and steadfast profession
-of republican principles. Born in 1764, he enlisted at eighteen, and
-was sergeant-major in 1789. He was very nearly court-martialed at that
-time for haranguing a crowd in revolutionary terms. Five years later
-he was a general, and in 1798 ambassador at Vienna. He was an able,
-thoughtful, hardy, handsome man, who, having received no education as a
-boy, made up for it by diligent study in after years; and no man ever
-so well corrected, in small or great things, the imperfections of early
-training. Tallyrand said of him, “He is a man who learns and _unlearns_
-every day.” One thing he learned was to read the character of Napoleon
-and not to be afraid of him, for the act which led to his becoming king
-of Sweden was one of rare audacity. Commanding an army sent against
-the Swedes in 1808, he suspended operations on learning the overthrow
-by revolution of Gustavus IV., against whom war had been declared.
-The Swedes were profoundly grateful for this, and Napoleon dared not
-say much, because he was supposed to have no quarrel with the Swedes
-as a people; but Bernadotte was marked down in his bad books from
-that day, and he was in complete disgrace when in 1810 Charles XIII.
-adopted him as crown prince with the approval of the Swedish people.
-Bernadotte made an excellent king, but remembering his austere advocacy
-of republicanism, it is impossible not to smile and ask whether there
-is not some truth in Madame de Girardin’s definition of equality as _le
-privilége pour tous_.
-
-Napoleon always valued Kellerman as having been a general in the old
-royal army. Born in 1735, he was a maréchal de camp (brigadier) when
-the war broke out. The emperor would have been glad to have had more
-of such men at his court; but it was creditable to the king’s general
-officers that very few of them forgot their duties as soldiers during
-the troublous period when so many temptations to commit treason beset
-men holding high command. Grouchy, who in 1789 was a lieutenant in
-the king’s body-guard, hardly cuts a fine figure as a revolutionist
-accepting a generalship in 1793 from the convention which had beheaded
-his king. He was an uncanny person altogether; the convention having
-voted that all noblemen should be debarred from commissions, he
-enlisted as a private soldier, and this was imputed to him as an act
-of patriotism; but he had friends in high quarters who promised that
-he should quickly regain his rank if he formally renounced his titles;
-and this he did, getting his generalship restored in consequence. In
-after years he resumed his marquisate, and denied that he had ever
-abjured it. Napoleon created him marshal during the Hundred Days for
-having taken the Duc d’Angoulême prisoner; but the Bourbons declined
-to recognize his title to the _bâton_, and he had to wait till Louis
-Philippe’s reign before it was confirmed to him. Grouchy was never
-a popular marshal, though he fought well in 1814 in the campaign of
-France. His inaction on the day of Waterloo has been satisfactorily
-explained, but somehow all his acts have required explanation; he was
-one of those men whose records are never intelligible without footnotes.
-
-But how many of the marshals remained faithful to their master when his
-sun had set? At St. Helena Napoleon alluded most often to Lannes and
-Bessières, who both died whilst he was in the heyday of his power, the
-first at Essling, the second at Lützen. As to these two Napoleon could
-cherish illusions, and he loved to think that Lannes especially—his
-brave, hot-headed, hot-hearted “Jean-Jean”—would have clung to him like
-a brother in misfortune. Perhaps it was as well that Lannes was spared
-an ordeal to which Murat, hot-headed and hot-hearted too, succumbed. It
-is at all events a bitter subject for reflection that the great emperor
-found among his marshals and dukes no such friend as he had among the
-hundreds of humbler officers, captains, and lieutenants, who threw up
-their commissions sooner than serve the Bourbons.—_Temple Bar._
-
-
-
-
-C. L. S. C. WORK.
-
-By REV. J. H. VINCENT, D.D., SUPERINTENDENT OF INSTRUCTION C. L. S. C.
-
-
-The Class of ’84 rules the year.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The readings for November are: “History of Greece,” Timayenis, volume
-II, parts 10 and 11, or (for the new Class of 1877) “Brief History of
-Greece;” Chautauqua Text-Book No. 5, “Greek History;” Required Readings
-in THE CHAUTAUQUAN.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Memorial Day for November, Special Sunday, November 11. Read Job,
-twenty-eighth chapter. One of the finest passages in all literature.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Talk much about the subject of your reading. You know what you have by
-your speech caused others to know.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Have you ever tried to control conversation at a table in the interest
-of some sensible subject? It will be a curious study for you to see
-how this mind and that will run away with or from the topic you have
-proposed. It will tax your ingenuity to bring the company back to the
-original topic. The measures of your success will be the interest you
-can awaken in others, the amount of information on the subject which
-you can elicit from them, and the amount, also, which you can give them
-without seeming to be a lecturer or preacher for the occasion.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We must insist upon the observance of the Memorial Days. Put up your
-list of Memorial Days in plain sight, so that you may not forget them.
-Order a copy of the little volume of “Memorial Days” from Phillips &
-Hunt, 805 Broadway, New York, or Walden & Stowe, Cincinnati, Ohio.
-Price, 10 cents.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is proposed that “the C. L. S. C. as a body organize a lecture
-bureau, to be entirely or partially sustained by small contributions
-from each member, thereby enabling weak circles to obtain one or two
-good lectures during the year at reasonable prices.” A proposition to
-be considered.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Will I be required to read the ‘Preparatory Latin Course in English’
-next year? I have studied the same thing in the original very lately.”
-Answer: You will be required to read the “Preparatory Latin Course in
-English.” You can not have studied, except under such a teacher as Dr.
-Wilkinson, the Latin Course in English as we require it under the C. L.
-S. C. The book must be read.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Does the C. L. S. C. confer a degree? If so, what is it?” Answer:
-The C. L. S. C. is not a university or college. It has no charter,
-consequently it has no power to confer degrees. There is a university
-charter in the hands of the Chautauqua management—a university to be.
-In this university there will be non-resident courses of study, with a
-rigid annual examination, to be followed by degrees and diplomas. There
-may sometime in the future be a permanent Chautauqua University at
-Chautauqua. Further than this I can say nothing now. It is to be hoped
-the Chautauqua University will never confer honorary degrees.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Correspond with some one on the studies of the C. L. S. C. Make your
-letter a means of self-improvement. Congratulate yourself if your
-friend, in reply, shows where you made two or three mistakes in your
-letter.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Will you find out the names of the latest graduating class of the high
-school in your town, and send them to me? I may interest them in the C.
-L. S. C. course of study, by sending a “Popular Education Circular.”
-Address Drawer 75, New Haven, Conn.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Are you willing wisely to distribute from ten to a hundred copies of
-the “Popular Education Circular,” and would you scatter copies of the
-tiny C. L. S. C. advertisement, if they were sent you?
-
- * * * * *
-
-The most indefatigable worker in the C. L. S. C., next to our worthy
-secretary, Miss Kimball, is the secretary of the new class—the Class of
-1887—Mr. Kingsley A. Burnell, who is making a remarkable record as he
-travels to and fro in the far West, visiting editors of papers, offices
-of railroad superintendents, cabins of employes, and on the cars,
-urging persons to adopt this new plan of self-culture.
-
-
-
-
-C. L. S. C. STATIONERY.
-
-
-A promise was made at the Round-Table at Chautauqua that in THE
-CHAUTAUQUAN for November there should be something said about all kinds
-of C. L. S. C. stationery known to the writer.
-
-William Briggs, 80 King St., E., Toronto, Ont., sells several styles
-of stationery, sheets and envelopes, with a monogram printed in blue,
-mauve, or crimson. Information can be obtained by addressing him at
-Toronto.
-
-By the time this number has reached the hands of its readers, or
-within a few days after, there will be for sale at the various book
-stores dealing in the “Required Reading” of the C. L. S. C. a variety
-of _papeterie_ stationery, having on the front page a beautiful
-design most artistically engraved, showing Chautauqua Lake, with the
-Chautauqua landing on the right, as seen from the railroad station,
-and in the upper left hand corner an oval, or circle, with the Hall
-of Philosophy very tastily enshrined therein. In the foliage drooping
-into the lake there is inwrought the monogram of the C. L. S. C. A box
-of this very fine paper and envelopes will cost about fifty cents. It
-will be sent by mail from Messrs. Fairbanks, Palmer & Co., 133 Wabash
-Avenue, Chicago, Ill., or from J. P. Magee, 38 Bromfield St., Boston,
-Mass., or from H. H. Otis, Buffalo, N. Y. An advertisement of this
-stationery will be found in the December number of THE CHAUTAUQUAN.
-
-Another style of stationery can be had of Messrs. Fairbanks, Palmer &
-Co., for the class of 1884, with a beautiful design especially arranged
-for that class. Forty cents for a quire of paper and envelopes to match.
-
-Ten thousand sheets prepared for general use by the members and
-officers of the several classes, specially designed to be used by
-gentlemen, can be had by addressing the several class officers.
-
-For further information write to Rev. W. D. Bridge, 718 State St., New
-Haven, Conn.
-
-
-
-
-NEW ENGLAND BRANCH OF THE CLASS OF ’86.
-
-
-While at Lake View a New England Branch of the Class of ’86 was
-organized, with the following officers: President, Rev. B. T. Snow,
-Biddeford, Me.; vice-presidents, Rev. W. H. Clark, South Norridgewock,
-Me., Edwin F. Reeves, Laconia, N. H., Rev. J. H. Babbitt, Swanton, Vt.,
-Charles Wainwright, Lawrence, Mass., Miss Lousia E. French, Newport, R.
-I., Rev. A. Gardner, Buckingham, Ct.; secretary and treasurer, Mary R.
-Hinckley, Bedford, Mass. The above officers were authorized to act also
-as an executive board.
-
-The badge of Class of ’86 can be obtained of the President. It has
-been decided to use in private correspondence a certain style of
-letter paper marked with “C. L. S. C. ’86” in a neat monogram. Further
-particulars in regard to this paper will soon be given.
-
-Just before leaving Chautauqua the Class of ’86 adopted a motto: “We
-study for light, to bless with light.” The New England branch adopts
-this motto, in addition to the one chosen at Lake View: “Let us keep
-our Heavenly Father in the midst.”
-
-
-
-
-C. L. S. C. TESTIMONY.
-
-
-_Canada._—It was a bitter disappointment to me that I was compelled
-to leave school at fourteen and earn my own living, giving up the
-idea of a college course. The C. L. S. C. has been to me therefore an
-unspeakable boon.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Vermont._—I have received large benefit as well as pleasure during the
-year that I have been a member of the C. L. S. C. The course of reading
-has taken me into broader fields, opened new avenues of thought and
-reflection, widened my field of vision, and altogether made me a better
-man.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Vermont._—According to Isaiah xxx:7, I have been trying to show my
-strength by “sitting still” four years. I often ask myself, what
-should I have done had I not had this interesting course—the C. L. S.
-C. During these four years of deprivation how many sorrows have been
-almost forgotten while reading the many interesting thoughts that are
-presented in our reading. I thank God many times for this glorious
-enterprise.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Connecticut._—I have been very much interested in the studies of
-the C. L. S. C. during the first year. It is an honor as well as a
-privilege to be a member.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Rhode Island._—Many times home duties have occupied time and thought
-so fully as to discourage me. But realizing that I am to live “heartily
-as to the Lord,” and viewing the course as his special blessing, I have
-gathered inspiration and journeyed on patiently.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_New York._—I have enjoyed my four years’ course very much, and hope
-that it has been profitable to me. Though having reached the age of
-sixty years my love for improvement has not been gratified, and I
-purpose to continue the course that is marked out.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_New York._—I am surprised at the pleasure and advantage the C. L. S.
-C. has been to me. I have read no more than usual, but have read more
-systematically, and received greater benefit. There is inspiration in
-being “one of many.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-_New York._—I have taken great pleasure in the reading. Am very
-enthusiastic over the course, and will try my best to graduate. I do it
-a great deal for my children, hoping that I may be a better mother, and
-train their minds so that they will make better men and women than they
-would have been had I not become a member of the C. L. S. C. Am all
-alone in my reading, except what my boy of fourteen does with me; even
-my little girl just turned seven studies geology with me, and is much
-interested in finding specimens.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Pennsylvania._—I have only been a member of the C. L. S. C. for about
-four months and in that time I have done most of my reading at night,
-reading usually from eight o’clock until eleven. As I have to work hard
-all day, I have little time for reading except at night, I find the
-course very interesting, and I am deriving a great amount of good from
-it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Pennsylvania._—For almost two years my work has required my presence
-twelve hours every week day, and part of the time sixteen and eighteen
-hours. I gave up last summer, thinking I could not finish the course,
-but after being present at Chautauqua I had a greater desire than ever
-to continue. I have at leisure moments read up for the two years, and
-must ever feel grateful to Chautauqua influence.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Ohio._—I am a farmer’s wife, but with all the care of the work that
-position in life brings (and a good share of the work too), I still
-find time to read the regular four years’ course of the C. L. S. C.,
-and desire to do as thorough work as I am capable of doing. Am reading
-not merely for pleasure, far less to criticise, but for _instruction_,
-and have been greatly helped by this first year’s study.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Ohio._—In many ways I think the C. L. S. C. has been of benefit to
-the little ones. This last winter my eldest daughter said: “Why can’t
-we have a society of our own?” “We,” meant the family. I seconded it
-gladly, and my husband also, and we resolved ourselves into the “Clio
-Clique” and took as our work “Art and Artists,” as mapped out in the
-_St. Nicholas_. Each member pledged themselves to take the work given
-them by the president (who was our only officer), and also to commit
-not less than eight lines of some poem to memory. We had no outside
-members, and we did our work right well, I think.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Illinois._—The C. L. S. C. has done much for me. Life has been
-brighter, sweeter and better than it might otherwise have been.
-Friendships have been formed which I am sure will survive life, and add
-another link in the golden chain that binds us to another world.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Michigan._—To the C. L. S. C. I owe everything.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Michigan._—Were it not that I still may keep a place in the Circle,
-I should be sorry the four years were over. They have been pleasant
-ones, so far as the Circle was concerned, and have passed swiftly. It
-seemed a great undertaking to me four years ago, when I commenced the
-course. For one thing, I did not see my way clear to get the books, but
-I resolved to try, and it has seemed all along that it was God’s way of
-helping me to the knowledge I had so much desired.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Wisconsin._—A lady writes: The regular methods of the C. L. S. C. have
-suggested to me the plan of having a little home monthly, contributed
-to only by members of the family, written, and read aloud on a
-specified evening each month. The children write prose and poetry that
-are a surprise, but only the effect of a regular course of reading and
-conversations by one member of the family. While reading astronomy,
-one of the little girls, aged ten years, took two looking-glasses and
-illustrated, in play, the motions of a planet. She held them by the
-window in the sun, so as to throw the reflection on the ceiling. One
-she had stationary, for the sun, the other she caused to go around
-it, causing the motion to hasten at perihelion, and to become slow at
-aphelion, describing the motions correctly. Then she imagined a comet,
-causing it to go out of sight, then return, and upon its approach to
-the sun rushing it past with lightning speed. I called the attention
-of their father to their play with much delight, for I had no idea
-they understood the motions so well, simply from conversations on the
-subject in the family circle. They all joined in the conversation at
-play, and seemed to comprehend it all.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Iowa._—The studies have benefited me much more than I can express
-in words. May heaven’s choicest blessings rest upon the officers and
-everyone connected with the C. L. S. C.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Kansas._—I am one of the busy housekeepers, but always find time
-to read. My reading has uplifted my soul, and led me to a fuller
-appreciation of the power and love of God, and I feel thankful that I
-am numbered with the army of Chautauquans.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_California._—When I read the C. L. S. C. testimony in THE CHAUTAUQUAN,
-I always think Chautauqua has been _all that_ and _more_ to me, for
-it has led me from cold, dark skepticism to my Bible and my Father in
-heaven, and it is gradually leading some of my friends into the light.
-I prize my C. L. S. C. books more highly that they are worn and soiled
-by many readers, and I believe I can do no better missionary work than
-by enlarging the Circle.
-
-
-
-
-C. L. S. C. REUNION.
-
-
-On the afternoon of June 27, at Pendleton, Indiana, a delightful C. L.
-S. C. reunion was held. The circle of Pendleton invited the circle from
-the neighboring village of Greenfield to join with them in their last
-meeting for the year. A goodly number of visitors were present. After
-an entertaining program of speeches, songs, toasts, etc., had been
-carried out, the following class histories were read:
-
-
-PENDLETON LOCAL CIRCLE.
-
- On the evening of the 28th of December, 1881, a little
- company of eight ladies and five gentlemen assembled
- at the home of Dr. Huston, Pendleton, Indiana, for the
- purpose of more fully discussing the Chautauqua Idea,
- and if possible to organize a branch of the great
- Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle. Three months
- behind in the year’s studies, the outlook was not as
- encouraging as could have been wished, but finding one
- of the class mottoes to be “Never be discouraged,”
- it was unanimously agreed that we organize. Teachers
- were also chosen for the principal studies, and it
- was thought best that they should present the lessons
- to the class in the form of questions. This method
- was generally observed throughout the year, with the
- exception of some lectures on geology. At each session
- two of the members were appointed to write papers
- for the following week, on some subject pertaining
- to the lessons. Longfellow’s birthday was the only
- memorial observed. Besides the usual exercises of the
- evening a short sketch of the life of the poet was
- read, followed by the reading of two of his poems. Our
- weekly meetings were well kept up, and much interest
- manifested in the studies until the first of May, when
- owing to summer heat, and many calls on the time of the
- different members, it was thought best to meet once a
- month, each member being given a portion of the studies
- to be brought forward at the next session. This plan
- was found to be a good one for the summer months, and
- was continued until the beginning of the new year’s
- studies, when the weekly meetings were again resumed,
- and the meetings were spent in much the same manner as
- the first year with the exception of the evening of the
- thirtieth of November, when a complete change was made
- in the program, by having a C. L. S. C. thanksgiving
- supper and a general good time at the residence of Mr.
- and Mrs. Whitney. Since that time our circle has lost
- several of its members either from sickness or change
- of residence, but we hope ere the beginning of another
- year to be fully reinforced and ready to continue the
- good work.
-
-
- GREENFIELD LOCAL CIRCLE.
-
- Although we have met to-day as strangers, we find that
- the unity of thought and purpose that has characterized
- our work the past year has made us friends. The history
- of our circle is necessarily brief because of the short
- time it has been in existence. When we first organized
- in the fall of ’82, a part of us supposed we were
- entering the society temporarily and did not expect to
- matriculate and become regular members of the mystic
- tie, but we only met a few times till we perceived the
- advantages we were deriving from the association, one
- with another, and saw the necessity of a permanent
- organization. Now there are ten of us enrolled as
- students of the “University of the C. L. S. C.” We
- pursued the course with a great deal of enthusiasm and
- delight, and if it were possible, each study seemed
- more interesting than the preceding. With a great deal
- of reluctance we laid aside geology and Greek history
- for astronomy and English history, but we soon saw we
- were susceptible of inspiration from the latter as well
- as the former. Our circle, except two, is composed of
- married ladies. As housewives we feel that the course
- has been very beneficial—it has relieved the monotony
- and tedium of housekeeping because it has given us
- something ennobling to think of—it has also given us
- a taste for something else than the last novel and
- the latest piece of gossip in the daily papers. We
- feel as though we could adopt the sentiment of Plato.
- A friend who observed that he seemed as desirous to
- learn himself as to teach others, asked him how long he
- expected to remain a student? Plato replied, “As long
- as I am not ashamed to grow wiser and better.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-TEMPERANCE and labor are the two best physicians of man; labor
-sharpens the appetite, and temperance prevents him from indulging to
-excess.—_Rousseau._
-
-
-
-
-LOCAL CIRCLES.
-
-
-=Province of Quebec (Bedford).=—The Harmony Circle was organized here
-last September. We are seven in number, all having so many cares that
-the Chautauqua work has to be done by improving the spare moments, and
-often by giving up some pleasure or recreation; but the sacrifice is
-made willingly. Each member prepares seven questions; the number to be
-chosen from each subject in hand is determined at the previous meeting.
-Each in turn puts a question to his or her nearest neighbor, then the
-second time round to the nearest but one, and so on; thus each member
-puts a question to every other member. This, with discussions and
-conversations which arise from the lesson, occupies more than two hours
-in a very enjoyable manner. We have derived profit from the work, both
-in increase of knowledge and improvement of literary taste. Our circle
-has also been the source of much kindly feeling and mutual interest,
-and a strong bond of friendship amongst us.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Maine (Brownfield).=—Our circle was organized early in October, 1882,
-with ten regular members, five gentlemen and five ladies. We arranged
-to meet once in two weeks, and enjoyed our evenings together so much
-that it was extremely difficult to keep the length of our sessions
-within reasonable bounds. We congratulated ourselves constantly on the
-pleasure afforded us by our studies, and on the obvious improvement,
-from month to month, in the work of individual members. It was
-decided, for the present year at least, to change the whole board of
-officers once in three months, that the educating influences of the
-responsibilities connected with the various offices might be shared, in
-turn, by all who were willing to accept them.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Maine (Fairfield).=—A local circle was organized here in October,
-1882, and now numbers fifteen members, nearly all of whom have
-completed the required readings to date. Teachers are assigned to each
-of the subjects as they are taken up, and recitations are conducted
-with excellent system and thoroughness. In addition to this we have
-numerous essays and readings, and the enthusiasm is such that,
-notwithstanding our regular meetings occur fortnightly, we have many
-special meetings. It is the custom at all of our meetings to criticize
-freely, and this leads to an exactness of pronunciation when reading,
-not otherwise to be attained.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Maine (Brownfield).=—Our circle meets once in two weeks, takes
-up questions in THE CHAUTAUQUAN, and then devotes a short time to
-questions of our own asking, using a question-box. We think this an
-excellent plan. After this we generally have short essays on the
-subjects we are reading, often closing with general conversation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Massachusetts (Wareham).=—The Pallas Circle closed for the season with
-a lawn party, June 18.
-
-
-PROGRAM.
-
- Singing—“A Song of To-day.”
-
- Roll-Call—Responses of quotations from any of the
- reading of the past year.
-
- Secretary’s report.
-
- Selected questions in Astronomy, answered by members of
- the circle.
-
- Reading—“The Vision of Mirza.”
-
- Essay—“The Mythological Story of Ursa Major and Ursa
- Minor.”
-
- Reading—Selections from “Evangeline.”
-
- Reading—“The Fan-drill.”—(Addison.)
-
- Singing—Chautauqua Carols.
-
- Supper—Toasts and Responses, including two original
- poems.
-
-Though small in numbers the circle is very enthusiastic in its work.
-New members for the coming year were enrolled from the invited guests
-of the occasion, and the readings will be commenced in October with
-fresh vigor.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Massachusetts (Haverhill).=—A local circle was organized in Haverhill,
-March 14, 1883, with the following officers: R. D. Trask, president;
-George H. Foster, vice president; Delia Drew, secretary. Whole
-membership numbers seventeen.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Massachusetts (Natick).=—The Natick local circle was organized
-September 20, 1879. Eight of the original members, keeping in view the
-motto, “never be discouraged,” have completed the four years’ course.
-At the commencement of the present year our local circle numbered
-twenty-five. We enjoy our reading greatly, and consider the Natick C.
-L. S. C. a success.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Connecticut (West Haven).=—Our circle was organized November 14,
-1881, and numbers seventeen members. We meet once a week. Our circle
-is divided into committees of three and four to arrange programs for
-the month’s entertainments. They include reviews, essays on different
-subjects connected with the course, readings and recitations.
-“Shakspere’s Day” was observed by reading a portion of the play,
-“Merchant of Venice,” the committee having previously assigned the
-different characters to the members present. We are very social at
-our meetings, and occasionally have a little collation at the close
-of the exercises. Most of us are well up with the class, and find the
-Chautauqua evenings not only instructive, but exceedingly enjoyable.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=New York (Angola).=—A local circle was organized here February 5,
-1883, and consists of eighteen members. We usually do the reading in
-THE CHAUTAUQUAN at our meetings, information being given, and questions
-asked by all. We have made use of the questions and answers in THE
-CHAUTAUQUAN, and found them to be of much assistance. Occasionally
-topics are assigned, upon which we are to read or speak at the next
-meeting. Criticism upon pronunciation is unsparingly given to all. We
-intend to continue our meetings, and hope that another year may bring
-us a larger membership.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Pennsylvania (Allegheny City).=—In November, 1882, the Woodlawn
-segment of the C. L. S. C. was organized and officers elected. The
-president having drawn up a constitution, it was read and unanimously
-adopted. Our constitution regulates the manner of conducting the
-society, prescribes parliamentary rules, etc. During our study of
-geology, we were favored with an interesting and instructive lecture by
-A. M. Martin, Esq., General Secretary of the C. L. S. C. Our membership
-now consists of seventeen persons, six being ladies.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Pennsylvania (Gillmor).=—Our circle owes its being to the earnest,
-persistent efforts of two or three persons who had read one year alone.
-The first meeting was held October 24, 1882, and the circle organized
-with fifteen members. We labor under some peculiar difficulties. Our
-members represent several little villages, and are so scattered that
-it is some times hard to get together. Then we are in the oil country
-where people stay rather than live, so they gather around them only
-such things as are needful for comfortable living. The majority have
-but few books of reference, or other helps to study. Our meetings
-were opened with prayer and the singing of a Chautauqua song, and
-sometimes repeating the Chautauqua mottoes, any items of business being
-attended to before beginning the regular work of the circle. Before
-closing members were appointed by the president to conduct the various
-exercises in the succeeding meeting. In the latter part of the winter
-the president proposed a course of lectures. It was a decided success.
-Our lecturers were J. T. Edwards, D.D., Randolph, N. Y.—subject:
-“Oratory and Eloquence;” D. W. C. Huntington, Bradford, Pa., “Rambles
-in Europe;” C. W. Winchester, Buffalo, N. Y., “Eight Wonders of the
-World.” This course closed with a home entertainment, consisting of
-vocal and instrumental music, readings, essays, etc., mostly by members
-of the circle. Our number is at present nineteen, and we are happy to
-have proved those to be false prophets who predicted that three months
-would be the limit of our existence.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=District of Columbia (Washington).=—The Parker Circle has been
-reorganized for the course of 1883-84. Several new members were
-received, and the circle now numbers about thirty-six. On Tuesday
-evening, the 18th, Dr. Dobson, our president, will organize a new
-circle in another part of the city, beginning with a dozen members.
-Foundry Circle reorganizes the same night, and several new circles will
-be organized during the fall. There is considerable interest manifested
-in the course.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Maryland (Baltimore).=—The Class of 1887 was organized on Thursday
-evening, September 20, at the Young Men’s Christian Association
-Hall. The membership for the coming year will be about thirty. The
-officers constitute the committee on instruction. The class of the
-past year, the fourth since its organization, was one of the best; the
-method adopted was that of the question box; each member placing such
-questions of interest in the box as he had met with in his reading.
-The director, Prof. J. Rendell Harris, would read the questions one at
-a time, and open the discussion upon them, in which all joined. Two
-meetings each month from October to June were held, and the entire time
-spent on the three books, the rest of the books being used for home
-reading only. This plan was considered preferable to the study of two
-or three at one time. The outlook for the new class is good.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Ohio (Harrisburg).=—We have eleven members, of whom ten are regular
-members of the C. L. S. C. Our method of work thus far has consisted of
-essays, readings, and conversations. The interest in the work increases
-with each meeting.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Illinois (Fairburg).=—We have here a small circle of eight members. We
-have met regularly once a week, taking each study in its course, and
-in an informal way have discussed the various subjects presented. Much
-interest has been felt and expressed, and we all feel that a prescribed
-course of reading is by all means the best and most direct means of
-self-culture.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Illinois (Yorkville).=—For the past two years quite a number of our
-people have pursued the course of studies, but not until last year
-did we see proper to unite with the home society. Our class comprised
-lawyers, bankers, insurance agents, carriage trimmers, preachers,
-teachers and farmers. All feel that it has been two years of very
-profitable study for us. We closed our last year’s study by a meeting
-at the residence of one of the members, where we were entertained by a
-program consisting of essays, character sketches, class history, music,
-and last, but not least, refreshments for the inner man. It was indeed
-an enjoyable occasion. We hope to organize a much larger class for the
-coming year.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Tennessee (Knoxville).=—The local circle at this place reorganized
-this year with a membership of twenty-eight, an increase of twenty
-over last year. How was this accomplished? The secret can be given in
-just two words: _personal influence_. At the close of last year we
-felt that our circle here was dying. The members were negligent about
-the preparation of lessons, careless and indifferent about attendance,
-and we disbanded for the summer feeling almost discouraged, yet in the
-heart of each member was a secret determination to do something to
-make the circle more interesting next year. One of our members went
-to Monteagle, another to Europe, and another to Chautauqua. Those
-who remained at home worked also for the C. L. S. C., and all worked
-earnestly and with enthusiasm. We thought, wrote and talked C. L. S.
-C. until our friends laughingly called us “people of one idea.” We
-sent for circulars, which we gave to every one whom we could betray
-into the slightest expression of interest. We loaned our books and
-magazine with the request, “please just look it over and tell us what
-you think of it.” The seventh of September we held a meeting at the Y.
-M. C. A. rooms, kindly tendered to us for that purpose. All who were
-interested in the C. L. S. C. were invited, and two of the ministers of
-our city also encouraged us by their presence and cheering words. Then
-we began to reap the fruits of our summer’s work. Seven new members
-were reported and two more asked for membership. Another meeting was
-held September 21 for reorganization, at which six new names were
-reported and five more requested admission to the circle, making our
-number twenty-eight. The circle will meet once a week, and we hope to
-accomplish results worthy of our enthusiasm. We send greeting to our
-sister circles, especially to the weak, to whom we would say: _Use your
-influence_ as a society and as individuals, and _success_ is yours.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Michigan (Niles).=—Our circle was organized last October, with
-thirteen members. We have held thirty-three meetings, at which reviews
-upon the topics studied and readings from THE CHAUTAUQUAN have formed
-part of the program. In addition, we have read Bryant’s translation of
-the “Iliad,” and “Evangeline.” All the Memorial Days have been kept.
-Selections from the author, sketches of his life and home, responses to
-roll-call with quotations from the same, and familiar talks upon the
-subject of the memorial, have made these occasions of unusual interest.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Michigan (Imlay City).=—On Tuesday evening, November 28, 1882, we
-organized a local circle of the C. L. S. C. We have eight regular and
-three local members. The meetings have been held once in two weeks,
-at the houses of the members, and from the interest manifested in the
-work, we have every reason to hope for a large increase in numbers next
-year. On the evening of February 27 we observed Longfellow’s birthday
-by an interesting program of essays, readings, recitations and songs.
-We closed with a sentiment from each one present, from Longfellow.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Wisconsin (La Crosse).=—A local circle was organized here last
-January. The membership is small, but we have been faithful to the
-work. Although we began very late, we have nearly completed the year’s
-work. We are all glad we began such a course of study, and have found
-much pleasure in gathering round our “round-table.” The prospects for
-an increase in numbers and interest for the coming year are encouraging.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Minnesota (Minneapolis).=—The Centenary Circle has just finished the
-work of the year. Our circle has numbered forty-two in all, with six
-local members, though six, at least, have been unable to attend the
-meetings on account of distance,—one even living in another State—but
-most are keeping up their work. There has been more interest and
-enthusiasm all through the year than during our first year.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Minnesota (Albert Lea).=—This is the first year of our local circle,
-and we number five, all ladies with home cares. We have short sketches
-of the “Required History Readings” in THE CHAUTAUQUAN, which we think
-make us remember them better. We are reading the “White Seal Course”
-aloud, and enjoy it so much. Can not be glad enough that we have taken
-up this course.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Iowa (Muscatine.)=—The Acme Circle is composed of fifty-five members,
-with an average attendance of thirty-five. We are very enthusiastic,
-and expect to take the examinations. We recite the lesson, occasionally
-reading a part which it does not seem worth while to commit to
-memory. Our exercises are varied by essays on topics of importance in
-connection with the lesson.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Iowa (St. Charles).=—I wish to report from our town a circle of three
-(myself and family). We hold no regular meetings. Although we began the
-first year’s course late last December, we have completed the reading
-up to this month. It has been very profitable and entertaining to us.
-We are each determined to complete the course. We will advertise it
-in our county papers, and do our utmost to solicit members and get
-up local circles. We do not think any better plan than the C. L. S.
-C. could be devised for furnishing those who have not the privilege
-of an academic or collegiate course an opportunity to acquire a good
-practical education.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Texas (Palestine.)=—The Houston _Daily Post_ gives the following
-history of the local circle in Palestine: Some young people and some
-adults of Palestine have formed themselves into a branch of the now
-world-renowned Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle, and have
-entered upon the four years’ course of study prescribed by that
-institution. The circle was organized in October, 1882, and now has a
-membership of twenty-three. Meetings are held every week at the homes
-of the members. The evenings thus spent are highly profitable to the
-members, socially and intellectually. Dr. Yoakum has assisted the
-circle greatly by lectures and talks on geology, astronomy, botany and
-history. The program of exercises is varied semi-occasionally from the
-regular channel, and the evening is spent in purely a literary way.
-Such seasons of refreshment occur on the birth anniversaries of popular
-authors. On the 23d of April a Shakspere memorial meeting was held
-at Sterne’s Hotel, on which occasion Mrs. Overall read “The Fall of
-Cardinal Wolsey.” Miss Kate Colding rendered “Hamlet’s Soliloquy” most
-admirably. Miss Florence Finch presided at the organ and lead in the
-Chautauqua songs. On May 1 the circle did honor to the life and memory
-of Addison. Mrs. J. C. Bradford read a sketch of his life and writings,
-Miss Ena Sawyers read “The Omnipresence and Omniscience of the Deity,”
-and Miss Fannie Reese read “The Vision of Mirza.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-=California (Brooklyn).=—Our circle is an informal quartet of congenial
-spirits who have been close friends and companions for some time past.
-We meet every Monday evening and have a delightful free and easy
-discussion over what we have read during the week, with Webster’s
-Unabridged in its post of honor—the piano stool, and the encyclopædia
-rack within reachable distance. We are enjoying the course very much,
-and feel that it is just what we need.
-
-
-
-
-HOW TO CONDUCT A LOCAL CIRCLE.[I]
-
-
-THE TROY METHOD OF ORGANIZING A CIRCLE.
-
-The “Rock of Ages” was sung, a prayer was offered by Mr. Martin, after
-which Mr. Farrar said:
-
-I desire to give you a little history of the inauguration of our circle
-work in Troy. I do so because I am confident that what was done there
-last year may be done in every city, in every village, and may be
-multiplied a thousand times.
-
-About the middle of last September I wrote an article on “Reading,
-Circles for Reading, and The C. L. S. C.,” and published it in the Troy
-_Daily Times_.
-
-I wrote this article, published it on Wednesday, calling a meeting
-at my church for Thursday evening, inviting anybody and everybody
-who desired, to be present. The evening was quite unfavorable. I
-expected about twenty. I was exceedingly surprised and gratified in the
-interests of the C. L. S. C. work when I found nearly three hundred
-people present. Being inspired by their presence, I began to talk to
-them on reading, the importance of it, the value of it to-day, and the
-cheapness of literature. I unfolded to them the C. L. S. C. plan, the
-numbers that were taking it up, the enthusiasm that prevailed here at
-Chautauqua, and how the Circle was spreading all over the world, not
-only in this country but in other countries. It was all new to many of
-them.
-
-At the conclusion of my half hour’s talk I asked how many persons
-wanted to join some such circle as this. About every hand in the
-audience went up. I was surprised again. Looking over the audience,
-I knew nearly every one of them, for I was back the second time as
-pastor of the same church, and knowing that four or five denominations
-were represented there, I suggested that there ought to be a circle in
-every church. I did not want to “scoop up” the whole right there in
-our church, and I was generous enough to say that there ought to be a
-dozen circles established in our city, one in connection with every
-church, and in the suburbs. I said that a week from that night we would
-organize a circle there, and any who desired to be connected with that
-circle would be gladly welcomed.
-
-During the week I received several letters from parties in the city,
-and out of the city, asking about the C. L. S. C., what its course
-of reading was, etc. I followed it in the _Daily Times_ with another
-letter on Wednesday, saying that our circle was to meet on Thursday,
-and explaining the text books that we were to take up for the year,
-and more fully entering into the C. L. S. C. idea. Our evening came,
-and we had over three hundred present. I had the whole list of books
-with me. I took them up and showed them to each person. I said, “this
-is the course.” I went on unfolding the whole idea of the course, the
-amount of time each year, the examinations at the end of the year,
-and the outlook of the four years’ course. I told them that this was
-the student’s outlook from college halls, with the exception of the
-mathematics and the languages to be translated.
-
-Then I asked how many desired to join this Circle. Over two hundred
-hands went up. Immediately we fell to organization. Fortunately,
-or unfortunately, I was elected president, and a Protestant
-Episcopal clergyman, rector of Christ Church, close by me, was
-elected vice-president. We have in our organization a president,
-vice-president, secretary, treasurer, and a board of managers
-consisting of five.
-
-I found on inspecting the number that joined our circle that we
-were about equally divided Baptists, Protestant Episcopalians,
-Presbyterians, and Methodist Episcopalians. Our board of managers
-was wisely selected from these various churches, so that there might
-be the largest remove possible from anything like an organization
-confined to our church. I say this because I believe that people are
-hungry for just such an organization as this. There are thousands in
-our communities who are tired of idle gossip. They want something to
-talk about, and the only way to stop gossip is to put something into
-their heads on a higher plane. I have had testimony from our members
-repeatedly, “Now we have so little time to talk about these other
-things.” Whenever they come together they talk about these wonders
-found in the C. L. S. C. work.
-
-This board of five managers arranges our monthly plan. Our large
-meetings are monthly. Our circle divides itself up; six or a dozen, or
-twenty, form little organizations, read together, meet once a week, and
-then we meet as a large circle monthly and review our work. This board
-of managers lays out the month’s work. The first week after our monthly
-meeting this board of managers is called together. They make out their
-plan, print it on a postal card, and send it out at once to every
-member of the circle, so that every member knows what the plan is to be
-three weeks before the meeting. Our method in the large meeting is to
-review our work by the essay method.
-
-Let me give you a program. First, singing. I was fortunate enough to
-have an enthusiastic singer in our number, and I gave him the work of
-organizing a glee club. He gathered twenty or twenty-five of the very
-best young people in the number, and formed a glee club, and they led
-our devotions. We followed with scripture and prayer. And then began
-our essays. We usually have three, four, sometimes five essays, and no
-essay is over ten minutes in length. We desire that the essays shall
-not exceed eight minutes. It requires a deal of skill and practice to
-reduce our thoughts on a subject to a six or eight minutes essay, but
-it is practicable. Then we are all interested in the subject which we
-have been studying for a month. When an individual rises and reads, we
-feel that we have gone over the same subject, and it is like a review
-to us, and helps to fasten it more definitely in our minds. Following
-each essay we have remarks and questions. We never criticise an essay.
-That would be unkind. You could not do it. You would intimidate
-everybody.
-
-We ask questions and throw in additional remarks. We take up half an
-hour, or three-quarters at most, devoted to the three, four or five
-essays. Following these we appoint some person to ask the questions
-which are printed in THE CHAUTAUQUAN. Any person who will ask and
-answer these questions will find that he has a wonderfully clear
-_résumé_ of the whole subject in his mind. I suppose that we are
-indebted to Mr. Martin for them. They are very clear, very concise, and
-greatly appreciated by the Troy members.
-
-Following these questions we have a recess of twenty minutes, in which
-it is the custom of our circle to shake hands, make each others’
-acquaintance, encourage each other, find out about each other, and
-inquire about the work. Upon the recall the Glee Club gives a song.
-Then follows the round-table. I need not explain this because you are
-all familiar with the round-table. After that a _conversazione_ on some
-prominent character of the world, old or new. We desire that every
-member will give us some extract of five lines, not to exceed five
-lines, unless it would break the harmony of the thought, from every
-person brought before us. We have had Shakspere, Longfellow, Bryant,
-and a variety of persons.
-
-Immediately after this _conversazione_ follows “a miscellaneous
-exercise”—anything that needs to be taken up. While we were studying
-geology, we went down to the village of Albany where the capital is
-located. They have a very fine series of geological rooms arranged by
-Prof. Hall, the State Geologist. As you enter the room, there are the
-very lowest specimens of the rocks with their fossils. As you go up
-story after story you reach the highest rocks. Prof. Hall, by previous
-appointment, met our large circle of about two hundred. We chartered
-a car or two and went down. He met us and gave us a very satisfactory
-lecture. We appreciated it.
-
-When we came to astronomy, we found out where we could find an
-astronomer. We invited him, and he came and gave us a lecture. Then
-we had a teacher of the high school stand before us, and allow us to
-question him to our heart’s content. We found it available to work in
-all the outside force possible. When we studied the subject of art we
-got together all the pictures of the town that we could find. I was in
-Gloversville as pastor at that time. We arranged them, and spent two or
-three very delightful evenings. You have two or three, another has one,
-another has six; bring them all together and discuss the whole subject
-of art. We found it very profitable.
-
-In Troy our circle is so enthusiastic in its work that there is a
-constant clamor of outside people to get in. We sometimes allow a few
-outsiders, and there is hardly a session that we do not have four to
-five hundred in our gathering, but the front seats are always reserved
-for members, and visitors, if there be any, must take the back seats.
-There are anywhere from fifty to one hundred and fifty clamoring to be
-admitted into the circle this fall. I do not know what we shall do. If
-we admit them, we shall go into the audience room. I think it is better
-to divide up.
-
-I have given you our work. I said in the outset, it is possible for
-any young man or woman, pastor or superintendent, through your village
-paper, to write a short article calling the attention of the people to
-it, saying that in such a place there will be an organization of this
-work. I have the impression that you can gather quite a large circle
-in every place, two or three of them. But my conviction is from the
-work as I have observed it through Troy and vicinity, that you need
-somebody in that circle, at the head of it, who loves it. You can make
-nothing in this world grow without love. Not even the flowers you may
-plant in your garden will grow unless you love them.
-
-As the result of the article in the Troy _Times_, eight circles were
-organized in our city. As the result of those two articles, twenty-six
-circles were organized around Troy.
-
-I would be glad to hear from you to-day. Criticise my plan as much as
-you please. I have taken more time because Dr. Vincent urged me to do
-so. He urged me to take twenty-five minutes. I have only taken twenty.
-Give me your plans, any suggestions, any practical idea that you have
-worked out in your circles.
-
-MR. MARTIN: I can say that I commend every feature that has been
-mentioned here by Mr. Farrar in the method of conducting local circles.
-I believe we have tested in Pittsburgh every one he has mentioned.
-There are several others we have tried, to which I would like to refer.
-For instance, I think it well for persons to start with the inspiration
-and a love of the Circle right here at Chautauqua. A great many persons
-have come to me on the ground, and asked me how to form a local circle,
-saying they had no local circles in their vicinity. I say to them if
-they have two or three members on the ground here who belong together
-in a circle, meet under the trees and start your organization here. We
-started with seven members under these trees by the Hall of Philosophy,
-in the year 1878, and we had somewhere between three and four hundred
-before the following January, and have as many more since. Last year
-about half a dozen who graduated in the class of ’82 met under the
-trees here, and we formed our preliminary organization. We carried
-the spirit and love of the C. L. S. C. home with us, and we formed in
-Pittsburgh an alumni association of nearly sixty members. We expect to
-increase the number largely during the coming year.
-
-One word with reference to the use of newspapers. Our executive
-committee apportion the different papers of the city between them. We
-have five members, and each member looks after a paper to see that the
-paper looks after C. L. S. C. matters. We make each member the editor
-of a C. L. S. C. department in a newspaper, and it is his duty to get
-in as many notices about the C. L. S. C. as possible. Our press has
-very generously opened to us its columns. Every monthly meeting is
-noticed before and after in the papers. I am glad to say that we have
-got into many considerable controversies in the newspapers. We like
-them because they bring our organization into notice.
-
-We avail ourselves of the papyrograph, the electric pen, the type
-writer, and the various plans for duplicating that we now have, in the
-way of sending out notices, preparing the programs, etc. Any of you who
-know how cheaply any of these appliances can be used for printing, will
-see how efficiently they can be employed for the use of the circle.
-
-Another point: If we get a little depressed, or a little behind, we
-get Dr. Vincent or one of the counselors to come and give us a rousing
-lecture. We have given them good audiences, and they have spread a
-new enthusiasm. What an amount of enthusiasm can be developed about
-the C. L. S. C. If you will have the patience to answer clearly and
-fully all questions that are asked you about the C. L. S. C., you will
-find that you are doing a grand missionary work. I know my business
-is often interrupted by people who come in and ask about the C. L. S.
-C., but I am always sorry if I ever have to turn any one away without
-information. If I give them full information, and they go away and join
-the C. L. S. C., and form a local circle afterward, I feel that I have
-done a missionary work.
-
-MR. FARRAR: Any suggestions?
-
-A VOICE: Did you permit persons to become members of your local circle
-who did not belong to the parent society?
-
-MR. FARRAR: Yes. But we requested them, if they did not wish to take up
-the full course of reading, to join the C. L. S. C. and pay their fifty
-cents, and take THE CHAUTAUQUAN. We honored the home office. But they
-need not fill out the questions unless they choose.
-
-MR. BRIDGE: In that way you will get a great many members of the C. L.
-S. C. who are not doing the work.
-
-MR. FARRAR: Very few. We took a few husbands who wanted to come with
-their wives. “Very good,” I said, “pay your fifty cents and take THE
-CHAUTAUQUAN.”
-
-REV. J. O. FOSTER: We had a large circle where I was last appointed.
-We found in the school a man well posted in geology. We found the
-depot agent was an astronomer, and he was very enthusiastic over the
-invitation that we gave him. He came down and spattered the blackboard
-all over with facts. He got a long strip of paper and stuck up around
-the room, and marked out the planets. He gave us a very fine lecture on
-astronomy, so good that the people requested him to repeat it before
-the whole congregation. We had this “jelly-pad business,” and struck
-off our programs the week before. Every one knew what he was expected
-to do. We secured plenty of books, if any one was at a loss for books.
-We had about twenty in the circle, and that circle is now running. I
-think it is three and a half years old. I do not know of any older than
-that.
-
-MR. MARTIN: We have one five years old.
-
-MR. FOSTER: Very good. Dr. Goodfellow organized this. Another member
-and I went to people in the city and asked them to lend us their
-pictures upon several subjects. You will be astonished at the amount of
-material you can gather together in a single afternoon to illustrate
-any subject.
-
-DR. VINCENT: I have no doubt that some small local circles have quite
-unique plans which they have adopted, and I hope if they hesitate to
-speak out, that they will write out their plans for us.
-
-A LADY: I was about to speak for a small circle. I am very positive
-in our circle of twenty it would be almost impossible to have essays,
-except occasionally. The members generally would be so frightened at
-the idea of having to write an essay that we should lose the circle
-entirely. We have to pet them a little, and we use the conversational
-method as freely as possible to get them to express themselves. What
-they can not tell we tell them. In my experience—I have been conductor
-four years—I find the essay method frightens small circles. Where you
-have circles of two hundred, where they have a great many ministers,
-and lawyers, you can get them to write essays.
-
-A LADY: I would say that I belong to a circle out West of six members.
-We pursued the essay work for the first two years entirely. Every one
-of us for the first two years wrote an essay every week. [Applause.]
-
-DR. EATON: I would like to speak for another small circle. We had a
-program. We opened with singing and prayer, and then the leader, who
-had prepared himself thoroughly, or tried to prepare himself thoroughly
-on the lesson, particularly in science and in history, examined every
-class by questioning and removing every difficulty connected with
-them. The whole circle replied at once, answering the questions. If
-there were any in the circle that could not answer a question, they
-had it answered for them, and were not placed under any embarrassment
-by the sense of failure. A great many said of these meetings every two
-weeks, that they obtained a better knowledge by this thorough drill
-than by reading privately at home. Likewise we had essays, but not very
-frequently. We had essays in the first part of the evening. Sometimes
-there was a failure to respond, but generally the subject was assigned
-to particular individuals, and a great many facts in connection with
-the difficulties in history were brought in that way. I think we
-commenced with a circle of about twenty or thirty, and we graduated
-here a year ago some sixteen members, I think. And others are coming
-in, but with what success I am unable to say, as I have not been in
-that place all the time. I think that every one in that circle would
-bear testimony that in this way—by close examination, the plan of a
-regular class drill—we have obtained a better knowledge than in any
-other way, and that they were satisfied at the end of the year they
-had accomplished more and better work than they would under any other
-circumstances.
-
-A VOICE: I would like to say we consider that the writing of these
-essays and insisting upon it, was as much for the advantage of the
-persons writing these essays as for that of those who listened to them.
-Therefore, we had a critic who was to write the criticisms, and had
-them read by the president. Do you think that was a good way?
-
-MR. FARRAR: We thought it was not the best way. Dr. Vincent suggests
-that the criticisms might be given privately to the writer. I found it
-quite difficult to get essays. Many young ladies and gentlemen looked
-upon it as a fearful task. Many times I had to call on them, and sit
-down with them, and talk them into it, showing them how they could do
-it. And never one wrote an essay in our circle but said “When you want
-me to write an essay, call on me again.” I have tried a dozen others
-who persisted in refusing, but at the close of the year they came to
-me and said: “If you will forgive us for our refusing to write you may
-call upon us next year.”
-
-After singing, the benediction was pronounced by Dr. Vincent.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[I] Round-Table held in the Hall of Philosophy, at Chautauqua, August
-16th, 1883, conducted by Rev. H. C. Farrar, of Troy, N. Y.
-
-
-
-
- [_Not required._]
-
-
-
-
-QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
-
- ONE HUNDRED QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ON “HISTORY OF
- GREECE,” VOLUME II, PARTS 10 AND 11—“THE ROMAN
- SUPREMACY, AND BYZANTINE HELLENISM.”
-
-By A. M. MARTIN, GENERAL SECRETARY C. L. S. C.
-
-
-1. Q. When is it generally said by historians that Hellas fell under
-the Roman rule? A. In 145 B. C., when Mummius captured Corinth.
-
-2. Q. Strictly speaking, when did Hellas become a Roman province? A.
-During the reign of Augustus.
-
-3. Q. Where was the principal theater of the Mithridatic war? A.
-Hellas, transplanted thither by the daring king of Pontus.
-
-4. Q. Whom did the Romans finally find it necessary to send against
-him? A. Sulla.
-
-5. Q. During this war what Hellenic city did Sulla capture after a long
-siege? A. Athens.
-
-6. Q. What is the assertion of several modern historians in regard
-to the devastation of the land and the slaughter of the inhabitants
-during this war, which ended in 84 B. C.? A. They did their work so
-effectually that Asia never thereafter recovered from the Roman wounds.
-
-7. Q. By what was the moral decay of the nation which began long before
-now followed? A. By a corresponding material ruin.
-
-8. Q. By what was the Ægean Sea from the earliest times infested? A. By
-pirates, who boldly attacked the coasts, islands and harbors, seizing
-vessels and plundering property.
-
-9. Q. In the year 78 B. C., what action did the Romans take against
-these pirates? A. They declared war against them, and entrusted the
-conduct of hostilities to Pompey.
-
-10. Q. What was the result of Pompey’s expedition against them? A. Ten
-thousand of them were put to death, twenty thousand captured, and one
-hundred and twenty of their harbors and fortifications were destroyed.
-
-11. Q. In the great struggle between Pompey and Cæsar for the supremacy
-of the world, whom did Hellas furnish with every possible assistance?
-A. Pompey.
-
-12. Q. In the year 44 B. C., what Hellenic city did Cæsar rebuild that
-had been destroyed a hundred years before by Mummius? A. Corinth.
-
-13. Q. In the Roman civil wars which followed the death of Cæsar, with
-whom did Athens ally herself? A. With Brutus and Cassius.
-
-14. Q. After the defeat of Brutus and Cassius by Octavius and Anthony,
-followed by hostilities between the latter two, for whom did the
-greater part of Hellas declare? A. For Anthony.
-
-15. Q. Shortly after Octavius assumed the name of Augustus to what did
-he reduce Hellas? A. To a Roman province.
-
-16. Q. What is said of the jurisdiction of the Roman proconsul
-thereafter sent annually to rule Hellas? A. Many cities and countries
-continued still to be regarded as “freed and allied.” The subject
-territory was designated by the name of Achaia as if it did not remain
-an integral part of “free Hellas.”
-
-17. Q. During the reign of Tiberias what did both Achaia and Macedonia
-become by reason of the harsh treatment received from the proconsuls?
-A. Cæsarean instead of public provinces.
-
-18. Q. What was the course of Nero toward Hellas? A. In the year 66 he
-declared the country autonomous, and at the same time plundered Hellas,
-inflicting far greater misfortunes on it than those sustained through
-the invasion of Xerxes.
-
-19. Q. When Vespasian ascended the throne what political change did he
-make? A. He reduced the country again to a Roman province.
-
-20. Q. During the reign of Vespasian what action was taken in regard
-to the Greek philosophers? A. Nearly all the Greek philosophers were
-banished from Rome.
-
-21. Q. How did Trajan prove to be one of the greatest benefactors of
-the Hellenic nation? A. He sent Maximus to Hellas as plenipotentiary
-and reorganizer of the free Hellenic cities, with instructions to
-honor the gods and ancient renown of the nation, and revere the sacred
-antiquity of the cities.
-
-22. Q. What was Hadrian’s treatment of Hellas? A. He visited Athens
-five times; sought to ameliorate the condition of the people, and
-adorned Athens and other cities with temples and buildings.
-
-23. Q. What political rights did he give the Hellenes? A. The rights of
-Roman citizenship.
-
-24. Q. During the reigns of what two Roman emperors did Hellas
-pre-eminently flourish? A. The Emperors Antoninus Pius and Marcus
-Aurelius.
-
-25. Q. Notwithstanding the benefits received from the Roman emperors
-what did Hellas continue to do? A. To wither and decline.
-
-26. Q. During the latter part of the third century what destructive
-invasion of Hellas took place? A. The invasion of the Goths and
-other northern barbarians, who overran the country like a deluge,
-depopulating cities and destroying everything in their path.
-
-27. Q. What relation does our author give Hellenism to Christianity? A.
-He makes it the first herald of Christianity.
-
-28. Q. Who was the first Roman emperor that issued a decree in favor of
-Christianity? A. Constantine the Great.
-
-29. Q. What discussions led Constantine to the convocation of the first
-General Council of the Christian Church, which assembled at Nice in
-A. D. 325? A. The discussions of Arianism, or opinions concerning the
-nature of the second person of the Trinity.
-
-30. Q. Who was the most noted opponent of Arianism? A. Athanasius.
-
-31. Q. What city did Constantine dedicate as the capital of his empire?
-A. Constantinople.
-
-32. Q. During the general slaughter of the relatives of Constantine
-that took place after his death, what cousin of his escaped and was
-assigned to the city of Athens for his place of habitation? A. Julian.
-
-33. Q. By comparing the present with the past, to what conclusion
-did Julian arrive as to the cause of the decline of the empire? A.
-That Christianity was the cause of the decline, or was not adapted to
-prevent the demoralization of the empire; that the change of affairs
-resulted from the debasement of the ancient religion and life, and that
-the reformation of the world could only be accomplished through their
-reëstablishment.
-
-34. Q. By what class of philosophers was Julian sustained in his views?
-A. By the Neapolitanists.
-
-35. Q. After Julian was recognized as emperor what was his main object
-on entering Constantinople? A. The restoration of the ancient religion.
-
-36. Q. What were some of the steps he took to accomplish this object?
-A. He restored the ancient temples and caused new ones to be erected to
-the gods; the games were celebrated with magnificence, and the schools
-of philosophy were especially protected.
-
-37. Q. Who was the successor to Julian? A. Jovian.
-
-38. Q. What was his course toward Christianity? A. He abolished the
-decrees enacted by Julian on behalf of idolatry, and seemed favorably
-inclined toward Christianity, but he died suddenly on his way to
-Constantinople.
-
-39. Q. About this time what two names became prominent in theological
-controversies? A. Basil the Great and Gregory the theologian.
-
-40. Q. What new invasion of the northern barbarians took place in the
-latter part of the fourth century? A. That of the Goths, who overran
-Thrace, Macedonia and Thessaly, ravaged the country, killed the
-inhabitants, and destroyed the cities that were not strongly fortified.
-
-41. Q. To what did Theodosius first direct his attention after he
-became emperor? A. To the pacification of the Goths, and succeeded
-within the space of four years in rendering them if not fully
-submissive to his scepter, at least anxious to seek terms of peace.
-
-42. Q. What did the solemn edict which Theodosius dictated in 380
-proclaim? A. The Athanasian doctrine of the Trinity, branded all who
-denied it with the name of heretics, and handed over the churches in
-Constantinople to the exclusive use of the orthodox party.
-
-43. Q. What synod did he convene at Constantinople a few months
-afterward, in the year 381? A. The second General Council of the
-Christian Church, which completed the theological system established by
-the Council of Nice.
-
-44. Q. After the death of Theodosius, who were the nominal rulers of
-the Roman empire? A. Arcadius in the East, and Honorius in the West,
-both sons of Theodosius.
-
-45. Q. Who, however, were the real rulers of the empire? A. Rufinus in
-the East and Stilicho in the West.
-
-46. Q. How are each characterized? A. Stilicho was noted for his
-military virtues, but Rufinus became notorious only for his wickedness.
-
-47. Q. Failing in his project of marrying his daughter Maria to
-Arcadius, how did Rufinus seek to revenge himself? A. By plotting the
-destruction of the empire itself.
-
-48. Q. What barbarians is it said he called into the empire? A. The
-Huns, who laid waste many provinces in Asia; and Alaric, the daring
-general of the Goths, who invaded Hellas, plundering and destroying
-everything in his path.
-
-49. Q. Who, called the greatest orator of Christianity, became
-archbishop of Constantinople near the close of the fourth century? A.
-John Chrysostom.
-
-50. Q. After the death of Arcadius, who virtually assumed the
-government of the empire? A. Pulcheria, the daughter of Arcadius.
-
-51. Q. What are we told as to the kind of life she led? A. That she
-embraced a life of celibacy, renounced all vanity in dress, interrupted
-by frequent fasts her simple and frugal diet, and devoted several hours
-of the day and night to the exercises of prayer and psalmody.
-
-52. Q. How did her brother Theodosius, who was the nominal emperor,
-spend his time? A. His days in riding and hunting, and his evenings in
-modeling and copying sacred books.
-
-53. Q. How long did Pulcheria continue to reign? A. For nearly forty
-years.
-
-54. Q. What is said of the condition of Hellenism in the meantime? A.
-It continued to wither in Hellas, while the modern began to spread and
-strengthen itself in Constantinople.
-
-55. Q. What is said of Hellenic literature from this time onward? A. It
-produced none of those works by which the memory of nations is honored
-and perpetuated.
-
-56. Q. To what is its intellectual decline mainly due? A. To the
-incursions of the barbarians, by which society was shaken to its
-very foundations, and the genius and enterprise of the nation almost
-paralyzed.
-
-57. Q. Under what leader did the Huns ravage without restraint and
-without mercy the suburbs of Constantinople and the provinces of Thrace
-and Macedonia? A. Attila, called the “Scourge of God.”
-
-58. Q. With the dethronement of what emperor did all political
-relations between Rome and the Eastern Empire cease? A. Romulus
-Augustulus in 476.
-
-59. Q. How did the emperors of the East continue to be styled? A.
-They continued to be styled emperors of the Romans, but legislation,
-government, and customs became thoroughly Hellenized.
-
-60. Q. What was the mainspring of the success in life of Justinian who
-became emperor in 527? A. An unrestrained desire for great deeds and
-his wonderful good fortune in the choice of ministers.
-
-61. Q. What military victories glorified the early years of his reign?
-A. Splendid victories over the Persians.
-
-62. Q. What general began his career in this war? A. Belisarius, the
-general who imparted such eminent distinction to the reign of Justinian.
-
-63. Q. What were Justinian’s most glorious and useful memorials? A.
-The composition of the celebrated collection of laws comprising the
-Institutes, the Digest or Pandects, and the Code.
-
-64. Q. To whom was the work entrusted? A. To ten law-teachers, over
-whom the famous Tribonian presided.
-
-65. Q. What are of special importance as among other memorable events
-which signalized the reign of Justinian? A. The successful wars which
-he waged against the Vandals in Africa and the Goths in Italy, and his
-expeditions to Sicily and Spain.
-
-66. Q. Among the many edifices erected during the reign of Justinian
-which is the most famous? A. That of St. Sophia.
-
-67. Q. To what epoch does the reign of Justinian partly belong? A. To
-the Roman epoch of the Eastern Empire.
-
-68. Q. What does the reign of Heraklius from 610 to 641 form? A. An
-integral part of mediæval Hellenism.
-
-69. Q. By what was Heraklius invited to ascend the throne, and how long
-did his posterity continue to reign over the empire of the East? A. The
-voice of the clergy, the senate, and the people invited him to ascend
-the throne, and his posterity till the fourth generation continued to
-reign over the empire of the East.
-
-70. Q. In 627, after many brilliant actions, what defeat did Heraklius
-inflict upon the Persians? A. So severe a defeat that their empire was
-nearly crushed.
-
-71. Q. Almost at the same time what unexpected and more terrible
-opponent arose in the Arabian peninsula whose conflict with Hellenism
-continues to the present day? A. Mohammedanism.
-
-72. Q. What did the Mohammedans of Arabia wrest from the empire? A.
-Syria, Egypt, and Northern Africa.
-
-73. Q. What was the Mohammedan religion called, and to what two dogmas
-was it limited? A. Islam, meaning devotion; its dogmas were the belief
-in a future life, and the unity of God.
-
-74. Q. In what words was the latter expressed? A. “There is only one
-God, and Mohammed is the apostle of God.”
-
-75. Q. Who was the next emperor of real historic value after the death
-of Heraklius? A. Constantine IV., surnamed Poganatus, or the Bearded.
-
-76. Q. For what was the reign of Constantine especially memorable? A.
-For the first siege of Constantinople by the Mohammedans.
-
-77. Q. How long did this siege last? A. For seven years, but was not
-carried on uninterruptedly throughout this time.
-
-78. Q. What was the result of the siege? A. The Mohammedans were
-finally forced to relinquish the fruitless enterprise in 675.
-
-79. Q. What formidable weapon did the Byzantines employ during this
-siege, the composition of which is now unknown? A. The Greek fire.
-
-80. Q. What declarations of an œcumenical council he convoked at
-Constantinople in 680 did Constantine sanction by a royal edict, and
-thus reëstablish religious union in the empire? A. That the church has
-always recognized in Christ two natures, united but not confounded—two
-wills, distinct, but not antagonistic.
-
-81. Q. When did the next siege of Constantinople by the Mohammedans
-take place? A. In the year 717, during the reign of Leo III.
-
-82. Q. What was the result? A. In the following year the Arabs were
-driven away, having suffered a loss of twenty-five hundred ships and
-more than five hundred thousand warriors.
-
-83. Q. What decrees did Leo III. issue in 726 and 730? A. A decree
-forbidding the worship of images, and another banishing them entirely
-from the churches.
-
-84. Q. How did these decrees divide the nation? A. Into two
-intensely hostile parties, of iconoclasts or image-breakers, and
-image-worshipers, by whose contests it was long distracted.
-
-85. Q. What action did Leo V. take in regard to image-worship? A. He
-not only banished the images from the churches, but also destroyed the
-songs and prayers addressed to them.
-
-86. Q. What further order was made in regard to their worship by
-Theophilus who became emperor in 829? A. He forbade the word “holy” to
-be inscribed on the images, and also that they should be honored by
-prayers, kissing, or lighted tapers.
-
-87. Q. After the death of Theophilus what action did the empress
-Theodora, into whose hands the positive power of the government passed,
-take in regard to the images? A. She herself worshiped images. The
-pictures were again hung in the churches, and the monastic order more
-than ever became potent both in society and government.
-
-88. Q. During the reign of Alexius what storm suddenly burst from the
-west? A. The so-called First Crusade.
-
-89. Q. Who was the Pope at this time? A. Urban II.
-
-90. Q. By whom were the crusades first incited? A. Peter the Hermit.
-
-91. Q. When did Jerusalem fall into the hands of the crusaders? A. July
-15, 1099.
-
-92. Q. Who were the leaders of the second crusade? A. Conrad III., king
-of Germany, and Louis VII., king of France.
-
-93. Q. What was the ostensible intention of the crusaders? A. To free
-Eastern Christianity from the oppression of the Turks.
-
-94. Q. What does our author say was their ultimate object? A. The
-capture of Constantinople and the abolition of the Byzantine empire.
-
-95. Q. What was the result of the second crusade? A. It was wholly
-inglorious, being relieved by no heroic deeds whatever.
-
-96. Q. What took place in Syria during 1187? A. The Christian authority
-was overthrown in Syria, and Jerusalem was captured by Saladin, the
-sultan of Egypt.
-
-97. Q. What occurred to Constantinople during the fourth crusade, in
-the year 1204? A. After a siege of five months it fell into the hands
-of the crusaders.
-
-98. Q. When and by whom was Constantinople recovered? A. In 1261, under
-the leadership of Michael Palœologus.
-
-99. Q. When was Constantinople again attacked by the Turks? A. In 1453,
-under the famous Mohammed II.
-
-100. Q. What was the result of the final decisive engagement? A. The
-city fell before overwhelming numbers, and passed under Turkish rule.
-
-
-
-
-OUTLINE OF C. L. S. C. STUDIES.
-
-
-NOVEMBER, 1883.
-
-The C. L. S. C. readings for November include parts 10 and 11 of
-Timayenis’s “History of Greece,” for students having read the first
-volume; or from page 93 to the end of “Brief History of Greece,” for
-students of Class of ’87.
-
-Chautauqua Text-Book, No. 5, “Greek History.”
-
-Readings in THE CHAUTAUQUAN.
-
-_First week_ (ending November 8)—1. “History of Greece,” from page 258
-to “Arius,” page 293; or, “Brief History of Greece,” from page 93 to
-“The Battle of Salamis,” page 118.
-
-2. Readings in German History and Literature in THE CHAUTAUQUAN.
-
-3. Sunday Readings in THE CHAUTAUQUAN, for November 4.
-
-_Second Week_ (ending November 15)—1. “History of Greece,” from
-“Arius,” page 293, to chapter viii, page 328; or, “Brief History of
-Greece,” from “The Battle of Salamis,” page 118, to “Life of Socrates,”
-page 143.
-
-2. Readings in Physical Science and Political Economy in THE
-CHAUTAUQUAN.
-
-3. Sunday Readings in THE CHAUTAUQUAN, for November 11.
-
-_Third Week_ (ending November 22)—1. “History of Greece,” from chapter
-viii, page 328, to chapter iii, page 359; or, “Brief History of
-Greece,” from “Life of Socrates,” page 143, to “Causes of the Sacred
-War,” page 169.
-
-2. Readings in Art, in THE CHAUTAUQUAN.
-
-3. Sunday Readings in THE CHAUTAUQUAN, for November 18.
-
-_Fourth Week_ (ending November 29)—1. “History of Greece,” from chapter
-iii, page 359, to the end of part 11, page 342; or, “Brief History of
-Greece,” from “Causes of the Sacred War,” page 169, to the end of the
-book.
-
-2. Readings in American Literature in THE CHAUTAUQUAN.
-
-3. Sunday Readings in THE CHAUTAUQUAN, for November 25.
-
-
-
-
-CHAUTAUQUA NORMAL CLASS.
-
-Season of 1884.
-
-J. L. HURLBUT, D.D., and R. S. HOLMES, A.M., INSTRUCTORS.
-
-
-I. The course of instruction to be pursued in the Sunday-school
-Normal Department of the Chautauqua Assembly, at its session in 1884,
-will embrace lessons upon the following subjects, prepared by the
-instructors in the department. The full text of these lessons will be
-printed during the year in THE CHAUTAUQUAN, which should be taken by
-all who desire to prepare for the Normal Department.
-
-_Twelve Lessons on the Bible._—(1) The Divine Revelation; (2) The Bible
-from God through Man; (3) The Bible as an English Book; (4) The Canon
-of Scripture; (5) The World of the Bible; (6) The Land of the Bible;
-(7) The History in the Bible; (8) The Golden Age of Bible History; (9)
-The House of the Lord; (10) The Doctrines of the Bible; (11) Immanuel;
-(12) The Interpretation of the Bible.
-
-_Twelve Lessons on the Sunday-school and the Teacher’s Work._—(1)
-The Sunday-school—its Purpose, Place, and Prerogatives; (2) The
-Superintendent—his Qualifications, Duties, and Responsibility; (3) The
-Teacher’s Office and Work; (4) The Teacher’s Week-day Work; (5) The
-Teacher’s Preparation; (6) The Teacher’s Mistakes; (7) The Teaching
-Process—Adaptation; (8) The Teaching Process—Approach; (9) The Teaching
-Process—Attention; (10) The Teaching Process—Illustration; (11) The
-Teaching Process—Interrogation; (12) The Teaching Process—Reviews.
-
-II. Students of the Normal Course should study in addition to the
-outlines in THE CHAUTAUQUAN, the following Chautauqua Text-Books (ten
-cents each): No. 18, “Christian Evidences;” No. 19, “The Book of
-Books;” No. 36, “Assembly Bible Outlines;” No. 37, “Assembly Normal
-Outlines;” No. 38, “The Life of Christ;” No. 39, “The Sunday-school
-Normal Class” (including the preparation of the Normal Praxes); and
-No. 41, “The Teacher Before his Class.”
-
-III. Students of the Normal Course are also desired to read the
-following books: Chautauqua Text-Book No. 1, “Bible Exploration;” No.
-8, “What Noted Men Think of the Bible;” No. 10, “What is Education?”
-No. 11, “Socrates;” and “Normal Outlines of Christian Theology,” by
-L. T. Townsend (price, forty cents). These books may be obtained
-of Phillips & Hunt, 805 Broadway, New York; or of Walden & Stowe,
-Cincinnati or Chicago.
-
-IV. Students in special classes in churches or schools, or individual
-students who prosecute the course as given above, may receive by mail
-outline memoranda for examination, and if they can certify to having
-studied the lessons and text-books, and will also prepare the Normal
-Praxes named in Chautauqua Text-Book No. 39, and fill out the Outline
-Memoranda, may receive the diploma of the Chautauqua Teachers’ Union,
-and will be enrolled as members of the Chautauqua Society. Such
-students will send name and address, with twenty-five cents, to Rev. J.
-L. Hurlbut, D.D., Plainfield, N. J.
-
-
-CHAUTAUQUA NORMAL CLASS—BIBLE SECTION.
-
-_Twelve Lessons on Bible Themes._
-
-
-LESSON I.—THE DIVINE REVELATION.
-
-I. There is in me a something which is called mind. I do not know what
-it is. I can neither tell whence it came, nor whither it will go when
-it ceases to inhabit this body. That in me, which is thus ignorant
-concerning the mind, is the mind itself. There are therefore matters
-beyond my mental range. That is, my mind is limited, bounded, finite
-in its powers. What is true of my mind is true of all human mind. Here
-then is one of the first results of consciousness: FINITE MIND IN THE
-WORLD.
-
-II. This finite mind did not produce itself; it sees in the body which
-it controls evidence of a design of which it is not the author. It
-turns to the phenomena of the universe and discovers in them the same
-evidences of design. It seeks the attributes and character of the
-designer or designers of human body and of natural phenomena, and finds
-them to be unlimited in action, unbounded by time or space, infinite in
-power, and uniform in manifestation. It therefore concludes that there
-is but one designer of all the phenomena of created nature, and that
-he is both intelligent and infinite. Here then is a second result of
-consciousness: INFINITE MIND IN THE UNIVERSE.
-
-III. We have so far brought to view two powers, infinite mind in the
-universe and finite mind in the world, and between them a distance
-immeasurable and impassable from the finite side. They are extremes in
-the progression of the universe. Let us notice some facts concerning
-each of these powers:
-
-1. The infinite mind is self-existent; eternal.
-
-2. The infinite mind created finite mind in its own likeness. Both
-these points will be considered in our lesson on the “Doctrines of the
-Bible.”
-
-3. The infinite mind has _provided a means of passing the distance
-between itself and the finite mind_, so that the finite might know the
-infinite; i. e. it has revealed itself to the finite mind.
-
-4. The finite mind is the highest created existence. This is left
-without discussion for the student to amplify.
-
-5. The finite mind exists because of the infinite mind. The gas jet
-burning above my head affords an illustration. It exists because of a
-well-stored gasometer two miles away; because of complicated machinery
-by which coal has been caused to yield up its hidden stores of light;
-because of a system of underground conductors that terminates in
-the burner on the wall. Without the burner and the light all these
-appliances would be useless; and they in turn exist only that there
-may be light. So the finite mind exists because of the infinite—nor
-can we think with satisfaction of infinite mind in the universe and no
-creation or correlated force.
-
-6. The finite mind hungers to know the infinite; it peers into the
-measureless space which its eye can not pierce, and longs for the
-infinite to reveal itself. This fact is historical, “Canst thou by
-searching find out God?” has been the question of the ages; and
-the answer has been “the world by wisdom knew not God.” The cry of
-multitudes of hungering souls has been: “O, that I knew where I might
-find him.” As light is necessary to the eye, and air to the bird’s
-wing, and sound to the ear, that each may perform the work for which
-it is adapted, so a knowledge of the infinite mind that is of God, is
-essential that the finite mind—that is, man—may fulfill its destiny.
-And this knowledge is possible only through self-revelation by God to
-man. That such a revelation has been made we have already asserted.
-That the Bible is that revelation is our claim, which we will discuss
-in a future lesson. The present lesson will be content to inquire
-simply, how that revelation has been effected. We answer:
-
-_God wrought it out in the presence of the race_ in ways unmistakable,
-exhibiting every attribute of his character, _even to those of mercy
-and forgiveness_. God wrought (not wrote). What we call the inspired
-Word is a mediate, not an immediate act of God. God wrought, the work
-extending through many ages, perhaps not even yet finished.
-
-_Wrought_ (_a_) in nature, so that “the invisible things of him since
-the creation of the world are clearly seen, being perceived through
-the things that are made.” Creation then is itself a part of the
-revelation, but only a part; for out of it comes no hint of forgiveness
-or redemption.
-
-(_b_) In man, _by spiritual manifestations_, _by intellectual
-enlightenments_, _by illuminations of conscience_, such as could not
-originate in the human soul. These revelations or workings of God in
-man mark a large portion of the history of thought through the ages;
-and in that dim twilight of the race, when men like Enoch walked with
-God, though history is but a shadow, yet it is the shadow of God
-working in man.
-
-(_c_) In Providence—that is, in his ordering the work of the world. He
-not only “produced a supernatural history extending through centuries,
-... and working out results which human wisdom could never have
-conceived, nor human power executed,”[J] but also he has directed all
-the workings of all history in accordance with the central purpose of
-his revelation.
-
-(_d_) In grace, by his spirit revealing what the human mind could
-never have discovered for itself, redemption and atonement through
-forgiveness of sin.
-
-IV. This divine revelation so wrought by God _has been, and is being
-reported_ that all the world may know and confess that “the Lord, he is
-the God.” Reported:
-
-1. _Through Tradition._—There was an unwritten Bible before the
-written word, handed down from patriarchs to scribes; and even in
-lands destitute of the Scriptures, we trace the dim outlines of truth
-transmitted from ancient authority.
-
-2. _Through Philosophy._—Wise men and thinkers have read the revelation
-in nature and gathered it up from human thought, and the highest
-philosophy, as that of a Socrates and a Plato, finds God.
-
-3. _Through Prophecy._—In the earlier ages, and perhaps through all the
-ages, God has communed with chosen men who have lived in fellowship
-with himself; and has made them the mouthpiece uttering his will to the
-world.
-
-4. _Through Preaching._—The pulpit, when it is true to its mission,
-voices the message of God to man.
-
-V. _We find also that this divine revelation has been written out,
-under a divine direction_:
-
-1. _In Various Books._—The Bible is not one book, but sixty-six books,
-a whole library, presenting the divine revelation under varied aspects,
-but all under one divine origin and supervision.
-
-2. _By Various Writers._—Not less than thirty authors, and probably
-many more, shared in the composition of the Scriptures, but all wrote
-under a divine control, and expressed, each in his own style, the mind
-of the Spirit.
-
-3. _Through Various Ages._—Moses may have begun the writing, doubtless
-from earlier documents. Samuel, David, Solomon, Isaiah, Ezra, Matthew,
-Paul, John, each in turn carried on the work through a period of
-sixteen hundred years. The book grew like a cathedral, rising through
-the centuries, under many successive master-builders, yet according to
-one plan of one divine Architect.
-
-4. _In Various Languages._—Two great tongues, one Semitic, the other
-Aryan, were employed, the Hebrew in the Old Testament, the Greek in the
-new; but the Hebrew of Moses is not that of Daniel a thousand years
-later.
-
-VI. _We find this divine revelation preserved_:
-
-1. _By being stereotyped into Dead Languages._—A living language is
-ever changing the meaning of its words; and truth written in it is in
-danger of being misunderstood by another generation. But the words of
-a dead language, like the Hebrew and the Greek, are fixed in their
-meaning, and once understood are not likely to be perverted. Soon after
-the Bible was completed, both its languages ceased to be spoken, and
-have been kept since as the shrine for the great truths contained in
-the Word.
-
-2. _By being translated into Living Languages._—The Bible has been
-translated into all the tongues of earth, and thus its perpetuation
-to the end of time has been assured. No other work has been read by
-so many races, and no other is so capable of being understood by the
-masses of mankind.
-
-3. _By being incorporated into Literature._—If every copy of the
-Scriptures in the whole world were destroyed every sentence of it could
-be reproduced from the writings of men, since it has become an integral
-part of the thought of the world.
-
-4. _By being perpetuated in Institutions._—The Jewish church
-perpetuates the Old Testament; the Christian church the New; and while
-either endures, the Bible containing the divine revelation must endure.
-
-VII. _We find this divine revelation proved_:
-
-1. _By Testimonies._—The child looking upon the opened page of the
-Bible at his mother’s knee, accepts her testimony that it is the word
-of God, and thus each generation receives the book from the preceding
-generation with a declaration of its divine origin.
-
-2. _By Probabilities._—Such has been the history of this book in its
-relation to the world, and its triumph over opposing forces; such has
-been its early, continuous and present acceptance; that there is every
-probability in favor of its being, what it appears to be, a divine book.
-
-3. _By Experience._—There are many who have put this book to the test
-in their own lives; have tried its promises; have tasted its spiritual
-experience; have brought it into contact with their own hearts; and
-have obtained from it a certain assurance that it comes from God.
-
-4. _By Evidences._—If any reader will not accept the Bible upon the
-testimonies of others; if he fails to see in its behalf the weight of
-probability; if he has not been able to put it to the test in his own
-experience, there is yet a strong line of argument appealing to his
-reason, and proving the book divine.
-
-VIII. _We find this divine revelation searched_:
-
-1. _Through Curiosity._—There are some who read and study the Bible
-from no higher motive than desire to know its contents.
-
-2. _Through Literary Taste._—There are others who read the Bible from
-an appreciation of its value as a work of literature, recognizing the
-high poetic rank of David and Isaiah, the historic worth of Joshua and
-Samuel, the philosophic thought of Paul.
-
-3. _Through Opposition._—In every age there have been searchers of the
-Bible actuated by the motive of unbelief; men trying to find in it the
-weapons for its own destruction. Yet even their study has often proved
-serviceable to the believer in the divine revelation.
-
-4. _Through Spiritual Desire._—Multitudes have studied the Bible,
-multitudes are studying it now because they find in it that which their
-spiritual nature craves, the knowledge of God. They feed upon the Word
-because it satisfies the hunger of their spirits.
-
-IX. We find this _divine revelation circulated among men_. The history
-of the Bible since its translation into English has been the history
-of multiplication. Language after language has had the Bible added to
-the library of its language. Unwritten languages have had characters
-invented for them to represent their words and the Bible has thus
-become the first book of the new-made written language of the people.
-All the leading languages of the world have thus been put in possession
-of the Bible, and the signs of the times point to a speedy realization
-of the hope that soon all the nations of the earth will know the divine
-revelation of our Father which is in heaven.
-
-
-CHAUTAUQUA NORMAL CLASS.
-
-_Twelve Lessons on the Sunday-school and the Teacher’s Work._
-
-
-LESSON I.—THE PLACE, PURPOSE AND PREROGATIVES OF THE SUNDAY-SCHOOL.
-
-
-_I. The place of the Sunday-school._
-
-1. The Sunday-school is one of the means employed by the Church of
-Christ for bringing men under the influence of the Gospel. It is not
-designed to fill the place of any of the other accepted agencies of the
-church.
-
-2. The Sunday-school does not, and should not accomplish the work
-belonging to the pulpit and the pastor, nor does it subserve the
-purpose of the church meeting for prayer and interchange of Christian
-experience.
-
-3. The Sunday-school can in no sense do the work of the Christian home.
-It is an agency differing from all other agencies of the church, and is
-made necessary by the nature and extent of the body of truth accepted
-by the church, so necessary that without it the church would be to a
-certain extent crippled.
-
-4. It is a school, _organized and officered as such_; occupying a well
-defined place in the religious system of the church, having a specific
-purpose, and entitled to certain prerogatives.
-
-5. As a school, its constituency is a body of teachers and pupils,
-associated together voluntarily, but not without responsibility and
-accountability.
-
-6. The Sunday-school in its theoretic constitution is the parallel of
-the secular school.
-
-(_a_) As the latter derives its life from the community, so the
-Sunday-school derives its life from _the religious community, the
-church_.
-
-(_b_) As the community delegates the power of control over the secular
-school to a representative body which exercises supreme authority over
-its affairs, so the church entrusts the management of the Sunday-school
-to her representative executive body, by whatever name known.
-
-(_c_) As the representative body controlling the secular school places
-the oversight of the system and its details of management in the hands
-of a general executive officer, or superintendent, so the governing
-power of the church entrusts the management of the Sunday-school to one
-of similar name—a superintendent.
-
-(_d_) As the secular school is within and subordinate to the
-community, and alongside of the home as its aid and supplement, so the
-Sunday-school is within and subordinate to the church, and beside the
-Christian home as its supplement.
-
-Let us gather up these propositions concerning the Sunday-school into a
-general definition.
-
-_Definition._
-
-The Sunday-school is a department of the church of Christ, in which the
-word of Christ is taught for the purpose of bringing souls to Christ
-and building up souls in Christ.
-
-As suggested by this definition, we make the following propositions:
-
-(1) The Sunday-school is a _school_.
-
-(2) The Sunday-school is not a substitute for the church.
-
-(3) The Sunday-school is not a substitute for the prayer meeting.
-
-(4) The Sunday-school is not a substitute for home training.
-
-(5) The Sunday-school is _in_ the church as an integral part.
-
-(6) The Sunday-school is subordinate to the church.
-
-(7) The Sunday-school is an aid to the Christian home.
-
-_II. The Purpose of the Sunday-school._
-
-1. The chief purpose of the Sunday-school is the _spiritual education_
-of the soul. By education we do not mean the mere putting in possession
-of knowledge. There have been learned men who were not educated men;
-men of wide knowledge, but with the power of _self-control_ and
-_self-use_ undeveloped. By education we mean leading the soul out
-of its natural condition, into a condition where it can do what God
-meant it to do, and be what God meant it to be. Spiritual education
-will therefore be the development of a soul by nature averse to divine
-control, into a condition of oneness with the divine will, such as
-is made possible by the at-one-ment of Jesus Christ. This process
-involves, (1) conversion, and (2) upbuilding in Christ, and would
-produce, if unhindered, a character that would reach toward the measure
-of the fulness of Christ.
-
-But many souls in the church have never reached farther than the first
-or preparatory step in spiritual education—the step which we call
-conversion. Hence,
-
-2. A second purpose of the Sunday-school is upbuilding in Christ, and
-this is possible only through searching study of the Word of God.
-
-As the astronomer must know all the intricacies of his science, and
-be able with the telescope to read the heavens as an open book, and
-scan their farthest depths, so the Christian must know the hidden
-mysteries and deep things of God as revealed in the Bible, which is
-both text-book and telescope to the soul.
-
-3. A third purpose of the Sunday-school is the development of the
-teaching power in the church. “Go teach,” in the Revised version
-becomes “Go disciple.” Sunday-school teaching therefore becomes
-_disciple-making_. In this respect its aim is the same as that of
-the church. To accomplish it by preaching, the church provides years
-of careful training for her ministers in special schools. As careful
-training is needed by the Sunday-school teacher, and the school itself
-is the only means by which the end can be secured.
-
-_III. The Prerogatives of the Sunday-school._
-
-The Sunday-school exists within the church and because of the church.
-Yet though a part of the church, it maintains a separate organic
-life. As a member of the body it has certain _rights_ which we call
-Prerogatives. We name the most important.
-
-1. _Care._—As no member of the body can be neglected without physical
-loss, so if any part of the body of Christ be left without watchful
-care, spiritual loss must ensue. The Sunday-school has a _right to
-the care_ of the church, exercised (_a_) officially by the governing
-body, that no want may be left unsupplied, and (_b_) individually that
-sympathy, help, prayer and interest may never be lacking, and that
-ample provision may be made for the efficient working of the school.
-
-2. _Support._—The Sunday-school has a right to the pecuniary support
-of the church. It never should be crippled by lack of means to carry
-out its plans. The school should not be expected to provide for its own
-necessary expenses. The voluntary contributions of the school should
-never be applied to the support of the school as such. Systematic
-giving should be taught, and should include all the benevolent
-operations of the church, even to the extent of contributing toward the
-general church expenses, but that the school should use its funds for
-defraying its own expenses is clearly an evil.
-
-(3) _Recognition._—The school has a right to be recognized as an
-established agency of the church. This recognition should include (1)
-regular notice from the pulpit of the time and place of holding its
-sessions; (2) the same prominence to the annual meeting for the choice
-of officers that is given to the same meetings of the church, and (3)
-its importance as a church agency should be recognized by giving to the
-school official recognition in the governing body of the church.
-
-(4) _Pastoral Supervision._—The school has a right to the watchful
-oversight and regular presence of the pastor. It is not necessary that
-he should superintend the school—it is better not. It is not necessary
-that he should be burdened with its cares. But it is essential (1)
-that he use it as a field of pastoral labor; (2) that he give to it
-the encouragement of his commendation; (3) that he extend to it the
-sympathy of his presence; (4) that he know as to the character of the
-work being done within it.
-
-(5) _Coöperation._—The Sunday-school has a right to the hearty
-coöperation of the whole church, so that (1) there may be no lack of
-teachers to do the work of the school, and (2) that the work of the
-teacher may be understood and appreciated in the Christian family,
-which is the church unit; and (3) that teacher and parent may work in
-perfect harmony.
-
-This is not intended as an exhaustive treatment of this subject. It
-presents in outline some salient points concerning the Sunday-school,
-and leaves the student to continue by himself the line of thought
-suggested, and to this end reference is made to “Hart’s Thoughts on
-Sunday-schools,” “Pardee’s Sunday-school Index,” and the “Chautauqua
-Normal Guide,” by J. H. Vincent, D.D., 1880.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[J] J. H. Vincent, D.D.
-
-
-
-
-EDITOR’S OUTLOOK.
-
-
-DR. HAYGOOD’S BATTLE FOR THE NEGRO.
-
-There is something sublime in the spectacle of an earnest man
-contending for his cause. The sublimity is heightened when we remember
-that his cause and his convictions are identical, without any reckoning
-of the cost. Of this character was the figure of Dr. Atticus G. Haygood
-on the Chautauqua platform, uttering brave words for the Negro, his
-former slave, but present fellow-citizen. Nor did we have to wait till
-opportunity made him heard at Chautauqua. From the close of the war
-until now, he has been a moulder and leader of the best sentiment in
-the South, and has occupied advanced ground upon all questions relating
-to the education and welfare of the liberated slave. His recent book,
-“Our Brother in Black,” is the ablest contribution we have had to the
-“Negro question.” It breathes throughout the same generous, Christian
-sentiment and sympathy that characterize all his utterances and his
-work elsewhere. Nor is the word “battle” too strong a term to be
-used. When we remember the jealousies, hates, and prejudices of long
-standing, and greatly intensified by the war; and how they have been
-kept alive by designing men on both sides; when we bear these things
-in mind, it is easy to see that it has required no little courage for
-a Southern man, in the midst of Southern people, with their sentiments
-and feelings, to take up the black man’s cause and advocate it in words
-of bold, plain truth.
-
-Dr. Haygood is the Christian, and not the politician. When he praises,
-as he does without stint, the work accomplished for the Negro by the
-people of the North, it is not the work of that particular politician,
-with his promise of “a mule, forty acres, and provisions for a year,”
-but of teachers, secular and religious, who, with a motive higher than
-the personal, have sought the elevation, moral and intellectual, of
-the Negro. He pleads no apology for his Southern brethren who have
-met these benevolent workers with opposition, social ostracism, and
-other forms of persecution, but utters his condemnation of this spirit
-whenever and wherever manifested.
-
-And the results of the first twenty years’ history have justified his
-high and hopeful views. It is only two years since Senator Brown,
-of Georgia, said of the Negro, in a speech delivered in the United
-States Senate: “He has shown a capacity to receive education, and a
-disposition to elevate himself that is exceedingly gratifying, not
-only to me, but to every right-thinking Southern man.” The results
-show that the Negro has a real hunger for the education he so greatly
-needs. It is shown that in the year 1881, forty-seven per cent. of the
-colored school population was enrolled as attending the public schools,
-whilst in the same year there was enrolled fifty-two per cent. of the
-white population. Though both figures are painfully low, and suggest a
-condition of great illiteracy, yet, when we remember the past of the
-Negro—how he has been trampled down and trodden under—the figure 47 at
-the end of his first twenty years, is both encouraging and significant.
-
-But Dr. Haygood finds his strongest hope in the religious nature of
-the Negro. The religious element of the race was very manifest in the
-days of slavery, and since its freedom still more so. The moral and
-religious progress of twenty years is encouraging. Of seven millions,
-the entire colored population, a million and a half are communicants of
-the various churches. Whilst their notions are crude, their conceptions
-of religious truth often painfully realistic and grotesque, yet their
-religion is real and worthy of confidence. More than to all other
-influences combined, to the black man’s religion is due the shaping of
-his better character. It is from this basis, and working along this
-line, that Dr. Haygood sees the success of the future. His closing word
-at Chautauqua is a statement of the whole theory which will commend
-itself to the sympathy and judgment of right-thinking Christian men
-everywhere: “Mere statesmanship can not solve this hard problem. It
-is not given to the wisdom of man; but God reigns, and God does not
-fail. We are workers with him in his great designs. When we stand by
-the cross of Jesus Christ we will know what to do. We can solve our
-problem, God being our helper. But on no lower platform than this—the
-platform of the Ten Commandments and of the Sermon on the Mount.”
-
-
-
-
-THE POLITICAL OUTLOOK.
-
-
-In a few months we shall be in the midst of another presidential
-campaign, and one as exciting, perhaps, as the country has known.
-Already we see earnest preparations for the fray. The party managers
-are busily laying their schemes; the question of candidates and the
-measures to secure victory are being thoroughly canvassed by the rival
-parties.
-
-What now strikes the thoughtful person as he considers the political
-outlook is the lack of party issues. Two great parties are seen on the
-eve of a tremendous struggle for the reins of government; but when the
-question is asked, what are the living issues at the bottom of this
-fight? one is puzzled for a reply. The situation is about this: instead
-of coming before the people with certain great principles as a ground
-of contention, one party has for its cry, “Put the rascals out;” and
-the other, “Let us keep the rascals from coming in.”
-
-Our feeling is that the case should be different. Are there no living
-issues important enough to serve as the rallying cry of political
-parties? Must parties live on a past record? Is there nothing for
-them to do but to glory in what they have done, and point a finger of
-contempt at the other side? By no means is this the case. There are
-to-day vitally important matters pertaining to the public welfare which
-call loudly to our political leaders for attention; and the party
-which shall take hold of these matters in an earnest way, and boldly
-present itself as the champion of principles of truth and justice and
-purity, ought to be, and must be, the party of the future.
-
-The reform of the civil service might very well be a party issue, but
-it is not. Neither of the great parties shows a disposition to take a
-hearty and united stand in favor of such reform. Some prominent men in
-both parties have it at heart, and the movement which has been seen
-can not be claimed as a party movement. The reform of the tariff wise
-men see to be one of the crying needs of the hour; but how hopelessly
-at sea seem our party leaders in dealing with the question. It can not
-be said that any principles of tariff are a party issue. There is a
-wide diversity of sentiment among those who have the management of the
-parties; on either side are seen free-trade men and protective tariff
-men; and probably some have their opinions yet to form upon a subject
-so live and important as the tariff. The nation has a yearly surplus
-revenue of $100,000,000, to get rid of which extravagant and needless
-appropriations are made; the embarrassment of certain branches of
-industry in our land, as things are, is evident; but to which party can
-we point as the one intelligently and earnestly bent on tariff reform?
-The time may come when the prohibition of the liquor traffic will be
-the underlying principle of a great political party, but it is not now.
-We may have our opinions as to which of the great parties bidding for
-the suffrages of the people is the more a temperance party, but either
-is a great way from being ready to adopt as an issue the righteous
-principle of prohibition. In just one State to-day (Iowa), one of the
-parties appears as the supporter of this principle. Turn to another
-State (Massachusetts), which sometimes is thought to lead all the
-rest in moral ideas, and see the same party fighting neither for this
-principle nor any other, but simply to wrest the power from Governor
-Butler.
-
-We judge of the coming national campaign by that now in progress in
-different States, and we see it is to be marked by a lack of high and
-worthy party issues. It will be—what it should not be—a contest without
-great underlying principles. Let whichever party may triumph, the
-victory can not be regarded one of living principles; it will be rather
-the success of individuals to whom the majority of the people choose
-to commit the reins of authority, or the triumph of a party which
-the people prefer for its record, or to which they give a blind and
-unthinking preference. Whatever the outcome of the impending political
-struggle, we have faith in the perpetuity of our institutions, and that
-there is a nobler destiny for the American people than they have yet
-attained.
-
-
-
-
-HISTORY OF GREECE.
-
-
-The installment of Grecian History required in the C. L. S. C. course
-is not extensive, but has been prepared with much care, and is adapted
-to its purpose. A careful study—enough to give possession of the
-principal facts stated, can hardly fail to kindle the desire for
-further knowledge of a people who had so many elements of greatness,
-and for centuries surpassed all others in knowledge and culture. The
-most advanced nations of to-day are largely indebted to the Greeks.
-Modern art and literature bear witness to the indebtedness. The race
-had wonderful capabilities. Their country, climate, blood, early habits
-of self-control, or all these together, secured in that corner of
-Europe a class of stalwart men, physically and intellectually capable
-of great deeds.
-
-Much of their early history is, of course, fabulous. The gods,
-goddesses, heroes and kings, whose councils and exploits are rehearsed,
-were but myths. Yet the legendary traditions respecting them have
-charms that attract and hold the reader. We may utterly discredit
-the story, but pay homage to the ability and versatile genius of
-the writer, whose glowing words so paint the scenes described. Only
-a slight basis of fact is conceded to some of the most captivating
-Homeric descriptions; yet they are in an important sense true. False
-in history, but sublimely true to the conceptions of the greatest of
-poets, as a bold delineator, peerless in his own, or any other age. If
-the ideal of the divinities thought to be interested in the affairs of
-men falls far below the conceptions of a monotheist, and seems unworthy
-of a philanthropic heathen, the portraiture is both complete and
-captivating.
-
-When the mists, that for centuries shrouded Greece and the neighboring
-isles, are dispersed, and we recognize the certain dawn of the
-_historic_ period, though the descendants of those mighty heroes and
-kings that were deified as sons of the gods, shrink to the proportions
-of men, they are still found to be mighty men, whose noble deeds and
-achievements have been an inspiration to millions in the generations
-since. Excepting only such as have the true light, and are blest with
-Christian civilization, we adopt the statement “No other race ever did
-so many things well as the Greeks.”
-
-Let the book be closely studied. If the cursory, objectless reader
-lacks interest, and tires in the work, the student feels more than
-compensated for his toil.
-
-
-
-
-A COLLEGE REFORM.
-
-
-The present agitation touching college courses of study is one from
-which good is likely to come. There is danger, however, that we swing
-to the other extreme. That undue prominence in the ordinary college
-curriculum has hitherto been given to classical studies, and too little
-room made for the modern languages, natural science, and English
-literature is coming to be widely felt. But the true reform is not
-utterly to eliminate the classics; it is not the part of wisdom to
-decry as folly the study of the dead tongues.
-
-The oration of Charles Francis Adams, Jr., last summer at Harvard,
-published under the title of “A College Fetich,” was quite as
-unexpected and sensational as that of Wendell Phillips on another
-similar occasion. Mr. Phillips arraigned his _alma mater_ that her sons
-were no more active in social reforms, while Mr. Adams charged upon her
-that, in retaining the dead languages as a required part of the course
-of study, she was guilty of worshiping a fetich. This grandson and
-great-grandson of a President, whose illustrious ancestors one after
-another were inmates of Harvard’s halls, makes against the venerable
-institution, the most serious charge that her graduates, upon leaving
-her, are not fitted as they should be for practical life. She sends
-them forth, he affirms, with a smattering of the dead languages, which
-is quite without advantage, instead of with a thorough knowledge of
-what can be turned to practical account and will qualify them for the
-duties of active life. He would have a drill in the classics no longer
-required of the college student; but would allow him to win his A. B.
-by pursuing other and more useful branches of study. Mr. Adams’s bold
-claim against Harvard, if sustained, would of course hold against other
-colleges, and against some others would hold in a higher degree.
-
-But we think his statements are too sweeping, and the reform he
-advocates, because it goes too far, would not be a wise reform. We
-would not abolish the study of Latin and Greek in our colleges. They
-are dead tongues, but it does not follow that time spent in their
-study is wasted. On the contrary, we would have them taught with such
-thoroughness, by such qualified and skillful teachers that the college
-graduate will go out with something more than a smattering of them. It
-is a fact which can not be disproved, that from a study of the classics
-comes a mental discipline and a mastery of good English, such as can
-be acquired from nothing else. But that too much comparative attention
-has been given to these branches is freely conceded. There is a want
-of more thorough study in our higher institutions of the natural
-science, the modern tongues, and the models of our own language. The
-true reform is to cease to magnify Latin and Greek at the expense of
-these other things, and to give to the latter their due attention. Of
-the wisdom of elective college courses there can be no doubt. It may
-not be always best for the young man who has not in view one of the
-learned professions, but a business life, to spend years in the study
-of the ancient languages. But it is our judgment that a knowledge of
-these should always be required of the candidate for the Bachelor of
-Art’s degree. Certain things are in the air, and we rejoice. Natural
-science, that field of study in richness so exhaustless, is attracting
-the student as never before. The importance of gaining a knowledge of
-languages now spoken, other than our own, is being felt as it was not
-once. We welcome the indications that promise a college reform. Let us
-have it without over-shooting the mark.
-
-
-
-
-EDITOR’S NOTE-BOOK.
-
-
-The trustees of the Garfield monument to be erected in Cleveland, Ohio,
-have more than one hundred and thirty thousand dollars on hand, and
-they expect to secure a sufficient increase to this sum, at an early
-day, to complete the work. This, with the fund of more than three
-hundred thousand dollars which the American people contributed and
-presented to the widow of the lamented Garfield, is positive proof that
-our republic is not ungrateful.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The old statement that a low grade of moral character may exist in
-the same community with a high grade of mental culture may be true of
-any type of the best modern civilizations, but it is not necessarily
-true. Education, like the gospel, may be the savor of death unto death,
-but moral death need not be its effect. A good illustration of the
-elevating tendencies of education in the community is found in the fact
-that since the compulsory school law went into operation in New York,
-juvenile crime in that city has been reduced by more than thirty-six
-per cent. And yet it is said the law has been only partially enforced.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Scientific temperance education has been by legislative action
-introduced into the public schools of Vermont and Michigan, and at the
-last session of the legislature in New Hampshire it was by a unanimous
-vote introduced into the schools of that State. The W. C. T. U. is
-laying its hand on legislatures in a very effective way, and we may
-look for an abundant harvest in the next generation. “Long voyages make
-rich returns.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Prince Bismarck is a timber merchant, and why should not a dealer
-in timber be called a merchant? But this is not all. He is a large
-distiller of spirituous liquors. The Germans do not object to his
-occupation as a distiller, for their drinking customs are on a low
-grade. Public opinion, in this country, would not long tolerate a
-statesman, even of great abilities, who manufactured distilled liquors
-for sale as a beverage. And herein we see one point of difference
-between these two nations on a great moral reform.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The _Scientific American_ of a recent date says: “Too much reliance
-is placed on the sense of taste, sight and smell in determining the
-character of drinking water. It is a fact which has been repeatedly
-illustrated that water may be odorless, tasteless and colorless, and
-yet be full of danger to those who use it. The recent outbreak of
-typhoid fever in Newburg, N. Y., is an example, having been caused by
-water which was clear, and without taste or smell. It is also a fact
-that even a chemical analysis sometimes will fail to show a dangerous
-contamination of the water, and will always fail to detect the specific
-poison if the water is infected with discharges of an infectious
-nature. It is therefore urged that the source of the water supply
-should be kept free from all possible means of contamination by sewage.
-It is only in the knowledge of perfect cleanliness that safety is
-guaranteed.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mr. Henry Hart, of Brockport, N. Y., manufactures a C. L. S. C. gold
-pin of beautiful design for gentlemen, and another one attached to
-an arrow, which is equally handsome, for ladies. Either one makes an
-appropriate badge for members of the Circle to wear in everyday life,
-and at times it will serve to introduce strangers when traveling or in
-strange places, who have a common sympathy in a great work, and thus
-aid the possessor in extending his circle of acquaintances.
-
- * * * * *
-
-One of the most embarrassing questions in the management of colleges
-and universities is, how shall trustees superannuate a certain class of
-professors, whose days of usefulness in the recitation room are past.
-When that problem is solved the unity and peace of the management will,
-as a rule, be secured.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The New York _Herald_ is led to pronounce against capital punishment
-because in many cases the law against murder is a dead letter, and
-produces the following historical reference to confirm the statement:
-“It appears that from 1860 to 1882 a hundred and seventy persons were
-tried in Massachusetts for murder in the first degree. Of this number
-only twenty-nine were convicted, and only sixteen paid the extreme
-penalty of the law. Of those convicted one committed suicide, and
-twelve got their sentences commuted. Here, then, during a period of
-little more than twenty years were a hundred and seventy murders in one
-State, and only sixteen executions.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-They have one hundred and fifty miles of electric railway in operation
-in Europe. Active preparations are making by rival inventors and
-corporations in New York City to introduce electricity on a large scale
-as a safe, rapid, and cheap motor. As in lighting houses, towns, and
-cities we have passed from the tallow candle to kerosene, and then to
-gas, and on to the electric light, so by many steps and advances we
-are almost ready to accept electricity as the moving power of railway
-trains.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The pardoning power of the general government is liable to work
-pernicious results in the regular army. Cases of embezzlement and
-fraud among army officers have been growing in number since our civil
-war, and laxity in the enforcement of the laws against these offenders
-is a growing evil. General J. B. Fry, an officer of repute, and a
-graduate of West Point, thus points out the evil: “The interposition
-of higher authority in favor of offenders has been so frequent since
-the war, especially from 1876 to 1880, as to be a great injury to
-the service. Many of the evils which have been exposed recently are
-fairly chargeable to executive and legislative reversal of army action.
-* * * When the strong current of military justice is dammed by the
-authorities set over the army, stagnant pools are formed which breed
-scandal, fraud, disobedience, dissipation, and disgrace, sometimes even
-among those educated for the service.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Cable intelligence, received September 3, shows that the Baron
-Nordenskjöld, as a Greenland explorer, has accomplished a large part of
-his original purpose. The expedition entered West Greenland in latitude
-68°, and proceeded 220 miles inland, attained an altitude of seven
-thousand feet above the sea level. In 1878 Lieutenant Jansen, of the
-Danish navy, penetrated fifty miles from the coast, and reached an “icy
-mountain, in lat. 62° 40′, five thousand feet high.” But no explorer
-has since done anything worth mention toward solving the mystery of
-Greenland’s interior physical geography. The expedition with Professor
-Nordenskjöld has gone farther and seen more of the “immense desert of
-ice;” and the latest telegrams claim that some important scientific
-data have been obtained.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The prohibition amendment, submitted to the voters of Ohio, is
-defeated, and our cherished hopes of its success, for the present,
-sadly disappointed. The non-partisan temperance people, everywhere,
-felt deeply interested in the issue, and will hear the result with
-profound sorrow. Multitudes of Ohio’s best men and women, who had
-prayed, worked, and hoped that deliverance might come in that way,
-and that from the 9th of October we would see the unspeakable curse
-of the liquor traffic placed where it ought to be, under the ban of
-the constitution, from which corrupt tinkering politicians would be
-unable to protect it, will confess their disappointment, but neither
-suppress their prayers nor cease their efforts. They are clearly in the
-majority, and when united will succeed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Telegraphic report says the Vicar of Stratford has authorized the
-exhumation of the remains of Shakspere that they may compare the skull
-with the bust that stands over the grave. Dr. Ingleby, of London, who
-is a trustee of the Shakspere Museum at Stratford, wishes, it seems,
-to photograph the face and take a cast of the skull. The absurdity of
-the proposal makes it almost incredible, and should itself prevent the
-desecration. We are not surprised that the bishop and local authorities
-have protested, and the intended outrage will hardly be perpetrated.
-By the terms of the deed of interment the consent of the Mayor of
-Stratford-on-Avon must first be given before the body can be moved. To
-this proposal, that official has given a decided refusal, and the dust
-of the poet will not be disturbed. Shakspere has been dead two hundred
-and sixty-seven years. The type of face and head, universally accepted
-as his, is sufficiently accurate. If it were not the correction of any
-fault in that likeness is now impossible.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Pittsburgh Exposition building, with most of its contents, was
-entirely consumed by fire during the exposition week. The principal
-loss was the goods on exhibition, including many articles of exquisite
-workmanship, and valuable relics that can not be replaced. The building
-itself, though a wooden structure, was large, and seemed suitable for
-the purpose. It was valued at $150,000 and not heavily insured. Perhaps
-sufficient care was not taken to secure the property against the
-calamity that, in so short a time, destroyed the whole. The company,
-who had before suffered some reverses and losses, and were struggling
-into what seemed a safe condition, with hopes of future prosperity,
-have the sympathy of the public.
-
- * * * * *
-
-During the last decade, and especially since the great Centennial,
-expositions have been numerous, and, in many cases, attended with most
-gratifying results. When the associations providing them are controlled
-by men of culture, they are generously sustained. The articles they
-have to exhibit are not only numerous, but in kind and quality,
-worthy of our advanced civilization. These American expositions are
-becoming notably rich in manufactured articles, and in the extent and
-variety of useful machinery. For inventive genius the Yankee nation is
-unrivaled, while in the mechanical execution of the designs our skilled
-artisans have few, if any, superiors. In the principal western cities
-the holding of at least annual expositions is no longer a tentative
-measure. The institutions are established, and their continuance, in
-most cases, pretty well assured. An example of these is the “Detroit
-Art and Loan Exposition” of recent origin. Already it has fair
-proportions, being from the commencement, in most respects, equal
-to the best. Evidently the project for having there a creditable,
-first-class exposition was clearly conceived, generously sustained, and
-most successfully executed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Before Congress opens General W. T. Sherman will close up the affairs
-of his office, and General Sheridan will succeed him as commander
-of the United States Army. General Sherman has made a good officer,
-but his reputation in history will rest chiefly on his bravery and
-skill as a general in his famous march to the sea. The Sherman family
-have served their country well. John Sherman, in the Senate, and as
-Secretary of the Treasury, in times when great abilities were in
-demand, has made a name as great in his line as the general in the army.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The receipts of the great Brooklyn bridge for nineteen weeks from the
-opening, were: For passengers, $34,464; for vehicles, $31,563; for
-cars, $3,936. Total receipts, $69,163. The average per day was $526.04.
-The total expenses during the nineteen weeks were $51,418.08.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The C. L. S. C. continues to grow with great rapidity in all parts of
-the country. There is no sign of the interest waning in any community
-from which we have heard. From Plainfield, N. J., the central office,
-we receive news that the new class will be the largest of our history.
-New England is rolling up a large membership. All over the West
-and Northwest there is an interest among the people amounting to
-enthusiasm. Mr. Lewis Peake, of Toronto, reports a C. L. S. C. revival
-in Canada. This is the time to circulate C. L. S. C. circulars, and to
-use your town, city, and county papers to call the attention of the
-people to the aims and methods of work. By these means a C. L. S. C.
-fire may be kindled on every street in every town and city in the land.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The recent pastoral letter of the Cardinal and other high officials
-in the Romish Church, caused a reporter to ask one of these officers
-some questions about marriage and divorce, to which he replied as
-follows. It is wholesome truth: “Marriage is a divine institution,
-and the Catholic Church under no circumstances whatever permits the
-sacred contract to be broken.” To the question, “Is there no such thing
-as separation between husband and wife recognized in the Catholic
-Church?” he answered: “Separation, yes, for the gravest reasons and
-under restrictions that do not admit of the remarriage of either of the
-parties to the original contract while both are living. But divorce in
-the sense generally accepted, never. Rather than permit divorce, the
-Church let England separate from the Holy See. The same question was
-raised by the first Napoleon, and it was ruled against him by the Pope.
-You will find that if anything bearing the appearance of divorce has
-been allowed in the Catholic Church, it has always been a case where
-the most careful investigation showed that the marriage was originally
-invalid.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Germans on October 8 in many towns and cities celebrated the
-bi-centennial of the arrival of the first German immigrants in this
-country, on the ship “Concord.” Their singing, secret, and literary
-societies paraded in regalia, with banners and music. It was a notable
-day among the Germans of America.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Bishop Paddock, of the Protestant Episcopal Church, in charge of the
-diocese of Washington Territory, when speaking of his field of labor
-before the Episcopal Council in Philadelphia last month, said: “I am
-decidedly opposed to separating the colored people in their worship
-from the whites.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-We learn from an exchange that the authorities of the Erie Railway
-have decided to discharge every employe who uses liquor as a beverage,
-whether he gets drunk or not. It is plain that for the safety of
-passengers a drinking man should not be entrusted with an engine,
-the care of a switch, with messages as a telegraph operator, or as a
-superintendent in charge of a division.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Methodists of Canada have eliminated the words “serve” and “obey”
-from the woman’s part of the marriage ceremony. Even the argument that
-the New Testament enjoins this kind of obedience on wives, did not
-preserve the words in the ritual. We congratulate the wives on the
-change.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Professor W. F. Sherwin has been appointed by Dr. E. Tourjee chorus
-director in that prosperous institution, the New England Conservatory
-of Music, in Boston, Massachusetts. The Professor will make Boston
-his home, and continue to lecture and conduct musical conventions, as
-heretofore.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Cooper Union was crowded one evening last month to welcome Francis
-Murphy home from England and his own native Ireland. Judge Noah Davis
-presided and delivered the address of welcome. “In speaking of Mr.
-Murphy’s work in England and Scotland he quoted the statistics of the
-United Kingdom to prove that Mr. Murphy’s efforts had been effectual in
-reducing the excise revenues many thousands of pounds sterling. He said
-that during his two years’ stay in England and Scotland he had obtained
-half a million signers to the pledge. Mr. Murphy responded in a few
-brief words, declaring that the occasion was the happiest of his whole
-life. A number of short addresses were made by clergymen, and with the
-singing of songs and choruses, in which the whole assembly engaged, the
-ceremonies were prolonged until about half-past ten o’clock.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The C. L. S. C. is rapidly becoming an established institution among
-New England people. This is to be accounted for in part by the fact
-that the religious press of Boston and other New England cities has
-favored the work with earnest, strong words. The Rev. Dr. B. K. Pierce,
-editor of _Zion’s Herald_, closes a leading editorial on the C. L. S.
-C., in his paper of a recent date, with these words: “There is another
-reason why we look with great satisfaction upon this widely-extended
-home-university. We have fallen upon an era of doubt. The literature
-of the hour is full of sneers at revealed religion and of arrogant
-and destructive criticism upon the Holy Scriptures. The daily, weekly
-and monthly press is strongly flavored with this. Our young people
-breathe it in the atmosphere of the school and of the streets. Here
-is one of the best, silent, powerful, positive correctives. This
-carefully-arranged plan of study and reading for successive years is
-entirely in the interest of the ‘truth as it is in Jesus.’ It is not
-narrow, nor dogmatic, nor polemical, nor confined to purely religious
-subjects, but the whole system is arranged and followed out upon
-the presumption of the inspiration of the Bible, the divine origin
-of Christianity, and its ultimate triumph upon the earth. It will
-powerfully strengthen the faith of young Christians, preserve them from
-the insidious attacks of infidelity, and enable them to have, and to
-give to any serious inquirer, an answer for the hope that is in them.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The jury system has some glaring defects which should be laid bare
-and made the subject of agitation till they are corrected. Recently
-in a famous bribery case (so called) at Albany, N. Y., when jurors
-were being called and questioned, one of them said, “I don’t know who
-were the United States Senators two years ago from New York.” Yet
-this ignorant man was accepted as a juror. This is a common custom in
-the selection of jurors. It is exalting ignorance at the expense of
-intelligence and justice. Some remedy should be found for this growing
-and terrible evil.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A new field of artistic ability is being developed in the East. It is
-the decoration of the interior of private residences. Already in New
-York a number of young artists, who find it difficult to sell all the
-pictures they paint, are giving their attention to this work, which
-promises to be very remunerative and very extensive.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Chicago agency of Alice H. Birch has been abandoned, and her old
-patrons may order any game previously advertised by her, at her home,
-Portland, Traill Co., Dakota.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Commissioner of Education has prepared a table showing the
-illiteracy among voters in the South, which presents a painfully
-interesting study for educators and statesmen. In the formerly
-slaveholding States there are 4,154,125 men legally entitled to vote.
-Of these, 409,563 whites, and 982,894 colored, are unable to write
-even their names, and their ability to read is very limited. Many, who
-profess to be able to read, can only with difficulty spell out a few
-simple sentences in their primers, and really get no knowledge, such as
-the citizen needs, from either books or papers. Thousands of them have
-neither books nor papers, and could not read them if they had. Surely a
-great work must be done for these freed men and poor whites before they
-are quite equal to all the duties of citizens in a country like ours.
-
-
-
-
-EDITOR’S TABLE.
-
-
-Q. Dec´orus or deco´rus, which?
-
-A. Webster authorizes both, giving preference to the latter. The
-former has the advantage of placing the accent on the root syllable, a
-rule that is very helpful in settling questions of pronunciation, and
-conforms to usage in the accentuation of cognate words, as “dec´orate,”
-“dec´oration,” etc. We prefer it.
-
-Q. What is the meaning of “liberal,” in the phrases, “liberal
-education,” and “liberal religious views?”
-
-A. An education extended much beyond the practical necessities of our
-every-day business and social life, is liberal. It is not a possession
-belonging alone to the alumni of colleges and universities. Any person
-of culture, who, with or without the aid of teachers, has mastered
-the curriculum of studies prescribed by colleges, or its equivalent,
-is liberally educated. In the best sense, a man of “liberal religious
-views” is generous, freely according to others the right to their
-opinions on all subjects about which good men may differ. He is not
-creedless, but not bigoted; and cordially approves “things that
-are most excellent,” wherever they are found. The claim to great
-liberality, set up by those who have no rule of faith, and no views
-they are willing to formulate, does not seem well founded.
-
-Q. Where is the line, “Far from the madding crowd’s ignoble strife”
-found? and should not the word “madding” be “maddening?”
-
-A. The line is from Gray’s Elegy (73). The adjective “mad” is made a
-causative verb, without the usual suffix, “en.” We do not find the form
-in prose, and would not use it.
-
-Q. Are there any books purporting to prove scientifically the
-immortality of the soul?
-
-A. If by “scientifically,” the querist means, as we suppose,
-rationally, philosophically, our answer is, yes, very many. More
-books have been written upon this one subject than one could read
-carefully in a lifetime. Several thousand distinct works, written in
-Greek, Latin, English, and the principal languages of Europe, have
-been catalogued by Ezra Abbott. The catalogue itself, published as
-an appendix to Alger’s “Doctrine of a Future Life,” would make a
-respectable volume, containing, as it does, a list of more than five
-thousand books, by almost as many authors, who discuss, more or less
-satisfactorily, the great problem of the soul. Some propose, not
-argument, but only a history of the doctrine of a future, immortal
-life as held by the different races of men, with various shades
-of opinion respecting it. Some doubt, some disbelieve, and some,
-discarding all rational processes, accept the dogma as a matter of
-faith alone, lying beyond the field of our reason. But many Christian
-writers, thankful for the “more sure word of prophecy,” and that
-“life and immortality are brought to light by the gospel,” hold also
-that outside the realm of faith, it is a fit subject for rational
-investigation, and as capable of proof or demonstration as other
-moral and psychical problems. Perhaps most of the works named in
-the catalogue consulted, treat of the soul and its immortality in
-connection with other principles and facts of the religious systems
-accepted by the authors, and are too voluminous for common use. Drew’s
-“Essay on the Immateriality and Immortality of the Soul” founded wholly
-on psychological and rational principles is regarded a masterpiece of
-metaphysical argument—clear, logical, satisfactory.
-
-Q. Is the expression “as though” ever correct?
-
-A. “Though” is often used in English, taking the place of the
-conditional _if_, especially in the phrases _as though_ and _what
-though_, which interchange with _as if_ and _what if_; _e. g._:
-
- “If she bid me pack, I’ll give her thanks _as though_
- she bid me stay by her a week.”—_Shakspere._
-
- “A Tartar, who looked _as though_ the speed of thought
- were in his limbs.”—_Byron._
-
-Other examples need not be given. These approve the expression as
-correct, though not much used at present.
-
-Q. Will the firing of cannon over water bring a dead body at the bottom
-to the surface; if so, why, or how?
-
-A. The concussion or violent agitation of the water may loosen a body
-slightly held at the bottom, when, if specifically lighter than water,
-it will rise.
-
-Q. In “Recreations in Astronomy,” p. 163, it is said 192 asteroides
-have been discovered, with diameters from 20 to 400 miles; and on the
-next page it is “estimated” that if all these were put into one planet,
-it would not be over 400 miles in diameter. How can that be?
-
-A. Allowing, as the author does, that the density of the masses remains
-the same, it would, of course, be impossible. We have not the means
-at hand to either verify or correct the diameters given, and can not
-locate the error.
-
-
-
-
-C. L. S. C. NOTES ON REQUIRED READINGS FOR NOVEMBER.
-
-
-
-
-TIMAYENIS’S HISTORY OF GREECE.
-
-
-PARTS 10 AND 11.
-
-P. 258.—“Mummius,” mum´mi-us. See Timayenis, p. 251, vol. II.
-
-“Delos,” de´los.
-
-“Mithradatic,” mith´ra-da=´=tic. For history of Mithradates see
-Timayenis, vol. II., p. 254.
-
-P. 259.—“Sulla,” sul´la. (B. C. 138-78). A Roman general, the rival of
-Marius. After the close of this war Sulla went to Italy, defeated the
-Marian party and issued a proscription by which many thousands of his
-enemies perished. For the two years following he held the office of
-dictator, which in 79 he resigned to retire to private life.
-
-“Epidaurus,” ep´i-dau=´=rus. One of the most magnificent temples in all
-Greece, that of the god Æsculapius, was situated there.
-
-“Peiræan,” pei-ræ´an. Through this gate ran the road to the Piræus, and
-at the Sacred Gate began the sacred road to Eleusis where the festivals
-and mysteries were celebrated.
-
-“Bithynia,” bi-thyn´i-a; “Kappadokia,” cap=´=pa-do´ci-a; “Paphlagonia,”
-paph=´=la-go´ni-a.
-
-P. 260.—“Chrysostom,” krĭs´os-tom. See Timayenis, vol. II., 319 sq.
-
-“Anthemius,” an-the´mi-us; “Isidorus,” is´i-do=´=rus. Eminent
-architects.
-
-P. 261.—“Pompey.” (B. C. 106-48.) Pompey had been a successful general
-from early life, receiving from Sulla the surname of Magnus.
-
-P. 262.—“Soli,” so´li. The word solecism (to speak incorrectly) is said
-to have been first used in regard to the dialect of the inhabitants of
-this city.
-
-“Pompeiopolis,” pom´pe-i-op=´=o-lis; “Armenia,” ar-me´ni-a.
-
-“Tigranes,” ti-gra´nes. The king of Armenia from B. C. 96-55. He was an
-ally of Mithradates until this invasion by Pompey, when he hastened to
-submit to the latter, thus winning favor and receiving the kingdom with
-the title of king.
-
-P. 263.—“Phillippi,” phil-lip´pi; “Octavius,” oc-ta´vi-us.
-
-“Philhellenist,” phĭl-hĕl´len-ist. A friend to Greece.
-
-“Philathenian,” phĭl-a-the´ni-an. A friend to Athens.
-
-“Actium,” ac´ti-um.
-
-P. 264.—“Ægina,” æ-gi´na; “Eretria,” e-re´tri-a.
-
-“Stoa,” sto´a. Halls or porches supported by pillars, and used as
-places of resort in the heat of the day.
-
-“Athene Archegetes,” a-the´ne ar-cheg´e-tes; “Peisistratus,”
-pi-sis´tra-tus; “Nikopolis,” ni-cop´o-lis.
-
-P. 265.—“Cæsarean,” cæ-sā´re-an.
-
-“Seneca.” (B. C. 5?-A. D. 65.) A Roman Stoic philosopher. The tutor and
-afterward adviser of Nero. When the excesses of the latter had made
-Seneca’s presence irksome to him, he was dismissed and soon after, by
-order of Nero, put to death. His writings were mainly philosophical
-treatises.
-
-“Agrippina,” ag-rip-pi´na. Nero was the son of Agrippina by her first
-husband. On her marriage with her third husband, the Emperor Claudius,
-she prevailed upon the latter to adopt Nero as his son. In order to
-secure the succession she murdered Claudius and governed the empire in
-Nero’s name until he, tired of her authority, caused her to be put to
-death.
-
-“Isthmian,” ĭs´mĭ-an; “Pythian,” pyth´i-an; “Nemean,” nē´me-an;
-“Olympian,” o-lym´pi-an. See author for accounts of these games.
-
-“Pythia,” pyth´i-a. See Timayenis, p. 44-45, vol. I.
-
-P. 266.—“Vespasian,” ves-pā´zhĭ-an; “Lollianus,” lol-li-a´nus.
-
-“Aristomenes,” ar´-is-tom=´=e-nes. The legendary hero of the Second
-Messenian War. In 865 B. C. he began hostilities and defeated Sparta
-several times but was at last taken prisoner. The legends tell that he
-was rescued, from the pit where he had been confined, by an eagle and
-led home by a fox. When at last Ira fell, Aristomenes went to Rhodes,
-where he died.
-
-“Aratus,” a-ra´tus; “Achæan,” a-chæ´an. See Timayenis, vol II., p.
-242-243.
-
-P. 267.—“Zeno.” The founder of the Stoic philosophy. A native of
-Cyprus. He lived, probably, about 260 B. C. He is said to have spent
-twenty years in study, after which time he opened his school in a stoa
-of Athens. From this place his disciples received the name of _Stoics_.
-
-Translation of foot-notes: “They call those sophists who for money
-offer knowledge to whomsoever wishes it.” “A sophist is one who seeks
-the money of rich young men.” “Sophistry consists in appearing wise,
-not in being so; and the sophist becomes wealthy by an appearance of
-wisdom, not by being wise.”
-
-“Gorgias,” gor´gi-as. “Leontine,” le-on´tine. An inhabitant of Leontini
-in Sicily.
-
-P. 268.—“Dion,” di´on chry-sos´to-mus, or Dion, the golden mouthed, so
-called from his eloquence.
-
-“Strabo,” stra´bo. His geography is contained in seventeen books. It
-gives descriptions of the physical features of the country, accounts of
-political events, and notices of the chief cities and men.
-
-“Plutarch.” His “Parallel Lives” is a history of forty-eight different
-Greeks and Romans. They are arranged in pairs, and each pair is
-followed by a comparison of the two men.
-
-“Appianus,” ap-pi-a´nus. The author of a history of Rome.
-
-“Dion Cassius.” (A. D. 155.) The grandson of Dion Chrysostomus.
-
-“Herodianus,” he´ro-di-a=´=nus.
-
-“Epiktetus,” ep´ic-te=´=tus. Few circumstances of his life are known.
-Only those of his works collected by Arrian are extant. As a teacher it
-is said that no one was able to resist his appeals to turn their minds
-to the good.
-
-“Hierapolis,” hi´e-rap=´=o-lis.
-
-“Longinus,” lon-gi´nus. The most distinguished adherent of the Platonic
-philosophy in the third century. His learning was so great that he
-was called “a living library.” He taught many years at Athens, but at
-last left to go to Palmyra, as the teacher of Zenobia. When she was
-afterward defeated by the Romans and captured, Longinus was put to
-death (273).
-
-“Lucian.” See notes in THE CHAUTAUQUAN for May, 1883.
-
-“Samosata,” sa-mos´a-ta.
-
-P. 270.—“Thesmopolis,” thes-mop´o-lis. “Sappho,” sap´pho. “Domitian,”
-do-mish´ĭ-an.
-
-P. 271.—“Pliny,” plĭn´ĭ. (61?-115?) The nephew of the elder Pliny. His
-life was largely spent in literary pursuits. His works extant are the
-_Panegyricus_, an eulogium on Trajan, and his letters.
-
-“Seleukidæ,” se-leu´ci-dæ. So named from Seleucus, the first ruler of
-the Syrian kingdom, one of the four into which Alexander’s kingdom was
-divided on his death.
-
-P. 272.—“Archon Eponymus,” ar´chon e-pon´y-mus. The first in rank of
-the nine Athenian Archons, so called because the year was named after
-him.
-
-“Favorinus,” fav´o-ri=´=nus. He is known as a friend of Plutarch and
-Herodes. Although he wrote much, none of his books have come down to
-us. “Herodes,” he-ro´des.
-
-“Mnesikles,” mnes´i-cles. The architect of the Propylæa.
-
-“Ilissus,” i-lis´sus. A small river of Attica.
-
-Translations of Greek inscriptions: “This is Athens the former city of
-Theseus.” “Here stands the city of Adrian, not of Theseus.”
-
-P. 273.—“Stymphalus,” stym-pha´lus. A lake of Arcadia.
-
-“Patræ,” pa´træ.
-
-P. 275.—“Pliny.” (23-75.) Although he held various civil and military
-positions, and during his whole life was the intimate friend and
-adviser of Vespasian, he applied himself so incessantly to study that
-he left one hundred and sixty volumes of notes. Pliny, the younger,
-says that the lives of those who have devoted themselves to study
-seem to have been passed in idleness and sleep when compared with the
-wonderful activity of his uncle. The only work of value come down to us
-is his “Historia Naturalis.”
-
-“Lebadeia,” leb´a-dei=´=a.
-
-“Stoa Pœkile.” The painted porch, so-called from the variety of curious
-pictures which it contained.
-
-“Theseum,” the-se´um. The temple erected in Athens in honor of the hero
-Theseus. To-day it is the best preserved monument of the splendor of
-the ancient city.
-
-“Kerameikus,” cer´a-mi=´=cus. A district of Athens, so called from
-Ceramus, the son of Bacchus, some say, but more probably from the
-potter’s art invented there.
-
-P. 277.—“Commodus,” com´mo-dus; “Caracalla,” car´a-cal=´=la; “Dacia,”
-da´ci-a; “Mœsia,” mœ´si-a; “Decius,” de´ci-us.
-
-P. 278.—“Gallienus,” gal´li-e=´=nus; “Valerianus,” va-le´ri-a=´=nus.
-
-“Pityus,” pit´y-us; “Trapezus,” tra-pe´zus; “Chrysopolis,”
-chry-sop´o-lis; “Kyzikus,” cyz´i-cus.
-
-“Dexippus,” dex-ip´pus. He held the highest official position at
-Athens. Was the author of histories, only fragments of which remain.
-
-P. 279.—“Artemis,” ar´te-mis. This temple of Artemis, or Diana,
-Lübke calls the “famous wonder of the ancient world.” Its dimensions
-were enormous, being 225 feet broad and 425 feet long. “Aurelian,”
-au-re´li-an.
-
-P. 280.—“Flavius Josephus,” fla´vi-us jo-se´phus. (37?-100?) The author
-of “History of the Jewish War” and “Jewish Antiquities.”
-
-“Philo Judæus,” phi´lo ju-dæ´us. His chief works are an attempt to
-reconcile the Scriptures with Greek philosophy.
-
-P. 281.—“Nikolaus,” nic´o-la=´=us; “Nikomedeia,” nic´o-me-di=´=a;
-“Claudius Ptolemæus,” clau´di-us ptol´e-mæ=´=us; “Pelusium,”
-pe-lu´si-um; “Plotinus,” plo-ti´nus; “Lykopolis,” ly-cop´o-lis.
-
-P. 282.—“Zenobia,” ze-no´bi-a; “Palmyra,” pal-my´ra.
-
-P. 286.—“Maximian,” max-im´i-an.
-
-P. 287.—“Constantius,” con-stan´ti-us. “Chlorus,” chlo´rus, “the pale;”
-“Naissus,” nais´sus; “Galerius,” ga-le´ri-us.
-
-P. 288.—“Eboracum,” eb´o-ra=´=cum; “Licinius,” li-cin´i-us;
-“Maxentius,” max-en´ti-us.
-
-P. 290.—“Labarum,” lăb´a-rŭm. The word is supposed by many to have been
-derived from the Celtic word _lavar_, meaning command, sentence.
-
-P. 292.—“Zosimus,” zos´i-mus; “Adrianopolis,” a=´=dri-an-op´o-lis.
-
-“St. Jerome.” (340-420.) The most famous of the Christian fathers. He
-spent many years in study and travel, was the friend of Gregory of
-Nazianzus and Pope Damascus. Much of his labor was given to obtain
-converts to his theories of monastic life. His commentaries on the
-Scriptures and translations into Latin of the New and Old Testaments
-are his most valuable works.
-
-P. 294.—“Athanasius,” ath´a-na=´=si-us.
-
-Translations of Greek in foot-note; “Speech against the Greeks.”
-“Concerning the incarnation of Christ and his appearance to us.”
-
-P. 295.—“Eusebius,” eu-se´bi-us. He afterward signed the creed of the
-Council of Nice.
-
-“Porphyrius,” por-phyr´i-us.
-
-P. 297.—“Tanais,” tan´a-is. Now the Don. “Borysthenes,” bo-rys´the-nes;
-the Dneiper.
-
-P. 299.—“Arianism,” a´ri-an-ism.
-
-P. 302.—“Magnentius,” mag-nen´ti-us.
-
-P. 303.—“Sapor,” sa´por. “Nisibis,” nis´i-bis.
-
-P. 304.—“Eusebia,” eu-se´bi-a. “Eleusinian,” el´u-sin=´=i-an. See
-foot-note p. 215, vol. II. Timayenis.
-
-P. 305.—“Aedesius,” ae-de´si-us. “Chrysanthius,” chry-san´thi-us.
-
-P. 306.—“Ochlus,” och´lus. The crowd, the populace.
-
-“Thaumaturgy,” thau=´=ma-tur´gy. The act of performing miracles,
-wonders.
-
-P. 307.—“Gregory Nazianzen,” greg´o-ry na-zi-an´zen; “Basil.” See page
-312 for sketches of these men.
-
-P. 308.—“Hierophant,” hī-er´o-phănt, a priest; “Oribasius,”
-or-i-ba´si-us.
-
-P. 311.—“Dadastana,” dad-as-ta´na.
-
-P. 312.—“Valentinian,” va-len-tin´i-an.
-
-P. 313.—“Eleemosynary,” ĕl´ee-mŏs´y-na-ry. Relating to charity.
-
-P. 315.—“Gratian,” gra´ti-an; “Theodosius,” the´o-do=´=si-us;
-“Eugenius,” eu-ge´ni-us.
-
-P. 317.—“Rufinus,” ru-fi´nus; “Stilicho,” stil´i-cho.
-
-“Claudian,” clau´di-an. The last of the classic poets of Rome. During
-the reigns of Honorius and Arcadius he held high positions in court,
-and from Stilicho he received many honors. Many of his poems are
-extant, all of them characterized by purity of expression and poetical
-genius.
-
-P. 318.—“Eutropius,” eu-tro´pi-us; “Eudoxia,” eu-dox´i-a; “Bauto,”
-bau´to; “Gainas,” gai´nas.
-
-“Alaric,” al´a-ric (all rich). Alaric made a second invasion into Italy
-in 410, taking and plundering Rome. His death occurred soon after.
-
-P. 319.—“Libanius,” li-ba´ni-us. The emperors Julian, Valens and
-Theodosius showed much respect to Libanius, but his life was
-embittered by the jealousies of the professors of Constantinople, and
-by continual dispute with the Sophists. His orations and a quantity
-of letters addressed to the eminent men of the times are still in
-existence.
-
-P. 320.—“Nectarius,” nec-ta´ri-us.
-
-P. 321.—“Theophilus,” the-oph´i-lus; “Chalkedon,” chal-ce´don.
-
-P. 322.—“Cucusus,” cu´cu-sus; “Comana,” co-ma´na.
-
-P. 323.—“Anthemius,” an-the´mi-us. “Pulcheria,” pul-che´ri-a.
-
-P. 324.—“Kalligraphos,” cal-lig´ra-phos; “Athenais,” ath´e-na=´=is;
-“Leontius,” le-on´ti-us.
-
-P. 326.—“Nestorius,” nes-to´ri-us; “Germanikeia,” ger-man´i-ci=´=a;
-“Marcian,” mar´ci-an; “Yezdegerd,” yez´de-jerd.
-
-“Successor.” This successor was Varanes I. He waged wars with the Huns,
-Turks and Indians, performing deeds which ever since have made him a
-favorite hero in Persian verse.
-
-P. 327.—“Attila,” at´ti-la; “Aetius,” a-ē´ti-us.
-
-P. 328.—“Aspar,” as´par; “Basiliscus,” bas-i-lis´cus; “Verina,”
-ve-ri´na.
-
-P. 329.—“Odoacer,” o-do´a-cer; “Ariadne,” a-ri-ad´ne; “Isaurian,”
-i-sau´ri-an; “Anastasius,” an-as-ta´si-us.
-
-P. 330.—“Sardica,” sar´di-ca.
-
-“Prokopius,” pro-co´pi-us. (500-565.) An historian as well as
-rhetorician. His talents early attracted the attention of Belisarius,
-who made him his secretary. Afterward Justinian raised him to the
-position of prefect of Constantinople. Among his extant works are
-several volumes of histories and orations, besides a collection of
-anecdotes, mainly court gossip about Justinian, the empress Theodora,
-Belisarius, etc.
-
-P. 331.—“Belisarius,” bel-i-sa´ri-us.
-
-“Collection of Laws.” Justinian first ordered a collection of the
-various imperial _constitutiones_ which he named “Justinianeus Codex.”
-The second collection was of all that was important in the works
-of jurists, and was called the “Digest.” This work contained nine
-thousand extracts, and the compilers are said to have consulted over
-two thousand different books in their work. But for ordinary reference
-these volumes were of little value, so that the “Institutes” were
-written, similar in contents, but condensed. A new code was afterward
-promulgated; also several new _constitutiones_—together these books
-form the Roman law.
-
-“Tribonian,” tri-bo´ni-an; “Side,” si´de.
-
-P. 333.—“Kalydonian Kapros.” The Calydonian wild boar.
-
-“Bronze-eagle.” In every race-course of the ancient Greeks a bronze
-eagle and a dolphin were used for signals in starting. The eagle was
-raised in the air and the dolphin lowered.
-
-P. 334.—“Chosroes,” chos´ro-es. “The generous mind.” One of the most
-noteworthy of the kings of Persia. He carried on several wars with the
-Romans and extended his domain until he received homage from the most
-distant kings of Africa and Asia. Although despotic, his stern justice
-made him the pride of the Persians.
-
-P. 335.—“Hæmus,” hæ´mus; “Aristus,” a-ris´tus; “Antes,” an´tes.
-
-P. 336.—“Melanthias,” me-lan´thi-as.
-
-P. 338.—“Fallmerayer,” fäl´meh-rī-er. (1791-1862.) A German historian
-and traveller. Among his important works are “Fragments from the East,”
-in which he publishes the results of his studies and travels there, and
-“The History of the Peninsula of Morea in the Middle Ages.” It is in
-this latter work that he advances the strange views here mentioned.
-
-“Malelas,” mal´e-las. A Byzantine historian who lived soon after
-Justinian. He wrote a chronological history from the creation of the
-world to the reign of Justinian, inclusive.
-
-P. 342.—“Heraclius,” her´a-cli=´=us; “Mauricius,” mau-ri´ci-us.
-
-P. 345.—“Ayesha,” â´ye-sha. The favorite wife of Mohammed and daughter
-of Abubeker, who succeeded him. The twenty-fourth chapter of the Koran
-treats of the purity of Ayesha. After her husband’s death she in many
-ways supported the religion.
-
-“Fatima,” fâ´te-ma. The only child living at the time of the Prophet’s
-death. She became the ancestress of the powerful dynasty of the
-Fatimites.
-
-P. 347.—“Aiznadin,” aiz´na-din; “Yermuk,” yer´muk; “Khaled,” kha´led.
-
-P. 348.—“Herakleonas,” her-ac-le-o´nas; “Pogonatus,” pog-o-na´tus;
-“Moawiyah,” mo-â-wē´yâ.
-
-P. 349.—“Charles Martel.” (690-741.) The duke of Austrasia, and the
-mayor of the palace of the Frankish kings. The name Martel, or “the
-hammer,” was given to him from his conduct in this battle.
-
-P. 350.—“Kallinikus,” cal-li-ni´cus.
-
-“Naphtha.” A volatile, bituminous liquid, very inflammable.
-
-P. 352.—“Rhinotmetus,” rhin-ot-me´tus.
-
-P. 353.—“Chersonites,” cher-son´i-tes.
-
-“Crim-Tartary.” The Crimea, also called Little Tartary.
-
-“Absimarus,” ab-sim´a-rus; “Khazars,” kha´zars.
-
-P. 354.—“Terbelis,” ter´be-lis.
-
-P. 356.—“Bardanes,” bar-da´nes; “Phillippicus,” phil-lip´pi-cus.
-
-P. 357.—“Moslemas,” mos´le-mas.
-
-P. 365.—“Haroun al-Rashid,” hä-roon´ äl-răsh´id. (765-809.) Aaron the
-Just, the fifth caliph of the dynasty of the Abassides. His conquests
-and administration were such that his reign is called the golden age of
-the Mohammedan nations. Poetry, science and art were cultivated by him.
-Haroun is the chief hero of Arabian tales.
-
-“Nikephorus,” ni-ceph´o-rus.
-
-P. 368.—“Theophilus,” the-oph´i-lus.
-
-P. 369.—“Armorium,” ar-mo´ri-um.
-
-P. 370.—“Bardas,” bar´das; “Theoktistus,” the-ok´tis-tus.
-
-“John Grammatikus.” John the grammarian. It was he that held that there
-were three Gods and rejected the word unity from the doctrine of the
-being of God.
-
-P. 371.—“Photius,” fo´shĭ-us. He played a distinguished part in the
-political, religious and literary affairs of the ninth century. After
-holding various offices, he was made patriarch by Bardas, deposing
-Ignatius. This incensed the Romish Church, and the controversy which
-arose did much to widen the gulf between the Eastern and Western
-Churches. Photius was deposed from his position, but replaced until the
-death of Basil, when he was driven into exile. Among his writings the
-most valuable is a review of ancient Greek literature. Many books are
-described in it of which we have no other knowledge.
-
-P. 372.—“Arsacidæ,” ar-sac´i-dæ. So called from Arsaces, the founder
-of the Parthian empire. About 250 B. C. Arsaces induced the Parthians
-to revolt from the Syrian empire, of the Seleucidæ. The family existed
-four hundred and seventy-six years, being obliged in 226 A. D. to
-submit to Artaxerxes, the founder of the dynasty of the Sassanidæ.
-
-P. 373.—“Porphyrogenitus,” por-phy-ro-gen´i-tus.
-
-P. 374.—“Seljuks,” sel-jooks´; “Commeni,” com-me´ni.
-
-P. 375.—“Robert Guiscard,” ges´kar=´=. Robert, the prudent.
-(1015-1085.) The founder of the kingdom of Naples. He had come from
-Normandy to Italy, where by his wit and energy he had been appointed
-Count of Apulia in 1057. Soon after he added other provinces to his
-kingdom, conquered Sicily, and drove the Saracens from Southern Italy.
-His hasty departure from Thessaly was to relieve the Pope from the
-siege of Henry IV. After accomplishing this he immediately undertook
-the second expedition against Constantinople.
-
-P. 376.—“Kephallenia,” ceph´al-le=´=ni-a; “Durazzo,” doo-rät´so.
-
-P. 377.—“Anna Commena.” The daughter of Alexis I. She wrote a full
-history of her father’s life; one of the most interesting and valuable
-books of Byzantine literature.
-
-P. 379.—“Piacenza,” pe-ä-chen´zä. The capital of the province of the
-same name in the north of Italy.
-
-P. 382.—“Nureddin,” noor-ed-deen´. A Mohammedan ruler of Syria and
-Egypt.
-
-P. 383.—“Dandolo,” dän´do-lo.
-
-P. 385.—“Scutari,” skoo´tă-ree.
-
-P. 386.—“Morisini,” mo-ri-si´ni.
-
-P. 387.—“Boniface,” bŏn´e-făss; “Montferrat,” mŏnt-fer-răt´;
-“Bouillon,” boo´yon=´=; “Laskaris,” las´ca-ris.
-
-P. 388.—“Palæologus,” pa-læ-ol´o-gus.
-
- * * * * *
-
-BRIEF HISTORY OF GREECE.
-
-The November readings in the “Brief History of Greece” are almost
-identical with the October readings in Timayenis’s history. For this
-reason no notes have been made out on the work. By consulting the notes
-on Timayenis’s history in THE CHAUTAUQUAN for October, all necessary
-help will be obtained. The papers on Physical Science and Political
-Economy, also the Sunday Readings, are too clear to need annotating.
-
-
-NOTES ON REQUIRED READINGS IN “THE CHAUTAUQUAN.”
-
-
-GERMAN HISTORY.
-
-P. 63, c. 1.—“Hermann.” The Latinized form of whose name was Arminius.
-He had learned the language and the military discipline of the Romans
-when he led his tribe as auxiliaries to their legions.
-
-“Varus,” va´rus. He had been consul at Rome in B. C. 13, and afterward
-governor of Syria, where he accumulated great wealth. After this battle
-Varus put an end to his life.
-
-P. 63, c. 2.—“Alemanni,” al-e-man´ni.
-
-“Sicambrians,” si-cam´bri-ans. In early German history one of the most
-powerful tribes. They lived in Westphalia, between the Rhine and Weser.
-
-“Chatti,” or “Catti,” so called from an old German word _cat_ or _cad_,
-meaning “war.” They dwelt south of the Sicambrians in the modern state
-of Hesse.
-
-“Batavi.” A Celtic people who had settled in the portion of the present
-Netherlands lying at the mouth of the Rhine. Their chief city was
-Leyden. The country was afterward extended and called Batavia.
-
-P. 64, c. 1.—“Salzburg,” sälts´boorg; “Ratisbonne,” ra´tis-bon;
-“Augsburg,” owgs´boorg; “Basle,” bâl, or “Basel,” bä´zel; “Baden,”
-bä´den; “Spires,” spīr´es; “Metz,” mĕts; “Treves,” treevz.
-
-“Ammianus,” am´mi-a=´=nus mar´cel-li=´=nus. A Greek serving under the
-emperor Julian 363. Later we find him in Rome where he wrote a history
-from the time of Nerva, 96, to the death of Valens, 378. Many of the
-events were contemporaneous, so that the descriptions and incidents are
-particularly valuable.
-
-P. 64, c. 2.—“Vandals.” This tribe first appeared in the north of
-Germany, from whence they went to the Reisengebirge, sometimes called
-from them the Vandal Mountains. In the fifth century they worked their
-way from Pannonia into Spain, marched southward and founded the once
-powerful kingdom of Andalusia (Vandalusia). In 429 they conquered
-Africa. An hundred years afterward Belisarius overthrew their power,
-and the race disappeared. Many claim that descendants of the Vandals
-are to be seen among the Berber race, with blue eyes and light hair.
-
-“Troyes,” trwä.
-
-“Catalaunian,” cat´a-lau=´=ni-an. A people formerly living in
-northeastern France, their capital the present Châlons-sur-Marne.
-
-“Méry-sur-Seine,” mā-rē-sur-sane.
-
-“Visigoths.” In the fourth century the Goths were divided into the
-Ostrogoths and Visigoths or the Eastern and Western Goths; the latter
-worked their way from the Danube westward to France and Spain where
-they built up a splendid kingdom which lasted until 711, when it was
-overthrown by the Moors.
-
-P. 65, c. 1.—“Genseric,” jĕn´ser-ik. A king of the Vandals under whom
-the tribe invaded Africa in 429. They conquered the entire country,
-capturing Carthage in 439 and making it their capital. After the sack
-of Rome, the entire coast of the Mediterranean was pillaged. Genseric
-ruled until his death in 477.
-
-“Heruli,” her´u-li; “Sciri,” si´ri; “Turcilingi,” tur-cil-in´gi;
-“Rugii,” ru´gi-i.
-
-“Theodoric.” The king of the Visigoths, who in 489 undertook to expel
-Odoacer from Italy. He defeated him in several battles and finally laid
-siege to Ravenna, where Odoacer had taken refuge. After holding out
-three years, Odoacer submitted on condition that he rule jointly with
-Theodoric, but the latter soon murdered his rival. For thirty-three
-years Theodoric ruled the country. He was a patron of art and learning
-and his sway was very prosperous. The porphyry vase in which his ashes
-were deposited is still shown at Ravenna.
-
-“Thuringians,” thu-rin´gi-ans. Dwellers in the central part of Germany
-between the Harz Mountains and the Thuringian forest.
-
-“Dietrich,” dē-trich; “Hildebrand,” hĭl´de-brand.
-
-“Siegfried,” seeg´freed. See notes on “Nibelungenlied” in this number.
-
-P. 65, c. 2.—“Langobardi” or Lombards. A German tribe which migrated
-southward from the river Elbe. In 568 they conquered the plains of
-northern Italy and founded a kingdom which lasted two centuries.
-
-GERMAN LITERATURE.
-
-The article on German Literature is abridged from Sime’s article on
-this subject in the “Encyclopædia Britannica.”
-
-P. 66, c. 1.—“Nibelungelied.” The song of the Nibelungen. “The work
-includes the legends of Siegfried, of Günther, of Dietrich, and of
-Attila; and the motives which bind them into a whole are the love and
-revenge of Kriemhild, the sister of Günther and Siegfried’s wife.
-She excites the envy of Brunhild, the Burgundian queen, whose friend
-Hagen discovers the vulnerable point in Siegfried’s enchanted body,
-treacherously slays him, and buries in the Rhine the treasure he
-has long before conquered from the race of the Nibelungen. There is
-then a pause of thirteen years, after which Kriemhild, the better to
-effect her fatal purpose, marries Attila. Thirteen years having again
-passed away her thirst for vengeance is satiated by slaying the entire
-Burgundian court. The Germans justly regard this epic as one of the
-most precious gems of their literature.”—_Sime._
-
-“Ulfilas,” ŭl´fĭ-las. (310-381.) The family of Ulfilas were Christians
-supposed to have been carried away by the Goths. In 341 he became the
-bishop of these people and soon induced a number of them to leave their
-warlike life to settle a colony in Mœsia. Here he cultivated the arts
-of peace, doing much to civilize the people. He introduced an alphabet
-of twenty-four letters and translated all of the Bible except the book
-of Kings. This work is the earliest known specimen of the Teutonic
-language.
-
-“Wolfram von Eschenbach,” fon esh´en-bäk. He lived at the close of the
-twelfth century. A nobleman by birth and a soldier in the civil wars.
-He joined the court of Hermann of Thuringia in the castle of Wartburg
-(where Luther escaped after the Diet of Worms) and was a contestant in
-the famous musical contest called “The war of the Wartburg.” Leaving
-here he afterward sang at many other courts, dying in 1225.
-
-“Parzival” or Parcival, par´ci-val.
-
-“Holy Grail.” The chalice said to have been used by Christ at the
-Last Supper and in which the wine was changed to blood. As the legend
-runs it fell into the hands of Joseph of Arimathea, by whom it was
-held for centuries, but finally, at his death, it passed to his
-descendants, with whom it remained until its possessor sinned; then the
-cup disappeared. The Knights of the Round-Table sought it, but until
-Sir Galahad no man was found so pure in heart and life that he could
-look upon it. Sir Galahad in some romances is called Sir Percival or
-_Parzival_. Eisenbach wrote another romance, “Titural,” founded on the
-same legend.
-
-“Gottfried,” gott´freed; “Tristram and Iseult,” trĭs´tram, is´eult;
-“Gudrun,” gu´drun.
-
-“Walther von der Vogelweide,” wäl´ter fon der fō=´=gel-wī´deh.
-(1165?-1228?) Walter “from the bird meadow.” He lived some time at
-Wartburg and was a friend of King Philip and of Frederick II. He died
-on a little estate the latter had given him.
-
-“Sachenspiegel.” Codex of the Saxon law.
-
-“Schwabenspiegel.” Codex of the Swabian law.
-
-“Berthold,” bĕr´tōlt. (1215-1272.) His love for the poor led him to
-zealous work in their behalf. Through many years he preached in the
-open air in Germany, Switzerland and Hungary.
-
-“Eckhart,” ĕk´hart. The father of German speculative thought, as Bach
-calls him, was a Dominician monk who attempted to reform his order but
-preached so exalted a philosophy that the Pope demanded a recantation.
-Eckhart never gave this but claimed that his views were entirely
-orthodox. His prose is among the purest specimens in the German
-language.
-
-“Meistersänger.” Master-singer.
-
-P. 66, c. 2.—“Shrove-Tuesday,” or confession Tuesday is the day before
-Lent. Although originally a day of preparation for the Lenten fast, it
-was soon changed to one of merry-making and feasting. As everything was
-devised to increase the gaiety of the occasion, these plays soon became
-a regular feature.
-
-“Reineke Vos.” Reynard the fox.
-
-“Barkhusen,” bark´hu-sen; “Rostock,” ros´tŏck.
-
-“Ulrich von Hutten,” ul´rich fon hoot´en. (1488-1523.) His life was
-spent in hot contests with the enemies of his reforms. As an advocate
-of the new learning, he went from city to city teaching and writing;
-“Epistolæ Obscurorum Virorum” was written in defense of this theory. He
-espoused the cause of the Reformation more because it favored religious
-and secular progress than from sympathy with its principles.
-
-“Hans Sachs.” (1494-1576.) “Honest Hans Sachs,” as he was called,
-was a cobbler of Nuremberg, who had learned verse-making from a
-_meistersänger_ of Munich. His verses included every style of poetry
-known, but the “Shrove-Tuesday plays” were the best, being full of
-strong characters and striking situations. The hymn mentioned, “Why art
-thou cast down, O, my soul?” is but one of several by him.
-
-“Leibnitz,” līp´nits. (1646-1716.) Educated at Leipsic, he says of
-himself, that before he was twelve, he “understood the Latin authors,
-had begun to lisp Greek and wrote verses with singular success.” After
-taking his degree he went to Frankfort under the patronage of a wealthy
-gentleman; here he devoted himself to composing treatises on religion,
-philosophy, law, etc. All manner of projects interested him. He tried
-to bring about a union between the Catholic and Lutheran Churches, to
-introduce a common alphabet for all languages, to urge the king of
-France to conquer Egypt, and other plans, more or less Utopian. In the
-latter part of his life he received high honor from Hanover, Vienna,
-and Peter the Great. His correspondence was voluminous, and his works
-covered almost the whole field of human thought.
-
-“Klopstock,” klop´stok. (1724-1803.)
-
-“Wieland,” wee´land. (1733-1813.)
-
-“Lessing,” lĕs´ĭng. (1729-1781.)
-
-“Oberon,” ŏb´er-on. The Oberon of Shakspere. The king of the fairies
-and the husband of Queen Titania.
-
-“Agathon,” ag´a-thon. A tragic poet of Athens, who died about 400 B. C.
-
-“Pietist,” pī´e-tist. The name was applied to a certain class of
-religious reformers in Germany, who sought to restore purity to the
-Church.
-
-P. 67, c. 1.—“Herder,” hĕr´der. (1744-1803.)
-
-“Kant.” (1724-1804.)
-
-“Kritik.” Critique of pure reason.
-
-“Fichte,” fik´teh. (1797-1879.)
-
-“Hardenburg.” (1772-1801.)
-
-“Wilhelm von Schlegel,” shlā´gel. (1767-1845.)
-
-“Friedrich.” (1772-1829.)
-
-“Tieck,” teek. (1773-1853.)
-
-“Fouquè,” foo=´=ka´. (1777-1843.)
-
-“Schleiermacher,” shlī´er-mä-ker. (1768-1834.)
-
-“Feuerbach,” foi´er-bäk. (1804-1872.)
-
-“Schopenhauer,” sho=´=pen-how´er. (1788-1860.)
-
-“Freytag,” frī´täg; “Heyse,” hī´zeh; “Spielhagen,” speel´hä-gen;
-“Reuter,” roi´ter.
-
-
-READINGS IN ART.
-
-The papers on Sculpture are compiled from Redford’s “Ancient Sculpture”
-and Lübke’s “History of Art.”
-
-P. 75, c. 1.—“Mycenæ,” my-ce´næ.
-
-“Cesnola,” ches´no-la. Born in Turin in 1832. He served in the Crimean
-war, and afterward in the war of the Rebellion. Having been made an
-American citizen he was appointed consul to Cyprus, where he discovered
-the necropolis of Idalium, a city which ceased to exist two thousand
-years ago. He began excavations, opening some eight thousand tombs,
-but an edict from the sultan stopped the work. Cesnola had already,
-however, gathered a magnificent collection of antiquities, which, in
-1872 was purchased for the Metropolitan Museum of New York.
-
-“Harpy.” The reliefs on this monument represent harpies, fabulous
-monsters in Greek mythology, carrying off children.
-
-“Frieze,” freez. The broad band resting upon the columns of a porch is
-called the entablature. It is divided into three portions; the central
-one is the frieze.
-
-P. 75, c. 2.—“Ageladas,” ag´e-la=´=das. _Not Argeladas._
-
-“Myron.” A Bœotian, born about 480 B. C. His master-pieces were all
-in bronze. The “quoit-player” and the “cow” are most famous. Myron
-excelled in animals and figures in action.
-
-“Canachus,” can´a-chus. (B. C. 540-508.) He executed the colossal
-statue of Apollo at Miletus, was skilled in casting bronze, in gold and
-silver, and in wood carving.
-
-“Callon,” cal´lon. (B. C. 516.)
-
-“Onatus,” o-na´tus. (B. C. 460.) “Hegias,” he´gi-as; “Critius,”
-cri´ti-us.
-
-“Calamis,” cal´a-mis. (B. C. 467-429.) He worked in marble, gold and
-ivory. His horses are said to have been unsurpassable, and his heroic
-female figures superior to those of his predecessors.
-
-“Pythagoras.” Lived about 470 in Magna Græcia. He executed life-like
-figures in bronze.
-
-“Lemnians,” lem´ni-ans.
-
-“Paris.” At a certain wedding feast to which all the gods had been
-invited except the goddess of Strife, she, angry at the slight, threw
-an apple into their midst with the inscription “to the fairest.” Juno,
-Minerva and Venus claimed it, and Jupiter ordered that Paris, then a
-shepherd on Mount Ida, should decide the dispute. As Venus promised him
-the most beautiful of women for his wife, he gave her the apple.
-
-P. 76, c. 1.—“Pellene,” pel-le´ne. A city of Achaia.
-
-“Rochette,” ro´shĕt=´=. (1790-1854.) A French archæologist.
-
-“Alcamenes,” al-cam´e-nes. (B.C. 444-400.) His greatest work was a
-statue of Venus.
-
-“Agoracritus,” ag´o-rac=´=ri-tus. (B. C. 440-428.) His most famous work
-was also a Venus, which he changed into a statue of Nemesis and sold
-because the people of Athens preferred the statue of Alcamenes.
-
-“Pæonius,” pæ-o´ni-us.
-
-“Pediment.” The triangular facing or top over a portico, window, gate,
-etc.
-
-“Metope,” met´o-pe. In the Doric style of architecture, the frieze was
-divided at intervals by ornaments called triglyphs. The spaces between
-these ornaments were called metopes.
-
-“Cella.” The interior space of a temple.
-
-“Phigalia,” phi-ga´li-a.
-
-“Niké-Apteros.” The wingless goddess of victory. Wingless, to signify
-that the prayer of the Athenians was that victory might never leave
-their city.
-
-“Scopas,” sco´pas. (395-350.) An architect and statuary, as well as
-sculptor. He was the architect of the temple of Minerva at Tegea, and
-assisted in the bas-reliefs of the mausoleum at Halicarnassus. The
-famous group of Niobe and her children is supposed to have been the
-work of Scopas.
-
-“Praxiteles,” prax-it´e-les. Born at Athens B. C. 392. He worked
-in both marble and bronze. About fifty different works by him are
-mentioned. First in fame stands the Cnidian Venus, “one of the most
-famous art creations of antiquity.” Apollo as the lizard-killer, his
-faun and a representation of Eros are probably best-known.
-
-“Nereid,” nē´re-id. A sea nymph.
-
-“Mænad,” mæ´nad. A priestess or votary of Bacchus.
-
-P. 76, c. 2.—“Toro Farnese” or Farnese Bull. Was discovered in the
-sixteenth century and is now in the Naples museum. It represents the
-sons of Antiope tying Dirce to a bull by which she is to be dragged to
-death. The work when discovered went to the Farnese palace in Rome,
-hence the name of Farnese bull.
-
-“Laocoon,” la-oc´o-on. One of the chief groups in the Vatican
-collection; discovered at Rome in 1506. Laocoon was a priest of Apollo,
-who having blasphemed the god was destroyed at the altar with his two
-sons by a serpent sent by the deity.
-
-“Niobe,” ni´o-be. The group of Niobe and her children was probably
-first an ornament of the pediment of a temple. The subject is the
-vengeance of Apollo and Artemis upon the Theban queen Niobe, who had
-boasted because of her fourteen children, that she was superior to Leda
-who had but two. As a punishment all her children were destroyed.
-
-“Pyromachus,” py-rom´a-chus.
-
-“Æsculapius,” æs-cu-la´pi-us. The god of the medical art.
-
-“Apollo Belvedere,” bel-vā-dā´rā, or bĕl=´=ve-deer´. This statue by
-many is considered the greatest existing work of ancient art. The
-subject is the god Apollo at the moment of his victory over the Python.
-It was discovered in 1503, and takes its name from its position in the
-belvedere of the Vatican, a gallery or open corridor of the Vatican
-which is called _belvedere_, (beautiful view) from the fine views it
-commands. It is of heroic size, and is considered the very type of
-manly beauty.
-
-P. 77, c. 1.—“Torus,” to´rus. A large moulding used in the base of
-columns.
-
-“Mæcenas,” mæ-ce´nas. (B. C. 73?-8.) A Roman statesman. His fame rests
-on his patronage of literature. He was a patron of both Horace and
-Virgil.
-
-“Tivoli,” tiv´o-le.
-
-“Varro.” (B. C. 116-28.) “The most learned of the Romans and the most
-voluminous of Roman writers.” He composed no less than 490 books; but
-two of these have come down to us.
-
-“Arcesilaus,” ar-ces=´=i-la´us.
-
-“Genetrix.” A mother.
-
-“Septimius Severus,” sep-tim´i-us se-ve´rus. (A. D. 146-211.) Roman
-Emperor.
-
-
-AMERICAN LITERATURE.
-
-P. 77, c. 2.—“Sydney Smith.” (1771-1845.) Educated at Oxford, he took
-orders and became a curate in 1794. Afterward he taught, and in 1802
-assisted in establishing the _Edinburgh Review_, of which he was the
-first editor. Although he had charge, during his life, of various
-parishes, he was active in literary work; for twenty-five years he
-contributed to the _Edinburgh Review_; he published “Sketches of Moral
-Philosophy,” several volumes of sermons, papers on “American Debt,” and
-many miscellaneous articles, all characterized by humor and sound sense.
-
-“Kaimes,” or Kames, kāmz. (1696-1782.) A Scottish jurist, educated at
-Edinburgh, and for thirty years practiced law; was then made Lord Chief
-Justice. He wrote many works on law, metaphysics, criticism, etc.
-
-“Davy.” (1778-1829.) The English chemist. His attention was first
-directed to chemistry by his medical studies, and he made such progress
-in original investigation that at twenty-three he was made lecturer on
-chemistry in the Royal Society of London. In 1817 he became a member
-of the French Institute, and his reputation as a chemist was second to
-that of no one in Europe. He wrote much and among his discoveries were
-the bases potassium, sodium, and iodine as a simple substance. His most
-valuable invention was the miner’s safety lamp.
-
-“Jeffrey.” (1773-1850.) Educated for the law, but was deeply interested
-in literature. After being admitted to the bar this division of
-interest for a long time hindered his success. He was one of the
-original founders of the _Edinburgh Review_, and became its editor
-with the fourth number. He soon made the magazine an organ of liberal
-thought on every theme. His most valuable contributions were his
-literary criticisms. His work at the bar improved with his literary
-ability, and in 1834 he was made a judge, a position he held until his
-death.
-
-“Passy,” päs=´=se´.
-
-P. 78, c. 1.—“Bancroft,” băng´kroft. (1800.) See American Literature.
-
-“Rufus King.” (1755-1827.) American statesman.
-
-“Everett.” (1794-1865.) American orator and statesman.
-
-P. 78, c. 2.—“Hessian,” hĕsh´an. The troops were from Hesse-Cassel. The
-king, Frederick II., between 1776 and 1784, received over £3,000,000 by
-hiring these soldiers to the English government to fight against the
-Americans.
-
-“Lanspach,” lanz´päk; “Kniphausen,” knip´how=´=zen.
-
-P. 79, c. 1.—“Brougham,” broo´am. (1779-1868.) A British statesman
-and author. After leaving school he spent some time in traveling
-and writing before being admitted to the bar. In 1810 he entered
-Parliament, and his first resolution was to petition the king to
-abolish slavery. From this time he was allied with the reforms of the
-age: the emancipation of Roman Catholics, government reforms, etc. The
-education of working people and charity schemes received the aid of his
-pen and voice, and he was instrumental in founding several societies
-since very powerful. In 1834 the change of ministry ended his official
-life, but his interest and zeal in public works never ceased.
-
-
-
-
-TRICKS OF THE CONJURORS.
-
-By THOMAS FROST.
-
-The dense ignorance which prevailed during the seventeenth century
-on the subject of conjuring, as the word is now understood, would be
-scarcely credible at the present day, if instances did not even now
-occur at intervals to show that there are still minds which the light
-of knowledge has not yet penetrated. Books did not reach the masses in
-those days, and hence the beginning of the eighteenth century found
-people as ready to drown a wizard as their ancestors had been.
-
-A book which was published in 1716, by Richard Neve, whose name is the
-first which we meet with in the conjuring annals of the eighteenth
-century, bears traces of the lingering fear of diabolical agency
-which still infected the minds of the people. Having stated, in his
-preface, that his book contained directions for performing thirty-three
-legerdemain tricks, besides many arithmetical puzzles and many jests,
-Neve says: “I dare not say that I have here set down all that are or
-may be performed by legerdemain, but thou hast here the most material
-of them; and if thou rightly understandest these, there is not a trick
-that any juggler in the world can show thee, but thou shalt be able to
-conceive after what manner it is done, if he do it by sleight of hand,
-and not by unlawful and detestable means, as too many do at this day.”
-
-The following are a few of the tricks which puzzled the people of
-those days: The tricks of the fakirs, or religious mendicants of India
-were remarkable. One of these fellows boasted that he would appear at
-Amadabant a town about two hundred miles from Surat, within fifteen
-days after being buried, ten feet deep, at the latter place. The
-Governor of Surat resolved to test the fellow’s powers, and had a grave
-dug, in which the fakir placed himself, stipulating that a layer of
-reeds should be interposed between his body and the superincumbent
-earth, with a space of two feet between his body and the reeds. This
-was done, and the grave was then filled up, and a guard was placed at
-the spot to prevent trickery.
-
-A large tree stood ten or twelve yards from the grave, and beneath its
-shade several fakirs were grouped around a large earthern jar, which
-was filled with water. The officer of the guard, suspecting that some
-trick was to be played, ordered the jar to be moved, and, this being
-done by the soldiers, after some opposition on the part of the fellows
-assembled round it, a shaft was discovered, with a subterranean gallery
-from its bottom to within two feet of the grave. The impostor was
-thereupon made to ascend, and a riot ensued, in which he and several
-other persons were slain.
-
-This trick has been repeated several times in India, under different
-circumstances, one of the most remarkable instances being that related
-by an engineer officer named Boileau, who was employed about forty
-years ago in the trigonometrical survey of that country. I shall relate
-this story in the officer’s own words, premising that he did not
-witness either the interment or the exhumation of the performer, but
-was told that they took place in the presence of Esur Lal, one of the
-ministers of the Muharwul of Jaisulmer.
-
-“The man is said, by long practice, to have acquired the art of
-holding his breath by shutting the mouth, and stopping the interior
-opening of the nostrils with his tongue; he also abstains from solid
-food for some days previous to his interment, so that he may not be
-inconvenienced by the contents of his stomach, while put up in his
-narrow grave; and, moreover, he is sewn up in a bag of cloth, and the
-cell is lined with masonry, and floored with cloth, that the white ants
-and other insects may not easily be able to molest him. The place in
-which he was buried at Jaisulmer is a small building about twelve feet
-by eight, built of stone; and in the floor was a hole, about three
-feet long, two and a half feet wide, and the same depth, or perhaps a
-yard deep, in which he was placed in a sitting posture, sewed up in
-his shroud, with his feet turned inward toward the stomach, and his
-hands also pointed inward toward the chest. Two heavy slabs of stone,
-five or six feet long, several inches thick, and broad enough to cover
-the mouth of the grave, so that he could not escape, were then placed
-over him, and I believe a little earth was plastered over the whole,
-so as to make the surface of the grave smooth and compact. The door of
-the house was also built up, and people placed outside, that no tricks
-might be played, nor deception practised.
-
-“At the expiration of a full month, the walling of the door was broken,
-and the buried man dug out of the grave; Trevelyan’s moonshee only
-running there in time to see the ripping open of the bag in which the
-man had been inclosed. He was taken out in a perfectly senseless state,
-his eyes closed, his hands cramped and powerless, his stomach shrunk
-very much, and his teeth jammed so fast together that they were forced
-to open his mouth with an iron instrument to pour a little water down
-his throat. He gradually recovered his senses and the use of his limbs;
-and when we went to see him he was sitting up, supported by two men,
-and conversed with us in a low, gentle tone of voice, saying that ‘we
-might bury him again for a twelvemonth, if we pleased.’”
-
-A conjuror was exhibiting a mimic swan, which floated on real water,
-and followed his motions, when the bird suddenly became stationary. He
-approached it more closely, but the swan did not move.
-
-“There is a person in the company,” said he, “who understands the
-principle upon which this trick is performed, and who is counteracting
-me. I appeal to the company whether this is fair, and I beg the
-gentleman will desist.”
-
-The trick was performed by magnetism, and the counteracting agency was
-a magnet in the pocket of Sir Francis Blake Delaval.
-
-In 1785 the celebrated automatic chess player was first exhibited in
-London, having previously been shown in various cities of Germany and
-France. It had been invented about fifteen years before by a Hungarian
-noble, the Baron von Kempelen, who had until then, however, declined to
-permit its exhibition in public. Having witnessed some experiments in
-magnetism by a Frenchman, performed before the Court of Maria Theresa,
-Kempelen had observed to the empress that he thought himself able to
-construct a piece of mechanism the operations of which would be far
-more surprising than the experiments they had witnessed. The curiosity
-of the empress was excited, and she exacted a promise from Kempelen to
-make the attempt. The result was the automatic chess-player.
-
-The figure was of the size of life, dressed as a Turk, and seated
-behind a square piece of cabinet work. It was fixed upon castors, so as
-to run over the floor, and satisfy beholders that there was no access
-to it from below. On the top, in the center, was a fixed chess-board,
-toward which the eyes of the figure were directed. Its right hand and
-arm were extended toward the board, and its left, somewhat raised, held
-a pipe.
-
-The spectators, having examined the figure, the exhibitor wound up
-the machinery, placed the cushion under the arm of the figure, and
-challenged any gentleman present to play.
-
-The Turk always chose the white men, and made the first move. The
-fingers opened as the hand was extended toward the board, and the piece
-was deftly picked up, and removed to the proper square. If a false move
-was made by its opponent, it tapped on the table impatiently, replaced
-the piece, and claimed the move for itself. If a human player hesitated
-long over a move, the Turk tapped sharply on the table.
-
-The mind fails to comprehend any mechanism capable of performing with
-such accuracy movements which require knowledge and reflection. Beckman
-says indeed that a boy was concealed in the figure, and prompted by the
-best chess-player whose services the proprietor could obtain.
-
-
-
-
-TALK ABOUT BOOKS.
-
-
-Oliver Wendell Holmes is a philanthropist in the world of letters.
-Since his college days at Harvard, where he distinguished himself by
-his contributions to the _Collegian_, he has been giving to his wide
-circle of readers strong, clean, good thoughts, mixed with the happiest
-humor. His essays have been among the most enjoyable of his writings.
-His publishers have recognized this and collected a dozen of them into
-“Pages from an Old Volume of Life.”[K] There are many subjects touched,
-but his “Phi Beta Kappa” oration of 1870, “Mechanism in Thought and
-Morals,” is, perhaps, the best in the collection. The two essays,
-written during the war for _The Atlantic_ readers, have a pathos so
-touching, it completely does away with the false idea that Holmes is
-only a humorist. The volume is a pleasant book for an hour’s reading;
-indeed, it may well be classed along with what the author himself has
-aptly called “pillow-smoothing authors;” not a dull, heavy book, but
-one whose easily-flowing thoughts and continued good humor, quiet the
-mind and allow the reader to pass into dreamy forgetfulness.
-
-“Things that have to be done, should be learned by doing them.”
-Teachers know as well, perhaps, as any class of people how applicable
-this old truism is to their work. They only learn by doing; but too
-often they learn the routine, not the science. A little book just
-published by A. Lovell & Co.,[L] is sent out in the interest of
-thoughtful teaching. There are some excellent development lessons, in
-which, simply by questions, and a few simple materials, are developed
-ideas of the senses, of forms, flat and solid, ideas of right and
-left, etc. A series of lessons on plants and insects have for their
-object “to bring the child into contact with nature, to teach him to
-observe, think, reason, and to express himself naturally.” The book
-contains an excellent paper on the much-discussed “Quincy School
-Work.” No new departure in the educational world has caused more talk.
-That there is something in it no one doubts that knows of the results
-of Superintendent Parker’s system, but how to use it is not easily
-explained. This essay will help teachers to understand the method and
-show them how it may be used.
-
-During this year Messrs. Harper & Brothers have added to the
-biographies of eminent Americans three very valuable works. Following
-Mr. Godwin’s life of Bryant, is the “Memoirs of John A. Dix.”[M] In so
-pretentious a work as the latter it is unfortunate that the compilation
-should have been made by his son. The unbiased, impersonal judgment
-that makes a biography trustworthy, is wanting. The fondness of the
-writer is continually evident to the reader. The book, however, is
-valuable from its fullness and exactness. It is really an epitome of
-the history of the most exciting times in our annals. General Dix’s
-part in the stirring events before and after the rebellion, his work
-as secretary of the treasury, as military commander during the New
-York riots in ’63, and his position upon various questions of national
-policy, are all explained minutely, and his correspondence is given in
-full. Although so voluminous, the work is never fatiguing. A feature
-which adds to the interest of the book is the selections from his
-translations, sketches, etc. General Dix added to his political and
-military ability a literary taste that led him to cultivate letters.
-His translations are particularly good. _Stabat Mater_, his son has
-seen fit to publish; it seems a pity that _Dies Iræ_ was not also given.
-
-The third of these biographies is the “Life of James Buchanan.”[N]
-The author himself says of this work, that “it was followed within a
-week by an amount of criticism such as I do not remember to have seen
-bestowed on any similar book in the same space of time.” Mr. Curtis was
-assigned a task from which most men would have shrunk. Mr. Buchanan’s
-administration as President of the United States was not popular. The
-belief that he favored the secession of the Southern States has been
-general. For his biographer to treat him as a conscientious actor in
-the struggle before the war has necessarily entailed criticism. Mr.
-Curtis says in his preface, “My estimate of his abilities and powers as
-a statesman has arisen with every investigation I have made and it is,
-in my judgment, not too much to say of him as a President of the United
-States, that he is entitled to stand very high in the catalogue—not
-a large one—of those who have had the moral courage to encounter
-misrepresentation and obloquy, rather than swerve from the line of
-duty which their convictions marked out for them.” Mr. Curtis will not
-change the popular opinion on the Buchanan administration, but he must
-modify that opinion. This treatment alone makes the work worth reading
-by both friend and foe. The most entertaining part of the book is the
-voluminous private correspondence, which well portray Mr. Buchanan’s
-social and friendly nature.
-
-One of the most delightful books of the season is “Spanish Vistas,”[O]
-by Mr. Lathrop. The publishers have given us a genuine _édition de
-luxe_, heavy paper, numberless choice illustrations, and beautiful
-binding. The book is the joint product of two artists, and if one
-wields the quill instead of the pencil he is no less artistic. Two
-things are particularly noticeable in Mr. Lathrop’s fine descriptions
-of scenery, of architecture, city sights and peasant gatherings: the
-skill with which he chooses his point and time of observation, and
-his really superior coloring. He knows at what hour the Alhambra will
-exercise its supreme spell, where the picturesque vagabondism of these
-handsome Spanish rascals will be most striking. To this power add his
-ability in colors and there is not a page but glows with effective
-pictures. Character sketches enliven the volume. The commonplace
-American abroad is introduced in Whetstone, a man of “iron persistence
-and intense prejudice,” who continually exclaims “I don’t see what
-I came to Spain for. If there ever was a God-forsaken country,” and
-who amid the grandeur of the cathedral of Seville squints along the
-cornice to see if it is straight. The writer has been ably assisted by
-his “Velveteen,” alias Mr. C. S. Reinhart, whose pictures give doubled
-value to the book. To all contemplating a trip to Spain the chapter on
-“Hints to Travelers” will be valuable.
-
-“Spanish Vistas” represents one class of books on travels. There is
-another more interesting to the majority of people, in which facts
-and adventures are the chief elements. Such a work is “The Golden
-Chersonese,”[P] by Isabella Bird. After having traveled on horseback
-through the interior of Japan, and braved the roughest passes of the
-Rocky Mountains, and spent six months among the wonders of the Sandwich
-Islands, this indefatigable woman penetrates that _terra incognita_,
-the Malay Peninsula. The dangers and inconveniences which she undergoes
-to get there and get through are remarkable. She sailed from Hong Kong
-not long after a party of piratical Chinese, shipping as steerage
-passengers on board a river steamer, had massacred the officers and
-captured the boat. There was but one English passenger on board besides
-herself, and some two thousand Chinese imprisoned in the steerage, an
-iron grating over each exit, and an officer ready to shoot the first
-man who attempted to force it. The decorations of the saloons consisted
-of stands of loaded rifles and unsheathed bayonets. She penetrates the
-country where the mosquitoes are a terror to life; snakes, land-leeches
-and centipedes are everywhere, but the enthusiastic traveler mentions
-them but casually. The dangers and bravery of the writer of course add
-piquancy to the interesting description of the scenes, the customs and
-peculiarities of “The Golden Chersonese.”
-
-Along with these fresh works comes out a new edition of one of the
-pioneers in this field of literature. We refer to Dr. Hayes’ “Arctic
-Boat Journey.”[Q] In 1860 it was first published, and speedily took
-its place as an authority on Arctic travels. The fresh interest given
-to this subject by the sad fate of the “Jeannette” has led to a new
-edition. The accounts lose nothing of interest by time, but rather
-become clearer from the added knowledge we have of the frozen seas and
-icy lands.
-
-No work will be found a more valuable addition to a C. L. S. C. library
-than Lübke’s “History of Art.”[R] In connection with the art readings
-it will be found invaluable. Since its first publication in 1860 it has
-gone through seven editions, and that, too, in critical Germany. The
-new translation from the latest German edition is the best.
-
-
-BOOKS RECEIVED.
-
-“Bible Stories for Young Children,” by Caroline Hoadley. Philadelphia:
-J. B. Lippincott. & Co.
-
-“Ancient Egypt in the Light of Modern Discoveries,” by Professor H. S.
-Osborn, LL.D. Cincinnati: Robert Clark & Co., 1883.
-
-“Woman and Temperance; or, The Work and the Workers of The Woman’s
-Christian Temperance Union,” by Frances E. Willard, President of the W.
-C. T. U. Hartford, Conn.: Park Publishing Co., 1883.
-
-“The Soul Winner.” A Sketch of Facts and Incidents in the Life and
-Labors of Edmund J. Zard, for sixty-three years a class-leader and
-hospital visitor in Philadelphia. By his sister, Mrs. Mary D. James.
-New York: Phillip & Hunt; Cincinnati: Walden & Stowe, 1883.
-
-“The Preacher and His Sermon.” A Treatise on Homiletics. By Rev. John
-W. Etter, B.D. Dayton, O.: United Brethren Publishing House, 1883.
-
-“Seven Stories, with Basement and Attic.” By the author of “Reveries of
-a Bachelor.” New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1884.
-
-“Reveries of A Bachelor; or, A Book of the Heart,” by Ik Marvel. New
-and revised edition. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1884.
-
-“The Story of Roland,” by James Baldwin. New York: Charles Scribner’s
-Sons, 1883.
-
-“Our Young Folks’ Plutarch;” edited by Rosalie Kaufman. Philadelphia:
-J. B. Lippincott & Co., 1883.
-
-“Young Folks’ Whys and Wherefores.” A Story by Uncle Lawrence.
-Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co., 1884.
-
-“Mrs. Gilpin’s Frugalities.” Remnants, and Two Hundred Ways of using
-them. By Susan Anna Brown, author of “The Book of Forty Puddings.” New
-York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1883.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[K] Pages from an Old Volume of Life; a collection of essays
-(1857-1881) by Oliver Wendell Holmes. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co.,
-1883.
-
-[L] Development Lessons for Teachers, by Esmond V. DeGraff and Margaret
-K. Smith. New York: H. Lovell & Co., 1883.
-
-[M] Memoirs of John A. Dix; compiled by his son, Morgan Dix. In two
-volumes. New York, Harper & Brothers, 1883.
-
-[N] Life of James Buchanan, Fifteenth President of the United States.
-By George Ticknor Curtis. In two volumes. New York: Harper & Brothers,
-1883.
-
-[O] Spanish Vistas, by George Parsons Lathrop, illustrated by Charles
-S. Reinhart. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1883.
-
-[P] The Golden Chersonese, by Isabella Bird. New York: G. P. Putnam’s
-Sons, 1883.
-
-[Q] An Arctic Boat Journey in the Autumn of 1854, by Isaac I. Hayes, M.
-D. New edition, enlarged and illustrated. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin &
-Company, 1883.
-
-[R] Outlines of the History of Art, by Dr. Wilhelm Lübke. A new
-translation from the seventh German edition, edited by Clarence Cook.
-New York: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1881.
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ROYAL
- BAKING
- POWDER
-
-Absolutely Pure.
-
-This powder never varies. A marvel of purity, strength and
-wholesomeness. More economical than the ordinary kinds, and can not be
-sold in competition with the multitude of low test, short weight, alum
-or phosphate powders. _Sold only in cans._ ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106
-Wall Street, New York.]
-
-
-
-
-THE CHAUTAUQUAN.
-
-1883-1884.
-
-
-The Fourth Volume Begins with October, 1883.
-
-A monthly magazine, 76 pages, ten numbers in the volume, beginning with
-October and closing with July.
-
-
-THE CHAUTAUQUAN
-
-is the official organ of the C. L. S. C., adopted by the Rev. J. H.
-Vincent, D.D., Lewis Miller, Esq., Lyman Abbott, D.D., Bishop H. W.
-Warren, D.D., Prof. W. C. Wilkinson, D.D., and Rev. J. M. Gibson, D.D.,
-Counselors of the C. L. S. C.
-
-One-half of the “Required Readings” in the C. L. S. C. course of study
-for 1883-84 will be published only in THE CHAUTAUQUAN.
-
-Our columns will contain articles on Roman, German, French and American
-History, together with “Sunday Readings,” articles on Political
-Economy, Civil Law, Physical Science, Sculpture and Sculptors, Painting
-and Painters, Architecture and Architects.
-
-Dr. J. H. Vincent will continue his department of C. L. S. C. Work.
-
-We shall publish “_Questions and Answers_” on every book in the course
-of study for the year. The work of each week and month will be divided
-for the convenience of our readers. Stenographic reports of the
-“Round-Tables” held in the Hall of Philosophy during August will be
-given.
-
-Special features of this volume will be the “C. L. S. C. Testimony” and
-“Local Circles.”
-
-
-THE EDITOR’S OUTLOOK, EDITOR’S NOTE-BOOK AND EDITOR’S TABLE,
-
-WILL BE IMPROVED.
-
-The new department of _Notes on the Required Readings_ will be
-continued. The notes have met with universal favor, and will be
-improved the coming year.
-
-Miscellaneous articles on Travel, Science, Philosophy, Literature,
-Religion, Art, etc., will be prepared to meet the needs of our readers.
-
-Prof. Wallace Bruce will furnish a series of ten articles, especially
-for this Magazine, on Sir Walter Scott’s “Waverley Novels,” in which
-he will give our readers a comprehensive view of the writings of this
-prince of novelists.
-
-Rev. Dr. J. H. Vincent, Rev. Dr. G. M. Steele, Prof. W. C. Wilkinson,
-D.D., Prof. W. G. Williams, A.M., Bishop H. W. Warren, A. M. Martin,
-Esq., Rev. C. E. Hall, A.M., Rev. E. D. McCreary, A.M., and others,
-will contribute to the current volume.
-
-The character of THE CHAUTAUQUAN in the past is our best promise of
-what we shall do for our readers in the future.
-
-
- THE CHAUTAUQUAN, one year, $1.50
-
-
- CLUB RATES FOR THE CHAUTAUQUAN.
-
- Five subscriptions at one time, each, $1.35
- Or, for the five 6.75
-
- In clubs, the Magazine must go to one postoffice.
-
-Remittances should be made by postoffice money order on Meadville, or
-draft on New York, Philadelphia or Pittsburgh, to avoid loss. Address,
-
- THEODORE L. FLOOD,
- Editor and Proprietor,
- MEADVILLE, PA.
-
-Complete sets of the _Chautauqua Assembly Herald_ for 1883 furnished at
-$1.00.
-
-
-
-
-CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS’ NEW BOOKS.
-
-
- =Biblical Study.= Its Principles, Methods, and a
- History of its Branches. Together with a Catalogue of
- a Reference Library of Biblical Study. By CHARLES A.
- BRIGGS, D.D., Professor of Hebrew and Cognate Languages
- in Union Theological Seminary. 1 vol. 12mo, $2.50.
-
-Professor Briggs’ book is admirably adapted for the use of the great
-number of readers and Bible students who desire to know the results
-of the most recent investigation and the best modern scholarship in
-the field of Biblical Study. Without such a guide it is impossible to
-comprehend the discussions which now agitate the religious world as
-to the canon, the languages, the style, the text, the interpretation,
-and the criticism of Scripture. Each of these departments, with other
-kindred topics, is treated in a brief but thorough and comprehensive
-manner, and their history and literature are presented together with
-their present aspect.
-
- =The Scriptural Idea of Man.= By MARK HOPKINS, D.D.,
- LL.D., 1 vol., 12mo, $1.00.
-
-“We wish every theological student in the land might have the chance,
-at least, of reading this book. The doctrines of the Bible in relation
-to man in his original nature have seldom been more powerfully
-enforced, and the different schools of modern infidelity have seldom
-been exposed more completely in all their weakness. It is like taking a
-tonic or a breath of mountain air for one to listen to such teachings
-as the pen of Doctor Hopkins here gives to the younger race of
-ministers.”—_The Christian Intelligencer._
-
- =The Grounds of Theistic and Christian Belief.=
- By GEORGE P. FISHER, D.D., LL.D., Professor of
- Ecclesiastical History in Yale College, 1 vol., crown
- 8vo. $2.50.
-
-This volume embraces a discussion of the evidences of both natural and
-revealed religion, and prominence is given to topics having special
-interest at present from their connection with modern theories and
-difficulties. Professor Fisher’s learning, skill in argument, and
-power of language have given him the position of one of the foremost
-defenders of the faith now living, and this volume will be useful to
-many in clearing up perplexities and throwing new light upon the nature
-of the Christian faith and its relation to modern thought.
-
- =Christian Charity in the Ancient Church.= By
- Dr. GERHARD UHLHORN, author of “The Conflict of
- Christianity with Heathenism.” 1 vol. crown 8vo, $2.50.
-
-Dr. Uhlhorn is favorably known on this side of the Atlantic by his able
-and fascinating treatment of one of the most important chapters in
-history, “The Conflict of Christianity with Heathenism.”
-
- =The Life of Luther.= By JULIUS KOSTLIN, Professor
- in the University of Halle. With more than 60
- illustrations from original portraits, documents, etc.
- 1 vol. 8vo.
-
-“At last we have a life of Luther which deserves the name.... The Herr
-Kostlin, in a single well-composed volume, has produced a picture which
-leaves little to be desired. A student who has read these six hundred
-pages attentively will have no question left to ask.”—JAMES ANTHONY
-FROUDE in _The Contemporary Review_.
-
- =The Middle Kingdom.= A survey of the Geography,
- Government, Literature, Social Life, Arts, and History
- of the Chinese Empire and its inhabitants. With
- illustrations and a new map of the Empire. By S. WELLS
- WILLIAMS, D.D., LL.D. 2 vols. royal 8vo, $9.00.
-
-This new issue of Dr. S. Wells Williams’s standard and important work,
-“The Middle Kingdom,” is practically a new book. The text of the old
-edition has been largely rewritten, and the work has been expanded so
-as to include a vast amount of new material collected by Dr. Williams
-during the later years of his residence in China, as well as the most
-recent information regarding all the departments of the Empire.
-
- =The Story of Roland.= By JAMES BALDWIN. With a series
- of illustrations by R. B. Birch. 1 vol. square 12mo,
- $2.00.
-
-This volume is intended as a companion to “The Story of Siegfried.” As
-“Siegfried” was an adaptation of Northern myths and romances to the
-wants and understanding of young readers, so is this story a similar
-adaptation of the Middle Age romances relating to Charlemagne and his
-paladins.
-
- =The Hoosier School-Boy.= By EDWARD EGGLESTON, author
- of “The Hoosier School-Master,” etc. With full-page
- illustrations. 1 vol. 12mo, $1.00.
-
-“Those who have read ‘The Hoosier School-master’—and who has not?—will
-feel that they must have this companion volume. Mr. Eggleston is a
-writer of very charming stories of a peculiar character. His stories
-always mean something, and are pervaded by a Christian tone of thought
-and feeling.”—_Christian Secretary, Hartford._
-
- =Mrs. Gilpin’s Frugalities.= Remnants, and 200 Ways of
- Using Them. By SUSAN ANNA BROWN, author of “The Book of
- Forty Puddings.” 1 vol. illuminated, $1.
-
-This little volume, which in the range of cook-book literature occupies
-a new and unoccupied field, aims to combat the spirit of wastefulness
-that is the besetting sin of American housekeeping. Miss Brown provides
-a multitude of receipts for transforming these remnants into savory and
-nutritious _plats_, side dishes, entrees, etc. Some of these receipts
-are from the French, but most of them are from the author’s own
-experiments.
-
-
- _These books are for sale by all book-sellers, or will
- be sent, post-paid, on receipt of price._
-
- CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS, Publishers,
- 743 and 745 Broadway, New York.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber’s Note:
-
-Obvious punctuation errors repaired.
-
-Page 66, “Muremburg” changed to “Nuremburg” (of Nuremburg, is now)
-
-Page 81, “Lybia” changed to “Libya” (deserts of Libya, there dwelt)
-
-Page 82, “Fresho” changed to “Fresno” (four chief towns, Fresno)
-
-Page 88, “Propylænm” changed to “Propylæum” (the Propylæum and enter)
-
-Page 97, “ti” changed to “it” (huzzaing for me; it)
-
-Page 98, stanza break placed between first and second stanza of poem.
-
-Page 103, “Lousta” changed to “Louisa” (Lousia E. French)
-
-Page 108, “be” changed to “he” (he came and gave)
-
-Page 109, “invested” changed to “infested” (earliest times infested)
-
-Page 116, “city” changed to “City” (New York City to introduce)
-
-Page 128, “cannon” changed to “canon” (as to the canon)
-
-Page 128, “Ulhorn” changed to “Uhlhorn” (Dr. Uhlhorn is favorably)
-
-Page 128, “adaption” changed to “adaptation” (an adaptation of Northern)
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Chautauquan, Vol. IV, November 1883, by
-The Chautauquan Literary and Scientific Circle
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Chautauquan, Vol. IV, November 1883, by
-The Chautauquan Literary and Scientific Circle
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Chautauquan, Vol. IV, November 1883
- A Monthly Magazine Devoted to the Promotion of True Culture.
- Organ of the Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle.
-
-Author: The Chautauquan Literary and Scientific Circle
-
-Editor: Theodore L. Flood
-
-Release Date: July 8, 2017 [EBook #52043]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHAUTAUQUAN, NOVEMBER 1883 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Emmy, Juliet Sutherland and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
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-
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-
-</pre>
-
-<h1 class='faux'>The Chautauquan, November 1883</h1>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 522px;">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="522" height="800" alt="Cover" />
-</div>
-
-<div class='tnote'><div class='center'><small><b>Transcriber's Note:</b> This cover has been
-created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</small></div></div>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class='maintitle'><a name="The_Chautauquan" id="The_Chautauquan"><span class="smcap">The Chautauquan.</span></a></div>
-
-<p class='center'>
-<i>A MONTHLY MAGAZINE DEVOTED TO THE PROMOTION OF TRUE CULTURE. ORGAN OF<br />
-THE CHAUTAUQUA LITERARY AND SCIENTIFIC CIRCLE.</i><br />
-</p>
-<hr />
-<p class='center'>
-<span class="smcap">Vol. IV.</span> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; November, 1883. &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; No. 2.<br />
-</p>
-<hr />
-
-
-
-<h2>Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle.</h2>
-
-<p><i>President</i>—Lewis Miller, Akron, Ohio.</p>
-
-<p><i>Superintendent of Instruction</i>—Rev. J. H. Vincent, D.D., New Haven,
-Conn.</p>
-
-<p><i>Counselors</i>—Rev. Lyman Abbott, D.D.; Rev. J. M. Gibson, D.D.;
-Bishop H. W. Warren, D.D.; Rev. W. C. Wilkinson, D.D.</p>
-
-<p><i>Office Secretary</i>—Miss Kate F. Kimball, Plainfield, N. J.</p>
-
-<p><i>General Secretary</i>—Albert M. Martin, Pittsburgh, Pa.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<div class='tnote'><b>Transcriber's Note:</b> This table of contents
-of this periodical was created for the HTML version to aid the reader.</div>
-
-<h2>Contents</h2>
-
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
-<tr>
-<td align="center"><a href="#REQUIRED_READING">REQUIRED READING</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">German History</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#GERMAN_HISTORY">63</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">German Literature</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#GERMAN_LITERATURE">66</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Physical Science</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">II.—The Circulation of Water on the Land</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#PHYSICAL_SCIENCE">67</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="center"><a href="#SUNDAY_READINGS">SUNDAY READINGS</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">[<i>Sunday, November 4.</i>]—Moral Distinctions Not Sufficiently Regarded in Social Intercourse</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Sunday_November_4">70</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">[<i>Sunday, November 11.</i>]</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Sunday_November_4">71</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">[<i>Sunday, November 18.</i>]</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Sunday_November_4">72</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">[<i>Sunday, November 25.</i>]</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Sunday_November_4">72</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Political Economy</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">II. Production, Continued—Capital—Combination and Division of Labor</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#POLITICAL_ECONOMY">73</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">III.—Consumption</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#IIICONSUMPTION">74</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Readings in Art</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">II.—Sculpture: Grecian and Roman</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#READINGS_IN_ART">75</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Selections from American Literature</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#SELECTIONS_FROM_AMERICAN">77</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Benjamin Franklin—<i>Extracts From Poor Richard’s Almanac</i></span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Extracts_From_Poor_Richards_Almanac">77</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">George Washington—<i>Account of the Battle of Trenton</i></span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#GEORGE_WASHINGTON">78</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Thomas Jefferson—<i>George Washington</i></span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#THOMAS_JEFFERSON">79</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Thoughts from William Ellery Channing</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#THOUGHTS_FROM_WILLIAM_ELLERY_CHANNING">79</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Autumn Sympathy</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#AUTUMN_SYMPATHY">80</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Republican Prospects in France</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#REPUBLICAN_PROSPECTS_IN">80</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Chautauqua to California</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#CHAUTAUQUA_TO_CALIFORNIA">81</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">To My Books</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#TO_MY_BOOKS">83</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Earthquakes—Ischia and Java</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#EARTHQUAKESISCHIA_AND_JAVA">83</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Low Spirits</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#LOW_SPIRITS">85</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Vegetable Villains</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#VEGETABLE_VILLAINS">86</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">From the Baltic to the Adriatic</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#FROM_THE_BALTIC_TO_THE">87</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Electricity</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#ELECTRICITY">89</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Poachers in England</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#POACHERS_IN_ENGLAND">90</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Eight Centuries With Walter Scott</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#EIGHT_CENTURIES_WITH_WALTER">91</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Great Organ at Fribourg</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#THE_GREAT_ORGAN_AT_FRIBOURG">94</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Eccentric Americans</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#ECCENTRIC_AMERICANS">95</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Etiquette</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#ETIQUETTE">99</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Napoleon’s Marshals</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#NAPOLEONS_MARSHALS">100</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">C. L. S. C. Work</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#C_L_S_C_WORK">102</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">C. L. S. C. Stationery</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#C_L_S_C_STATIONERY">103</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">New England Branch of the Class of ’86</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#NEW_ENGLAND_BRANCH_OF_THE">103</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">C. L. S. C. Testimony</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#C_L_S_C_TESTIMONY">103</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">C. L. S. C. Reunion</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#C_L_S_C_REUNION">104</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Local Circles</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#LOCAL_CIRCLES">105</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">How to Conduct a Local Circle</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#HOW_TO_CONDUCT_A_LOCAL">107</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Questions and Answers</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#QUESTIONS_AND_ANSWERS">109</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Outline of C. L. S. C. Studies</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#OUTLINE_OF_C_L_S_C_STUDIES">112</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Chautauqua Normal Class</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#CHAUTAUQUA_NORMAL_CLASS">112</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Editor’s Outlook</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#EDITORS_OUTLOOK">115</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dr. Haygood's Battle for the Negro</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#EDITORS_OUTLOOK">115</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">The Political Outlook</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#THE_POLITICAL_OUTLOOK">115</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">History of Greece</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#HISTORY_OF_GREECE">116</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">A College Reform</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#A_COLLEGE_REFORM">116</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Editor’s Note-Book</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#EDITORS_NOTE-BOOK">117</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Editor’s Table</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#EDITORS_TABLE">119</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">C. L. S. C. Notes on Required Readings For November</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#C_L_S_C_NOTES_ON_REQUIRED_READINGS_FOR_NOVEMBER">120</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">C. L. S. C. Notes on Required Readings in “The Chautaquan”</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#NOTES_ON_REQUIRED_READINGS_IN_THE_CHAUTAUQUAN">123</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Tricks of the Conjurors</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#TRICKS_OF_THE_CONJURORS">125</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Talk About Books</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#TALK_ABOUT_BOOKS">126</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table></div>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-<h2><a name="REQUIRED_READING" id="REQUIRED_READING">REQUIRED READING</a><br />
-
-<small>FOR THE<br />
-
-<i>Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle for 1883-4</i>.<br />
-
-NOVEMBER.</small></h2>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-<h2><a name="GERMAN_HISTORY" id="GERMAN_HISTORY">GERMAN HISTORY.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">By <span class="smcap">Rev. W. G. WILLIAMS</span>, A.M.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<h3>II.</h3>
-
-<p>From the time of Julius Cæsar to the fall of the Roman Empire,
-a period of more than four hundred years, the greater
-part of the Germans were subject to Roman rule, a rule maintained
-only by military force. But the struggle against Rome
-never entirely ceased—and as Roman power gradually declined
-the Germans seized every opportunity to recover their liberty
-and in their turn became conquerors. To trace the succession
-of their vicissitudes during this period would be to give the
-narrative of a bold, vigorous, war-like people in their rude barbaric
-condition. We should discover even in those early times
-those race characteristics of strength, bravery and persistence
-which became so marked in later centuries; we should recognize
-in Hermann, the first German leader, the prophecy of the
-Great Charles who steps upon the scene nearly eight centuries
-later.</p>
-
-
-<h4>HERMANN, THE FIRST LEADER.</h4>
-
-<p>He it was (Hermann Arminius) who, with a power to organize
-equal to that of William of Orange, bound the German
-tribes in a secret confederacy, whose object it was to resist and
-repel the Roman armies. While still himself serving as an
-officer in the Roman army, he managed to rally the confederated
-Germans and to attack Varus’s army of forty thousand
-men—the best Roman legions—as they were marching through
-the Teutoburger Forest, where, aided by violent storms, the
-Germans threw the Romans into panic and the fight was
-changed to a slaughter. When the news of the great German
-victory reached Rome the aged Augustus trembled with fear;
-he let his hair and beard grow for months as a sign of trouble,
-and was often heard to exclaim: “O, Varus, Varus, give me
-back my legions.” Though Rome, under the able leadership
-of Germanicus, soon after defeated the Germans, yet she had
-been taught that the Germans possessed a spirit and a power
-sufficient to make her tremble for her future supremacy.</p>
-
-<p>Hermann seems to have devoted himself to the creation of
-a permanent union of the tribes he had commanded. We may
-guess, but can not assert, that his object was to establish a national
-organization like that of Rome, and in doing this he
-must have come into conflict with laws and customs which were
-considered sacred by the people. But his remaining days were
-too few for even the beginning of a task which included such
-an advance in the civilization of the race. We only know that
-he was waylaid and assassinated by members of his own family
-in the year 21. He was then 37 years old and had been for
-thirteen years the leader of his people.<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>He was undoubtedly the liberator of Germany, having
-dared to grapple with the Roman power, not in its beginnings,
-like other kings and commanders, but in the maturity of its
-strength. He was not always victorious in battle, but in
-war he was never subdued. He still lives in the songs of the
-barbarians, unknown to the annals of the Greeks, who only
-admire that which belongs to themselves—nor celebrated as he
-deserves by the Romans, who, in praising the olden times, neglect
-the events of the later years.<a name="FNanchor_B_2" id="FNanchor_B_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a></p>
-
-
-<h4>GERMAN NATIONALITIES AT THE CLOSE OF THE THIRD
-CENTURY.</h4>
-
-<p>When we meet the Germans at the close of the third century
-we are surprised to find that the tribal names which they bore
-in the time of Hermann have nearly all disappeared, and
-new names of wider significance have taken their places. Instead
-of thirty to forty petty tribes, they are now consolidated
-into four chief nationalities with two or three inferior, but independent
-branches. Their geographical situation is no longer
-the same, migrations have taken place, large tracts of territory
-have changed hands, and many leading families have been
-overthrown and new ones arisen. Nothing but the constant
-clash of arms could have wrought such change. As each of
-these new nationalities plays a prominent part in the following
-centuries, a short description of them is given:</p>
-
-<p>1. <i>The Alemanni.</i>—The name of this division (<i>Alle Mannen</i>,
-signifying “all men”) shows that it was composed of fragments
-of many tribes. The Alemanni first made their appearance
-along the Main, and gradually pushed southward over the
-Tithe lands, where the military veterans of Rome had settled,
-until they occupied the greater part of southwestern Germany,
-and eastern Switzerland to the Alps. Their descendants occupy
-the same territory to this day.</p>
-
-<p>2. <i>The Franks.</i>—It is not known whence this name is derived,
-nor what is its meaning. The Franks are believed to
-have been formed out of the Sicambrians in Westphalia,
-a portion of the Chatti and the Batavi in Holland, together
-with other tribes. We first hear of them on the Lower Rhine,
-but they soon extended their territory over a great part of Belgium
-and Westphalia. Their chiefs were already called kings,
-and their authority was hereditary.</p>
-
-<p>3. <i>The Saxons.</i>—This was one of the small original tribes
-settled in Holstein. The name “Saxon” is derived from their
-peculiar weapon, a short sword, called <i>sahs</i>. We find them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-occupying at the close of the third century nearly all the territory
-between the Harz Mountains and the North Sea, from the
-Elbe westward to the Rhine. There appears to have been a
-natural enmity—no doubt bequeathed from the earlier tribes
-out of which both grew—between them and the Franks.</p>
-
-<p>4. <i>The Goths.</i>—Their traditions state that they were settled
-in Sweden before they were found by the Greek navigators on
-the southern shore of the Baltic in 330 B. C. It is probable
-that only a portion of the tribe navigated, and that the present
-Scandinavian race is descended from the remainder. They
-came in contact with the Romans beyond the mouth of the
-Danube about the beginning of the third century.<a name="FNanchor_C_3" id="FNanchor_C_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_C_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</a></p>
-
-
-<h4>INFLUENCE OF THE ROMANS ON THE GERMANS.</h4>
-
-<p>The proximity of the Romans on the Rhine, the Danube, and
-the Neckar, had by degrees effected alterations in the manners
-of the Germans. They had become acquainted with many new
-things, both good and bad. By means of the former they became
-acquainted with money, and even luxuries. The Romans
-had planted the vine on the Rhine, and constructed roads,
-cities, manufactories, theaters, fortresses, temples, and altars.
-Roman merchants brought their wares to Germany, and fetched
-thence amber, feathers, furs, slaves, and the very hair of the
-Germans; for it became the fashion to wear light flaxen wigs,
-instead of natural hair. Of the cities which the Romans built
-there are many yet remaining, as Salzburg, Ratisbonne, Augsburg,
-Basle, Strasburg, Baden, Spires, Worms, Metz, Treves,
-Cologne, Bonn, etc. But in the interior of Germany, neither
-the Romans nor their habits and manners had found friends,
-nor were cities built there according to the Roman style.<a name="FNanchor_D_4" id="FNanchor_D_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_D_4" class="fnanchor">[D]</a></p>
-
-
-<h4>INVASION OF THE HUNS—ATTILA.</h4>
-
-<p>The fourth century of our era and the first half of the fifth
-were characterized by the spirit of migration among all the
-peoples beyond the Rhine. Representatives of every German
-village and district went to Rome, and each brought back
-stories of the wealth and luxury that existed there. They had
-the keen perception and the strength to recognize the increasing
-weakness of the government, and also to despise the enervation
-and corruption of its citizens. The German was ambitious
-and restless as daily he regarded Rome more and more as
-his prey. The Romans themselves saw the danger of the Empire
-and lived in apprehension of overwhelming incursions
-long before they came. In the latter part of the fourth century
-the great impulse was given to the people of northern and eastern
-Europe by successive invasions from Asia; and a vast and
-general movement began among them which resulted in the
-disintegration of the Roman Empire, and the transfer of the
-principal arena of history from the shores of the Mediterranean
-Sea to the countries in which the great powers of modern
-Europe afterward grew up. The first impulse to this series of
-events was given by disturbances and migrations in central
-Asia, of whose cause hardly anything is known. Long before
-the Christian era there was a powerful race of Huns in northeastern
-Asia who became so dangerous to the Chinese that the
-great wall of China was built as a defense against them (finished
-B. C. 244).<a name="FNanchor_E_5" id="FNanchor_E_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_E_5" class="fnanchor">[E]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>These Huns, a Mongol race, had migrated from the center of
-Asia westward three-quarters of a century previously (A. D.
-375), carrying death and devastation on their path. They had
-nothing in common with the peoples of the West, either in facial
-features or habits of life. Contemporary historians describe
-them as surpassing by their savagery all that can be imagined.
-They were of low stature, with broad shoulders, thick-set limbs,
-flat noses, high cheek-bones, small eyes deeply sunk in the
-sockets, and yellow complexion. Ammianus Marcellinus compares
-them, in their monstrous ugliness, to beasts walking on
-two legs, or the grinning heads clumsily carved on the posts of
-bridges. They had no beard, because from infancy their faces
-were hideously scarred by being slashed all over, in order to
-hinder its growth. Accustomed to lead a wandering life in
-their native country, these wild hordes traversed the Steppes,
-or boundless plains which lie between Russia and China, in
-huge chariots, or on small hardy horses, changing their stations
-as often as fresh pasture was required for their cattle. Except
-constrained by necessity, they never entered any kind of
-house, holding them in horror as so many tombs. They were
-accustomed from infancy to endure cold, hunger, and thirst.
-As the great boots they wore deprived them of all facility in
-marching, they never fought on foot; but the skill with which
-they managed their horses and threw the javelin, made them
-more formidable to the Germans than even the disciplined, but
-less ferocious, legions of Rome.</p>
-
-<p>This was the rude race which, bursting into Europe in the
-second half of the fourth century, shook the whole barbarian
-world to its center, and precipitated it upon the Roman Empire.
-The Goths fled before them, when they passed the Danube, the
-Vandals when they crossed the Rhine. After a halt of half a
-century in the center of Europe, the Huns put themselves
-again in motion.</p>
-
-<p>Attila, the king of this people, constrained all the tribes wandering
-between the Rhine and the Oural to follow him. For
-some time he hesitated upon which of the two empires he
-should carry the wrath of heaven. Deciding upon the West,
-he passed the Rhine, the Moselle, and the Seine, and marched
-upon Orleans. The populations fled before him in indescribable
-terror, for the <i>Scourge of God</i>, as he was called, left not
-one stone upon another wheresoever he passed. Metz and
-twenty other cities had been destroyed. Troyes alone had been
-saved by its bishop, Saint Loup. He wished to seize upon Orleans,
-the key of the southern provinces; and his innumerable
-army surrounded the city. Its bishop, St. Aignan, sustained
-the courage of the inhabitants by promising them a powerful
-succor. Ætius, in fact, arrived with all the barbarian nations
-encamped in Gaul, at the expense of which the new invasion
-was made. Attila for the first time fell back; but in order to
-choose a battle-field favorable for his cavalry, he halted in the
-Catalaunian plains near Méry-sur-Seine. There the terrible
-shock of battle took place. In the first onset the Franks, who
-formed the vanguard of Ætius, fought with such animosity that
-15,000 Huns strewed the plain. But next day, when the great
-masses on both sides encountered, the bodies of 165,000 combatants
-were left on that field of carnage. Attila was conquered.
-The allies, however, not daring to drive the wild
-Huns to despair, suffered Attila to retreat into Germany (451).
-In the year following he made amends for his defeat by an invasion
-of northern Italy, ravaging Aquileia, Milan, and other
-cities in a frightful manner, but died of an apoplectic stroke
-(453), soon after his return, and his empire fell with him, but
-not the terrible remembrance of his name and of his cruelties.
-The Visigoths, whose king had perished in the fight, and the
-Franks of Meroveus, had had, with Ætius, the chief honor of
-that memorable day in the Catalaunian plains. For it had become
-a question whether Europe should be German or Mongolian,
-whether the fierce Huns or the Germans should found
-an empire on the ruins of that which was then crumbling.<a name="FNanchor_F_6" id="FNanchor_F_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_F_6" class="fnanchor">[F]</a></p>
-
-
-<h4>FALL OF THE WESTERN EMPIRE—MANNERS AND MORALS OF
-THE GERMANS IN THIS AGE.</h4>
-
-<p>The Western Empire had now but a short time to live. The
-dastardly emperor Valentinian III., suspicious of the independent
-position of Ætius, recalled the conqueror of Attila from Gaul,
-and slew him with his own hand (A. D. 454). He was himself
-murdered soon after, and his widow, Eudoxia, though forced to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-marry the assassin, determined to avenge her husband. She
-invited the Vandals, for this purpose, from Africa across the
-sea to Rome. This German tribe, still ruled by the aged Genseric,
-was the only one which possessed a fleet; and by this
-means the Vandals had already made themselves masters of
-the great islands of the Mediterranean, of Sicily, Sardinia, and
-Corsica. The “sea-king” eagerly obeyed the summons (A. D.
-455), and now “golden Rome” was given up for fourteen days
-to his soldiers, and was sacked with such horrors that the name
-of Vandal has ever since been a proverb for barbarity and destruction.
-Yet the mediation of Leo the Great, then Bishop of
-Rome, saved the city from utter ruin. From this time onward
-the emperors, who followed one another in quick succession,
-were mere tools of the German generals, and symbols of power
-before the common people; for the whole imperial army now
-consisted of the remnants of various German nations, who had
-sought service for pay. These too, at last, like their kindred in
-the provinces, demanded lands in Italy, and would have no
-less than one-third of the soil. When this was refused, Odoacer,
-at the head of his soldiers—Heruli, Sciri, Turcilingi, and
-Rugii, who forced their way thither from the Danube—put an
-end to the very name of the Roman Empire, stripping the boy
-Romulus Augustulus, the last emperor, of the purple, and ruling
-alone in Italy, as German general and king. Thus the
-Western Empire fell by German hands, after they had already
-wrested from it all its provinces, Africa, Spain, Gaul and Britain.
-This occurred in the year 476. Ancient history ends with this
-event; but in the history of the Germans it is merely an episode.</p>
-
-<p>At the time of the great migrations, the German tribes were
-barbarians, in that they were destitute alike of humanity toward
-enemies and inferiors, and of scientific culture. Neither the
-pursuit of learning nor the practice of mercy to the vanquished
-could seem to them other than unmanly weakness. Their ferocity
-spread misery and ruin through the whole arena of history,
-and made the fifth and sixth centuries of our era the crowning
-epoch in the annals of human suffering; while their active, passionate
-contempt for learning destroyed the existing monuments
-of intelligence and habits of inquiry and thought, almost as
-completely as they swept away the wealth, prosperity, and social
-organization of the Roman world. Their ablest kings despised
-clerical accomplishments. Even Theodoric the Great could
-not write, and his signature was made by a black smear over a
-form or mould in which his name was cut. Nevertheless these
-nations were not what we mean by savages. Their originally
-beautiful and resonant language was already cultivated in poetical
-forms, in heroic songs. There was intercourse and trade
-among the several nations. Minstrels, especially, passed from
-one royal court to another, and the same song which was sung
-to Theodoric in Ravenna could be heard and understood by
-the Vandals in Carthage, by Clovis in Paris, and by the Thuringians
-in their fastnesses. A common language was a strong
-bond of union among these nations. Messengers, embassies,
-and letters were sent to and fro between their courts; gifts were
-exchanged, and marriages and alliances entered into. Thus
-the nations were informed concerning one another, and recognized
-their mutual relationship. It was this international intercourse
-that gave rise to the heroic minstrelsy—a faithful relation
-of the great deeds of German heroes during the migrations; but
-the minstrel boldly transforms the order of events, and brings
-together things which in reality took place at intervals of whole
-generations. Thus they sing of Hermanric, of Theodoric the
-Great (Dietrich the Strong, of Berne), and of his faithful knight
-Hildebrand; then of the fall of the Burgundian kings, of the
-far-ruling Attila, and of Sigurd, or Siegfried, who was originally
-a Northern god of spring, but here appears as a youthful hero,
-faithful and child-like, simple and unsuspicious, yet the mightiest
-of all—the complete image of the German character.</p>
-
-<p>These wild times of warfare and wandering could not, of
-course, favorably affect morals and character. They did much
-to root out of the minds and lives of the people their ancient
-heathen faith and practices. Their old gods were associated
-with places, scenes, features of the country and the climate;
-and, with these out of sight, the gods themselves were easily
-forgotten. Moreover, the local deities of other places and nations
-were brought into notice. The people’s religious habits
-were broken up, their minds confused, and thus they were better
-prepared than before to embrace the new and universal doctrines
-of Christianity. But the wanderings had a bad effect on
-morality in all forms. The upright German was still distinguished
-by his self-respect from the false, faithless, and cowardly
-“Welshman,” whose nature had become deformed through
-years of servitude. But Germans, too, were now often guilty of
-faithlessness and cruelty; and some tribes grew effeminate and
-corrupt, especially the Vandals in luxurious Africa. They imitated
-the style of the conquered in dress, arms, and manner of
-life; and some adopted their language also. For instance,
-even Theodoric the Great corresponded in Latin with foreign
-monarchs; and as early as the sixth and seventh centuries, the
-Germans recorded their own laws in Latin, the West Goths and
-Burgundians introducing the practice, which was followed by
-the Franks, Alemanni, Bavarians, and Langobards. These
-laws, and the prohibitions they contain, are the best sources of
-information upon the manners of the time, and especially upon
-the condition of the lower orders, the peasants, and the slaves.
-The most frequent cases provided are of bodily injuries, murder,
-wounds, and mutilations, showing that the warlike disposition
-had degenerated into cruelty and coarseness. For all these injuries,
-the weregeld, or ransom, was still a satisfaction. The
-life of a nobleman, that of a freeman, of a slave, and the members
-of the body—the eye, ear, nose, and hand—were assessed
-each at a fixed money valuation, to be paid by the aggressor,
-if he would not expose himself to the vengeance of the wronged
-man or his family. But crimes committed by peasants and
-slaves were punished by death, sometimes at the stake, where
-freemen might escape by paying a fine. The oaths of parties
-and witnesses were heard; and they were sustained by the
-oaths of others, their friends, relations, or partisans, who swore
-that they were to be believed. If an accused party swore that
-he was innocent, it was only necessary for him to obtain a sufficient
-number of compurgators, or jurors, of his own rank to
-swear that they believed him, in order to secure acquittal. But
-the number required was much larger for men of low rank
-than for the nobles; and the freedmen and slaves had no rights
-of the kind, but were tortured at will to compel them to confess
-or testify. The slaves were often tried by an ordeal, and were
-held guilty of any accusation if they could not put their hands
-into boiling water without harm. For freemen, if no other evidence
-were accessible, a trial by battle was adopted, as an appeal
-to God’s judgment. The heathen tribes in Germany proper—the
-Frisi, Saxons, Thuringians, and Alemanni—lived on in their
-old ways; yet they too failed to maintain the spotless character
-assigned them by Tacitus. It was a time of general ferment.
-The new elements of civilization had brought with them new
-vices, and the simplicity of earlier days could not survive.<a name="FNanchor_G_7" id="FNanchor_G_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_G_7" class="fnanchor">[G]</a></p>
-
-<p class="continue">
-[To be continued.]<br />
-</p>
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1">[A]</a> Bayard Taylor.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_B_2" id="Footnote_B_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_2">[B]</a> Tacitus.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_C_3" id="Footnote_C_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_C_3">[C]</a> Bayard Taylor.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_D_4" id="Footnote_D_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_D_4">[D]</a> Sime.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_E_5" id="Footnote_E_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_E_5">[E]</a> Lewis.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_F_6" id="Footnote_F_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_F_6">[F]</a> Sime.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_G_7" id="Footnote_G_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_G_7">[G]</a> Lewis.</p></div></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Right</span> well I know that improvement is a duty, and as we
-see man strives ever after a higher point, at least he seeks
-some novelty. But beware! for with these feelings Nature has
-given us also a desire to continue in the old ways, and to take
-pleasure in that to which we have been accustomed. Every
-condition of man is good which is natural and in accordance
-with reason. Man’s desires are boundless, but his wants are
-few. For his days are short, and his fate bounded by a narrow
-span. I find no fault with the man who, ever active and restless,
-crosses every sea and braves the rude extremes of every
-clime, daring and diligent in pursuit of gain, rejoicing his heart
-and house by wealth.—<i>Goethe.</i></p>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="GERMAN_LITERATURE" id="GERMAN_LITERATURE">GERMAN LITERATURE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>Among the Germans, as among all other nations, the earliest
-literature is poetical. Little is preserved of their ancient poetry,
-but Tacitus tells us that the Germans of his time had ancient
-songs relating to Tuisco and Mannus, and to the hero Arminius.
-It is the opinion of many critics that the stories of “Reynard,
-the Fox,” and “Isengrim, the Wolf,” may be traced back
-to these remote times. The legends of the “Nibelungenlied”
-have many marks of antiquity which would place them in this
-pre-historic age. The first definite period, however, is:</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I. The Early Middle Age.</span>—When the German tribes accepted
-Christianity, the clergy strove to replace the native
-poetry by the stories of the gospel. In the fourth century
-Bishop Ulfilas prepared a clear, faithful and simple translation
-of the Scriptures, which has since been of value in the study of
-the Teutonic languages. Charles the Great overpowered the
-effort the priests had made to check poetry by issuing orders to
-collect the old German ballads. But few of these treasures of
-Old High and Low German literature have come down to us.
-Later the Church still further counteracted the influences of
-pagan literature by a religious poetry in which the life of Christ
-was sung in verse. Scholastic learning was also zealously cultivated
-in the monasteries and schools.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">II. The Age of Chivalry.</span>—Under the Hohenstaufen dynasty
-during the period of Middle High German the country
-passed through one of the greatest epochs of its literature. The
-most characteristic outcome of this active era is a series of
-poetical romances produced in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries.
-In these romances the subject of whatever epoch it
-might be, was treated wholly in the spirit of chivalry, the supreme
-aim was to furnish an idealized picture of the virtues of
-knighthood. Wolfram von Eschenbach was one of the most
-brilliant of these writers; “Parzival,” his chief poem, is purely
-imaginative. The hero is made to pass from a life of dreams
-to one of adventure, finally to become lord of the palace of the
-Holy Grail. Its object is to show the restless spirit of the Middle
-Ages, which, continually discontent with life, sought a nobler
-place.</p>
-
-<p>Gottfried, of Strasburg, was a complete contrast to Wolfram
-and his greatest contemporary. Tristam and Iseult is his theme.
-Mediæval romance bore its richest fruit in these two poets, and
-most of their successors imitated either one or the other. To
-this age belongs the famous epic, the “Nibelungenlied,” in which
-many ancient ballads have been collected and arranged.
-“Gudrun” is another epic in which a poet of this period has given
-form to several old legends. But lyrics as well as romances
-and epics mark the age of chivalry. The poets of this class
-were known as <i>minnesänger</i> because their favorite theme was
-<i>minne</i> or love. Of all the <i>minnesänger</i> the first place belongs
-to Walther von der Vogelweide. He wrote poems of patriotism
-as well as on the usual subjects of lyric verse.</p>
-
-<p>To this epoch belong the beginnings of prose in German
-literature. Latin was the speech of scholars, and prose works
-were almost uniformly in that language. The “Sachenspiegel”
-and “Schwabenspiegel,” two collections of local laws, aroused
-interest among Germans in their language. The preachers,
-however, were the chief founders of prose style. Dissatisfied
-with the abuses and mere forms under which genuine spiritual
-life was crushed, they strove to awaken new and truer ideas of
-religion. A Franciscan monk, Berthold, and Eckhart are the
-two to whom most is due.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">III. The Later Middle Age.</span>—After the fall of the Hohenstaufen
-dynasty, chivalry died out in Germany, and with it the
-incentive to poetry. During the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries,
-attempts were made to produce poetry by rule. As every
-trade has its guild, so there was formed a guild of poetry, in
-which the members made their verses by the “<i>tabulatur</i>,” and
-were obliged to pass through successive stages up to the “<i>meistersänger</i>.”
-More important were the efforts at dramatic composition.
-They were crude representations of scriptural subjects,
-with which the clergy sought to replace the pagan festivals.
-Out of these representations grew the “mysteries,” or
-“miracle plays,” in which there was an endeavor to dramatize
-sacred subjects. “Shrove Tuesday plays” were dialogues, setting
-forth some scene of noisy fun, and were the first attempts
-at comedy.</p>
-
-<p>During the latter part of the fifteenth century there was in
-Germany, as in other European countries, a great revival of intellectual
-life. It was due to two things—the re-discovery of
-Greek literature and the invention of printing. In the universities
-a broader culture took the place of scholastic studies.
-Many books found their way to the people, but these were mainly
-on social questions. The tyranny of princes and abuses of the
-clergy were the topics for the times, and multitudes of books
-were written ridiculing princes, priests, nobles, and even the
-Pope. The greatest of these satires was “Reineke Vos,” by Barkhusen,
-a printer of Rostock. During this stirring period Maximilian
-I. was emperor, and attempted to revive the mediæval
-romance. His success was not great, and in no sense affected
-popular taste.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">IV. The Century of the Reformation.</span>—While the Renaissance
-brought about a great literary movement in England
-and France, and an artistic movement in Italy, in Germany the
-Reformation agitated the nation. Luther was the commanding
-spirit of the age in literature, as in religion. His greatest
-achievement was his translation of the Bible. For the first time
-a literary language was given to the nation. Luther gave to the
-men of all the countries of Germany a common speech, so that
-it is to him that the Germans owe the most essential of all the
-conditions of a national life and literature. Next to Luther
-stands Ulrich Von Hutten, an accomplished defender of the
-new culture and of the Reformation. Hans Sachs, the meistersänger
-of Nuremburg, is now acknowledged to be the chief German
-poet of the sixteenth century. He wrote more than six
-thousand poems. His hymn, “Warum betrübst du dich, mein
-Herz,” was soon translated into eight languages. The religious
-lyrics of this age were of superior worth. Indeed, next to the
-translation of the Bible, nothing did so much to unite the Protestants.
-During this century the drama made considerable progress.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">V. The Period of Decay.</span>—This period is in many respects
-the most dismal in German history. During the seventeenth
-century little poetry of worth was produced. No progress was
-made in the formation of the drama, and few prose works were
-written that are now tolerated. The one brilliant thinker of the
-age was Leibnitz.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">VI. The Period of Revival.</span>—With the accession of Frederick
-the Great, a stronger national life sprung up in Germany,
-and literature shared the growth. Several causes contributed
-to the advance of literature; the revival of classical learning,
-and a knowledge of English literature were chief. Several literary
-schools grew up. Important as were many of the writers
-in them, they exercised slight influence on the national mind
-compared with founders of the German classical literature—Klopstock,
-Wieland, and Lessing. Klopstock’s fame mainly
-rests on the “Messiah,” a work now little read, and if defective,
-yet full of striking and beautiful images. Klopstock’s odes are
-superior to his dramas, the latter showing knowledge neither of
-the stage nor of life. His influence upon intellectual life in
-Germany was very marked.</p>
-
-<p>Wieland was one of the most prolific of writers. “Oberon”
-is the most pleasing of his poems to modern readers, and by far
-most famous. “Agathon” is his best prose romance. Although
-at first a strong pietist, Wieland eventually became a pronounced
-epicurean. Lessing, the third of these great poets, is the only
-writer before Goethe that Germans now read sympathetically. As
-an imaginative writer he was chiefly distinguished in the drama,
-and his most important dramatic work is “Minna Von Barnhelm.”
-Superior to his imaginative works were his labors as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-thinker. His style ranks with the greatest European writers,
-and his criticisms are of great value.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">VII. The Classical Period.</span>—About 1770 there began in
-German literary life a curious movement called “<i>Sturm und
-Drang</i>” (storm and pressure). Almost all young writers were
-under its influence. Its most prominent quality was discontent
-with the existing world. The critical guide of the movement
-was Herder. To him is due the impulse which led to a collection
-of the songs and ballads of the people. His most important
-prose work was “Ideas Toward the Philosophy of the
-History of Humanity.” To Herder belongs the honor of stimulating
-the genius of Goethe, who holds in German literature
-the place of Shakspere in English. His extraordinary range of
-activity is his most wonderful characteristic. Goethe’s first
-published work placed him among the writers of the “<i>Sturm
-und Drang</i>” school, as was true of the earlier works of Schiller.
-The lyrics of Goethe have perhaps the most subtle charm of all
-his writings, but “Hermann und Dorothea,” “Wilhelm Meister,”
-“Faust,” etc., are his great productions. Schiller, Goethe’s
-great rival, divided with him the public attention and interest.
-Schiller’s literary career began when he was only twenty-two.
-“The Robbers” and “Don Carlos” are his principal early works.
-It was in 1794 that Goethe and Schiller began that acquaintance
-which ripened into one of the most beautiful friendships in the
-history of literature. They wrote in common on Schiller’s journal
-“Die Horen,” and many of Schiller’s works were influenced
-by the larger life of his friend. This is particularly true of his
-dramas, “Wallenstein,” “Die Jungfrau von Orleans,” “Maria
-Stuart,” and “Wilhelm Tell.”</p>
-
-<p>In 1781 one of the most important works of German literature
-was published—Kant’s “Kritik der Reinen Vernunft.” The
-philosophical systems of Fichte, Schelling and Hegel followed,
-and excited even greater interest than the writings of the imaginative
-writers.</p>
-
-<p>Each of the leading writers of the classical period had numerous
-followers, but the most important band was that which
-at first grew up around Goethe—the romantic school. The aim
-of the school was to revive mediævalism—to link daily life to
-poetry. The writer known as the prophet of the school was
-Frederick von Hardenburg, generally called Novalis. The
-critical leaders were Wilhelm and Friedrich von Schlegel.
-Tieck, Nackenroder, Fouquè, and Schleiermacher were the
-chief writers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">VIII. The Latest Period.</span>—In 1832, with the death of
-Goethe, a new era began in German literature. In philosophy
-the school of Hegel, who wrote during the lifetime of Goethe,
-has had many enthusiastic adherents; among these were
-Strauss, Ruge and Feuerbach. Schopenhauer, although he
-wrote his chief book during the time of Goethe at present stirs
-deeper interest than any other thinker.</p>
-
-<p>In imaginative literature the greatest writer of the latest period
-is Heinrich Heine, whose lyrics have attracted general attention.
-The novel has acquired the same important place in Germany
-as in England. Among the chief novelists are Freytag, the
-Countess Ida Hahn-Hahn, Paul Heyse, Spielhagen and Reuter.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Everything</span> that regards statesmanship and the interest of
-the world is in all outward respects of the greatest importance;
-it creates and destroys in a moment the happiness, even the
-very existence, of thousands, but when the wave of the moment
-has rushed past, and the storm has abated, its influence
-is lost, and even frequently disappears without leaving a trace
-behind. Many other things that are noiselessly influencing the
-thoughts and feelings often make far deeper and more lasting
-impressions on us. Man can for the most part keep himself
-very independent of all that does not trench on his private life—a
-very wise arrangement of Providence, since it gives a much
-greater security to human happiness.—<i>William von Humboldt.</i></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="PHYSICAL_SCIENCE" id="PHYSICAL_SCIENCE">PHYSICAL SCIENCE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<h3>II.—THE CIRCULATION OF WATER ON THE LAND.</h3>
-
-<p>Although air is continually evaporating water from the surface
-of the earth, and continually restoring it again by condensation,
-yet, on the whole and in the course of years, there seems
-to be no sensible gain or loss of water in our seas, lakes, and
-rivers; so that the two processes of evaporation and condensation
-balance each other.</p>
-
-<p>It is evident, however, that the moisture precipitated at any
-moment from the air is not at once evaporated again. The disappearance
-of the water is due in part to evaporation, but only
-in part. A great deal of it goes out of sight in other ways.</p>
-
-<p>The rain which falls upon the sea is the largest part of the
-whole rainfall of the globe, because the surface of the sea is
-about three times greater than that of the land. All this rain
-gradually mingles with the salt water, and can then be no longer
-recognized. It thus helps to make up for the loss which the sea
-is always suffering by evaporation. For the sea is the great
-evaporating surface whence most of the vapor of the atmosphere
-is derived.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, the total amount of rain which falls upon
-the land of the globe must be enormous. It has been estimated,
-for example, that about sixty-eight cubic miles of water annually
-descend as rain even upon the surface of the British Isles, and
-there are many much more rainy regions. If you inquire about
-this rain which falls upon the land, you will find that it does
-not at once disappear, but begins another kind of circulation.
-Watch what happens during a shower of rain. If the shower is
-heavy, you will notice little runs of muddy water coursing down
-the streets or roads, or flowing out of the ridges of the fields.
-Follow one of the runs. It leads into some drain or brook, that
-into some larger stream, the stream into a river; and the river,
-if you follow it far enough, will bring you to the sea. Now think
-of all the brooks and rivers of the world, where this kind of
-transport of water is going on, and you will at once see how
-vast must be the part of the rain which flows off the land into
-the ocean.</p>
-
-<p>But does the whole of the rain flow off at once into the sea in
-this way? A good deal of the rain which falls upon the land
-must sink underground and gather there. You may think that
-surely the water which disappears in that way must be finally
-withdrawn from the general circulation which we have been
-tracing. When it sinks below the surface, how can it ever get
-up to the surface again?</p>
-
-<p>Yet, if you consider for a little, you will be convinced that whatever
-becomes of it underneath, it can not be lost. If all the rain
-which sinks into the ground be forever removed from the surface
-circulation, you will at once see that the quantity of water
-upon the earth’s surface must be constantly and visibly diminishing.
-But no such changes, so far as can be seen, are really
-taking place. In spite of the rain which disappears into the
-ground, the circulation of water between the air, the land, and
-the sea continues without perceptible diminution.</p>
-
-<p>You are driven to conclude, therefore, that there must be some
-means whereby the water underground is brought back to the
-surface. This is done by springs, which gush out of the earth,
-and bring up water to feed the brooks and rivers, whereby it is
-borne into the sea. Here, then, are two distinct courses which
-the rainfall takes—one below ground, and one above. It will
-be most convenient to follow the underground portion first.</p>
-
-<p>A little attention to the soils and rocks which form the surface
-of a country is enough to show that they differ greatly from each
-other in hardness, and in texture or grain. Some are quite
-loose and porous, others are tough and close-grained. They
-consequently differ much in the quantity of water they allow to
-pass through them. A bed of sand, for example, is pervious;
-that is, will let water sink through it freely, because the little
-grains of sand lie loosely together, touching each other only at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-some points, so as to leave empty spaces between. The water
-readily finds its way among these empty spaces. In fact, the
-sand-bed may become a kind of sponge, quite saturated with
-the water which has filtered down from the surface. A bed of
-clay, on the other hand, is impervious; it is made up of very
-small particles fitting closely to each other, and therefore offering
-resistance to the passage of water. Wherever such a bed
-occurs, it hinders the free passage of the water, which, unable
-to sink through it from above on the way down, or from below on
-the way up to the surface again, is kept in by the clay, and
-forced to find another line of escape.</p>
-
-<p>Sandy soils are dry because the rain at once sinks through
-them; clay soils are wet because they retain the water, and
-prevent it from freely descending into the earth.</p>
-
-<p>Now the rocks beneath us, besides being in many cases porous
-in their texture, such as sandstone, are all more or less
-traversed with cracks—sometimes mere lines, like those of a
-cracked window-pane, but sometimes wide and open clefts and
-tunnels. These numerous channels serve as passages for the
-underground water. Hence, although a rock may be so hard
-and close-grained that water does not soak through it at all,
-yet if that rock is plentifully supplied with these cracks, it may
-allow a large quantity of water to pass through. Limestone, for
-example, is a very hard rock, through the grains of which water
-can make but little way; yet it is so full of cracks or “joints,”
-as they are called, and these joints are often so wide, that they
-give passage to a great deal of water.</p>
-
-<p>In hilly districts, where the surface of the ground has not been
-brought under the plow, you will notice that many places are
-marshy and wet, even when the weather has long been dry.
-The soil everywhere around has perhaps been baked quite hard
-by the sun; but these places remain still wet, in spite of the
-heat. Whence do they get their water? Plainly not directly
-from the air, for in that case the rest of the ground would also
-be damp. They get it not from above, but from below. It is
-oozing out of the ground; and it is this constant outcome of
-water from below which keeps the ground wet and marshy. In
-other places you will observe that the water does not merely
-soak through the ground, but gives rise to a little run of clear
-water. If you follow such a run up to its source, you will see
-that it comes gushing out of the ground as a spring.</p>
-
-<p>Springs are the natural outlets for the underground water.
-But, you ask, why should this water have any outlets, and what
-makes it rise to the surface?</p>
-
-<p>Let us suppose that a flat layer of some impervious rock, like
-clay, underlies another layer of a porous material, like sand.
-The rain which falls on the surface of the ground, and sinks
-through the upper bed, will be arrested by the lower one, and
-made either to gather there, or find its escape along the surface
-of that lower bed. If a hollow or valley should have its bottom
-below the level of the line along which the water flows, springs
-will gush out along the sides of the valley. The line of escape
-may be either the junction between two different kinds of rock,
-or some of the numerous joints already referred to. Whatever
-it be, the water can not help flowing onward and downward,
-as long as there is any passage along which it can find its way;
-and the rocks underneath are so full of cracks, that it has no
-difficulty in doing so.</p>
-
-<p>But it must happen that a great deal of the underground
-water descends far below the level of the valleys, and even below
-the level of the sea. And yet, though it should descend for
-several miles, it comes at last to the surface again. To realize
-clearly how this takes place, let us follow a particular drop of
-water from the time when it sinks into the earth as rain, to the
-time when, after a long journey up and down in the bowels of the
-earth, it once more reaches the surface. It soaks through the
-soil together with other drops, and joins some feeble trickle, or
-some more ample flow of water, which works its way through
-crevices and tunnels of the rocks. It sinks in this way to
-perhaps a depth of several thousand feet, until it reaches some
-rock through which it can not readily make further way. Unable
-to work its way downward, the pent-up water must try to
-find escape in some other direction. By the pressure from
-above it is driven through other cracks and passages, winding
-up and down until at last it comes to the surface again. It
-breaks out there as a gushing spring.</p>
-
-<p>Rain is water nearly in a state of purity. After journeying up
-and down underground it comes out again in springs, always
-more or less mingled with other materials, which it gets from
-the rocks through which it travels. They are not visible to the
-eye, for they are held in what is called chemical solution. When
-you put a few grains of salt or sugar upon a plate, and pour
-water over them, they are dissolved in the water and disappear.
-They enter into union with the water. You can not see them,
-but you can still recognize their presence by the taste which
-they give to the water which holds them in solution. So water,
-sinking from the soil downward, dissolves a little of the substance
-of the subterranean rocks, and carries this dissolved material
-up to the surface of the ground. One of the important ingredients
-in the air is carbonic acid gas, and this substance
-is both abstracted from and supplied to the air by plants and
-animals. In descending through the atmosphere rain absorbs
-a little air. As ingredients of the air, a little carbonic acid gas,
-particles of dust and soot, noxious vapors, minute organisms,
-and other substances floating in the air, are caught up by the
-descending rain, which in this way washes the air, and tends
-to keep it much more wholesome than it would otherwise be.</p>
-
-<p>But rain not merely picks up impurities from the air, it gets a
-large addition when it reaches the soil.</p>
-
-<p>Armed with the carbonic acid which it gets from the air, and
-with the larger quantity which it abstracts from the soil, rainwater
-is prepared to attack rocks, and to eat into them in a
-way which pure water could not do.</p>
-
-<p>Water containing carbonic acid has a remarkable effect on
-many rocks, even on some of the very hardest. It dissolves
-more or less of their substance, and removes it. When it falls,
-for instance, on chalk or limestone, it almost entirely dissolves
-and carries away the rock in solution, though still remaining
-clear and limpid. In countries where chalk or limestone is an
-abundant rock, this action of water is sometimes singularly
-shown in the way in which the surface of the ground is worn
-into hollows. In such districts, too, the springs are always hard;
-that is, they contain much mineral matter in solution, whereas
-rainwater and springs which contain little impurity are termed
-soft.</p>
-
-<p>When a stone building has stood for a few hundred years, the
-smoothly-dressed face which its walls received from the mason
-is usually gone. Again, in the burying-ground surrounding a
-venerable church you see the tombstones more and more mouldered
-the older they are. This crumbling away of hard stone
-with the lapse of time is a common familiar fact to you. But
-have you ever wondered why it should be so? What makes
-the stone decay, and what purpose is served by the process?</p>
-
-<p>If it seem strange to you to be told that the surface of
-the earth is crumbling away, you should take every opportunity
-of verifying the statement. Examine your own district.
-You will find proofs that, in spite of their apparent steadfastness,
-even the hardest stones are really crumbling down. In
-short, wherever rocks are exposed to the air they are liable to
-decay. Now let us see how this change is brought about.</p>
-
-<p>First of all we must return for a moment to the action of carbonic
-acid, which has been already described. You remember
-that rainwater abstracts a little carbonic acid from the air, and
-that, when it sinks under the earth, it is enabled by means of the
-acid to eat away some parts of the rocks beneath. The same
-action takes place with the rain, which rests upon or flows over
-the surface of the ground. The rainwater dissolves out little by
-little such portions of the rocks as it can remove. In the case of
-some rocks, such as limestone, the whole, or almost the whole,
-of the substance of the rock is carried away in solution. In<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-other kinds, the portion dissolved is the cementing material
-whereby the mass of the rock was bound together; so that when
-it is taken away, the rock crumbles into mere earth or sand,
-which is readily washed away by the rain. Hence one of the
-causes of the mouldering of stone is the action of the carbonic
-acid taken up by the rain.</p>
-
-<p>In the second place, the oxygen of the portion of air contained
-in rainwater helps to decompose rocks. When a piece of iron
-has been exposed for a time to the weather, in a damp climate,
-it rusts. This rust is a compound substance, formed by the
-union of oxygen with iron. What happens to an iron railing or
-a steel knife, happens also, though not so quickly nor so strongly,
-to many rocks. They, too, rust by absorbing oxygen. A crust
-of corroded rock forms on their surface, and, when it is knocked
-off by the rain, a fresh layer of rock is reached by the ever-present
-and active oxygen.</p>
-
-<p>In the third place, the surface of many parts of the world is
-made to crumble down by means of frost. Sometimes during
-winter, when the cold gets very keen, pipes full of water burst,
-and jugs filled with water crack from top to bottom. The reason
-of this lies in the fact that water expands in freezing. Ice
-requires more space than the water would if it remained fluid.
-When ice forms within a confined space, it exerts a great pressure
-on the sides of the vessel, or cavity, which contains it. If
-these sides are not strong enough to bear the strain to which
-they are put, they must yield, and therefore they crack.</p>
-
-<p>You have learned how easily rain finds its way through
-soil. Even the hardest rocks are more or less porous, and take
-in some water. Hence, when winter comes the ground is full of
-moisture; not in the soil merely, but in the rocks. And so, as
-frost sets in, this pervading moisture freezes. Now, precisely the
-same kind of action takes place with each particle of water, as
-in the case of the water in the burst water-pipe or the cracked jar.
-It does not matter whether the water is collected into some hole
-or crevice, or is diffused between the grains of the rocks and the
-soil. When it freezes it expands, and in so doing tries to push
-asunder the walls between which it is confined.</p>
-
-<p>Water freezes not only between the component grains, but in
-the numerous crevices or joints, as they are called, by which
-rocks are traversed. You have, perhaps, noticed that on the
-face of a cliff, or in a quarry, the rock is cut through by lines
-running more or less in an upright direction, and that by means
-of these lines the rock is split up by nature, and can be divided
-by the quarrymen into large four-sided blocks or pillars. These
-lines, or joints, have been already referred to as passages for
-water in descending from the surface. You can understand that
-only a very little water may be admitted at a time into a joint.
-But by degrees the joint widens a little, and allows more water
-to enter. Every time the water freezes it tries hard to push
-asunder the two sides of the joint. After many winters, it is at
-last able to separate them a little; then more water enters, and
-more force is exerted in freezing, until at last the block of rock
-traversed by the joint is completely split up. When this takes
-place along the face of a cliff, one of the loosened parts may
-fall and actually roll down to the bottom of the precipice.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to carbonic acid, oxygen, and frost, there are still
-other influences at work by which the surface of the earth is
-made to crumble. For example, when, during the day, rocks
-are highly heated by strong sunshine, and then during night are
-rapidly cooled by radiation, the alternate expansion and contraction
-caused by the extremes of temperature loosen the particles
-of the stone, causing them to crumble away, or even making
-successive crusts of the stone fall off.</p>
-
-<p>Again, rocks which are at one time well soaked with rain,
-and at another time are liable to be dried by the sun’s rays
-and by wind, are apt to crumble away. If then it be true, as it
-is, that a general wasting of the surface of the land goes on,
-you may naturally ask why this should be. Out of the crumbled
-stones all soil is made, and on the formation and renewal
-of the soil we depend for our daily food.</p>
-
-<p>Take up a handful of soil from any field or garden, and look
-at it attentively. What is it made of? You see little pieces of
-crumbling stone, particles of sand and clay, perhaps a few vegetable
-fibers; and the whole soil has a dark color from the decayed
-remains of plants and animals diffused through it. Now
-let us try to learn how these different materials have been brought
-together.</p>
-
-<p>Every drop of rain which falls upon the land helps to alter
-the surface. You have followed the chemical action of rain
-when it dissolves parts of rocks. It is by the constant repetition
-of the process, drop after drop, and shower after shower, for
-years together, that the rocks become so wasted and worn. But
-the rain has also a mechanical action.</p>
-
-<p>Watch what happens when the first pattering drops of a
-shower begin to fall upon a smooth surface of sand, such as
-that of a beach. Each drop makes a little dint or impression.
-It thus forces aside the grains of sand. On sloping ground,
-where the drops can run together and flow downward, they are
-able to push or carry the particles of sand or clay along. This
-is called a mechanical action; while the actual solution of the
-particles, as you would dissolve sugar or salt, is a chemical
-action. Each drop of rain may act in either or both of these
-ways.</p>
-
-<p>Now you will readily see how it is that rain does so much in
-the destruction of rocks. It not only dissolves out some parts
-of them, and leaves a crumbling crust on the surface, but it
-washes away this crust, and thereby exposes a fresh surface to
-decay. There is in this way a continual pushing along of powdered
-stone over the earth’s surface. Part of this material accumulates
-in hollows, and on sloping or level ground; part is
-swept into the rivers, and carried away into the sea. As the
-mouldering of the surface of the land is always going on, there
-is a constant formation of soil. Indeed, if this were not the
-case, if after a layer of soil had been formed upon the ground,
-it were to remain there unmoved and unrenewed, the plants
-would by degrees take out of it all the earthy materials they
-could, and leave it in a barren or exhausted state. But some
-of it is being slowly carried away by rain, fresh particles from
-mouldering rocks are being washed over it by the same agent,
-while the rock or sub-soil underneath is all the while decaying
-into soil. The loose stones, too, are continually crumbling
-down and making new earth. And thus, day by day, the soil
-is slowly renewed.</p>
-
-<p>Plants, also, help to form and renew the soil. They send
-their roots among the grains and joints of the stones, and loosen
-them. Their decaying fibers supply most of the carbonic acid
-by which these stones are attacked, and furnish also most of
-the organic matter in the soil. Even the common worms, which
-you see when you dig up a spadeful of earth, are of great service
-in mixing the soil and bringing what lies underneath up to
-the surface.</p>
-
-<p>One part of the rain sinks under the ground, and you have
-traced its progress there until it comes to the surface again. You
-have now to trace, in a similar way, the other portion of the rainfall
-which flows along the surface in brooks and rivers.</p>
-
-<p>You can not readily meet with a better illustration of this subject
-than that which is furnished by a gently sloping road during
-a heavy shower of rain. Let us suppose that you know
-such a road, and that just as the rain is beginning you take up
-your station at some part where the road has a well-marked descent.
-At first you notice that each of the large heavy drops of
-rain makes in the dust, or sand, one of the little dints or rain-prints
-already described. As the shower gets heavier these
-rain-prints are effaced, and the road soon streams with water.
-Now mark in what manner the water moves.</p>
-
-<p>Looking at the road more narrowly, you remark that it is full
-of little roughnesses—at one place a long rut, at another a projecting
-stone, with many more inequalities which your eye could
-not easily detect when the road was dry, but which the water at
-once discloses. Every little dimple and projection affects the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-flow of the water. You see how the raindrops gather together
-into slender streamlets of running water which course along the
-hollows, and how the jutting stones and pieces of earth seem to
-turn these streamlets now to one side and now to another.</p>
-
-<p>Toward the top of the slope only feeble runnels of water are
-to be seen. But further down they become fewer in number,
-and at the same time larger in size. They unite as they descend;
-and the larger and swifter streamlets at the foot of the
-descent are thus made up of a great many smaller ones from
-the higher parts of the slope.</p>
-
-<p>Why does the water run down the sloping road? why do
-rivers flow? and why should they always move constantly in the
-same direction? They do so for the same reason that a stone
-falls to the ground when it drops out of your hand; because
-they are under the sway of that attraction toward the center of
-the earth, to which, as you know, the name of gravity is given.
-Every drop of rain falls to the earth because it is drawn downward
-by the force of this attraction. When it reaches the ground
-it is still, as much as ever, under the same influence; and it
-flows downward in the readiest channel it can find. Its fall
-from the clouds to the earth is direct and rapid; its descent
-from the mountains to the sea, as part of a stream, is often long
-and slow; but the cause of the movement is the same in either
-case. The winding to and fro of streams, the rush of rapids,
-the roar of cataracts, the noiseless flow of the deep sullen currents,
-are all proofs how paramount is the sway of the law of
-gravity over the waters of the globe.</p>
-
-<p>Drawn down in this way by the action of gravity, all that portion
-of the rain which does not sink into the earth must at once
-begin to move downward along the nearest slopes, and continue
-flowing until it can get no further. On the surface of the land
-there are hollows called lakes, which arrest part of the flowing
-water, just as there are hollows on the road which serve to collect
-some of the rain. But in most cases they let the water run
-out at the lower end as fast as it runs in at the upper, and therefore
-do not serve as permanent resting places for the water.
-The streams which escape from lakes go on as before, working
-their way to the seashore. So that the course of all streams is
-a downward one; and the sea is the great reservoir into which
-the water of the land is continually pouring.</p>
-
-<p>The brooks and rivers of a country are thus the natural drains,
-by which the surplus rainfall, not required by the soil or by
-springs, is led back again into the sea. When we consider the
-great amount of rain, and the enormous number of brooks in
-the higher parts of the country, it seems, at first, hardly possible
-for all these streams to reach the sea without overflowing the
-lower grounds. But this does not take place; for when two
-streams unite into one, they do not require a channel twice as
-broad as either of their single water-courses. On the contrary,
-such an union gives rise to a stream which is not so broad as
-either of the two from which it flows. But it becomes swifter
-and deeper.</p>
-
-<p>Let us return to the illustration of the roadway in rain. Starting
-from the foot of the slope, you found the streamlets of rain
-getting smaller and smaller, and when you came to the top there
-were none at all. If, however, you were to descend the road on
-the other side of the ridge, you would probably meet with
-other streamlets coursing down-hill in the opposite direction.
-At the summit the rain seems to divide, part flowing off to one
-side, and part to the other.</p>
-
-<p>In the same way, were you to ascend some river from the sea,
-you would watch it becoming narrower as you traced it inland,
-and branching more and more into tributary streams, and these
-again subdividing into almost endless little brooks. But take
-any of the branches which unite to form the main stream, and
-trace it upward. You come, in the end, to the first beginnings
-of a little brook, and going a little further you reach the summit,
-down the other side of which all the streams are flowing to
-the opposite quarter. The line which separates two sets of
-streams in this way is called the water-shed. In England, for
-example, one series of rivers flows into the Atlantic, another into
-the North Sea. If you trace upon a map a line separating all
-the upper streams of the one side from those of the other, that
-line will mark the water-shed of the country.</p>
-
-<p>But there is one important point where the illustration of the
-road in rain quite fails. It is only when rain is falling, or immediately
-after a heavy shower, that the rills are seen upon the
-road. When the rain ceases the water begins to dry up, till in
-a short time the road becomes once more firm and dusty. But
-the brooks and rivers do not cease to flow when the rain ceases
-to fall. In the heat of summer, when perhaps there has been
-no rain for many days together, the rivers still roll on, smaller
-usually than they were in winter, but still with ample flow.
-What keeps them full? If you remember what you have already
-been told about underground water, you will answer that rivers
-are fed by springs as well as by rain.</p>
-
-<p>Though the weather may be rainless, the springs continue to
-give out their supplies of water, and these keep the rivers going.
-But if great drought comes, many of the springs, particularly
-the shallow ones, cease to flow, and the rivers fed by them shrink
-up or get dry altogether. The great rivers of the globe, such
-as the Mississippi, drain such vast territories, that any mere
-local rain or drought makes no sensible difference in their
-mass of water.</p>
-
-<p>In some parts of the world, however, the rivers are larger in
-summer and autumn than they are in winter and spring. The
-Rhine, for instance, begins to rise as the heat of summer increases,
-and to fall as the cold of winter comes on. This happens
-because the river has its source among snowy mountains.
-Snow melts rapidly in summer, and the water which streams
-from it finds its way into the brooks and rivers, which are thereby
-greatly swollen. In winter, on the other hand, the snow remains
-unmelted; the moisture which falls from the air upon the
-mountains is chiefly snow; and the cold is such as to freeze the
-brooks. Hence the supplies of water at the sources of these
-rivers are, in winter, greatly diminished, and the rivers themselves
-become proportionately smaller.</p>
-
-<p class="continue">
-[To be continued.]<br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-<h2><a name="SUNDAY_READINGS" id="SUNDAY_READINGS">SUNDAY READINGS.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">Selected by <span class="smcap">Rev.</span> J. H. VINCENT, D.D.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<h3>[<i><a id="Sunday_November_4"></a>Sunday, November 4.</i>]<br />
-
-MORAL DISTINCTIONS NOT SUFFICIENTLY REGARDED
-IN SOCIAL INTERCOURSE.</h3>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“He that walketh with wise men shall be wise; but a companion of
-fools shall be destroyed.”—<i>Proverbs xiii:20.</i></p></div>
-
-<p>That “a man may be known by the company he keeps,” has
-passed into a proverb among all nations, thus attesting what
-has been the universal experience. The fact would seem to be
-that a man’s associates either find him, or make him like themselves.
-An acute but severe critic of manners, who was too often
-led by his disposition and circumstances to sink the philosopher
-in the satirist, has said: “Nothing is so contagious as example.
-Never was there any considerable good or ill action,
-that hath not produced its like. We imitate good ones through
-emulation; and bad ones through that malignity in our nature,
-which shame conceals, and example sets at liberty.”</p>
-
-<p>This being the case, or anything like it, all, I think, must
-agree that moral distinctions are not sufficiently cared for in
-social intercourse. In forming our intimacies we are sometimes
-determined by the mere accident of being thrown together;
-sometimes by a view to connections and social position; sometimes
-by the fascination of what are called companionable qualities;
-seldom, I fear, by thoughtful and serious regard to the
-influence they are likely to have on character. We forget that
-other attractions, of whatsoever nature, instead of compensating
-for moral unfitness in a companion, only have the effect to make
-such unfitness the more to be dreaded.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Let me introduce what I have to say on the importance of
-paying more regard to moral distinctions in the choice of friends,
-by a few remarks on what are called, by way of distinction,
-companionable qualities, and on the early manifestation of a
-free, sociable, confiding turn of mind. Most parents hail the
-latter, I believe, as the best of prognostics; and in some respects
-it is. It certainly makes the child more interesting as a child,
-and more easily governed; it often passes for precocity of talent;
-at any rate, men are willing to construe it into evidence of
-the facility with which he will make his way in the world. The
-father is proud of such a son; the mother idolizes him. If from
-any cause he is brought into comparison with a reserved, awkward,
-and unyielding boy in the neighborhood, they are ready
-enough to felicitate themselves, and others are ready enough to
-congratulate them, on the difference. And yet I believe I keep
-within bounds, when I say that, of the two, there is more than
-an even chance that the reserved, awkward, and unyielding boy
-will give his parents less occasion for anxiety and mortification,
-and become in the end the wiser and better man. The reason
-is, that if a child from natural facility of disposition is easily won
-over to good courses, he is also, from the same cause, liable at
-any time to be seduced from these good courses into bad ones.
-On the contrary, where a child, from rigor or stubbornness of
-temper, is peculiarly hard to subdue or manage, there is this
-hope for a compensation: if by early training, or the experience
-of life, or a wise foresight of consequences, he is once set right,
-he is almost sure to keep so.</p>
-
-<p>It is not enough considered, that, in the present constitution
-of society, men are not in so much danger from want of good
-dispositions, as from want of firmness and steadiness of purpose.
-Hence it is that gentle and affectionate minds, more perhaps
-than any others, stand in need of solid principle and fixed habits
-of virtue and piety, as a safeguard against the lures and fascinations
-of the world. A man of a cold, hard, and ungenial
-nature is comparatively safe so far as the temptations of society
-go: partly because of this very impracticableness of his nature,
-and partly because his companionship is not likely to be desired
-or sought even by the bad: he will be left to himself. The corrupters
-of innocence in social intercourse single out for their
-prey men of companionable qualities. Through his companionable
-qualities the victim is approached, and by his companionable
-qualities he is betrayed.</p>
-
-<p>Let me not be misunderstood. Companionable qualities are
-not objected to <i>as such</i>. When they spring from genuine goodness
-of heart, and are the ornament of an upright life, they are
-as respectable as they are amiable; and it would be well if
-Christians and all good men cultivated them more than they do.
-If we would make virtue and religion to be loved, we must
-make <i>ourselves</i> to be loved <i>for</i> our virtue and religion; which
-would be done if we were faithful to carry the gentleness and
-charity of the gospel into our manners as well as into our morals.
-Nevertheless, we insist that companionable qualities,
-when they have no better source than a sociable disposition,
-or, worse still, an easy temper and loose principles, are full of
-danger to their possessor, and full of danger to the community;
-especially where, from any cause, but little regard is paid to moral
-distinctions in social intercourse. We also say, that in such a
-state of society the danger will be most imminent to those
-whom we should naturally be most anxious to save—I mean,
-persons of a loving and yielding turn of mind.</p>
-
-
-<h3>[<i><a id="Sunday_November_11"></a>Sunday, November 11.</i>]</h3>
-
-<p>And this brings me back again to the position taken in the
-beginning of this discourse. The reason why companionable
-qualities are attended with so much danger is, that society itself
-is attended with so much danger; and the reason why society is
-attended with so much danger is, that social intercourse is not
-more under the control of moral principles, moral rules, and
-moral sanctions.</p>
-
-<p>My argument does not make it necessary to exaggerate the
-evils and dangers of modern society. I am willing to suppose
-that there have been times when society was much less pure
-than it is now; and again, that there are places where it is
-much less pure than it is here; but it does not follow that there
-are no evils or dangers now and here. On the contrary, it is
-easy to see that there may be stages in the progressive improvement
-of society, where the improvement itself will have
-the effect, not to lessen, but to increase the danger, <i>so far as
-good men are concerned</i>. In a community where vice abounds,
-where the public manners are notoriously and grossly corrupt,
-good men are put on their guard. They will not be injured
-by such society, for they will have nothing to do with it.
-A broad line of demarcation is drawn between what is expected
-from good men, and what is expected from bad men; so that
-the example of the latter has no effect on the former except to
-admonish and to warn. But let the work of refinement and
-reform go on in general society until vice is constrained to wear
-a decent exterior, until an air of decorum and respectability is
-thrown over all public meetings and amusements, and one
-consequence will be that the distinction between Christians and
-the world will not be so clearly seen, or so carefully observed,
-as before. The standard of the world, from the very fact that
-it is brought nearer to the standard of the gospel, will be more
-frequently confounded with it; Christians will feel at liberty to
-do whatever the world does, and the danger is, that they will
-come at length to do it from the same principles.</p>
-
-<p>Besides, are we sure that we have not formed too favorable
-an opinion of the moral condition of general society—of that
-general society in the midst of which we are now living, and to
-the influence of which we are daily and hourly exposed? We
-should remember that in pronouncing on the character of
-public opinion and public sentiment, we are very likely to be
-affected and determined ourselves, not a little, by the fact that
-we share in that very public opinion and public sentiment
-which we are called upon to judge. I have no doubt that virtue,
-in general, is esteemed by the world, or that, <i>other things
-being equal</i>, a man of integrity will be preferred on account of
-his integrity. But this is not enough. It shows that the multitude
-see, and are willing to acknowledge, the dignity and worth
-of an upright course; but it does not prove them to have that
-<i>abhorrence for sin</i>, which it is the purpose and the tendency of
-the gospel to plant in all minds. If they had this settled and
-rooted abhorrence for sin, which marks the Christian, and
-without which a man can not be a Christian, they would not
-prefer virtue to vice, “other things being equal,” but they would
-do so whether other things were equal or not; they would
-knowingly keep no terms with vice, however recommended or
-glossed over by interest or worldly favor, or refined and elegant
-manners.</p>
-
-<p>Now, I ask whether general society, even as it exists amongst
-us, will bear this test? Is it not incontestable that very unscrupulous
-and very dangerous men, if they happen to be men
-of talents, or men of fashion, or men of peculiarly engaging
-manners, find but little difficulty in insinuating themselves into
-what is called good society; nay, are often among those who
-are most courted and caressed? Some vices, I know, are understood
-to put one under the social ban; but it is because they
-offend, not merely against morality and religion, but against
-taste, against good-breeding, against certain conventions of the
-world. To be convinced of this it is only necessary to observe
-that the same, or even a much larger amount of acknowledged
-criminality, manifested under other forms, is not found to be
-attended with the same result. The mischiefs of this state of
-things are felt by all; but especially by those who are growing
-up in what are generally accounted the most favored walks of
-life. On entering into society they see men of known profligacy
-mingling in the best circles, and with the best people, if
-not indeed on terms of entire sympathy and confidence, at
-least on those of the utmost possible respect and courtesy. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-see all this, and they see it every day; and it is by such flagrant
-inconsistencies in those they look up to for guidance,
-more perhaps than by any other one cause, that their own
-principles and their own faith are undermined. And besides,
-being thus encouraged and countenanced in associating with
-dissipated and profligate men in what is called good society,
-they will be apt to construe it into liberty to associate with them
-<i>anywhere</i>. At any rate the intimacy is begun. As society is
-constituted at present, corrupting intimacies are not infrequently
-begun amidst all the decencies of life, and, it may be,
-in the presence and under the countenance and sanction of
-parents and virtuous friends, which are afterward renewed and
-consummated, and this too by an easy, natural, and almost
-necessary gradation, amidst scenes of excess—perhaps in the
-haunts of ignominy and crime.</p>
-
-
-<h3>[<i><a id="Sunday_November_18"></a>Sunday, November 18.</i>]</h3>
-
-<p>If one should propose a reform in this respect, I am aware of
-the difficulties and objections that would stand in his way.</p>
-
-<p>Some would affirm it to be impracticable in the nature of
-things. They would reason thus: “The circle in which a man
-visits and moves is made for him, and not by him: at any rate,
-it is not, and can not be, determined by moral considerations
-alone. Something depends on education; something on family
-connections or mere vicinity; something on similarity in
-tastes and pursuits; something also on equality or approximation
-in wealth and standing. A poor man, or a man having a
-bare competency, if he is as virtuous and industrious, is just as
-<i>respectable</i> as a rich man; but it is plain that he can not pitch
-his style of living, or his style of hospitality, on the same scale
-of expense. It is better for both, therefore, that they should
-visit in different circles.” Perhaps it is; but what then? I am
-not recommending an amalgamation of the different classes in
-society. I suppose that such an amalgamation would neither
-be practicable nor desirable in the existing state of things. All
-I contend for is, that in every class, open and gross immorality
-of any kind should exclude a man from reputable company.
-Will any one say that this is impracticable? Let a man, through
-untoward events, but not by any fault or neglect of his own, be
-reduced in his circumstances,—let a man become generally
-odious, not in consequence of any immorality, but because, perhaps,
-he has embraced the unpopular side in politics or religion—let
-a man omit some trifling formality which is construed into
-a vulgarity, or a personal affront, and people do not appear to
-find much difficulty in dropping the acquaintance. If, then, it
-is so easy a thing to drop a man’s acquaintance for other reasons,
-and for no reason,—from mere prejudice, from mere caprice,—will
-it still be pretended that it can not be done at the
-command of duty and religion?</p>
-
-<p>Again, it may be objected that, if you banish a man from general
-society for his immoralities, you will drive him to despair,
-and so destroy the only remaining hope of his reformation.
-What! are you going <i>to keep society corrupt</i> in the vain expectation
-that a corrupt state of society will help to reform its corrupt
-members? Besides, I grant that we should have compassion
-on the guilty; but I also hold that we should have compassion
-on the innocent too. Would you, therefore, allow a bad
-man to continue in good society, when the chances are a thousand
-to one that he will make others as bad as himself, and not
-more than one to a thousand that he himself will be reclaimed?
-Moreover, this reasoning is fallacious throughout. By expelling
-a dissipated and profligate man from good society, instead
-of destroying all hope of his recovery, you do in fact resort to
-the only remaining means of reforming one over whom a fear
-of God, and a sense of character, and the upbraidings of conscience
-have lost their power. What cares he for principle, or
-God, or an hereafter? Nothing, therefore, is so likely to encourage
-and embolden him to go on in his guilty course, as the belief
-that he will be allowed to do so without the forfeiture of the
-only thing he does care for, his reputable standing in the world.
-On the other hand, nothing is so likely to arrest him in these
-courses, and bring him to serious reflection, as the stern and
-determined threat of absolute exclusion from good society, if he
-persists.</p>
-
-<p>Another objection will also be made which has stronger
-claims on our sympathy and respect. We shall be told that the
-innocent as well as the guilty will suffer—the guilty man’s
-friends and connections, who will probably feel the indignity
-more than he does himself. God forbid that we should needlessly
-add to the pain of those who are thus connected! But
-we must remember that the highest form of friendship does not
-consist in blindly falling in with the feelings of those whom we
-would serve, but in consulting what will be for their real and
-permanent good. If, therefore, the course here recommended
-has been shown to be not only indispensable to public morals,
-but more likely than any other to reclaim the offender, it is
-clearly not more a dictate of justice to the community, than of
-Christian charity to the parties more immediately concerned.
-Consider, also, how much is asked, when a good man is called
-upon to open his doors to persons without virtue and without
-principle. Unless the social circle is presided over by a spirit
-which will rebuke and frown away immorality, whatever fashionable
-names and disguises it may wear,—unless your sons
-and daughters can meet together without being in danger of
-having their faith disturbed by the jeers of the infidel, or their
-purity sullied by the breath of the libertine, neither they nor
-you are safe in the most innocent enjoyments and recreations.
-Parents at least should take a deep interest in this subject, if
-they do not wish to see the virtue, which they have reared under
-the best domestic discipline, blighted and corrupted before their
-eyes by the temptations to which their children are almost necessarily
-exposed in general society—a society which they can
-not escape except by going out of the world, and which they
-can not partake of without endangering the loss of what is of
-more value than a thousand worlds.</p>
-
-
-<h3>[<i><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sunday, November 25.</span></i>]</h3>
-
-<p>I have failed altogether in my purpose in this discourse if I
-have not done something to increase your distrust of mere
-companionable qualities, when not under the control of moral
-and religious principle; and also of the moral character and
-moral influence of general society, as at present constituted.
-Still you may ask, “If I associate with persons worse than myself,
-how can it be made out to be more probable that they will
-drag me down to their level, than that I shall lift them up to
-mine?” The answer to this question, I hardly need say, depends,
-in no small measure, on the reason or motive which induces
-the association. If you mix with the world, not for purposes
-of pleasure or self-advantage—if you resort to society,
-not for society as an end, but as a means to a higher end, <i>the
-improvement of society itself</i>—you do but take up the heavenly
-mission which Christ began. For not being able to make the
-distinction, through the hollowness and corruption of their
-hearts, the Pharisees thought it to be a just ground of accusation
-against our Lord, that he was willing to be accounted the friend
-of publicans and sinners. Let the same mind be in you that
-was also in Christ Jesus, and we can not doubt that the spirit
-which inspires you will preserve you wherever you may go. It
-is of such persons that our Lord has said: “Behold, I give unto
-you power to tread on serpents and scorpions, and over all the
-power of the enemy; and nothing shall by any means harm
-you.” Very far am I, therefore, from denying that we may do
-good in society, as well as incur danger and evil. Even in
-common friendships frequent occasions will present themselves
-for mutual service, for mutual counsel and admonition. Let
-me impress upon you this duty. Perhaps there is not one
-among you all, who has not at this moment companions on
-whom he can confer an infinite blessing. If there is a weak<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-place in their characters, if to your knowledge they are contemplating
-a guilty purpose, if they are on the brink of entering
-into dangerous connections, by a timely, affectionate, and
-earnest remonstrance you may save them from ruin. <i>Remember,
-we shall all be held responsible, not only for the evil
-which we do ourselves, but for the evil which we might prevent
-others from doing; it is not enough that we stand; we must
-endeavor to hold up our friends.</i></p>
-
-<p>Very different from this, however, is the ordinary commerce
-of society; and hence its danger. If we mix with the world
-for the pleasure it affords, we shall be likely to be among the
-first to be reconciled to the freedom and laxity it allows. The
-world is not brought up to us, but we sink down to the world;
-the drop becomes of the consistence and color of the ocean into
-which it falls; the ocean remains itself unchanged. In the
-words of an old writer: “Though the well-disposed will remain
-some good space without corruption, yet time, I know not how,
-worketh a wound in him, which weakness of ours considered,
-and easiness of nature, apt to be deceived, looked into, they do
-best provide for themselves that separate themselves as far as
-they can from the bad, and draw as nigh to the good, as by any
-possibility they can attain to.” “He that walketh with wise
-men shall be wise; but a companion of fools shall be destroyed.”</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-<h2><a name="POLITICAL_ECONOMY" id="POLITICAL_ECONOMY">POLITICAL ECONOMY.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">By G. M. STEELE, D.D.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<h3>II.<br />
-<small>PRODUCTION, CONTINUED—CAPITAL—COMBINATION AND
-DIVISION OF LABOR.</small></h3>
-
-<p>5. We have already seen that an essential to any considerable
-production is <i>capital</i>. We have seen the nature of capital and
-how it comes to exist. We have also learned that though capital
-implies saving, mere saving is not the sole condition of
-capital; indeed, a narrow penuriousness prevents the rapid
-accumulation of capital. The man who is accustomed to bring
-his water from a spring a quarter of a mile from his house instead
-of digging a well at the cost of a few dollars, or a few
-days’ work, acts uneconomically. In the long run the bringing
-of the water from the spring costs him much more than the
-digging of the well. The man who has extensive grain-fields,
-and who, for the sake of saving the expense of a reaper, or even a
-cradle, continues to use the sickle, will find that his saving results
-in a loss instead of a gain.</p>
-
-<p>A man does not need to be rich in order to be a capitalist.
-When the savage has invented a bow and arrows he has the
-rudiments of capital. The laborer who has reserved out of his
-earnings enough to buy him a set of tools, or a few acres of land,
-is as really a capitalist as the owner of factories or railroads.
-Whatever property is used for production is capital.</p>
-
-<p>Capital exists in many forms. It has been generally divided
-into <i>fixed</i> and <i>circulating</i>, though the limits of these divisions
-are not very precisely defined. The main difference consists in
-this, that while certain kinds of capital are used only once in
-the fulfillment of their purposes, other kinds are used repeatedly.
-Fuel can be burned but once. An axe may serve for years.
-Circulating capital is of two kinds:</p>
-
-<p>(1) There are the stock and commodities which are to be consumed
-in reproduction; (<i>a</i>) the material out of which the new
-product is to be made, as lumber for cabinet ware, leather for
-shoes, etc.; (<i>b</i>) food and other provisions for the sustenance of
-the laborers.</p>
-
-<p>(2) There is the stock of completed commodities on hand and
-ready for the market. The chairs that are finished and ready
-for sale in the chair factory are of this character. It is to be
-observed that the same article may be at one time circulating
-and at another fixed capital. Thus the chairs just spoken of,
-while they are in the hands of the manufacturer, or passing
-through those of the dealers, are circulating capital. It is only
-when they become <i>fixed in use</i> that their character changes.</p>
-
-<p>Fixed capital consists (1) of all tools, implements, and machinery,
-used in the trades. Here, too, belong all structures of
-every sort for productive purposes; (2) all beasts of burden and
-draft; (3) all improvements of land implied in clearing, fencing,
-draining, fertilizing, terracing, etc.; (4) all mental acquisitions
-gained by labor and which give man power for productive
-results.</p>
-
-<p>Obviously capital, by whomsoever owned, is an advantage to
-the laborer. But such capital is useless to the owner unless he
-can unite it with labor. So, too, the ability to labor is of no
-benefit to the laborer unless he can employ it in connection
-with capital. Generally the more capital there is in a community,
-other things being equal, the better it is for the laborer;
-and the more laborers there are, other things being equal, the
-better it is for the capitalist. When a factory burns down it
-may destroy only a small part of the wealth of the owners, and
-they may not palpably suffer; but it is very likely to deprive
-the laborers, who are connected with it, of the means of securing
-their daily sustenance.</p>
-
-<p>There is no natural antagonism of interests between capital
-and labor, but rather the utmost concord and interdependence.
-Whatever conflicts arise between the laborers and the capitalists
-come from the unnatural selfishness and jealousy of the parties
-concerned.</p>
-
-<p>6. As has been intimated, it is only by application of principles
-underlying political economy that we come to the conditions
-of the highest production, or, in other words, find how
-to satisfy the largest range of desires to the greatest extent at the
-smallest cost of labor. One of the chief means of effecting this
-is by <i>the combination and division of labor</i>. Recalling what
-was said concerning association and individuality, we shall see
-what principles are involved here, and how naturally they came
-into operation. As there was seen to be no antagonism between
-the two latter conceptions when carefully analyzed, so there is
-none, but rather the opposite, between combination and division
-of labor. It is true that there are instances where combination
-may take place without division, as when men unite to effect
-purposes which one could not accomplish except in much more
-than the proportionate time; as also in some cases to affect purposes
-which the individual could not effect in any length of
-time, such as the moving and placing of heavy timbers and
-stones, the management of ships and railway trains, etc. But
-for the most part men divide their labor in the process in order
-that they may combine the result. This is done in two ways:</p>
-
-<p>(1) Men divide up the work of supplying human wants into different
-trades and occupations, according to their several tastes
-and aptitudes. Each man needs nearly the same that
-every other needs. But while each provides for only one
-kind of want, he provides more than enough to satisfy his own
-desire in that particular respect, and contributes the overplus to
-meet that same want in others. As all others do the same, each
-is contributing to meet the desires of one and all to each. The
-shoemaker, the tailor, the carpenter, the cabinet-maker, the
-blacksmith, the weaver, the paper-maker, the tin-man, the
-miner, the smelter, the painter, the glazier, etc., are all contributing
-to supply the farmer’s needs, and the farmer is contributing
-to all their needs. The wants of all are many times more
-fully met in this way than if each one should undertake to supply
-all his own wants.</p>
-
-<p>(2) In some complicated trades the work is divided into a
-number of processes. There are men who could do every one
-of these parts; but such men are few, and their labor very
-costly, because some of the parts require rare skill and talent.
-What is needed is to organize several grades of laborers, so that
-the physically strong, the intelligent and skillful may have the
-work that only they can do; the less strong and skillful may
-find employment in the lighter and easier parts, and so all
-grades of ability down to the delicate woman or the little child,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-and up to the most powerful muscle and most advanced intelligence,
-can find their place. It is almost incredible how great
-is the increase of productiveness from the mere economical arrangement
-of workers. It is said that in so simple a matter as
-the making of pins, where the work is divided into ten processes
-and properly distributed, that the production will be <i>two hundred
-and forty times</i> as much as if each man did the whole work
-on each pin.</p>
-
-<p>This connects itself with another important condition of large
-production. I mean the diversification of employment in a
-community. It is only in such a varied industry that all the
-varied tastes, aptitudes and abilities of society can find scope
-and adaptation; and without this, production must fall far short
-of its possibilities. This, too, is required to develop those differences
-which constitute individuality, and on which association
-depends.</p>
-
-<p>There are other conditions of enlarged production, such as
-are implied in freedom, good government, and the moral character
-of the community, the influence of each of which will easily
-suggest itself to thoughtful minds.</p>
-
-
-<h3><a id="IIICONSUMPTION"></a>III.—CONSUMPTION.</h3>
-
-<p>1. Consumption is the destruction of values. Production
-implies consumption. In general, all material is destroyed in
-entering into new forms of wealth. Thus, leather must be destroyed
-in order to the production of shoes. Flour must disappear
-in the manufacture of bread, and wheat in the making of
-flour. Every kind of implement, or machine or structure is
-consumed by use. This consumption is immediate, or by a
-single use; or it is gradual. The food that we eat and the fuel
-that we burn are examples of the former; tools, bridges,
-buildings and aqueducts are examples of the latter. It is accomplished
-in a few months or years; or is protracted through
-centuries.</p>
-
-<p>2. Consumption is either <i>voluntary</i> or <i>involuntary</i>. Of the
-latter kind we have instances in the <i>natural decay</i> of objects,
-as in wood and vegetables; the rusting of iron, the mildew
-and the moth-eating of cotton and woolen fabrics, and the
-wearing away by attrition of gold, silver, and other metals;
-also the destruction caused by vermin. Much of this may be
-prevented by the prudent foresight which sound economy enjoins;
-yet much loss will inevitably take place. A great deal
-of consumption is <i>accidental</i>. Great destruction is caused by
-fires, steam-boiler explosions, floods and tornadoes, earthquakes
-and volcanic eruptions.</p>
-
-<p>3. Voluntary consumption is either <i>productive</i> or <i>unproductive</i>.
-The former is when the material appears in new form
-and with a higher value, as cloth made into garments and iron
-into hardware and cutlery. Unproductive consumption occurs,
-both in the cases before mentioned of natural and accidental
-consumption, and in cases where gratification of desire is the
-sole object sought and achieved, as when one eats and drinks
-simply for the enjoyment, and without reference to the waste of
-nature or the nourishment of the system.</p>
-
-<p>It is not altogether easy to discriminate between these two
-kinds of consumption. We readily see the difference between
-a man’s drinking a quantity of whiskey, not because it will help
-him in the performance of any duty, but because he likes it,
-and the scattering of a quantity of seed over the ground in
-spring. There is no doubt that one act is productive and the
-other unproductive. But there are cases where the distinction
-is less clear.</p>
-
-<p>It is not necessarily a case of unproductive consumption when
-one destroys value for the sake of gratifying some desire. Probably
-a majority of men eat and drink simply because they desire
-food and drink, having no thought of any ulterior object. Yet
-this eating and drinking is absolutely essential to productive
-labor. The wealth consumed in this way reappears, to a large
-extent, in the products of human industry.</p>
-
-<p>Still there is much really unproductive consumption; a destruction
-of value, in the place of which no other value ever
-appears. There are, for instance, men and women—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">* &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; * &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; * &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; “who creep</div>
-<div class="verse">Into this world to eat and sleep,</div>
-<div class="verse">And know no reason why they’re born,</div>
-<div class="verse">But simply to consume the corn.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Vast quantities of wealth are consumed in riotous living, in
-greedy and vulgar extravagance, and unmeaning magnificence.
-There is also much consumption designed to be productive,
-but failing of its end through misdirection. Large amounts of
-property are sometimes invested in enterprises which prove
-failures. This occurs partly from miscalculation or negligence,
-and partly from a disposition to trust to chances—the gambler’s
-calculation. In these ways much wealth is consumed with no
-consequent product.</p>
-
-<p>4. It is not easy to draw the line between the ordinary conveniences
-of life and its luxuries; nor can it be stated to what
-extent the latter in any sense of the term are economically
-allowable. What to one class of persons may be a luxury to
-another class may be almost a necessity. So what might in one
-age have been a rare and expensive indulgence, is in a more
-advanced period among the cheaper and more ordinary commodities.
-I call special attention to three kinds of consumption:</p>
-
-<p>(1) There is the consumption necessary to life and the performance
-of productive labor. The word <i>necessary</i> here is used
-in its liberal rather than its restricted sense. The absolute necessities
-of human life are very few. It does not even require
-much to keep a man in working condition. But to keep him
-where there is a larger kind of living, and where his energies
-of both body and mind, together with the moral qualities which
-render him most efficient, are at their best, the consumption
-must be more generous.</p>
-
-<p>Besides subsistence there must be materials, tools, machines,
-and a variety of conditions involving the destruction of value.
-It is desirable to sustain man not as a mere savage, but to give
-him the largest volume of human life; and the civilized man,
-it will be admitted, lives a broader life than the savage. We
-are not to forget that Political Economy aims at the increase of
-the value of man, more than at the multiplication of material
-wealth, or the increase of commerce, except as the latter are
-conditions of the former.</p>
-
-<p>(2) A second kind of consumption is of such articles as minister
-to bodily enjoyment and meet certain mental appetencies
-of a lower order. They are not necessary to sustain life, nor to
-render it more efficient. On the contrary, they often impair the
-vigor and competence of the person. At the best they simply
-gratify certain desires without adding anything to the value of
-the man. To this category belong mere dainty food, gold and
-jewels, and other ornaments, valued solely because of their
-showiness and not for any artistic excellence; gay and costly
-apparel, in which the gayety and the costliness are the main
-features. These constitute a class of luxuries that are in nearly
-every sense non-productive. They favorably affect neither the
-individual nor society, and are for the most part hurtful to both.</p>
-
-<p>(3) But not all consumption, the object of which is to gratify
-desire, is to be reckoned in this category. There are certain
-pleasures which ennoble and really enrich those who participate
-in them. There are desires the gratification of which enlarges
-the volume of one’s being. They are related not so much to
-man’s productive capability as to that which is the final cause
-of all production, and to which all wealth is only a means.
-The labor, material, implements, and whatever else is consumed
-in the production of the works or effects of genuine art, result
-in the most <i>real wealth</i> that exists. By this is meant not merely
-pictures, statues, books, carved work, tasteful tapestries, and
-similar objects which can be bought and sold, but also oratorios
-which you may hear but once; magnificent parks to which you
-may be admitted, but may never own; great actors and singers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-whose genius may be exhibited to others, but not possessed by
-them. It is true that much which properly belongs here may be
-so consumed as to deserve only a place in the second class;
-but it may also have those higher and nobler uses which imply
-production in the best sense.</p>
-
-<p>5. <i>Public consumption</i> is the expenditure of means for society
-in its aggregate capacity. It has reference principally to
-the support of those agencies which are implied in the term <i>government</i>.
-The reasons for the necessity of such expenditures
-have already been given. The purposes to which such consumption
-is properly applied may be grouped as follows:</p>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) The support and administration of government. This
-embraces compensation to executive, legislative and judicial
-officers, and expenditure for public buildings. (<i>b</i>) For works of
-public convenience. Here are included the paving and lighting
-of streets, water-works and sewerage. (<i>c</i>) For advancing
-science and promoting intelligence, by means of exploring expeditions,
-geological surveys, meteorological and astronomical
-observations, etc. (<i>d</i>) For the promotion of popular education.
-(<i>e</i>) For the support of the poor and the relief of the afflicted.
-(<i>f</i>) For national defense.</p>
-
-<p>6. The general law of economical consumption, both individual
-and public, is that only so much and such a quality should
-be consumed as is necessary to effect the purpose designed,
-whether that be further production or individual gratification.
-It is nearly the same in the case of labor. In relation to the
-work to be done, the character, ability and skill of the laborer
-should be considered.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-<h2><a name="READINGS_IN_ART" id="READINGS_IN_ART">READINGS IN ART.</a></h2>
-
-
-<h3>II.—SCULPTURE: GRECIAN AND ROMAN.</h3>
-
-<p>While Egyptian sculpture was losing its individuality, and
-Assyrian was wearing itself out in excessive ornamentation,
-there was a new art growing up in the isles and on the eastern
-shores of the Mediterranean. The early centuries of its growth
-are hidden from our knowledge. The remains are so scanty, so
-imperfect, that it is with difficulty that we trace the influences
-which were molding the art, and the extent to which it was taking
-hold of the people. Of this primitive period but one single
-work of sculpture is preserved.</p>
-
-<p>“At Mycenæ, once perhaps in the days of Homer (850-800?
-B. C.) the most important city of Greece, there are sculptural
-works in the remains of two lions over the entrance gate. The
-height of these is about ten feet, and the width fifteen feet.
-The stone is a greenish limestone. The holes show where
-the metal pins held the heads, long since decayed. Fragments
-as they are, they show an Assyrian rather than an Egyptian
-influence in the strong marking of the muscles and joints, softened
-though it is by decay, and in the erect attitude, which denotes
-action, such as is not seen in Egyptian art of this kind.
-Of this gate of the lions, which has long been known as the
-most ancient work of early Greek sculpture, it must be noticed
-that it is not in the round, but only in high relief. And this is
-the case with all the earliest works, just as it is with the Assyrian
-sculptures. They tend to show therefore that the Greek sculptor
-had not yet learnt to model and carve in the round in marble
-and stone.”</p>
-
-<p>In the objects found by Cesnola in Cyprus, and consisting of
-statues and other sculptures, incised gems, and metal work of
-the hammered-out kind, the resemblance to the art of Assyria is
-remarkable. Three hundred years later than the “gate of lions”
-are the reliefs discovered at Xanthus in Lycia. “They belong
-to the Harpy monument—a pier-shaped memorial, along the
-upper edge of which is a frieze ornamented in relief.” The
-archaic is still visible in the figures. The drapery falls in long
-straight folds, with zigzag edges. There is the stiff, inevitable
-smile of the Egyptian statue. The figures are in motion, but
-both feet are set flat on the ground. Though in profile the eyes
-are shown in full. In spite of these primitive absurdities, and
-the fact that the subjects represent foreign myths, the statues
-are Greek.</p>
-
-<p>In the fifth century various art schools were founded. “In
-Argos lived Argeladas (515-455 B. C.), famous for his bronze
-statues of gods and Olympic victors, and still more famous for
-his three great pupils, Phidias, Myron, and Polycleitus. In
-Sicyon there lived, at the same time, Canachus, the founder of
-a vital and enduring school. He executed the colossal statue
-of Apollo at Miletus, and was skilled not only in casting bronze
-but in the use of gold and ivory and wood carving. Ægina,
-then a commercial island as yet not subjected, was rendered illustrious
-by the two masters Callon and Onatas, the latter especially
-known by several groups of bronze statues and warlike
-scenes from heroic legends. Lastly, Athens possessed among
-other artists Hegias, the teacher of Phidias and Critius. But all
-of these old masters were severe, hard, archaic in their treatment.”</p>
-
-<p>But a period approaches when by a freer, happier treatment
-of their work the way was led to the highest Athenian sculpture.
-We can but mention the leading sculptors, Calamis of Athens,
-Pythagoras of Rhegium, and, greatest of all, Myron of Athens.
-They do not belong to the epoch of the finest Grecian art, but
-they were the immediate forerunners.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, for the first time in opposition to the barbarians, the
-national Hellenic mind rose to the highest consciousness of
-noble independence and dignity. Athens concentrated within
-herself, as in a focus, the whole exuberance and many-sidedness
-of Greek life, and glorified it into beautiful utility. The
-victory of the old time over the new was effected by the power
-of Phidias, one of the most wonderful artist minds of all times.
-He lived in the times of Athens’ greatest prosperity, and to
-him Pericles gave the task of executing the magnificent works
-he had planned for adorning the city. Among the famous
-statues which Phidias wrought in carrying out these plans was
-that of Athene, the patron goddess of the Athenians. The
-booty which had been taken at Salamis was set aside for this
-purpose, and forty-four talents, equal to $589,875 of our money,
-was spent in adorning the statue. The virgin goddess was
-standing erect; a golden helmet covered her beautiful and
-earnest head; a coat of mail, with the head of the Medusa
-carved in ivory concealed her bosom; and long, flowing, golden
-drapery enveloped her whole figure—a statue of Niké, six feet
-high, stood on the outstretched hand of the goddess. The undraped
-parts were formed of ivory; the eyes of sparkling precious
-stones; the drapery, hair, and weapons of gold. In it
-Phidias portrayed for all ages the character of Minerva, the serious
-goddess of wisdom, the mild protectress of Attica.”</p>
-
-<p>Still more than in this statue the austere maidenliness of the
-goddess was elevated into noble, intellectual beauty in a figure
-of Athene placed on the Acropolis by the Lemnians; so much
-so that an old epigram instituted a comparison with the Aphrodite
-of Praxiteles of Cnidus, and calls Paris “a mere cow-driver
-for not giving the apple to Athene.”</p>
-
-<p>The still more famous colossal statue by Phidias, the Zeus
-at Olympia in Elis, was his last great work. It was made between
-B. C. 438, the date of the consecration of the Parthenon
-statue, and B. C. 432, the year of his death, at Elis.</p>
-
-<p>This was a seated statue of ivory and gold, 55 feet high, including
-the throne. Strabo remarks, that “if the god had risen
-he would have carried away the roof,” and the height of the interior
-was about 55 feet; the temple being built on the model
-of the Parthenon at Athens, which was 64 feet to the point of
-the pediment.</p>
-
-<p>The statue was seen in its temple by Paulus Æmilius in the
-second century B. C., who declared the god himself seemed
-present to him. Epictetus says that “it was considered a misfortune
-for any one to die without having seen the masterpiece
-of Phidias.” In the time of Julian the Apostate (A. D. 361-363)
-“it continued to receive the homage of Greece in spite of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-every kind of attack which the covert zeal of Constantine had
-made against polytheism, its temples, and its idols.” This is
-the last notice we possess giving authentic information of this
-grand statue. Phidias is said to have executed many other
-statues: thirteen in bronze from the booty of Marathon, consecrated
-at Delphi under Cimon—statues of Apollo, Athene,
-and Miltiades, with those ten heroes who had given their names
-to the ten Athenian tribes (Eponymi); an Athene for the city of
-Pellene in gold and ivory; another for the Platæans, of the
-spoils of Marathon, made of wood gilt, with the head, feet, and
-hands of Pentelic marble. “These,” M. Rochette says, “may
-be considered the productions of his youth.”</p>
-
-<p>The great national work of the time, however, was the Parthenon,
-and the ornamentation was entrusted to Phidias. Not
-that all the wonderful statues were executed by him alone. He
-had his pupils and associates. The most famous of these seems
-to have been Alcamenes, a versatile and imaginative disciple of
-his master. After him were Agoracritus and Pæonius. There
-were many others who assisted in the work. The outside of
-the temple was ornamented with three classes of sculpture:
-(1) The sculptures of the pediments, being independent statues
-resting on the cornices. (2) The groups of the metopes,
-ninety-two in number. These were in high relief. (3) The
-frieze around the upper border of the cella of the Parthenon
-contained a representation in low relief of the Panathenaic procession.
-All these classes of sculpture were in the highest
-style of the art.</p>
-
-<p>The influence of the sculptures of the Parthenon is seen in
-many directions in the temple of Apollo at Phigalia, the temple
-of Niké-Apteros on the Acropolis at Athens, at Halicarnassus,
-etc.</p>
-
-<p>“The works which are known to have been executed by the
-sculptors contemporary with Phidias, and by others who
-formed what is spoken of as ‘the later Athenian school,’ did not
-approach the great examples of the Parthenon. Sculpture then
-reached the highest point in the grandest style, whether in the
-treatment of the statue in the round, or of bas-relief as in the
-frieze, or alto-relievo as in the metopes. As to the chryselephantine
-statues of Phidias, it may be concluded without hesitation
-that though we are compelled to rely upon descriptions
-only, they must have been works of the great master even more
-beautiful than the marbles.”</p>
-
-<p>At Argos during the time of Phidias, a somewhat younger
-school flourished under the leadership of Polycleitus. “The
-aspiration of Polycleitus was to depict the perfect beauty of the
-human form in calm repose.” His Amazon and Juno represent
-best his style; so perfect are all his works in their proportions
-that the invention of the canon has been assigned to him.</p>
-
-<p>In the works of the later Athenian school, at the head of
-which were Scopas and Praxiteles, the sublime ideal of Greek
-art was no longer sustained by any new creations that can be
-compared with those of the Phidian school; no rivalry with
-those great masters seemed to be attempted. The severe and
-grand was beyond the comprehension, or probably uncongenial
-to the spirit of the age, which inclined toward the poetic, the graceful,
-the sentimental and romantic. The whole range of the
-beautiful myths found abundant illustration in forms entirely
-different from the ancient archaic representations,
-and in these the fancy of the sculptor was allowed the
-fullest and freest indulgence. Nymphs, nereids, mænads, and
-bacchantes occupied the chisel of the sculptor in every form of
-graceful beauty.</p>
-
-<p>After this epoch, to which so many of the fine statues belong—repetitions
-in marble of famous originals in bronze—Greek
-sculpture took another phase in accordance with the social life
-and the taste of the age, which inclined toward the feeling for
-display that arose with the domination of the Macedonian
-power, brought to its height by the conquests and ambition of
-Alexander the Great. Lysippus, a self-taught sculptor of
-Sicyon, was the leading artist of his time. He was evidently a
-student of nature and individual character, as he was the first
-to become celebrated for his portraits, especially those of
-Alexander. He departed from the severe and grand style, and
-in the native conceit of all self-taught men sneered at the art
-of Polycleitus in the well-known saying recorded of him,
-“Polycleitus made men as they were, but I make them as they
-ought to be.” He seems to have been the first great naturalistic
-sculptor.</p>
-
-<p>Rhodes had unquestionable right to give her name to a
-school of sculpture, both from the great antiquity of the origin
-of the culture of the arts in the island, and from the number,
-more than one hundred, of colossal statues in bronze. The
-Rhodian school is also distinguished by those remarkable examples
-of sculpture in marble of large groups of figures—the
-Toro Farnese and the Laocoon. In these works there is the
-same feeling for display of artistic accomplishment that has
-been noticed as characteristic of the Macedonian age, with that
-effort at the pathetic, especially in the Laocoon, which belongs
-to the finer style of the later Athenian school as displayed in
-the works of Scopas and Praxiteles, in the Niobe figures and
-others.</p>
-
-<p>At Pergamus, another school allied in style to that of Ephesus
-arose, of which the chief sculptor was Pyromachus, who, according
-to Pliny, flourished in the 120th Olympiad, B. C. 300-298.
-A statue of Æsculapius by Pyromachus was a work of
-some note in the splendid temple at Pergamus, and is to be seen
-on the coins of that city. It is also conjectured that the well-known
-Dying Gladiator is a copy of a bronze by Pyromachus.
-The vigorous naturalistic style of these statues, surpassing anything
-of preceding schools in the effort at expression, may be
-taken as characteristic of the school of Pergamus, then completely
-under Roman influence, and destined to become more
-so. But all question as to the nature of the sculptures was set
-at rest by the discovery of many large works in high relief by
-the German expedition at Pergamus in 1875. These are now
-in the Museum at Berlin. They are of almost colossal proportions,
-representing, as Pliny described, the wars of Attalus and
-the Battles with the Giants. The nude figure is especially
-marked by the effort to display artistic ability as well as great
-energy in the action. In these points there is observable a
-connection with the well-known and very striking example of
-sculpture of this order—the Fighting Gladiator, or more properly
-the Warrior of Agasias, who, as is certain from the inscription
-on his work, was an Ephesian.</p>
-
-<p>The equally renowned statue of the Apollo Belvedere, finely
-conceived and admirably modeled as it undoubtedly is, bears
-the stamp of artistic display which removes it from the style of
-the great classic works of sculpture.</p>
-
-<p>The history of Roman sculpture is soon told. If it have any
-real roots, they are to be traced in the ancient Etruscan; for all
-that was really characteristic in it as art is associated with that
-style, in that intense naturalism which became developed so
-strikingly in the production of portrait statues and busts, and
-in those great monumental works in bas-relief which are marked
-by the same strong feeling for descriptive representation of the
-most direct and realistic kind, upon their triumphal columns
-and arches.</p>
-
-<p>As has already been stated, early Roman sculpture, if such it
-can be called, was entirely the work of Etruscan artists, employed
-by the wealth of Rome to afford the citizens that display
-of pomp in their worship of the gods and the triumphs of their
-warriors which their ambition demanded. All important works
-were made of colossal size. Some of the early Roman (quasi
-Etruscan) statues spoken of by the historians are a bronze colossus
-of Jupiter, an Etruscan bronze colossus of Apollo, eighty
-feet high, in the Palatine Library of the temple of Augustus. A
-portrait statue of an orator in the toga, and a chimæra, both of
-bronze, are in the Florence Museum. Sculpture, from the love
-of it as a means of expressing the beautiful in the ideal form of
-the deities or the heroic and the pathetic of humanity, never existed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-as a growth of Roman civilization. The inclination of the
-Roman mind was toward social, municipal, and imperial system
-and ordering; in this direction the Romans were inventors
-and improvers upon that which they borrowed from the Greeks.
-But in art they began by hiring, and they ended by debasing
-the work of the hired.</p>
-
-<p>They took away the bronze statues of Greece as trophies of
-conquest, covered them with gold, and set them up in the palaces
-and public places of Rome. They subsidized the sculptors
-of Greece, who under Roman influence had fallen away from
-their high traditions; they did nothing for the sake of art, but
-simply manufactured, as it were, copies and imitations of Greek
-statues for their own use. Happily we have to be grateful for
-the fact, though we can not honor the motive. Had it not been
-for this bestowal of their wealth in the gratification of their taste
-for luxury and display, many of the renowned statues of ancient
-Greek art would have been known only by the vague mention
-of them by Pausanias and Pliny, or the early Christian writers
-of the Church, or the poetic allusions of the Greek anthologists
-and the Latin epigrammatists.</p>
-
-<p>The Column of Trajan was the great work of Apollodorus,
-the favorite architect of the emperor, dedicated A. D. 114. It
-is 10½ feet in diameter and 127 feet high, made of thirty-four
-blocks of white marble, twenty-three being in the shaft, nine in
-the base, which is finely sculptured, and two in the capital and
-<i>torus</i>. The reliefs at the base are smaller than those toward
-the top, being two feet high, increasing to nearly four as they
-approach the summit; this was, of course, to enable the more
-distant subjects to be seen equally well with the others, a singular
-illustration of the intensely practical turn of Roman art in
-its application. There are about 2,500 figures, not counting
-horses, representing the battles and sieges of the Dacian war.
-The column of M. Aurelius Antoninus, erected A. D. 174, is
-similar in height, but the sculptures, although in higher relief,
-are not so good. They represent the conquest of the Marcomans.</p>
-
-<p>The Augustan age (B. C. 36-A. D. 14), favorable as it was to
-literature, only contributed to the multiplying of copies of the
-Greek statues, such as we see in so many instances, some of
-which are of great excellence, and inestimable as reliable evidence
-of fine Greek sculpture. These copies were sometimes
-varied by the sculptor in some immaterial point of detail.</p>
-
-<p>Nero (A. D. 54-68) is said to have adorned his Golden House
-with no less than 500 statues, brought from Delphi. In the
-Baths of Titus, still in existence (they were built on the ground
-of the house and gardens of Mæcenas), many valuable statues
-have been discovered. The Arch of Titus furnishes an excellent
-example of bas-relief of that time, in it the golden candlestick
-and other spoils from the temple of Jerusalem are
-shown.</p>
-
-<p>Hadrian (A. D. 117-138) encouraged the reproduction of the
-Greek statues, with great success as regards execution, for his
-famous villa at Tivoli, and besides these are the statues of his
-favorite Antinous, which are the most original works of the
-time. Hadrian’s imperial and liberal promotion of sculpture,
-gave an immense impetus to the production of statues of every
-form. All the towns of Greece which he favored made bronze
-portrait statues of him, which were placed in the temple of Jupiter
-Olympius at Athens, and the enclosure round more than
-half a mile in extent was filled with its many statues.</p>
-
-<p>The learned Varro speaks of Arcesilaus as the sculptor of
-Venus Genetrix, in the forum of Cæsar, and of a beautiful marble
-group of Cupids playing with a lioness, some leading her,
-others beating her with their sandals, others offering her wine
-to drink from horns.</p>
-
-<p>Under the Antonines arose the outrageous fashion of representing
-noble Romans and their wives as deities, and this was
-carried so far that the men are not unfrequently nude as if heroic.
-The bas-reliefs on the arch of Septimus Severus at Rome,
-and that which goes by the name of Constantine—though made
-chiefly of reliefs belonging to one raised in honor of Trajan—show
-the poor condition of sculpture at that time. The numerous
-sarcophagi, some made by Greek sculptors for the Roman
-market, and others by those working at Rome, are other examples
-of the feeble style of imitators and workmen actuated by
-no knowledge or feeling of art. Some of these are still to be
-seen in the collections at Rome, with mythological subjects, the
-heads being left unfinished, so that the portraits of the family
-could be carved when required.</p>
-
-<p>The rule of Constantine was, however, far more disastrous to
-art as the seat of the Empire was removed to Byzantium.
-Most of the finest statues accumulated in Rome were removed
-there only to be lost forever in the plundering of wars and the
-fanatical rage of the Christian iconoclasts. While destroying
-the statues of the gods, they may have spared those which
-commemorated agonistic victors; but we may be sure that
-nearly all the works in metal which the Christians spared were
-melted down by the barbarous hordes of Gothic invaders,
-who under Alaric occupied the Morea about A. D. 395.</p>
-
-<p>With this glance at the complete decadence of art and the
-coming darkness that preceded its revival, we approach the
-subject of sculpture as connected with the rise of ecclesiastical
-religious art, which is necessarily reserved for further
-consideration.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-<h2><a name="SELECTIONS_FROM_AMERICAN" id="SELECTIONS_FROM_AMERICAN">SELECTIONS FROM AMERICAN
-LITERATURE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<h3>BENJAMIN FRANKLIN.</h3>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>I recommend the study of Franklin to all young people; he was a
-real philanthropist, a wonderful man. It was said that it was honor
-enough to any one country to have produced such a man as Franklin.—<i>Sydney
-Smith.</i></p>
-
-<p>A man who makes a great figure in the learned world; and who would
-still make a greater figure for benevolence and candor were virtue as
-much regarded in this declining age as knowledge.—<i>Lord Kaimes.</i></p>
-
-<p>He was a great experimental philosopher, a consummate politician, and
-a paragon of common sense.—<i>Edinburgh Review.</i></p>
-
-<p>He has in no instance exhibited that false dignity by which science is
-kept aloof from common application; and he has sought rather to make
-her an useful inmate and servant in the common habitations of man, than
-to preserve her merely as an object of admiration in temples and palaces.—<i>Sir
-Humphrey Davy.</i></p>
-
-<p>His style has all the vigor, and even conciseness of Swift, without any
-of his harshness. It is in no degree more flowery, yet both elegant and
-lively.—<i>Lord Jeffrey.</i></p>
-
-<p>When he left Passy it seemed as if the village had lost its patriarch.—<i>Thomas
-Jefferson.</i></p></div>
-
-
-<h4><a id="Extracts_From_Poor_Richards_Almanac"></a>Extracts From Poor Richard’s Almanac.</h4>
-
-<p>“Love well, whip well.” “The proof of gold is fire; the proof
-of woman, gold; the proof of man, a woman.” “There is no
-little enemy.” “Necessity never made a good bargain.”
-“Three may keep a secret, if two of them are dead.” “Deny
-self for self’s sake.” “Keep thy shop, and thy shop will keep
-thee.” “Here comes the orator, with his flood of words and his
-drop of reason.” “Sal laughs at everything you say; why? because
-she has fine teeth.” “An old young man will be a young
-old man.” “He is no clown that drives the plow, but he that
-does clownish things.” “Diligence is the mother of good luck.”
-“Wealth is not his that has it, but his that enjoys it.” “He
-that can have patience can have what he will.” “Good wives
-and good plantations are made by good husbands.” “God
-heals, the doctor takes the fee.” “The noblest question in the
-world is, What good may I do in it?” “There are three faithful
-friends, an old wife, an old dog, and ready money.” “Who
-has deceived thee so oft as thyself?” “Fly pleasures, and they
-will follow you.” “Hast thou virtue? Acquire also the graces
-and beauties of virtue.” “Keep your eyes wide open before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-marriage; half shut afterward.” “As we must account for
-every idle word, so we must for every idle silence.” “Search
-others for their virtues, thyself for thy vices.” “Grace thou thy
-house, and let not that grace thee.” “Let thy child’s first lesson
-be obedience, and the second will be what thou will.” “Let
-thy discontents be thy secrets.” “Happy that nation, fortunate
-that age, whose history is not diverting.” “There are lazy
-minds, as well as lazy bodies.” “Tricks and treachery are the
-practice of fools, who have not wit enough to be honest.” “Let
-no pleasure tempt thee, no profit allure thee, no ambition corrupt
-thee, no example sway thee, no persuasion move thee, to
-do anything which thou knowest to be evil; so shalt thou always
-live jollily, for a good conscience is a continual Christmas.”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Altho’ thy teacher act not as he preaches,</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Yet ne’ertheless, if good, do what he teaches;</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Good counsel failing men may give, for why?</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">He that’s aground knows where the shoal doth lie.</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">My old friend Berryman, oft when alive,</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Taught others thrift, himself could never thrive.</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Thus like the whetstone, many men are wont</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">To sharpen others while themselves are blunt.”</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<h5>Poetry for December, 1834.</h5>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“He that for the sake of drink neglects his trade,</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And spends each night in taverns till ’tis late,</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And rises when the sun is four hours high,</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And ne’er regards his starving family,</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">God in his mercy may do much to save him,</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">But, woe to the poor wife, whose lot it is to have him.”</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<h4>An Astronomical Notice.</h4>
-
-<p>During the first visible eclipse <i>Saturn</i> is retrograde: for which
-reason the crabs will go sidelong, and the rope-makers backward.
-Mercury will have his share in these affairs, and so confound
-the speech of the people, that when a <i>Pennsylvanian</i>
-would say <i>panther</i>, he shall say <i>painter</i>. When a <i>New Yorker</i>
-thinks to say <i>this</i>, he shall say <i>diss</i>, and the people in <i>New
-England</i> and <i>Cape May</i> will not be able to say <i>cow</i> for their
-lives, but will be forced to say <i>keow</i>, by a certain involuntary
-twist in the root of their tongues. No <i>Connecticut man</i> nor
-<i>Marylander</i> will be able to open his mouth this year but <i>sir</i>
-shall be the first or last syllable he pronounces, and sometimes
-both. Brutes shall speak in many places, and there will be
-about seven and twenty irregular verbs made this year if grammar
-don’t interpose. Who can help these misfortunes? This
-year the stone-blind shall see but very little; the deaf shall hear
-but poorly; and the dumb sha’n’t speak very plain. As to old
-age, it will be incurable this year, because of the years past.
-And toward the fall some people will be seized with an unaccountable
-inclination to roast and eat their own ears: Should
-this be called madness, doctors? I think not. But the worst
-disease of all will be a most horrid, dreadful, malignant, catching,
-perverse, and odious malady, almost epidemical, insomuch
-that many shall seem mad upon it. I quake for very fear when
-I think on’t; for I assure you very few shall escape this disease,
-which is called by the learned Albromazer—<i>Lacko’mony</i>.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<h3><a id="GEORGE_WASHINGTON"></a>GEORGE WASHINGTON.</h3>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>His papers which have been preserved show how he gained the power
-of writing correctly—always expressing himself with clearness and directness,
-often with felicity and grace.—<i>George Bancroft.</i></p>
-
-<p>No one who has not been in England can have an idea of the admiration
-expressed among all parties for General Washington.—<i>Rufus King,
-1797.</i></p>
-
-<p>* * * The great central figure of that unparalleled group, that
-“noble army” of chieftains, sages, and patriots, by whom the revolution
-was accomplished.—<i>Edward Everett.</i></p>
-
-<p>He had in his composition a calm which gave him in moments of
-highest excitement the power of self-control, and enabled him to excel in
-patience.—<i>Bancroft.</i></p></div>
-
-
-<h4>Account of the Battle of Trenton.</h4>
-
-<div class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Headquarters, Morristown</span>, Dec. 27, 1776.<br />
-</div>
-<div class="unindent">
-<i>To the President of Congress</i>:<br />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Sir</span>—I have the pleasure of congratulating you upon the
-success of an enterprise which I had formed against a detachment
-of the enemy lying in Trenton, and which was executed
-yesterday morning.</p>
-
-<p>The evening of the twenty-fifth I ordered the troops intended
-for this service to parade back of McKonkey’s ferry, that they
-might begin to pass as soon as it grew dark, imagining we
-should be able to throw them all over, with the necessary artillery,
-by twelve o’clock, and that we might easily arrive at
-Trenton by five in the morning, the distance being about nine
-miles. But the quantity of ice made that night impeded the
-passage of the boats so much that it was three o’clock before
-the artillery could all be got over; and near four before the
-troops took up their line of march.</p>
-
-<p>This made me despair of surprising the town, as I well knew
-we could not reach it before the day was fairly broke. But as
-I was certain there was no making a retreat without being discovered,
-and harassed on re-passing the river, I determined to
-push on at all events. I formed my detachment into two divisions,
-one to march by the lower or river road, the other by
-the upper or Pennington road. As the divisions had nearly the
-same distance to march, I ordered each of them, immediately
-upon forcing the out-guards, to push directly into the town, that
-they might charge the enemy before they had time to form.</p>
-
-<p>The upper division arrived at the enemy’s advanced post
-exactly at eight o’clock: and in three minutes after I found,
-from the fire on the lower road, that that division had also got
-up. The out-guards made but small opposition, though, for
-their numbers, they behaved very well, keeping up a constant
-retreating fire from behind houses. We presently saw their
-main body formed; but from their motions, they seemed undetermined
-how to act.</p>
-
-<p>Being hard pressed by our troops, who had already got possession
-of their artillery, they attempted to file off by a road on
-their right, leading to Princeton. But, perceiving their intention,
-I threw a body of troops in their way; which immediately
-checked them. Finding, from our disposition, that they were
-surrounded, and that they must inevitably be cut to pieces if
-they made any further resistance, they agreed to lay down
-their arms. The number that submitted in this manner was
-twenty-three officers and eight hundred and eighty-six men.
-Colonel Rahl, the commanding officer, and seven others, were
-found wounded in the town. I do not exactly know how many
-they had killed; but I fancy not above twenty or thirty, as they
-never made any regular stand. Our loss is very trifling indeed—only
-two officers and one or two privates wounded.</p>
-
-<p>I find that the detachment consisted of the three Hessian
-regiments of Lanspach, Kniphausen, and Rahl, amounting to
-about fifteen hundred men, and a troop of British light horse;
-but immediately upon the beginning of the attack, all those who
-were not killed or taken pushed directly down toward Bordentown.
-These would likewise have fallen into our hands could
-my plan have been completely carried into execution.</p>
-
-<p>General Ewing was to have crossed before day at Trenton
-ferry, and taken possession of the bridge leading out of town;
-but the quantity of ice was so great that, though he did every
-thing in his power to effect it, he could not get over. This
-difficulty also hindered General Cadwallader from crossing
-with the Pennsylvania militia from Bristol. He got part of his
-foot over; but finding it impossible to embark his artillery, he
-was obliged to desist.</p>
-
-<p>I am fully confident that, could the troops under Generals
-Ewing and Cadwallader have passed the river, I should have
-been able, with their assistance, to have driven the enemy from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-all their posts below Trenton. But the numbers I had with me
-being inferior to theirs below me, and a strong battalion of light
-infantry being at Princeton above me, I thought it most prudent
-to return the same evening with the prisoners and the artillery
-we had taken. We found no stores of any consequence
-in the town.</p>
-
-<p>In justice to the officers and men, I must add that their behavior
-upon this occasion reflects the highest honor upon them.
-The difficulty of passing the river in a very severe night, and
-their march through a violent storm of snow and hail, did not
-in the least abate their ardor; but when they came to the charge
-each seemed to vie with the other in pressing forward; and
-were I to give a preference to any particular corps I should do
-great injustice to the others.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Baylor, my first aid-de-camp, will have the honor of
-delivering this to you; and from him you may be made acquainted
-with many other particulars. His spirited behavior
-upon every occasion requires me to recommend him to your
-particular notice.</p>
-
-<p>I have the honor to be, etc.,</p>
-
-<p class="sig">
-G. W.<br />
-</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<h3><a id="THOMAS_JEFFERSON"></a>THOMAS JEFFERSON.</h3>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>As a composition, the Declaration [of Independence] is Mr. Jefferson’s.
-It is the production of his mind, and the high honor of it belongs
-to him clearly and absolutely. To say that he performed his great work
-well would be doing him an injustice. To say that he did excellently
-well, admirably well, would be inadequate and halting praise. Let us
-rather say that he so discharged the duty assigned him that all Americans
-may well rejoice that the work of drawing the title-deed of their liberties
-devolved upon him.—<i>Daniel Webster.</i></p>
-
-<p>After Washington and Franklin there is no person who fills so eminent
-a place among the great men of America as Jefferson.—<i>Lord
-Brougham.</i></p></div>
-
-
-<h4>Washington.</h4>
-
-<p>His mind was great and powerful, without being of the very
-first order; his penetration strong, though not so acute as that
-of a Newton, Bacon, or Locke; and as far as he saw, no judgment
-was ever sounder. It was slow in operation, being little
-aided by invention or imagination, but sure in conclusion.
-Hence the common remark of his officers, of the advantage he
-derived from councils of war, where, hearing all suggestions, he
-selected whatever was best; and certainly no general ever
-planned his battles more judiciously. But if deranged during
-the course of the action, if any member of his plan was dislocated
-by sudden circumstances, he was slow in a re-adjustment.
-The consequence was, that he often failed in the field, and
-rarely against an enemy in station, as at Boston and York. He
-was incapable of fear, meeting personal dangers with the calmest
-unconcern. Perhaps the strongest feature in his character
-was prudence, never acting until every circumstance, every consideration
-was maturely weighed; refraining if he saw a doubt,
-but when once decided, going through with his purpose, whatever
-obstacles opposed. His integrity was most pure, his justice
-the most inflexible I have ever known; no motives of interest
-or consanguinity, of friendship or hatred, being able to bias
-his decision. He was, indeed, in every sense of the word, a
-wise, a good, and a great man. His temper was naturally irritable
-and high-toned; but reflection and resolution had obtained
-a firm and habitual ascendency over it. If ever, however, it
-broke its bounds, he was most tremendous in his wrath. In his
-expenses he was honorable, but exact; liberal in contributions
-to whatever promised utility; but frowning and unyielding on
-all visionary projects, and all unworthy calls on his charity.
-His heart was not warm in its affections; but he exactly calculated
-every man’s value, and gave him a solid esteem proportioned
-to it. His person, you know, was fine, his stature exactly
-what one would wish; his deportment easy, erect, and noble,
-the best horseman of his age, and the most graceful figure that
-could be seen on horseback. Although in the circle of his
-friends, where he might be unreserved with safety, he took a
-free share in conversation, his colloquial talents were not above
-mediocrity, possessing neither copiousness of ideas nor fluency
-of words. In public, when called on for a sudden opinion, he
-was unready, short, and embarrassed. Yet he wrote readily,
-rather diffusely, in an easy and correct style. This he had acquired
-by conversation with the world, for his education was
-merely reading, writing, and common arithmetic, to which he
-added surveying at a later day. His time was employed in
-action chiefly, reading little, and that only in agriculture and
-English history. His correspondence became necessarily extensive,
-and with journalizing his agricultural proceedings, occupied
-most of his leisure hours within doors. On the whole,
-his character was, in its mass, perfect, in nothing bad, in a few
-points indifferent; and it may truly be said, that never did nature
-and fortune combine more completely to make a man
-great, and to place him in the same constellation with whatever
-worthies have merited from man an everlasting remembrance.
-For his was the singular destiny and merit of leading the armies
-of his country successfully through an arduous war, for the establishment
-of its independence; of conducting its councils
-through the birth of a government, new in its forms and principles,
-until it had settled down into a quiet and orderly train;
-and of scrupulously obeying the laws through the whole of his
-career, civil and military, of which the history of the world furnishes
-no other example.</p>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<h3><a id="THOUGHTS_FROM_WILLIAM_ELLERY_CHANNING"></a>THOUGHTS FROM WILLIAM ELLERY CHANNING.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">On Books.</span>—It is chiefly through books that we enjoy intercourse
-with superior minds and these invaluable means of communication
-are in the reach of all. In the best books great
-men talk to us, give us their most precious thoughts, and pour
-their souls into ours.</p>
-
-<p>God be thanked for books! They are the voices of the distant
-and the dead, and make us heirs of the spiritual life of past
-ages.</p>
-
-<p>Books are the true levelers. They give to all who will faithfully
-use them, the society, the spiritual presence of the best and
-greatest of our race. No matter how poor I am. No matter
-though the prosperous of my time will not enter my obscure
-dwelling. If the sacred writers will enter and take up their
-abode under my roof, if Milton will cross my threshhold to sing
-to me of paradise, and Shakspere to open to me the worlds of
-imagination and the workings of the human heart, and Franklin
-to enrich me with his practical wisdom, I shall not pine for
-want of intellectual companionship, and I may become a cultivated
-man, though excluded from what is called the best
-society in the place where I live.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">On Labor.</span>—Manual labor is a great good, but only in its
-just proportions. In excess it does great harm. It is not a good
-when made the sole work of life. It must be joined with higher
-means of improvement or it degrades instead of exalting. Man
-has a various nature which requires a variety of occupation and
-discipline for its growth. Study, meditation, society, and relaxation
-should be mixed up with his physical toil. He has
-intellect, heart, imagination, taste, as well as bones and muscles;
-and he is grievously wronged when compelled to exclusive
-drudgery for bodily subsistence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">On Politics.</span>—To govern one’s self (not others) is true glory.
-To serve through love, not to rule, is Christian greatness.
-Office is not dignity. The lowest men, because most faithless
-in principle, most servile to opinion, are to be found in office.
-I am sorry to say it, but the truth should be spoken, that, at
-the present moment, political action in this country does little
-to lift up any who are concerned in it. It stands in opposition
-to a high morality. Politics, indeed, regarded as the study and
-pursuit of the true, enduring good of a community, as the application
-of great unchangeable principles to public affairs, is a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-noble sphere of thought and action, but politics, in its common
-sense, or considered as the invention of temporary shifts, as
-the playing of a subtle game, as the tactics of party for gaining
-power and the spoils of office, and for elevating one set of men
-above another is a paltry and debasing concern.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">On Self-Denial.</span>—To deny ourselves is to deny, to withstand,
-to renounce whatever, within or without, interferes with
-our conviction of right, or with the will of God. It is to suffer,
-to make sacrifice, for duty or our principles. The question now
-offers itself: What constitutes the singular merit of this suffering?
-Mere suffering, we all know, is not virtue. Evil men
-often endure pain as well as the good and are evil still. This,
-and this alone, constitutes the worth and importance of the
-sacrifice, suffering, which enters into self-denial, that it springs
-from and manifests moral strength, power over ourselves, force
-of purpose, or the mind’s resolute determination of itself to duty.
-It is the proof and result of inward energy. Difficulty, hardship,
-suffering, sacrifices, are tests and measures of moral force
-and the great means of its enlargement. To withstand these is
-the same thing as to put forth power. Self-denial then is the
-will acting with power in the choice and prosecution of duty.
-Here we have the distinguishing glory of self-denial, and here
-we have the essence and distinction of a good and virtuous
-man.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">On Pleasure.</span>—The first means of placing a people beyond
-the temptations to intemperance is to furnish them with the
-means of innocent pleasure. By innocent pleasures I mean
-such as excite moderately; such as produce a cheerful frame of
-mind, not boisterous mirth; such as refresh, instead of exhausting,
-the system; such as are chastened by self-respect,
-and are accompanied with the consciousness that life has a
-higher end than to be amused. In every community there
-<i>must</i> be pleasures, relaxations and means of agreeable excitement;
-and if innocent ones are not furnished, resort will be
-had to criminal. Men drink to excess very often to shake off
-depression, or to satisfy the restless thirst for agreeable excitement,
-and these motives are excluded in a cheerful community.
-A gloomy state of society in which there are few innocent recreations,
-may be expected to abound in drunkenness if opportunities
-are afforded. The savage drinks to excess because his
-hours of sobriety are dull and unvaried, because in losing consciousness
-of his condition and his existence he loses little
-which he wishes to retain. The laboring classes are most exposed
-to intemperance, because they have at present few other
-pleasurable excitements. A man, who, after toil, has resources
-of blameless recreation is less tempted than other men to seek
-self-oblivion. He has too many of the pleasures of the man to
-take up those of the brute.</p>
-
-<p class="continue">
-[End of Required Reading for November.]<br />
-</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-<h2><a name="AUTUMN_SYMPATHY" id="AUTUMN_SYMPATHY">AUTUMN SYMPATHY.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">By E. G. CHARLESWORTH.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">The primrose and the violet,</div>
-<div class="verse">The bloom on apricot and peach,</div>
-<div class="verse">The marriage-song of larks in heights,</div>
-<div class="verse">The south wind and the swallow’s nest;</div>
-<div class="verse">All born of spring, I once loved best.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">But now the dying leaf and flower,</div>
-<div class="verse">The frost wind moaning in the pane,</div>
-<div class="verse">The robin’s plaintive latter song,</div>
-<div class="verse">The early sunset in the west;</div>
-<div class="verse">All born of autumn, I love best.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Tell me, my heart, the reason why</div>
-<div class="verse">Thy pulse thus beats with things that die;</div>
-<div class="verse">Is it thine own autumnal sheaves?</div>
-<div class="verse">Is it thine own dead fallen leaves?</div>
-<div class="sig">—<i>London Sunday Magazine.</i></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="REPUBLICAN_PROSPECTS_IN" id="REPUBLICAN_PROSPECTS_IN">REPUBLICAN PROSPECTS IN
-FRANCE.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">By JOSEPH REINACH.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>On the very morrow of Gambetta’s death, and when that catastrophe
-had been interpreted by the immense majority of
-European opinion, as also by many Frenchmen, as the certain
-presage of the approaching triumph of advanced Radicalism—triumph
-to be followed by violent interior discords that would
-infallibly bring about the fall of the Republic and the re-establishment
-either of Empire or of Royalty—I said that these
-predictions would not be realized, and, moreover, that Gambetta’s
-death would but serve to hasten the triumph of his
-political ideas and party. I will cite, word for word, what I
-wrote at the end of January in a paper that appeared in this
-Review on February 1:</p>
-
-<p>“We even believe we may predict that the realization of
-several of Gambetta’s ideas will meet with fewer obstacles, at
-least among a certain fraction of public opinion, to-morrow
-than yesterday. A formidable reaction will take place in favor
-of the great statesman whom we weep, a reaction in favor of
-his theories and his principles. In short, we shall most likely
-witness the contrary of what has taken place for some years.
-It was enough that Gambetta should defend a theory for it to
-be attacked with fury. From henceforth it will often suffice
-that an idea was formerly held up by Gambetta for it to be enthusiastically
-acclaimed. As in the story of Cid Campeador, it
-is his corpse that leads his followers to victory.”</p>
-
-<p>What I foretold six months ago has been fulfilled in every
-point. Those very Castilians who during Cid’s lifetime suspected
-him of the darkest designs and reviled him as a criminal—what
-did they do after his death? They put the hero’s corpse
-in an iron coffin, and the black gravecloth on the bier was the
-standard which, in the front rank of battle, led the Spanish
-army to victory. And so has it been, or nearly so, with French
-Republicans and Gambetta. The political history of our
-country during the last six months may be thus summed up:
-Out of Gambetta’s death-bed has arisen a first (not complete)
-victory for his ideas and friends; from the party more specially
-organized by him have been chosen most men now in office,
-that they may execute his will.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, just after the excitement of the first few
-days, as soon as it became necessary for the Republicans to
-unite and stop the Royalists who thought the fruit already ripe,
-what ministers did the President of the Republic call for? M.
-Jules Ferry, who for the last five years had been, if not the
-direct coadjutor, at least the most invariable and faithful political
-ally of Gambetta, was made Prime Minister; M. Waldeck-Rousseau,
-the late Minister for Home Affairs under Gambetta,
-and M. Raynal, the late Minister of Public Works, were both
-recalled to the same offices. M. Challemel-Lacour, Gambetta’s
-most esteemed and devoted friend, was named Minister of
-Foreign Affairs, and M. Martin Feuillèe, Under-Secretary of
-State for Justice on November 14, Minister of Justice; M.
-Margue, Under-Secretary of State for Home Affairs, resumed
-the same post. General Campenon could have been Minister
-of War had he wished it. And a great pity it is he declined his
-friends’ proposals. Thus, in its general bearings, the Ferry
-Ministry is the Gambetta Ministry without Gambetta.</p>
-
-<p>Except some secondary modifications made necessary by the
-change of circumstances, the political program is about the
-same. Abroad an active and steady diplomacy, the regular
-development of our colonial politics, the consolidation of the
-protectorate in Tunis; at home the constitution of a strong government,
-the methodical realization of social and democratic
-reforms, the policy of <i>scrutin de liste</i>, whilst awaiting the abolition
-of <i>scrutin d’arrondissement</i>. The principal bills adopted
-last session, except the Magistracy bill, are but legacies from
-the Gambetta Cabinet. Both cabinets are animated by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-same national spirit—national above all, but also progressist
-and governmental. The halo imparted by the presence of a
-man of genius is certainly wanting; but Carlyle’s <i>hero-worship</i>
-is by no means a democratic necessity. There is certainly reason
-for rejoicing when a nation acknowledges and appreciates
-in one of its sons, sprung from its midst, an intellect of the
-highest order. But when Alexander leaves lieutenants profoundly
-imbued with his spirit, formed in his school, most
-desirous and capable of continuing his work—when these men,
-instead of being at variance, remain, on the contrary, more
-strongly bound together than ever—there is certainly no reason
-for complaining and giving way to discouragement.</p>
-
-<p>Then it is not only in parliament that the <i>opportunist</i> policy
-is again getting the upper hand. Throughout the whole country
-it has regained the ground it had lost by the intrigues of
-hostile parties. The great majority of Republicans have now
-recovered from a number of diseases for which Gambetta had
-always prescribed the remedy—remedy, alas! that too many
-refused to stretch out their hand for. The mania for decentralization
-is forgotten. The necessity for a strongly constituted
-and vigorous central power is almost universally understood
-and acknowledged. Demagogue charlatans are for the most
-part unmasked. Our foreign policy is steadier—we are no
-longer afraid of Egyptian shadows. Intransigeants of the Right
-and Left still continue to see in our colonial enterprises but vulgar
-jobbing, and to denounce and revile them in every possible
-way. But the great mass of the nation is no longer to be made
-a fool of, and has understood the necessity of extending France
-beyond the seas. There is a story of an English peasant who
-locked the stable door after the horse had been stolen. Happily
-for France she has several horses in her stables. If she
-has lost, at least for a time, her beautiful Arabian steed on the
-borders of the Nile, that is but an additional reason for taking
-jealous care of the others.—<i>The Nineteenth Century.</i></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> 404 Honorius was emperor. At that time, in the remote
-deserts of Libya, there dwelt an obscure monk named Telemachus.
-He had heard of the awful scenes in the far-off Coliseum
-at Rome. Depend upon it, they lost nothing by their
-transit across the Mediterranean in the hands of Greek and
-Roman sailors. In the baths and market-places of Alexandria,
-in the Jewries of Cyrene, in the mouths of every itinerant Eastern
-story-teller, the festive massacres of the Coliseum would
-doubtless be clothed in colors truly appalling, yet scarcely more
-appalling than the truth.</p>
-
-<p>Telemachus brooded over these horrors till his mission dawned
-upon him. He was ordained by heaven to put an end to the
-slaughter of human beings in the Coliseum. He made his way
-to Rome. He entered the Coliseum with the throng, what time
-the gladiators were parading in front of the emperor with uplifted
-swords and the wild mockery of homage—“<i>Morituri te salutant.</i>”
-Elbowing his way to the barrier, he leapt over at the
-moment when the combatants rushed at each other, threw himself
-between them, bidding them, in the name of Christ, to desist.
-To blank astonishment succeeded imperial contempt and
-popular fury. Telemachus fell slain by the swords of the gladiators.
-Legend may adorn the tale and fancy fill out the picture,
-but the solid fact remains—<i>there never was another gladiatorial
-fight in the Coliseum</i>. One heroic soul had caught the flow of
-public feeling that had already begun to set in the direction of
-humanity, and turned it. He had embodied by his act and consecrated
-by his death the sentiment that already lay timidly in
-the hearts of thousands in that great city of Rome. In 430 an
-edict was passed abolishing forever gladiatorial exhibitions.—<i>Good
-Words.</i></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">All</span> merit ceases the moment we perform an act for the sake
-of its consequences. Truly in this respect “we have our reward.”—<i>Wilhelm
-von Humboldt.</i></p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAUTAUQUA_TO_CALIFORNIA" id="CHAUTAUQUA_TO_CALIFORNIA">CHAUTAUQUA TO CALIFORNIA.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">By FRANCES E. WILLARD, President N. W. C. T. U.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<h3>I.</h3>
-
-<h4>I.—SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA.</h4>
-
-<p>In one thing Chautauqua and California are alike—each is a
-climax, and both are “made up of every creature’s best.” My
-sufficient consolation for missing one of them this year is, that
-I saw the other. Let us speed onward, then, taking Chautauqua
-as our point of departure, in a Pickwickian sense only, unless
-for the further reason that it has the high prerogative of making
-all its happy denizens believe it to be the center of gravity (and
-good times) for one planet at least; the meridian from which
-all fortunate longitude is reckoned and all lucky time-pieces
-set. Our swift train, “outward bound,” races along through the
-old familiar East and the West no longer new.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">“Through the kingdoms of corn,</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Through the empires of grain,</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Through dominions of forest;</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Drives the thundering train;</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Through fields where God’s cattle</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Are turned out to grass,</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">And his poultry whirl up</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">From the wheels as we pass;</span></div>
-<div class="verse">Through level horizons as still as the moon</div>
-<div class="verse">With the wilds fast asleep and the winds in a swoon.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>From a palace car with every eastern luxury, we gaze out on
-the dappled, pea-green hills of New Mexico and the wide,
-empty stretches of Arizona, stopping in Santa Fe—Columbia’s
-Damascus, in Albuquerque—a pocket edition of Chicago, and
-in Tucson—the storm-center of semi-tropic trade. But the “W.
-C. T. U.” is a plant of healing as indigenous to every soil for
-good as the saloon for evil, and in the first city the Governor’s
-wife has accepted leadership; in the second that place is held
-by a lovely Ohio girl, the wife of a young lawyer; and in the
-third a leading woman of society and church work, whose husband
-is one of Arizona’s most honored pioneers, consents to be
-our standard-bearer. These way-side errands, with their delightful
-new friendships and tender gospel lessons over, we
-hasten on to California. Some token of its affluent beauty
-comes to us on Easter Sabbath in the one hundred calla-lilies
-sent from Los Angeles, five hundred miles beyond, to adorn the
-church where we worship in Tucson, that marvelous oasis in
-the desert. “Go on, and God be with you,” says the friend
-who escorts us to the train; “you’ll find Los Angeles a heaven
-on earth.” And so, indeed, we did, coming up out of the wilderness
-on a soft spring day, between fair, emerald hills that
-stood as the fore-runners of the choicest land on which were
-ever mirrored the glory and the loveliness of God.</p>
-
-<p>We visited the thirty leading centers of interest and activity
-in the great Golden State during the two months of our stay,
-but when the courteous mayor of this “city of the angels” welcomed
-us thither, and children heaped about us their baskets
-of flowers, rare, save in California, we told “His Honor” that
-of all the towns we had yet visited—and they number a thousand
-at least—his was the one most fitly named.</p>
-
-<p>Southern California, and this its exquisite metropolis, have
-been a terra incognita even to the intelligent, until the steam
-horse lately caracoled this way. Now it is thronged by emigrants
-and tourists, men and women of small means reaping
-from half a dozen acres here what a large farm in Illinois could
-hardly yield, and invalids hitherto only an expense to their
-friends, finding the elixir of life in this balmy air, and joyously
-joining once more the energetic working forces of the world.
-Flowers are so plenty here that banks and pyramids alone can
-satisfy the claims of decorative art; baskets of roses are more
-frequent than bouquets or even <i>boutonnieres</i> with us. Heliotropes
-and fuchsias climb to the apex of the roof, while the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-common garden trees are oranges, lemons, limes, citrons, figs,
-olives and pomegranates. Strawberry short-cake can be had
-all the year round from the fresh fruit of one’s own garden, and
-oranges at the rate of nine thousand to one tree, and in some
-cases fifteen inches in circumference, have been raised in this
-vicinity. Riverside and Pasadena are adjacent colonies and
-bear a stronger resemblance to one’s ideal Garden of Eden
-than any other places I ever expect to see. Through groves of
-rarest semi-tropic fruit trees you ride for miles, in the midst of
-beautiful, modern homes, for the American renaissance is not
-more manifest in the suburbs of Boston or Chicago than in
-Southern California. Fences are nowhere visible, the Monterey
-cypress furnishing a hedge which puts to blush the choicest of
-old England; the pepper tree with drooping branches, and the
-Australian gum tree, tall and umbrageous, outlining level
-avenues whose vistas seem unending. Above all this are skies
-that give back one’s best Italian memories, and for a background
-the tranquil amplitude of the Sierra Madre Mountains.
-What would you more? “See Naples and die” is an outworn
-phrase. “See California and live” has been the magic
-formula of how many restored and happy pilgrims! The
-tonic of cold water has electrified this soil, seven years ago an
-utter desert, so that now three years of growth will work a
-transformation that fifteen would fail to bring about east of the
-Mississippi. To my thinking this result is but a material prototype
-of the heavenly estate that shall come to our America
-when its arid waste of brains and stomachs, usurped by alcohol,
-shall learn the cooling virtues of this same cold water. In
-Riverside my host planted in May of 1880, two thousand grape
-cuttings (not roots, remember), and in September, 1881, gathered
-from them two hundred boxes of grapes. Pasadena was
-founded by a good man from Maine, and is exempt from saloons
-by the provisions of its charter. Here, from six acres, a
-gentleman realized thirteen hundred dollars, clear of all expenses,
-last year, by drying and sacking his grapes, instead of
-sending them to the winery. “The profits were so much larger
-that hereafter his pocket-book will counsel him, if not his conscience,
-to keep clear of the wine trade,” said the wide awake
-temperance woman who gave me the item. In Pasadena, Mrs.
-Jennie C. Carr, whose fruit ranche and gardens, largely tilled
-by her own hands, disclose every imaginable variety which the
-most extravagant climate can produce, sells at three thousand
-dollars per acre, land purchased by her for a mere song six
-years ago. In Santa Ana and San Bernardino, also near Los
-Angeles, there is the same luxuriance and swift moving life.
-A county superintendent of schools told me he had one school
-district that includes 160 miles of railroad, and has a town of
-800 people, where three months ago there was silence and vacancy.
-At San Diego, the most southerly town in California,
-we found the <i>ne plus ultra</i> of climate for consumptives, its temperature
-ranging from fifty-five to seventy-five degrees, and its
-air dry. San Diego is the oldest town in the State, having been
-established as a Catholic “Mission” in 1769. It is now altogether
-modernized and is Nature’s own sanitarium, besides
-being a lovely land-locked harbor of the Pacific. Santa
-Barbara, which we missed seeing, has a grape vine sixty
-years old, and a foot through, which in 1867 bore six tons
-of grapes, some of whose clusters weighed five pounds each.
-The railroad will soon make this beautiful town accessible to
-rapid tourists to whom the ocean is unkind. Twenty-one missions
-were founded over a century ago by Franciscan friars in
-Southern California. They brought with them from Spain the
-orange and the vine. They were conquerors, civilizers, subduers
-of the soil. They brought cattle, horses, sheep, and—alas!
-hogs. They conquered the land for Spain without cruelty,
-baptizing the Indians into the church and teaching them the
-arts of peace. Then followed the Mexican, then our own conquest
-of their territory, and now the Anglo-Saxon reigns supreme
-in a land on which Nature has lavished all she had to
-give. Upon his victory over the alcohol habit, depends the future
-of this goodly heritage. If he raises grapes he will survive; if
-he turns them into wine he must succumb.</p>
-
-
-<h4>II.—SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY.</h4>
-
-<p>We crossed the famous and dangerous “Tehachapi Pass”
-at night, and wended our way slowly through this notable valley,
-three hundred miles in length by thirty-five in width, stopping
-to found the W. C. T. U. in its four chief towns, Fresno,
-Tulare, Merced, and Modesto.</p>
-
-<p>Irrigation is the watchword here, and as it takes capitalists to
-carry this through on a scale so immense, large farms are now the
-rule. For instance, we passed over one seventy-three miles in
-length by twenty in width. Later on, it is to be hoped these
-immense proprietaries may be settled by men whose primary
-object is to establish and maintain homes. At present, in the
-agricultural line, “big enterprises” are alone attractive. “Alfalfa,”
-a peculiarly hardy and luxuriant clover—imported by
-Governor Bigler from Chili—is the first crop, and grazing precedes
-grain. This plant “strikes its roots six feet or more into
-the soil, and never requires a second planting, while every year
-there are five crops of alfalfa and but two of wheat and barley.”</p>
-
-<p>Varied indeed is the population of this valley. One day we
-dine with a practical woman from Massachusetts, who declares
-that the sand storms, which most people consider the heaviest
-discount on the valley, are “really not so bad, for they polish
-off the house floors as nothing else could.” The next we meet
-a group of earnest, motherly hearts from a dozen different States,
-and almost as many religious denominations, united to “provide
-for the common defense” of home against saloon. Next day
-a lawyer from Charleston invites us to his cozy residence, “because
-his wife knows some of our Southern leaders in the W. C.
-T. U.” The next we make acquaintance with half a dozen
-school ma’ams from the East, who have taken a ranche and set
-up housekeeping for themselves; and in the fourth town visited
-an Englishman born in Auckland, New Zealand, the leading
-criminal lawyer of the county, and instigator of the woman’s
-crusade in Oakland, who gives us a graphic description of that
-movement, which was a far-off echo of the Ohio pentecost.</p>
-
-<p>So we move on at the rate of two meetings a day, with the
-hearty support of the united clergy (except the Episcopal, and
-often they helped us, too), and the warm coöperation of the temperance
-societies, emerging in San Francisco, Monday, April
-16, 1883.</p>
-
-
-<h4>III.—SAN FRANCISCO.</h4>
-
-<p>I am glad we did not so far forget ourselves as to arrive on
-Sunday, for it appears that certain good, gifted, and famous
-persons, who shall be nameless, telegraphed to certain Christian
-leaders of their intended arrival on that day, and received answer:
-“The hour of your coming will find us at church. The
-Palace is the best hotel.” Now on an overland trip, an absent-minded
-traveler might fail to note the precise date of his
-arrival in the metropolis of the Pacific, but that would be no excuse
-to our guid folk yonder, whose Sunday laws have been
-smitten from their statute books, and Christians hold themselves
-to strict account for their example, which now alone conserves
-the Christian’s worship and the poor man’s rest.</p>
-
-<p>San Francisco is probably the most cosmopolitan city now
-extant. Its three hundred thousand people sound the gamut
-of nationality in the most varying and dissonant chorus that
-ever greeted human ears. The struggle for survival is an astonishing
-mixture of fierceness and good-nature. Crowding
-along the streets, Irish and Chinaman, New Englander and Negro,
-show kind consideration, but in the marts of trade and at
-the polls “their guns are ballots, their bullets are ideas.” Old-time
-asperities are softening, however, even on these battlegrounds.
-The trend is upward, toward higher levels of hope
-and brotherhood. Eliminate the alcohol and opium habits, and
-all these would (and will ere long) dwell together in unity. Lives
-like those of Rev. Dr. Otis Gibson, and Mrs. Captain Goodall, invested
-for the Christianizing of the Chinese, or like that of Mrs.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-Sarah B. Cooper, devoted to kindergartening the embryo “hoodlum,”
-or that of Dr. R. H. McDonald, the millionaire philanthropist,
-consecrated to the temperance reform, are mighty
-prophecies of the good time coming.</p>
-
-<p>San Francisco is the city of bay windows, and its people, beyond
-any other on this continent, believe in sunshine and fresh
-air. In like manner, they are fond of ventilating every subject,
-are in nowise afraid of the next thing simply because it is the
-next, but have broad hospitality for new ideas. Rapid as the
-heel taps of its street life is the movement of its thought and the
-flame of its sympathy. Much as has been said in its dispraise,
-Mount Diablo—the chief feature of its environs—is not so symbolic
-of its spirit as the white tomb of Thomas Starr King, which,
-standing beside one of its busiest streets, is a perpetual reminder
-of noble power conserved for noblest use. Everybody knows
-San Francisco’s harbor is without a rival save Puget Sound
-and Constantinople. Everybody has heard of its “Palace Hotel,”
-the largest in the world, and one that includes “eighteen
-acres of floor;” of its “endless chain” street cars, the inevitable
-outgrowth of dire necessity in its up-hill streets; of its indescribable
-“Chinatown;” of “Seal Rock,” with its monster sea-lions,
-gamboling and howling year out and year in, for herein
-are the salient features of the strange city’s individuality. For
-a metropolis but thirty-four years old, the following record is
-unrivaled: Total value of real and personal property, $253,000,000;
-school property, $1,000,000; 130,000 buildings; 11,000
-streets; 12 street car lines; 33 libraries and reading-rooms;
-38 hospitals; 316 benevolent societies; 168 newspapers, and—the
-best fire department in the world!</p>
-
-<p>The two drawbacks of this wonderful city are its variable climate
-and its possible earthquakes. A witty writer warns the
-intending tourist thus: “Be sure to bring your <i>summer</i> clothes.
-Let me repeat: be sure to bring your <i>winter</i> clothes.” To state
-the fact that in August one may see fur cloaks any day, and in
-January a June toilet is not uncommon, is but another way of
-stating that the galloping sea breeze, unimpeded by mountains,
-rushes in moist squadrons on the shore, and has all seasons for
-its own, in which to battle with the genial warmth of this most
-lovely climate. As to earthquakes, there have been but three
-since 1849, and these were insignificant calamities compared
-with one year of our domesticated western tornadoes. Less
-than fifty lives have been lost in California by earthquakes,
-thirty-seven of these occurring in the country outside of San
-Francisco, and less than a hundred thousand dollars worth of
-property has been destroyed, while two millions would not
-cover our loss by cyclone in a single year, to say nothing of
-the number of victims. Civilization seems to have a naturalizing
-effect on fleas, snakes and earthquakes, west of the Sierras,
-but acts as a tonic upon hurricanes east of the Rockies. Will
-our scientists please “rise to explain” this mystery so close in
-its relation to human weal and woe?</p>
-
-<p class="continue">
-[To be continued.]<br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-<h2><a name="TO_MY_BOOKS" id="TO_MY_BOOKS">TO MY BOOKS.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">By <span class="smcap">Lady</span> STIRLING-MAXWELL.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Silent companions of the lonely hour,</div>
-<div class="verse">Friends, who can never alter or forsake,</div>
-<div class="verse">Who for inconstant roving have no power,</div>
-<div class="verse">And all neglect, perforce, must calmly take,</div>
-<div class="verse">Let me return to you; this turmoil ending</div>
-<div class="verse">Which worldly cares have in my spirit wrought,</div>
-<div class="verse">And, o’er your old familiar pages bending,</div>
-<div class="verse">Refresh my mind with many a tranquil thought:</div>
-<div class="verse">Till, haply meeting there, from time to time,</div>
-<div class="verse">Fancies, the audible echo of my own,</div>
-<div class="verse">’Twill be like hearing in a foreign clime</div>
-<div class="verse">My native language spoke in friendly tone,</div>
-<div class="verse">And with a sort of welcome I shall dwell</div>
-<div class="verse">On these, my unripe musings, told so well.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="EARTHQUAKESISCHIA_AND_JAVA" id="EARTHQUAKESISCHIA_AND_JAVA">EARTHQUAKES—ISCHIA AND JAVA.</a></h2>
-
-
-<h3>PHENOMENA AND PROBABLE CAUSES.</h3>
-
-<p>These violent convulsions that from time to time shake and
-rend the earth, are among the most terrible calamities that come
-upon men, causing immense destruction of property and of life.
-Their occurrence is often most unexpected.</p>
-
-<p>Villages, cities, and whole districts of densely populated
-countries sink beneath a sudden stroke, overwhelmed in a
-common ruin. If any warning is given, the alarming premonitions
-rather confuse and paralyze effort, because, with the appalling
-certainty of disaster, there is nothing to show in what
-form it will come, or to indicate a place of refuge.</p>
-
-<p>While the recent horrors at Ischia and in Java excite much
-painful interest in the public mind, they naturally recall similar
-scenes of other years. Earthquakes of less destructive violence
-are very frequent, and suggest greater power than is exerted.
-Even the slight trembling, or vibratory motions, that
-produce no material injury, remind us of the prodigious forces
-that may at any moment burst their barriers with great violence.</p>
-
-<p>In every perceptible shock we feel the mighty pulsations of
-the agitated molten mass whose waves dash against the walls
-that restrain them; or the struggling of compressed elastic
-gases, that must have vent, though their escape rend the earth.
-The crust between us and the seas of fire, whose extent no man
-knoweth, may be in places weakening, cut away, as the inner
-walls of a furnace by the molten metal; so the danger may be
-nearer and greater than is known or feared. A devout man
-finds refuge and a comfortable assurance in the truth, “The
-Lord reigneth; in his hands are the deep places of the earth.
-The strength of the hills is his also.”</p>
-
-<p>There are records of earthquakes more ancient than any
-books written by men. They antedate the earliest chapters of
-human history, and probably belonged to the pre-adamite earth.
-If no human ear heard their tread, the footprints are still visible.
-In all mountainous regions the evidence of their upheaval
-by some mighty force is too plain to be doubted. The marine
-fossils found far up on their heights, the position of strata, often
-far from horizontal, with immense fissures, and chasms of unknown
-depth, all tell of disturbances that may have taken place
-before the historic period. If in those primitive times mountains
-were literally carried into the midst of the sea, and vast
-tracts of the ocean’s bed shoved up thousands of feet, it was
-only a more terrible display of the gigantic powers still in
-action, and of whose workings the centuries have borne witness.</p>
-
-<p>No country seems to have escaped these terrible visitations,
-though some suffer more than others. Volcanoes being of the
-same origin, they are more frequent in volcanic regions, and
-perhaps by their shocks the seething caldrons have been uncovered.</p>
-
-<p>The same localities, as Southern Italy, and the neighboring
-island of Sicily, have, from a remote period, at times been terribly
-shaken. From 1783 to 1786 a thousand shocks were
-made note of, five hundred of which are described as having
-much force. Lyell considers them of special importance, not
-because differing from like disturbances in other places, but because
-observed and minutely described by men competent to
-collect and state such physical facts in a way to show their
-bearing on the science of the earth. The following, collected
-from Lyell, Gibbon, Humboldt, and the encyclopædias, are facts
-respecting some of the principal earthquakes on record. Their
-statements, much condensed, are not given in chronological
-order, but as we find them:</p>
-
-<p>In 115, of the Christian era, Antioch in Syria, “Queen of the
-East,” beautiful in itself, and beautiful for situation, a city of
-two hundred thousand inhabitants, was utterly ruined by earthquake.
-Afterward rebuilt, in more than all its ancient splendor,
-by Trajan, the tide of life and wealth again flowed into it, and
-for centuries we read of no serious disasters of the kind. All
-apprehension of danger removed, the people became famous for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-luxurious refinements, and, strangely enough, seem to have
-united high intellectual qualities with a passionate fondness for
-amusements. In 458 the city was again terribly shaken, and
-twice in the sixth century. Each time the destruction was nearly
-complete; but each time, in less than a century, the city was restored
-again, but only to stand until 1822, and from that overthrow
-it has never recovered, being now a miserable town of
-only six thousand inhabitants. The destruction of five populous
-cities, on one site, involved a fearful loss of life. Probably
-more than half a million thus perished. The most destructive
-earthquake in that, or any other locality, of which we find any
-mention, was in 562. An immense number of strangers being
-in attendance at the festival of the Ascension, added to the
-multitudes belonging to the city. Gibbon estimates that two
-hundred and fifty thousand persons were buried in the ruins.</p>
-
-<p>Among the earliest accounts of earthquakes having particular
-interest, is the familiar one of that which destroyed Herculaneum
-and Pompeii in the year 63—about sixteen years before
-those cities were buried in scoria and ashes from Vesuvius.</p>
-
-<p>Of modern earthquakes three or four are here mentioned as
-presenting some interesting phenomena. That of Chili, in 1822,
-caused the permanent elevation of the country between the Andes
-and the coast. The area thus raised is estimated at one
-hundred thousand square miles, and the elevation from two to
-seven feet. Shore lines, at higher levels, indicate several previous
-upheavals of the same region, along about the same lines.
-The opposite of this, a depression of land, was occasioned in
-the island of Jamaica in 1692, when Port Royal, the capital, was
-overwhelmed. A thousand acres or more thus sank in less than
-one minute, the sea rolling in and driving the vessels that were
-in the harbor over the tops of the houses.</p>
-
-<p>The earthquake of New Madrid, below St. Louis, on the Mississippi,
-was in 1811, and interesting as an instance of successive
-shocks, and almost incessant quaking of the ground for
-months, and at a distance from any volcano. The agitation of
-the earth in Missouri continued till near the time of the destruction
-of the city of Caracas, in South America, and then
-ceased. One evening, about this time, is described by the inhabitants
-of New Madrid as cloudless, and peculiarly brilliant.
-The western sky was a continual glare from vivid flashes of
-lightning, and peals of thunder were incessantly heard, apparently
-proceeding, as did the flashes, from below the horizon.
-Comparatively little harm was done in Missouri, but the beautiful
-city of Caracas, with its splendid churches and palatial
-homes, was made a heap of ruins, beneath which twelve thousand
-of its inhabitants were buried. Just how these events were
-related we know not. Whether the same pent-up forces that
-were struggling in vain to escape in the valley of the Mississippi,
-found vent in that distant locality, God only knows. The
-supposition allowed may account for the relief that came to the
-greatly troubled New Madrid. The evils they dreaded came
-but in part—enough only to suggest the greater perils they escaped.
-Over an extent of country three hundred miles in length
-fissures were opened in the ground through which mud and
-water were thrown, high as the tops of the trees. From the
-mouth of the Ohio to the St. Francis the ground rose and fell
-in great undulations. Lakes were formed and drained again,
-and the general surface so lowered that the country along the
-White River and its tributaries, for a distance of seventy miles,
-is known as “the sunk country.” Flint, the geographer, seven
-years after the event, noticed hundreds of chasms then closed
-and partially filled. They may yet, in places, be traced, having
-the appearance of artificial trenches.</p>
-
-<p>Fissures are occasionally met in different parts of the country,
-which extend through solid rock to a great depth. “The
-Rocks” at Panama, N. Y., have been elsewhere described, and
-furnish a profitable study.</p>
-
-<p>A more remarkable chasm of this kind extends from the
-western base of the Shawangunk Mountain, near Ellenville,
-Ulster County, N. Y., for about a mile to the summit. At first
-one can easily step across the fissure, but further up it becomes
-wider, till the hard vertical walls of sandstone are separated by
-a gorge several feet wide, and of great depth. At the top an area
-of a hundred acres or more is rent in every direction, the continuity
-of the surface being interrupted by steps of rocks, presenting
-abrupt walls. The gorge traced up the mountain becomes
-a frightful abyss, more than a hundred feet wide. Among
-the loose stones at the bottom large trees are growing, whose
-tops scarce reach half way to the edge of the precipice. Most
-such disruptions of rocks and mountains were doubtless caused
-by earthquakes at some unknown period.</p>
-
-<p>The great earthquake at Lisbon, the capital of Portugal, was
-in 1755. “The ominous rumbling sound below the surface was
-almost immediately followed by the shock which threw down
-the principal part of the city; in the short space of six minutes,
-it is believed, 60,000 perished. The sea rolled back, leaving
-the bar dry, and then returned, in a great tidal wave, fifty feet,
-or more, in height. The mountains around were shaken with
-great violence, their rocks rent, and thrown in fragments into
-the valley below. Multitudes of people rushed from their falling
-buildings to the marble quay, which suddenly sank with
-them, like a ship foundering at sea; and when the waters closed
-over the place no fragments of the wreck—none of the vessels
-near by, that were drawn into the whirlpool, and not one of the
-thousands of the bodies that were carried down ever appeared
-again. Over the spot occupied by the quay, the water
-stood six hundred feet deep; and beneath it, locked in fissured
-rocks, and in chasms of unknown depth, lie what was the life
-and wealth of the place, in the middle of the eighteenth century.”</p>
-
-<p>Earthquakes, of especial interest, from their recent occurrence
-and destructive effects, are those of 1857-58, in the kingdom
-of Naples, and in Mexico; but we have not room to more
-than mention them. The past summer will be remembered as
-the period of at least two terrible disasters from earthquakes,
-in localities distant from each other. The first, July 28, was
-at Ischia, a beautiful island at the north entrance of the bay of
-Naples. The principal town, Cassamicciola, was mostly destroyed,
-and much injury done at other places. The town was
-a noted health resort, and it is feared many distinguished strangers
-perished in it. The shocks began in the night, when a
-majority of the citizens, who frequent such places, were in the
-theater, and the scene there was terrible. Lamps were overturned;
-clouds of dust arose, and then the walls of the building
-opened, and fell, giving no opportunity for escape. The
-ground opened in many places, and houses and their inhabitants
-were swallowed up. The hotel Picola Sentinella sank
-into the earth, with all its inmates. The number destroyed,
-first estimated at three thousand, was much larger, but how
-much is not yet certainly known. Years must elapse before
-the town is restored, when it will be with a new class of inhabitants.</p>
-
-<p>The sad tidings of disaster in Italy were soon followed by
-still more startling intelligence from Java, where, as in regions
-bordering on the Mediterranean, earthquakes are not a new
-experience with the inhabitants. A recital of the calamities occurring
-in Java during the last century would make a gloomy
-chapter in history, suggesting the insecurity and transitory nature
-of all earthly possessions. The island is one of the largest
-and, commercially, most important, in the Indian archipelago,
-six hundred and sixty miles in length, and the width varying
-from forty to one hundred and thirty miles. It is densely populated,
-and governed by a Dutch viceroy. In the mountain
-range extending through the center, with a mean elevation of
-seven thousand feet, are many volcanoes; and earthquakes are
-of frequent occurrence, as in other volcanic regions. In 1878
-record was made of some sixteen, in different parts of the island.
-One of the most famous, accompanied by a vast eruption
-of Papandayang, the largest of the volcanoes, took place a
-hundred years ago, overwhelming an area of a hundred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-square miles, and destroying three thousand people—the island
-at that time having fewer inhabitants. There were two similar
-eruptions from volcanoes at the same time, respectively one
-hundred and thirty-four and three hundred and fifty-two miles
-from Papandayang, suggesting the fact that the power of producing
-them, and the earthquakes, may operate through a field
-of vast extent, and breaks through where the barriers give way.
-It is safe to say both have the same origin.</p>
-
-<p>Ischia and Java, though almost antipodes, are companions
-in disaster, and possibly felt the dashing of the same billows,
-striking with violence here or there, according as some mighty
-impulse drove them on. The great calamities of the past summer,
-besides their appeal to our humanity, will be of interest to
-scientific men, and may throw light on the relations of earthquakes
-and volcanoes, and their cause, after which they have
-been searching a good deal in the dark, and with results not
-yet satisfactory.</p>
-
-<p>The accounts of the last fearful disaster are yet incomplete,
-and may not all be verified. The latest, and apparently most
-reliable reports, place it among the most terrible calamities
-known in the history of the race, since the deluge. The earth
-trembled and shook—rocks were rent—buildings tumbled in
-ruins. A large part of the city, full of wealth and life, sank
-out of sight. Tidal waves carried destruction along the coast.
-Volcanoes belched forth smoke, ashes and lava, overspreading
-fertile valleys; and when the sulphurous clouds that hung
-over them, black as night, were lifted, turbulent waters rolled over
-fifty square miles of pasture lands that the day before were
-covered with flocks, and the homes of men. It is estimated
-that seventy-five thousand people perished. It may be a few
-thousand less, or more, as there are yet no data from which to
-form more than a proximate estimate. The whole number
-will not be known till the graves and the sea give up their
-dead.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-<h2><a name="LOW_SPIRITS" id="LOW_SPIRITS">LOW SPIRITS.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">By J. MORTIMER GRANVILLE.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>There is enough in the daily experience of life to depress the
-feelings and rob the mind of its buoyancy, without having to
-encounter lowness of spirits as a besetting mental state or malady.
-Nevertheless, it so frequently assumes the character of an
-affection essentially morbid, attacks individuals who are not
-naturally disposed to despondency, and gives so many unmistakable
-proofs of its close relations with the health of the physical
-organism, that it must needs be included in the category of
-disease. The constitutional melancholy which distinguishes
-certain types of character and development, is a setting in the
-minor key rather than depression. Within the compass of a
-lower range, individuals of this class exhibit as many changes
-of mood as those whose temperament is, so to say, pitched
-higher, and who therefore seem to be capable of greater elation.</p>
-
-<p>It is important to ascertain at the outset whether a particular
-person upon whom interest may be centered is not naturally
-characterized by this restrained or reserved tone of feeling!
-Unhealthy conditions of mind are generally to be recognized by
-the circumstance that they offer a contrast to some previous
-state. The movable, excitable temperament may become fixed
-and seemingly unimpressionable, the self-possessed begin to be
-irritable, the calm, passionate. It is the <i>change</i> that attracts attention,
-and when low spirits come to afflict a mind wont to exhibit
-resilience and joyousness, there must be a cause for the
-altered tone, and prudence will enjoin watchfulness. Mischief
-may be done unwittingly by trying to stimulate the uncontrollable
-emotions.</p>
-
-<p>There are few more common errors than that which assumes
-lowness of spirits to be a state in which an appeal should be made
-to the sufferer. We constantly find intelligent and experienced
-persons, who show considerable skill in dealing with other mental
-disorders and disturbances, fail in the attempt to relieve the
-pains of melancholy. They strive by entreaty, expostulation,
-firmness, and even brusqueness, to coerce the victim, and prevail
-upon him to shake off his despondency. They urge him to
-take an interest in what is passing around, to bestir himself,
-and put an end to his broodings. This would be all very well if
-the burden that presses so heavily on the spirit simply lay on
-the surface, but the lowness of which I am speaking is something
-far deeper than can be reached by “rallying.” It is a
-freezing of all the energies; a blight which destroys the vitality,
-a poison which enervates and paralyzes the whole system.</p>
-
-<p>It is no use probing the consciousness for the cause while the
-depression lasts—as well look for the weapon by which a man
-has been struck senseless to the earth, when the victim lies faint
-and bleeding in need of instant succor. If the cause were found
-at such a moment, nothing could be done to prevent its further
-mischief. Supposing it to be discovered that the malady is the
-fruit of some evil-doing or wrong management of self, the moment
-when a crushed spirit is undergoing the penalty of its
-error is not that which should be selected for remonstrance. It
-is vain to argue with a man whose every faculty of self-control
-is at its lowest ebb. The judgment and the will are dormant.
-The show of feeling made by the conscience in the hour of dejection
-is in great part emotional, and the purposes then formed
-are sterile. The tears of regret, the efforts of resolve, elicited
-in the state of depression, are worse than useless; they are like
-the struggles of a man sinking in the quicksand—they bury the
-mind deeper instead of freeing it.</p>
-
-<p>The state of mental collapse must be allowed to pass; but here
-comes the difficulty; the moment reaction takes place, as shown
-by a slight raising of the cloud, it will be too late to interfere.
-The mind will then have entered on another phase not less
-morbid than the depression which it has replaced. There is no
-certain indication of the right moment to make the effort for the
-relief of a sufferer from this progressive malady. The way to
-help is to watch the changes of temperament narrowly, and,
-guided by time rather than symptoms, to present some new object
-of interest—a trip, an enterprise, a congenial task—at the
-moment which immediately precedes the recovery. The soul
-lies brooding—it is about to wake; the precise time can be foreknown
-only by watching the course of previous attacks; whatever
-engrosses the rousing faculties most powerfully on waking,
-will probably hold them for awhile. It is a struggle between
-good and healthy influences on the one hand, and evil
-and morbid on the other. If it be earnestly desired to rescue
-the sufferer, the right method must be pursued, and wrong and
-mischief-working procedures—among which preaching, persuading,
-moralizing, and rallying are the worst and most hurtful—ought
-to be carefully avoided. When the thoughts are revived
-and the faculties rebound, they must be kept engaged
-with cheering and healthful subjects.</p>
-
-<p>There is no greater error than to suppose good has been accomplished
-when a melancholic patient has been simply
-aroused. The apparently bright interval of a malady of this
-class is even more perilous than the period of exhaustion and
-lowness. The moment the mind resumes the active state, it
-generally resumes the work of self-destruction. The worst mischief
-is wrought in the so-called lucid interval. The consciousness
-must be absorbed and busied with healthful exercise, or it
-will re-engage in the morbid process which culminates in depression.
-The problem is to keep off the next collapse, and
-this can be accomplished only by obviating the unhealthy excitement
-by which it is commonly preceded and produced.
-Healthy activity promotes nutrition, and replenishes the strength
-of mind and body alike; all action that does not improve the
-quality of the organ acting, deteriorates it and tends to prevent
-normal function.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="VEGETABLE_VILLAINS" id="VEGETABLE_VILLAINS">VEGETABLE VILLAINS.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">By R. TURNER.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<h3>THE LARGER FUNGI.</h3>
-
-<p>To become acquainted with the bulkier of these villains, we
-must visit their favorite haunts. An occasional one may occur
-in any kind of place, as has already been explained. A good
-many, especially of the edible sort, and notably the common
-mushroom, grow in open pastures. To get among crowds of
-them, however, we must resort to close woods, especially of fir
-and pine. There they grow on tree-stumps, fallen trunks, and
-on the ground, in great variety and abundance. If we go at
-the proper season their profusion will astonish us. This time
-of plenty varies from early to late autumn with the character of
-the weather. Clad in waterproof wraps and with leather gloves
-on hand, we may make a fungus foray into the dripping woods
-amid russet and falling leaves with comparative comfort; and
-even on a “raw rheumatic day” there will likely be much enjoyment
-for us and still more instruction. It will be strange,
-indeed, if we do not find some kinds to eat and very many to
-think over. We ought to get examples, at least, of nearly all
-the different families. Let us consider them in a general way
-as novices do. A host of them have gills like the mushroom;
-and so we may take that best known of them all as a type of
-the whole class. Mushroom spawn runs through the soil in a
-rootlike way, absorbing the organic matter it falls in with and
-every here and there swelling out into roundish bodies, each
-consisting of a tubercle enclosed in a wrapper. The tubercle
-bursts through the wrapper as growth goes on, and soon above
-ground appears the well-known form of the mushroom, with a
-stalk supporting a fleshy head by the center, and on the under
-surface of this head radiating gills, which are at first covered
-by a veil that finally gives way and leaves only a ring round
-the stem. These gills are originally flesh-colored, but afterward
-become brown and mottled with numerous minute purple
-spores. If we were to investigate further by means of the
-microscope, we should find that the spores are not contained in
-any case, and that they are produced in fours on little points at
-the tips of special cells. Of the other kinds belonging to this
-order of agarics, some differ from the mushroom in being poisonous
-and others in being parasitic. There is much variety,
-also, in the tints of gill and spore, different kinds having these
-white, pink, rosy, salmon-colored, reddish, or yellowish, or
-darkish brown, purple or black. Again, in some the stem is
-not central, but attached more or less laterally to the head; in
-others there is no stem, and the gills radiate out from the substance
-on which the agaric grows. The ring round the stalk,
-too, often varies, or is sometimes wanting. There are many
-other differences, and it is by these that we are able to distinguish
-the one kind from the other: but, of course, little more
-can be done here than merely to indicate this infinite variety.
-Dr. Badham, in his admirable work on the “Esculent Funguses
-of England,” puts this quaintly, as he does many other facts.
-“These are stilted upon a high leg, and those have not a leg to
-stand on; some are shell-shaped, many bell-shaped; and some
-hang upon their stalks like a lawyer’s wig.”</p>
-
-<p>These gill-bearers, are, however, but one order in this extensive
-division of plants. Nature’s plastic hand is never weary
-of shaping fresh forms. It is lavish of variety, and never
-works in a stinted or makeshift way. In place of gills we find
-in another order tubes or pores in which the spores are produced.
-These tubular kinds are sometimes fleshy, as in the
-edible boletus, or woody, as in the polypores, popularly called
-sap-balls, which every one who knows anything about woods
-and their wonders must have seen on old tree-stumps, often
-growing to a great size. In yet another order, spines, or bristles,
-or teeth, take the place of gills and tubes. In the puff-balls
-the spores ripen inside a roundish leathern case, which afterward
-bursts and discharges them as a fine dust. Then there
-is an extensive class in which the spores are not produced in
-this offhand way at all, but are carefully enclosed in little cases,
-or rather, I should say, loaded into microscopic guns, as in the
-pezizas; and very beautiful objects these are under the microscope.</p>
-
-<p>Poisonous, putrescent, strange in shape, or color, or odor, as
-many of the larger fungi are, it is little to be wondered at that
-contempt has been a common human feeling with respect to
-most of them, and a crush with disdainful heel on occasion the
-lot of a good many. The popular loathing has run out into
-language. Under the opprobrious term “toadstool,” a whole
-host of kinds is commonly included. The puff-balls are known
-in Scotland as “de’il’s sneeshin’-mills” (devil’s snuff-boxes),
-an epithet which expresses with a certain imaginative humor,
-and a dash of superstition, the idea of something so utterly
-base that it ministers to the gratification of demons, tickling
-their olfactory organs with satanic satisfaction. Indeed, in this
-country the mushroom is almost the only favored exception to
-the popular verdict of loathing. It has gained the hearts of the
-people through their stomachs, and ketchup has overcome popular
-prejudice by its fine flavor. But there are many others on
-which cultured palates dote. Truffles are dear delicacies, which
-few but rich men taste, for fine aroma and flavor command a
-high price. The Scotch-bonnets of the fairy rings, besides possessing
-a certain bouquet of elfin romance, cook into delicacies
-full of stomachic delight. Then there are chantarells and morels
-and blewitts, and poor-men’s-beef-steaks, over which trained
-appetites rejoice. A score of dainty little rogues at least there
-are, and a still greater number of kinds that are nutritive and
-fairly palatable. In some European countries the edible ones
-are a really valuable addition to the food of the people—not
-from being more plentiful than with us, but from being more
-eagerly gathered and diligently cultivated. One sort or other
-is used as food by every tribe of men. Not only does the edible
-mushroom occur in all habitable lands, but in certain foreign
-parts—as in Australia—there are forms of it very much
-superior in quality to our English ones. Then, of course, every
-clime has its own peculiar edible kinds. The native bread of
-the Australians is an instance in point; it looks somewhat like
-compressed sago, and is a fairly good article of diet. The staple
-food of the wild Fuegians for several months each year is
-supplied by a kind which they gather in great abundance from
-the living twigs of the evergreen beech. Then there are some not
-very pleasant, according to our ideas, which can be safely used,
-and are thus available in times of scarcity, as, for instance, the gelatinous
-one which the New Zealand natives know as “thunder-dirt,”
-and one somewhat similar that the Chinese are said to utilize.
-A curious trade has of late years sprung up between New Zealand
-and China. A brown semi-transparent fungus, resembling
-the human ear, grows abundantly in the North Island. This
-the Maoris and others collect, dry, and pack into bags, for export
-to China, where it is highly prized for its flavor and gelatinous
-qualities as an ingredient in soup. It is a species nearly related
-to our Jew’s-ear. The value of this fungus exported from
-New Zealand in 1877 was stated at over £11,000.—<i>Good Words.</i></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">When we reflect how little we have done</div>
-<div class="verse">And add to that how little we have seen,</div>
-<div class="verse">And furthermore how little we have won</div>
-<div class="verse">Of joy or good, how little known or been,</div>
-<div class="verse">We long for other life, more full, more keen,</div>
-<div class="verse">And yearn to change with those</div>
-<div class="verse">Who well have run.</div>
-<div class="sig">—<i>Jean Ingelow.</i></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A talent</span> for any art is rare; but it is given to nearly every
-one to cultivate a taste for art; only it must be cultivated with
-earnestness. The more things thou learnest to know and enjoy,
-the more complete and full will be for thee the delight of
-living.—<i>Platen.</i></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="FROM_THE_BALTIC_TO_THE" id="FROM_THE_BALTIC_TO_THE">FROM THE BALTIC TO THE
-ADRIATIC.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">By the author of “German-American Housekeeping,” etc.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="continue">
-[Concluded.]<br />
-</p>
-
-
-<p>Travelers are like conchologists, vying with one another in
-picking up different shells, and herein lies the unending interest
-of their records.</p>
-
-<p>In the roundabout route from the Baltic to the Adriatic and
-Mediterranean, Cassel, the electorate in former years of Hesse-Cassel,
-afforded a most suggestive visit. To be sure, its
-history is not altogether pleasant to an American, for the fact
-that the old elector hired his troops to England to fight us during
-the Revolutionary war, is not a savory bit of German history.
-Even Frederick the Great saw the meanness of it, for
-when he heard they were to take their route to England by
-Prussian roads, he sent word, “if they did so, he would levy a
-cattle tax on them.” Perhaps some of the money paid by England
-at that time was laid up in the public treasury and expended
-afterward upon the extravagant ornamentation of the
-grounds of the elector’s summer residence, “Wilhelmshöhe.”
-The palace is in itself one of the most magnificent in Europe.
-Above the cascades in front of it is the highest fountain on the
-continent. One stream, twelve inches in diameter, is thrown to
-the height of two hundred feet. The colossal Hercules which
-crowned the summit of this artificial grandeur was thirty feet
-high, and the cascades are nine hundred feet long. The whole
-arrangement is said to have kept two thousand men engaged
-for fourteen years, and to have cost over ten million dollars!
-Jerome Napoleon occupied this palace of Wilhelmshöhe when
-he was king of Westphalia.</p>
-
-<p>A walk of three miles under the straight and narrow road
-shaded by lime trees, leads one back to Cassel, after this visit
-to Wilhelmshöhe. The town is beautifully situated on either
-side of the river Fulda, and has a population of thirty-two thousand.
-The beautiful terrace overlooking the <i>angarten</i>, crowned
-by its new picture gallery, offers as delightful promenades as
-the celebrated Dresden Terrace. The strains of sweet music
-coming up from the <i>angarten</i> (meadow) while one is looking at
-the beautiful Rembrandts and Van Dykes in the gallery, give the
-enchantment which one never fails to find in a German town.
-Napoleon carried away many of the most valuable pictures from
-the Cassel gallery—but it is redeemed from the number of horrible
-Jordaens and Teniers by possessing the “pearl of Rembrandts,”
-a portrait of “Saskia,” his wife.</p>
-
-<p>Chemical products, snuff included, are manufactured in Cassel,
-and it is quite a wide-awake business place—the old town
-preserved for picturesque effect, and the new town building up
-for enterprising manufacturers.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving Cassel any day at one o’clock, one can reach Coblenz
-at half-past seven in the evening, and the Bellevue Hotel
-will shelter one delightfully for the night, provided a room on
-the <i>hof</i>, or court, is not given. Four hundred feet above the
-river at Coblenz stands the old fortress of “Ehrenbreitstein.”
-How fine its old gray stone and its commanding situation is!
-No wonder Auerbach, the novelist, in his “Villa on the Rhine,”
-devoted so many pages to Ehrenbreitstein, the Gibraltar of the
-Rhine. It cost the government five million dollars. With its
-four hundred cannon, and capacity to store provision for ten
-years for eight thousand men in its magazine, well may it scorn
-attacks “as a tempest scorns a chain.”</p>
-
-<p>Instead of driving up to see this monstrous fortress, one may
-prefer to wander into St. Castor’s Church in the early morning,
-and, like a devout Catholic, kneel and pray. It may be more
-restful to thus “commune with one’s own heart and be still,”
-than to keep up a perpetual sight-seeing. Charlemagne divided
-his empire among his grandchildren in this very church. It
-dates to the eighth century, and is one of the best specimens of
-Lombard architecture in all the Rhine provinces. Coming out
-in the morning about ten o’clock, the sun will light up the severe
-outlines of the great old Ehrenbreitstein across the river,
-and the thought comes to one, did Luther compose his celebrated
-hymn, “<i>Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott</i>” (A mighty fortress is
-our God), while in such a moment of inspiration as this scene
-produces upon the mind?</p>
-
-<p>We left Coblenz at ten o’clock on the steamer “Lorlei” for
-Mainz. This romantic name for our boat, the waters we were
-plying, St. Castor’s Church on the left, and Ehrenbreitstein on
-the right, brought a strange combination of war, romance and
-religion to the mind. The only prosaic moment which seized
-me was in passing the Lorlei Felsen on the Rhine—when instead
-of remembering Lorlei, I exclaimed, so my companions
-told me: “O! here is where they catch the fine salmon!” Rheinstein
-was to my mind the most beautiful and picturesque castle of
-all, and being owned by the Crown Prince is kept in becoming
-repair. The little “<i>panorama des Rheins</i>” is a troublesome
-little companion, for it leaves one not a moment for calm enjoyment
-and forgetfulness, constantly pointing out the places of
-interest and crowding their history and romance upon one.</p>
-
-<p>The Dom at Mainz is a curious study for an architect—combining
-as it does so many styles and containing such curious
-old tombs.</p>
-
-<p>Frankfort, the birthplace of Goethe, and the native place of
-the Rothschilds family, has too much history to detail in an article
-like this. When it was a free city it had, and still retains,
-I believe, the reputation of being the commercial capital of that
-part of Germany.</p>
-
-<p>Goethe preferred little Weimar for the development of his
-poetical life. His father’s stately house in Frankfort, still to be
-seen, was not equal to his own in Weimar.</p>
-
-<p>But let us leave the river Main and the river Rhine and look
-up Nuremberg and Munich before we follow our southern
-course to the Adriatic. An erratic journey this, but have we
-not found some shells which the other conchologists overlooked?</p>
-
-<p>Nuremberg seems to have lost more in population than any
-German city we know of. Having once numbered 100,000, it
-now claims only 55,000. It is a curious fact that Nuremberg
-toys which were so celebrated formerly, have been surpassed
-in this country, and now American manufactures in this line are
-taken to Nuremberg and actually sold as German toys. This was
-told me by a gentleman interested in the trade. But buy a lead-pencil
-in Nuremberg if you want a good article very cheap—perhaps
-you can learn to draw or sketch with one, being inspired
-with the memory of Albert Dürer.</p>
-
-<p>Nuremberg is Bavaria’s second largest city, and attracts more
-foreigners or visitors than Munich, perhaps, yet to the mind of
-the Bavarian Munich is Bavaria, as to the Frenchman Paris is
-France, and to the Prussian Berlin is Prussia! No traveler
-can be contented, however, without some time in Nuremberg,
-although I dare say many go away disappointed. The old stone
-houses with their carved gables, the walls and turrets, St. Sebald
-Church, and the fortress where Gustavus Adolphus with
-his immense army was besieged by Wallenstein, are things
-which never grow tedious to the memory. In this fortress now
-they keep the instruments of torture used in the middle ages to
-extract secrets from the criminal or the innocent, as it might
-chance to be. A German in Berlin laughingly told me when I
-described the rusty torturous things, that they were all of recent
-manufacture, and were not the genuine articles at all! But new
-or old, genuine or reproduced, they make one shudder as does
-Fox’s “Book of Martyrs.” I know of no church in Germany more
-worthy of study than St. Sebald’s. In it one finds a curious
-old gold lamp, which swings from the ceiling about half way
-down one aisle of the church. It is called <i>die ewige lampe</i>, because
-it has been always burning since the twelfth century. It
-is related of one of Nuremberg’s respectable old citizens that
-he was returning in the darkness one stormy night to his home,
-and finally almost despaired of finding his way, when a faint<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-light from the St. Sebald’s Church enabled him to arrive safe at
-his own door. He gave a fund to the church afterward for the
-purpose of keeping there a perpetual light. When the Protestants
-took St. Sebald’s, as they did so many Catholic churches
-in Germany after the Reformation, the interest money which
-the old man gave had still to be used in this way according to
-his will. So <i>die ewige lampe</i> still swings and gives its dim light
-to the passer-by at night. Our American consul told me a characteristic
-story of an American girl and her mother, whom he
-was showing about Nuremberg, as was his social duty, perhaps.
-They were in St. Sebald’s Church, and he related the story of the
-lamp as they stood near it. Underneath stands a little set of
-steps which the old sexton ascends to trim the lamp. “Oh!”
-said this precocious American girl, “I shall blow it out, and then
-their tradition that it has never been out will be upset.” So she
-climbed the steps fast, and as she was about to do this atrocious
-thing our consul pulled her back, and said she would be in custody
-in an hour, and he would not help her out. The mother
-merely laughed, and evidently saw nothing wrong about the
-performance. It is just such smart acts on the part of American
-girls abroad which induce a man like Henry James to write
-novels about them. The fine, intelligent, self-poised girls travel
-unnoticed, while the “Daisy Millers” cause the judgment so
-often passed upon all American girls by foreigners, that they
-are “an emancipated set.”</p>
-
-<p>It was our good fortune while in Munich to board with most
-agreeable people. The <i>Herr Geheimrath</i> (privy counselor) had
-retired from active life of one kind, to enjoy the privilege of being
-an antiquarian and art critic. He had his house full of
-most valuable and curious treasures. The study of ceramics
-was his hobby, and fayence, porcelain, and earthenwares of the
-rarest kinds were standing around on his desk, on cabinets, and
-on the floor. He edited <i>Die Wartburg</i>, a paper which was the
-organ of <i>Münchener Alterthum-Verein</i>, and wrote weekly articles
-<i>Ueber den Standpunkt unserer heutigen Kunst</i>. His wife
-was formerly the <i>hof-singerin</i> (court-singer) at the royal opera
-in Munich, but was then too old to continue. Every Saturday
-evening she would give a home concert, and would sing the
-lovely aria from “Freischutz,” or Schumann’s songs.</p>
-
-<p>St. Petersburg never looked whiter from snow than did Munich
-that winter. The galleries were cold, but the new and old
-Pinakothek were too rich to be forsaken. Fortunately the new
-building was just across the street from the <i>Herr Geheimrath’s</i>.
-If it had only been the old Pinakothek I found myself continually
-saying, for who cares for Kaulbachs, and modern German
-art, compared with the rich Van Dykes, the Rubens, the Dürers,
-and the old Byzantine school? I should say the Munich gallery
-is superior to the Dresden in numbers, but not in gems.
-But they have fine specimens from the Spanish, the Italian, and
-German schools.</p>
-
-<p>The Glyptothek is Munich’s boast. There is a stately grandeur
-in this building that suggests Greece and her art. On a
-frosty morning, to wander out beyond the Propylæum and enter
-through the great bronze door of the Glyptothek, one feels
-like a mouse entering a marble quarry. I presume there is no
-such collection of originals in any country but Italy. Ghiberti,
-Michael Angelo, Benvenuti, Cellini, Peter Vischer, Thorwaldsen,
-Canova, Rauch, Schwanthaler, are all represented by original
-works. But it needs a warm climate to make such a collection
-of statuary altogether attractive.</p>
-
-<p>Going from Germany to Italy, one takes the “Brenner Pass,”
-generally, over the Alps—the oldest way known, and used by
-Hannibal. After winding around the side of these snowy peaks,
-and being blinded by the mists enveloping the landscape, trembling
-with admiration or fear, as the case may be, a glimpse of
-sunny Italy is most encouraging.</p>
-
-<p>To reach the Adriatic and Venice is enough earthly joy for
-some souls. Elizabeth Barrett Browning felt so; and all people
-feel so, perhaps, who, as Henry James and W. D. Howells, give
-themselves up to Venice, and write about her until she becomes
-identified with their reputation. But let Venice and the Adriatic
-be silent factors in this article, and let Verona, Florence,
-and Rome substitute them.</p>
-
-<p>We alighted at Verona at midnight, and in the pale moonlight,
-which gave a ghastly appearance to the quaint old place.
-“The Two Gentlemen of Verona” were not to be seen that
-night. The streets were silent, yet I thought perhaps they might
-greet us in the morning; but their shadowy old cloaks are only
-to be seen thrown around a thousand beggars, who are as thick
-as bees and as ugly as bats.</p>
-
-<p>“The tomb of Juliet” is also a deception—a modern invention;
-but the house of Juliet’s parents (the Capuletti), an old
-palace, stands as it did in the days when Shakspere represents
-its banqueting halls and good cheer.</p>
-
-<p>The scenery from Verona to Florence, with the exception of
-a few views of the Apennines, is very tedious—nothing beyond
-almond orchards, which in March, the time of the year I saw
-them, resembled dead apple trees. You will be surprised to
-hear that the Italian gentlemen wore fur on their coats. They
-were, I imagine, traveled gentlemen, for the genuine Italian,
-whether count or beggar, has a cloak thrown over his shoulders
-in bewitching folds. When he pulls his large felt hat over his
-magnificent eyes so that it casts a dark shadow over his mysterious
-face, and stands in the sunshine, he looks simply a picture.</p>
-
-<p>Verona is more Italian in appearance than Florence. The
-principal street runs along either side of the river Arno, and is
-crowded for some distance with little picture and jewelry shops;
-but farther on toward the <i>cascine</i>, or park, the street widens,
-and is enriched with handsome modern buildings, most of which
-are hotels. This drive to the <i>cascine</i> and the grand hotel was
-made when Victor Emmanuel allowed the impression to exist
-that Florence would remain the capital of Italy. This drive is
-thronged with carriages about four o’clock in the afternoon. It
-was here I remember to have had the carriage of the Medici
-family pointed out to me. Within sat two ladies with dark,
-lustrous eyes, jet hair, and a great deal of lemon color on their
-bonnets. The livery was also lemon color, and the carriage
-contained the coat of arms on a lemon-colored panel. The
-Italians are very partial to this shade of yellow. The beds are
-draped with material of this same intense hue—very becoming
-to brunettes, but ruinous, as the young ladies would say, to
-blondes.</p>
-
-<p>Every one knows of the old Palazzo Vecchio, which rises
-away above every object in the city of Florence. Its walls are
-so thick that in them there are places for concealment—little
-cells—and in one of these the great reformer of Florence, Savonarola,
-was kept until they burned him at the stake in front of
-the palace.</p>
-
-<p>“Santa Croce” is the name of the church which contains the
-tombs of Michael Angelo, Alfieri Galileo, and Machiavelli.
-Byron, moved with this idea, writes:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“In Santa Croce’s holy precincts lie</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Ashes which make it holier, dust which is</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Even in itself an immortality.”</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Every American goes to Powers’s studio to see the original of
-the Greek Slave. Next to the Venus of Milo it seems the loveliest
-study in marble of the female figure. But “our lady of
-Milo,” as Hawthorne calls her—there is no beauty to hers!</p>
-
-<p>The Baptistery in Florence is a curious octagonal church,
-built in the twelfth century, and has the celebrated bronze doors
-by Ghiberti, representing twelve eventful scenes from the Bible.
-Those to the south are beautiful enough, said Michael Angelo,
-to be the gates of paradise.</p>
-
-<p>As often as I had reflected upon Rome and her seven hills,
-on arriving there the hills seemed to be a new revelation to me,
-and the rapid driving of the Italians up and down the steep and
-narrow streets bewildered me not a little. I found myself on
-the way from the depot, constantly asking, can this be Rome?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-Everything looks so new. The houses are light sandstone,
-like the buildings in Paris. I was informed that this portion
-of Rome was calculated to mislead me, and that I
-would find our hotel quite like Paris and New York houses.
-The next morning, instead of making a pilgrimage to the
-Roman forum, the Colosseum, and the palace of the Cæsars,
-we drove to St. Peter’s, which kept me still quite in the
-notion that Rome had been whitewashed, or something
-done to destroy her ancient classic aspect. We spent four
-hours in the great church wandering around and witnessing a
-procession of priests, monks, and gorgeous cardinals. There is
-no gewgaw, no tinsel in St. Peter’s as one sees in so many other
-Catholic churches; although gold is used in profusion, yet it is
-kept in subjection to the tone of the walls. The bronze altar
-over St. Peter’s tomb is wonderfully effective in the way of concentrating
-color and attention. It is almost necessary to find
-a niche in the base of some pillar and sit there awhile before
-plunging into the immensity of this great building, just as a
-bird gets ready before darting into space. But after all, the
-feeling of immensity which St. Peter’s gives is not so grateful to
-the religious sense as the Gothic style of architecture, with its
-stained window, and deep recesses,</p>
-
-<div class="center">“Its long drawn aisles and fretted vaults.”</div>
-
-<p>There is little solemnity in St. Peter’s, little shade and no
-music, only from side chapels; but there are grand proportions,
-perfect simplicity, and the pure light of heaven sending
-a beam upon a golden dove above St. Peter’s tomb, which radiates
-in a thousand streams of light over the marble pavement.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing impressed me so much in Rome or suggested the
-ancient glory so much as the ruins of the Baths of Caracalla.
-The magnificence of this building must have been unparalleled.
-It accommodated sixteen hundred bathers at once, and some
-of its walls are so thick one fears to estimate the depth. What
-would the old Romans have thought of the buildings of the
-present generation, which fall down or burn up without much
-warning. Here is solid masonry standing since the year 212.</p>
-
-<p>The different arches and columns of Rome constitute one of
-the most attractive features to almost every traveller. Let
-those who enjoy them climb their steps or strain their eyes to decipher
-in a scorching Italian sun the dates, the seven golden
-candlesticks, the shew bread, and Aaron’s rod, on Titus’s arch for
-example. I shall wander off while they are so occupied into
-the old capitol—into the room where Rienzi stood and exhorted
-the people to recover their ancient rights and into the basement
-below where St. Paul was imprisoned.</p>
-
-<p>The present king had just been crowned at that time. I saw
-the king and queen in a procession where they were driving
-to gratify the people, and again we saw him unattended driving
-with his brother through the grounds of the Borghese Villa.
-The carnival was forbidden that year in Rome on account of the
-death of the King and Pope, but there were out-croppings of it
-on the streets. The tinseled finery and humbug of it seem so
-incongruous in ancient classic Rome. I was glad to escape it.</p>
-
-<p>The old Pantheon is too important in its history for any
-one to write of it, but I have always liked the following
-paragraph from James Freeman Clarke concerning it: “The
-Romans in this church, or temple, worshiped their own gods,
-while they allowed the Jews, when in Rome, to worship their
-Jewish god, and the Egyptians to worship the gods of Egypt,
-and when they admitted the people of a conquered state to
-become citizens of Rome their gods were admitted with them;
-but in both cases the new citizens occupied a subordinate position
-to the old settlers. The old worship of Rome was free from
-idolatry. Jupiter, Juno, and the others were not represented
-by idols. But there was an impassable gulf between the old
-Roman religion and modern Roman thought, and Christianity
-came to the Roman world not as a new theory but as a new
-life, and now her churches stand by the side of the ruins of the
-Temple of Vesta and the old empty Pantheon.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-<h2><a name="ELECTRICITY" id="ELECTRICITY">ELECTRICITY.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>What is it? and what some of its manifestations? The name
-was given to an occult, but everywhere present, property of
-material things. First discovered by the ancients in amber
-(Gr. <i>electron</i>) and brought into evidence by friction. It is generally
-spoken of as a highly elastic, imponderable fluid, or
-fluids, with which all matter is supposed to be in a greater or
-less degree charged. Though such fluids have never been
-discovered as entities, and their existence may be but imaginary,
-it was asserted to account for facts that otherwise seemed
-inexplicable.</p>
-
-<p>Definitions of electricity are at hand, and could be easily
-given; but they do not define or accurately point out that
-which they designate. All that can be said, with confidence,
-is that certain phenomena which come within our observation
-suggest the presence of such fluids, and are not otherwise explained.
-The answer to the question, “What is it?” must be
-the honest confession, we do not know. But, if ignorant of
-what it is, we may yet intelligently study its manifestations.
-The phenomena are not less capable of satisfactory discussion
-because the efficient agent producing them is unknown.</p>
-
-<p>The theory of two imponderable fluids or electricities having
-strong attractive and repellant forces, is adopted because probable,
-and it helps make the discussion intelligible.</p>
-
-<p>The awakened interest now so widely felt in this branch of
-natural science is more than just the desire to know what is
-knowable of the world we live in. At first, and indeed for ages,
-only the curious studied electricity, and practical men asked
-“<i>Cui bono?</i>” But in the present century it has become an
-applied science. In no other field have our studies of nature
-been more fruitful of discoveries practically affecting the multiform
-industries, and improving the rapidly advancing civilization
-of the age.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the skillful inventions for controlling and utilizing
-this power lying all about us will be mentioned hereafter.</p>
-
-<p>It will be well first to state a few facts that are known and
-mostly established by experimental tests:</p>
-
-<p>(1) The earth, and all bodies on its surface, with the atmosphere
-surrounding it, are charged with electricity of greater or
-less potency. This seems their permanent state, though in
-some cases, its presence is not easily detected.</p>
-
-<p>(2) In quantity or intensity it is very different in different
-bodies, as also in the same under different conditions. In some
-portions of vast objects, as the earth and its atmosphere, it accumulates,
-immense currents being poured into them, while
-others are perhaps to the same extent drained.</p>
-
-<p>(3) Through some bodies the subtle fluid may pass with but
-slight obstruction—and they are called <i>conductors</i>. In others
-the hindrance is greater, and we call them <i>insulators</i>. But the
-difference is only of degrees; as the best conductors offer some
-obstruction, and the most perfect insulators do not completely
-insulate. The metals, charcoal, water, and most moist substances,
-as the earth and animal bodies, offer but little resistance.
-The atmosphere, most kinds of glass, sulphur, india
-rubber, vulcanite, shellac, and other resins, with dry silk and
-cotton, are our best insulators. Friction used to secure electrical
-manifestations is the occasion rather than the cause of the
-electricity thus developed or set free. That it does not cause
-it, even in the sense that it causes heat is evident, since the
-quantity of electricity bears no proportion to the amount of
-friction used to produce it.</p>
-
-<p>Though, really, there are not several distinct kinds of electricity,
-as statical, dynamic, magnetic, frictional, and atmospheric,
-the nomenclature of the science is at least convenient,
-and will not mislead. It indicates the methods of production,
-and makes the discussion of the subject more intelligible. And
-then the electricity developed or set free by the different
-methods of excitement, though of the same kind, differs much
-in degree and intensity.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>What is called statical electricity is the condition of the subtle
-force in a state of electrical quiescence; and all electricity in
-motion, however excited by friction, heat, chemical action, or
-otherwise, is dynamic.</p>
-
-<p>Perpetual modifications are taking place in electrical condition
-of all matter, that when made apparent, at first may seem
-quite inexplicable. The excited currents flow with amazing
-rapidity. Their actions and re-actions baffle our calculations,
-and the imagination itself is bewildered by their extent and
-complexity. Yet by electrical tests and laboratory experiments,
-carefully employed, the laws of electricity are now as
-well known as those of any other branch of physical science,
-and the phenomena, if more startling, are no more mysterious
-than the manifestations of heat, light and gravitation.</p>
-
-<p>Atmospheric electricity is not different in kind from that
-brought into evidence by the methods of the experimenter in
-the laboratory, subject to his control, and much used in the
-arts and industries of life. The lightning that shineth from the
-one part under heaven to the other part under heaven, a bright
-light in the cloud, is the same as the electric spark from the
-moderately charged receiver, when the positive and negative
-poles are brought into contact—the same as the less intense
-spark excited by passing the hand rapidly over the fur on the
-cat’s back when the electrical conditions are favorable.</p>
-
-<p>The storm cloud is a vast receiver and by induction becomes
-at times highly charged with electricity. If the cloud is at rest,
-and the heated air grows moist, that which is known as sheet
-or heat lightning appears in frequent flashes. The imprisoned
-electricity leaps forth from the bosom or edge of the cloud, but
-as instantly gathers itself back to its source, and apparently
-without tension or force enough to crash through the atmosphere
-to any distant object. The flashes are unaccompanied
-by the noise of thunder, and may be but reflections on the
-cloud from a source far beyond. We watch them without fear
-of danger, and the subdued impression is that of the beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>Amidst the terrific grandeur of the violent thunder storm another
-form of lightning is seen; either the vivid flash that seems
-to envelop us, or zigzag, sometimes forked lines that dash
-across the cloud earthward, and occasionally, as in a return
-stroke, from the earth to the cloud.</p>
-
-<p>In about the middle of the eighteenth century the identity of
-lightning with electricity was fully ascertained, and since then
-the most sublime and startling phenomena of our thunder
-storms are better understood. Under certain contingencies
-they must occur. Since the different clouds or portions of the
-same cloud are charged with different electricities, positive and
-negative, when these by the winds are brought near each other,
-or rolled together, fierce explosions follow, and great electrical
-changes take place in the clouds. Vast supplies of the imprisoned
-fiery fluid leap from strata to strata, or, if the distance is
-not too great, and the earth is at the same time strongly electrified,
-crash down to it through whatever sufficient conductors
-are found. If those not sufficient to receive and convey the
-charge be in the path they are dashed aside; men and beasts
-are killed by the shock, trees and other less perfect conductors
-are scattered in fragments.</p>
-
-<p>Usually the more prominent objects as masts of ships, trees,
-and buildings are struck in the lightning’s course from the
-cloud, but occasionally those lowest down, near trees, and even
-in cellars receive the shock. In these cases the current is probably
-from the earth, whose electric condition is negative with
-respect to the clouds that pass over it. In either case the opposite
-electricities that strongly attract each other, and whose
-concurrence produces the destructive discharge near the earth’s
-surface are held apart by the stratum of air between them.
-When the attraction becomes too strong to be resisted by the
-insulating medium they rush together, in their fiery embrace,
-the flash and concussion being in proportion to the intensity of
-the charge.</p>
-
-<p>Do lightning rods protect? Yes; but not perfectly. If
-properly constructed, and of sufficient conducting capacity,
-they are a source of safety, and to discard them as useless is
-not wise.</p>
-
-<p>The instances in which buildings provided with rods have
-been struck do not prove them useless; or, as some say, that
-the rods do harm by attracting the lightning that they are unable
-to conduct to the earth without injury to the building.
-The point does not attract, but only catches the electricity that
-sweeps over it. When violent shocks or explosions occur the
-rod may be of little service. Its office is to prevent these by
-silently conducting the excess of electricity from the air. The
-rod, rightly placed, conducts to the earth all it can, lessening
-the evil it does not entirely prevent. But all danger is not removed.
-The position of the opposite poles in the immense battery
-may be such as to give the stroke a horizontal direction,
-and far below the point of the rod; such currents have been
-known to pass long distances through atmosphere and smite
-with destructive violence objects lying in their path. Against
-these lateral attacks rods above our roofs are probably little or
-no protection. Still the more good conductors there are in any
-locality the less danger, as they prevent the accumulation of
-electricity.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-<h2><a name="POACHERS_IN_ENGLAND" id="POACHERS_IN_ENGLAND">POACHERS IN ENGLAND.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">By JAMES TURVES.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>It is somewhat surprising that none of our present-day novelists,
-like Charles Reade or Thomas Hardy, who are always
-on the outlook for romantic realism, whether it be in incident
-or in fact, have had their eyes directed to the rural poachers
-who abound in every shire. Poachers, though neither quite
-respectable members of the church nor of society, are more interesting
-characters than burglars or ticket-of-leave men, who
-figure frequently in the novelist’s pages. And, very strange to
-say, it has been left to a lady to write the first accounts of
-poaching episodes, episodes remarkable for their masculine
-touches and their wonderful grip of open-air reality; Harriet
-Martineau, in her “Forest and Game Law Tales,” astonishes
-us by her graphic realism and her delicacy of treatment;
-Charles Kingsley wrote one or two of his pathetic ballads on
-the subject of a poacher and his wife; Norman Macleod made
-a Highland poacher the subject of a character sketch; and in
-our own times Mr. Richard Jefferies, a writer who finds pleasure
-in minute description and vivid realism, has in his own style of
-exact word-painting given us a pleasant book about his own
-experiences as an amateur poacher. But the real poacher, the
-rural vagabond, the parish character, the ne’er-do-weel, whose
-life is a living protest against the game-laws, is of more lasting
-interest than any amateur can ever be.</p>
-
-<p>Viewed from the serene vantage-ground of the philosophy of
-life, poaching is mean and ignoble, and demoralizing sport to
-you or me, and is not worth the powder and shot, while the fines
-and punishments are out of all proportion to the joys; yet there
-are not wanting apologists for it in this apologetic century.
-“Poaching! Man, there’s no sin in catching a rabbit or snaring
-a hare. They belong to naebody. Bless you! it’s a gentleman’s
-trick, shooting.” This is the opinion of any Northern
-lowland ploughman’s wife, as she looks from her red-tiled
-cottage-door out upon the face of the corn-growing mother
-earth, which has given her sweet memories and a host of country
-neighbors and friends.</p>
-
-<p>Sixty years ago peasants could use their guns without let or
-hindrance, and it was then a common thing for a farm-laborer
-to go out and have a shot when no sportsman was in the way.
-Taking an odd shot now and then was never, and is not even
-now, looked upon by them as poaching. But a noted poacher,
-nicknamed the Otter, tells me, with a sigh, “Poaching is not
-what it once was!” And it is true. Not so very long ago it
-was a very profitable occupation, and comparatively respectable,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-before railways and telegraph wires and penny newspapers
-stereotyped metropolitan ideas into all and sundry. An old
-farmer is pointed out as having made all his money by systematic
-poaching, and an influential city official is said to have laid
-his early nest-egg by no other means than being a good shot
-where he had no invitation to be. To-day even rural society
-would look down upon a young farmer engaged in poaching.
-It is no longer sport to gentlemen, says the Otter, and is left to
-moral vagabonds, the waifs and strays, the parish loafers. The
-great strides of agriculture, the game-laws, and the artificial
-breeding of game have driven it into sneaking ways, and robbed
-it of its robust picturesque adventures. To excel in it a
-man must give up his nights and days to it—in short, he must
-become a specialist, and even then it hardly pays.</p>
-
-<p>A genuine poacher has great force of character; he has a
-genius for field and woodcraft. He is the eldest survivor of
-rustic romance. His wild life is tinged with the love of adventure,
-the love of moon and stars, the knowledge of the seasons,
-the haunts and habits of game, and the power of trapping rabbits
-in dark woodland glades. No man knows more intimately
-the night-side of Nature between the chilly hours of midnight
-and sunrise. In this cold-blooded age there are always some
-Quixotic individuals, born in the outwardly sleepy villages and
-lifeless farmsteads, with the love of midnight adventure, who
-wage long warfare against the game-laws, and who only
-knuckle under to the law’s severity when their health gives way
-or an enemy turns informer. “Rheumatics plays the mischief
-with poaching!” exclaims the Otter, referring to the long night-watches
-in wet ditches and beside hedges for hares on the lea
-fields. Irrespective of all thought of gain, there is an infatuation
-to eager spirits in this midnight sport. It appeals to
-strong, healthy, brave men. Charles Kingsley, in “The Bad
-Squire,” with its strong sympathy and feeling, and its cry of
-“blood” on all the squire owned, from the foreign shrub to the
-game he sold, gives us the poacher’s wife view, a view we are
-too apt to ignore or forget, with the weary eyes and heavy
-heart, that grow light only with weeping, and go wandering
-into the night. We forget too often that in the hearts of common
-folk there is the glamor of poetic romance about poaching,
-and a bitter hatred toward the game-laws. Like Rizpah’s son,
-many a lad has had no other incentive than that “The farmer
-dared us to do it,” and that he found it sweetened by the secret
-sympathy of the people. Too often, I fear, the game-laws dare
-a brave rustic into poaching: he has only this one way left to
-satisfy the insatiable British thirst for field sport. It is gravely
-whispered that some of the most striking men have tasted its
-romance; and if all stories be true, the master of the English
-drama owes to an unlucky deer-poaching incident the lucky
-turn in his career which sent him to London and to writing
-plays, and poachers may reasonably claim Shakspere as their
-patron saint.</p>
-
-<p>When the strong, sweet ale warms his heart, the poacher
-boasts of dreadful adventures in the night, of leaping broad
-mill-dams when chased, of giving fight in the dark, and discomfiting
-gamekeepers by clever tricks. He paints his exploits in
-such heroical glory, that the seat next the fire in the ale-house
-is given him by admiring and fearing rustics. Honesty he
-ascribes to practicedness in the world’s ways, and he looks upon
-keeping out of jail as the greatest victory that man can achieve.
-He is the type of man that makes our best soldiers, or, as he
-phrases it, is paid to stop the gun-shots. He requires no almanac
-to tell him when the moon is to rise to-morrow, and he
-could give the gamekeepers lessons. He is to be envied for his
-quick feeling of life and his sympathy for field and forest sport,
-and that wild exuberance of spirits which he seems to catch
-with his hares. It is this rural vagabond—and not Mr. Commonplace
-Respectability—who rivets young folks’ attention;
-his energy anywhere would achieve success; and he is free
-from that unpardonable fault, dulness. In the rustic drama of
-life he is the character that takes hold of us in our best impulses—and
-is not that the best world of the ideal? He disdains
-to shoot starlings or black-birds; he is too much a
-sportsman to pay attention to such small game. He can put
-his hands to various ways of living; he can collect bird’s eggs,
-shoot wild rock-pigeons for a farmers’ club, gather blackberries,
-or, as they say in Scotland, “brambles,” pull young ash-saplings
-in plantations, and sell them to grooms in the livery stables
-in town.—<i>The Contemporary Review.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-<h2><a name="EIGHT_CENTURIES_WITH_WALTER" id="EIGHT_CENTURIES_WITH_WALTER">EIGHT CENTURIES WITH WALTER
-SCOTT.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">By WALLACE BRUCE.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>“The burning sun of Syria had not yet attained its highest
-point in the horizon, when a knight of the Red Cross, who had
-left his distant northern home, and joined the host of the Crusaders
-in Palestine, was pacing slowly along the sandy deserts
-which lie in the vicinity of the Dead Sea, or as it is called, the
-Lake Asphalites, where the waves of the Jordan pour themselves
-into an inland sea, from which there is no discharge of
-waters.”</p>
-
-<p>This is the graphic opening of “The Talisman.” The steel clad
-pilgrim was entering upon that great plain, once watered even
-as the Garden of the Lord, now an arid and sterile wilderness,
-sloping away to the Dead Sea, which hides beneath its sluggish
-waves the once proud cities of Sodom and Gomorrah;—a dark
-mass of water “Which holds no living fish in its bosom, bears
-no skiff on its surface, and sends no tribute to the ocean.” It
-was a scene of desolation still testifying to the just wrath of the
-Almighty. As in the days of Moses, “The whole land was
-brimstone and salt; it is not sown, nor beareth, nor any grass
-groweth thereon.” The first sentence of the chapter revealed
-the descriptive and artistic power of the novelist, for the desolation
-is made more desolate by the introduction of the solitary
-horseman, journeying slowly through the flitting sand, under
-the noontide splendor of the eastern sun.</p>
-
-<p>Almost a century has passed since the triumph of the first
-crusade. The Latin Kingdom, founded by its leaders, had
-lasted only eighty-eight years. Jerusalem is again in the hands
-of the Saracens. The crescent gleams on the Mosque of St.
-Omar. The cross has been torn from her temples, her shrines
-profaned, and the worshipers of the Holy Sepulcher murdered
-or exiled. The second crusade had been a failure, and its history
-a series of disasters. Thousands perished in the long
-march across Asia Minor. Those who reached Palestine undertook
-the siege of Damascus, but the attempt was disastrous.
-In 1187 a powerful leader of the East appeared in the high-souled
-and chivalrous Saladin. By wise counsel he united the
-factions of the Mohammedans, which had been at variance for
-two hundred years; and on the arrival of the third crusade,
-with which event we are now dealing, he was enabled to present
-a solid front of warriors “like unto the sand of the desert
-in multitude.”</p>
-
-<p>The land, where “peace and good will to men” had been
-proclaimed by the voices of angels, and emphasized by the
-blessed words of the Son of God, was again converted into a
-vast tournament field for the armies of Europe and Asia: aye
-more, even in the mountain passes that guard the Holy City,
-the mission of the crusaders was sacrificed to petty insults and
-rivalries. Richard the Lion-hearted and King Philip of France
-were repeating the old story of Achilles and Agamemnon. The
-military orders of the Knights of the Temple and the Knights
-of St. John, which had grown up in Jerusalem, founded as fraternities
-devoted to works of mercy in behalf of poor pilgrims,
-had become powerful rivals of each other and the clergy, and
-by intrigue and dissension purposely fomented the discord.
-According to the historian Michaud, “On the one side were the
-French, the German, the Templars and the Genoese; on the
-other the English, the Pisans, and the Knights of St. John.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>These are the historical circumstances with which Scott has
-to deal; and it is on a mission from such a council, made up of
-discordant factions, convened during the sickness of Richard,
-that we find the Knight of the Red Cross, or as he is afterward
-styled, Kenneth the Scot, bearing a message to the celebrated
-Hermit of Engaddi. His adventures by the way are as romantic
-as any recorded in the Knights of the Round-Table; for, as
-he directed his course toward a cluster of palm trees, he saw
-suddenly emerge therefrom a Saracen chief mounted on a fleet
-Arabian horse. As they drew near each other they prepared
-for battle, each after the manner of his own country. “On the
-desert,” according to an Eastern proverb, “no man meets a
-friend.” The heavy armor of the crusader and his powerful
-horse are more than an even match for the wily Saracen. The
-Scottish knight might have been likened in the conflict to a
-bold rock in the sea, and the swift assaults of the Eastern warrior
-to the waves dashing against it only to be broken into
-foam. After a long struggle, which was worthy of a larger audience,
-the Saracen calls a truce, and the Mohammedan and
-Christian, so lately in deadly conflict, make their way side by
-side, each respecting the other’s courage, to the well under the
-clustered palms.</p>
-
-<p>The student of history will find in the description of this
-hand-to-hand conflict an object-lesson of the garb and manners
-of the Eastern and Western races; and will learn more in
-the conversation that follows, as they partake of their scanty
-meal, of the sentiments and customs of the hostile races than
-can be gathered from the pages of any history with which I am
-acquainted: for Sir Walter had the marvelous faculty of absorbing
-history. He saw everything so vividly that he was able
-to reproduce it in living forms. As we read his description, we
-sit with them under the palms; we hear them now responding
-in courtesy, and again in sharp discussion, as allusion is made
-to their respective religions or modes of life; and, as they resume
-their journey, we feel grateful to the novelist for the beautiful
-figure which he puts in the mouth of the Scottish knight in
-answer to the Saracen’s boast of harem-life as contrasted with
-a Christian household.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“That diamond signet,” says the knight, “which thou wearest on thy
-finger, thou holdest it doubtless of inestimable value?” “Bagdad can
-not show the like,” replied the Saracen; “But what avails it to our purpose?”
-“Much,” replied the Frank, “as thou shalt thyself confess.
-Take my war-axe and dash the stone into twenty shivers; would each
-fragment be as valuable as the original gem, or would they, all collected,
-bear the tenth part of its estimation?”</p>
-
-<p>“That is a child’s question,” answered the Saracen; “the fragments
-of a stone would not equal the entire jewel in the degree of hundreds to
-one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Saracen,” replied the Christian warrior, “the love which a true
-knight binds on one only, fair and faithful, is the gem entire; the affection
-thou flingest among thy enslaved wives, and half-wedded slaves, is
-worthless, comparatively, as the sparkling shivers of the broken diamond.”</p></div>
-
-<p>We find both soldiers courteous in conversation, and their
-example teaches a good lesson to modern controversy; but the
-“courtesy of the Christian seemed to flow rather from a good
-natured sense of what was due to others; that of the Moslem,
-from a high feeling of what was to be expected from himself.
-The manners of the Eastern warrior were grave, graceful and
-decorous;” he might have been compared to “his sheeny and
-crescent-shaped saber, with its narrow and light, but bright and
-keen, Damascus blade, contrasted with the long and ponderous
-Gothic war-sword which was flung unbuckled on the same
-sod.”</p>
-
-<p>They pursue their march to the grotto of the Hermit of Engaddi;
-a man respected alike by Christian and Mohammedan;
-revered by the Latins for his austere devotion, and by the
-Arabs on account of his symptoms of insanity, which they ascribed
-to inspiration. The hermit, once a crusader, was the
-man whom Kenneth was to meet. He delivers his message;
-but at night, while the Saracen slept, Kenneth is conducted to
-a subterraneous, but elegantly carved chapel, where he meets
-by chance with the noble sister of King Richard, who with
-Richard’s newly wedded wife, had come hither to pray for the
-king’s recovery. She drops a rose at the knight’s feet confirming
-the approbation which her smiles had already expressed to
-him in camp, and the story of true love, not destined to run
-smoothly, is fairly commenced. But as with “Count Robert of
-Paris,” “The Talisman” is not so much a romance as a picture of
-the strife and jealousy of haughty and rival leaders. Its value,
-as a historical novel, lies in the portrayal of these discordant
-elements.</p>
-
-<p>We may read the best history of the crusades, page by page,
-line by line, only to forget the next month, or the next year, everything
-save the issue of the long struggle; but “The Talisman,”
-by its wondrous reality, makes a lasting impression upon our
-minds. We see Richard tossing upon his couch, impatient of
-his fever and protracted delays. We see the Marquis of Montserrat,
-and the Grand Master of the Knights Templar walking
-together in close-whispered conspiracy. We see Leopold, the
-Grand Duke of Austria, lifting his own banner, with overweening
-pride, by the side of England’s standard. We see Richard
-dashing aside the attendants of his sick bed, half-clad, rushing
-forth to avenge the insult, splintering the staff, and trampling
-upon the Austrian flag. We stand with Kenneth under the
-starlight, guarding alone the dignity of England’s banner, but
-decoyed away in an unlucky hour by the ring of King Richard’s
-sister, which had been obtained by artifice. We see the
-flag stolen in that fatal absence, and the noble knight condemned
-to death, to be saved only by miracle from the fierce wrath of
-Richard. He is given as a present to the Arabian physician
-whose art had restored the king to health. We see him again
-with Richard in the disguise of a Nubian slave. We see a
-strolling Saracen with poisoned dagger attempting the life of
-Richard, but saved by the faithful Kenneth. We find Richard
-considering in his mind the giving of his royal sister in marriage
-to Saladin; an affair which fortunately needed the lady’s
-consent, who had in her veins too much of the proud Plantagenet
-blood to know the meaning of compulsion. We see the
-tournament which decided the treachery of Conrad, and the
-triumph of Kenneth, who turns out to be no other than the Earl
-of Huntingdon, heir of the Scottish throne. The comrade of
-Kenneth, and the physician who waited upon the king, chances
-to be the same person, and no less renowned a hero than the
-Emperor Saladin, who sends as a nuptial present to Kenneth
-and Edith Plantagenet the celebrated talisman by which he
-had wrought so many notable cures; which, according to Scott,
-is still in existence in the family of Sir Simon of Lee.</p>
-
-<p>This tale of the crusaders is so complete that we need after
-closing the volume only a few lines of history to complete the
-record. The city of Ptolemais was captured after a three years’
-siege. More than one hundred skirmishes and nine great battles
-were fought under its walls. Both parties were animated
-by religious zeal. It is said that the King of Jerusalem marched
-to battle with the books of the Evangelists borne before him;
-and that Saladin often paused upon the field of battle to recite a
-prayer, or read a chapter from the Koran. Philip finally returns
-to France. Richard remains in command of one hundred
-thousand soldiers. He conquers the Saracens in battle, repairs
-the fortifications of Jaffa and Ascalon, but in the intoxication of
-pleasure forgets the conquest of Jerusalem. His victories were
-fruitless. He obtained from Saladin merely a truce of three
-years and eight months, “which insured to pilgrims the right of
-entering Jerusalem untaxed,” and, without fulfilling his promise
-of striking his lance against the gates of the Holy City, sets
-off on his homeward journey, to be taken captive and held a
-prisoner in a Tyrolese castle. In brief the history of the Third
-Crusade is that of a house divided against itself.</p>
-
-<p>As “The Betrothed” brought us back from Constantinople and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-Palestine to Merrie England, so “Ivanhoe” transports the reader,
-and some of the prominent actors of the drama, from the eastern
-shores of the Mediterranean to the pleasant district of the West
-Riding of Yorkshire, watered by the river Don, “where flourished
-in ancient times those bands of gallant outlaws, whose
-deeds have been rendered so popular in English song.”</p>
-
-<p>The prominent historical features which Scott illustrates in
-the romantic story of “Ivanhoe” are the domestic and civil relations
-existing between the Saxon and the Norman about the
-year 1196, when the return of Richard the First from Palestine
-and captivity was an event rather hoped for than expected;
-and an event <i>not</i> hoped for by King John and his followers.</p>
-
-<p>The Saxon spirit had been well nigh subdued by the strict
-and unjust laws imposed by the Norman kings. For one hundred
-and thirty years Norman-French had been the language of
-the court, the language of law, of chivalry and justice. The
-laws of the chase and the curfew,—and many others unknown
-to the Saxon constitution,—had been placed upon the necks of
-the inhabitants of the soil. With few exceptions the race of
-Saxon princes had been extirpated; and it was not until the
-reign of Edward III. that England became thoroughly united
-as one people. The English language at the close of the
-twelfth century was not yet born. The Saxon mother and Norman
-father were not yet wedded; the two languages were gradually
-getting acquainted with each other; or, as Scott has logically
-expressed it, “the necessary intercourse between the lords
-of the soil, and those oppressed inferior beings by whom that
-soil was cultivated, occasioned the formation of a dialect, compounded
-betwixt the French and the Anglo-Saxon, in which
-they could render themselves mutually intelligible to each
-other; and from this necessity arose by degrees the structure of
-our present English language, in which the speech of the victors
-and the vanquished has been so happily blended together,
-and which has since been so richly improved by importations
-from the classical languages, and from those spoken by the
-southern nations of Europe.” In the first chapter—and it is
-always well to read carefully the first chapter of Scott—we are
-introduced to a swine-herd, born thrall of Cedric of Rotherwood,
-one of the few powerful Saxon families existing in England at
-the time of our story. He is attended by a domestic clown, or
-jester, maintained at that time in the houses of the wealthy.
-With an art and unity like Shakspere, Scott emphasizes at the
-very outset the chief historic feature of his story, by putting the
-following conversation in the mouths of these Saxon menials:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“How call you those grunting brutes running about on their four
-legs?” demanded Wamba, the jester.</p>
-
-<p>“Swine,” said the herd.</p>
-
-<p>“And swine is good Saxon,” said the jester; “but how call you it
-when quartered?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pork,” answered the cow-herd.</p>
-
-<p>“And pork,” said Wamba, “is good Norman-French; and so when the
-brute lives, and is in the charge of a Saxon slave, she goes by her Saxon
-name; but becomes a Norman, and is called <i>pork</i>, when she is carried to
-the castle-hall to feast among the nobles. Nay, I can tell you more,” said
-Wamba, in the same tone, “there is Alderman Ox, who continues to hold
-his Saxon epithet, while he is under the charge of serfs and bondsmen
-such as thou, but becomes <i>beef</i>, a fiery French gallant, when he arrives
-before the worshipful jaws that are destined to consume him. Mynheer
-Calf, too, becomes Monsieur de <i>Veau</i> in the like manner; he is Saxon
-when he requires tendance, and takes a Norman name when he becomes
-matter of enjoyment.”</p></div>
-
-<p>The third chapter brings together a strange gathering under
-the roof of the hospitable Cedric: Brian de Bois Gilbert, a
-haughty Templar; Prior Aymer, of free and jovial character; a
-poor Palmer, just returned from the Holy Land, and a Jew known
-as Isaac of York; all journeying on their way to a tournament
-to be held a few miles distant at Ashby de la Zouche. Lady
-Rowena, descended from the noble line of Alfred, graced the
-table with her presence, a ward destined by Cedric, but not by
-fate, to be the wife of Athelstane,—a Saxon descended from
-Edward the Confessor: in the furtherance of which idea his
-only son had been exiled, when it became known that he aspired
-to the hand of the Saxon beauty.</p>
-
-<p>At the tournament the remaining characters of the drama are
-introduced: King John, with his retinue; Richard the Lion-Hearted,
-under the disguise of the “Black Knight;” Rebecca,
-the Jewess; the proud baron Front de Bœuf; Robin Hood, the
-brave outlaw, under the name of Loxley; and Ivanhoe, the poor
-pilgrim, who wins the prize at the tournament and crowns
-Rowena Queen of Beauty. At the close of the second day’s
-tournament, in which Ivanhoe is again successful, a letter is
-handed to King John with the brief sentence, “Take heed to
-yourself, for the devil is unchained.” It was like the handwriting
-on the wall of Belshazzar’s palace, and proclaimed the end
-of his kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>Cedric, Rowena, Isaac, Rebecca, Athelstane and Ivanhoe
-depart their several ways from the tournament, but are captured
-and taken to Front de Bœuf’s castle. Cedric escapes in the
-guise of a monk. The castle is stormed, and now occurs one
-of the most dramatic pictures in the pages of romantic literature,
-destined to reveal to all time the undying hate between the
-Saxon and the Norman. A Saxon woman, by name Ulrica, had
-lived for years in Front de Bœuf’s castle. She had seen her
-father and seven brothers killed in defending their home, but
-she “remained to administer ignominiously to the murderers of
-her family. She used the seductions of her beauty to arm the
-son against the father; she heated drunken revelry into murderous
-broil, and stained with a parricide the banqueting hall
-of the conquerors.” She had sold body and soul to obtain revenge
-for Norman cruelties; and now, grown old in servitude,
-incensed by the contempt of her masters, she determines upon
-a deed, which will make the ears of men tingle while the name
-of Saxon is remembered. She fires the castle and appears on
-a turret in the guise of one of the ancient furies, yelling forth a
-war-song. “Her long, dishevelled grey hair flows back from
-her uncovered head; the inebriated delight of gratified vengeance
-contends in her eyes with the fire of insanity; and she
-brandishes the distaff which she holds in her hand, as if she
-were one of the fatal sisters, who spin and abridge the thread of
-human life. At length, with a terrific crash, the whole turret
-gives way, and she perishes in the flames which consume her
-tyrant.”</p>
-
-<p>There is another historic feature of the times emphasized in
-this romance: the oppression of the Jews in England during
-these cruel and adventurous times. The character of the race
-is vividly portrayed in Isaac of York, in which masterly delineation
-Scott seems truer to nature than Shakspere in the character
-of Shylock. Rebecca, his noble and beautiful daughter,
-is the type of all that is pure and womanly. Her words have
-the eloquence of the poets and prophets of old: “Know proud
-knight,” she says, “we number names amongst us to which
-your boasted Northern nobility is as the gourd compared with
-the cedar—names that ascend far back to those high times when
-the Divine Presence shook the mercy seat between the cherubim,
-and which derive their splendor from no earthly prince,
-but from the awful Voice, which bade their fathers be nearest
-of the congregation to the vision; such were the princes of the
-house of Jacob; now such no more. They are trampled down
-like the shorn grass, and mixed with the mire of the ways; yet
-there are those among them who shame not such high descent,
-and of such shall be the daughter of Isaac, the son of Adonikam.
-Farewell! I envy not thy blood-won honors; I envy not thy
-barbarous descent from northern heathens; I envy not thy
-faith, which is ever in thy mouth, but never in thy heart nor in
-thy practice.”</p>
-
-<p>The description of Friar Tuck entertaining King Richard in
-disguise is in Scott’s happiest vein; and Robin Hood, with his
-bold outlaws, shares the honors gracefully with knights and nobles.
-But it is alike unnecessary and unprofitable to attempt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-a condensation of “Ivanhoe.” No outline can convey the beauty
-of a finished picture. It is not to be taken at second hand. It
-is only for us to indicate its relation to history; and it will suffice
-to say that King Richard was gladly welcomed by the
-English people, and that Ivanhoe was wedded to the beautiful
-Rowena.</p>
-
-<p>But, do I hear the reader ask, what becomes of the fair
-Jewess? Scott has answered the question so beautifully in his
-preface that I borrow his own words—a passage to my mind
-unsurpassed in English prose: “The character of the fair
-Jewess found so much favor in the eyes of some fair readers,
-that the writer was censured, because, when arranging the
-fates of the characters of the drama, he had not assigned the
-hand of Wilfred to Rebecca, rather than the less interesting
-Rowena. But, not to mention that the prejudices of the age
-rendered such an union almost impossible, the author may, in
-passing, observe, that he thinks a character of a highly virtuous
-and lofty stamp, is degraded rather than exalted by an attempt
-to reward virtue with temporal prosperity. Such is not the recompense
-which Providence has deemed worthy of suffering
-merit, and it is a dangerous and fatal doctrine to teach young
-persons, the most common readers of romance, that rectitude
-of conduct and of principle are either naturally allied with, or
-adequately rewarded by, the gratification of our passions, or
-attainment of our wishes. In a word, if a virtuous and self-denied
-character is dismissed with temporal wealth, greatness,
-rank, or the indulgence of such a rashly formed or ill-assorted
-passion as that of Rebecca for Ivanhoe, the reader will be apt
-to say, ‘Verily, virtue has had its reward.’ But a glance on
-the great picture of life will show that the duties of self-denial
-and the sacrifice of passion to principle are seldom thus remunerated;
-and that the internal consciousness of their high-minded
-discharge of duty produces on their own reflections a
-more adequate recompense in the form of that peace which the
-world can not give or take away.”</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-<h2><a name="THE_GREAT_ORGAN_AT_FRIBOURG" id="THE_GREAT_ORGAN_AT_FRIBOURG">THE GREAT ORGAN AT FRIBOURG.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">By EDITH SESSIONS TUPPER.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>After thoroughly “doing” Berne in most approved guide-book
-fashion; feeding the bears—hot, dusty looking creatures;
-standing in the middle of the street, heads thrown back at the
-risk of dislocating our necks to watch the celebrated clock
-strike, we stand one evening on the hotel terrace and take our
-farewell look at the Bernese Alps. Sharply defined against a
-sunset-flushed sky, as if cut from alabaster, glittering fair and
-white like the pinnacles and domes of a city celestial, rise the
-Mönch, Eiger, Wetterhorn, and, serene and august in her icy
-virgin beauty, the Jungfrau.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Too soon the light began to fade,</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Tho’ lingering soft and tender;</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And the snow giants sank again</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Into their calm dead splendor.”</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Leaving Berne, we take our way to Fribourg, to see its wonderful
-gorges and skeleton bridges, and hear its more wonderful
-organ. On our arrival at this quaint old Romanesque town,
-we are driven to the most delightful little hotel, hanging on
-the very edge of the great ravine, upon the sides of which the
-town is built. Through the more closely-built region of the town
-runs the old stone wall with its high watch-towers. Spanning
-the great gulf are the bridges—mere phantoms of bridges they
-seem from our windows. A dreary, drizzling rain sets in soon
-after we arrive, and some American lads across the court-yard
-from time to time send forth in their sweet untrained voices the
-refrain of that mournful ballad, the “Soldier’s Farewell,”</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-“Farewell, farewell, my own true love.”<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>A prevalent tone of <i>heimweh</i> is in the air; eyes are filling,
-and memory is stretching longing hands over the ocean, when
-fortunately comes the summons to <i>table d’hote</i>. At our plates
-we find programs in very bad English of a concert to be given
-this evening upon the great organ in the cathedral. Thither
-we go at dusk, pausing a moment to look at the grotesque carving
-of the last judgment over the great door. Thereon the
-good, with most satisfied faces, are being admitted to heaven
-by St. Peter, a stout old gentleman in a short gown, jingling a
-bunch of keys; while the wicked are being carried in Swiss
-baskets to a great cauldron over a blazing fire, therein to be deposited,
-and to be stirred up by devils armed with pitchforks for
-that purpose. We enter. Without, the ceaseless drip of the
-rain; within, gloom, darkness—save for the never-ceasing light
-before the altar, decay. The air is chill and damp. Around
-us stretch dark, shadowed aisles. Tombs of those long dust
-are on every hand. The air seems peopled with ghosts. We
-are seated, and patiently wait for life to be breathed into that
-mighty monster looming up in the darkness, above our heads.
-Suddenly, with a crash that shakes the building, the organ
-speaks. Silenced, overwhelmed, we listen, possessing our souls
-in patience for the “Pastorale,” representing a thunder storm
-among the Alps, which is to close the evening’s entertainment.
-We have but recently come from the everlasting hills, and our
-souls are still under their magic enchantment. At last the moment
-comes. A pause, and there steals upon the ear a
-light, sweet refrain. It is spring, the old, ideal spring; the trees
-are budding; flowers are smiling from the meadows; we feel
-warm south winds blowing; afar in the woods we hear the sylvan
-pipe of the shepherd and the songs of birds. A peace is upon
-everything. Nature is calm, happy, and full of promise of glad
-fruition. To this succeeds a languid, dreary strain—it is a
-drowsy summer afternoon. A delicious languor pervades the
-air; we hear the trees whispering to each other of their perfect
-foliage; we hear the laughing waters leaping and calling to
-each other through their rocky passes; the flocks are asleep in
-the shade; the shadows are stealing and playing over the sides
-of the mountains, and the whole world swims in a misty, golden
-haze. Now listen closely. Do not we catch the mutter of distant
-thunder? And again, do not we hear that clear, bell-like
-bird-call for rain? The distant muttering grows louder, a
-stronger breeze sways the trees; still we hear distinctly that
-bird-call. Now louder rolls the thunder, the wind has arisen,
-the trees are bending to meet it, and in rage are tossing their
-boughs to the overcast sky; and ah! here comes the rain. Patter,
-patter, at first, now fast and faster, and now with a mad rush
-down it comes in one tremendous, outpouring sheet, and now
-with a terrific rumble and crash,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“From peak to peak the rattling crags among,</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Leaps the live thunder:</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Not from one lone cloud,</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">But every mountain now hath found a tongue,</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">And Jura answers from her misty shroud</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Back to the joyous Alps who call on her aloud.”</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="unindent">The wind shrieks and howls, and yet above all this tumult and
-roar of the elements, clearly and unmistakably rings that sweet
-flute-like bird-call. The storm rages, spends its fury, and dies
-away, and from a neighboring cloister come the voices of an
-unseen choir, raising a “Te Deum” to him who holds the
-storms in his hands. Silently we rise and go, a great peace
-upon us, for divine notes from the soul of the organ have entered
-into ours.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is not the nature of man to be always moving forward;
-it has its comings and goings. Fever has its cold and hot fits,
-and the cold shiver proves the height of the fever quite as much
-as the hot fit. The inventions of man from age to age proceed
-much in the same way. The good nature and the malice of the
-world in general have the same ebbs and flows. “Change of
-living is generally agreeable to the rich.”—<i>Pascal.</i></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="ECCENTRIC_AMERICANS" id="ECCENTRIC_AMERICANS">ECCENTRIC AMERICANS.</a></h2>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">By COLEMAN E. BISHOP.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<h3>II.—THE STATESMAN IN A STATE OF NATURE.</h3>
-
-<p>David Crockett was born in the wilds of Tennessee, August 17,
-1786. He toughened rapidly, like a bear’s cub, but he showed
-in addition to the usual woodsman’s instincts the unusual qualities
-of great tenderness of feeling and generosity, with a remarkable
-gift of wit and love of fun. The incredible stories of
-his hardships at the age of twelve and thereafter we have not
-room to recount. In the best sense he was a tough boy. The
-closing scene of his home life—if a hut presided over by a
-drunken father, and a mother who left no impression on the
-boy’s character that showed itself in after years can be by any
-courtesy called a home—was a dissolving view of a ragged,
-bare-footed urchin of fourteen chased through the brush by a
-father with a large goad and a large load of liquor. Thus David
-Crockett set out upon the world for himself.</p>
-
-<p>With Crockett’s story as a bear-hunter, nomadic woodsman,
-soldier and Indian-fighter, exciting and marvelous as are these
-incidents of the first thirty years of his life, we shall not much
-concern ourselves. But I do wonder that his life-like, quaint
-narrative of these has not become standard juvenile literature,
-along with Robinson Crusoe and Mayne Reid’s stories of adventure.
-Through all these exciting though isolated years, the
-young woodsman picked up a good deal of practical knowledge,
-not one scrap of which he ever forgot; and withal was developing
-a strange quality of unpretentious self-esteem. “The idea
-seemed never to have entered his mind that there was any one
-superior to David Crockett, or any one so humble that Crockett
-was entitled to look down upon him with condescension. He
-was a genuine democrat, and all were in his view equal. And
-this was not the result of thought, of any political or moral
-principle. It was a part of his nature, like his stature or complexion.
-This is one of the rarest qualities to be found in any
-man.”<a name="FNanchor_H_8" id="FNanchor_H_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_H_8" class="fnanchor">[H]</a></p>
-
-<p>He also was developing oratorical powers. He acquired unbounded
-popularity at musters and frolics, in camp and in the
-chase by his fun-making qualities, his homely, kindly, keen
-wit. His retentive memory was an inexhaustible store-house of
-anecdote, and he always had an apt illustration for any point
-he wanted to make. He began to taste the sweet consciousness
-of power over his fellows, and to easily fall into the position of
-leadership, for which nature designed him.</p>
-
-<p>His first official position came to him at about the age of
-thirty. There were a good many outlaws in the region where
-he at that time had his cabin and claim, and society began to
-cohere for self-protection. The settlers convened and appointed
-Crockett and others to be justices of the peace, and a
-corps of stalwart young men to be constables. These justices
-were really provost-marshals in power. There were no statute
-laws nor courts; but there was authority enough, and Crockett
-says everybody made laws according to his own notions of
-right. For shooting and appropriating a hog running at large,
-for instance, the sentence was to strip the thief, tie him to a
-tree and give him a flogging, burn down his cabin and drive
-him out of the country. Soon after, the new territory was organized
-into counties and Crockett was regularly commissioned
-a justice by the legislature. His account of his administration
-is interesting:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I was made a squire according to law; though now the honor rested
-on me more heavily than before. For, at first, whenever I told my constable,
-says I, ‘catch that fellow and bring him up for trial!’ away he
-went, and the fellow must come, dead or alive. For we considered this
-a good warrant, though it was only in <i>verbal writing</i>. But after I was
-appointed by the Assembly, they told me my warrants must be in <i>real</i>
-writing and signed; and that I must keep a book and write my proceedings
-in it. This was a hard business on me, for I could just barely write
-my own name. But to do this, and write the warrants too, was at least
-a huckleberry over my persimmon. I had a pretty well informed constable
-however, and I told him when he should happen to be out anywhere
-and see that a warrant was necessary and would have a good effect, he
-needn’t take the trouble to come all the way to me to get one, but he
-could just fill one out, and then on the trial I could correct the whole business
-if he had committed any error. In this way I got on pretty well,
-till by care and attention I improved my handwriting in such a manner
-as to be able to prepare my warrants and keep my record books without
-much difficulty. My judgments were never appealed from: and if they
-had been they would have stuck like wax, as I gave my decisions on
-the principles of common justice and honesty between man and man, and
-relied on natural born sense, and not on law learning, to guide me; for I
-had never read a page in a law-book in all my life.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Crockett made his first stump speech when he was about
-thirty-four years old. A militia regiment was to be organized,
-and a Captain Mathews, after promising Crockett the majority
-of the regiment if he would support him for its colonel, turned
-against Crockett in favor of his own son. At a great muster
-prepared by Mathews, he made a stump speech in his own and
-his son’s favor. Crockett, entirely unabashed, mounted the
-stump as soon as Mathews finished, and on the captain’s own
-grounds proceeded to expose his duplicity and argue the total
-unfitness of both him and his son for the command. The speech
-was fluent, witty, full of anecdote, and carried the rude audience
-by storm. It effectually beat both father and son. The fame
-of this maiden effort traveled fast in a community where oratory
-was the great, if not the only engine of popular control, and the
-result was that a committee soon waited on Crockett and asked
-him to stand for the legislature then about to be elected (1821).
-Some of his first electioneering adventures illustrate the frankness
-and tact so queerly combined in him, and also show how
-he got his education in politics. Hickman county wanted to
-change its county seat. He says: “Here they told me that
-they wanted to move their town nearer to the center of the
-county, and I must come out in favor of it. I did not know
-what this meant, or how the town was to be moved, and so I
-kept dark, going on the same identical plan that I now find is
-called <i>non-committal</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion the candidates for governor of the State,
-Congress, and several for legislature, some of them able stump-speakers,
-were announced. As he listened, a sense of inferiority
-for the first time, probably, penetrated him; he drank in all
-they said, and remembered it. He says:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The thought of having to make a speech made my knees feel mighty
-weak, and set my heart to fluttering almost as bad as my first love scrape
-with the Quaker’s niece. But as luck would have it, these big candidates
-spoke nearly all day, and when they quit the people were worn out with
-fatigue, which afforded me a good apology for not discussing the government.
-But I listened mighty close to them, and was learning pretty
-fast about political matters. When they were all done I got up and told
-some laughable story and quit.”</p></div>
-
-<p>He was elected, and in the legislature proved a good story-teller,
-a formidable antagonist in repartee, and above all a
-good listener. He says the first thing that he took pains to
-learn was the meaning of the words “judiciary” and “government,”
-as up to that time he had “never heard that there was
-any such thing in all nature as a judiciary.” The halls of the
-Tennessee legislature were again brightened in 1823-24 by the
-wit and good sense of “the gentleman from the cane” as an opponent
-derisively dubbed him, very much to his subsequent
-regret.</p>
-
-<p>Crockett was now so well known that he was put forward for
-Congress. His rapid advancement staggered even his self-sufficiency,
-and he objected, saying he “knowed nothing about
-Congress matters.” Fortunately, perhaps, he was given time
-to learn more, for he was beaten at the polls this time. It was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-claimed by his supporters the result was obtained by fraud, and
-as the adverse majority was small, he was urged to contest the
-election; but he declined, saying he did not care enough for
-office to take it unless the clearly expressed will of the people
-called him thereto. From hunting for men he turned with zest
-to hunting for bears; his endurance, hardihood and success, and
-the never-failing benevolence with which he divided the fruits
-of the hunt with poor settlers, or lent a helping hand in many
-other ways, made him more political capital than the best
-stump speeches could have done. He killed one hundred and
-five bears one season. Two years later (1827) he ran for Congress
-again and was triumphantly elected over two strong
-opponents. Thus the bear-hunting, Indian-fighting “gentleman
-from the cane,” barely able to write his name, so poor that he
-had to borrow money to pay his traveling expenses to Washington,
-became a law-maker of a great nation by sheer force of
-native talent and goodness of heart.</p>
-
-<p>His fame preceded him to Washington. His prowess in
-arms, his dexterity in politics, and his quaint wit had been in the
-papers; all his sayings had been, as is the style of American
-journalism, exaggerated and embellished and distorted, until
-the general impression of him was that of a coarse, outlandish,
-swaggering yahoo. His appearance in Washington dispersed
-these illusions thence, but the misrepresentations did not cease
-in the prints. As in the case of Lincoln, every profane and
-vulgar thing that cheap wit could invent was attributed to
-Crockett, and received as his. Many of these false impressions
-survive to this day; it is therefore proper here to give a picture
-of the man as he was seen at home. It is thus reported by an
-intelligent gentleman who visited his cabin just after his election.
-The visitor penetrated to Crockett’s cabin eight miles
-through unbroken wilderness by a path blazed on the trees.
-He says:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Two men were seated on stools at the door, both in their shirt-sleeves,
-engaged in cleaning their rifles. As the stranger rode up, one of the
-men came forward to meet him. He was dressed in very plain homespun
-attire, with a black fur cap upon his head. He was a finely proportioned
-man, about six feet high, apparently forty-five years of age, and
-of very frank, pleasing, open countenance. He held his rifle in his hand,
-and from his right shoulder hung a bag made of raccoon-skin, to which
-there was a sheath attached containing a large butcher-knife.</p>
-
-<p>“This is Colonel Crockett’s residence, I presume,” said the stranger.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” was the reply, with a smile as of welcome.</p>
-
-<p>“Have I the pleasure of seeing that gentleman before me?” the
-stranger added.</p>
-
-<p>“If it be a pleasure,” was the courteous reply, “you have, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Colonel,” responded the stranger, “I have ridden much out of
-my way to spend a day or two with you, and take a hunt.”</p>
-
-<p>“Get down, sir,” said the Colonel, cordially. “I am delighted to see you.
-I like to see strangers. And the only care I have is that I can not accommodate
-them as well as I could wish. I have no corn, but my little
-boy will take your horse over to my son-in-law’s. He is a good fellow,
-and will take care of him.”</p>
-
-<p>Leading the stranger into his cabin, Crockett very courteously introduced
-him to his brother, his wife, and his daughters. He then added:</p>
-
-<p>“You see we are mighty rough here. I am afraid you will think it
-hard times. But we have to do the best we can. I started mighty poor,
-and have been rooting ’long ever since. But I hate apologies. What I
-live upon always, I think a friend can for a day or two. I have but
-little, but that little is as free as the water that runs. So make yourself
-at home.”</p></div>
-
-<p>He seemed to have a great horror of binding himself to any
-man or party. “I will pledge myself to no administration,” he
-said. “When the will of my constituents is known, that will
-be my law; when it is unknown my own judgment shall be my
-guide.” So clear and lofty an idea had this unlearned man
-formed of the duties of a representative! Well for the country
-if as high a standard of political duty even now prevailed among
-the best and wisest legislators!</p>
-
-<p>Nothing is recorded of his first term in Congress except that
-he “brought down the house” every time he spoke, and once
-so discomfited a colleague that a duel was talked of; upon
-which Crockett gave out that if any one challenged him he
-should select as their weapons <i>bows and arrows</i>.</p>
-
-<p>He was re-elected in 1829. This was the Jackson tidal wave—the
-inauguration of that craze of hero-worship and spoils-grabbing
-which entailed its curse upon our politics, even to this
-day. During this term came the turning point in Crockett’s
-career and a triumphant test of the strength of his character.
-At first he supported Jackson’s administration and acted with
-the party. But when that “constitutional democrat” blossomed
-out into an unconstitutional autocrat, one man of his party was
-found manly enough to act upon his own convictions. One of
-these unconstitutional measures was an act to vote half a million
-of dollars for disbursements made without color of law, and
-Crockett opposed it. The result is best told in his own words:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Soon after the commencement of this second term, I saw, or thought
-I did, that it was expected of me that I would bow to the name of Andrew
-Jackson, and follow him in all his motions, and mindings, and turnings,
-even at the expense of my conscience and judgment. Such a thing
-was new to me, and a total stranger to my principles. I know’d well
-enough, though, that if I didn’t ‘hurrah’ for his name, the hue and cry
-was to be raised against me, and I was to be sacrificed, if possible. His
-famous, or rather I should say his <i>infamous</i> Indian bill was brought forward,
-and I opposed it from the purest motives in the world. Several of
-my colleagues got around me, and told me how well they loved me, and
-that I was ruining myself. They said this was a favorite measure of the
-President, and I ought to go for it. I told them I believed it was a
-wicked, unjust measure, and that I should go against it, let the cost to
-myself be what it might; that I was willing to go with General Jackson
-in everything I believed was honest and right; but, further than this, I
-wouldn’t go for him or any other man in the whole creation.</p>
-
-<p>“I had been elected by a majority of three thousand five hundred and
-eighty-five votes, and I believed they were honest men, and wouldn’t
-want me to vote for any unjust notion, to please Jackson or any one else;
-at any rate, I was of age, and determined to trust them. I voted against
-this Indian bill, and my conscience yet tells me that I gave a good, honest
-vote, and one that I believe will not make me ashamed in the day of
-judgment. I served out my term, and though many amusing things happened,
-I am not disposed to swell my narrative by inserting them.</p>
-
-<p>“When it closed, and I returned home, I found the storm had raised
-against me sure enough; and it was echoed from side to side, and from
-end to end of my district, that I had turned against Jackson. This was
-considered the unpardonable sin. I was hunted down like a wild varment,
-and in this hunt every little newspaper in the district, and every
-little pin-hook lawyer was engaged. Indeed, they were ready to print
-anything and everything that the ingenuity of man could invent against
-me.”</p></div>
-
-<p>It proved as he had anticipated; he failed of re-election, but
-only by a majority of seventy votes. Two years of bear-hunting
-followed, during which Crockett thirsted for the nobler
-pursuit of ambition of which he had had a taste. Some of his
-predictions as to Jackson’s course had been verified, and many
-things conspired to open his constituents’ eyes to the high
-character of their representative’s course. In the canvass of
-1833 he was elected the third time, winning one of the most remarkable
-political triumphs ever known in this country. He
-had against him all the education, talent and wealth of his district;
-the administration made it a test vote, and all that promises
-of reward, threats of punishment, political and social,
-unlimited money, the influence of the national banks, and
-every appliance that the most tyrannical disposition ever dominant
-in our affairs could bring to bear were used. Men of
-genius, eloquence, influence and fortune rode the district;
-whiskey was free as water. The entire press opposed Crockett
-with the ingenuity and abandon which only “patronage”
-can inspire. More than all this the common people of the district,
-with whom lay Crockett’s influence, if he had any, worshiped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-“Old Hickory,” under whom many of them had fought.
-Against these odds the impoverished, uneducated hunter, with
-no aid but his natural gifts and a clean record, canvassed the
-district of seventeen counties and 100,000 inhabitants and won.
-This remarkable victory in Jackson’s own State, when his popularity
-was at its height, gave Crockett a new and better title to
-respect than any he had before presented; and it increased the
-mystery hanging about this strange, uncultured genius. The
-world abandoned its preconceived notions of the back-woodsman
-when it saw his power; but it was at loss to conceive a
-true idea of him.</p>
-
-<p>During this session of Congress (1833-34) Crockett wrote his
-autobiography. As might be expected, it is a very unique work.
-Its style is simple and vigorous; the language is Shaksperian
-in its monosyllables and short sentences, but the <i>ensemble</i> is
-graphic, and as the events narrated are of the most extraordinary
-kind, it makes very exciting reading. On the title page
-appears his famous motto:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“I leave these words for others when I’m dead;</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Be always sure you’re right, then <span class="smcap">GO AHEAD</span>!”</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Crockett submitted the manuscript of this work to a critic for
-revision; but he declared afterward that the reviser had not
-improved the work—probably because he toned down its vigorous
-language. Such expressions as “my son and me went,”
-occur, and spelling like this: “hawl,” “tuff,” “scaffled,”
-“clomb” (for climbed); “flower” (for flour). But he positively
-objected to some of the orthographical corrections, as he said
-“such spelling was contrary to nature.” He brought the narrative
-of his life up to the date, and concluded it as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I am now here in Congress, this 28th day of January, in the year
-of our Lord 1834; and, what is more agreeable to my feelings, as a free
-man. I am at liberty to vote as my conscience and judgment dictate to
-be right, without the yoke of any party on me or the driver at my heels
-with the whip in hand commanding me to ‘gee-wo-haw!’ just at his
-pleasure. Look at my arms: you will find no party handcuffs on them!
-Look at my neck: you will not find there any collar with the engraving,</p>
-
-<div class="bboxdot">
-MY DOG.—ANDREW JACKSON.
-</div>
-
-<p class="unindent">But you will find me standing up to my rack as the people’s faithful representative,
-and the public’s most obedient, very humble servant,</p>
-
-<p class="sig">
-<span class="smcap">“David Crockett</span>.”<br />
-</p></div>
-
-<p>What would not senators and representatives of to-day give
-for the same independence? What health and manliness it
-would impart to public life, if every legislator were thus free
-of handcuffs and collars!</p>
-
-<p>In the spring of 1834, Crockett made his famous “starring
-tour” through the East. From Philadelphia to Portland, and
-back to Washington, it was a continuous ovation. Crockett and
-the populace were mutually astonished; he at his receptions,
-and they at the actions, appearance, and utterances of the man
-who had been represented to them by his political opponents
-as a buffoon and semi-savage. He was more than all impressed
-with the developments of wealth and enterprise in the
-North; he frankly confessed the prejudices he had formed
-against the Yankees, and praised their thrift and principles. He
-spoke well and appropriately on each occasion, though—strange
-change in him!—with evident confusion at the lionizing. He
-wrote of the ovation he received on landing in Philadelphia:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“It struck me strangely to hear a strange people huzzaing for me; it
-took me so uncommon unexpected, as I had no idea of attracting attention.
-The folks came crowding around me, saying, ‘Give me the hand
-of an honest man.’ I thought I had rather be in the wilderness with
-my gun and dogs, than to be attracting all that fuss.”</p></div>
-
-<p>In a happy little speech here, from the hotel balcony, he said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I am almost induced to believe this flattery—perhaps a burlesque.
-This is new to me, yet I see nothing but friendship in your faces.”</p></div>
-
-<p>At a grand banquet in New York City, Crockett having been
-toasted as “The undeviating supporter of the constitution and
-the laws,” made this neat and characteristic hit, as he reports
-it:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I made a short speech, and concluded with the story of the red cow,
-which was, that as long as General Jackson went straight, I followed
-him; but when he began to go this way, and that way, and every way,
-I wouldn’t go after him; like the boy whose master ordered him to
-plough across the field to the red cow. Well, he began to plough, and
-she began to walk; and he ploughed all forenoon after her. So when
-the master came, he swore at him for going so crooked. ‘Why, sir,’
-said the boy, ‘you told me to plough to the red cow, and I kept after her,
-but she always kept moving.’”</p></div>
-
-<p>Most enthusiastic of all was his reception in Boston, where
-President Jackson’s policy was most unpopular. It was even
-proposed to confer on Crockett the degree of LL.D., an honor
-that had been awarded to Jackson: but, unlike Jackson,
-Crockett had the wit to decline an honor which neither of the
-two deserved.</p>
-
-<p>The more he saw and heard the more humble he became.
-When called up for an after-dinner speech in Boston he burst
-out in his honest way—“I never had but six months’ schooling
-in all my life, and I confess I consider myself a <i>poor tyke</i> to be
-here addressing the most intelligent people in the world.” If
-he had not culture, he had what was far more rare in that age of
-truckling to one-man power—<i>manhood</i>. It seemed as if unlettered
-David Crockett was the only man in public life to stand
-up straight, and people acknowledged the power of true character.
-The culture and wealth of the East bowed to unspoiled
-manhood; it was a revelation fresh from Nature’s hand.</p>
-
-<p>A few extracts from one of his more sustained and dignified
-efforts will illustrate the development Crockett had attained by
-simple observation. After praising New England he said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I don’t mean that because I eat your bread and drink your liquor,
-that I feel so. No; that don’t make me see clearer than I did. It is
-your habits, and manners, and customs; your industry; your proud, independent
-spirits; your hanging on to the eternal principles of right and
-wrong; your liberality in prosperity, and your patience when you are
-ground down by legislation, which, instead of crushing you, whets your
-invention to strike a path without a blaze on a tree to guide you; and
-above all, your never-dying, deathless grip to our glorious Constitution.
-These are the things that make me think you are a mighty good people.</p>
-
-<p>“I voted for Andrew Jackson because I believed he possessed certain
-principles, and not because his name was Andrew Jackson, or the ‘Hero,’
-or ‘Old Hickory.’ And when he left those principles which induced me
-to support him, I considered myself justified in opposing him. This
-thing of man-worship I am a stranger to; I don’t like it; it taints every
-action of life.</p>
-
-<p>“I know nothing, by experience, of party discipline. I would rather
-be a raccoon-dog, and belong to a Negro in the forest, than to belong to
-any party, further than to do justice to all, and to promote the interests of
-my country. The time will and must come, when honesty will receive
-its reward, and when the people of this nation will be brought to a sense
-of their duty, and will pause and reflect how much it cost us to redeem
-ourselves from the government of one man. It cost the lives and fortunes
-of thousands of the best patriots that ever lived. Yes, gentlemen,
-hundreds of them fell in sight of your own city.</p>
-
-<p>“Gentlemen, if it is for opposing those high-handed measures that you
-compliment me, I say I have done so, and will do so, now and forever.
-I will be no man’s man, and no party’s man, other than to be the people’s
-faithful representative: and I am delighted to see the noble spirit
-of liberty retained so boldly here, where the first spark was kindled;
-and I hope to see it shine and spread over our whole country.”</p></div>
-
-<p>He took his seat in Congress, a central object in the political
-field. His position was anomalous. Party ties were closely
-drawn, and party rancor bitter as it can be only when nothing
-but plunder is at stake between parties. The Democrats
-could not claim Crockett so long as he antagonized their god,
-Jackson; and the alliance of the Whigs he most distinctly repudiated.
-He was an independent, an “unattached statesman;”
-the prototype of an element which has now become formidable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-in our politics, but a character for whom there was no place
-in those times. He was, like all eccentrics, ahead or apart from
-his age, and was at first feared, then shunned, and then called
-crazy by the great body of public men, whose standard of sanity
-was to sacrifice manhood to party, to betray the Republic for
-spoils.</p>
-
-<p>It was during this Congress that he created a sensation by
-antagonizing benevolence of representatives at government
-expense. A bill had been reported and was about to pass, appropriating
-a gratuity to a naval officer’s widow. Crockett made
-an unanswerable argument on the unconstitutionality of this
-and other such appropriations, and closed by offering, with other
-friends of the widow, to give her a week of his salary as congressman.
-Not a member dared to answer or to vote for the
-bill, and not one followed Crockett’s example of charity at his
-own expense.</p>
-
-<p>But the independent, honest eccentric had reached the end
-of his public career. In the next congressional election he was
-beaten by tricks such as would not be tolerated at this time.
-One of these devices was to announce fictitiously a large number
-of public meetings in Crockett’s name on the same day.
-When he failed to appear, as announced, speakers of the Jackson
-party, who would always arrange to be present, denounced
-Crockett as afraid to face his constituents upon his “treacherous
-and corrupt record in Congress.” The defeat was a surprise to
-him; more, it almost broke his heart. He wrote, manfully, but
-pathetically, “I have suffered myself to be politically sacrificed
-to save my country from ruin and disgrace.” I may add, like
-the man in the play, “Crockett’s occupation’s gone.”</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after he made a farewell address to his constituents,
-into which he compressed a good deal of plain speaking, or as
-he says, “I put the ingredients in the cup pretty strong, I tell
-you: and I concluded by telling them that I was done with
-politics for the present, and that they might all go to hell and
-I would go to Texas.”</p>
-
-<p>“When I returned home,” he adds, “I felt sort of cast down
-at the change that had taken place in my fortunes; sorrow, it
-is said, will make even an oyster feel poetical. Such was my
-state of feeling that I began to fancy myself inspired; so I took
-my pen in hand, and as usual, I went ahead.” This is</p>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
-<div class="center">CROCKETT’S FAREWELL TO HOME.</div>
-<div class="verse">“Farewell to the mountains whose mazes to me</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Were more beautiful far than Eden could be;</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">No fruit was forbidden, but Nature had spread</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Her bountiful board, and her children were fed.</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">The hills were our garners—our herds wildly grew</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And Nature was shepherd and husbandman too.</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">I felt like a monarch, yet thought like a man,</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">As I thanked the Great Giver, and worshiped his plan.</span></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">“The home I forsake where my offspring arose;</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">The graves I forsake where my children repose.</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">The home I redeemed from the savage and wild;</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">The home I have loved as a father his child;</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">The corn that I planted, the fields that I cleared,</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">The flocks that I raised, and the cabin I reared;</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">The wife of my bosom—Farewell to ye all!</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">In the land of the stranger I rise or I fall.</span></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">“Farewell to my country! I fought for thee well,</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">When the savage rushed forth like the demons from hell.</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">In peace or in war I have stood by thy side—</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">My country, for thee I have lived, would have died!</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">But I am cast off, my career now is run,</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And I wander abroad like the prodigal son—</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Where the wild savage roves, and the broad prairies spread,</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">The fallen—despised—will again go ahead.”</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>We can not follow our hero—for he was a moral hero—in his
-adventures while going across the country to Texas. Only one
-incident have we room for. On the way he rode apace with a
-circuit preacher, a man not less a hardy adventurer than himself.
-He narrates this:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“We talked about politics, religion, and nature, farming, and bear-hunting,
-and the many blessings that an all-bountiful Providence had bestowed
-upon our happy country. He continued to talk on this subject,
-traveling over the whole ground, as it were, until his imagination glowed,
-and his soul became full to overflowing; and he checked his horse, and
-I stopped mine also, and a stream of eloquence burst forth from his aged
-lips, such as I have seldom listened to: it came from the overflowing
-fountain of a pure and grateful heart. We were alone in the wilderness,
-but as he proceeded, it seemed to me as if the tall trees bent their tops
-to listen; that the mountain stream laughed out joyfully as it bounded on
-like some living thing; that the fading flowers of autumn smiled, and
-sent forth their fresher fragrance, as if conscious that they would revive
-in spring; and even the sterile rocks seemed to be endued with some
-mysterious influence. We were alone in the wilderness, but all things
-told me that God was there. The thought renewed my strength and
-courage. I had left my country, felt somewhat like an outcast, believed
-that I had been neglected and lost sight of. But I was now conscious
-that there was one watchful eye over me; no matter whether I dwelt in
-the populous cities, or threaded the pathless forests alone; no matter
-whether I stood in the high places among men, or made my solitary lair
-in the untrodden wild, that eye was still upon me. My very soul
-leaped joyfully at the thought. I never felt so grateful in all my life. I
-never loved my God so sincerely in all my life. I felt that I still had a
-friend.</p>
-
-<p>“When the old man finished, I found that my eyes were wet with
-tears. I approached and pressed his hand, and thanked him, and says
-I, ‘Now let us take a drink.’ I set him the example, and he followed
-it, and in a style too that satisfied me, that if he had ever belonged to the
-temperance society, he had either renounced membership, or obtained a
-dispensation.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Crockett reached Texas just in time to take part with the American
-filibusters in the famous defense of the fortress of the Alamo,
-against Santa Anna’s army. On the 6th of March, 1836, the citadel
-was carried by the Mexicans by assault, only six of the little
-garrison surviving, of whom Crockett was one. When captured
-he stood at bay in an angle of the fort, his shattered rifle in one
-hand and a bloody bowie-knife in the other; twenty Mexicans,
-dead or dying, were at his feet. His face was covered with
-blood flowing from a deep gash across his forehead. Santa
-Anna ordered the prisoners to be put to the sword. Crockett,
-hearing the order, though entirely unarmed, sprang like a tiger
-at the throat of the Mexican general, but a dozen swords interrupted
-him and cut off his life.</p>
-
-<p>Thus in its prime was thrown away a life that in many respects
-was one of the most extraordinary in our annals. If he
-had enjoyed early advantages, he would have been one of the
-greatest of Americans. Nay, it is possible that if he had not
-been so deeply wounded by ingratitude, treachery and defeat,
-and had remained at home, he, instead of General Harrison,
-would have been the one to lead the popular revolution, when
-came the reaction from the unlicensed <i>regime</i> of Jackson and
-Van Buren.</p>
-
-<p>David Crockett’s courage, independence, honesty, goodness
-of heart, made him shine “like a good deed in a naughty
-world.” He ought not to be forgotten by his countrymen, for
-a noble illustration of the capabilities that may be found among
-the common people, and of the career possible to even the lowliest-born
-American citizen.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_H_8" id="Footnote_H_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_H_8">[H]</a> Abbott.</p></div></div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">When</span> a man is called feeble, what is meant by the expression?
-Feebleness denotes a relative state; a relative state of
-the being to whom it is applied. He whose strength exceeds
-his necessities, though an insect, a worm, is a strong being; he
-whose necessities exceed his strength, though an elephant, a lion,
-a conqueror, a hero, though a god, is a feeble being.—<span class="smcap">Rousseau.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="ETIQUETTE" id="ETIQUETTE">ETIQUETTE.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>Etiquette is from the French word for ticket, and its present
-use in English suggests the old custom of distributing tickets or
-cards on which the ceremonies to be observed at any formal
-proceedings are fully set forth—a kind of program for important
-social gatherings of distinguished persons. Modern usage has
-given the word a much wider significance. It means the manners
-or deportment of cultured people; their bearing toward,
-or treatment of others.</p>
-
-<p>The suggestions in a recent number of <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>,
-respecting “street etiquette,” or things proper to be observed
-in riding, driving and walking, will not now be repeated, though
-many of our younger readers might profit by having, on so
-familiar a subject, “line upon line, precept upon precept.”</p>
-
-<p>The etiquette proper for the home and every-day life, in town
-and country, is quite as important, and embraces more things
-than there is space to notice.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CALLS AND CARDS.</h3>
-
-<p>Home, the dearest spot on earth, would be no fit abode for
-social beings if closed against the entrance and friendly offices
-of those without. The courtesies and kindness of neighbors
-must be received and reciprocated to make the home comforts
-complete. By simple methods the most important amicable
-relations in society are established and maintained.</p>
-
-<p>Calls may be distinguished as ceremonious or friendly. The
-latter among intimate friends may, and ought to be quite informal,
-and for them no rules need be prescribed. Common-sense
-may be safely trusted, as to their manner, frequency, and
-the time spent in making them. But well-disposed, cultured
-people will usually have friendly relations with a much larger
-number than can be received on terms of close intimacy. As
-a means of establishing and maintaining such relations, mere
-formal calls are made. In the country and in small towns residents
-are expected to call on new-comers without having any
-previous acquaintance with them, or even having met them
-before. Ordinarily the new-comer, of whatever rank, should
-not call formally on a resident first, but wait till the other has
-taken the initiative. If after the first meeting, for any reason,
-the resident does not care to pursue the acquaintance, it will be
-discontinued by not leaving cards or calling again. The newcomer
-in like manner if not wishing to extend or continue the
-acquaintance, will politely return the first call, leaving cards
-only if the neighbors are not at home.</p>
-
-<p>In some sections of the country calling on newcomers is
-done rather indiscriminately and with little regard to the real,
-or supposed social standing of the persons. This accords best
-with our American ideas of equality, and is consistent for those
-whose friendships are decided by character and personal accomplishments,
-rather than by the accidents of birth or wealth.
-The good society for which all may rightly aspire claims as
-among its brightest jewels some who financially rank with the
-lowly—rich only in the nobler qualities of mind and heart.
-The etiquette that, in any way, closes the door to exclude them
-is more nice than wise.</p>
-
-<p>Those in high esteem in their community and most worthy
-will naturally, if circumstances permit, take the responsibility
-of first calls on strangers who come to reside among them.
-The call itself is a tender of friendship, and friendly offices,
-even though intimacy is not found practicable or desirable.</p>
-
-<p>Custom does not require the residents of large cities to
-formally call on all new-comers in their neighborhood, which
-would be impracticable, only those quite near and having apparently
-about the same social status are entitled to this courtesy.
-Some discrimination is not only allowable but necessary.</p>
-
-<p>A desirable acquaintance once formed, however initiated, is
-maintained by calls more or less frequent, as circumstances
-may decide, or by leaving cards when for either party that is
-more convenient.</p>
-
-<p>Visiting cards must be left in person, not sent by mail or by
-the hand of a servant, unless in exceptional cases. Distance,
-unfavorable weather or delicate health might be sufficient reasons
-for sending the cards, but, as a rule, ladies leave their
-cards themselves, this being found more acceptable.</p>
-
-<p>A lady’s visiting card should be plain, printed in clear type,
-with no ornamental or old English letters. The name printed
-on the middle of the card. The place of residence on the left-hand
-corner.</p>
-
-<p>A married lady would never use her christian name on a
-card, but that of her husband after Mrs., before her surname.</p>
-
-<p>In most places it is customary and considered in good taste
-for husbands and wives to have their names printed on the
-same card: “Mr. and Mrs.,” but each would still need separate
-cards of their own.</p>
-
-<p>The title “Honorable” is not used on cards. Other titles are,
-omitting the “The” preceding the title.</p>
-
-<p>It is not in accordance with etiquette in most places for young
-ladies to have visiting cards of their own. Their names are
-printed beneath that of their mother, on her card, either
-“Miss” or “the Misses,” as the case may be. If the mother is
-not living, the daughter’s name would be printed beneath that
-of her father, or of her brother, in case of a brother and sister
-residing alone.</p>
-
-<p>If a young lady is taken into society by a relative or friend,
-her name would properly be written in pencil under that of her
-friend.</p>
-
-<p>If a lady making calls finds the mistress of the house “not at
-home” she will leave her card and also one of her husband’s
-for each, the mistress and her husband; but if she have a card
-with her own and her husband’s name on it, she leaves but one
-of his separate cards.</p>
-
-<p>If a lady were merely leaving cards, and not intending to
-call she would hand the three cards to the person answering
-at the door, saying, “For Mrs. ——,” without asking whether
-she is at home or not.</p>
-
-<p>If a lady is sufficiently intimate to call, asks for and finds her
-friend at home, she should, on leaving the house, leave two of
-her husband’s cards in a conspicuous place on the table in the
-hall. She should not drop them in the card-basket or hand them
-to the hostess, though she might silently hand them to the servant
-in the hall. She will on no account leave her own card,
-having seen the lady which removes all occasion for leaving
-her card.</p>
-
-<p>If the lady were accompanied by her husband and the lady
-of the house at home, the husband would leave one of his own
-cards for the master of the house, but if he also is at home no
-cards are left. A lady leaves her card for a lady only, while a
-gentleman leaves his for both husband and wife.</p>
-
-<p>A gentleman when calling takes his hat in his hand into the
-room and holds it until he has met the mistress of the house;
-he may then either place it on a chair or table near him, or hold
-it in his hand till he takes his leave.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><span class="smcap">Dreams</span>, books, are each a world: and books we know,</div>
-<div class="verse">Are a substantial world, both pure and good;</div>
-<div class="verse">Round these, with tendrils strong as flesh and blood,</div>
-<div class="verse">Our pastime and our happiness will grow.</div>
-<div class="verse">There find I personal themes, a plenteous store,</div>
-<div class="verse">Matter wherein right voluble I am,</div>
-<div class="verse">To which I listen with a ready ear;</div>
-<div class="verse">Two shall be named, preëminently dear,—</div>
-<div class="verse">The gentle lady married to the Moor;</div>
-<div class="verse">And heavenly Una, with her milk-white lamb.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Blessings be with them, and eternal praise,</div>
-<div class="verse">Who gave us nobler loves and nobler cares—</div>
-<div class="verse">The poets, who on earth have made us heirs</div>
-<div class="verse">Of truth and pure delight by heavenly lays!</div>
-<div class="verse">Oh! might my name be numbered among theirs,</div>
-<div class="verse">Then gladly would I end my mortal days.</div>
-<div class="sig">—<i>Wordsworth’s “Personal Talk.”</i></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="NAPOLEONS_MARSHALS" id="NAPOLEONS_MARSHALS">NAPOLEON’S MARSHALS.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>Napoleon’s marshals were twenty-six in number, of whom
-seven only were born in a rank which would have entitled
-them to become general officers under the old Monarchy.
-These were Kellermann, Berthier, Davoust, Macdonald, Marmont,
-Grouchy, and Poniatowski, a Pole. Of the others, Murat
-was the son of an innkeeper, Lefèbvre of a miller, Augereau of
-a mason, Bernadotte of a weaver, and Ney of a cooper. Masséna’s
-father, like Murat’s, kept a village wine-shop; Lannes
-was the son of an ostler, and was himself apprenticed to a
-dyer; Victor, whose real name was Perrin, was the son of an
-invalided private soldier, who after leaving the service became
-a market-crier; while Soult’s mother kept a mercer’s shop, and
-Oudinot’s a small <i>cafè</i> with a circulating library. The marshals
-sprung from the <i>bourgeoisie</i> or middle class were Serrurier,
-whose father was an officer, but never rose above the rank of
-captain; Bessières, whose father, though a poor clerk in a lawyer’s
-office, was the son of a doctor; Suchet, who was the son
-of a silk-merchant; Moncey, the son of a barrister; Gouvion,
-who assumed the name of Saint-Cyr, and whose father practiced
-as an attorney; and Brune, who started in life as a journalist.
-It is curious to trace through the lives of the different
-men the effect which their earliest associations had upon them.
-Some grew ashamed of their parentage; whilst others bragged
-overmuch of being self-made men. Only one or two bore their
-honors with perfect modesty and tact.</p>
-
-<p>The noblest character among Napoleon’s marshals was beyond
-doubt Adrien Moncey, Duc de Conégliano. He was
-born at Besançon in 1754, and enlisted at the age of fifteen,
-simply that he might not be a charge to his parents. From his
-father, the barrister, he had picked up a smattering of education,
-while Nature had given him a talent for drawing. He
-looked so small and young when he was brought before the
-colonel of the Franche Comté regiment for enrollment, that the
-latter, who was quite a young man—the Count de Survilliers—asked
-him, laughing, whether he had been tipsy from “drinking
-too much milk” when he fell into the hands of the recruiting
-sergeant. The sergeant, by way of proving that young
-Moncey had been quite sober when he had put on the white
-cockade (which was like taking the king’s shilling in England),
-produced a cleverly executed caricature of himself which the
-boy had drawn; upon which M. de Survilliers predicted that so
-accomplished a recruit would quickly win an epaulette. This
-promise came to nothing, for in 1789, after twenty years’ service,
-Moncey was only a lieutenant. It was a noble trait in
-him that in after years he never spoke resentfully of his slow
-promotion. He used to say that he had been thoroughly well-trained,
-and he alluded kindly to all his former officers. After
-Napoleon’s overthrow, Moncey’s conduct was most chivalrous;
-he privately blamed Ney’s betrayal of the Bourbons, for it was
-not in his nature to approve of double-dealing, but he refused
-to sit in judgment upon his former comrade. Marshal Victor
-was sent to shake his resolution, but Moncey repeated two or
-three times: “I do not think I should have acted as Ney did,
-but I believe he acted according to his conscience and did
-well; ordinary rules do not apply to this case.” He eventually
-became governor of the Invalides, and it fell to him in 1840 to
-receive Napoleon’s body when it was brought from St. Helena.
-It was remarked at the time that if Napoleon himself could
-have designated the man who was to discharge this pious duty,
-he would have chosen none other than Moncey, or Oudinot,
-who by a happy coincidence became governor of the Invalides
-in 1842 after Moncey’s death.</p>
-
-<p>Nicolas Oudinot, Duc de Reggio, was surnamed the Modern
-Bayard. He was born in 1767, and like Moncey enlisted in his
-sixteenth year. He was wounded thirty-two times in action,
-but was so little of a braggart that in going among the old pensioners
-of the Invalides he was never heard to allude to his own
-scars. At Friedland a bullet went through both his cheeks,
-breaking two molars. “These Russians do not know how to
-draw teeth,” was his only remark, as his wound was being
-dressed.</p>
-
-<p>After Friedland he received with the title of count a grant of
-£40,000, and he began to distribute money at such a rate
-among his poor relations, that the emperor remonstrated with
-him. “You keep the lead for yourself, and you give the gold
-away,” said His Majesty in allusion to two bullets which remained
-in the marshal’s body.</p>
-
-<p>Macdonald comes next among the marshals for nobility of
-character. He was of Irish extraction, born at Sancerre in
-1765, and served under Louis XVI. in Dillon’s Irish Regiment.
-Macdonald won his colonelcy at Jemmapes. In 1804, however,
-all his prospects were suddenly marred through his generous
-espousal of Moreau’s cause. Moreau had been banished on
-an ill-proven charge of conspiracy; and Macdonald thought,
-like most honest men, that he had been very badly treated.</p>
-
-<p>But by saying aloud what most honest men were afraid even
-to whisper, Macdonald incurred the Corsican’s vindictive hatred,
-and during five years he was kept in disgrace, being deprived
-of his command, and debarred from active service. He
-thus missed the campaigns of Austerlitz and Jéna, and this was
-a bitter chagrin to him. He retired to a small country-house
-near Brunoy, and one of his favorite occupations was gardening.
-He was much interested in the projects for manufacturing
-sugar out of beetroot, which were to render France independent
-of West India sugar—a matter of great consequence after the
-destruction of France’s naval power at Trafalgar: and he had
-an intelligent gardener who helped him in his not very successful
-efforts to raise fine beetroots. This man turned out to be a
-police-spy. Napoleon in his jealousy of Moreau and hatred of
-all who sympathized with the latter, had thought it good to have
-Macdonald watched, and he appears to have suspected at one
-time that the hero of Otricoli contemplated taking service in
-the English army. There were other marshals besides Macdonald
-who had reasons to complain of Napoleon; Victor’s
-hatred of him was very lively, and arose out of a practical joke.
-Victor was the vainest of men; he had entered Louis XVI.’s
-service at fifteen as a drummer, but when he became an officer
-under the Republic he was weak enough to be ashamed of his
-humble origin and assumed his Christian name of Victor as a
-surname instead of his patronymic of Perrin. He might have
-pleaded, to be sure, that Victor was a name of happy augury
-to a soldier, but he does not appear to have behaved well
-toward his Perrin connections. He was a little man with a
-waist like a pumpkin, and a round, rosy, jolly face, which had
-caused him to be nicknamed <i>Beau Soleil</i>. A temperate fondness
-for red wine added occasionally to the luster of his complexion.
-He was not a general of the first order, but brave and
-faithful in carrying out his master’s plans; he had an honorable
-share in the victory of Friedland, and after this battle was
-promoted to the marshalate and to a dukedom. Now Victor
-would have liked to be made Duke of Marengo; but Napoleon’s
-sister Pauline suggested that his services in the two Italian
-wars could be commemorated as well by the title of Belluno—pronounced
-in French, Bellune. It was not until after Napoleon
-had innocently acceded to this suggestion that he learned
-his facetious sister had in choosing the title of Bellune (Belle
-Lune) played upon the sobriquet of Beau Soleil. He was at
-first highly displeased at this, but Victor himself took the joke
-so very badly that the emperor ended by joining in the laughter,
-and said that if the marshal did not like the title that had
-been given him, he should have no other. Wounds in vanity
-seldom heal, and Victor, as soon as he could safely exhibit his
-resentment, showed himself one of Napoleon’s bitterest enemies.
-During the Hundred Days he accompanied Louis XVIII.
-to Ghent, and he figured in full uniform at the <i>Te Deum</i> celebrated
-in the Cathedral of Saint Bavon in honor of Waterloo.</p>
-
-<p>Augereau, Duc de Castiglione, was of all the marshals the
-one in whom there is least to admire; yet he was for a time the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-most popular among them, having been born in Paris
-and possessing the devil-may-care impudence of Parisians.
-He was the son of a mason and of a street fruit-vendor, and he
-began life as apprentice to his father’s trade. Soon after
-he enlisted, and proved a capital soldier; but his character
-was only good in the military sense. He was thirty-two when
-the Revolution broke out, and was then wearing a sergeant’s
-stripes; in the following year he got a commission; in 1793 he
-was a colonel; in 1795 a general. His rapid promotion was
-not won by valor only, but by sending to the war office bombastic
-despatches in which he magnified every achievement of
-his twenty-fold, and related it with a rigmarole of patriotic sentiments
-and compliments to the convention.</p>
-
-<p>There was one great point of resemblance between Augereau
-and Masséna: they were both inveterate looters. In 1798, when
-Masséna was sent to Rome to establish a republic, his own soldiers
-were disgusted by the shameless way in which he plundered
-palaces and churches, and he actually had to resign his
-command owing to their murmurs. Augereau was a more wily
-spoiler, for he gave his men a good share of what he took, and
-kept another share for Parisian museums, but he always reserved
-enough for himself to make his soldiering a very profitable
-business.</p>
-
-<p>It was politic of Napoleon to make of Augereau a marshal-duke,
-for apart from the man’s intrepidity, which was unquestionable
-(though he was a poor general), the honors conferred
-upon him were a compliment to the whole class of Parisian
-<i>ouvriers</i>. Augereau’s mother, the costerwoman, lived to see
-him in all his glory, and he was good to her, for once, at a state
-pageant, when he was wearing the plumed hat of a senator,
-and the purple velvet mantle with its <i>semis</i> of golden bees, he
-gave her his arm in public. This incident delighted all the
-market-women of Paris, and helped to make Napoleon’s court
-popular; but in general respects Augereau proved an unprofitable,
-ungrateful servant. He was one of the first marshals to
-grumble against his master’s repeated campaigns, and he deserted
-him in 1814 under circumstances which looked suspicious.
-Napoleon accused him of letting himself be purposely
-beaten by the Allies. After the escape from Elba, Augereau first
-pronounced himself vehemently against the “usurper;” then
-proffered him his services, which were contemptuously spurned.
-The Duc de Castiglione’s career ended then, for he retired to
-his estate at Houssaye, and died a year afterward, little regretted
-by anybody.</p>
-
-<p>Masséna, who had been born the year after Augereau, died
-the year after him, in 1817. He too had enlisted very young,
-but finding he could get no promotion, had asked his friends to
-buy his discharge, and during the five years that preceded the
-Revolution, he served as potman in his father’s tavern at Leven.
-Re-enlisting in 1789, he became a general in less than four
-years. After Rivoli, Bonaparte dubbed him “The darling of
-victory;” but it was a curious feature in Masséna that his talents
-only came out on the battle-field. Usually he was a dull dog,
-with no faculty for expressing his ideas, and he wore a morose
-look. Napoleon said that “the noise of cannon cleared his
-mind,” endowing him with penetration and gaiety at the same
-time. The din of war had just the contrary effect upon Brune,
-who, but for his tragic death, would have remained the most
-obscure of the marshals, though he is conspicuous from being almost
-the only one of the twenty-six who had no title of nobility.
-Brune was a notable example of what strong will-power can do
-to conquer innate nervousness. He was the son of a barrister,
-and having imbibed the hottest revolutionary principles, vapored
-them off by turning journalist. He went to Paris, and
-was introduced to Danton, for whom he conceived an enthusiastic
-admiration. He became the demagogue’s disciple, letter-writer,
-and boon companion, and it is pretty certain that he
-would eventually have kept him company on the guillotine, had
-it not been for a lucky sneer from a woman’s lips which drove
-him into the army. Brune had written a pamphlet on military
-operations, and it was being talked of at Danton’s table, when
-Mdlle. Gerfault, an actress of the Palais Royal, better known as
-“Eglé,” said mockingly, “You will be a general when we fight
-with pens.” Stung to the quick, Brune applied for a commission,
-was sent into the army with the rank of major, and in
-about a year, through Danton’s patronage, became a brigade-general;
-meanwhile poor Eglé, having wagged her pert tongue
-at Robespierre, lost her head in consequence.</p>
-
-<p>The marshal on whom ducal honors seemed to sit most
-queerly was François Lefèbvre, Duc de Dantzig. He was born
-in 1755, the son of a miller, and was a sergeant in the French
-guards at the time of the Revolution. He had then just married
-a <i>vivandière</i>. The anecdotes of Madame Lefèbvre’s incongruous
-sayings at the consular and imperial courts are so many
-as to remind one of the proverb, “We yield only to riches.”
-Everything that could be imagined in the way of a <i>lapsus linguæ</i>
-or a bull was attributed to this good-natured Mrs. Malaprop,
-whose oddities amused Josephine, but not always Napoleon.</p>
-
-<p>Once Lefèbvre fell ill of ague, and his servant, an old soldier,
-caught the malady at the same time. The servant was
-quickly cured; but the fever clung to the marshal until it occurred
-to his energetic duchess that the doctor had blundered
-by giving to a marshal the same doses as to a private soldier.
-She rapidly counted on her fingers the different rungs of the
-military ladder. “Here, drink, this suits your rank,” she said,
-putting a full tumbler to her husband’s lips, and the duke having
-swallowed a dozen doses at one gulp, was soon on his legs again.
-“You have much to learn, my friend,” was the lady’s subsequent
-remark to the astonished doctor.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon was a great stickler for appearances, and for this
-reason loathed the dirtiness and slovenliness of Davoust. Madame
-Junot, in her amusing “Memoirs,” relates that the Duc
-d’Auerstadt, having some facial resemblance to Napoleon, was
-fond of copying him in dress and manners; but she adds that
-Napoleon himself was very neat. A marshal had no excuse for
-being untidy. Davoust had been at Brienne with Bonaparte,
-and had thus a longer experience of his master’s character than
-any of the other marshals. Had he been wise he would have
-turned it to account, not only by cultivating the graces, but by
-giving the emperor that ungrudging, demonstrative loyalty
-which Napoleon valued above all things, and rewarded by constant
-favor. But Davoust was a caballer, a grievance-monger,
-and a <i>grognard</i>; and it must have been rather diverting to see
-him aping the manners of a master at whom he was always
-carping in holes and corners. On the other hand, it must be
-said that Davoust proved faithful in the hour of misfortune, and
-did not rally to the Bourbons till 1818; that is, when all chances
-of an imperial restoration were gone; moreover, every time he
-held an important command he did his duty with courage, talent,
-and fidelity. His affected brusqueness of speech was an
-unfortunate mannerism, for it made him many enemies, and
-sometimes exposed him to odd reprisals. The roughness of
-tongue which was affected in Davoust was natural in Soult.
-This marshal had an excellent heart, but he could not, for the life
-of him, refrain from snarling at anybody whom he heard praised.
-The proverb about bite and bark might have been invented for
-him, as the men at whom he grumbled most were often those
-whom he most favored.</p>
-
-<p>Soult was born in the same year as Napoleon, 1769, and out-lived
-all his brother marshals, dying in 1852, when the second
-empire was already an impending fact. He had been a private
-soldier under Louis XVI., he passed through every grade in the
-service, he became prime minister, and when he voluntarily resigned
-office in 1847, owing to the infirmities of age, Louis Philippe
-created him marshal-general—a title which had only been
-borne by three marshals before him, Turenne, Villars, and
-Maurice de Saxe. But these honors never quite consoled Soult
-for having failed to become king of Portugal. He could not
-stomach the luck of his comrade Bernadotte, the son of a weaver,
-who was wearing the crown of Sweden.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Bernadotte, whom Soult envied, has some affinities with M.
-Grévy. This president of the republic first won renown by a
-parliamentary motion to the effect that a republic did not
-want a president; so Bernadotte came to be a king, after a long
-and steadfast profession of republican principles. Born in 1764,
-he enlisted at eighteen, and was sergeant-major in 1789. He
-was very nearly court-martialed at that time for haranguing a
-crowd in revolutionary terms. Five years later he was a general,
-and in 1798 ambassador at Vienna. He was an able,
-thoughtful, hardy, handsome man, who, having received no education
-as a boy, made up for it by diligent study in after years;
-and no man ever so well corrected, in small or great things, the
-imperfections of early training. Tallyrand said of him, “He is a
-man who learns and <i>unlearns</i> every day.” One thing he learned
-was to read the character of Napoleon and not to be afraid of
-him, for the act which led to his becoming king of Sweden was
-one of rare audacity. Commanding an army sent against the
-Swedes in 1808, he suspended operations on learning the overthrow
-by revolution of Gustavus IV., against whom war had
-been declared. The Swedes were profoundly grateful for this,
-and Napoleon dared not say much, because he was supposed to
-have no quarrel with the Swedes as a people; but Bernadotte
-was marked down in his bad books from that day, and he was
-in complete disgrace when in 1810 Charles XIII. adopted him
-as crown prince with the approval of the Swedish people. Bernadotte
-made an excellent king, but remembering his austere
-advocacy of republicanism, it is impossible not to smile and ask
-whether there is not some truth in Madame de Girardin’s definition
-of equality as <i>le privilége pour tous</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon always valued Kellerman as having been a general
-in the old royal army. Born in 1735, he was a maréchal de
-camp (brigadier) when the war broke out. The emperor would
-have been glad to have had more of such men at his court; but
-it was creditable to the king’s general officers that very few of
-them forgot their duties as soldiers during the troublous period
-when so many temptations to commit treason beset men holding
-high command. Grouchy, who in 1789 was a lieutenant in
-the king’s body-guard, hardly cuts a fine figure as a revolutionist
-accepting a generalship in 1793 from the convention which
-had beheaded his king. He was an uncanny person altogether;
-the convention having voted that all noblemen should be debarred
-from commissions, he enlisted as a private soldier, and
-this was imputed to him as an act of patriotism; but he had
-friends in high quarters who promised that he should quickly
-regain his rank if he formally renounced his titles; and this he
-did, getting his generalship restored in consequence. In after
-years he resumed his marquisate, and denied that he had ever
-abjured it. Napoleon created him marshal during the Hundred
-Days for having taken the Duc d’Angoulême prisoner; but the
-Bourbons declined to recognize his title to the <i>bâton</i>, and he had
-to wait till Louis Philippe’s reign before it was confirmed to him.
-Grouchy was never a popular marshal, though he fought well
-in 1814 in the campaign of France. His inaction on the day of
-Waterloo has been satisfactorily explained, but somehow all his
-acts have required explanation; he was one of those men whose
-records are never intelligible without footnotes.</p>
-
-<p>But how many of the marshals remained faithful to their
-master when his sun had set? At St. Helena Napoleon alluded
-most often to Lannes and Bessières, who both died whilst he
-was in the heyday of his power, the first at Essling, the second
-at Lützen. As to these two Napoleon could cherish illusions,
-and he loved to think that Lannes especially—his brave, hot-headed,
-hot-hearted “Jean-Jean”—would have clung to him
-like a brother in misfortune. Perhaps it was as well that Lannes
-was spared an ordeal to which Murat, hot-headed and hot-hearted
-too, succumbed. It is at all events a bitter subject for
-reflection that the great emperor found among his marshals
-and dukes no such friend as he had among the hundreds of
-humbler officers, captains, and lieutenants, who threw up their
-commissions sooner than serve the Bourbons.—<i>Temple Bar.</i></p>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="C_L_S_C_WORK" id="C_L_S_C_WORK">C. L. S. C. WORK.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">By <span class="smcap">Rev.</span> J. H. VINCENT, D.D., <span class="smcap">Superintendent of Instruction</span> C. L. S. C.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>The Class of ’84 rules the year.</p>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>The readings for November are: “History of Greece,” Timayenis,
-volume II, parts 10 and 11, or (for the new Class of 1877)
-“Brief History of Greece;” Chautauqua Text-Book No. 5, “Greek
-History;” Required Readings in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>Memorial Day for November, Special Sunday, November 11.
-Read Job, twenty-eighth chapter. One of the finest passages in
-all literature.</p>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>Talk much about the subject of your reading. You know
-what you have by your speech caused others to know.</p>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>Have you ever tried to control conversation at a table in the
-interest of some sensible subject? It will be a curious study for
-you to see how this mind and that will run away with or from
-the topic you have proposed. It will tax your ingenuity to bring
-the company back to the original topic. The measures of your
-success will be the interest you can awaken in others, the
-amount of information on the subject which you can elicit from
-them, and the amount, also, which you can give them without
-seeming to be a lecturer or preacher for the occasion.</p>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>We must insist upon the observance of the Memorial Days.
-Put up your list of Memorial Days in plain sight, so that you may
-not forget them. Order a copy of the little volume of “Memorial
-Days” from Phillips &amp; Hunt, 805 Broadway, New York, or
-Walden &amp; Stowe, Cincinnati, Ohio. Price, 10 cents.</p>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>It is proposed that “the C. L. S. C. as a body organize a lecture
-bureau, to be entirely or partially sustained by small contributions
-from each member, thereby enabling weak circles to
-obtain one or two good lectures during the year at reasonable
-prices.” A proposition to be considered.</p>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>“Will I be required to read the ‘Preparatory Latin Course in
-English’ next year? I have studied the same thing in the
-original very lately.” Answer: You will be required to read
-the “Preparatory Latin Course in English.” You can not have
-studied, except under such a teacher as Dr. Wilkinson, the
-Latin Course in English as we require it under the C. L. S. C.
-The book must be read.</p>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>“Does the C. L. S. C. confer a degree? If so, what is it?”
-Answer: The C. L. S. C. is not a university or college. It has
-no charter, consequently it has no power to confer degrees.
-There is a university charter in the hands of the Chautauqua
-management—a university to be. In this university there will
-be non-resident courses of study, with a rigid annual examination,
-to be followed by degrees and diplomas. There may
-sometime in the future be a permanent Chautauqua University
-at Chautauqua. Further than this I can say nothing now. It
-is to be hoped the Chautauqua University will never confer honorary
-degrees.</p>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>Correspond with some one on the studies of the C. L. S. C.
-Make your letter a means of self-improvement. Congratulate
-yourself if your friend, in reply, shows where you made two or
-three mistakes in your letter.</p>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>Will you find out the names of the latest graduating class of
-the high school in your town, and send them to me? I may
-interest them in the C. L. S. C. course of study, by sending a
-“Popular Education Circular.” Address Drawer 75, New
-Haven, Conn.</p>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>Are you willing wisely to distribute from ten to a hundred
-copies of the “Popular Education Circular,” and would you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-scatter copies of the tiny C. L. S. C. advertisement, if they
-were sent you?</p>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>The most indefatigable worker in the C. L. S. C., next to our
-worthy secretary, Miss Kimball, is the secretary of the new class—the
-Class of 1887—Mr. Kingsley A. Burnell, who is making a
-remarkable record as he travels to and fro in the far West, visiting
-editors of papers, offices of railroad superintendents, cabins
-of employes, and on the cars, urging persons to adopt this
-new plan of self-culture.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-<h2><a name="C_L_S_C_STATIONERY" id="C_L_S_C_STATIONERY">C. L. S. C. STATIONERY.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>A promise was made at the Round-Table at Chautauqua that
-in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span> for November there should be something
-said about all kinds of C. L. S. C. stationery known to the
-writer.</p>
-
-<p>William Briggs, 80 King St., E., Toronto, Ont., sells several
-styles of stationery, sheets and envelopes, with a monogram
-printed in blue, mauve, or crimson. Information can be obtained
-by addressing him at Toronto.</p>
-
-<p>By the time this number has reached the hands of its readers,
-or within a few days after, there will be for sale at the various
-book stores dealing in the “Required Reading” of the C.
-L. S. C. a variety of <i>papeterie</i> stationery, having on the front
-page a beautiful design most artistically engraved, showing
-Chautauqua Lake, with the Chautauqua landing on the right,
-as seen from the railroad station, and in the upper left hand
-corner an oval, or circle, with the Hall of Philosophy very
-tastily enshrined therein. In the foliage drooping into the
-lake there is inwrought the monogram of the C. L. S. C. A
-box of this very fine paper and envelopes will cost about fifty
-cents. It will be sent by mail from Messrs. Fairbanks, Palmer
-&amp; Co., 133 Wabash Avenue, Chicago, Ill., or from J. P. Magee,
-38 Bromfield St., Boston, Mass., or from H. H. Otis, Buffalo,
-N. Y. An advertisement of this stationery will be found in the
-December number of <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>.</p>
-
-<p>Another style of stationery can be had of Messrs. Fairbanks,
-Palmer &amp; Co., for the class of 1884, with a beautiful design especially
-arranged for that class. Forty cents for a quire of paper
-and envelopes to match.</p>
-
-<p>Ten thousand sheets prepared for general use by the members
-and officers of the several classes, specially designed to
-be used by gentlemen, can be had by addressing the several
-class officers.</p>
-
-<p>For further information write to Rev. W. D. Bridge, 718
-State St., New Haven, Conn.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-<h2><a name="NEW_ENGLAND_BRANCH_OF_THE" id="NEW_ENGLAND_BRANCH_OF_THE">NEW ENGLAND BRANCH OF THE
-CLASS OF ’86.</a></h2>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>While at Lake View a New England Branch of the Class of
-’86 was organized, with the following officers: President, Rev.
-B. T. Snow, Biddeford, Me.; vice-presidents, Rev. W. H.
-Clark, South Norridgewock, Me., Edwin F. Reeves, Laconia, N.
-H., Rev. J. H. Babbitt, Swanton, Vt., Charles Wainwright,
-Lawrence, Mass., Miss Lousia E. French, Newport, R. I., Rev.
-A. Gardner, Buckingham, Ct.; secretary and treasurer, Mary
-R. Hinckley, Bedford, Mass. The above officers were authorized
-to act also as an executive board.</p>
-
-<p>The badge of Class of ’86 can be obtained of the President.
-It has been decided to use in private correspondence a certain
-style of letter paper marked with “C. L. S. C. ’86” in a neat
-monogram. Further particulars in regard to this paper will
-soon be given.</p>
-
-<p>Just before leaving Chautauqua the Class of ’86 adopted a
-motto: “We study for light, to bless with light.” The New
-England branch adopts this motto, in addition to the one
-chosen at Lake View: “Let us keep our Heavenly Father in
-the midst.”</p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="C_L_S_C_TESTIMONY" id="C_L_S_C_TESTIMONY">C. L. S. C. TESTIMONY.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p><i>Canada.</i>—It was a bitter disappointment to me that I was
-compelled to leave school at fourteen and earn my own living,
-giving up the idea of a college course. The C. L. S. C. has
-been to me therefore an unspeakable boon.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>Vermont.</i>—I have received large benefit as well as pleasure
-during the year that I have been a member of the C. L. S. C.
-The course of reading has taken me into broader fields, opened
-new avenues of thought and reflection, widened my field of
-vision, and altogether made me a better man.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>Vermont.</i>—According to Isaiah xxx:7, I have been trying to
-show my strength by “sitting still” four years. I often ask
-myself, what should I have done had I not had this interesting
-course—the C. L. S. C. During these four years of deprivation
-how many sorrows have been almost forgotten while reading
-the many interesting thoughts that are presented in our reading.
-I thank God many times for this glorious enterprise.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>Connecticut.</i>—I have been very much interested in the
-studies of the C. L. S. C. during the first year. It is an honor
-as well as a privilege to be a member.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>Rhode Island.</i>—Many times home duties have occupied time
-and thought so fully as to discourage me. But realizing that I
-am to live “heartily as to the Lord,” and viewing the course as
-his special blessing, I have gathered inspiration and journeyed
-on patiently.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>New York.</i>—I have enjoyed my four years’ course very much,
-and hope that it has been profitable to me. Though having
-reached the age of sixty years my love for improvement has
-not been gratified, and I purpose to continue the course that is
-marked out.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>New York.</i>—I am surprised at the pleasure and advantage
-the C. L. S. C. has been to me. I have read no more than
-usual, but have read more systematically, and received greater
-benefit. There is inspiration in being “one of many.”</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>New York.</i>—I have taken great pleasure in the reading. Am
-very enthusiastic over the course, and will try my best to graduate.
-I do it a great deal for my children, hoping that I may
-be a better mother, and train their minds so that they will
-make better men and women than they would have been had
-I not become a member of the C. L. S. C. Am all alone in
-my reading, except what my boy of fourteen does with me;
-even my little girl just turned seven studies geology with me,
-and is much interested in finding specimens.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>Pennsylvania.</i>—I have only been a member of the C. L. S. C.
-for about four months and in that time I have done most of my
-reading at night, reading usually from eight o’clock until
-eleven. As I have to work hard all day, I have little time for
-reading except at night, I find the course very interesting,
-and I am deriving a great amount of good from it.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>Pennsylvania.</i>—For almost two years my work has required
-my presence twelve hours every week day, and part of the
-time sixteen and eighteen hours. I gave up last summer,
-thinking I could not finish the course, but after being present
-at Chautauqua I had a greater desire than ever to continue. I
-have at leisure moments read up for the two years, and must
-ever feel grateful to Chautauqua influence.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>Ohio.</i>—I am a farmer’s wife, but with all the care of the work
-that position in life brings (and a good share of the work too),
-I still find time to read the regular four years’ course of the C.
-L. S. C., and desire to do as thorough work as I am capable of
-doing. Am reading not merely for pleasure, far less to criticise,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-but for <i>instruction</i>, and have been greatly helped by this first
-year’s study.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>Ohio.</i>—In many ways I think the C. L. S. C. has been
-of benefit to the little ones. This last winter my eldest daughter
-said: “Why can’t we have a society of our own?” “We,”
-meant the family. I seconded it gladly, and my husband also,
-and we resolved ourselves into the “Clio Clique” and took as
-our work “Art and Artists,” as mapped out in the <i>St. Nicholas</i>.
-Each member pledged themselves to take the work given them
-by the president (who was our only officer), and also to commit
-not less than eight lines of some poem to memory. We had no
-outside members, and we did our work right well, I think.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>Illinois.</i>—The C. L. S. C. has done much for me. Life has
-been brighter, sweeter and better than it might otherwise have
-been. Friendships have been formed which I am sure will survive
-life, and add another link in the golden chain that binds
-us to another world.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>Michigan.</i>—To the C. L. S. C. I owe everything.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>Michigan.</i>—Were it not that I still may keep a place in the
-Circle, I should be sorry the four years were over. They have
-been pleasant ones, so far as the Circle was concerned, and
-have passed swiftly. It seemed a great undertaking to me four
-years ago, when I commenced the course. For one thing, I did
-not see my way clear to get the books, but I resolved to try, and
-it has seemed all along that it was God’s way of helping me to
-the knowledge I had so much desired.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>Wisconsin.</i>—A lady writes: The regular methods of the C.
-L. S. C. have suggested to me the plan of having a little home
-monthly, contributed to only by members of the family, written,
-and read aloud on a specified evening each month. The children
-write prose and poetry that are a surprise, but only the effect of
-a regular course of reading and conversations by one member
-of the family. While reading astronomy, one of the little girls,
-aged ten years, took two looking-glasses and illustrated, in play,
-the motions of a planet. She held them by the window in the
-sun, so as to throw the reflection on the ceiling. One she had
-stationary, for the sun, the other she caused to go around it,
-causing the motion to hasten at perihelion, and to become slow
-at aphelion, describing the motions correctly. Then she imagined
-a comet, causing it to go out of sight, then return, and
-upon its approach to the sun rushing it past with lightning speed.
-I called the attention of their father to their play with much delight,
-for I had no idea they understood the motions so well,
-simply from conversations on the subject in the family circle.
-They all joined in the conversation at play, and seemed to
-comprehend it all.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>Iowa.</i>—The studies have benefited me much more than I
-can express in words. May heaven’s choicest blessings rest
-upon the officers and everyone connected with the C. L. S. C.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>Kansas.</i>—I am one of the busy housekeepers, but always
-find time to read. My reading has uplifted my soul, and
-led me to a fuller appreciation of the power and love of God,
-and I feel thankful that I am numbered with the army of Chautauquans.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><i>California.</i>—When I read the C. L. S. C. testimony in <span class="smcap">The
-Chautauquan</span>, I always think Chautauqua has been <i>all that</i>
-and <i>more</i> to me, for it has led me from cold, dark skepticism to
-my Bible and my Father in heaven, and it is gradually leading
-some of my friends into the light. I prize my C. L. S. C. books
-more highly that they are worn and soiled by many readers,
-and I believe I can do no better missionary work than by enlarging
-the Circle.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-<h2><a name="C_L_S_C_REUNION" id="C_L_S_C_REUNION">C. L. S. C. REUNION.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>On the afternoon of June 27, at Pendleton, Indiana, a delightful
-C. L. S. C. reunion was held. The circle of Pendleton
-invited the circle from the neighboring village of Greenfield
-to join with them in their last meeting for the year. A goodly
-number of visitors were present. After an entertaining program
-of speeches, songs, toasts, etc., had been carried out, the following
-class histories were read:</p>
-
-
-<h3>PENDLETON LOCAL CIRCLE.</h3>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>On the evening of the 28th of December, 1881, a little company of
-eight ladies and five gentlemen assembled at the home of Dr. Huston,
-Pendleton, Indiana, for the purpose of more fully discussing the Chautauqua
-Idea, and if possible to organize a branch of the great Chautauqua
-Literary and Scientific Circle. Three months behind in the year’s
-studies, the outlook was not as encouraging as could have been wished,
-but finding one of the class mottoes to be “Never be discouraged,” it
-was unanimously agreed that we organize. Teachers were also chosen
-for the principal studies, and it was thought best that they should present
-the lessons to the class in the form of questions. This method was
-generally observed throughout the year, with the exception of some
-lectures on geology. At each session two of the members were appointed
-to write papers for the following week, on some subject pertaining to the
-lessons. Longfellow’s birthday was the only memorial observed. Besides
-the usual exercises of the evening a short sketch of the life of the
-poet was read, followed by the reading of two of his poems. Our
-weekly meetings were well kept up, and much interest manifested in the
-studies until the first of May, when owing to summer heat, and many
-calls on the time of the different members, it was thought best to meet once
-a month, each member being given a portion of the studies to be brought
-forward at the next session. This plan was found to be a good one for
-the summer months, and was continued until the beginning of the new
-year’s studies, when the weekly meetings were again resumed, and the
-meetings were spent in much the same manner as the first year with the
-exception of the evening of the thirtieth of November, when a complete
-change was made in the program, by having a C. L. S. C. thanksgiving
-supper and a general good time at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Whitney.
-Since that time our circle has lost several of its members either
-from sickness or change of residence, but we hope ere the beginning of
-another year to be fully reinforced and ready to continue the good work.</p>
-
-
-<h3>GREENFIELD LOCAL CIRCLE.</h3>
-
-<p>Although we have met to-day as strangers, we find that the unity of
-thought and purpose that has characterized our work the past year has
-made us friends. The history of our circle is necessarily brief because of
-the short time it has been in existence. When we first organized in the
-fall of ’82, a part of us supposed we were entering the society temporarily
-and did not expect to matriculate and become regular members of
-the mystic tie, but we only met a few times till we perceived the advantages
-we were deriving from the association, one with another, and saw
-the necessity of a permanent organization. Now there are ten of us enrolled
-as students of the “University of the C. L. S. C.” We pursued
-the course with a great deal of enthusiasm and delight, and if it were
-possible, each study seemed more interesting than the preceding. With
-a great deal of reluctance we laid aside geology and Greek history for
-astronomy and English history, but we soon saw we were susceptible
-of inspiration from the latter as well as the former. Our circle, except
-two, is composed of married ladies. As housewives we feel that the
-course has been very beneficial—it has relieved the monotony and tedium
-of housekeeping because it has given us something ennobling to think of—it
-has also given us a taste for something else than the last novel and
-the latest piece of gossip in the daily papers. We feel as though we
-could adopt the sentiment of Plato. A friend who observed that he
-seemed as desirous to learn himself as to teach others, asked him how
-long he expected to remain a student? Plato replied, “As long as I am
-not ashamed to grow wiser and better.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Temperance</span> and labor are the two best physicians of man;
-labor sharpens the appetite, and temperance prevents him from
-indulging to excess.—<i>Rousseau.</i></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="LOCAL_CIRCLES" id="LOCAL_CIRCLES">LOCAL CIRCLES.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p><b>Province of Quebec (Bedford).</b>—The Harmony Circle was organized
-here last September. We are seven in number, all
-having so many cares that the Chautauqua work has to be
-done by improving the spare moments, and often by giving up
-some pleasure or recreation; but the sacrifice is made willingly.
-Each member prepares seven questions; the number to be chosen
-from each subject in hand is determined at the previous
-meeting. Each in turn puts a question to his or her nearest
-neighbor, then the second time round to the nearest but
-one, and so on; thus each member puts a question to every
-other member. This, with discussions and conversations which
-arise from the lesson, occupies more than two hours in a very
-enjoyable manner. We have derived profit from the work,
-both in increase of knowledge and improvement of literary
-taste. Our circle has also been the source of much kindly feeling
-and mutual interest, and a strong bond of friendship
-amongst us.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Maine (Brownfield).</b>—Our circle was organized early in October,
-1882, with ten regular members, five gentlemen and five
-ladies. We arranged to meet once in two weeks, and enjoyed
-our evenings together so much that it was extremely difficult to
-keep the length of our sessions within reasonable bounds. We
-congratulated ourselves constantly on the pleasure afforded us
-by our studies, and on the obvious improvement, from month
-to month, in the work of individual members. It was decided,
-for the present year at least, to change the whole board of officers
-once in three months, that the educating influences of the
-responsibilities connected with the various offices might be
-shared, in turn, by all who were willing to accept them.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Maine (Fairfield).</b>—A local circle was organized here in October,
-1882, and now numbers fifteen members, nearly all of
-whom have completed the required readings to date. Teachers
-are assigned to each of the subjects as they are taken up, and
-recitations are conducted with excellent system and thoroughness.
-In addition to this we have numerous essays and readings,
-and the enthusiasm is such that, notwithstanding our regular
-meetings occur fortnightly, we have many special meetings.
-It is the custom at all of our meetings to criticize freely,
-and this leads to an exactness of pronunciation when reading,
-not otherwise to be attained.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Maine (Brownfield).</b>—Our circle meets once in two weeks,
-takes up questions in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>, and then devotes a
-short time to questions of our own asking, using a question-box.
-We think this an excellent plan. After this we generally
-have short essays on the subjects we are reading, often closing
-with general conversation.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Massachusetts (Wareham).</b>—The Pallas Circle closed for
-the season with a lawn party, June 18.</p>
-
-
-<h4>PROGRAM.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Singing—“A Song of To-day.”</p>
-
-<p>Roll-Call—Responses of quotations from any of the reading of the
-past year.</p>
-
-<p>Secretary’s report.</p>
-
-<p>Selected questions in Astronomy, answered by members of the circle.</p>
-
-<p>Reading—“The Vision of Mirza.”</p>
-
-<p>Essay—“The Mythological Story of Ursa Major and Ursa Minor.”</p>
-
-<p>Reading—Selections from “Evangeline.”</p>
-
-<p>Reading—“The Fan-drill.”—(Addison.)</p>
-
-<p>Singing—Chautauqua Carols.</p>
-
-<p>Supper—Toasts and Responses, including two original poems.</p></div>
-
-<p>Though small in numbers the circle is very enthusiastic in its
-work. New members for the coming year were enrolled from
-the invited guests of the occasion, and the readings will be
-commenced in October with fresh vigor.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Massachusetts (Haverhill).</b>—A local circle was organized in
-Haverhill, March 14, 1883, with the following officers: R. D.
-Trask, president; George H. Foster, vice president; Delia Drew,
-secretary. Whole membership numbers seventeen.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Massachusetts (Natick).</b>—The Natick local circle was organized
-September 20, 1879. Eight of the original members, keeping
-in view the motto, “never be discouraged,” have completed
-the four years’ course. At the commencement of the present
-year our local circle numbered twenty-five. We enjoy our reading
-greatly, and consider the Natick C. L. S. C. a success.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Connecticut (West Haven).</b>—Our circle was organized November
-14, 1881, and numbers seventeen members. We meet once a
-week. Our circle is divided into committees of three and four
-to arrange programs for the month’s entertainments. They include
-reviews, essays on different subjects connected with the
-course, readings and recitations. “Shakspere’s Day” was observed
-by reading a portion of the play, “Merchant of Venice,”
-the committee having previously assigned the different characters
-to the members present. We are very social at our meetings,
-and occasionally have a little collation at the close of the
-exercises. Most of us are well up with the class, and find the
-Chautauqua evenings not only instructive, but exceedingly enjoyable.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>New York (Angola).</b>—A local circle was organized here February
-5, 1883, and consists of eighteen members. We usually
-do the reading in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span> at our meetings, information
-being given, and questions asked by all. We have made
-use of the questions and answers in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>, and
-found them to be of much assistance. Occasionally topics are
-assigned, upon which we are to read or speak at the next meeting.
-Criticism upon pronunciation is unsparingly given to all. We
-intend to continue our meetings, and hope that another year
-may bring us a larger membership.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Pennsylvania (Allegheny City).</b>—In November, 1882, the
-Woodlawn segment of the C. L. S. C. was organized and officers
-elected. The president having drawn up a constitution, it
-was read and unanimously adopted. Our constitution regulates
-the manner of conducting the society, prescribes parliamentary
-rules, etc. During our study of geology, we were favored with
-an interesting and instructive lecture by A. M. Martin, Esq.,
-General Secretary of the C. L. S. C. Our membership now consists
-of seventeen persons, six being ladies.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Pennsylvania (Gillmor).</b>—Our circle owes its being to the
-earnest, persistent efforts of two or three persons who had read
-one year alone. The first meeting was held October 24,
-1882, and the circle organized with fifteen members. We labor
-under some peculiar difficulties. Our members represent
-several little villages, and are so scattered that it is some times
-hard to get together. Then we are in the oil country where
-people stay rather than live, so they gather around them only
-such things as are needful for comfortable living. The majority
-have but few books of reference, or other helps to study.
-Our meetings were opened with prayer and the singing of a
-Chautauqua song, and sometimes repeating the Chautauqua
-mottoes, any items of business being attended to before beginning
-the regular work of the circle. Before closing members
-were appointed by the president to conduct the various exercises
-in the succeeding meeting. In the latter part of the winter
-the president proposed a course of lectures. It was a decided
-success. Our lecturers were J. T. Edwards, D.D., Randolph,
-N. Y.—subject: “Oratory and Eloquence;” D. W. C.
-Huntington, Bradford, Pa., “Rambles in Europe;” C. W.
-Winchester, Buffalo, N. Y., “Eight Wonders of the World.”
-This course closed with a home entertainment, consisting of
-vocal and instrumental music, readings, essays, etc., mostly by
-members of the circle. Our number is at present nineteen,
-and we are happy to have proved those to be false prophets<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-who predicted that three months would be the limit of our
-existence.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>District of Columbia (Washington).</b>—The Parker Circle has
-been reorganized for the course of 1883-84. Several new members
-were received, and the circle now numbers about thirty-six.
-On Tuesday evening, the 18th, Dr. Dobson, our president, will
-organize a new circle in another part of the city, beginning
-with a dozen members. Foundry Circle reorganizes the same
-night, and several new circles will be organized during the fall.
-There is considerable interest manifested in the course.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Maryland (Baltimore).</b>—The Class of 1887 was organized on
-Thursday evening, September 20, at the Young Men’s Christian
-Association Hall. The membership for the coming year
-will be about thirty. The officers constitute the committee on
-instruction. The class of the past year, the fourth since its organization,
-was one of the best; the method adopted was
-that of the question box; each member placing such questions
-of interest in the box as he had met with in his reading.
-The director, Prof. J. Rendell Harris, would read the questions
-one at a time, and open the discussion upon them, in which all
-joined. Two meetings each month from October to June were
-held, and the entire time spent on the three books, the rest of
-the books being used for home reading only. This plan was
-considered preferable to the study of two or three at one time.
-The outlook for the new class is good.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Ohio (Harrisburg).</b>—We have eleven members, of whom ten
-are regular members of the C. L. S. C. Our method of work
-thus far has consisted of essays, readings, and conversations.
-The interest in the work increases with each meeting.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Illinois (Fairburg).</b>—We have here a small circle of eight
-members. We have met regularly once a week, taking each
-study in its course, and in an informal way have discussed the
-various subjects presented. Much interest has been felt and
-expressed, and we all feel that a prescribed course of reading
-is by all means the best and most direct means of self-culture.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Illinois (Yorkville).</b>—For the past two years quite a number
-of our people have pursued the course of studies, but not until
-last year did we see proper to unite with the home society. Our
-class comprised lawyers, bankers, insurance agents, carriage
-trimmers, preachers, teachers and farmers. All feel that it has
-been two years of very profitable study for us. We closed our
-last year’s study by a meeting at the residence of one of the
-members, where we were entertained by a program consisting
-of essays, character sketches, class history, music, and last, but
-not least, refreshments for the inner man. It was indeed an
-enjoyable occasion. We hope to organize a much larger class
-for the coming year.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Tennessee (Knoxville).</b>—The local circle at this place reorganized
-this year with a membership of twenty-eight, an increase
-of twenty over last year. How was this accomplished?
-The secret can be given in just two words: <i>personal influence</i>.
-At the close of last year we felt that our circle here was
-dying. The members were negligent about the preparation
-of lessons, careless and indifferent about attendance, and we
-disbanded for the summer feeling almost discouraged, yet in
-the heart of each member was a secret determination to do
-something to make the circle more interesting next year. One
-of our members went to Monteagle, another to Europe, and
-another to Chautauqua. Those who remained at home worked
-also for the C. L. S. C., and all worked earnestly and with enthusiasm.
-We thought, wrote and talked C. L. S. C. until our
-friends laughingly called us “people of one idea.” We sent
-for circulars, which we gave to every one whom we could betray
-into the slightest expression of interest. We loaned our
-books and magazine with the request, “please just look it over
-and tell us what you think of it.” The seventh of September
-we held a meeting at the Y. M. C. A. rooms, kindly tendered to
-us for that purpose. All who were interested in the C. L. S. C.
-were invited, and two of the ministers of our city also encouraged
-us by their presence and cheering words. Then we began
-to reap the fruits of our summer’s work. Seven new members
-were reported and two more asked for membership. Another
-meeting was held September 21 for reorganization, at which
-six new names were reported and five more requested admission
-to the circle, making our number twenty-eight. The circle
-will meet once a week, and we hope to accomplish results
-worthy of our enthusiasm. We send greeting to our sister circles,
-especially to the weak, to whom we would say: <i>Use your
-influence</i> as a society and as individuals, and <i>success</i> is yours.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Michigan (Niles).</b>—Our circle was organized last October,
-with thirteen members. We have held thirty-three meetings, at
-which reviews upon the topics studied and readings from <span class="smcap">The
-Chautauquan</span> have formed part of the program. In addition,
-we have read Bryant’s translation of the “Iliad,” and
-“Evangeline.” All the Memorial Days have been kept. Selections
-from the author, sketches of his life and home, responses
-to roll-call with quotations from the same, and familiar talks
-upon the subject of the memorial, have made these occasions
-of unusual interest.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Michigan (Imlay City).</b>—On Tuesday evening, November 28,
-1882, we organized a local circle of the C. L. S. C. We have
-eight regular and three local members. The meetings have
-been held once in two weeks, at the houses of the members,
-and from the interest manifested in the work, we have every
-reason to hope for a large increase in numbers next year. On
-the evening of February 27 we observed Longfellow’s birthday
-by an interesting program of essays, readings, recitations and
-songs. We closed with a sentiment from each one present,
-from Longfellow.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Wisconsin (La Crosse).</b>—A local circle was organized here
-last January. The membership is small, but we have been
-faithful to the work. Although we began very late, we have
-nearly completed the year’s work. We are all glad we began
-such a course of study, and have found much pleasure in gathering
-round our “round-table.” The prospects for an increase
-in numbers and interest for the coming year are encouraging.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Minnesota (Minneapolis).</b>—The Centenary Circle has just finished
-the work of the year. Our circle has numbered forty-two
-in all, with six local members, though six, at least, have been
-unable to attend the meetings on account of distance,—one
-even living in another State—but most are keeping up their
-work. There has been more interest and enthusiasm all through
-the year than during our first year.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Minnesota (Albert Lea).</b>—This is the first year of our local
-circle, and we number five, all ladies with home cares. We
-have short sketches of the “Required History Readings” in
-<span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>, which we think make us remember them
-better. We are reading the “White Seal Course” aloud, and
-enjoy it so much. Can not be glad enough that we have taken
-up this course.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Iowa (Muscatine.)</b>—The Acme Circle is composed of fifty-five
-members, with an average attendance of thirty-five. We are
-very enthusiastic, and expect to take the examinations. We
-recite the lesson, occasionally reading a part which it does not
-seem worth while to commit to memory. Our exercises are varied
-by essays on topics of importance in connection with the
-lesson.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Iowa (St. Charles).</b>—I wish to report from our town a circle
-of three (myself and family). We hold no regular meetings.
-Although we began the first year’s course late last December,
-we have completed the reading up to this month. It has been
-very profitable and entertaining to us. We are each determined<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-to complete the course. We will advertise it in our county papers,
-and do our utmost to solicit members and get up local
-circles. We do not think any better plan than the C. L. S. C.
-could be devised for furnishing those who have not the privilege
-of an academic or collegiate course an opportunity to acquire
-a good practical education.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>Texas (Palestine.)</b>—The Houston <i>Daily Post</i> gives the following
-history of the local circle in Palestine: Some young people
-and some adults of Palestine have formed themselves into a
-branch of the now world-renowned Chautauqua Literary and
-Scientific Circle, and have entered upon the four years’ course
-of study prescribed by that institution. The circle was organized
-in October, 1882, and now has a membership of twenty-three.
-Meetings are held every week at the homes of the
-members. The evenings thus spent are highly profitable to the
-members, socially and intellectually. Dr. Yoakum has assisted
-the circle greatly by lectures and talks on geology, astronomy,
-botany and history. The program of exercises is varied semi-occasionally
-from the regular channel, and the evening is spent
-in purely a literary way. Such seasons of refreshment occur
-on the birth anniversaries of popular authors. On the 23d of
-April a Shakspere memorial meeting was held at Sterne’s
-Hotel, on which occasion Mrs. Overall read “The Fall of Cardinal
-Wolsey.” Miss Kate Colding rendered “Hamlet’s
-Soliloquy” most admirably. Miss Florence Finch presided at
-the organ and lead in the Chautauqua songs. On May 1 the
-circle did honor to the life and memory of Addison. Mrs. J. C.
-Bradford read a sketch of his life and writings, Miss Ena Sawyers
-read “The Omnipresence and Omniscience of the Deity,”
-and Miss Fannie Reese read “The Vision of Mirza.”</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p><b>California (Brooklyn).</b>—Our circle is an informal quartet of
-congenial spirits who have been close friends and companions
-for some time past. We meet every Monday evening and have
-a delightful free and easy discussion over what we have read
-during the week, with Webster’s Unabridged in its post of
-honor—the piano stool, and the encyclopædia rack within
-reachable distance. We are enjoying the course very much,
-and feel that it is just what we need.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-<h2><a name="HOW_TO_CONDUCT_A_LOCAL" id="HOW_TO_CONDUCT_A_LOCAL"></a>HOW TO CONDUCT A LOCAL
-CIRCLE.<a name="FNanchor_I_9" id="FNanchor_I_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_I_9" class="fnanchor">[I]</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<h3>THE TROY METHOD OF ORGANIZING A CIRCLE.</h3>
-
-<p>The “Rock of Ages” was sung, a prayer was offered by Mr.
-Martin, after which Mr. Farrar said:</p>
-
-<p>I desire to give you a little history of the inauguration of
-our circle work in Troy. I do so because I am confident that
-what was done there last year may be done in every city, in every
-village, and may be multiplied a thousand times.</p>
-
-<p>About the middle of last September I wrote an article on
-“Reading, Circles for Reading, and The C. L. S. C.,” and
-published it in the Troy <i>Daily Times</i>.</p>
-
-<p>I wrote this article, published it on Wednesday, calling a
-meeting at my church for Thursday evening, inviting anybody
-and everybody who desired, to be present. The evening was
-quite unfavorable. I expected about twenty. I was exceedingly
-surprised and gratified in the interests of the C. L. S. C.
-work when I found nearly three hundred people present. Being
-inspired by their presence, I began to talk to them on reading,
-the importance of it, the value of it to-day, and the cheapness
-of literature. I unfolded to them the C. L. S. C. plan, the
-numbers that were taking it up, the enthusiasm that prevailed
-here at Chautauqua, and how the Circle was spreading all over
-the world, not only in this country but in other countries. It
-was all new to many of them.</p>
-
-<p>At the conclusion of my half hour’s talk I asked how many
-persons wanted to join some such circle as this. About every
-hand in the audience went up. I was surprised again. Looking
-over the audience, I knew nearly every one of them, for I
-was back the second time as pastor of the same church, and
-knowing that four or five denominations were represented
-there, I suggested that there ought to be a circle in every church.
-I did not want to “scoop up” the whole right there in our
-church, and I was generous enough to say that there ought to
-be a dozen circles established in our city, one in connection
-with every church, and in the suburbs. I said that a week from
-that night we would organize a circle there, and any who desired
-to be connected with that circle would be gladly welcomed.</p>
-
-<p>During the week I received several letters from parties in the
-city, and out of the city, asking about the C. L. S. C., what its
-course of reading was, etc. I followed it in the <i>Daily Times</i>
-with another letter on Wednesday, saying that our circle was
-to meet on Thursday, and explaining the text books that we
-were to take up for the year, and more fully entering into the
-C. L. S. C. idea. Our evening came, and we had over three
-hundred present. I had the whole list of books with me. I
-took them up and showed them to each person. I said, “this
-is the course.” I went on unfolding the whole idea of the
-course, the amount of time each year, the examinations at the
-end of the year, and the outlook of the four years’ course. I
-told them that this was the student’s outlook from college halls,
-with the exception of the mathematics and the languages to be
-translated.</p>
-
-<p>Then I asked how many desired to join this Circle. Over
-two hundred hands went up. Immediately we fell to organization.
-Fortunately, or unfortunately, I was elected president,
-and a Protestant Episcopal clergyman, rector of Christ Church,
-close by me, was elected vice-president. We have in our organization
-a president, vice-president, secretary, treasurer, and
-a board of managers consisting of five.</p>
-
-<p>I found on inspecting the number that joined our circle that
-we were about equally divided Baptists, Protestant Episcopalians,
-Presbyterians, and Methodist Episcopalians. Our board
-of managers was wisely selected from these various churches,
-so that there might be the largest remove possible from anything
-like an organization confined to our church. I say this because
-I believe that people are hungry for just such an organization
-as this. There are thousands in our communities who are
-tired of idle gossip. They want something to talk about, and
-the only way to stop gossip is to put something into their heads
-on a higher plane. I have had testimony from our members
-repeatedly, “Now we have so little time to talk about these
-other things.” Whenever they come together they talk about
-these wonders found in the C. L. S. C. work.</p>
-
-<p>This board of five managers arranges our monthly plan. Our
-large meetings are monthly. Our circle divides itself up; six
-or a dozen, or twenty, form little organizations, read together,
-meet once a week, and then we meet as a large circle monthly
-and review our work. This board of managers lays out the
-month’s work. The first week after our monthly meeting this
-board of managers is called together. They make out their
-plan, print it on a postal card, and send it out at once to every
-member of the circle, so that every member knows what the
-plan is to be three weeks before the meeting. Our method
-in the large meeting is to review our work by the essay method.</p>
-
-<p>Let me give you a program. First, singing. I was fortunate
-enough to have an enthusiastic singer in our number, and I
-gave him the work of organizing a glee club. He gathered
-twenty or twenty-five of the very best young people in the
-number, and formed a glee club, and they led our devotions.
-We followed with scripture and prayer. And then began our
-essays. We usually have three, four, sometimes five essays,
-and no essay is over ten minutes in length. We desire that the
-essays shall not exceed eight minutes. It requires a deal of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-skill and practice to reduce our thoughts on a subject to a six or
-eight minutes essay, but it is practicable. Then we are all interested
-in the subject which we have been studying for a month.
-When an individual rises and reads, we feel that we have gone
-over the same subject, and it is like a review to us, and helps
-to fasten it more definitely in our minds. Following each essay
-we have remarks and questions. We never criticise an essay.
-That would be unkind. You could not do it. You would intimidate
-everybody.</p>
-
-<p>We ask questions and throw in additional remarks. We take
-up half an hour, or three-quarters at most, devoted to the three,
-four or five essays. Following these we appoint some person
-to ask the questions which are printed in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>.
-Any person who will ask and answer these questions will find
-that he has a wonderfully clear <i>résumé</i> of the whole subject in
-his mind. I suppose that we are indebted to Mr. Martin for
-them. They are very clear, very concise, and greatly appreciated
-by the Troy members.</p>
-
-<p>Following these questions we have a recess of twenty minutes,
-in which it is the custom of our circle to shake hands, make
-each others’ acquaintance, encourage each other, find out about
-each other, and inquire about the work. Upon the recall the
-Glee Club gives a song. Then follows the round-table. I
-need not explain this because you are all familiar with the
-round-table. After that a <i>conversazione</i> on some prominent
-character of the world, old or new. We desire that every member
-will give us some extract of five lines, not to exceed five
-lines, unless it would break the harmony of the thought, from
-every person brought before us. We have had Shakspere,
-Longfellow, Bryant, and a variety of persons.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately after this <i>conversazione</i> follows “a miscellaneous
-exercise”—anything that needs to be taken up. While we were
-studying geology, we went down to the village of Albany
-where the capital is located. They have a very fine series of
-geological rooms arranged by Prof. Hall, the State Geologist.
-As you enter the room, there are the very lowest specimens of
-the rocks with their fossils. As you go up story after story you
-reach the highest rocks. Prof. Hall, by previous appointment,
-met our large circle of about two hundred. We chartered a
-car or two and went down. He met us and gave us a very satisfactory
-lecture. We appreciated it.</p>
-
-<p>When we came to astronomy, we found out where we could
-find an astronomer. We invited him, and he came and gave
-us a lecture. Then we had a teacher of the high school stand
-before us, and allow us to question him to our heart’s content.
-We found it available to work in all the outside force possible.
-When we studied the subject of art we got together all the
-pictures of the town that we could find. I was in Gloversville
-as pastor at that time. We arranged them, and spent two or
-three very delightful evenings. You have two or three, another
-has one, another has six; bring them all together and discuss
-the whole subject of art. We found it very profitable.</p>
-
-<p>In Troy our circle is so enthusiastic in its work that there is a
-constant clamor of outside people to get in. We sometimes allow
-a few outsiders, and there is hardly a session that we do
-not have four to five hundred in our gathering, but the front
-seats are always reserved for members, and visitors, if there be
-any, must take the back seats. There are anywhere from fifty
-to one hundred and fifty clamoring to be admitted into the
-circle this fall. I do not know what we shall do. If we admit
-them, we shall go into the audience room. I think it is better
-to divide up.</p>
-
-<p>I have given you our work. I said in the outset, it is possible
-for any young man or woman, pastor or superintendent,
-through your village paper, to write a short article calling the
-attention of the people to it, saying that in such a place there
-will be an organization of this work. I have the impression
-that you can gather quite a large circle in every place, two or
-three of them. But my conviction is from the work as I have
-observed it through Troy and vicinity, that you need somebody
-in that circle, at the head of it, who loves it. You can make
-nothing in this world grow without love. Not even the flowers
-you may plant in your garden will grow unless you love them.</p>
-
-<p>As the result of the article in the Troy <i>Times</i>, eight circles
-were organized in our city. As the result of those two articles,
-twenty-six circles were organized around Troy.</p>
-
-<p>I would be glad to hear from you to-day. Criticise my plan
-as much as you please. I have taken more time because Dr.
-Vincent urged me to do so. He urged me to take twenty-five
-minutes. I have only taken twenty. Give me your plans, any
-suggestions, any practical idea that you have worked out in
-your circles.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Martin</span>: I can say that I commend every feature that
-has been mentioned here by Mr. Farrar in the method of conducting
-local circles. I believe we have tested in Pittsburgh
-every one he has mentioned. There are several others we have
-tried, to which I would like to refer. For instance, I think it
-well for persons to start with the inspiration and a love of the
-Circle right here at Chautauqua. A great many persons have
-come to me on the ground, and asked me how to form a local
-circle, saying they had no local circles in their vicinity. I say
-to them if they have two or three members on the ground here
-who belong together in a circle, meet under the trees and start
-your organization here. We started with seven members under
-these trees by the Hall of Philosophy, in the year 1878, and we
-had somewhere between three and four hundred before the following
-January, and have as many more since. Last year
-about half a dozen who graduated in the class of ’82 met under
-the trees here, and we formed our preliminary organization.
-We carried the spirit and love of the C. L. S. C. home with us,
-and we formed in Pittsburgh an alumni association of nearly
-sixty members. We expect to increase the number largely during
-the coming year.</p>
-
-<p>One word with reference to the use of newspapers. Our executive
-committee apportion the different papers of the city between
-them. We have five members, and each member looks
-after a paper to see that the paper looks after C. L. S. C. matters.
-We make each member the editor of a C. L. S. C.
-department in a newspaper, and it is his duty to get in as many
-notices about the C. L. S. C. as possible. Our press has very
-generously opened to us its columns. Every monthly meeting
-is noticed before and after in the papers. I am glad
-to say that we have got into many considerable controversies
-in the newspapers. We like them because they bring our organization
-into notice.</p>
-
-<p>We avail ourselves of the papyrograph, the electric pen, the
-type writer, and the various plans for duplicating that we now
-have, in the way of sending out notices, preparing the programs,
-etc. Any of you who know how cheaply any of these
-appliances can be used for printing, will see how efficiently
-they can be employed for the use of the circle.</p>
-
-<p>Another point: If we get a little depressed, or a little behind,
-we get Dr. Vincent or one of the counselors to come and give
-us a rousing lecture. We have given them good audiences,
-and they have spread a new enthusiasm. What an amount of
-enthusiasm can be developed about the C. L. S. C. If you will
-have the patience to answer clearly and fully all questions that
-are asked you about the C. L. S. C., you will find that you are
-doing a grand missionary work. I know my business is often
-interrupted by people who come in and ask about the C. L. S.
-C., but I am always sorry if I ever have to turn any one away
-without information. If I give them full information, and they
-go away and join the C. L. S. C., and form a local circle afterward,
-I feel that I have done a missionary work.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Farrar</span>: Any suggestions?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A voice</span>: Did you permit persons to become members of
-your local circle who did not belong to the parent society?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Farrar</span>: Yes. But we requested them, if they did not
-wish to take up the full course of reading, to join the C. L. S. C.
-and pay their fifty cents, and take <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>. We<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-honored the home office. But they need not fill out the questions
-unless they choose.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Bridge</span>: In that way you will get a great many members
-of the C. L. S. C. who are not doing the work.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Farrar</span>: Very few. We took a few husbands who
-wanted to come with their wives. “Very good,” I said, “pay
-your fifty cents and take <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Rev. J. O. Foster</span>: We had a large circle where I was last
-appointed. We found in the school a man well posted in
-geology. We found the depot agent was an astronomer, and
-he was very enthusiastic over the invitation that we gave him.
-He came down and spattered the blackboard all over with
-facts. He got a long strip of paper and stuck up around the
-room, and marked out the planets. He gave us a very fine
-lecture on astronomy, so good that the people requested him
-to repeat it before the whole congregation. We had this “jelly-pad
-business,” and struck off our programs the week before.
-Every one knew what he was expected to do. We secured
-plenty of books, if any one was at a loss for books. We had
-about twenty in the circle, and that circle is now running. I
-think it is three and a half years old. I do not know of any
-older than that.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Martin</span>: We have one five years old.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Foster</span>: Very good. Dr. Goodfellow organized this.
-Another member and I went to people in the city and asked
-them to lend us their pictures upon several subjects. You will
-be astonished at the amount of material you can gather together
-in a single afternoon to illustrate any subject.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dr. Vincent</span>: I have no doubt that some small local circles
-have quite unique plans which they have adopted, and I hope
-if they hesitate to speak out, that they will write out their plans
-for us.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A Lady</span>: I was about to speak for a small circle. I am very
-positive in our circle of twenty it would be almost impossible
-to have essays, except occasionally. The members generally
-would be so frightened at the idea of having to write an essay
-that we should lose the circle entirely. We have to pet them a
-little, and we use the conversational method as freely as possible
-to get them to express themselves. What they can not tell
-we tell them. In my experience—I have been conductor four
-years—I find the essay method frightens small circles. Where
-you have circles of two hundred, where they have a great many
-ministers, and lawyers, you can get them to write essays.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A Lady</span>: I would say that I belong to a circle out West of
-six members. We pursued the essay work for the first two
-years entirely. Every one of us for the first two years wrote an
-essay every week. [Applause.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dr. Eaton</span>: I would like to speak for another small circle.
-We had a program. We opened with singing and prayer, and
-then the leader, who had prepared himself thoroughly, or tried
-to prepare himself thoroughly on the lesson, particularly in science
-and in history, examined every class by questioning and
-removing every difficulty connected with them. The whole
-circle replied at once, answering the questions. If there were
-any in the circle that could not answer a question, they had it
-answered for them, and were not placed under any embarrassment
-by the sense of failure. A great many said of these meetings
-every two weeks, that they obtained a better knowledge by
-this thorough drill than by reading privately at home. Likewise
-we had essays, but not very frequently. We had essays
-in the first part of the evening. Sometimes there was a failure
-to respond, but generally the subject was assigned to particular
-individuals, and a great many facts in connection with the difficulties
-in history were brought in that way. I think we commenced
-with a circle of about twenty or thirty, and we graduated
-here a year ago some sixteen members, I think. And others
-are coming in, but with what success I am unable to say, as
-I have not been in that place all the time. I think that every
-one in that circle would bear testimony that in this way—by close
-examination, the plan of a regular class drill—we have obtained
-a better knowledge than in any other way, and that they were
-satisfied at the end of the year they had accomplished more and
-better work than they would under any other circumstances.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A voice</span>: I would like to say we consider that the writing
-of these essays and insisting upon it, was as much for the
-advantage of the persons writing these essays as for that of
-those who listened to them. Therefore, we had a critic who
-was to write the criticisms, and had them read by the president.
-Do you think that was a good way?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Farrar</span>: We thought it was not the best way. Dr. Vincent
-suggests that the criticisms might be given privately to the
-writer. I found it quite difficult to get essays. Many young ladies
-and gentlemen looked upon it as a fearful task. Many times I
-had to call on them, and sit down with them, and talk them
-into it, showing them how they could do it. And never one
-wrote an essay in our circle but said “When you want me to
-write an essay, call on me again.” I have tried a dozen others
-who persisted in refusing, but at the close of the year they came
-to me and said: “If you will forgive us for our refusing to
-write you may call upon us next year.”</p>
-
-<p>After singing, the benediction was pronounced by Dr. Vincent.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_I_9" id="Footnote_I_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_I_9">[I]</a> Round-Table held in the Hall of Philosophy, at Chautauqua, August 16th, 1883,
-conducted by Rev. H. C. Farrar, of Troy, N. Y.</p></div></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="continue">
-[<i>Not required.</i>]<br />
-</p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="QUESTIONS_AND_ANSWERS" id="QUESTIONS_AND_ANSWERS">QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<div class="hang1">
-<b>ONE HUNDRED QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ON “HISTORY OF
-GREECE,” VOLUME II, PARTS 10 AND 11—“THE ROMAN SUPREMACY,
-AND BYZANTINE HELLENISM.”</b></div>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">By A. M. MARTIN, <span class="smcap">General Secretary</span> C. L. S. C.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>1. Q. When is it generally said by historians that Hellas fell
-under the Roman rule? A. In 145 B. C., when Mummius captured
-Corinth.</p>
-
-<p>2. Q. Strictly speaking, when did Hellas become a Roman
-province? A. During the reign of Augustus.</p>
-
-<p>3. Q. Where was the principal theater of the Mithridatic war?
-A. Hellas, transplanted thither by the daring king of Pontus.</p>
-
-<p>4. Q. Whom did the Romans finally find it necessary to send
-against him? A. Sulla.</p>
-
-<p>5. Q. During this war what Hellenic city did Sulla capture
-after a long siege? A. Athens.</p>
-
-<p>6. Q. What is the assertion of several modern historians in
-regard to the devastation of the land and the slaughter of the
-inhabitants during this war, which ended in 84 B. C.? A. They
-did their work so effectually that Asia never thereafter recovered
-from the Roman wounds.</p>
-
-<p>7. Q. By what was the moral decay of the nation which began
-long before now followed? A. By a corresponding material
-ruin.</p>
-
-<p>8. Q. By what was the Ægean Sea from the earliest times
-infested? A. By pirates, who boldly attacked the coasts,
-islands and harbors, seizing vessels and plundering property.</p>
-
-<p>9. Q. In the year 78 B. C., what action did the Romans take
-against these pirates? A. They declared war against them,
-and entrusted the conduct of hostilities to Pompey.</p>
-
-<p>10. Q. What was the result of Pompey’s expedition against
-them? A. Ten thousand of them were put to death, twenty
-thousand captured, and one hundred and twenty of their harbors
-and fortifications were destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>11. Q. In the great struggle between Pompey and Cæsar for
-the supremacy of the world, whom did Hellas furnish with every
-possible assistance? A. Pompey.</p>
-
-<p>12. Q. In the year 44 B. C., what Hellenic city did Cæsar rebuild
-that had been destroyed a hundred years before by Mummius?
-A. Corinth.</p>
-
-<p>13. Q. In the Roman civil wars which followed the death of
-Cæsar, with whom did Athens ally herself? A. With Brutus
-and Cassius.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>14. Q. After the defeat of Brutus and Cassius by Octavius
-and Anthony, followed by hostilities between the latter two, for
-whom did the greater part of Hellas declare? A. For Anthony.</p>
-
-<p>15. Q. Shortly after Octavius assumed the name of Augustus
-to what did he reduce Hellas? A. To a Roman province.</p>
-
-<p>16. Q. What is said of the jurisdiction of the Roman proconsul
-thereafter sent annually to rule Hellas? A. Many cities
-and countries continued still to be regarded as “freed and
-allied.” The subject territory was designated by the name of
-Achaia as if it did not remain an integral part of “free Hellas.”</p>
-
-<p>17. Q. During the reign of Tiberias what did both Achaia
-and Macedonia become by reason of the harsh treatment received
-from the proconsuls? A. Cæsarean instead of public
-provinces.</p>
-
-<p>18. Q. What was the course of Nero toward Hellas? A. In
-the year 66 he declared the country autonomous, and at the
-same time plundered Hellas, inflicting far greater misfortunes
-on it than those sustained through the invasion of Xerxes.</p>
-
-<p>19. Q. When Vespasian ascended the throne what political
-change did he make? A. He reduced the country again to a
-Roman province.</p>
-
-<p>20. Q. During the reign of Vespasian what action was taken
-in regard to the Greek philosophers? A. Nearly all the Greek
-philosophers were banished from Rome.</p>
-
-<p>21. Q. How did Trajan prove to be one of the greatest benefactors
-of the Hellenic nation? A. He sent Maximus to
-Hellas as plenipotentiary and reorganizer of the free Hellenic
-cities, with instructions to honor the gods and ancient renown
-of the nation, and revere the sacred antiquity of the cities.</p>
-
-<p>22. Q. What was Hadrian’s treatment of Hellas? A. He
-visited Athens five times; sought to ameliorate the condition of
-the people, and adorned Athens and other cities with temples
-and buildings.</p>
-
-<p>23. Q. What political rights did he give the Hellenes? A.
-The rights of Roman citizenship.</p>
-
-<p>24. Q. During the reigns of what two Roman emperors did
-Hellas pre-eminently flourish? A. The Emperors Antoninus
-Pius and Marcus Aurelius.</p>
-
-<p>25. Q. Notwithstanding the benefits received from the Roman
-emperors what did Hellas continue to do? A. To wither and
-decline.</p>
-
-<p>26. Q. During the latter part of the third century what
-destructive invasion of Hellas took place? A. The invasion
-of the Goths and other northern barbarians, who overran
-the country like a deluge, depopulating cities and destroying
-everything in their path.</p>
-
-<p>27. Q. What relation does our author give Hellenism to
-Christianity? A. He makes it the first herald of Christianity.</p>
-
-<p>28. Q. Who was the first Roman emperor that issued a decree
-in favor of Christianity? A. Constantine the Great.</p>
-
-<p>29. Q. What discussions led Constantine to the convocation
-of the first General Council of the Christian Church, which assembled
-at Nice in A. D. 325? A. The discussions of Arianism,
-or opinions concerning the nature of the second person of
-the Trinity.</p>
-
-<p>30. Q. Who was the most noted opponent of Arianism? A.
-Athanasius.</p>
-
-<p>31. Q. What city did Constantine dedicate as the capital of
-his empire? A. Constantinople.</p>
-
-<p>32. Q. During the general slaughter of the relatives of Constantine
-that took place after his death, what cousin of his escaped
-and was assigned to the city of Athens for his place of
-habitation? A. Julian.</p>
-
-<p>33. Q. By comparing the present with the past, to what conclusion
-did Julian arrive as to the cause of the decline of the
-empire? A. That Christianity was the cause of the decline, or
-was not adapted to prevent the demoralization of the empire;
-that the change of affairs resulted from the debasement of the
-ancient religion and life, and that the reformation of the world
-could only be accomplished through their reëstablishment.</p>
-
-<p>34. Q. By what class of philosophers was Julian sustained in
-his views? A. By the Neapolitanists.</p>
-
-<p>35. Q. After Julian was recognized as emperor what was his
-main object on entering Constantinople? A. The restoration
-of the ancient religion.</p>
-
-<p>36. Q. What were some of the steps he took to accomplish
-this object? A. He restored the ancient temples and caused
-new ones to be erected to the gods; the games were celebrated
-with magnificence, and the schools of philosophy were especially
-protected.</p>
-
-<p>37. Q. Who was the successor to Julian? A. Jovian.</p>
-
-<p>38. Q. What was his course toward Christianity? A. He
-abolished the decrees enacted by Julian on behalf of idolatry,
-and seemed favorably inclined toward Christianity, but he died
-suddenly on his way to Constantinople.</p>
-
-<p>39. Q. About this time what two names became prominent
-in theological controversies? A. Basil the Great and Gregory
-the theologian.</p>
-
-<p>40. Q. What new invasion of the northern barbarians took
-place in the latter part of the fourth century? A. That of the
-Goths, who overran Thrace, Macedonia and Thessaly, ravaged
-the country, killed the inhabitants, and destroyed the cities that
-were not strongly fortified.</p>
-
-<p>41. Q. To what did Theodosius first direct his attention after
-he became emperor? A. To the pacification of the Goths,
-and succeeded within the space of four years in rendering them
-if not fully submissive to his scepter, at least anxious to seek
-terms of peace.</p>
-
-<p>42. Q. What did the solemn edict which Theodosius dictated
-in 380 proclaim? A. The Athanasian doctrine of the Trinity,
-branded all who denied it with the name of heretics, and
-handed over the churches in Constantinople to the exclusive
-use of the orthodox party.</p>
-
-<p>43. Q. What synod did he convene at Constantinople a few
-months afterward, in the year 381? A. The second General
-Council of the Christian Church, which completed the theological
-system established by the Council of Nice.</p>
-
-<p>44. Q. After the death of Theodosius, who were the nominal
-rulers of the Roman empire? A. Arcadius in the East, and
-Honorius in the West, both sons of Theodosius.</p>
-
-<p>45. Q. Who, however, were the real rulers of the empire? A.
-Rufinus in the East and Stilicho in the West.</p>
-
-<p>46. Q. How are each characterized? A. Stilicho was noted
-for his military virtues, but Rufinus became notorious only for
-his wickedness.</p>
-
-<p>47. Q. Failing in his project of marrying his daughter Maria
-to Arcadius, how did Rufinus seek to revenge himself? A. By
-plotting the destruction of the empire itself.</p>
-
-<p>48. Q. What barbarians is it said he called into the empire?
-A. The Huns, who laid waste many provinces in Asia; and
-Alaric, the daring general of the Goths, who invaded Hellas,
-plundering and destroying everything in his path.</p>
-
-<p>49. Q. Who, called the greatest orator of Christianity, became
-archbishop of Constantinople near the close of the fourth century?
-A. John Chrysostom.</p>
-
-<p>50. Q. After the death of Arcadius, who virtually assumed
-the government of the empire? A. Pulcheria, the daughter of
-Arcadius.</p>
-
-<p>51. Q. What are we told as to the kind of life she led? A.
-That she embraced a life of celibacy, renounced all vanity in
-dress, interrupted by frequent fasts her simple and frugal diet,
-and devoted several hours of the day and night to the exercises
-of prayer and psalmody.</p>
-
-<p>52. Q. How did her brother Theodosius, who was the nominal
-emperor, spend his time? A. His days in riding and hunting,
-and his evenings in modeling and copying sacred books.</p>
-
-<p>53. Q. How long did Pulcheria continue to reign? A. For
-nearly forty years.</p>
-
-<p>54. Q. What is said of the condition of Hellenism in the
-meantime? A. It continued to wither in Hellas, while the modern<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-began to spread and strengthen itself in Constantinople.</p>
-
-<p>55. Q. What is said of Hellenic literature from this time onward?
-A. It produced none of those works by which the memory
-of nations is honored and perpetuated.</p>
-
-<p>56. Q. To what is its intellectual decline mainly due? A.
-To the incursions of the barbarians, by which society was
-shaken to its very foundations, and the genius and enterprise
-of the nation almost paralyzed.</p>
-
-<p>57. Q. Under what leader did the Huns ravage without restraint
-and without mercy the suburbs of Constantinople and
-the provinces of Thrace and Macedonia? A. Attila, called the
-“Scourge of God.”</p>
-
-<p>58. Q. With the dethronement of what emperor did all political
-relations between Rome and the Eastern Empire cease?
-A. Romulus Augustulus in 476.</p>
-
-<p>59. Q. How did the emperors of the East continue to be
-styled? A. They continued to be styled emperors of the Romans,
-but legislation, government, and customs became thoroughly
-Hellenized.</p>
-
-<p>60. Q. What was the mainspring of the success in life of
-Justinian who became emperor in 527? A. An unrestrained
-desire for great deeds and his wonderful good fortune in the
-choice of ministers.</p>
-
-<p>61. Q. What military victories glorified the early years of his
-reign? A. Splendid victories over the Persians.</p>
-
-<p>62. Q. What general began his career in this war? A. Belisarius,
-the general who imparted such eminent distinction to
-the reign of Justinian.</p>
-
-<p>63. Q. What were Justinian’s most glorious and useful memorials?
-A. The composition of the celebrated collection of
-laws comprising the Institutes, the Digest or Pandects, and the
-Code.</p>
-
-<p>64. Q. To whom was the work entrusted? A. To ten law-teachers,
-over whom the famous Tribonian presided.</p>
-
-<p>65. Q. What are of special importance as among other memorable
-events which signalized the reign of Justinian? A. The
-successful wars which he waged against the Vandals in Africa
-and the Goths in Italy, and his expeditions to Sicily and Spain.</p>
-
-<p>66. Q. Among the many edifices erected during the reign of
-Justinian which is the most famous? A. That of St. Sophia.</p>
-
-<p>67. Q. To what epoch does the reign of Justinian partly belong?
-A. To the Roman epoch of the Eastern Empire.</p>
-
-<p>68. Q. What does the reign of Heraklius from 610 to 641
-form? A. An integral part of mediæval Hellenism.</p>
-
-<p>69. Q. By what was Heraklius invited to ascend the throne, and
-how long did his posterity continue to reign over the empire of
-the East? A. The voice of the clergy, the senate, and the people
-invited him to ascend the throne, and his posterity till the
-fourth generation continued to reign over the empire of the East.</p>
-
-<p>70. Q. In 627, after many brilliant actions, what defeat did
-Heraklius inflict upon the Persians? A. So severe a defeat
-that their empire was nearly crushed.</p>
-
-<p>71. Q. Almost at the same time what unexpected and more
-terrible opponent arose in the Arabian peninsula whose conflict
-with Hellenism continues to the present day? A. Mohammedanism.</p>
-
-<p>72. Q. What did the Mohammedans of Arabia wrest from
-the empire? A. Syria, Egypt, and Northern Africa.</p>
-
-<p>73. Q. What was the Mohammedan religion called, and
-to what two dogmas was it limited? A. Islam, meaning devotion;
-its dogmas were the belief in a future life, and the unity
-of God.</p>
-
-<p>74. Q. In what words was the latter expressed? A. “There
-is only one God, and Mohammed is the apostle of God.”</p>
-
-<p>75. Q. Who was the next emperor of real historic value after
-the death of Heraklius? A. Constantine IV., surnamed Poganatus,
-or the Bearded.</p>
-
-<p>76. Q. For what was the reign of Constantine especially
-memorable? A. For the first siege of Constantinople by the
-Mohammedans.</p>
-
-<p>77. Q. How long did this siege last? A. For seven years,
-but was not carried on uninterruptedly throughout this time.</p>
-
-<p>78. Q. What was the result of the siege? A. The Mohammedans
-were finally forced to relinquish the fruitless enterprise
-in 675.</p>
-
-<p>79. Q. What formidable weapon did the Byzantines employ
-during this siege, the composition of which is now unknown?
-A. The Greek fire.</p>
-
-<p>80. Q. What declarations of an œcumenical council he convoked
-at Constantinople in 680 did Constantine sanction by a
-royal edict, and thus reëstablish religious union in the empire?
-A. That the church has always recognized in Christ two natures,
-united but not confounded—two wills, distinct, but not
-antagonistic.</p>
-
-<p>81. Q. When did the next siege of Constantinople by the
-Mohammedans take place? A. In the year 717, during the
-reign of Leo III.</p>
-
-<p>82. Q. What was the result? A. In the following year the
-Arabs were driven away, having suffered a loss of twenty-five
-hundred ships and more than five hundred thousand warriors.</p>
-
-<p>83. Q. What decrees did Leo III. issue in 726 and 730? A.
-A decree forbidding the worship of images, and another banishing
-them entirely from the churches.</p>
-
-<p>84. Q. How did these decrees divide the nation? A. Into
-two intensely hostile parties, of iconoclasts or image-breakers,
-and image-worshipers, by whose contests it was long distracted.</p>
-
-<p>85. Q. What action did Leo V. take in regard to image-worship?
-A. He not only banished the images from the churches,
-but also destroyed the songs and prayers addressed to them.</p>
-
-<p>86. Q. What further order was made in regard to their worship
-by Theophilus who became emperor in 829? A. He forbade
-the word “holy” to be inscribed on the images, and also
-that they should be honored by prayers, kissing, or lighted tapers.</p>
-
-<p>87. Q. After the death of Theophilus what action did the
-empress Theodora, into whose hands the positive power of the
-government passed, take in regard to the images? A. She herself
-worshiped images. The pictures were again hung in the
-churches, and the monastic order more than ever became potent
-both in society and government.</p>
-
-<p>88. Q. During the reign of Alexius what storm suddenly burst
-from the west? A. The so-called First Crusade.</p>
-
-<p>89. Q. Who was the Pope at this time? A. Urban II.</p>
-
-<p>90. Q. By whom were the crusades first incited? A. Peter
-the Hermit.</p>
-
-<p>91. Q. When did Jerusalem fall into the hands of the crusaders?
-A. July 15, 1099.</p>
-
-<p>92. Q. Who were the leaders of the second crusade? A.
-Conrad III., king of Germany, and Louis VII., king of France.</p>
-
-<p>93. Q. What was the ostensible intention of the crusaders?
-A. To free Eastern Christianity from the oppression of the Turks.</p>
-
-<p>94. Q. What does our author say was their ultimate object?
-A. The capture of Constantinople and the abolition of the Byzantine
-empire.</p>
-
-<p>95. Q. What was the result of the second crusade? A. It
-was wholly inglorious, being relieved by no heroic deeds whatever.</p>
-
-<p>96. Q. What took place in Syria during 1187? A. The Christian
-authority was overthrown in Syria, and Jerusalem was captured
-by Saladin, the sultan of Egypt.</p>
-
-<p>97. Q. What occurred to Constantinople during the fourth
-crusade, in the year 1204? A. After a siege of five months it
-fell into the hands of the crusaders.</p>
-
-<p>98. Q. When and by whom was Constantinople recovered?
-A. In 1261, under the leadership of Michael Palœologus.</p>
-
-<p>99. Q. When was Constantinople again attacked by the
-Turks? A. In 1453, under the famous Mohammed II.</p>
-
-<p>100. Q. What was the result of the final decisive engagement?
-A. The city fell before overwhelming numbers, and
-passed under Turkish rule.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="OUTLINE_OF_C_L_S_C_STUDIES" id="OUTLINE_OF_C_L_S_C_STUDIES">OUTLINE OF C. L. S. C. STUDIES.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<h3>NOVEMBER, 1883.</h3>
-
-<p>The C. L. S. C. readings for November include parts 10 and
-11 of Timayenis’s “History of Greece,” for students having read
-the first volume; or from page 93 to the end of “Brief History
-of Greece,” for students of Class of ’87.</p>
-
-<p>Chautauqua Text-Book, No. 5, “Greek History.”</p>
-
-<p>Readings in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>.</p>
-
-<p><i>First week</i> (ending November 8)—1. “History of Greece,”
-from page 258 to “Arius,” page 293; or, “Brief History of
-Greece,” from page 93 to “The Battle of Salamis,” page 118.</p>
-
-<p>2. Readings in German History and Literature in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>.</p>
-
-<p>3. Sunday Readings in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>, for November 4.</p>
-
-<p><i>Second Week</i> (ending November 15)—1. “History of Greece,”
-from “Arius,” page 293, to chapter viii, page 328; or, “Brief
-History of Greece,” from “The Battle of Salamis,” page 118, to
-“Life of Socrates,” page 143.</p>
-
-<p>2. Readings in Physical Science and Political Economy in
-<span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>.</p>
-
-<p>3. Sunday Readings in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>, for November 11.</p>
-
-<p><i>Third Week</i> (ending November 22)—1. “History of Greece,”
-from chapter viii, page 328, to chapter iii, page 359; or, “Brief
-History of Greece,” from “Life of Socrates,” page 143, to
-“Causes of the Sacred War,” page 169.</p>
-
-<p>2. Readings in Art, in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>.</p>
-
-<p>3. Sunday Readings in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>, for November 18.</p>
-
-<p><i>Fourth Week</i> (ending November 29)—1. “History of Greece,”
-from chapter iii, page 359, to the end of part 11, page 342; or,
-“Brief History of Greece,” from “Causes of the Sacred War,”
-page 169, to the end of the book.</p>
-
-<p>2. Readings in American Literature in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>.</p>
-
-<p>3. Sunday Readings in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>, for November 25.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-<h2><a name="CHAUTAUQUA_NORMAL_CLASS" id="CHAUTAUQUA_NORMAL_CLASS">CHAUTAUQUA NORMAL CLASS.</a></h2>
-
-<div class="center"><b>Season of 1884.</b></div>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">J. L. HURLBUT, D.D., and R. S. HOLMES, A.M., <span class="smcap">Instructors</span>.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>I. The course of instruction to be pursued in the Sunday-school
-Normal Department of the Chautauqua Assembly, at its
-session in 1884, will embrace lessons upon the following subjects,
-prepared by the instructors in the department. The full
-text of these lessons will be printed during the year in <span class="smcap">The
-Chautauquan</span>, which should be taken by all who desire to prepare
-for the Normal Department.</p>
-
-<p><i>Twelve Lessons on the Bible.</i>—(1) The Divine Revelation;
-(2) The Bible from God through Man; (3) The Bible as an
-English Book; (4) The Canon of Scripture; (5) The World of
-the Bible; (6) The Land of the Bible; (7) The History in the
-Bible; (8) The Golden Age of Bible History; (9) The House of
-the Lord; (10) The Doctrines of the Bible; (11) Immanuel;
-(12) The Interpretation of the Bible.</p>
-
-<p><i>Twelve Lessons on the Sunday-school and the Teacher’s
-Work.</i>—(1) The Sunday-school—its Purpose, Place, and Prerogatives;
-(2) The Superintendent—his Qualifications, Duties, and
-Responsibility; (3) The Teacher’s Office and Work; (4) The
-Teacher’s Week-day Work; (5) The Teacher’s Preparation;
-(6) The Teacher’s Mistakes; (7) The Teaching Process—Adaptation;
-(8) The Teaching Process—Approach; (9) The Teaching
-Process—Attention; (10) The Teaching Process—Illustration;
-(11) The Teaching Process—Interrogation; (12) The Teaching
-Process—Reviews.</p>
-
-<p>II. Students of the Normal Course should study in addition to
-the outlines in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>, the following Chautauqua
-Text-Books (ten cents each): No. 18, “Christian Evidences;”
-No. 19, “The Book of Books;” No. 36, “Assembly Bible Outlines;”
-No. 37, “Assembly Normal Outlines;” No. 38, “The
-Life of Christ;” No. 39, “The Sunday-school Normal Class”
-(including the preparation of the Normal Praxes); and No. 41,
-“The Teacher Before his Class.”</p>
-
-<p>III. Students of the Normal Course are also desired to read the
-following books: Chautauqua Text-Book No. 1, “Bible Exploration;”
-No. 8, “What Noted Men Think of the Bible;”
-No. 10, “What is Education?” No. 11, “Socrates;” and “Normal
-Outlines of Christian Theology,” by L. T. Townsend (price,
-forty cents). These books may be obtained of Phillips &amp; Hunt,
-805 Broadway, New York; or of Walden &amp; Stowe, Cincinnati
-or Chicago.</p>
-
-<p>IV. Students in special classes in churches or schools, or individual
-students who prosecute the course as given above, may
-receive by mail outline memoranda for examination, and if they
-can certify to having studied the lessons and text-books, and
-will also prepare the Normal Praxes named in Chautauqua
-Text-Book No. 39, and fill out the Outline Memoranda, may receive
-the diploma of the Chautauqua Teachers’ Union, and will
-be enrolled as members of the Chautauqua Society. Such students
-will send name and address, with twenty-five cents, to
-Rev. J. L. Hurlbut, D.D., Plainfield, N. J.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<h3>CHAUTAUQUA NORMAL CLASS—BIBLE SECTION.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Twelve Lessons on Bible Themes.</i></p>
-
-
-<h4>LESSON I.—THE DIVINE REVELATION.</h4>
-
-<p>I. There is in me a something which is called mind. I do
-not know what it is. I can neither tell whence it came, nor
-whither it will go when it ceases to inhabit this body. That in
-me, which is thus ignorant concerning the mind, is the mind
-itself. There are therefore matters beyond my mental range.
-That is, my mind is limited, bounded, finite in its powers.
-What is true of my mind is true of all human mind. Here then
-is one of the first results of consciousness: <span class="smcap">Finite mind in
-the world</span>.</p>
-
-<p>II. This finite mind did not produce itself; it sees in the body
-which it controls evidence of a design of which it is not the
-author. It turns to the phenomena of the universe and discovers
-in them the same evidences of design. It seeks the
-attributes and character of the designer or designers of human
-body and of natural phenomena, and finds them to be unlimited
-in action, unbounded by time or space, infinite in power,
-and uniform in manifestation. It therefore concludes that there
-is but one designer of all the phenomena of created nature, and
-that he is both intelligent and infinite. Here then is a second
-result of consciousness: <span class="smcap">Infinite mind in the universe</span>.</p>
-
-<p>III. We have so far brought to view two powers, infinite mind
-in the universe and finite mind in the world, and between them
-a distance immeasurable and impassable from the finite side.
-They are extremes in the progression of the universe. Let us
-notice some facts concerning each of these powers:</p>
-
-<p>1. The infinite mind is self-existent; eternal.</p>
-
-<p>2. The infinite mind created finite mind in its own likeness.
-Both these points will be considered in our lesson on the “Doctrines
-of the Bible.”</p>
-
-<p>3. The infinite mind has <i>provided a means of passing the
-distance between itself and the finite mind</i>, so that the finite
-might know the infinite; i. e. it has revealed itself to the finite
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>4. The finite mind is the highest created existence. This is
-left without discussion for the student to amplify.</p>
-
-<p>5. The finite mind exists because of the infinite mind. The
-gas jet burning above my head affords an illustration. It exists
-because of a well-stored gasometer two miles away; because of
-complicated machinery by which coal has been caused to yield
-up its hidden stores of light; because of a system of underground
-conductors that terminates in the burner on the wall.
-Without the burner and the light all these appliances would be
-useless; and they in turn exist only that there may be light.
-So the finite mind exists because of the infinite—nor can we
-think with satisfaction of infinite mind in the universe and no
-creation or correlated force.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>6. The finite mind hungers to know the infinite; it peers into
-the measureless space which its eye can not pierce, and longs
-for the infinite to reveal itself. This fact is historical, “Canst
-thou by searching find out God?” has been the question of the
-ages; and the answer has been “the world by wisdom knew
-not God.” The cry of multitudes of hungering souls has been:
-“O, that I knew where I might find him.” As light is necessary
-to the eye, and air to the bird’s wing, and sound to the
-ear, that each may perform the work for which it is adapted, so
-a knowledge of the infinite mind that is of God, is essential
-that the finite mind—that is, man—may fulfill its destiny. And
-this knowledge is possible only through self-revelation by God
-to man. That such a revelation has been made we have already
-asserted. That the Bible is that revelation is our claim,
-which we will discuss in a future lesson. The present lesson
-will be content to inquire simply, how that revelation has been
-effected. We answer:</p>
-
-<p><i>God wrought it out in the presence of the race</i> in ways unmistakable,
-exhibiting every attribute of his character, <i>even to
-those of mercy and forgiveness</i>. God wrought (not wrote). What
-we call the inspired Word is a mediate, not an immediate act
-of God. God wrought, the work extending through many ages,
-perhaps not even yet finished.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wrought</i> (<i>a</i>) in nature, so that “the invisible things of him
-since the creation of the world are clearly seen, being perceived
-through the things that are made.” Creation then is
-itself a part of the revelation, but only a part; for out of it
-comes no hint of forgiveness or redemption.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) In man, <i>by spiritual manifestations</i>, <i>by intellectual
-enlightenments</i>, <i>by illuminations of conscience</i>, such as
-could not originate in the human soul. These revelations or
-workings of God in man mark a large portion of the history of
-thought through the ages; and in that dim twilight of the race,
-when men like Enoch walked with God, though history is but a
-shadow, yet it is the shadow of God working in man.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) In Providence—that is, in his ordering the work of the world.
-He not only “produced a supernatural history extending through
-centuries, ... and working out results which human wisdom
-could never have conceived, nor human power executed,”<a name="FNanchor_J_10" id="FNanchor_J_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_J_10" class="fnanchor">[J]</a> but
-also he has directed all the workings of all history in accordance
-with the central purpose of his revelation.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>d</i>) In grace, by his spirit revealing what the human mind
-could never have discovered for itself, redemption and atonement
-through forgiveness of sin.</p>
-
-<p>IV. This divine revelation so wrought by God <i>has been, and
-is being reported</i> that all the world may know and confess that
-“the Lord, he is the God.” Reported:</p>
-
-<p>1. <i>Through Tradition.</i>—There was an unwritten Bible before
-the written word, handed down from patriarchs to scribes;
-and even in lands destitute of the Scriptures, we trace the dim
-outlines of truth transmitted from ancient authority.</p>
-
-<p>2. <i>Through Philosophy.</i>—Wise men and thinkers have read
-the revelation in nature and gathered it up from human thought,
-and the highest philosophy, as that of a Socrates and a Plato,
-finds God.</p>
-
-<p>3. <i>Through Prophecy.</i>—In the earlier ages, and perhaps
-through all the ages, God has communed with chosen men
-who have lived in fellowship with himself; and has made them
-the mouthpiece uttering his will to the world.</p>
-
-<p>4. <i>Through Preaching.</i>—The pulpit, when it is true to its
-mission, voices the message of God to man.</p>
-
-<p>V. <i>We find also that this divine revelation has been written
-out, under a divine direction</i>:</p>
-
-<p>1. <i>In Various Books.</i>—The Bible is not one book, but sixty-six
-books, a whole library, presenting the divine revelation under
-varied aspects, but all under one divine origin and supervision.</p>
-
-<p>2. <i>By Various Writers.</i>—Not less than thirty authors, and
-probably many more, shared in the composition of the Scriptures,
-but all wrote under a divine control, and expressed, each
-in his own style, the mind of the Spirit.</p>
-
-<p>3. <i>Through Various Ages.</i>—Moses may have begun the
-writing, doubtless from earlier documents. Samuel, David,
-Solomon, Isaiah, Ezra, Matthew, Paul, John, each in turn carried
-on the work through a period of sixteen hundred years.
-The book grew like a cathedral, rising through the centuries,
-under many successive master-builders, yet according to one
-plan of one divine Architect.</p>
-
-<p>4. <i>In Various Languages.</i>—Two great tongues, one Semitic,
-the other Aryan, were employed, the Hebrew in the Old Testament,
-the Greek in the new; but the Hebrew of Moses is not
-that of Daniel a thousand years later.</p>
-
-<p>VI. <i>We find this divine revelation preserved</i>:</p>
-
-<p>1. <i>By being stereotyped into Dead Languages.</i>—A living language
-is ever changing the meaning of its words; and truth
-written in it is in danger of being misunderstood by another generation.
-But the words of a dead language, like the Hebrew
-and the Greek, are fixed in their meaning, and once understood
-are not likely to be perverted. Soon after the Bible was
-completed, both its languages ceased to be spoken, and have
-been kept since as the shrine for the great truths contained in
-the Word.</p>
-
-<p>2. <i>By being translated into Living Languages.</i>—The Bible
-has been translated into all the tongues of earth, and thus its
-perpetuation to the end of time has been assured. No other
-work has been read by so many races, and no other is so capable
-of being understood by the masses of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>3. <i>By being incorporated into Literature.</i>—If every copy of
-the Scriptures in the whole world were destroyed every sentence
-of it could be reproduced from the writings of men, since it
-has become an integral part of the thought of the world.</p>
-
-<p>4. <i>By being perpetuated in Institutions.</i>—The Jewish church
-perpetuates the Old Testament; the Christian church the New;
-and while either endures, the Bible containing the divine revelation
-must endure.</p>
-
-<p>VII. <i>We find this divine revelation proved</i>:</p>
-
-<p>1. <i>By Testimonies.</i>—The child looking upon the opened page
-of the Bible at his mother’s knee, accepts her testimony that it
-is the word of God, and thus each generation receives the book
-from the preceding generation with a declaration of its divine
-origin.</p>
-
-<p>2. <i>By Probabilities.</i>—Such has been the history of this book
-in its relation to the world, and its triumph over opposing
-forces; such has been its early, continuous and present acceptance;
-that there is every probability in favor of its being,
-what it appears to be, a divine book.</p>
-
-<p>3. <i>By Experience.</i>—There are many who have put this
-book to the test in their own lives; have tried its promises;
-have tasted its spiritual experience; have brought it into contact
-with their own hearts; and have obtained from it a certain
-assurance that it comes from God.</p>
-
-<p>4. <i>By Evidences.</i>—If any reader will not accept the Bible
-upon the testimonies of others; if he fails to see in its behalf
-the weight of probability; if he has not been able to put it to
-the test in his own experience, there is yet a strong line of argument
-appealing to his reason, and proving the book divine.</p>
-
-<p>VIII. <i>We find this divine revelation searched</i>:</p>
-
-<p>1. <i>Through Curiosity.</i>—There are some who read and study
-the Bible from no higher motive than desire to know its contents.</p>
-
-<p>2. <i>Through Literary Taste.</i>—There are others who read the
-Bible from an appreciation of its value as a work of literature,
-recognizing the high poetic rank of David and Isaiah, the historic
-worth of Joshua and Samuel, the philosophic thought of
-Paul.</p>
-
-<p>3. <i>Through Opposition.</i>—In every age there have been
-searchers of the Bible actuated by the motive of unbelief;
-men trying to find in it the weapons for its own destruction.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-Yet even their study has often proved serviceable to the believer
-in the divine revelation.</p>
-
-<p>4. <i>Through Spiritual Desire.</i>—Multitudes have studied the
-Bible, multitudes are studying it now because they find in it
-that which their spiritual nature craves, the knowledge of God.
-They feed upon the Word because it satisfies the hunger of
-their spirits.</p>
-
-<p>IX. We find this <i>divine revelation circulated among men</i>.
-The history of the Bible since its translation into English has
-been the history of multiplication. Language after language has
-had the Bible added to the library of its language. Unwritten
-languages have had characters invented for them to represent
-their words and the Bible has thus become the first book of the
-new-made written language of the people. All the leading
-languages of the world have thus been put in possession of the
-Bible, and the signs of the times point to a speedy realization
-of the hope that soon all the nations of the earth will know the
-divine revelation of our Father which is in heaven.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAUTAUQUA NORMAL CLASS.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Twelve Lessons on the Sunday-school and the Teacher’s Work.</i></p>
-
-
-<h4>LESSON I.—THE PLACE, PURPOSE AND PREROGATIVES OF THE
-SUNDAY-SCHOOL.</h4>
-
-
-<p><i>I. The place of the Sunday-school.</i></p>
-
-<p>1. The Sunday-school is one of the means employed by the
-Church of Christ for bringing men under the influence of the
-Gospel. It is not designed to fill the place of any of the other
-accepted agencies of the church.</p>
-
-<p>2. The Sunday-school does not, and should not accomplish
-the work belonging to the pulpit and the pastor, nor does it
-subserve the purpose of the church meeting for prayer and interchange
-of Christian experience.</p>
-
-<p>3. The Sunday-school can in no sense do the work of the
-Christian home. It is an agency differing from all other agencies
-of the church, and is made necessary by the nature and
-extent of the body of truth accepted by the church, so necessary
-that without it the church would be to a certain extent
-crippled.</p>
-
-<p>4. It is a school, <i>organized and officered as such</i>; occupying
-a well defined place in the religious system of the church,
-having a specific purpose, and entitled to certain prerogatives.</p>
-
-<p>5. As a school, its constituency is a body of teachers and
-pupils, associated together voluntarily, but not without responsibility
-and accountability.</p>
-
-<p>6. The Sunday-school in its theoretic constitution is the parallel
-of the secular school.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) As the latter derives its life from the community, so the
-Sunday-school derives its life from <i>the religious community, the
-church</i>.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) As the community delegates the power of control over
-the secular school to a representative body which exercises supreme
-authority over its affairs, so the church entrusts the
-management of the Sunday-school to her representative executive
-body, by whatever name known.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) As the representative body controlling the secular school
-places the oversight of the system and its details of management
-in the hands of a general executive officer, or superintendent,
-so the governing power of the church entrusts the
-management of the Sunday-school to one of similar name—a
-superintendent.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>d</i>) As the secular school is within and subordinate to the
-community, and alongside of the home as its aid and supplement,
-so the Sunday-school is within and subordinate to the
-church, and beside the Christian home as its supplement.</p>
-
-<p>Let us gather up these propositions concerning the Sunday-school
-into a general definition.</p>
-
-<p><i>Definition.</i></p>
-
-<p>The Sunday-school is a department of the church of Christ,
-in which the word of Christ is taught for the purpose of bringing
-souls to Christ and building up souls in Christ.</p>
-
-<p>As suggested by this definition, we make the following propositions:</p>
-
-<p>(1) The Sunday-school is a <i>school</i>.</p>
-
-<p>(2) The Sunday-school is not a substitute for the church.</p>
-
-<p>(3) The Sunday-school is not a substitute for the prayer meeting.</p>
-
-<p>(4) The Sunday-school is not a substitute for home training.</p>
-
-<p>(5) The Sunday-school is <i>in</i> the church as an integral part.</p>
-
-<p>(6) The Sunday-school is subordinate to the church.</p>
-
-<p>(7) The Sunday-school is an aid to the Christian home.</p>
-
-<p><i>II. The Purpose of the Sunday-school.</i></p>
-
-<p>1. The chief purpose of the Sunday-school is the <i>spiritual
-education</i> of the soul. By education we do not mean the mere
-putting in possession of knowledge. There have been learned
-men who were not educated men; men of wide knowledge,
-but with the power of <i>self-control</i> and <i>self-use</i> undeveloped. By
-education we mean leading the soul out of its natural condition,
-into a condition where it can do what God meant it to do,
-and be what God meant it to be. Spiritual education will therefore
-be the development of a soul by nature averse to divine
-control, into a condition of oneness with the divine will, such as
-is made possible by the at-one-ment of Jesus Christ. This process
-involves, (1) conversion, and (2) upbuilding in Christ, and
-would produce, if unhindered, a character that would reach
-toward the measure of the fulness of Christ.</p>
-
-<p>But many souls in the church have never reached farther
-than the first or preparatory step in spiritual education—the
-step which we call conversion. Hence,</p>
-
-<p>2. A second purpose of the Sunday-school is upbuilding in
-Christ, and this is possible only through searching study of the
-Word of God.</p>
-
-<p>As the astronomer must know all the intricacies of his science,
-and be able with the telescope to read the heavens as an
-open book, and scan their farthest depths, so the Christian
-must know the hidden mysteries and deep things of God as revealed
-in the Bible, which is both text-book and telescope to
-the soul.</p>
-
-<p>3. A third purpose of the Sunday-school is the development
-of the teaching power in the church. “Go teach,” in the
-Revised version becomes “Go disciple.” Sunday-school teaching
-therefore becomes <i>disciple-making</i>. In this respect its aim
-is the same as that of the church. To accomplish it by preaching,
-the church provides years of careful training for her ministers
-in special schools. As careful training is needed by the
-Sunday-school teacher, and the school itself is the only means
-by which the end can be secured.</p>
-
-<p><i>III. The Prerogatives of the Sunday-school.</i></p>
-
-<p>The Sunday-school exists within the church and because of
-the church. Yet though a part of the church, it maintains a
-separate organic life. As a member of the body it has certain
-<i>rights</i> which we call Prerogatives. We name the most important.</p>
-
-<p>1. <i>Care.</i>—As no member of the body can be neglected
-without physical loss, so if any part of the body of Christ be
-left without watchful care, spiritual loss must ensue. The Sunday-school
-has a <i>right to the care</i> of the church, exercised (<i>a</i>)
-officially by the governing body, that no want may be left unsupplied,
-and (<i>b</i>) individually that sympathy, help, prayer and
-interest may never be lacking, and that ample provision may
-be made for the efficient working of the school.</p>
-
-<p>2. <i>Support.</i>—The Sunday-school has a right to the pecuniary
-support of the church. It never should be crippled by
-lack of means to carry out its plans. The school should not be
-expected to provide for its own necessary expenses. The voluntary
-contributions of the school should never be applied to the
-support of the school as such. Systematic giving should be
-taught, and should include all the benevolent operations of the
-church, even to the extent of contributing toward the general
-church expenses, but that the school should use its funds for
-defraying its own expenses is clearly an evil.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>(3) <i>Recognition.</i>—The school has a right to be recognized as
-an established agency of the church. This recognition should
-include (1) regular notice from the pulpit of the time and
-place of holding its sessions; (2) the same prominence to the
-annual meeting for the choice of officers that is given to the
-same meetings of the church, and (3) its importance as a
-church agency should be recognized by giving to the school
-official recognition in the governing body of the church.</p>
-
-<p>(4) <i>Pastoral Supervision.</i>—The school has a right to the
-watchful oversight and regular presence of the pastor. It is not
-necessary that he should superintend the school—it is better
-not. It is not necessary that he should be burdened with its
-cares. But it is essential (1) that he use it as a field of pastoral
-labor; (2) that he give to it the encouragement of his
-commendation; (3) that he extend to it the sympathy of his
-presence; (4) that he know as to the character of the work
-being done within it.</p>
-
-<p>(5) <i>Coöperation.</i>—The Sunday-school has a right to the
-hearty coöperation of the whole church, so that (1) there may
-be no lack of teachers to do the work of the school, and (2)
-that the work of the teacher may be understood and appreciated
-in the Christian family, which is the church unit; and (3)
-that teacher and parent may work in perfect harmony.</p>
-
-<p>This is not intended as an exhaustive treatment of this subject.
-It presents in outline some salient points concerning the
-Sunday-school, and leaves the student to continue by himself
-the line of thought suggested, and to this end reference is made
-to “Hart’s Thoughts on Sunday-schools,” “Pardee’s Sunday-school
-Index,” and the “Chautauqua Normal Guide,” by J. H.
-Vincent, D.D., 1880.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_J_10" id="Footnote_J_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_J_10">[J]</a> J. H. Vincent, D.D.</p></div></div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-<h2><a name="EDITORS_OUTLOOK" id="EDITORS_OUTLOOK">EDITOR’S OUTLOOK.</a></h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>DR. HAYGOOD’S BATTLE FOR THE NEGRO.</h3>
-
-<p>There is something sublime in the spectacle of an earnest man
-contending for his cause. The sublimity is heightened when
-we remember that his cause and his convictions are identical,
-without any reckoning of the cost. Of this character was the
-figure of Dr. Atticus G. Haygood on the Chautauqua platform,
-uttering brave words for the Negro, his former slave, but present
-fellow-citizen. Nor did we have to wait till opportunity
-made him heard at Chautauqua. From the close of the war
-until now, he has been a moulder and leader of the best sentiment
-in the South, and has occupied advanced ground upon all
-questions relating to the education and welfare of the liberated
-slave. His recent book, “Our Brother in Black,” is the ablest
-contribution we have had to the “Negro question.” It breathes
-throughout the same generous, Christian sentiment and sympathy
-that characterize all his utterances and his work elsewhere.
-Nor is the word “battle” too strong a term to be used.
-When we remember the jealousies, hates, and prejudices of long
-standing, and greatly intensified by the war; and how they
-have been kept alive by designing men on both sides; when
-we bear these things in mind, it is easy to see that it has required
-no little courage for a Southern man, in the midst of
-Southern people, with their sentiments and feelings, to take up
-the black man’s cause and advocate it in words of bold, plain
-truth.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Haygood is the Christian, and not the politician. When
-he praises, as he does without stint, the work accomplished for
-the Negro by the people of the North, it is not the work of that
-particular politician, with his promise of “a mule, forty acres,
-and provisions for a year,” but of teachers, secular and religious,
-who, with a motive higher than the personal, have sought
-the elevation, moral and intellectual, of the Negro. He pleads
-no apology for his Southern brethren who have met these benevolent
-workers with opposition, social ostracism, and other
-forms of persecution, but utters his condemnation of this spirit
-whenever and wherever manifested.</p>
-
-<p>And the results of the first twenty years’ history have justified
-his high and hopeful views. It is only two years since Senator
-Brown, of Georgia, said of the Negro, in a speech delivered in
-the United States Senate: “He has shown a capacity to receive
-education, and a disposition to elevate himself that is exceedingly
-gratifying, not only to me, but to every right-thinking
-Southern man.” The results show that the Negro has a real
-hunger for the education he so greatly needs. It is shown that
-in the year 1881, forty-seven per cent. of the colored school population
-was enrolled as attending the public schools, whilst in
-the same year there was enrolled fifty-two per cent. of the white
-population. Though both figures are painfully low, and suggest
-a condition of great illiteracy, yet, when we remember the past
-of the Negro—how he has been trampled down and trodden
-under—the figure 47 at the end of his first twenty years, is both
-encouraging and significant.</p>
-
-<p>But Dr. Haygood finds his strongest hope in the religious nature
-of the Negro. The religious element of the race was very
-manifest in the days of slavery, and since its freedom still more
-so. The moral and religious progress of twenty years is encouraging.
-Of seven millions, the entire colored population, a
-million and a half are communicants of the various churches.
-Whilst their notions are crude, their conceptions of religious
-truth often painfully realistic and grotesque, yet their religion is
-real and worthy of confidence. More than to all other influences
-combined, to the black man’s religion is due the shaping
-of his better character. It is from this basis, and working along
-this line, that Dr. Haygood sees the success of the future. His
-closing word at Chautauqua is a statement of the whole theory
-which will commend itself to the sympathy and judgment of
-right-thinking Christian men everywhere: “Mere statesmanship
-can not solve this hard problem. It is not given to the
-wisdom of man; but God reigns, and God does not fail. We
-are workers with him in his great designs. When we stand by
-the cross of Jesus Christ we will know what to do. We can
-solve our problem, God being our helper. But on no lower
-platform than this—the platform of the Ten Commandments
-and of the Sermon on the Mount.”</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-<h3><a name="THE_POLITICAL_OUTLOOK" id="THE_POLITICAL_OUTLOOK">THE POLITICAL OUTLOOK.</a></h3>
-
-
-<p>In a few months we shall be in the midst of another presidential
-campaign, and one as exciting, perhaps, as the country
-has known. Already we see earnest preparations for the fray.
-The party managers are busily laying their schemes; the question
-of candidates and the measures to secure victory are being
-thoroughly canvassed by the rival parties.</p>
-
-<p>What now strikes the thoughtful person as he considers the
-political outlook is the lack of party issues. Two great parties
-are seen on the eve of a tremendous struggle for the reins of
-government; but when the question is asked, what are the
-living issues at the bottom of this fight? one is puzzled for a
-reply. The situation is about this: instead of coming before
-the people with certain great principles as a ground of contention,
-one party has for its cry, “Put the rascals out;” and the
-other, “Let us keep the rascals from coming in.”</p>
-
-<p>Our feeling is that the case should be different. Are there
-no living issues important enough to serve as the rallying cry
-of political parties? Must parties live on a past record? Is
-there nothing for them to do but to glory in what they have
-done, and point a finger of contempt at the other side? By no
-means is this the case. There are to-day vitally important
-matters pertaining to the public welfare which call loudly to our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-political leaders for attention; and the party which shall take
-hold of these matters in an earnest way, and boldly present itself
-as the champion of principles of truth and justice and
-purity, ought to be, and must be, the party of the future.</p>
-
-<p>The reform of the civil service might very well be a party
-issue, but it is not. Neither of the great parties shows a disposition
-to take a hearty and united stand in favor of such reform.
-Some prominent men in both parties have it at heart, and the
-movement which has been seen can not be claimed as a party
-movement. The reform of the tariff wise men see to be one of
-the crying needs of the hour; but how hopelessly at sea seem
-our party leaders in dealing with the question. It can not be
-said that any principles of tariff are a party issue. There is a
-wide diversity of sentiment among those who have the management
-of the parties; on either side are seen free-trade men and
-protective tariff men; and probably some have their opinions
-yet to form upon a subject so live and important as the tariff.
-The nation has a yearly surplus revenue of $100,000,000, to get
-rid of which extravagant and needless appropriations are made;
-the embarrassment of certain branches of industry in our land,
-as things are, is evident; but to which party can we point as
-the one intelligently and earnestly bent on tariff reform? The
-time may come when the prohibition of the liquor traffic will be
-the underlying principle of a great political party, but it is not
-now. We may have our opinions as to which of the great parties
-bidding for the suffrages of the people is the more a temperance
-party, but either is a great way from being ready to
-adopt as an issue the righteous principle of prohibition. In
-just one State to-day (Iowa), one of the parties appears as the
-supporter of this principle. Turn to another State (Massachusetts),
-which sometimes is thought to lead all the rest in moral
-ideas, and see the same party fighting neither for this principle
-nor any other, but simply to wrest the power from Governor
-Butler.</p>
-
-<p>We judge of the coming national campaign by that now in
-progress in different States, and we see it is to be marked by a
-lack of high and worthy party issues. It will be—what it
-should not be—a contest without great underlying principles.
-Let whichever party may triumph, the victory can not be regarded
-one of living principles; it will be rather the success of
-individuals to whom the majority of the people choose to commit
-the reins of authority, or the triumph of a party which the
-people prefer for its record, or to which they give a blind and
-unthinking preference. Whatever the outcome of the impending
-political struggle, we have faith in the perpetuity of our
-institutions, and that there is a nobler destiny for the American
-people than they have yet attained.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-<h3><a name="HISTORY_OF_GREECE" id="HISTORY_OF_GREECE">HISTORY OF GREECE.</a></h3>
-
-
-<p>The installment of Grecian History required in the C. L. S. C.
-course is not extensive, but has been prepared with much care,
-and is adapted to its purpose. A careful study—enough to give
-possession of the principal facts stated, can hardly fail to kindle
-the desire for further knowledge of a people who had so
-many elements of greatness, and for centuries surpassed all
-others in knowledge and culture. The most advanced nations
-of to-day are largely indebted to the Greeks. Modern art and
-literature bear witness to the indebtedness. The race had wonderful
-capabilities. Their country, climate, blood, early habits
-of self-control, or all these together, secured in that corner of
-Europe a class of stalwart men, physically and intellectually
-capable of great deeds.</p>
-
-<p>Much of their early history is, of course, fabulous. The gods,
-goddesses, heroes and kings, whose councils and exploits are
-rehearsed, were but myths. Yet the legendary traditions respecting
-them have charms that attract and hold the reader.
-We may utterly discredit the story, but pay homage to the ability
-and versatile genius of the writer, whose glowing words so
-paint the scenes described. Only a slight basis of fact is conceded
-to some of the most captivating Homeric descriptions;
-yet they are in an important sense true. False in history, but
-sublimely true to the conceptions of the greatest of poets, as a
-bold delineator, peerless in his own, or any other age. If the
-ideal of the divinities thought to be interested in the affairs of
-men falls far below the conceptions of a monotheist, and seems
-unworthy of a philanthropic heathen, the portraiture is both
-complete and captivating.</p>
-
-<p>When the mists, that for centuries shrouded Greece and the
-neighboring isles, are dispersed, and we recognize the certain
-dawn of the <i>historic</i> period, though the descendants of those
-mighty heroes and kings that were deified as sons of the gods,
-shrink to the proportions of men, they are still found to be
-mighty men, whose noble deeds and achievements have been
-an inspiration to millions in the generations since. Excepting
-only such as have the true light, and are blest with Christian
-civilization, we adopt the statement “No other race ever did so
-many things well as the Greeks.”</p>
-
-<p>Let the book be closely studied. If the cursory, objectless
-reader lacks interest, and tires in the work, the student feels
-more than compensated for his toil.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-<h3><a name="A_COLLEGE_REFORM" id="A_COLLEGE_REFORM">A COLLEGE REFORM.</a></h3>
-
-
-<p>The present agitation touching college courses of study is one
-from which good is likely to come. There is danger, however,
-that we swing to the other extreme. That undue prominence
-in the ordinary college curriculum has hitherto been given to
-classical studies, and too little room made for the modern languages,
-natural science, and English literature is coming to be
-widely felt. But the true reform is not utterly to eliminate the
-classics; it is not the part of wisdom to decry as folly the study
-of the dead tongues.</p>
-
-<p>The oration of Charles Francis Adams, Jr., last summer at
-Harvard, published under the title of “A College Fetich,” was
-quite as unexpected and sensational as that of Wendell Phillips
-on another similar occasion. Mr. Phillips arraigned his <i>alma
-mater</i> that her sons were no more active in social reforms,
-while Mr. Adams charged upon her that, in retaining the dead
-languages as a required part of the course of study, she was
-guilty of worshiping a fetich. This grandson and great-grandson
-of a President, whose illustrious ancestors one after another
-were inmates of Harvard’s halls, makes against the venerable
-institution, the most serious charge that her graduates, upon
-leaving her, are not fitted as they should be for practical life.
-She sends them forth, he affirms, with a smattering of the dead
-languages, which is quite without advantage, instead of with a
-thorough knowledge of what can be turned to practical account
-and will qualify them for the duties of active life. He would
-have a drill in the classics no longer required of the college
-student; but would allow him to win his A. B. by pursuing
-other and more useful branches of study. Mr. Adams’s bold
-claim against Harvard, if sustained, would of course hold
-against other colleges, and against some others would hold in
-a higher degree.</p>
-
-<p>But we think his statements are too sweeping, and the reform
-he advocates, because it goes too far, would not be a wise reform.
-We would not abolish the study of Latin and Greek in
-our colleges. They are dead tongues, but it does not follow
-that time spent in their study is wasted. On the contrary, we
-would have them taught with such thoroughness, by such
-qualified and skillful teachers that the college graduate will go
-out with something more than a smattering of them. It is a
-fact which can not be disproved, that from a study of the classics
-comes a mental discipline and a mastery of good English, such
-as can be acquired from nothing else. But that too much comparative
-attention has been given to these branches is freely
-conceded. There is a want of more thorough study in our
-higher institutions of the natural science, the modern tongues,
-and the models of our own language. The true reform is to
-cease to magnify Latin and Greek at the expense of these other
-things, and to give to the latter their due attention. Of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-wisdom of elective college courses there can be no doubt. It
-may not be always best for the young man who has not in view
-one of the learned professions, but a business life, to spend
-years in the study of the ancient languages. But it is our judgment
-that a knowledge of these should always be required of
-the candidate for the Bachelor of Art’s degree. Certain things
-are in the air, and we rejoice. Natural science, that field of
-study in richness so exhaustless, is attracting the student as
-never before. The importance of gaining a knowledge of languages
-now spoken, other than our own, is being felt as it was
-not once. We welcome the indications that promise a college
-reform. Let us have it without over-shooting the mark.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-<h2><a name="EDITORS_NOTE-BOOK" id="EDITORS_NOTE-BOOK">EDITOR’S NOTE-BOOK.</a></h2>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<p>The trustees of the Garfield monument to be erected in
-Cleveland, Ohio, have more than one hundred and thirty thousand
-dollars on hand, and they expect to secure a sufficient increase
-to this sum, at an early day, to complete the work. This,
-with the fund of more than three hundred thousand dollars
-which the American people contributed and presented to the
-widow of the lamented Garfield, is positive proof that our republic
-is not ungrateful.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>The old statement that a low grade of moral character may
-exist in the same community with a high grade of mental culture
-may be true of any type of the best modern civilizations,
-but it is not necessarily true. Education, like the gospel, may be
-the savor of death unto death, but moral death need not be its
-effect. A good illustration of the elevating tendencies of education
-in the community is found in the fact that since the compulsory
-school law went into operation in New York, juvenile
-crime in that city has been reduced by more than thirty-six per
-cent. And yet it is said the law has been only partially enforced.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>Scientific temperance education has been by legislative action
-introduced into the public schools of Vermont and Michigan,
-and at the last session of the legislature in New Hampshire it
-was by a unanimous vote introduced into the schools of that
-State. The W. C. T. U. is laying its hand on legislatures in a
-very effective way, and we may look for an abundant harvest
-in the next generation. “Long voyages make rich returns.”</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>Prince Bismarck is a timber merchant, and why should not a
-dealer in timber be called a merchant? But this is not all. He
-is a large distiller of spirituous liquors. The Germans do not
-object to his occupation as a distiller, for their drinking customs
-are on a low grade. Public opinion, in this country, would
-not long tolerate a statesman, even of great abilities, who manufactured
-distilled liquors for sale as a beverage. And herein
-we see one point of difference between these two nations on
-a great moral reform.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>The <i>Scientific American</i> of a recent date says: “Too much
-reliance is placed on the sense of taste, sight and smell in determining
-the character of drinking water. It is a fact which has
-been repeatedly illustrated that water may be odorless, tasteless
-and colorless, and yet be full of danger to those who use it.
-The recent outbreak of typhoid fever in Newburg, N. Y., is an
-example, having been caused by water which was clear, and
-without taste or smell. It is also a fact that even a chemical
-analysis sometimes will fail to show a dangerous contamination
-of the water, and will always fail to detect the specific poison if
-the water is infected with discharges of an infectious nature.
-It is therefore urged that the source of the water supply should
-be kept free from all possible means of contamination by sewage.
-It is only in the knowledge of perfect cleanliness that
-safety is guaranteed.”</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>Mr. Henry Hart, of Brockport, N. Y., manufactures a C. L.
-S. C. gold pin of beautiful design for gentlemen, and another
-one attached to an arrow, which is equally handsome, for ladies.
-Either one makes an appropriate badge for members of
-the Circle to wear in everyday life, and at times it will serve to
-introduce strangers when traveling or in strange places, who have
-a common sympathy in a great work, and thus aid the possessor
-in extending his circle of acquaintances.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>One of the most embarrassing questions in the management
-of colleges and universities is, how shall trustees superannuate
-a certain class of professors, whose days of usefulness in the
-recitation room are past. When that problem is solved the
-unity and peace of the management will, as a rule, be secured.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>The New York <i>Herald</i> is led to pronounce against capital
-punishment because in many cases the law against murder is
-a dead letter, and produces the following historical reference to
-confirm the statement: “It appears that from 1860 to 1882 a
-hundred and seventy persons were tried in Massachusetts for
-murder in the first degree. Of this number only twenty-nine
-were convicted, and only sixteen paid the extreme penalty of the
-law. Of those convicted one committed suicide, and twelve
-got their sentences commuted. Here, then, during a period of
-little more than twenty years were a hundred and seventy murders
-in one State, and only sixteen executions.”</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>They have one hundred and fifty miles of electric railway in
-operation in Europe. Active preparations are making by rival
-inventors and corporations in New York City to introduce electricity
-on a large scale as a safe, rapid, and cheap motor. As
-in lighting houses, towns, and cities we have passed from the
-tallow candle to kerosene, and then to gas, and on to the electric
-light, so by many steps and advances we are almost ready to
-accept electricity as the moving power of railway trains.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>The pardoning power of the general government is liable to
-work pernicious results in the regular army. Cases of embezzlement
-and fraud among army officers have been growing in
-number since our civil war, and laxity in the enforcement of
-the laws against these offenders is a growing evil. General J.
-B. Fry, an officer of repute, and a graduate of West Point, thus
-points out the evil: “The interposition of higher authority in
-favor of offenders has been so frequent since the war, especially
-from 1876 to 1880, as to be a great injury to the service.
-Many of the evils which have been exposed recently are fairly
-chargeable to executive and legislative reversal of army action.
-* * * When the strong current of military justice
-is dammed by the authorities set over the army, stagnant pools
-are formed which breed scandal, fraud, disobedience, dissipation,
-and disgrace, sometimes even among those educated for
-the service.”</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>Cable intelligence, received September 3, shows that the Baron
-Nordenskjöld, as a Greenland explorer, has accomplished a
-large part of his original purpose. The expedition entered
-West Greenland in latitude 68°, and proceeded 220 miles inland,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-attained an altitude of seven thousand feet above the sea level.
-In 1878 Lieutenant Jansen, of the Danish navy, penetrated
-fifty miles from the coast, and reached an “icy mountain, in
-lat. 62° 40′, five thousand feet high.” But no explorer has since
-done anything worth mention toward solving the mystery of
-Greenland’s interior physical geography. The expedition with
-Professor Nordenskjöld has gone farther and seen more of the
-“immense desert of ice;” and the latest telegrams claim that
-some important scientific data have been obtained.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>The prohibition amendment, submitted to the voters of Ohio,
-is defeated, and our cherished hopes of its success, for the
-present, sadly disappointed. The non-partisan temperance
-people, everywhere, felt deeply interested in the issue, and will
-hear the result with profound sorrow. Multitudes of Ohio’s
-best men and women, who had prayed, worked, and hoped
-that deliverance might come in that way, and that from the 9th
-of October we would see the unspeakable curse of the liquor
-traffic placed where it ought to be, under the ban of the constitution,
-from which corrupt tinkering politicians would be unable
-to protect it, will confess their disappointment, but neither
-suppress their prayers nor cease their efforts. They are clearly
-in the majority, and when united will succeed.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>Telegraphic report says the Vicar of Stratford has authorized
-the exhumation of the remains of Shakspere that they may compare
-the skull with the bust that stands over the grave. Dr.
-Ingleby, of London, who is a trustee of the Shakspere Museum
-at Stratford, wishes, it seems, to photograph the face and take
-a cast of the skull. The absurdity of the proposal makes it
-almost incredible, and should itself prevent the desecration.
-We are not surprised that the bishop and local authorities have
-protested, and the intended outrage will hardly be perpetrated.
-By the terms of the deed of interment the consent of the
-Mayor of Stratford-on-Avon must first be given before the
-body can be moved. To this proposal, that official has given
-a decided refusal, and the dust of the poet will not be disturbed.
-Shakspere has been dead two hundred and sixty-seven years.
-The type of face and head, universally accepted as his, is sufficiently
-accurate. If it were not the correction of any fault in
-that likeness is now impossible.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>The Pittsburgh Exposition building, with most of its contents,
-was entirely consumed by fire during the exposition week. The
-principal loss was the goods on exhibition, including many articles
-of exquisite workmanship, and valuable relics that can
-not be replaced. The building itself, though a wooden structure,
-was large, and seemed suitable for the purpose. It was
-valued at $150,000 and not heavily insured. Perhaps sufficient
-care was not taken to secure the property against the calamity
-that, in so short a time, destroyed the whole. The company,
-who had before suffered some reverses and losses, and were
-struggling into what seemed a safe condition, with hopes of
-future prosperity, have the sympathy of the public.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>During the last decade, and especially since the great Centennial,
-expositions have been numerous, and, in many cases,
-attended with most gratifying results. When the associations
-providing them are controlled by men of culture, they are generously
-sustained. The articles they have to exhibit are not
-only numerous, but in kind and quality, worthy of our advanced
-civilization. These American expositions are becoming
-notably rich in manufactured articles, and in the extent and
-variety of useful machinery. For inventive genius the Yankee
-nation is unrivaled, while in the mechanical execution of the
-designs our skilled artisans have few, if any, superiors. In the
-principal western cities the holding of at least annual expositions
-is no longer a tentative measure. The institutions are
-established, and their continuance, in most cases, pretty well
-assured. An example of these is the “Detroit Art and Loan
-Exposition” of recent origin. Already it has fair proportions,
-being from the commencement, in most respects, equal to the
-best. Evidently the project for having there a creditable, first-class
-exposition was clearly conceived, generously sustained,
-and most successfully executed.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>Before Congress opens General W. T. Sherman will close up
-the affairs of his office, and General Sheridan will succeed him
-as commander of the United States Army. General Sherman has
-made a good officer, but his reputation in history will rest chiefly
-on his bravery and skill as a general in his famous march to the
-sea. The Sherman family have served their country well.
-John Sherman, in the Senate, and as Secretary of the Treasury,
-in times when great abilities were in demand, has made a name
-as great in his line as the general in the army.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>The receipts of the great Brooklyn bridge for nineteen weeks
-from the opening, were: For passengers, $34,464; for vehicles,
-$31,563; for cars, $3,936. Total receipts, $69,163. The average
-per day was $526.04. The total expenses during the nineteen
-weeks were $51,418.08.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>The C. L. S. C. continues to grow with great rapidity in all
-parts of the country. There is no sign of the interest waning in
-any community from which we have heard. From Plainfield,
-N. J., the central office, we receive news that the new class will
-be the largest of our history. New England is rolling up a large
-membership. All over the West and Northwest there is an interest
-among the people amounting to enthusiasm. Mr. Lewis
-Peake, of Toronto, reports a C. L. S. C. revival in Canada.
-This is the time to circulate C. L. S. C. circulars, and to use
-your town, city, and county papers to call the attention of the
-people to the aims and methods of work. By these means a C.
-L. S. C. fire may be kindled on every street in every town and
-city in the land.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>The recent pastoral letter of the Cardinal and other high officials
-in the Romish Church, caused a reporter to ask one of
-these officers some questions about marriage and divorce, to
-which he replied as follows. It is wholesome truth: “Marriage
-is a divine institution, and the Catholic Church under no circumstances
-whatever permits the sacred contract to be broken.”
-To the question, “Is there no such thing as separation between
-husband and wife recognized in the Catholic Church?” he answered:
-“Separation, yes, for the gravest reasons and under
-restrictions that do not admit of the remarriage of either of the
-parties to the original contract while both are living. But divorce
-in the sense generally accepted, never. Rather than permit
-divorce, the Church let England separate from the Holy
-See. The same question was raised by the first Napoleon, and
-it was ruled against him by the Pope. You will find that if anything
-bearing the appearance of divorce has been allowed in the
-Catholic Church, it has always been a case where the most careful
-investigation showed that the marriage was originally invalid.”</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>The Germans on October 8 in many towns and cities celebrated
-the bi-centennial of the arrival of the first German immigrants
-in this country, on the ship “Concord.” Their singing,
-secret, and literary societies paraded in regalia, with banners
-and music. It was a notable day among the Germans of America.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>Bishop Paddock, of the Protestant Episcopal Church, in charge
-of the diocese of Washington Territory, when speaking of his
-field of labor before the Episcopal Council in Philadelphia last
-month, said: “I am decidedly opposed to separating the colored
-people in their worship from the whites.”</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>We learn from an exchange that the authorities of the Erie<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-Railway have decided to discharge every employe who uses
-liquor as a beverage, whether he gets drunk or not. It is plain
-that for the safety of passengers a drinking man should not be
-entrusted with an engine, the care of a switch, with messages
-as a telegraph operator, or as a superintendent in charge of a
-division.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>The Methodists of Canada have eliminated the words “serve”
-and “obey” from the woman’s part of the marriage ceremony.
-Even the argument that the New Testament enjoins
-this kind of obedience on wives, did not preserve the words in
-the ritual. We congratulate the wives on the change.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>Professor W. F. Sherwin has been appointed by Dr. E. Tourjee
-chorus director in that prosperous institution, the New England
-Conservatory of Music, in Boston, Massachusetts. The
-Professor will make Boston his home, and continue to lecture
-and conduct musical conventions, as heretofore.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>The Cooper Union was crowded one evening last month to
-welcome Francis Murphy home from England and his own
-native Ireland. Judge Noah Davis presided and delivered the
-address of welcome. “In speaking of Mr. Murphy’s work in
-England and Scotland he quoted the statistics of the United
-Kingdom to prove that Mr. Murphy’s efforts had been effectual
-in reducing the excise revenues many thousands of pounds
-sterling. He said that during his two years’ stay in England
-and Scotland he had obtained half a million signers to the
-pledge. Mr. Murphy responded in a few brief words, declaring
-that the occasion was the happiest of his whole life. A number
-of short addresses were made by clergymen, and with the
-singing of songs and choruses, in which the whole assembly
-engaged, the ceremonies were prolonged until about half-past
-ten o’clock.”</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>The C. L. S. C. is rapidly becoming an established institution
-among New England people. This is to be accounted for in
-part by the fact that the religious press of Boston and other New
-England cities has favored the work with earnest, strong words.
-The Rev. Dr. B. K. Pierce, editor of <i>Zion’s Herald</i>, closes a
-leading editorial on the C. L. S. C., in his paper of a recent
-date, with these words: “There is another reason why we look
-with great satisfaction upon this widely-extended home-university.
-We have fallen upon an era of doubt. The literature
-of the hour is full of sneers at revealed religion and of arrogant
-and destructive criticism upon the Holy Scriptures. The daily,
-weekly and monthly press is strongly flavored with this. Our
-young people breathe it in the atmosphere of the school and of
-the streets. Here is one of the best, silent, powerful, positive
-correctives. This carefully-arranged plan of study and reading
-for successive years is entirely in the interest of the ‘truth as it
-is in Jesus.’ It is not narrow, nor dogmatic, nor polemical,
-nor confined to purely religious subjects, but the whole system
-is arranged and followed out upon the presumption of the inspiration
-of the Bible, the divine origin of Christianity, and its
-ultimate triumph upon the earth. It will powerfully strengthen
-the faith of young Christians, preserve them from the insidious
-attacks of infidelity, and enable them to have, and to give to
-any serious inquirer, an answer for the hope that is in them.”</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>The jury system has some glaring defects which should be
-laid bare and made the subject of agitation till they are corrected.
-Recently in a famous bribery case (so called) at Albany,
-N. Y., when jurors were being called and questioned, one
-of them said, “I don’t know who were the United States Senators
-two years ago from New York.” Yet this ignorant man was
-accepted as a juror. This is a common custom in the selection of
-jurors. It is exalting ignorance at the expense of intelligence
-and justice. Some remedy should be found for this growing
-and terrible evil.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>A new field of artistic ability is being developed in the East.
-It is the decoration of the interior of private residences. Already
-in New York a number of young artists, who find it difficult
-to sell all the pictures they paint, are giving their attention
-to this work, which promises to be very remunerative and very
-extensive.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>The Chicago agency of Alice H. Birch has been abandoned,
-and her old patrons may order any game previously advertised
-by her, at her home, Portland, Traill Co., Dakota.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p>The Commissioner of Education has prepared a table showing
-the illiteracy among voters in the South, which presents a painfully
-interesting study for educators and statesmen. In the
-formerly slaveholding States there are 4,154,125 men legally
-entitled to vote. Of these, 409,563 whites, and 982,894 colored,
-are unable to write even their names, and their ability to read
-is very limited. Many, who profess to be able to read, can only
-with difficulty spell out a few simple sentences in their primers,
-and really get no knowledge, such as the citizen needs, from
-either books or papers. Thousands of them have neither
-books nor papers, and could not read them if they had. Surely
-a great work must be done for these freed men and poor whites
-before they are quite equal to all the duties of citizens in a
-country like ours.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="EDITORS_TABLE" id="EDITORS_TABLE">EDITOR’S TABLE.</a></h2>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="question">Q. Dec´orus or deco´rus, which?</p>
-
-<p class="answer">A. Webster authorizes both, giving preference to the latter.
-The former has the advantage of placing the accent on the
-root syllable, a rule that is very helpful in settling questions of
-pronunciation, and conforms to usage in the accentuation of cognate
-words, as “dec´orate,” “dec´oration,” etc. We prefer it.</p>
-
-<p class="question">Q. What is the meaning of “liberal,” in the phrases, “liberal
-education,” and “liberal religious views?”</p>
-
-<p class="answer">A. An education extended much beyond the practical necessities
-of our every-day business and social life, is liberal. It is
-not a possession belonging alone to the alumni of colleges and
-universities. Any person of culture, who, with or without the
-aid of teachers, has mastered the curriculum of studies prescribed
-by colleges, or its equivalent, is liberally educated. In
-the best sense, a man of “liberal religious views” is generous,
-freely according to others the right to their opinions on all subjects
-about which good men may differ. He is not creedless,
-but not bigoted; and cordially approves “things that are most
-excellent,” wherever they are found. The claim to great liberality,
-set up by those who have no rule of faith, and no views
-they are willing to formulate, does not seem well founded.</p>
-
-<p class="question">Q. Where is the line, “Far from the madding crowd’s ignoble
-strife” found? and should not the word “madding” be
-“maddening?”</p>
-
-<p class="answer">A. The line is from Gray’s Elegy (73). The adjective “mad”
-is made a causative verb, without the usual suffix, “en.” We
-do not find the form in prose, and would not use it.</p>
-
-<p class="question">Q. Are there any books purporting to prove scientifically the
-immortality of the soul?</p>
-
-<p class="answer">A. If by “scientifically,” the querist means, as we suppose,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-rationally, philosophically, our answer is, yes, very many.
-More books have been written upon this one subject than
-one could read carefully in a lifetime. Several thousand
-distinct works, written in Greek, Latin, English, and the principal
-languages of Europe, have been catalogued by Ezra
-Abbott. The catalogue itself, published as an appendix to
-Alger’s “Doctrine of a Future Life,” would make a respectable
-volume, containing, as it does, a list of more than five
-thousand books, by almost as many authors, who discuss, more
-or less satisfactorily, the great problem of the soul. Some propose,
-not argument, but only a history of the doctrine of a future,
-immortal life as held by the different races of men, with
-various shades of opinion respecting it. Some doubt, some
-disbelieve, and some, discarding all rational processes, accept
-the dogma as a matter of faith alone, lying beyond the field of our
-reason. But many Christian writers, thankful for the “more sure
-word of prophecy,” and that “life and immortality are brought to
-light by the gospel,” hold also that outside the realm of faith,
-it is a fit subject for rational investigation, and as capable
-of proof or demonstration as other moral and psychical
-problems. Perhaps most of the works named in the catalogue
-consulted, treat of the soul and its immortality in connection with
-other principles and facts of the religious systems accepted
-by the authors, and are too voluminous for common use.
-Drew’s “Essay on the Immateriality and Immortality of the
-Soul” founded wholly on psychological and rational principles
-is regarded a masterpiece of metaphysical argument—clear,
-logical, satisfactory.</p>
-
-<p class="question">Q. Is the expression “as though” ever correct?</p>
-
-<p class="answer">A. “Though” is often used in English, taking the place of
-the conditional <i>if</i>, especially in the phrases <i>as though</i> and <i>what
-though</i>, which interchange with <i>as if</i> and <i>what if</i>; <i>e. g.</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“If she bid me pack, I’ll give her thanks <i>as though</i> she bid me stay
-by her a week.”—<i>Shakspere.</i></p>
-
-<p>“A Tartar, who looked <i>as though</i> the speed of thought were in his
-limbs.”—<i>Byron.</i></p></div>
-
-<p>Other examples need not be given. These approve the expression
-as correct, though not much used at present.</p>
-
-<p class="question">Q. Will the firing of cannon over water bring a dead body
-at the bottom to the surface; if so, why, or how?</p>
-
-<p class="answer">A. The concussion or violent agitation of the water may
-loosen a body slightly held at the bottom, when, if specifically
-lighter than water, it will rise.</p>
-
-<p class="question">Q. In “Recreations in Astronomy,” p. 163, it is said 192 asteroides
-have been discovered, with diameters from 20 to 400
-miles; and on the next page it is “estimated” that if all these
-were put into one planet, it would not be over 400 miles in diameter.
-How can that be?</p>
-
-<p class="answer">A. Allowing, as the author does, that the density of the
-masses remains the same, it would, of course, be impossible.
-We have not the means at hand to either verify or correct the
-diameters given, and can not locate the error.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="C_L_S_C_NOTES_ON_REQUIRED_READINGS_FOR_NOVEMBER" id="C_L_S_C_NOTES_ON_REQUIRED_READINGS_FOR_NOVEMBER">C. L. S. C. NOTES ON REQUIRED READINGS FOR NOVEMBER.</a></h2>
-
-
-
-
-<h3><a name="TIMAYENISS_HISTORY_OF_GREECE" id="TIMAYENISS_HISTORY_OF_GREECE">TIMAYENIS’S HISTORY OF GREECE.</a></h3>
-
-
-<h4>PARTS 10 AND 11.</h4>
-
-<p>P. 258.—“Mummius,” mum´mi-us. See Timayenis, p. 251, vol. II.</p>
-
-<p>“Delos,” de´los.</p>
-
-<p>“Mithradatic,” mith´ra-da<b>´</b>tic. For history of Mithradates see Timayenis,
-vol. II., p. 254.</p>
-
-<p>P. 259.—“Sulla,” sul´la. (B. C. 138-78). A Roman general, the
-rival of Marius. After the close of this war Sulla went to Italy, defeated
-the Marian party and issued a proscription by which many thousands of
-his enemies perished. For the two years following he held the office of
-dictator, which in 79 he resigned to retire to private life.</p>
-
-<p>“Epidaurus,” ep´i-dau<b>´</b>rus. One of the most magnificent temples in
-all Greece, that of the god Æsculapius, was situated there.</p>
-
-<p>“Peiræan,” pei-ræ´an. Through this gate ran the road to the Piræus,
-and at the Sacred Gate began the sacred road to Eleusis where the festivals
-and mysteries were celebrated.</p>
-
-<p>“Bithynia,” bi-thyn´i-a; “Kappadokia,” cap<b>´</b>pa-do´ci-a; “Paphlagonia,”
-paph<b>´</b>la-go´ni-a.</p>
-
-<p>P. 260.—“Chrysostom,” krĭs´os-tom. See Timayenis, vol. II., 319 sq.</p>
-
-<p>“Anthemius,” an-the´mi-us; “Isidorus,” is´i-do<b>´</b>rus. Eminent architects.</p>
-
-<p>P. 261.—“Pompey.” (B. C. 106-48.) Pompey had been a successful
-general from early life, receiving from Sulla the surname of Magnus.</p>
-
-<p>P. 262.—“Soli,” so´li. The word solecism (to speak incorrectly) is
-said to have been first used in regard to the dialect of the inhabitants of
-this city.</p>
-
-<p>“Pompeiopolis,” pom´pe-i-op<b>´</b>o-lis; “Armenia,” ar-me´ni-a.</p>
-
-<p>“Tigranes,” ti-gra´nes. The king of Armenia from B. C. 96-55.
-He was an ally of Mithradates until this invasion by Pompey, when he
-hastened to submit to the latter, thus winning favor and receiving the
-kingdom with the title of king.</p>
-
-<p>P. 263.—“Phillippi,” phil-lip´pi; “Octavius,” oc-ta´vi-us.</p>
-
-<p>“Philhellenist,” phĭl-hĕl´len-ist. A friend to Greece.</p>
-
-<p>“Philathenian,” phĭl-a-the´ni-an. A friend to Athens.</p>
-
-<p>“Actium,” ac´ti-um.</p>
-
-<p>P. 264.—“Ægina,” æ-gi´na; “Eretria,” e-re´tri-a.</p>
-
-<p>“Stoa,” sto´a. Halls or porches supported by pillars, and used as places
-of resort in the heat of the day.</p>
-
-<p>“Athene Archegetes,” a-the´ne ar-cheg´e-tes; “Peisistratus,” pi-sis´tra-tus;
-“Nikopolis,” ni-cop´o-lis.</p>
-
-<p>P. 265.—“Cæsarean,” cæ-sā´re-an.</p>
-
-<p>“Seneca.” (B. C. 5?-A. D. 65.) A Roman Stoic philosopher. The
-tutor and afterward adviser of Nero. When the excesses of the latter had
-made Seneca’s presence irksome to him, he was dismissed and soon
-after, by order of Nero, put to death. His writings were mainly philosophical
-treatises.</p>
-
-<p>“Agrippina,” ag-rip-pi´na. Nero was the son of Agrippina by her
-first husband. On her marriage with her third husband, the Emperor
-Claudius, she prevailed upon the latter to adopt Nero as his son. In
-order to secure the succession she murdered Claudius and governed
-the empire in Nero’s name until he, tired of her authority, caused her to
-be put to death.</p>
-
-<p>“Isthmian,” ĭs´mĭ-an; “Pythian,” pyth´i-an; “Nemean,” nē´me-an;
-“Olympian,” o-lym´pi-an. See author for accounts of these games.</p>
-
-<p>“Pythia,” pyth´i-a. See Timayenis, p. 44-45, vol. I.</p>
-
-<p>P. 266.—“Vespasian,” ves-pā´zhĭ-an; “Lollianus,” lol-li-a´nus.</p>
-
-<p>“Aristomenes,” ar´-is-tom<b>´</b>e-nes. The legendary hero of the Second
-Messenian War. In 865 B. C. he began hostilities and defeated Sparta
-several times but was at last taken prisoner. The legends tell that he
-was rescued, from the pit where he had been confined, by an eagle and
-led home by a fox. When at last Ira fell, Aristomenes went to Rhodes,
-where he died.</p>
-
-<p>“Aratus,” a-ra´tus; “Achæan,” a-chæ´an. See Timayenis, vol II.,
-p. 242-243.</p>
-
-<p>P. 267.—“Zeno.” The founder of the Stoic philosophy. A native
-of Cyprus. He lived, probably, about 260 B. C. He is said to have
-spent twenty years in study, after which time he opened his school in a
-stoa of Athens. From this place his disciples received the name of
-<i>Stoics</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Translation of foot-notes: “They call those sophists who for money
-offer knowledge to whomsoever wishes it.” “A sophist is one who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-seeks the money of rich young men.” “Sophistry consists in appearing
-wise, not in being so; and the sophist becomes wealthy by an appearance
-of wisdom, not by being wise.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gorgias,” gor´gi-as. “Leontine,” le-on´tine. An inhabitant of
-Leontini in Sicily.</p>
-
-<p>P. 268.—“Dion,” di´on chry-sos´to-mus, or Dion, the golden mouthed,
-so called from his eloquence.</p>
-
-<p>“Strabo,” stra´bo. His geography is contained in seventeen books.
-It gives descriptions of the physical features of the country, accounts
-of political events, and notices of the chief cities and men.</p>
-
-<p>“Plutarch.” His “Parallel Lives” is a history of forty-eight different
-Greeks and Romans. They are arranged in pairs, and each pair is followed
-by a comparison of the two men.</p>
-
-<p>“Appianus,” ap-pi-a´nus. The author of a history of Rome.</p>
-
-<p>“Dion Cassius.” (A. D. 155.) The grandson of Dion Chrysostomus.</p>
-
-<p>“Herodianus,” he´ro-di-a<b>´</b>nus.</p>
-
-<p>“Epiktetus,” ep´ic-te<b>´</b>tus. Few circumstances of his life are known.
-Only those of his works collected by Arrian are extant. As a teacher it
-is said that no one was able to resist his appeals to turn their minds to
-the good.</p>
-
-<p>“Hierapolis,” hi´e-rap<b>´</b>o-lis.</p>
-
-<p>“Longinus,” lon-gi´nus. The most distinguished adherent of the
-Platonic philosophy in the third century. His learning was so great that
-he was called “a living library.” He taught many years at Athens, but
-at last left to go to Palmyra, as the teacher of Zenobia. When she was
-afterward defeated by the Romans and captured, Longinus was put to
-death (273).</p>
-
-<p>“Lucian.” See notes in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span> for May, 1883.</p>
-
-<p>“Samosata,” sa-mos´a-ta.</p>
-
-<p>P. 270.—“Thesmopolis,” thes-mop´o-lis. “Sappho,” sap´pho. “Domitian,”
-do-mish´ĭ-an.</p>
-
-<p>P. 271.—“Pliny,” plĭn´ĭ. (61?-115?) The nephew of the elder
-Pliny. His life was largely spent in literary pursuits. His works extant
-are the <i>Panegyricus</i>, an eulogium on Trajan, and his letters.</p>
-
-<p>“Seleukidæ,” se-leu´ci-dæ. So named from Seleucus, the first ruler
-of the Syrian kingdom, one of the four into which Alexander’s kingdom
-was divided on his death.</p>
-
-<p>P. 272.—“Archon Eponymus,” ar´chon e-pon´y-mus. The first in
-rank of the nine Athenian Archons, so called because the year was
-named after him.</p>
-
-<p>“Favorinus,” fav´o-ri<b>´</b>nus. He is known as a friend of Plutarch and
-Herodes. Although he wrote much, none of his books have come down
-to us. “Herodes,” he-ro´des.</p>
-
-<p>“Mnesikles,” mnes´i-cles. The architect of the Propylæa.</p>
-
-<p>“Ilissus,” i-lis´sus. A small river of Attica.</p>
-
-<p>Translations of Greek inscriptions: “This is Athens the former city
-of Theseus.” “Here stands the city of Adrian, not of Theseus.”</p>
-
-<p>P. 273.—“Stymphalus,” stym-pha´lus. A lake of Arcadia.</p>
-
-<p>“Patræ,” pa´træ.</p>
-
-<p>P. 275.—“Pliny.” (23-75.) Although he held various civil and military
-positions, and during his whole life was the intimate friend and adviser
-of Vespasian, he applied himself so incessantly to study that he left
-one hundred and sixty volumes of notes. Pliny, the younger, says that
-the lives of those who have devoted themselves to study seem to have
-been passed in idleness and sleep when compared with the wonderful
-activity of his uncle. The only work of value come down to us is his
-“Historia Naturalis.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lebadeia,” leb´a-dei<b>´</b>a.</p>
-
-<p>“Stoa Pœkile.” The painted porch, so-called from the variety of curious
-pictures which it contained.</p>
-
-<p>“Theseum,” the-se´um. The temple erected in Athens in honor of
-the hero Theseus. To-day it is the best preserved monument of the
-splendor of the ancient city.</p>
-
-<p>“Kerameikus,” cer´a-mi<b>´</b>cus. A district of Athens, so called from
-Ceramus, the son of Bacchus, some say, but more probably from the potter’s
-art invented there.</p>
-
-<p>P. 277.—“Commodus,” com´mo-dus; “Caracalla,” car´a-cal<b>´</b>la; “Dacia,”
-da´ci-a; “Mœsia,” mœ´si-a; “Decius,” de´ci-us.</p>
-
-<p>P. 278.—“Gallienus,” gal´li-e<b>´</b>nus; “Valerianus,” va-le´ri-a<b>´</b>nus.</p>
-
-<p>“Pityus,” pit´y-us; “Trapezus,” tra-pe´zus; “Chrysopolis,” chry-sop´o-lis;
-“Kyzikus,” cyz´i-cus.</p>
-
-<p>“Dexippus,” dex-ip´pus. He held the highest official position at
-Athens. Was the author of histories, only fragments of which remain.</p>
-
-<p>P. 279.—“Artemis,” ar´te-mis. This temple of Artemis, or Diana,
-Lübke calls the “famous wonder of the ancient world.” Its dimensions
-were enormous, being 225 feet broad and 425 feet long. “Aurelian,”
-au-re´li-an.</p>
-
-<p>P. 280.—“Flavius Josephus,” fla´vi-us jo-se´phus. (37?-100?) The
-author of “History of the Jewish War” and “Jewish Antiquities.”</p>
-
-<p>“Philo Judæus,” phi´lo ju-dæ´us. His chief works are an attempt to
-reconcile the Scriptures with Greek philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>P. 281.—“Nikolaus,” nic´o-la<b>´</b>us; “Nikomedeia,” nic´o-me-di<b>´</b>a;
-“Claudius Ptolemæus,” clau´di-us ptol´e-mæ<b>´</b>us; “Pelusium,” pe-lu´si-um;
-“Plotinus,” plo-ti´nus; “Lykopolis,” ly-cop´o-lis.</p>
-
-<p>P. 282.—“Zenobia,” ze-no´bi-a; “Palmyra,” pal-my´ra.</p>
-
-<p>P. 286.—“Maximian,” max-im´i-an.</p>
-
-<p>P. 287.—“Constantius,” con-stan´ti-us. “Chlorus,” chlo´rus, “the
-pale;” “Naissus,” nais´sus; “Galerius,” ga-le´ri-us.</p>
-
-<p>P. 288.—“Eboracum,” eb´o-ra<b>´</b>cum; “Licinius,” li-cin´i-us; “Maxentius,”
-max-en´ti-us.</p>
-
-<p>P. 290.—“Labarum,” lăb´a-rŭm. The word is supposed by many to
-have been derived from the Celtic word <i>lavar</i>, meaning command, sentence.</p>
-
-<p>P. 292.—“Zosimus,” zos´i-mus; “Adrianopolis,” a<b>´</b>dri-an-op´o-lis.</p>
-
-<p>“St. Jerome.” (340-420.) The most famous of the Christian fathers.
-He spent many years in study and travel, was the friend of Gregory of
-Nazianzus and Pope Damascus. Much of his labor was given to obtain
-converts to his theories of monastic life. His commentaries on the
-Scriptures and translations into Latin of the New and Old Testaments
-are his most valuable works.</p>
-
-<p>P. 294.—“Athanasius,” ath´a-na<b>´</b>si-us.</p>
-
-<p>Translations of Greek in foot-note; “Speech against the Greeks.”
-“Concerning the incarnation of Christ and his appearance to us.”</p>
-
-<p>P. 295.—“Eusebius,” eu-se´bi-us. He afterward signed the creed of
-the Council of Nice.</p>
-
-<p>“Porphyrius,” por-phyr´i-us.</p>
-
-<p>P. 297.—“Tanais,” tan´a-is. Now the Don. “Borysthenes,” bo-rys´the-nes;
-the Dneiper.</p>
-
-<p>P. 299.—“Arianism,” a´ri-an-ism.</p>
-
-<p>P. 302.—“Magnentius,” mag-nen´ti-us.</p>
-
-<p>P. 303.—“Sapor,” sa´por. “Nisibis,” nis´i-bis.</p>
-
-<p>P. 304.—“Eusebia,” eu-se´bi-a. “Eleusinian,” el´u-sin<b>´</b>i-an. See foot-note
-p. 215, vol. II. Timayenis.</p>
-
-<p>P. 305.—“Aedesius,” ae-de´si-us. “Chrysanthius,” chry-san´thi-us.</p>
-
-<p>P. 306.—“Ochlus,” och´lus. The crowd, the populace.</p>
-
-<p>“Thaumaturgy,” thau<b>´</b>ma-tur´gy. The act of performing miracles,
-wonders.</p>
-
-<p>P. 307.—“Gregory Nazianzen,” greg´o-ry na-zi-an´zen; “Basil.” See
-page 312 for sketches of these men.</p>
-
-<p>P. 308.—“Hierophant,” hī-er´o-phănt, a priest; “Oribasius,” or-i-ba´si-us.</p>
-
-<p>P. 311.—“Dadastana,” dad-as-ta´na.</p>
-
-<p>P. 312.—“Valentinian,” va-len-tin´i-an.</p>
-
-<p>P. 313.—“Eleemosynary,” ĕl´ee-mŏs´y-na-ry. Relating to charity.</p>
-
-<p>P. 315.—“Gratian,” gra´ti-an; “Theodosius,” the´o-do<b>´</b>si-us; “Eugenius,”
-eu-ge´ni-us.</p>
-
-<p>P. 317.—“Rufinus,” ru-fi´nus; “Stilicho,” stil´i-cho.</p>
-
-<p>“Claudian,” clau´di-an. The last of the classic poets of Rome.
-During the reigns of Honorius and Arcadius he held high positions in
-court, and from Stilicho he received many honors. Many of his poems
-are extant, all of them characterized by purity of expression and poetical
-genius.</p>
-
-<p>P. 318.—“Eutropius,” eu-tro´pi-us; “Eudoxia,” eu-dox´i-a; “Bauto,”
-bau´to; “Gainas,” gai´nas.</p>
-
-<p>“Alaric,” al´a-ric (all rich). Alaric made a second invasion into
-Italy in 410, taking and plundering Rome. His death occurred soon
-after.</p>
-
-<p>P. 319.—“Libanius,” li-ba´ni-us. The emperors Julian, Valens and
-Theodosius showed much respect to Libanius, but his life was embittered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-by the jealousies of the professors of Constantinople, and by continual
-dispute with the Sophists. His orations and a quantity of letters addressed
-to the eminent men of the times are still in existence.</p>
-
-<p>P. 320.—“Nectarius,” nec-ta´ri-us.</p>
-
-<p>P. 321.—“Theophilus,” the-oph´i-lus; “Chalkedon,” chal-ce´don.</p>
-
-<p>P. 322.—“Cucusus,” cu´cu-sus; “Comana,” co-ma´na.</p>
-
-<p>P. 323.—“Anthemius,” an-the´mi-us. “Pulcheria,” pul-che´ri-a.</p>
-
-<p>P. 324.—“Kalligraphos,” cal-lig´ra-phos; “Athenais,” ath´e-na<b>´</b>is;
-“Leontius,” le-on´ti-us.</p>
-
-<p>P. 326.—“Nestorius,” nes-to´ri-us; “Germanikeia,” ger-man´i-ci<b>´</b>a;
-“Marcian,” mar´ci-an; “Yezdegerd,” yez´de-jerd.</p>
-
-<p>“Successor.” This successor was Varanes I. He waged wars with the
-Huns, Turks and Indians, performing deeds which ever since have made
-him a favorite hero in Persian verse.</p>
-
-<p>P. 327.—“Attila,” at´ti-la; “Aetius,” a-ē´ti-us.</p>
-
-<p>P. 328.—“Aspar,” as´par; “Basiliscus,” bas-i-lis´cus; “Verina,” ve-ri´na.</p>
-
-<p>P. 329.—“Odoacer,” o-do´a-cer; “Ariadne,” a-ri-ad´ne; “Isaurian,”
-i-sau´ri-an; “Anastasius,” an-as-ta´si-us.</p>
-
-<p>P. 330.—“Sardica,” sar´di-ca.</p>
-
-<p>“Prokopius,” pro-co´pi-us. (500-565.) An historian as well as rhetorician.
-His talents early attracted the attention of Belisarius, who
-made him his secretary. Afterward Justinian raised him to the position
-of prefect of Constantinople. Among his extant works are several volumes
-of histories and orations, besides a collection of anecdotes, mainly
-court gossip about Justinian, the empress Theodora, Belisarius, etc.</p>
-
-<p>P. 331.—“Belisarius,” bel-i-sa´ri-us.</p>
-
-<p>“Collection of Laws.” Justinian first ordered a collection of the various
-imperial <i>constitutiones</i> which he named “Justinianeus Codex.” The
-second collection was of all that was important in the works of jurists,
-and was called the “Digest.” This work contained nine thousand extracts,
-and the compilers are said to have consulted over two thousand
-different books in their work. But for ordinary reference these volumes
-were of little value, so that the “Institutes” were written, similar in contents,
-but condensed. A new code was afterward promulgated; also
-several new <i>constitutiones</i>—together these books form the Roman law.</p>
-
-<p>“Tribonian,” tri-bo´ni-an; “Side,” si´de.</p>
-
-<p>P. 333.—“Kalydonian Kapros.” The Calydonian wild boar.</p>
-
-<p>“Bronze-eagle.” In every race-course of the ancient Greeks a bronze
-eagle and a dolphin were used for signals in starting. The eagle was
-raised in the air and the dolphin lowered.</p>
-
-<p>P. 334.—“Chosroes,” chos´ro-es. “The generous mind.” One of
-the most noteworthy of the kings of Persia. He carried on several wars
-with the Romans and extended his domain until he received homage
-from the most distant kings of Africa and Asia. Although despotic, his
-stern justice made him the pride of the Persians.</p>
-
-<p>P. 335.—“Hæmus,” hæ´mus; “Aristus,” a-ris´tus; “Antes,” an´tes.</p>
-
-<p>P. 336.—“Melanthias,” me-lan´thi-as.</p>
-
-<p>P. 338.—“Fallmerayer,” fäl´meh-rī-er. (1791-1862.) A German
-historian and traveller. Among his important works are “Fragments
-from the East,” in which he publishes the results of his studies and
-travels there, and “The History of the Peninsula of Morea in the Middle
-Ages.” It is in this latter work that he advances the strange views here
-mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>“Malelas,” mal´e-las. A Byzantine historian who lived soon after
-Justinian. He wrote a chronological history from the creation of the
-world to the reign of Justinian, inclusive.</p>
-
-<p>P. 342.—“Heraclius,” her´a-cli<b>´</b>us; “Mauricius,” mau-ri´ci-us.</p>
-
-<p>P. 345.—“Ayesha,” â´ye-sha. The favorite wife of Mohammed and
-daughter of Abubeker, who succeeded him. The twenty-fourth chapter
-of the Koran treats of the purity of Ayesha. After her husband’s
-death she in many ways supported the religion.</p>
-
-<p>“Fatima,” fâ´te-ma. The only child living at the time of the Prophet’s
-death. She became the ancestress of the powerful dynasty of the
-Fatimites.</p>
-
-<p>P. 347.—“Aiznadin,” aiz´na-din; “Yermuk,” yer´muk; “Khaled,”
-kha´led.</p>
-
-<p>P. 348.—“Herakleonas,” her-ac-le-o´nas; “Pogonatus,” pog-o-na´tus;
-“Moawiyah,” mo-â-wē´yâ.</p>
-
-<p>P. 349.—“Charles Martel.” (690-741.) The duke of Austrasia,
-and the mayor of the palace of the Frankish kings. The name Martel,
-or “the hammer,” was given to him from his conduct in this battle.</p>
-
-<p>P. 350.—“Kallinikus,” cal-li-ni´cus.</p>
-
-<p>“Naphtha.” A volatile, bituminous liquid, very inflammable.</p>
-
-<p>P. 352.—“Rhinotmetus,” rhin-ot-me´tus.</p>
-
-<p>P. 353.—“Chersonites,” cher-son´i-tes.</p>
-
-<p>“Crim-Tartary.” The Crimea, also called Little Tartary.</p>
-
-<p>“Absimarus,” ab-sim´a-rus; “Khazars,” kha´zars.</p>
-
-<p>P. 354.—“Terbelis,” ter´be-lis.</p>
-
-<p>P. 356.—“Bardanes,” bar-da´nes; “Phillippicus,” phil-lip´pi-cus.</p>
-
-<p>P. 357.—“Moslemas,” mos´le-mas.</p>
-
-<p>P. 365.—“Haroun al-Rashid,” hä-roon´ äl-răsh´id. (765-809.) Aaron
-the Just, the fifth caliph of the dynasty of the Abassides. His conquests
-and administration were such that his reign is called the golden
-age of the Mohammedan nations. Poetry, science and art were cultivated
-by him. Haroun is the chief hero of Arabian tales.</p>
-
-<p>“Nikephorus,” ni-ceph´o-rus.</p>
-
-<p>P. 368.—“Theophilus,” the-oph´i-lus.</p>
-
-<p>P. 369.—“Armorium,” ar-mo´ri-um.</p>
-
-<p>P. 370.—“Bardas,” bar´das; “Theoktistus,” the-ok´tis-tus.</p>
-
-<p>“John Grammatikus.” John the grammarian. It was he that held
-that there were three Gods and rejected the word unity from the doctrine
-of the being of God.</p>
-
-<p>P. 371.—“Photius,” fo´shĭ-us. He played a distinguished part in the
-political, religious and literary affairs of the ninth century. After holding
-various offices, he was made patriarch by Bardas, deposing Ignatius.
-This incensed the Romish Church, and the controversy which arose did
-much to widen the gulf between the Eastern and Western Churches.
-Photius was deposed from his position, but replaced until the death of
-Basil, when he was driven into exile. Among his writings the most
-valuable is a review of ancient Greek literature. Many books are described
-in it of which we have no other knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>P. 372.—“Arsacidæ,” ar-sac´i-dæ. So called from Arsaces, the
-founder of the Parthian empire. About 250 B. C. Arsaces induced the
-Parthians to revolt from the Syrian empire, of the Seleucidæ. The family
-existed four hundred and seventy-six years, being obliged in 226 A.
-D. to submit to Artaxerxes, the founder of the dynasty of the Sassanidæ.</p>
-
-<p>P. 373.—“Porphyrogenitus,” por-phy-ro-gen´i-tus.</p>
-
-<p>P. 374.—“Seljuks,” sel-jooks´; “Commeni,” com-me´ni.</p>
-
-<p>P. 375.—“Robert Guiscard,” ges´kar<b>´</b>. Robert, the prudent. (1015-1085.)
-The founder of the kingdom of Naples. He had come from
-Normandy to Italy, where by his wit and energy he had been appointed
-Count of Apulia in 1057. Soon after he added other provinces to his
-kingdom, conquered Sicily, and drove the Saracens from Southern Italy.
-His hasty departure from Thessaly was to relieve the Pope from the siege
-of Henry IV. After accomplishing this he immediately undertook the
-second expedition against Constantinople.</p>
-
-<p>P. 376.—“Kephallenia,” ceph´al-le<b>´</b>ni-a; “Durazzo,” doo-rät´so.</p>
-
-<p>P. 377.—“Anna Commena.” The daughter of Alexis I. She wrote
-a full history of her father’s life; one of the most interesting and valuable
-books of Byzantine literature.</p>
-
-<p>P. 379.—“Piacenza,” pe-ä-chen´zä. The capital of the province of
-the same name in the north of Italy.</p>
-
-<p>P. 382.—“Nureddin,” noor-ed-deen´. A Mohammedan ruler of Syria
-and Egypt.</p>
-
-<p>P. 383.—“Dandolo,” dän´do-lo.</p>
-
-<p>P. 385.—“Scutari,” skoo´tă-ree.</p>
-
-<p>P. 386.—“Morisini,” mo-ri-si´ni.</p>
-
-<p>P. 387.—“Boniface,” bŏn´e-făss; “Montferrat,” mŏnt-fer-răt´;
-“Bouillon,” boo´yon<b>´</b>; “Laskaris,” las´ca-ris.</p>
-
-<p>P. 388.—“Palæologus,” pa-læ-ol´o-gus.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h4>BRIEF HISTORY OF GREECE.</h4>
-
-<p>The November readings in the “Brief History of Greece” are almost
-identical with the October readings in Timayenis’s history. For this
-reason no notes have been made out on the work. By consulting the
-notes on Timayenis’s history in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span> for October, all
-necessary help will be obtained. The papers on Physical Science and
-Political Economy, also the Sunday Readings, are too clear to need annotating.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3><a id="NOTES_ON_REQUIRED_READINGS_IN_THE_CHAUTAUQUAN"></a>NOTES ON REQUIRED READINGS IN “THE CHAUTAUQUAN.”</h3>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<h4>GERMAN HISTORY.</h4>
-
-<p>P. 63, c. 1.—“Hermann.” The Latinized form of whose name was
-Arminius. He had learned the language and the military discipline of
-the Romans when he led his tribe as auxiliaries to their legions.</p>
-
-<p>“Varus,” va´rus. He had been consul at Rome in B. C. 13, and afterward
-governor of Syria, where he accumulated great wealth. After
-this battle Varus put an end to his life.</p>
-
-<p>P. 63, c. 2.—“Alemanni,” al-e-man´ni.</p>
-
-<p>“Sicambrians,” si-cam´bri-ans. In early German history one of the
-most powerful tribes. They lived in Westphalia, between the Rhine
-and Weser.</p>
-
-<p>“Chatti,” or “Catti,” so called from an old German word <i>cat</i> or <i>cad</i>,
-meaning “war.” They dwelt south of the Sicambrians in the modern
-state of Hesse.</p>
-
-<p>“Batavi.” A Celtic people who had settled in the portion of the present
-Netherlands lying at the mouth of the Rhine. Their chief city was
-Leyden. The country was afterward extended and called Batavia.</p>
-
-<p>P. 64, c. 1.—“Salzburg,” sälts´boorg; “Ratisbonne,” ra´tis-bon;
-“Augsburg,” owgs´boorg; “Basle,” bâl, or “Basel,” bä´zel; “Baden,”
-bä´den; “Spires,” spīr´es; “Metz,” mĕts; “Treves,” treevz.</p>
-
-<p>“Ammianus,” am´mi-a<b>´</b>nus mar´cel-li<b>´</b>nus. A Greek serving under
-the emperor Julian 363. Later we find him in Rome where he wrote a
-history from the time of Nerva, 96, to the death of Valens, 378. Many
-of the events were contemporaneous, so that the descriptions and incidents
-are particularly valuable.</p>
-
-<p>P. 64, c. 2.—“Vandals.” This tribe first appeared in the north of
-Germany, from whence they went to the Reisengebirge, sometimes called
-from them the Vandal Mountains. In the fifth century they worked their
-way from Pannonia into Spain, marched southward and founded the once
-powerful kingdom of Andalusia (Vandalusia). In 429 they conquered
-Africa. An hundred years afterward Belisarius overthrew their power,
-and the race disappeared. Many claim that descendants of the Vandals
-are to be seen among the Berber race, with blue eyes and light
-hair.</p>
-
-<p>“Troyes,” trwä.</p>
-
-<p>“Catalaunian,” cat´a-lau<b>´</b>ni-an. A people formerly living in northeastern
-France, their capital the present Châlons-sur-Marne.</p>
-
-<p>“Méry-sur-Seine,” mā-rē-sur-sane.</p>
-
-<p>“Visigoths.” In the fourth century the Goths were divided into the
-Ostrogoths and Visigoths or the Eastern and Western Goths; the latter
-worked their way from the Danube westward to France and Spain where
-they built up a splendid kingdom which lasted until 711, when it was
-overthrown by the Moors.</p>
-
-<p>P. 65, c. 1.—“Genseric,” jĕn´ser-ik. A king of the Vandals under
-whom the tribe invaded Africa in 429. They conquered the entire
-country, capturing Carthage in 439 and making it their capital. After
-the sack of Rome, the entire coast of the Mediterranean was pillaged.
-Genseric ruled until his death in 477.</p>
-
-<p>“Heruli,” her´u-li; “Sciri,” si´ri; “Turcilingi,” tur-cil-in´gi; “Rugii,”
-ru´gi-i.</p>
-
-<p>“Theodoric.” The king of the Visigoths, who in 489 undertook to
-expel Odoacer from Italy. He defeated him in several battles and
-finally laid siege to Ravenna, where Odoacer had taken refuge. After
-holding out three years, Odoacer submitted on condition that he rule
-jointly with Theodoric, but the latter soon murdered his rival. For
-thirty-three years Theodoric ruled the country. He was a patron of art
-and learning and his sway was very prosperous. The porphyry vase in
-which his ashes were deposited is still shown at Ravenna.</p>
-
-<p>“Thuringians,” thu-rin´gi-ans. Dwellers in the central part of Germany
-between the Harz Mountains and the Thuringian forest.</p>
-
-<p>“Dietrich,” dē-trich; “Hildebrand,” hĭl´de-brand.</p>
-
-<p>“Siegfried,” seeg´freed. See notes on “Nibelungenlied” in this
-number.</p>
-
-<p>P. 65, c. 2.—“Langobardi” or Lombards. A German tribe which
-migrated southward from the river Elbe. In 568 they conquered the
-plains of northern Italy and founded a kingdom which lasted two centuries.</p>
-
-<p>GERMAN LITERATURE.</p>
-
-<p>The article on German Literature is abridged from Sime’s article on
-this subject in the “Encyclopædia Britannica.”</p>
-
-<p>P. 66, c. 1.—“Nibelungelied.” The song of the Nibelungen. “The
-work includes the legends of Siegfried, of Günther, of Dietrich, and of
-Attila; and the motives which bind them into a whole are the love and
-revenge of Kriemhild, the sister of Günther and Siegfried’s wife. She
-excites the envy of Brunhild, the Burgundian queen, whose friend
-Hagen discovers the vulnerable point in Siegfried’s enchanted body,
-treacherously slays him, and buries in the Rhine the treasure he has
-long before conquered from the race of the Nibelungen. There is then
-a pause of thirteen years, after which Kriemhild, the better to effect her
-fatal purpose, marries Attila. Thirteen years having again passed away
-her thirst for vengeance is satiated by slaying the entire Burgundian
-court. The Germans justly regard this epic as one of the most precious
-gems of their literature.”—<i>Sime.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Ulfilas,” ŭl´fĭ-las. (310-381.) The family of Ulfilas were Christians
-supposed to have been carried away by the Goths. In 341 he became
-the bishop of these people and soon induced a number of them to
-leave their warlike life to settle a colony in Mœsia. Here he cultivated
-the arts of peace, doing much to civilize the people. He introduced an
-alphabet of twenty-four letters and translated all of the Bible except the
-book of Kings. This work is the earliest known specimen of the Teutonic
-language.</p>
-
-<p>“Wolfram von Eschenbach,” fon esh´en-bäk. He lived at the close
-of the twelfth century. A nobleman by birth and a soldier in the civil
-wars. He joined the court of Hermann of Thuringia in the castle of
-Wartburg (where Luther escaped after the Diet of Worms) and was a
-contestant in the famous musical contest called “The war of the Wartburg.”
-Leaving here he afterward sang at many other courts, dying in
-1225.</p>
-
-<p>“Parzival” or Parcival, par´ci-val.</p>
-
-<p>“Holy Grail.” The chalice said to have been used by Christ at the
-Last Supper and in which the wine was changed to blood. As the legend
-runs it fell into the hands of Joseph of Arimathea, by whom it was held
-for centuries, but finally, at his death, it passed to his descendants, with
-whom it remained until its possessor sinned; then the cup disappeared.
-The Knights of the Round-Table sought it, but until Sir Galahad
-no man was found so pure in heart and life that he could look upon it. Sir
-Galahad in some romances is called Sir Percival or <i>Parzival</i>. Eisenbach
-wrote another romance, “Titural,” founded on the same legend.</p>
-
-<p>“Gottfried,” gott´freed; “Tristram and Iseult,” trĭs´tram, is´eult;
-“Gudrun,” gu´drun.</p>
-
-<p>“Walther von der Vogelweide,” wäl´ter fon der fō<b>´</b>gel-wī´deh. (1165?-1228?)
-Walter “from the bird meadow.” He lived some time at Wartburg
-and was a friend of King Philip and of Frederick II. He died
-on a little estate the latter had given him.</p>
-
-<p>“Sachenspiegel.” Codex of the Saxon law.</p>
-
-<p>“Schwabenspiegel.” Codex of the Swabian law.</p>
-
-<p>“Berthold,” bĕr´tōlt. (1215-1272.) His love for the poor led him
-to zealous work in their behalf. Through many years he preached in
-the open air in Germany, Switzerland and Hungary.</p>
-
-<p>“Eckhart,” ĕk´hart. The father of German speculative thought, as
-Bach calls him, was a Dominician monk who attempted to reform his
-order but preached so exalted a philosophy that the Pope demanded a
-recantation. Eckhart never gave this but claimed that his views were
-entirely orthodox. His prose is among the purest specimens in the German
-language.</p>
-
-<p>“Meistersänger.” Master-singer.</p>
-
-<p>P. 66, c. 2.—“Shrove-Tuesday,” or confession Tuesday is the day before
-Lent. Although originally a day of preparation for the Lenten fast,
-it was soon changed to one of merry-making and feasting. As everything
-was devised to increase the gaiety of the occasion, these plays soon
-became a regular feature.</p>
-
-<p>“Reineke Vos.” Reynard the fox.</p>
-
-<p>“Barkhusen,” bark´hu-sen; “Rostock,” ros´tŏck.</p>
-
-<p>“Ulrich von Hutten,” ul´rich fon hoot´en. (1488-1523.) His life<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-was spent in hot contests with the enemies of his reforms. As an advocate
-of the new learning, he went from city to city teaching and writing;
-“Epistolæ Obscurorum Virorum” was written in defense of this theory.
-He espoused the cause of the Reformation more because it favored religious
-and secular progress than from sympathy with its principles.</p>
-
-<p>“Hans Sachs.” (1494-1576.) “Honest Hans Sachs,” as he was
-called, was a cobbler of Nuremberg, who had learned verse-making
-from a <i>meistersänger</i> of Munich. His verses included every style of
-poetry known, but the “Shrove-Tuesday plays” were the best, being full
-of strong characters and striking situations. The hymn mentioned,
-“Why art thou cast down, O, my soul?” is but one of several by him.</p>
-
-<p>“Leibnitz,” līp´nits. (1646-1716.) Educated at Leipsic, he says of
-himself, that before he was twelve, he “understood the Latin authors,
-had begun to lisp Greek and wrote verses with singular success.” After
-taking his degree he went to Frankfort under the patronage of a wealthy
-gentleman; here he devoted himself to composing treatises on religion,
-philosophy, law, etc. All manner of projects interested him. He tried
-to bring about a union between the Catholic and Lutheran Churches, to
-introduce a common alphabet for all languages, to urge the king of
-France to conquer Egypt, and other plans, more or less Utopian.
-In the latter part of his life he received high honor from Hanover,
-Vienna, and Peter the Great. His correspondence was voluminous, and
-his works covered almost the whole field of human thought.</p>
-
-<p>“Klopstock,” klop´stok. (1724-1803.)</p>
-
-<p>“Wieland,” wee´land. (1733-1813.)</p>
-
-<p>“Lessing,” lĕs´ĭng. (1729-1781.)</p>
-
-<p>“Oberon,” ŏb´er-on. The Oberon of Shakspere. The king of the
-fairies and the husband of Queen Titania.</p>
-
-<p>“Agathon,” ag´a-thon. A tragic poet of Athens, who died about
-400 B. C.</p>
-
-<p>“Pietist,” pī´e-tist. The name was applied to a certain class of religious
-reformers in Germany, who sought to restore purity to the Church.</p>
-
-<p>P. 67, c. 1.—“Herder,” hĕr´der. (1744-1803.)</p>
-
-<p>“Kant.” (1724-1804.)</p>
-
-<p>“Kritik.” Critique of pure reason.</p>
-
-<p>“Fichte,” fik´teh. (1797-1879.)</p>
-
-<p>“Hardenburg.” (1772-1801.)</p>
-
-<p>“Wilhelm von Schlegel,” shlā´gel. (1767-1845.)</p>
-
-<p>“Friedrich.” (1772-1829.)</p>
-
-<p>“Tieck,” teek. (1773-1853.)</p>
-
-<p>“Fouquè,” foo<b>´</b>ka´. (1777-1843.)</p>
-
-<p>“Schleiermacher,” shlī´er-mä-ker. (1768-1834.)</p>
-
-<p>“Feuerbach,” foi´er-bäk. (1804-1872.)</p>
-
-<p>“Schopenhauer,” sho<b>´</b>pen-how´er. (1788-1860.)</p>
-
-<p>“Freytag,” frī´täg; “Heyse,” hī´zeh; “Spielhagen,” speel´hä-gen;
-“Reuter,” roi´ter.</p>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-<h4>READINGS IN ART.</h4>
-
-<p>The papers on Sculpture are compiled from Redford’s “Ancient
-Sculpture” and Lübke’s “History of Art.”</p>
-
-<p>P. 75, c. 1.—“Mycenæ,” my-ce´næ.</p>
-
-<p>“Cesnola,” ches´no-la. Born in Turin in 1832. He served in the
-Crimean war, and afterward in the war of the Rebellion. Having been
-made an American citizen he was appointed consul to Cyprus, where he
-discovered the necropolis of Idalium, a city which ceased to exist two
-thousand years ago. He began excavations, opening some eight thousand
-tombs, but an edict from the sultan stopped the work. Cesnola had already,
-however, gathered a magnificent collection of antiquities, which,
-in 1872 was purchased for the Metropolitan Museum of New York.</p>
-
-<p>“Harpy.” The reliefs on this monument represent harpies, fabulous
-monsters in Greek mythology, carrying off children.</p>
-
-<p>“Frieze,” freez. The broad band resting upon the columns of a porch
-is called the entablature. It is divided into three portions; the central
-one is the frieze.</p>
-
-<p>P. 75, c. 2.—“Ageladas,” ag´e-la<b>´</b>das. <i>Not Argeladas.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Myron.” A Bœotian, born about 480 B. C. His master-pieces
-were all in bronze. The “quoit-player” and the “cow” are most famous.
-Myron excelled in animals and figures in action.</p>
-
-<p>“Canachus,” can´a-chus. (B. C. 540-508.) He executed the colossal
-statue of Apollo at Miletus, was skilled in casting bronze, in gold and
-silver, and in wood carving.</p>
-
-<p>“Callon,” cal´lon. (B. C. 516.)</p>
-
-<p>“Onatus,” o-na´tus. (B. C. 460.) “Hegias,” he´gi-as; “Critius,”
-cri´ti-us.</p>
-
-<p>“Calamis,” cal´a-mis. (B. C. 467-429.) He worked in marble, gold and
-ivory. His horses are said to have been unsurpassable, and his heroic
-female figures superior to those of his predecessors.</p>
-
-<p>“Pythagoras.” Lived about 470 in Magna Græcia. He executed
-life-like figures in bronze.</p>
-
-<p>“Lemnians,” lem´ni-ans.</p>
-
-<p>“Paris.” At a certain wedding feast to which all the gods had been
-invited except the goddess of Strife, she, angry at the slight, threw an
-apple into their midst with the inscription “to the fairest.” Juno, Minerva
-and Venus claimed it, and Jupiter ordered that Paris, then a shepherd
-on Mount Ida, should decide the dispute. As Venus promised
-him the most beautiful of women for his wife, he gave her the apple.</p>
-
-<p>P. 76, c. 1.—“Pellene,” pel-le´ne. A city of Achaia.</p>
-
-<p>“Rochette,” ro´shĕt<b>´</b>. (1790-1854.) A French archæologist.</p>
-
-<p>“Alcamenes,” al-cam´e-nes. (B.C. 444-400.) His greatest work
-was a statue of Venus.</p>
-
-<p>“Agoracritus,” ag´o-rac<b>´</b>ri-tus. (B. C. 440-428.) His most famous work
-was also a Venus, which he changed into a statue of Nemesis and sold
-because the people of Athens preferred the statue of Alcamenes.</p>
-
-<p>“Pæonius,” pæ-o´ni-us.</p>
-
-<p>“Pediment.” The triangular facing or top over a portico, window,
-gate, etc.</p>
-
-<p>“Metope,” met´o-pe. In the Doric style of architecture, the frieze
-was divided at intervals by ornaments called triglyphs. The spaces between
-these ornaments were called metopes.</p>
-
-<p>“Cella.” The interior space of a temple.</p>
-
-<p>“Phigalia,” phi-ga´li-a.</p>
-
-<p>“Niké-Apteros.” The wingless goddess of victory. Wingless, to signify
-that the prayer of the Athenians was that victory might never leave
-their city.</p>
-
-<p>“Scopas,” sco´pas. (395-350.) An architect and statuary, as well
-as sculptor. He was the architect of the temple of Minerva at Tegea,
-and assisted in the bas-reliefs of the mausoleum at Halicarnassus. The
-famous group of Niobe and her children is supposed to have been the
-work of Scopas.</p>
-
-<p>“Praxiteles,” prax-it´e-les. Born at Athens B. C. 392. He worked in
-both marble and bronze. About fifty different works by him are mentioned.
-First in fame stands the Cnidian Venus, “one of the most famous
-art creations of antiquity.” Apollo as the lizard-killer, his faun and a
-representation of Eros are probably best-known.</p>
-
-<p>“Nereid,” nē´re-id. A sea nymph.</p>
-
-<p>“Mænad,” mæ´nad. A priestess or votary of Bacchus.</p>
-
-<p>P. 76, c. 2.—“Toro Farnese” or Farnese Bull. Was discovered in
-the sixteenth century and is now in the Naples museum. It represents
-the sons of Antiope tying Dirce to a bull by which she is to be dragged
-to death. The work when discovered went to the Farnese palace in
-Rome, hence the name of Farnese bull.</p>
-
-<p>“Laocoon,” la-oc´o-on. One of the chief groups in the Vatican collection;
-discovered at Rome in 1506. Laocoon was a priest of Apollo,
-who having blasphemed the god was destroyed at the altar with his two
-sons by a serpent sent by the deity.</p>
-
-<p>“Niobe,” ni´o-be. The group of Niobe and her children was probably
-first an ornament of the pediment of a temple. The subject is the
-vengeance of Apollo and Artemis upon the Theban queen Niobe, who
-had boasted because of her fourteen children, that she was superior to
-Leda who had but two. As a punishment all her children were destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>“Pyromachus,” py-rom´a-chus.</p>
-
-<p>“Æsculapius,” æs-cu-la´pi-us. The god of the medical art.</p>
-
-<p>“Apollo Belvedere,” bel-vā-dā´rā, or bĕl<b>´</b>ve-deer´. This statue by many
-is considered the greatest existing work of ancient art. The subject
-is the god Apollo at the moment of his victory over the Python.
-It was discovered in 1503, and takes its name from its position in the
-belvedere of the Vatican, a gallery or open corridor of the Vatican
-which is called <i>belvedere</i>, (beautiful view) from the fine views it commands.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-It is of heroic size, and is considered the very type of manly
-beauty.</p>
-
-<p>P. 77, c. 1.—“Torus,” to´rus. A large moulding used in the base of
-columns.</p>
-
-<p>“Mæcenas,” mæ-ce´nas. (B. C. 73?-8.) A Roman statesman. His
-fame rests on his patronage of literature. He was a patron of both
-Horace and Virgil.</p>
-
-<p>“Tivoli,” tiv´o-le.</p>
-
-<p>“Varro.” (B. C. 116-28.) “The most learned of the Romans and
-the most voluminous of Roman writers.” He composed no less than
-490 books; but two of these have come down to us.</p>
-
-<p>“Arcesilaus,” ar-ces<b>´</b>i-la´us.</p>
-
-<p>“Genetrix.” A mother.</p>
-
-<p>“Septimius Severus,” sep-tim´i-us se-ve´rus. (A. D. 146-211.) Roman
-Emperor.</p>
-
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<h4>AMERICAN LITERATURE.</h4>
-
-<p>P. 77, c. 2.—“Sydney Smith.” (1771-1845.) Educated at Oxford,
-he took orders and became a curate in 1794. Afterward he taught, and
-in 1802 assisted in establishing the <i>Edinburgh Review</i>, of which he was
-the first editor. Although he had charge, during his life, of various
-parishes, he was active in literary work; for twenty-five years he contributed
-to the <i>Edinburgh Review</i>; he published “Sketches of Moral Philosophy,”
-several volumes of sermons, papers on “American Debt,”
-and many miscellaneous articles, all characterized by humor and sound
-sense.</p>
-
-<p>“Kaimes,” or Kames, kāmz. (1696-1782.) A Scottish jurist, educated
-at Edinburgh, and for thirty years practiced law; was then made
-Lord Chief Justice. He wrote many works on law, metaphysics, criticism,
-etc.</p>
-
-<p>“Davy.” (1778-1829.) The English chemist. His attention was
-first directed to chemistry by his medical studies, and he made such progress
-in original investigation that at twenty-three he was made lecturer
-on chemistry in the Royal Society of London. In 1817 he became a
-member of the French Institute, and his reputation as a chemist was second
-to that of no one in Europe. He wrote much and among his discoveries
-were the bases potassium, sodium, and iodine as a simple substance.
-His most valuable invention was the miner’s safety lamp.</p>
-
-<p>“Jeffrey.” (1773-1850.) Educated for the law, but was deeply interested
-in literature. After being admitted to the bar this division of
-interest for a long time hindered his success. He was one of the original
-founders of the <i>Edinburgh Review</i>, and became its editor with the
-fourth number. He soon made the magazine an organ of liberal thought
-on every theme. His most valuable contributions were his literary criticisms.
-His work at the bar improved with his literary ability, and in
-1834 he was made a judge, a position he held until his death.</p>
-
-<p>“Passy,” päs<b>´</b>se´.</p>
-
-<p>P. 78, c. 1.—“Bancroft,” băng´kroft. (1800.) See American Literature.</p>
-
-<p>“Rufus King.” (1755-1827.) American statesman.</p>
-
-<p>“Everett.” (1794-1865.) American orator and statesman.</p>
-
-<p>P. 78, c. 2.—“Hessian,” hĕsh´an. The troops were from Hesse-Cassel.
-The king, Frederick II., between 1776 and 1784, received over
-£3,000,000 by hiring these soldiers to the English government to fight
-against the Americans.</p>
-
-<p>“Lanspach,” lanz´päk; “Kniphausen,” knip´how<b>´</b>zen.</p>
-
-<p>P. 79, c. 1.—“Brougham,” broo´am. (1779-1868.) A British
-statesman and author. After leaving school he spent some time in traveling
-and writing before being admitted to the bar. In 1810 he entered
-Parliament, and his first resolution was to petition the king to abolish
-slavery. From this time he was allied with the reforms of the age: the
-emancipation of Roman Catholics, government reforms, etc. The education
-of working people and charity schemes received the aid of his
-pen and voice, and he was instrumental in founding several societies
-since very powerful. In 1834 the change of ministry ended his official
-life, but his interest and zeal in public works never ceased.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-<h2><a name="TRICKS_OF_THE_CONJURORS" id="TRICKS_OF_THE_CONJURORS">TRICKS OF THE CONJURORS.</a></h2>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-<p class="center">By THOMAS FROST.</p>
-<hr class="shorter" />
-
-
-<p>The dense ignorance which prevailed during the seventeenth
-century on the subject of conjuring, as the word is now understood,
-would be scarcely credible at the present day, if instances
-did not even now occur at intervals to show that there are still
-minds which the light of knowledge has not yet penetrated.
-Books did not reach the masses in those days, and hence the
-beginning of the eighteenth century found people as ready to
-drown a wizard as their ancestors had been.</p>
-
-<p>A book which was published in 1716, by Richard Neve, whose
-name is the first which we meet with in the conjuring annals of
-the eighteenth century, bears traces of the lingering fear of diabolical
-agency which still infected the minds of the people.
-Having stated, in his preface, that his book contained directions
-for performing thirty-three legerdemain tricks, besides
-many arithmetical puzzles and many jests, Neve says: “I dare
-not say that I have here set down all that are or may be performed
-by legerdemain, but thou hast here the most material of
-them; and if thou rightly understandest these, there is not a
-trick that any juggler in the world can show thee, but thou shalt
-be able to conceive after what manner it is done, if he do it by
-sleight of hand, and not by unlawful and detestable means, as
-too many do at this day.”</p>
-
-<p>The following are a few of the tricks which puzzled the
-people of those days: The tricks of the fakirs, or religious
-mendicants of India were remarkable. One of these fellows
-boasted that he would appear at Amadabant a town about two
-hundred miles from Surat, within fifteen days after being buried,
-ten feet deep, at the latter place. The Governor of Surat
-resolved to test the fellow’s powers, and had a grave dug, in
-which the fakir placed himself, stipulating that a layer of reeds
-should be interposed between his body and the superincumbent
-earth, with a space of two feet between his body and the reeds.
-This was done, and the grave was then filled up, and a guard
-was placed at the spot to prevent trickery.</p>
-
-<p>A large tree stood ten or twelve yards from the grave, and
-beneath its shade several fakirs were grouped around a large
-earthern jar, which was filled with water. The officer of the
-guard, suspecting that some trick was to be played, ordered the
-jar to be moved, and, this being done by the soldiers, after
-some opposition on the part of the fellows assembled round it,
-a shaft was discovered, with a subterranean gallery from its
-bottom to within two feet of the grave. The impostor was thereupon
-made to ascend, and a riot ensued, in which he and several
-other persons were slain.</p>
-
-<p>This trick has been repeated several times in India, under
-different circumstances, one of the most remarkable instances
-being that related by an engineer officer named Boileau, who
-was employed about forty years ago in the trigonometrical survey
-of that country. I shall relate this story in the officer’s
-own words, premising that he did not witness either the interment
-or the exhumation of the performer, but was told that
-they took place in the presence of Esur Lal, one of the ministers
-of the Muharwul of Jaisulmer.</p>
-
-<p>“The man is said, by long practice, to have acquired the art<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-of holding his breath by shutting the mouth, and stopping the
-interior opening of the nostrils with his tongue; he also abstains
-from solid food for some days previous to his interment,
-so that he may not be inconvenienced by the contents of his
-stomach, while put up in his narrow grave; and, moreover, he
-is sewn up in a bag of cloth, and the cell is lined with masonry,
-and floored with cloth, that the white ants and other insects may
-not easily be able to molest him. The place in which he was buried
-at Jaisulmer is a small building about twelve feet by eight,
-built of stone; and in the floor was a hole, about three feet long,
-two and a half feet wide, and the same depth, or perhaps a
-yard deep, in which he was placed in a sitting posture, sewed
-up in his shroud, with his feet turned inward toward the stomach,
-and his hands also pointed inward toward the chest. Two
-heavy slabs of stone, five or six feet long, several inches thick,
-and broad enough to cover the mouth of the grave, so that he
-could not escape, were then placed over him, and I believe a
-little earth was plastered over the whole, so as to make
-the surface of the grave smooth and compact. The door of
-the house was also built up, and people placed outside, that no
-tricks might be played, nor deception practised.</p>
-
-<p>“At the expiration of a full month, the walling of the door
-was broken, and the buried man dug out of the grave; Trevelyan’s
-moonshee only running there in time to see the ripping
-open of the bag in which the man had been inclosed. He
-was taken out in a perfectly senseless state, his eyes closed, his
-hands cramped and powerless, his stomach shrunk very much,
-and his teeth jammed so fast together that they were forced to
-open his mouth with an iron instrument to pour a little water
-down his throat. He gradually recovered his senses and the
-use of his limbs; and when we went to see him he was sitting
-up, supported by two men, and conversed with us in a low, gentle
-tone of voice, saying that ‘we might bury him again for a
-twelvemonth, if we pleased.’”</p>
-
-<p>A conjuror was exhibiting a mimic swan, which floated on
-real water, and followed his motions, when the bird suddenly
-became stationary. He approached it more closely, but the
-swan did not move.</p>
-
-<p>“There is a person in the company,” said he, “who understands
-the principle upon which this trick is performed, and who
-is counteracting me. I appeal to the company whether this is
-fair, and I beg the gentleman will desist.”</p>
-
-<p>The trick was performed by magnetism, and the counteracting
-agency was a magnet in the pocket of Sir Francis Blake
-Delaval.</p>
-
-<p>In 1785 the celebrated automatic chess player was first exhibited
-in London, having previously been shown in various cities
-of Germany and France. It had been invented about fifteen
-years before by a Hungarian noble, the Baron von Kempelen,
-who had until then, however, declined to permit its exhibition in
-public. Having witnessed some experiments in magnetism by
-a Frenchman, performed before the Court of Maria Theresa,
-Kempelen had observed to the empress that he thought himself
-able to construct a piece of mechanism the operations of
-which would be far more surprising than the experiments they
-had witnessed. The curiosity of the empress was excited, and
-she exacted a promise from Kempelen to make the attempt.
-The result was the automatic chess-player.</p>
-
-<p>The figure was of the size of life, dressed as a Turk, and
-seated behind a square piece of cabinet work. It was fixed
-upon castors, so as to run over the floor, and satisfy beholders
-that there was no access to it from below. On the top, in the
-center, was a fixed chess-board, toward which the eyes of the
-figure were directed. Its right hand and arm were extended
-toward the board, and its left, somewhat raised, held a pipe.</p>
-
-<p>The spectators, having examined the figure, the exhibitor
-wound up the machinery, placed the cushion under the arm of
-the figure, and challenged any gentleman present to play.</p>
-
-<p>The Turk always chose the white men, and made the first
-move. The fingers opened as the hand was extended toward
-the board, and the piece was deftly picked up, and removed to
-the proper square. If a false move was made by its opponent,
-it tapped on the table impatiently, replaced the piece, and
-claimed the move for itself. If a human player hesitated long
-over a move, the Turk tapped sharply on the table.</p>
-
-<p>The mind fails to comprehend any mechanism capable of
-performing with such accuracy movements which require
-knowledge and reflection. Beckman says indeed that a boy
-was concealed in the figure, and prompted by the best chess-player
-whose services the proprietor could obtain.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-
-<h2><a name="TALK_ABOUT_BOOKS" id="TALK_ABOUT_BOOKS">TALK ABOUT BOOKS.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>Oliver Wendell Holmes is a philanthropist in the world of letters.
-Since his college days at Harvard, where he distinguished himself by
-his contributions to the <i>Collegian</i>, he has been giving to his wide circle
-of readers strong, clean, good thoughts, mixed with the happiest humor.
-His essays have been among the most enjoyable of his writings. His
-publishers have recognized this and collected a dozen of them into
-“Pages from an Old Volume of Life.”<a name="FNanchor_K_11" id="FNanchor_K_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_K_11" class="fnanchor">[K]</a> There are many subjects
-touched, but his “Phi Beta Kappa” oration of 1870, “Mechanism in
-Thought and Morals,” is, perhaps, the best in the collection. The two
-essays, written during the war for <i>The Atlantic</i> readers, have a pathos so
-touching, it completely does away with the false idea that Holmes is only
-a humorist. The volume is a pleasant book for an hour’s reading; indeed,
-it may well be classed along with what the author himself has aptly
-called “pillow-smoothing authors;” not a dull, heavy book, but one
-whose easily-flowing thoughts and continued good humor, quiet the mind
-and allow the reader to pass into dreamy forgetfulness.</p>
-
-<p>“Things that have to be done, should be learned by doing them.”
-Teachers know as well, perhaps, as any class of people how applicable
-this old truism is to their work. They only learn by doing; but too
-often they learn the routine, not the science. A little book just published
-by A. Lovell &amp; Co.,<a name="FNanchor_L_12" id="FNanchor_L_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_L_12" class="fnanchor">[L]</a> is sent out in the interest of thoughtful teaching.
-There are some excellent development lessons, in which, simply by
-questions, and a few simple materials, are developed ideas of the senses,
-of forms, flat and solid, ideas of right and left, etc. A series of lessons
-on plants and insects have for their object “to bring the child into contact
-with nature, to teach him to observe, think, reason, and to express
-himself naturally.” The book contains an excellent paper on the much-discussed
-“Quincy School Work.” No new departure in the educational
-world has caused more talk. That there is something in it no one doubts
-that knows of the results of Superintendent Parker’s system, but how to
-use it is not easily explained. This essay will help teachers to understand
-the method and show them how it may be used.</p>
-
-<p>During this year Messrs. Harper &amp; Brothers have added to the biographies
-of eminent Americans three very valuable works. Following
-Mr. Godwin’s life of Bryant, is the “Memoirs of John A. Dix.”<a name="FNanchor_M_13" id="FNanchor_M_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_M_13" class="fnanchor">[M]</a> In
-so pretentious a work as the latter it is unfortunate that the compilation
-should have been made by his son. The unbiased, impersonal judgment
-that makes a biography trustworthy, is wanting. The fondness of
-the writer is continually evident to the reader. The book, however, is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-valuable from its fullness and exactness. It is really an epitome of the
-history of the most exciting times in our annals. General Dix’s part
-in the stirring events before and after the rebellion, his work as secretary
-of the treasury, as military commander during the New York riots in
-’63, and his position upon various questions of national policy, are all
-explained minutely, and his correspondence is given in full. Although
-so voluminous, the work is never fatiguing. A feature which adds to
-the interest of the book is the selections from his translations, sketches,
-etc. General Dix added to his political and military ability a literary
-taste that led him to cultivate letters. His translations are particularly
-good. <i>Stabat Mater</i>, his son has seen fit to publish; it seems a pity that
-<i>Dies Iræ</i> was not also given.</p>
-
-<p>The third of these biographies is the “Life of James Buchanan.”<a name="FNanchor_N_14" id="FNanchor_N_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_N_14" class="fnanchor">[N]</a> The
-author himself says of this work, that “it was followed within a week by
-an amount of criticism such as I do not remember to have seen bestowed
-on any similar book in the same space of time.” Mr. Curtis was assigned
-a task from which most men would have shrunk. Mr. Buchanan’s administration
-as President of the United States was not popular. The
-belief that he favored the secession of the Southern States has been general.
-For his biographer to treat him as a conscientious actor in the
-struggle before the war has necessarily entailed criticism. Mr. Curtis
-says in his preface, “My estimate of his abilities and powers as a statesman
-has arisen with every investigation I have made and it is, in my
-judgment, not too much to say of him as a President of the United
-States, that he is entitled to stand very high in the catalogue—not a large
-one—of those who have had the moral courage to encounter misrepresentation
-and obloquy, rather than swerve from the line of duty which their
-convictions marked out for them.” Mr. Curtis will not change the popular
-opinion on the Buchanan administration, but he must modify that
-opinion. This treatment alone makes the work worth reading by both
-friend and foe. The most entertaining part of the book is the voluminous
-private correspondence, which well portray Mr. Buchanan’s social
-and friendly nature.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most delightful books of the season is “Spanish Vistas,”<a name="FNanchor_O_15" id="FNanchor_O_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_O_15" class="fnanchor">[O]</a>
-by Mr. Lathrop. The publishers have given us a genuine <i>édition de
-luxe</i>, heavy paper, numberless choice illustrations, and beautiful binding.
-The book is the joint product of two artists, and if one wields the quill
-instead of the pencil he is no less artistic. Two things are particularly
-noticeable in Mr. Lathrop’s fine descriptions of scenery, of architecture,
-city sights and peasant gatherings: the skill with which he chooses
-his point and time of observation, and his really superior coloring. He
-knows at what hour the Alhambra will exercise its supreme spell, where
-the picturesque vagabondism of these handsome Spanish rascals will be
-most striking. To this power add his ability in colors and there is not a
-page but glows with effective pictures. Character sketches enliven the
-volume. The commonplace American abroad is introduced in Whetstone,
-a man of “iron persistence and intense prejudice,” who continually
-exclaims “I don’t see what I came to Spain for. If there ever was a God-forsaken
-country,” and who amid the grandeur of the cathedral of Seville
-squints along the cornice to see if it is straight. The writer has
-been ably assisted by his “Velveteen,” alias Mr. C. S. Reinhart, whose
-pictures give doubled value to the book. To all contemplating a trip to
-Spain the chapter on “Hints to Travelers” will be valuable.</p>
-
-<p>“Spanish Vistas” represents one class of books on travels. There is
-another more interesting to the majority of people, in which facts and adventures
-are the chief elements. Such a work is “The Golden Chersonese,”<a name="FNanchor_P_16" id="FNanchor_P_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_P_16" class="fnanchor">[P]</a>
-by Isabella Bird. After having traveled on horseback through the
-interior of Japan, and braved the roughest passes of the Rocky Mountains,
-and spent six months among the wonders of the Sandwich Islands,
-this indefatigable woman penetrates that <i>terra incognita</i>, the Malay Peninsula.
-The dangers and inconveniences which she undergoes to get there
-and get through are remarkable. She sailed from Hong Kong not long after
-a party of piratical Chinese, shipping as steerage passengers on board a
-river steamer, had massacred the officers and captured the boat. There
-was but one English passenger on board besides herself, and some two
-thousand Chinese imprisoned in the steerage, an iron grating over each
-exit, and an officer ready to shoot the first man who attempted to force
-it. The decorations of the saloons consisted of stands of loaded rifles
-and unsheathed bayonets. She penetrates the country where the mosquitoes
-are a terror to life; snakes, land-leeches and centipedes are everywhere,
-but the enthusiastic traveler mentions them but casually. The dangers
-and bravery of the writer of course add piquancy to the interesting
-description of the scenes, the customs and peculiarities of “The Golden
-Chersonese.”</p>
-
-<p>Along with these fresh works comes out a new edition of one of the
-pioneers in this field of literature. We refer to Dr. Hayes’ “Arctic Boat
-Journey.”<a name="FNanchor_Q_17" id="FNanchor_Q_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_Q_17" class="fnanchor">[Q]</a> In 1860 it was first published, and speedily took its place
-as an authority on Arctic travels. The fresh interest given to this subject
-by the sad fate of the “Jeannette” has led to a new edition. The accounts
-lose nothing of interest by time, but rather become clearer from
-the added knowledge we have of the frozen seas and icy lands.</p>
-
-<p>No work will be found a more valuable addition to a C. L. S. C.
-library than Lübke’s “History of Art.”<a name="FNanchor_R_18" id="FNanchor_R_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_R_18" class="fnanchor">[R]</a> In connection with the art readings
-it will be found invaluable. Since its first publication in 1860 it has
-gone through seven editions, and that, too, in critical Germany. The
-new translation from the latest German edition is the best.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<h3>BOOKS RECEIVED.</h3>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>“Bible Stories for Young Children,” by Caroline Hoadley. Philadelphia:
-J. B. Lippincott. &amp; Co.</p>
-
-<p>“Ancient Egypt in the Light of Modern Discoveries,” by Professor H.
-S. Osborn, LL.D. Cincinnati: Robert Clark &amp; Co., 1883.</p>
-
-<p>“Woman and Temperance; or, The Work and the Workers of The
-Woman’s Christian Temperance Union,” by Frances E. Willard, President
-of the W. C. T. U. Hartford, Conn.: Park Publishing Co., 1883.</p>
-
-<p>“The Soul Winner.” A Sketch of Facts and Incidents in the Life and Labors
-of Edmund J. Zard, for sixty-three years a class-leader and hospital
-visitor in Philadelphia. By his sister, Mrs. Mary D. James. New York:
-Phillip &amp; Hunt; Cincinnati: Walden &amp; Stowe, 1883.</p>
-
-<p>“The Preacher and His Sermon.” A Treatise on Homiletics. By Rev.
-John W. Etter, B.D. Dayton, O.: United Brethren Publishing House, 1883.</p>
-
-<p>“Seven Stories, with Basement and Attic.” By the author of “Reveries
-of a Bachelor.” New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1884.</p>
-
-<p>“Reveries of A Bachelor; or, A Book of the Heart,” by Ik Marvel.
-New and revised edition. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1884.</p>
-
-<p>“The Story of Roland,” by James Baldwin. New York: Charles Scribner’s
-Sons, 1883.</p>
-
-<p>“Our Young Folks’ Plutarch;” edited by Rosalie Kaufman. Philadelphia:
-J. B. Lippincott &amp; Co., 1883.</p>
-
-<p>“Young Folks’ Whys and Wherefores.” A Story by Uncle Lawrence.
-Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott &amp; Co., 1884.</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Gilpin’s Frugalities.” Remnants, and Two Hundred Ways of
-using them. By Susan Anna Brown, author of “The Book of Forty
-Puddings.” New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1883.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_K_11" id="Footnote_K_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_K_11">[K]</a> Pages from an Old Volume of Life; a collection of essays (1857-1881) by Oliver
-Wendell Holmes. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin &amp; Co., 1883.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_L_12" id="Footnote_L_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_L_12">[L]</a> Development Lessons for Teachers, by Esmond V. DeGraff and Margaret K.
-Smith. New York: H. Lovell &amp; Co., 1883.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_M_13" id="Footnote_M_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_M_13">[M]</a> Memoirs of John A. Dix; compiled by his son, Morgan Dix. In two volumes.
-New York, Harper &amp; Brothers, 1883.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_N_14" id="Footnote_N_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_N_14">[N]</a> Life of James Buchanan, Fifteenth President of the United States. By George
-Ticknor Curtis. In two volumes. New York: Harper &amp; Brothers, 1883.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_O_15" id="Footnote_O_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_O_15">[O]</a> Spanish Vistas, by George Parsons Lathrop, illustrated by Charles S. Reinhart.
-New York: Harper &amp; Brothers, 1883.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_P_16" id="Footnote_P_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_P_16">[P]</a> The Golden Chersonese, by Isabella Bird. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1883.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_Q_17" id="Footnote_Q_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_Q_17">[Q]</a> An Arctic Boat Journey in the Autumn of 1854, by Isaac I. Hayes, M. D. New
-edition, enlarged and illustrated. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin &amp; Company, 1883.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_R_18" id="Footnote_R_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_R_18">[R]</a> Outlines of the History of Art, by Dr. Wilhelm Lübke. A new translation from
-the seventh German edition, edited by Clarence Cook. New York: Dodd, Mead &amp;
-Co., 1881.</p></div></div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 187px;">
-<img src="images/royalpowder.jpg" width="187" height="333" alt="Royal Baking Powder. Absoloutely Pure" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>This powder never varies. A marvel of purity, strength and wholesomeness.
-More economical than the ordinary kinds, and can not be
-sold in competition with the multitude of low test, short weight, alum or
-phosphate powders. <i>Sold only in cans.</i> <span class="smcap">Royal Baking Powder Co.</span>,
-106 Wall Street, New York.</p></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>THE CHAUTAUQUAN.</h2>
-
-<p class="center">1883-1884.<br />
-
-——————————<br />
-The Fourth Volume Begins with October, 1883.<br />
-——————————<br /></p>
-<p>A monthly magazine, 76 pages, ten numbers in the volume, beginning with October
-and closing with July.</p>
-
-
-<div class="adtitle2">THE CHAUTAUQUAN</div>
-
-<p class="unindent">is the official organ of the C. L. S. C., adopted by the Rev. J. H. Vincent, D.D.,
-Lewis Miller, Esq., Lyman Abbott, D.D., Bishop H. W. Warren, D.D., Prof. W. C.
-Wilkinson, D.D., and Rev. J. M. Gibson, D.D., Counselors of the C. L. S. C.</p>
-
-<p>One-half of the “Required Readings” in the C. L. S. C. course of study for 1883-84
-will be published only in <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span>.</p>
-
-<p>Our columns will contain articles on Roman, German, French and American History,
-together with “Sunday Readings,” articles on Political Economy, Civil Law,
-Physical Science, Sculpture and Sculptors, Painting and Painters, Architecture and
-Architects.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. J. H. Vincent will continue his department of C. L. S. C. Work.</p>
-
-<p>We shall publish “<i>Questions and Answers</i>” on every book in the course of study
-for the year. The work of each week and month will be divided for the convenience
-of our readers. Stenographic reports of the “Round-Tables” held in the Hall of
-Philosophy during August will be given.</p>
-
-<p>Special features of this volume will be the “C. L. S. C. Testimony” and “Local
-Circles.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">THE EDITOR’S OUTLOOK, EDITOR’S NOTE-BOOK AND EDITOR’S TABLE,<br />
-<small>WILL BE IMPROVED.</small></p>
-
-<p>The new department of <i>Notes on the Required Readings</i> will be continued. The
-notes have met with universal favor, and will be improved the coming year.</p>
-
-<p>Miscellaneous articles on Travel, Science, Philosophy, Literature, Religion, Art,
-etc., will be prepared to meet the needs of our readers.</p>
-
-<p>Prof. Wallace Bruce will furnish a series of ten articles, especially for this Magazine,
-on Sir Walter Scott’s “Waverley Novels,” in which he will give our readers a
-comprehensive view of the writings of this prince of novelists.</p>
-
-<p>Rev. Dr. J. H. Vincent, Rev. Dr. G. M. Steele, Prof. W. C. Wilkinson, D.D., Prof.
-W. G. Williams, A.M., Bishop H. W. Warren, A. M. Martin, Esq., Rev. C. E. Hall,
-A.M., Rev. E. D. McCreary, A.M., and others, will contribute to the current volume.</p>
-
-<p>The character of <span class="smcap">The Chautauquan</span> in the past is our best promise of what we
-shall do for our readers in the future.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="prices">
-<tr>
-<td align="center" colspan="2">—————</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><b>THE CHAUTAUQUAN, one year,</b></td>
-<td align="right"><b>$1.50</b></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="center" colspan="2">—————</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="center" colspan="2"><b>CLUB RATES FOR THE CHAUTAUQUAN.</b></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><b>Five subscriptions at one time, each,</b>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
-<td align="right"><b>$1.35</b></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;"><b>Or, for the five</b></span></td>
-<td align="right"><b>6.75</b></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table></div>
-
-<p class="center">In clubs, the Magazine must go to one postoffice.<br />
-—————<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>Remittances should be made by postoffice money order on Meadville, or draft on
-New York, Philadelphia or Pittsburgh, to avoid loss. Address,</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-<b><big>THEODORE L. FLOOD,</big></b><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 8em;">Editor and Proprietor,</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 14em;"><b>MEADVILLE, PA.</b></span><br />
-—————<br />
-
-Complete sets of the <i>Chautauqua Assembly Herald</i> for 1883 furnished at $1.00.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<img src="images/decoline1_arrowsbox.jpg" width="252" height="14" alt="decorative line" />
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="CHARLES_SCRIBNERS_SONS_NEW_BOOKS" id="CHARLES_SCRIBNERS_SONS_NEW_BOOKS">CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS’ NEW BOOKS.</a></h2>
-
-
-<div class="hang1"><b>Biblical Study.</b> Its Principles, Methods, and a History
-of its Branches. Together with a Catalogue of a Reference
-Library of Biblical Study. By <span class="smcap">Charles A.
-Briggs</span>, D.D., Professor of Hebrew and Cognate Languages
-in Union Theological Seminary. 1 vol. 12mo,
-$2.50.</div>
-
-<p>Professor Briggs’ book is admirably adapted for the use
-of the great number of readers and Bible students who
-desire to know the results of the most recent investigation
-and the best modern scholarship in the field of Biblical
-Study. Without such a guide it is impossible to comprehend
-the discussions which now agitate the religious world
-as to the canon, the languages, the style, the text, the
-interpretation, and the criticism of Scripture. Each of
-these departments, with other kindred topics, is treated
-in a brief but thorough and comprehensive manner, and
-their history and literature are presented together with
-their present aspect.</p>
-
-<div class="hang1">
-<b>The Scriptural Idea of Man.</b> By <span class="smcap">Mark Hopkins</span>,
-D.D., LL.D., 1 vol., 12mo, $1.00.</div>
-
-<p>“We wish every theological student in the land might
-have the chance, at least, of reading this book. The
-doctrines of the Bible in relation to man in his original
-nature have seldom been more powerfully enforced, and
-the different schools of modern infidelity have seldom
-been exposed more completely in all their weakness. It
-is like taking a tonic or a breath of mountain air for one
-to listen to such teachings as the pen of Doctor Hopkins
-here gives to the younger race of ministers.”—<i>The Christian
-Intelligencer.</i></p>
-
-<div class="hang1"><b>The Grounds of Theistic and Christian Belief.</b> By
-<span class="smcap">George P. Fisher</span>, D.D., LL.D., Professor of Ecclesiastical
-History in Yale College, 1 vol., crown 8vo.
-$2.50.</div>
-
-<p>This volume embraces a discussion of the evidences of
-both natural and revealed religion, and prominence is
-given to topics having special interest at present from
-their connection with modern theories and difficulties.
-Professor Fisher’s learning, skill in argument, and power
-of language have given him the position of one of the
-foremost defenders of the faith now living, and this volume
-will be useful to many in clearing up perplexities
-and throwing new light upon the nature of the Christian
-faith and its relation to modern thought.</p>
-
-<div class="hang1"><b>Christian Charity in the Ancient Church.</b> By Dr.
-<span class="smcap">Gerhard Uhlhorn</span>, author of “The Conflict of Christianity
-with Heathenism.” 1 vol. crown 8vo, $2.50.</div>
-
-<p>Dr. Uhlhorn is favorably known on this side of the Atlantic
-by his able and fascinating treatment of one of the
-most important chapters in history, “The Conflict of
-Christianity with Heathenism.”</p>
-
-<div class="hang1"><b>The Life of Luther.</b> By <span class="smcap">Julius Kostlin</span>, Professor in
-the University of Halle. With more than 60 illustrations
-from original portraits, documents, etc. 1 vol. 8vo.</div>
-
-<p>“At last we have a life of Luther which deserves the
-name.... The Herr Kostlin, in a single well-composed
-volume, has produced a picture which leaves little
-to be desired. A student who has read these six hundred
-pages attentively will have no question left to ask.”—<span class="smcap">James
-Anthony Froude</span> in <i>The Contemporary Review</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="hang1"><b>The Middle Kingdom.</b> A survey of the Geography,
-Government, Literature, Social Life, Arts, and History
-of the Chinese Empire and its inhabitants. With illustrations
-and a new map of the Empire. By <span class="smcap">S. Wells
-Williams</span>, D.D., LL.D. 2 vols. royal 8vo, $9.00.</div>
-
-<p>This new issue of Dr. S. Wells Williams’s standard
-and important work, “The Middle Kingdom,” is practically
-a new book. The text of the old edition has been
-largely rewritten, and the work has been expanded so as
-to include a vast amount of new material collected by Dr.
-Williams during the later years of his residence in China,
-as well as the most recent information regarding all the
-departments of the Empire.</p>
-
-<div class="hang1"><b>The Story of Roland.</b> By <span class="smcap">James Baldwin</span>. With a
-series of illustrations by R. B. Birch. 1 vol. square
-12mo, $2.00.</div>
-
-<p>This volume is intended as a companion to “The Story
-of Siegfried.” As “Siegfried” was an adaptation of Northern
-myths and romances to the wants and understanding
-of young readers, so is this story a similar adaptation of
-the Middle Age romances relating to Charlemagne and
-his paladins.</p>
-
-<div class="hang1"><b>The Hoosier School-Boy.</b> By <span class="smcap">Edward Eggleston</span>,
-author of “The Hoosier School-Master,” etc. With
-full-page illustrations. 1 vol. 12mo, $1.00.</div>
-
-<p>“Those who have read ‘The Hoosier School-master’—and
-who has not?—will feel that they must have this companion
-volume. Mr. Eggleston is a writer of very charming
-stories of a peculiar character. His stories always
-mean something, and are pervaded by a Christian tone of
-thought and feeling.”—<i>Christian Secretary, Hartford.</i></p>
-
-<div class="hang1"><b>Mrs. Gilpin’s Frugalities.</b> Remnants, and 200 Ways
-of Using Them. By <span class="smcap">Susan Anna Brown</span>, author of
-“The Book of Forty Puddings.” 1 vol. illuminated, $1.</div>
-
-<p>This little volume, which in the range of cook-book
-literature occupies a new and unoccupied field, aims to
-combat the spirit of wastefulness that is the besetting sin
-of American housekeeping. Miss Brown provides a multitude
-of receipts for transforming these remnants into
-savory and nutritious <i>plats</i>, side dishes, entrees, etc.
-Some of these receipts are from the French, but most of
-them are from the author’s own experiments.</p>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-
-<i>These books are for sale by all book-sellers, or will be<br />
-sent, post-paid, on receipt of price.</i><br />
-
-<br />
-<b>CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS, Publishers,<br />
-743 and 745 Broadway, New York.</b><br />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<div class="tnote"><div class="center">
-<b>Transcriber’s Notes:</b></div>
-
-<p>Obvious punctuation errors repaired.</p>
-
-<p>Page 66, “Muremburg” changed to “Nuremburg” (of Nuremburg, is now)</p>
-
-<p>Page 81, “Lybia” changed to “Libya” (deserts of Libya, there dwelt)</p>
-
-<p>Page 82, “Fresho” changed to “Fresno” (four chief towns, Fresno)</p>
-
-<p>Page 88, “Propylænm” changed to “Propylæum” (the Propylæum and enter)</p>
-
-<p>Page 97, “ti” changed to “it” (huzzaing for me; it)</p>
-
-<p>Page 98, stanza break placed between first and second stanza of poem.</p>
-
-<p>Page 103, “Lousta” changed to “Louisa” (Lousia E. French)</p>
-
-<p>Page 108, “be” changed to “he” (he came and gave)</p>
-
-<p>Page 109, “invested” changed to “infested” (earliest times
-infested)</p>
-
-<p>Page 116, “city” changed to “City” (New York City to introduce)</p>
-
-<p>Page 128, “cannon” changed to “canon” (as to the canon)</p>
-
-<p>Page 128, “Ulhorn” changed to “Uhlhorn” (Dr. Uhlhorn is favorably)</p>
-
-<p>Page 128, “adaption” changed to “adaptation” (an adaptation of Northern)</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Chautauquan, Vol. IV, November 1883, by
-The Chautauquan Literary and Scientific Circle
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